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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 14 March 1896, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1896-03-14/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• Zitt Metro giourn. CHAPERON THE GIRLS. By ROBERT C. BAH,EY. MONTANA. Chief Tall of the Osages was reported to be short in his ccounts last week. Says the Wichita Eagle: \We do not like England in anything.\ How about the bottom of the tureen? Milwaukee editors are talking of fighting a duel. This will doubtless be accomplished by putting shot in their ink -wells. Hour by hour, fellow -citizens, we are oeing remorselessly brought nearer to the time when the straw -ballot fiend will have his quadrennial attack. If President Kruger's pictures in the papers are accurate we believe the gold brick operators have overlooked a fine field for operation in the Transvaal. Occasionally there is something in a name. A man named Flood wanted to be put on the water commission in Boston and the mayor would not have IL It is said •that it takes money to get into the United States senate. This may be why Congressman H. D. Money has been chosen by the Mississippi leg- islature. A St. Paul typewriter nas been sued for $12,575 damages for alienating a husband's affections. The St. Paul key - pounder in action on the affections must be a terror. That Troy paper which thinks that \all will ride bicycles hereafter,\ per- haps will admit that a large propor- tion of the riders probably will have to be classed as \scorchers.\ Bull fighting seems to be a profitable . profession. GuerrIta, the most famous Spaniard in that line, appeared in sev- enty-seven fights last_ year, for which he received $1,200 for each perform- ance. Paderewski has a magnificent touch; (Here can be no doubt of that. Thirteen thousand five hundred dollars for two matinee reeltals! There's nothing the matter with that sort of box office tech- nique. \First catch your flea.\ This advice .s to the new governor-general of Cuba who raves it out that he will proceed at once to crush the insurgents. Campos announced his plans in very much the same language. A man who died in Chicago the other Jay left a letter to - be sent to his sister, whbse name he confessed he didn't know. The old adage, that it is a wise man who knows his own father, will have to be brought up to date. A Chicago man was offered $60 to kill a reputable citizen. Instead of asking the intended victim how much he would give not to he killed, the first man re- ported the offer to the police. Yet we hear that Chicagoans are enterprising. Railway construction in Japan, tem- porarily interrupted by the war, is again active. \A sum of $22,000,000 has been voted for the construction of a double line, 376 miles long, between Tokio and Kobe, passing through the principal commercial and industrial centers of Japan, viz., Yokohama, Ktoto and Os aka.\ The New York board of health recom- mends that notices be placed in all public places, in surface and ele- vated cars, public halls and assem- bly rooms, warning everybody against expectoration on the floors. The doctors say that consumption, diph- theria, influenza, and other diseases are easily communicated in this way during certain stages of the disease. Catarrhal affections may be com- municated through dried spittle mix- ing with dust. These germs are likely to be gathered on the feet and on the skirts of women and taken into private houses, where the most perfect vertilation will not stay their evil effects. • Reports from various southern points east of the Mississippi show a remark- able tide of immigration from the northwest to the south Mace the holi- days. A number Of minor industries are being located in the south by west- ern people. Repreeentatives of the va- , Gouts professions from the northwest are looking for mw locations in the south. and current events seem to favor a close political and industrial alliance of the south and the northwest. No fewer than foal land agents have gone from the swith(rn states to the north- west since Jan. 1 for the purpose of pre- senting the advantages of different lo- calities and inducing home -seekers to locate in the south. • A large per cent of the settlers are Grand Army men, and' this fact will show a heavy increase in the pension.payments for the next year In the southern states. David Hammel, of New Jersey, re- turned to his family the other day after thirty years' absence. In 1866 he sup- ported a republican for governor, quar- reled with his wife and left her. He vowed never to return until a republi- can was governor, an event that hap- pened with the inauguration of Gov. Griggs some days ago. Hammel, it is said, has had at times to live on acorns, but he kept his vow. Report says he was received with rejoicings and apple- jack, but Mrs. Ilammel in likely to re- gret that the state did not remain dem- ocratic. MORE PROTECTION FOR THESE YOUNO PEOPLE. Women Should Melte Every Effort to Be Their lialighters' Confidantes aud Companions and 0 Secure Theo, for Friends. 