Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 7, 1882, Page 3

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T.0. BROW N & CO WHOLESALE DRY GOODS NOTIONS, . Boots and Shoes. OMAHA, - - - - - NEB. | J. A WAKEFIELD, { s W TN S IER IR i t.ath, Shingles, Pickets, ‘ 8ASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, LIME, CEMEK FrL.ASTER, BEYTO. SWITATRE AGENT FOR MILWAUKR: OXMENT COMPANTY Near Union Pacific Devot. OMAHAW ¢ HENRY LEHMANN, ‘ WINDOW SHADES 'EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. 118 FARNAM ST. - - OMAHA STEELE, JJHNSON & C0., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOEBERS IN Ficur, S8alt, Sugars, Canned Goods, and All Grocers' Supplies. A Full Line of the Best Brands of CIGARS AND HMANUFACTURED TOBACCO. Agents for BENWCOD AILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER £0. DO 0 £ DN ALY SN Crial L. KN Gy POWER AND HAND 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, MINING MACHINERY, BELTING, H BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PIPE, aTRa 1 " PAGKING: AT WHOLESALE AND RITAIL = ' HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH'AND.SCHOOL:BELLE A Qor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb. . BOYIER O, ~—DEALERS IN—— § HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO. Fire and Burglar Pro> T AULTS, LOOKS: S, . 1020 Farnham Street, il ODEA. - WHOLRSALE DEALER TN DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS, Window and Plate Glass.: will find 14 %o tholr ad 4 Anyone contemplating bullding store, bauk, or any other fine anbage to corres ond with us before purchasing thelr Plate Glase, i C. F, GOODMAW, OMAHA -~ - . " "“MILLARD & PECK. Storage, Commission aud Wholesale Fruits 1421 & 1423 FARNHAM STREET. OONSIGNMENTS COUNTRY PRODUOCE SOLIOITED] 21, . gents for Peck & Baushers Eard, and Wilber Mills Flonr 1| OMAHA, - - - REFERENCES : OMAHA NATIONAL BANK, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., TOOTLE NEB MAUL & CO. PERFECTION HEATING AND BAKING is only attained by using CHARTER OAK 8toves and Ranges. WITH WIRE GAUZE OVER DOORS, .For sale by| MILTON ROGERS & SONS ONMLAELA. jull-m&ely WILLIAV SNYDER, MANUFACTURER OF CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, AND ROAD W AGONS. Firs-Olass Paining and Trimming, Repairing Promptly Done. 1319 Harnev, Cor: 14th, Omabs, Nob THE DAILY BRE---OMAHA TMHURSDAY ECEMBER 1 THURLOW WEED. Recollections of a Poor Man's Son, How Tall Oaks from Little Acorns Urow in Amerioa. Extracts of His Letters Myifirst employment was in attend. ance upon an ashery. The proocess of extracting lye from ashes and of boil- ing the lye into black white salts was commonplace enough, but when the molting down into potash came all was excitement and bustle. This labor was succeeded, when the spring had advanced far enough, by the du- ties of the p-bush.” This is the season to whioh the farmers’ sons and daughters look forward with agreeable anticipations. In the employment toil is more than liberally sweetened. The occupation and its associations are healthful and beneficial. When your troughs are dug out (of bass wood, for there were no buckets in those daye), your trees tapped, your sap gathered, your wood cut and your fires fed, there is leisure either tor reading or rking.” And what youthfal deniz f the sap bush will ever forget the ‘‘sugaring off” their share, or the transparent and delicious streaks of candy congealed and cooled in the snow ? Many a farmer's son has found his beat opportunity for mental improve- ment in his intervals of leisure while tending ‘‘sap-bush.” Such, at any rate, was my own experiense. At night you had only to feed the bet- tles and keep up your firos—the sap ng been gathered and the wood cut ‘‘vefore dark.” Dm::g the day we would also lay In & g stock of ‘‘fat pine,” by the light of which, blazing brightly in front of the sugar- house, in the pasture the serpent was condemned to assume as a penalty for tempting our great {firat grandmother, I have passed many and mauy a de- lightful night in reading. I remem- ber in this way to have read a history of the French revolution, and to have obtained from it a better and more enduring knowledge of its events and horrors, and of the actors in that great national tragedy, than I have re- ceived from all subsequent teachinge. I remember, also, how happy I was in being able to borrow the book of a Mr. Keyes, after a two-mile tramp through the snow, shoeles, my feet swadled in remnants of a rag carpet. In ithe autumn following our re- moval to Clncinnati, I