7 ,, OW many girls we meet between the ages of 13 and 17 who are going out in eompany without either father or mother accompany- ing them. Either they go out alone or with a young girl or young man as eas- ily influenced as themselves. These young people have an idea that their parents are grqwing old and are of a different generation from themselves, and therefore they neither understand nor sympathize with them,- so they seek suggestions from those who they think will coincide with their views and with the times , generally. How differently the daughter feels toward the wise mother who has made of her a friend and companion from childhood. Bound up in the love and influence and confidence of such a mother there will be no question con- cerning the useful womanhood ,. of such a daughter.\ \But sometimes,\ I interrupted, \one sees daughters that are far superior in moral character to their mothers.\ \There are instances, of course, where the daughter would be better off had the mother no influence whatever over her,\ was the answer. \It is shameful that such a state of affairs should exist, and yet it is true. The mother seems as greatly pleased over the daughter's success in 'catching 'flew beaux' as other mothers feel when their daughters receive prizes for ef- ficient work in school. They proudly exhibit the packet of love letters the daughter has received in one week, and we have only to look out upon the street of any town, from twilight until 9 to 10'o'cloclein the evening, to see the result of such training. Young girls dressed in their beat are noticed walk- ing up and down the streets, endeavor- ing to attract attention or chatting with some youth upon a street corner. These are somebody's daughters. Are they yours? Perhaps some mothers will ask: 'What harm, so long as there are other girls with her?' But who are the other girls, and what is their influence over your daughter? Do you suppose these girls are the confidential compan- ions of their mothers, or that they re- peat to them one-half the conversation which passes between them and their street friends? \If you Wive not previously secured your daughter's confidence, however, tte sure It will not be given you then; for her timidity and bashfulness will be far greater at that time than ever be- fore. If she does not go to you she gath- erc a little information from one young friend, a little more from another, and very likely none of 'it correct and much of it harmful. \The complaint of the paragraph, I think is just. Women should make every effort to be their daughters' con- fidantes—yes, and their sons', too.\— Philadelphia Press. Salaries of Rulers. The president of the French repub- lic receives 1.200,000 francs; the Amer- ican president. 250,000 francs, while the president of the Swiss republic has only 13,500 francs. The allqwance of the queen of England and her family is placed at 50,000,000 francs; the king of the Belgians, at 4,000,000 francs; the little queen of Holland and her mother at 2.500,000 franca: the emperor of Germany at 11,700,000 francs; the king of Italy at 14,250,000 francs; the king of Spain and his mother at 7,450,000 francs; the king of Portugal and his mother at 3.800,000 francs, the emperor of Austria-Hungary at 23.325,000 francs; the king of Sweden and Norway at 6,500,000 francs; the king of Denmark at 2.400,000 francs, and the king of Greece at only 1,300,000 francs. The Pyramid Limp. \The pyramid limp,\ as it has come to be called, is that state of body which falls upon one for two or three days after making the ascent of the pyra- mids. One is SO much pulled and pushed at the time that little or no inconveni- ence is felt. There is no . sign of sore- ness of joint or muscle until after one has slept, and then the trouble begins to brew. The second day of that man or woman is worse than the first; the climax is reached at the end of the sec- ond or the beginning of the third day, and from that time the patient begins slowly to recover. • A Tree Knows Its Friend., R. M. Kellogg, a Michigan fruit grower, says that a tree has its liken and dislikes; that it knows its friends and enemies when they approach, and has a degree of intelligence generally. He believes trees are Rs alive to their surroundings as animals. and that their sensibilities must be touched to gain the best results. He has made a life- long etinly of fruit trees and fruit grow- ing. He exploited his theory at the Joint convention of western Michigan horticultural societlem in Grand Rapid,' the other day. Society. Whet is the difference bet?ecr SD - railed good societyand the despised low society? Simply in the manner In which they express their mutiny egainet God. -Rev. Dr. Riker, W: Va, CONTENT WITH A GOLD MINE. Stratton. the Creek Mine,. Is Taking Life Emily 71111”10 Days. From the New York Herald: One of the richest of the Cripple Creek gold mine owners is a miner known to all as \Old Man\ Stratton, who, until a few years ago, was a poor, hard-work- ing carpenter. He went to Colorado de- termined to make a lucky strike if it were possible to do so. He made the strike and the claim he located yield- ed ore which ran from $300 to $400 to the ton. At one time he accepted an offer of $150,000 for the mine, and received $10,000 cash down. Then came the financial depressions of 1893 and the contract fell through, but \Old Man\ Stratton had the $10,000 and used it to develop his mine. He was soon tak- ing so much out of his mine that he did know what to do with it. He was a millionaire now, and when he began to think of the hundreds of thousands of dollars he had in bank and of the thousands that were coming each day from the mine, he said to himself: \I must go slow;. if I do not look out I will go crazy.\ And then this singular man came to an odd conclusion. He did not want his money in the banks, nor did he want The bother of invest- ments. And so he has gone ahead and pushed his drifts along the veins and run shafts, and, as the phrase is, \blocked out the erre.\ To -day he has $2,000,000 or $3,000,000 worth of \ore in sight,\ and probably more. He does not know how much there is himself. One day a man came to him and said: \Will you take $10,000,000 for your mine?\ The old man replied: \Do you happen to have a million in your pocket?\ The man said: \No but I guess I can get it.\ Then Stratton added: \Well if you would give me ten times ten million, and put a million in gold down to bind the bargain, I wouldn't sell If I had the motley I wouldn't know what to do with it. So long as it is down in the mine no one can take it away from me, and • I can take it out as fast as I please.\ And so this mast sits in an unpre- tentious little office in Colorado Springs and looks up towards Pike's peak, just beyond which lies the Ihdependence mirie, and gently dreams of the day when, if it pleases his fancy, he may take a million dollars from the depths of the earth between the rising and the setting of the sun. A Feathered Prodigy. Elias Midkiff of Hamlin, Lincoln county, was in Charleston the other day and proposed to the State Histor- ical and Antiquarian society that if it would send a taxidermist to Hamlin the society could secure 'a monster bird of a kind never seen before by any one in West Virginia. The feathered mon- ster is described by Mr. Midkiff, from measurements taken by himself and W. W. Adkins of Hamlin, who killed the bird at the mouth of Vannatters creek, with five bullets from his rifle, while hunting deer on Monday. The bird is 7 feet 4 inches from tip to tip, 4 feet from tip of bill to tail, flat bill 4 inches long and 3 inches wide, some- what similar to that of a (uck, web feet, covering nearly a square foot of alert each; neck 19 tmehes long, legs about 11 inches long and about 1 1 / 2 inches through below the feathers, plumage dark brown, relieved on the wings and breast by light blue shading. The bird when first•seen was circling high in the air, but came down very quickly and alighted in the water, where Adkins got a good shot at it, crippling its wing. Adkins attempted to capture the strange fowl alive, but It was so vicious that he could not get near it without killing it, which re- quired five bullets.