had “‘worked out,” und earned leather (sole and up- per) enough for a pair of shoes, which were to be made by a son of Crispin (Deacon Badger, if I remember right- ly), who lived on the river a mile and a half away. The deacon, I doubt not, has gone to his rest, and I forgive him the fibs he told, and the dozen journeys I made barefooted over the trozen and ‘‘hubby” road in D:cem- ber before the shoes were done. My mind retains most vividly inci- dents rather than individuals. In those days, Liard as it may seem now, r men, however honest, lived in read of imprisonment. My father was one of a class whom ill fortune tracked through life. He worked hard, but never prospered. His horse was always sick, or lame, or was back- ing off the dock. The debtor's prison, therefore, was ever staring us in the face. But there was this blersed mit- igation of the horrors of a debt- There prison, of which a debtor with a reputation for honesty, and a wealthy friend who would sign his bond to remain upon the ‘‘limits,” might avail himself, The limits, ac- tually defined, extended to business parts of the village, 8o thata poor man stood some chancs of keeping the wolf from devouring his wife and children. This, however, was not the full mea: ure of the ]aw's humanity. On Sun- days the debtor was tree, and on these days of jubilee I used to roam, with my enfranchised father, dovn to the “‘Point,” over to the Shad Fishery, or up to ‘‘Jefferson,” with a deep sense of gratitude that he was permitted one day in the week to walk God's earth and breathe His atmosphers unre- strained. Creditors were on the watch alwaysa for truant debtors, who some- times failed to return to the limits be- fore 12 o'clock on Sunday night. In Everard Peck, of Rochester, for whom I worked after a wife and chil- dren were upon my hands (that wife, God bless her, always doing more than her share for the support of all), and to whose cffice I seemed to have been providentially attracted, I found that friend who ‘‘sticketh closer than a brother.” I rejoice that the memory of Frank- lin is cherished by printers, No page of history is adorned by a brighter name, His precepts and examples— both eminently wise and grod—have exerted a salutary and influence over the ciyilized worl But to rinters especially, have his teachings een profitable Stimulated by his virtues, and emulo of his fame, printers have since risen to high and enviablo stations, There 18 no man, I venturo to say, who has the slightest intellectual re- lation to our craft, who hes not been rendered wiser, better and happier by reading the life ot B min Frank- lin, And many a prioter’s devil, who, but for his fam i uid have groveled through life, has risen to eminence, Every state in the Union has fur- nished gratifying 1illustrations of this fact, Progress and mechanism have di- vested our art of much of its in- terest. I have never been in favor of innovations; and if our great exemplar, Fraoklin, could revisit earth, his spirit would grieve at the vandaliem which hss robbed “‘press work” of all its intellectuality, Benjamin Franklin, though a good “‘compositor,” was & good ! ‘pressman’ also, and worked as such, from choice, while a journeyman, But now only one branch of our trade is taught to apprentices, A printer is now no longer connected with the ‘‘press-room.” The printer of the present day is a stranger te its healthful toil, its rich humor, its merry laugh, its habitual jests, ‘and, I am constrained to remembar, its too fre- quent molr.hl:. 'l‘hi:h ou“l-lotl of the press-room, along wi bors, are all absolete. Jho, of the present generation of printers, knows any- thing of the mystic and magic power of :l’gutun “Or" And how can boy make a good printer whose initia tory stops were not taken in treading apelt? Who haa forgotton the weari- ness of that treadmill? I remember with gratitude the innovation which gave us dressed deer skins instead of green pelts for balls. Railroads, steambots, caual-boats, oto., hava had their share, too, in plucking flowers from our path. The journeyman printer, like the hatter aad shoemaker, used to go on his These were delightful peregrinations, 1 have traveled on foot from Onondaga to_Auburn, from Auburn to Utiea, from Utica to Hork- imer, thencs to Albany, thence again to Uticn, ete., working & few months a8 chanced, in each place, Time has wrought great changes, and nowhere else with such a legible hand as in your city gNew York.) I obtained a ‘‘situation” there in June, 1815. It seemn as if but a night had intervened, and that all I