—Baltimore Amer lean. ERRORS ABOUT WOMEN. The mother of Coriolanue did not In- tercede with her son to spare Rome. The story has no better foundation than that of Horatius. Pocahontas did not save the life of John Smith. It has been ascertained that this worthy man was the most able-bodied prevaricator of his century. Fair Rosamond was not poisoned by Queen Eleanor, but, after a long resi- dence as a nun in the convent of Gad - stow, died greatly esteemed by her as- sociates. Queen Eleanor did not suck the poison from her husband's wounds, as she did not accompany him on the ex- pedition during which the incident is alleged to have taken place. The hanging gardens of Babylon did not hang, nor were they gardens. They were terraces supported by arches, and overgrown with trees. They were erected for the amusement of a Baby- lonian queen who had come from a mountainous country. The Beige of Troy was mostly a myth. According to Homer's own figures --ii there ever was much a man as Homer - 1 Helen must have been at least 00 years of age when she first met Paris, and even in the heroic period of the world women at that age were a trifle \papatee.\ Sappho, the poeteen, was not a wan- ton beauty, nor did she throw herself from the Leucadian cliff to be cured of an unworthy love. The latest Investi- gations prove her a remanctable mar- ried woman with a large family, which she reared with am much rare as a Greek matron usually gave her children. Mary Stuart of Reotland was not beauty. She had crone -eyes. end to save the trouble of having her hair dressed cut Hoff dare to her head and wore a wig. When, after her death, the exe- rut:creel- lifted her head to show It to the people, the wig came oft and die played a close -cropped skull covered with gray hair A SUMMER OUTING. The Pleasures and Benefits to Be De. rived In (Ii,, NI ouutatua uf Colored°. The day, ill e here, when one begins to make plane for his summer outing, and studies rinlway maps and questions friends to learn of the best spots, and where the Most varied amusements may be had for the least outlay. To Kansas people the Rocky mountains are the most convenient and afford op- portunity for the enjoyment of tastes of all shades. Twenty-four hours places the most eastern dweller of the state right in the heart of the great divide and he has enjoyed such scenes en - route, as wealthy tourists go across the ocean to find. The Denver & Rio Grande road, the Great Scenic Route of the world, takes you at Pueblo or Den- ver, and whirls you through canons where there must have been an en- chantment and where giant arms have dashed the boulders into their present resting places. The ride through the Royal Gorge displays the great in- genuity of its engineers, anti the ob- stinate determination of its builders. The rails are placed in almost inaccesi- ble places, along the edge of the stream or torrent, which with wonderful skill has been forced out of the way to make room for the rock road bed and the iron rails. At certain points the torrent maintains its supremacy, but the diffi- culty is met and surmounted, a set of hangers being made into the cliffs overhead, to support the bridge work and track. The stream is still jubilant of its power over man, and laughs, booms and dashes- by as the train passes, not caring for the queer shad- ows that fall into it, if it can only be supreme at this critical point. The canon is one of the grandest in the world, barely wide enough: . in certain parts, to admit of the stream and the tracks, the granite walls of giant moun- tains towering above and over all, and giving a still more impressive object lesson of the great force of Nature which has caused it all. The climb is a long one, and after leaving Salida you think it is over and that as you enter upon a slight down grade, or a smiling valley, that you are now going to slide down into the great San Luis Valley. Never were you more mis- taken; and if you look you will see two puffing little giants pulling the train for several hours yet. At length, how- ever, when you have begun to wish for breakfast, the summit is reached, and there is a rapid stride down the west- ern slope, and into the beautiful val- ley. For more than fifty miles the track 'sus straight as an arrow, and the train speeds along bringing you into Alamosa for breakfast, right under the shadow of Blanco, the highest moun- tain in this country. All around are smiling fields as far as the eye can reach, until vision is interrupted by the mountains which encircle the val- ley. Some one has said the West Moun- tain and the Sangre de Cristo range on the east are a ring and that Blanco is the setting. These mountains afford every variety of amusement and enter- tainment. There is fine trout fishing; in season there are plenty of ducks and Sand Hill Cranes, Brants, Geese and Curlew. These are in the valley. If big game is desired you must go back into the mountains, where Elk, Bear, Mountain Sheep and Lions, Glouse, etc., are still to be found. Outfit at one of the pleasant little hamlets and spend a month in these mountains and in this valley, if you want ad outint If you wish to meet the gay social parties, that make the mountains their home in summer, go to Colorado Springs. Man- itou, or some other of the delightful re- sorts on the line of the Denver & Rio Grande road. We know of no greater advantage to heath, than may be gained by a sojourn away from the gores of business and daily duties of the routine of living. Here there is no routine but a con- tinued change, of pleasure resulting more profitable to a tired body or over- taxed mind than any other opportpnity within reach. The Denver & Rio eill'ande Company looks after the comfort of its patrons with scrupulous care, and pro- vides the beat facilities for observation and enjoyment of the ride. If you have never yet visited these precincts, de- cide now to do so this year, and get the rest and health you have been looking for. • F. P. BAKER. Suspicion Confirmed. Powell—I see by your sign that you are a dispensing chemist. Chemist —Yes, sir. • Powell —What do you dispense with? Chemist—With accuracy, sir. Powell—I thought so. The last prescription I had made up hero nearly killed my wife.—Truth. How's This i We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENF:Y A CO., Toledo, 0. We, the uniereigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 16 years. and be- lleve him perfeetly honorable in all business transactions. and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WALDINa. IONNAN 8t MARVIN, Wholesivie Druggists, Tole io; Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal- ly, acting directly upon the blood and mucous eurfaces of the system. Testi- monials sent (ree. Price. 75c per bottle. Sold by all dhiggints. Hall's Family Pills. 'Sc. Tie days of rapidly armor n'ating for- tunes on speculation are gliding by. If the Baby is Cutting Teeth. De sore and ni.3 that old and well tried reined r, line WIMILOW'S B007111.1 Syntr for Children Teething - There ti a foolish controversy as to the maginary leadership of New York society. A Colon Suort,n NOT -brown's Bronchial. Troebes - are a simple remedy and give immediate relief. Avoid imitations. . --- The girl should hesitate long and earnest- ly iteftsre tattoming religion to marry. _FITS - ill Flt•atorped freehy Pr. K line's Crest nerve Restorer. No kiteaner the turn ow, a m .o. hari urea Trent lee and Vtrial 1.11111..fre. I. ii lard to arch ht..1 . 1.11...V. A photograph that hot better looking than the NubJect 11 p.i 10101'0(0'n ph. Hinder Con1111 I. ts .1mph. r•tnedv, hut II takes out ..rne slot w tint u It I,! Matra vt. st arngallitg. If you w n man ir re - f.& p •holilol Ire 1 ,, ;my yoUr Mothers who bare nerd r ker. .in ger Tonle fof retire 1,41410 the, It o, • , other medletnes, et ery form n el dint •rul oesa yield to It. Any girl oid enough to take it. valentine •ie 1.. ta WO old to get one. cure for Ctmsumption ha.. been • to nie-Wm B. McClellan, ••• lei Florida. Sept. 17. 4911. An Atchispn t4 calls a baker's, pis • land me-thArn.' ,) SHE ASTONISHES HER 'RACE. Misslesippi Piegress Who Boasts a Pro. fu•lon of Long Hair. From the alemphis Selnkitar: The Mississippians In Memphis tell of a strange negro character living near holly Springs, forty miles *mallet:tat of this city. The negro, or rather ne- gress, in question is named Nancy Gar- rison, and is said to be the only long- haired member of her race. Nancy is a genuine negress; black, with kinky hair. She is 48 years old. Until 1878, after the yellow fever epidemic, there was nothing remarkable about her, hut during the scourge she had the fever and came near dying. It was months before she was able to leave her house. Immediately after her con vales- cence her short, kinky hair began to grow rapidly, and in a year's time it grew from three inches to three feet in length, thickening as it grew. A few years later the crisp mass of hair fell below her knees. About this time a wonderful change of color took place; the jetty locks turned white as snow and remained so until two years ago; since then