now soev, in waking, of grandeur and magnificence, of a wilderness of dwellings and for. est of masts, is the work of enchant- ment, Not a Case. Not a oase of rheumatism, not u case of neuralgia, not & oase of lameness, not a oase of pain or sprain—not ono—has failed w“go when attacked by Themas' Foleotric il — A NOVEBL TUNNEL. How an Eastern Superintendent Was Worked by an Old Timer, Bozoman (Mont.) Courie: While the Clark’s Fork mines aro not in the regions of eternal snow, the fall there is by no means (nconsid- erable. A story is told of a tunnel ranon a lead in that district to the depth of 225 feet, which is deserving of being immortalized in print, Some 0o a party of eastern o a purchase of the 8i . They sent out as superin- tendent a dapper little chap from New York, who knew no more about min- ing than a Crow Indian does of geom- etry. The superintendent, Mc. Smythe by name, ocame to Bozeman, hired a retinue of conks, teamaters, oto., and went out to the mine. It had not been devoloped to any extent, and after an iuepection of the prospect shaft, Mr. Smythe determined to have a tunnel 1un on tho property. Ho announced his intentions and asked for bids, An old timer and prospector named Jackson, hearing of Mr, Smythe's wants, went to see tho em. bryo superintendent It did not take Jackson long to ‘%ize up’ his man, and in a short time he had coutracted to ran a tunnel on the lead toa depth of 225 feet. Explaining to Mr. Smythe the character of the formation, aud telling him that in soft rock he could make fair headway, he undertook to ron the tunnel to the required length for $20 per foot, or $1,600 for the work. A payment was made Mr. Jackeon on the spot of $1,000, and Mr. Smythe went to St. Paul, the tunnel contractor agreeing to meske a weekly report as to the progress of the work, Mr. Smythe's visit was made in the Iatter part of November. Just prior to his coming there had been a heavy snow fall, and in the vicinity of the mine the snow averaged a great depth, Mr. Jackeon knew this, Ho started his tunnel, and instead of entering the mountain, took an easterly course around the side under the snow. The mouth was closely timbered, but after a distance of thirty feet the timbering was done in a less substantisl manner, the contractor using sixteen foot boards and 2x4 spiles, The track was laid in che same dantace as the sub- tial timbering. A car or two of waste iittered the roadway, and the appearance of a veritable tunnel pre- sented. In the latter part of Janua- ry, Jackson sent the superintendent word that the tannel was complete. Indue time Mr. Smythe arrived. Jackson conducted himtothe entrance, gave him the end of a rope which was exaotly 225 feet long, and told him he need not soil his clothes; that the tunnel was very wet, and that when the end was reached he (Jackson) would strike the face with a hammer, This was done. Mr. Smythe ex- pressed entire satisfaction with the work, paid Jackson the $3,600 re- maining due, and released him from his contract, The superintendent then went east and made his report. He returned six months later, pre- pared to at once prccoed with the de- velopment of the mine. His queries as to the meaning of the timbers around the mountan resulted in the discovery that he had been taken in, Jackson was last heard of in Tomb- stone, and the superintendeut of the Silver King lode hasn’t been heard from since, —— “What Can’t be Cur dur This old adage does not, signify that we must suffer the miseries of dyspepsia, when a medicine with the curative properties of Burdock Blood Bitters is available, It is one of the most substantial and reliable remedies old to day. Theatrical Deadheads, Indianapolls Journal, ements. This was all arranged. en the advance man remarked that their soenery was bulky, and probably it would bo necessary to pat it on & speoial oar to carry it. Just then a farmer who proposed to immigrate to a Kansas point, came in, stating that himself and his wife, his wife's sister and seven children were to immigrate there and he want- od the lowest rate. The looal agent named the rate, which was two and three-quarter cents per mile, per head, oarried thisside of the Missour: river, and an arbitrary rate was added on the wost side, Here the baggage i ne up, and it was foond that it wou!d cost him some $18 to get through, owing to excess in weight, The farmer, who was going west to farnish produce which would be oarrfed over these very roads, accopted the situation, oalled for the tickets, but, as he pulled out his pocket book, s ‘‘Look here, ocaptain, can't you put a little chap we have, about six years old, through free?” “Well, no; but I tell you what T will do - I will get him through on half fare,” The tarmer paid his meney and left, but the advance agent was still there using the paper of the ral Must be En. | ( road company and writing two or threo telegrams which he erh d sent free. The reporter left at this juno- ture, thinking that ¢ ho & general manager the theatrical party should r-y big rates and the horny-handed armer should be the favored one of the two. Flles ana sug Flies, ronches, ants, bed-bugs, rats, mice, gophers, chipmunks, cleared out by “Rough on Rata.” 16c, An Internal Revenue Offier Saved. PRoVIDNNCH, Aug. 29, 1682, Ervor or Bostox HERALD, DrAR Sik—During my term of service in the Internal Roverue Department of the United States, at the time my office was in ths city, T was afflict:d with a severe attack of Kidnoy D soase and at times suffered intensey. 1 recelved the medical advice of some cf our best physicians fo a long time, without belng benefitied by tholr SHORT LINE ~OF THE— OHERIOAGO, Milwaukee & St. Pau RAILWAY Ta now running its FABT EXPRESS TRAINS trom OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS ~WITH - Pullman’s Magnificent Sleepers AND THE Finest Dining Cars in the World. IF YOU ARE GOING EAST T CHIOAGO, MILWAUKEE, Or to any point beyond; or IF YOU ARE COING NORTH ST. PAUL OR MINNEAFPOLIS Take the BEST ROUTE, the Chicago, Milwaukee& 8t PaulR'y Ticket office located at corner Parnam and Fourteenth streota and at U. P. Depot and at Milla'd Hotel, Omaha. &S00 Time Table in another column, F. A. NASH, Genoral Avent. G. H, FOOTE, Ticket Agent, Omaha. 8.8, MERRILL, A, V. H. CARPRNTER, General Manager, "~ Genoral Paas. Agent, J. T. CLARK, GRO. H. HEAFFORD, Qeneral Sup't. Ass’t Gen, Pass, Agent. prescriptious. Being discouraged by the failusso | § the d-etors to help me, and being urged to use Hunt's Remed, o friend who had tisted ite merits, although] reluct:nt to try a patent medi- icine, T was fina'ly induced to try the remedy, ant prcured two bottles ot it, and commenced taking it falthfully acosrdiog to the directions, Before 1'had taken It three days the excrutia- | 1 ting pain in my back had disappeared. and before T had used two bott'es I was entirely cured Whenever, from over-exsrtion or a violent cold, the pains in my kidneys return, n few (doses of Hunt's Remedy qnickl Before closing I beg to mention th cure of a triend of ne in New whom I rec mmended this val ab o medicine, He was suffering severcly from an_ attack which was pronounced by bis physician a decided case of Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. 1 obtained two bottleaot Hunt's Remedy for him, & d he com. menced taking it, snd began to improve at once, and was speelily restored to health, and he at- tributes th ug of bis lifo, urder the blessing ofa merc ful Providence, to Hunt's Remedy. Another frioud of mine in New York, to whom Irecommended Hunt's Remedy, was suftering verely from k dney diseace, and wis entirely ed of it after a'ng this wondertul wedicine ouly & ehoit pariod Feeling d.eply grateful forthe great bonefits experienc.d by my friends and myelf from the use of Huat's Remedy. 1 feel it tobe my datys 9 woll 8 n zreat privelsge, to furnish you thi voluntary and untolicited stitement of facta foy the informatioa of your Iarge number of readers, many <f whom are undoubtedly ruffering trom tnis widely preadipg scourge, and I believe thay 1t 14 the bost medicine now known, and that 1t will cure all ca s of kidney diseases that can be cured, 1 8hall be pleased $0 confer with ‘any ore who way desire an interview tegarding the state’ ments bereln contained, Truly Yours, RICHMOND HENSHAW, 99 Mossor Strest, ESTABLISHED 1868, SIDE BPRING A‘rrAcélbuxN'r—No'r PATENT A. J. SIMPSON. LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 1400 snd 1411 Dodge Btreat, aug 7-mo 6m Omapa, Nep ALL TRUE FELLOWSF:, Worthily point to the “HUB PUNCH" A3 an articlo of such rare and exceoding merit & doserve a placo on every sideboard, One of the mysteries in railroad | = operations is that so much is done in the f courting the non-paying theatrical busi A representative of the Journal, a day or two since, chanced to be in one of the local out- side offices when one of those cheeky " | advance agents of a theatrical troupe came in, The first thing he called for was & railway guide, the looking over of which, laying out his route for a couple of weeks, occupied fully fifteen minutes, His first request was a pass