the hair has turned gradu- ally to its natural blackness. It con- tinues to grow and now measures elev- en feet. Prominent physicians of the Holly Springs neighborhood have ex- amined the woman's head and are dis- posed to think that the spell of fever produced the unnatural growth. She is a living curiosity, visited by hundreds who handle her massive braids before they believe the truth. Like the ma- jority of the negroes, Nancy is super- stitious, and the story she tells about her hair is interesting. She claims that she had a vision while she lay sick of fever; that a black woman stood before her with three long braids of kinky hair that fell to the floor; the woman pointed to the hair and disap- peared. When her hair began to grow Nancy often thought of the vision. A year later, when she was alone in her cabin, the vision appeared again, hold- ing in her hands the massive braids. She said to Nancy: \Behold this is your hair. Mark me, it is as black as night; .it shall be as white as snow.\ This frightened the negress and she bound up her hair in a cloth and was afraid to loosen it or to look upon it for a month. When questioned about it she always says: \It's all the spirits' work.\ CURSE OF OFFICE HOLDING. Utterly Unfits a Man for Any Other Oc- cupation. Somebody must hold office, but the man who does submits to a sacrifice that is appalling, says the Farmer's Voice. Office holding, as a rule, is a blighting curse to the office holder. Once he tasted the \sweets\ of office he is as much under the control of the office holding passion as the drunkard is under the control of his appetite. Nothing satisfies him but a permanent position at the public crib, though very often the man could earn ten times more outside of politics than in. Think of a business man or profession- al man straining every nerve and spending lots of money to go to the legislature at $5 per day. But hundreds do it, and regard defeat, which sensible men would regard as a blessing, as a serious and almost irreparable misfor- tune. If it is an appointive office and the man unfortunately succeeds in hold- ing it for a series of years, but at last is discharged, he is as helpless as a babe, for he is utterly unfit for other occupations. This is especially true of old men who lose their positions at Washington. It is said that one of this class recently cried like a child over his misfortune. Better remain on the farm or in the workshop or in any private busibess than to embark on the troubled sea of politics. There Is not much honor in it and there is still less money than honor, if the fingers do not have wax on them; and it is bet- ter, far better, to be an honest pauper than a dishonest official. If a man maintains a clear conscience he can live and die with at least one priceless treas- ure. The Trolley in Feral.. The first electric railroad in Persia will be built from Teheran to the 111111I- mer resorts, about ten miles to the north of the city, where everybody lives during the hot season. The sum- mer on the Persian plateau is very hot and dry, and it is only in the neighbor- hood of the mountaina that Europeans can stand the great heat. Were it not for the resort they would have to leave Teheran for four months of the year. The new road Is to be a trolley road, and a concession for ninety years has been granted to a German contractor, who will start the building of the road at once. l'hrit On the question of divorces. the law at Moses was almost as lax ns the law of Maine, while on the other hand the law of Christ Is far leas stringent than the law of South Carolina—for no di- vorce has ever been granted in that state. It would be a happy Way for this nation if all civil law in all our states, touching this question of family purity, was brought into harmony with the law of Chrlet. The devil of divorce Is a most impure, as well as a most in- dustrione evil, and he cannot be sent too quickly to his own place. -Rev. Dr. McLeod. Presbyterian, Scranton, Pa. Oita h• In Stollen& In several towns in Holland a birth is announced by the exposing the the doorof a s u ilk pincushion, covered and edged he plaited lace, the SPX of h in- fant being aliawn by the color for a boy, red, for n girl. white. The house which shows in this manner that the number of its inhabitants has been in- creased enjoys, by an arcient law and custom ; various imfnenities and privi- ls.e.es. • Come West for Your Seed. That's what we say, because it's the best. Saizer's Wisconsin grown seeds are bred to earliness and produce the earliest vegetables in the world. Right alongside of other seedamens' earliest, his are 20 days ahead! Just try his earliest peas, radishes, lettuce, cabbage, etc! He is the largest grower of farm and vegetable seeds, potatoes, grasses, clovers, etc! If you will cut till. ont and send it to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., with 10c postage, you will get sample package of Early Bird Rad- ish (ready in 16 days) and their great' catalogue. Catalogue alone ac postage, eluding above oats, free. What a hit Bob Ingersoll could make us an evangelist! Scrofula Manifests itself in many different ways, like goitre, swellings, running sores, boils, salt rheum and pimples and other eruptions. Scarcely a man Is Wholly free front it, in some form. It clings tenaciously until the last vestige of scrofulous poison is eradicated from the blood by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Thousands of voluntary testimonials tell of suffering froni scrofula, often. inherited and most tenaci(ius, positively, per- fectly and permanently cured by Sarsaparilla The One True 71100a Purifier. All druggists. al. Prepared only by C. I. Uoodikeo., Lowell, Mass. act aarmoniously with. Hood's Pills Hood's Sarsaparilla. 2.5C. - The Greatest lledical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. lie has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except ititwo cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his. possession over two hundred tertificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war- ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them.; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or 3iliOUS it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet eve: necessary. Ea. the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed- time. Sold by all Druggists. sE EQs t - PECIAL OFFER Made to Build New Business. A trial will make you our perribinent co...tomer. A Vegetable Garden for the cost of Postage (PreMilf ft, '1OlfreCtIOnt—Itaoltsit, to varlet)... Lettuce, hots. cm to 7 T es, finest; urnips, 3 .2•Inna 'Ai . anti I tblnlift A l3 ' t:...t rat - half. , . 4 aEND 1EN CENT tn'iraTi \ d r re ' oe7v ge e Ls ibis collection of seeds postland. R. W. 1nah lin, Ads, O. writes; \Haws planted Donahoe , ..a Seed. for yeare, with the hest of surer.. lit. e grand business to handle such it good grade of seeds!' Write to-dey and rt•-eivn my new Seed and Plant Book: the beet plat listiod. I ',natant..., to Omuta H. W. BUCKBEE, l ao f8'lyil Spoil 40W. 1 1.411140 -40 411111401/1-4111111 CUTANDSLASH t SMOKING TOBACCO, t CUT AN-D SLASH CHEROOTS 3 for 5 Cents. 9 Give a Good, Mellow, Healthy. 9 Pleasant smoke. Try Them. t t I,ION k Cll. NUM WAS, Durham, C. ip SIP.. 04.11.40 40-41 40 2 oz for 5 Cents. ir sit g A EItAff/TOR CO. does nai; the world • windmill AMID...a, because It has rettunnti the roil a. Wind 1•0entr LO 1 11 whir it eras -a It Ibis ninny branch, no „„ and amyl\'.e its gni, stud repairi at your door. It C.1111 ar.1 us, furtilsh I. better article for less money I h•it others It make. ping and Onartai, Steel tial•aiiiratt after• Completion Wituamll a. 1 lulling and fired Steel Towers, Steel Dots nl Frames. Stool F.I.11 Cotters and Feed firInderp. 4 rtaltation It will nettle on. Of ti,an PrtIck.ft that, It will Nryll.th in ill January 1st at I 13 1.110. Usual prlos It •11.1 mates Tank* and l'unIpti of all kind*, Send for eataliar.n. Peden Ilia. Rockwall and Rawer. Streets, Chicano — DROPSY TREATEII Flit F. rowl t lot y Cured er It h ege I able It e me dl e y, linen ri.rea thota•notis 4.1 I n, . pro- htupetess by bral ph V Plelan• F r..Tt list1.41 sympt,unts disappear In IP!, day. at IfIn• 1 third' All •ympt,.. 11 4 .111()VP.1 i-nitid for free 1,k ,'..I I ITIii 111.1. of mIractilona ',Jr.., Ten lore trprornent free Ity mall. It yoo tatter trial PP1141 Inc in •Itt up• lot , ., postage Olt II 11.1.1lt V, ath, t ile '1111 4t-dPr 1,1%1 rot.ru, ills nayertItembnt ti US. SWEET POTATOESs . '\ quirM 10'44:e tatres• T..1. MK I% Si EH. tiolanshne. ken. HAYDEN BROS., c*„,,Tal'!„!! b r . ;,:i7,... Write for cst•lotrue of lapwing Famish... OPIUM Morphine Ilabit I tired In 11 to SO day.. Boyar till citron. Da.J•IIITEPNE143,L.C•nos.Oh.o If **1\\ Thomoson's Eye Water. axe eyes. Uwe Al LSI I. nest )rnp '1'nntom (1ood. the In time .0,1 I's dr. sista. L. N. U. No. 8. 1896. Wile ,, t , n This Paper Why , tots Write to an Advert ser. 4