for himself and his lithographer to & point 384 miles away, with a dozen of stop-offs, Then, in a fow days, his programme distributer would bealong, and he wished a pass for himand some 800 pounds of baggage. Then, at the same time, there would be boxes weighing 1,300 pounds, which he wished sent through to the terminus of the voute laid out, free, This was all consented to, The advance agent then remarked that there was 26 cents a day storage on the last named box, which he wished the local agent would arrange with the | m baggageman to throw off. He then asked for an order for the treasurer of the troupe for the thirteen tickets, in which the amount (1 cent per mile for each) would bestated. Then the mal ter of connection was brought up, and it was found necessary to holx the train thirty to forty minutes at three points, that they might fulfil their en- | e A\ AB ocial Glass of Hub Panch is & most welcome accessory of friendly Intercourse peculiarly accoptable at partics. Uncork, an tis ready. Punches brewed at roquest are fa behind it in flavor, Gifted orators never dis-lose The real source whence thelr eloquence flows— Beliove me, It comes, atter dinner or lunch, From a flowing bowl of GRAVES' HUB PUNCH Tho name and title—*HUB PUNCH" s adop- ted asa trido mark. All unauthorlzed use of this trade mark will be promptly prosecutod. Q, H. GRAVES & BONS, BOSTON, MASE, by Grocers and Wine Merchants everywhere, Trade supplied a6 Manufacturer's prices by M. A, MoNumara; families supplied by A, M, Gladetone, Omaha Neb + | Send 81, 82, 84, or 85 for & re- = |tail box by Express of the best i () [Condies i America, put up in fi alegant boxes, and strictly pure, ; z |Suitable for presents, Expres 1 <L [charges light. Refors to all Chi- [C] oago, Try it once. O. ¥, QUNTBHI! aloctioner, v In the old Favorite and PRINOIE.AXLLINGD —FOR CHICAGO, PEORI 8T. LOUIS, MILWAUKEE. DETROIY, NIAGARA FALLS NEW YORK,BOSTON, And all Poluts East and®@outh.East. THE LINE COMPRISES Noarly 4,000 miles. Solld Bmooth Btool Track 11 connoctions are made in UNION DEPOTE has_s Natlonal Repntation aa being the reat Through Oar Line, and s universall onceded $0 be the FINEST EQUIPPED Rail. oad In the world for all classes of travel. Try it andyou will find trayeling & loxury g a ort. Through Tickets via rhis Colebrated Line for salo ab all offices in the Wost. All Information about Rates 0 Car Acocmmodations, Time Tables, &c., cheogtully given by applyining to 54 Vico-Pres’s & Gen. Manager, Chicago PERCIVAL LOWELL, Gon, Passenger Agi. Ohloago W. J. DAVENPORT, Gon, Agent, Gonioll Blafle. H, P. DUELL, Ticked Agt. omahs mnio-ed 1y éimtx City & Eacmu T ATLIERC.AID. TEE BIOUX OITY ROUTE Rune » Aolld Traln Through from Oouncil Blufls to 8t. Paunl Without Uhange Time, Only 17 Houra ALY MILES .'E;;l SHORBTES ROUTY COUNOIT, BLUFFS gh WITHOU 4 £A. Paul, via Counctl Blutta noon TEN HOURS IN ADVANCE OF ANY OTEKS BOUTE, acmbor tn Making the Sfoux Olty Rou frals. Tue Bhortes) Gue tiat your Tokohs Tesd via bbe “lous 01ty aud Pacifo Ratiroed 7 8. WATTLES, J.R, BUCHA{AN Huporintendent. Gen' Pasz. Agen Missourl Valley 1a, W. ¥, DAVIS Boushwestern Pasenger Counell Hluds FAST TIME| Lo goln Easf take (e (ihicago & Northwest: wmarce ([ wwaw. Traine loave Omans 8:40 p. m, and 7:40a. m For tull lntormation call oo H. P, DEUEL, Ticke and Farnam ete,, J, BELL, U. ) pot. or st JAMEES T, CLARK, Genor J. . ROGERS & 00, ACGENTS F.'L. Bommers & Co's | CELEBRATED CRACKERS BIBCUITS, OAKES, BLES JUA]‘%D NOVELTIES. Wholesale Manufacturing CONFECTIONERS AND DEALERS IN Fruits, Nuts and Il 8 14th St. NEB| e of charge. OMHA, . . oORNIGE” Wokxs1 1212 Harney 8, - Omrha, Heb, MANUFACTURERS OF Galvanized Iron CORNICES, ] DORMER WINDOWS, FINTALS, Tin, Iron and Slate Roofing, Spocht's Patent Motalic Skylight, Patent Adjusted Ratchet Bar and Bracket Shelving. I am the general azent for the above line of goods. IRON FENCING, Ovestings, Balustrades, Vorandat fl’.‘n‘l‘ Rallin, o0 and Window and lar rein; el Hynoinths Taltos. Orocuses. 'all Planting. Large § et shown ln'flluuo- e Tilustrated Oatalogue free. Sond for te, Hiram 8ibley & Co., SEEDMEN, h v The seat of all diseases of this oa- ture is in the blood, as any one mani- festly knows; therefore, if you purify the blood, the diseate, in any form or stage, disappears, Read what those say who haye tested the mertts of the t vegetable blood purifior, 8. 8. 8, t cloanses the blood of all scrofulons taint so thoroughly that the disease never returns. I had sorofula for seven months, the ulcer covering the entire surface of both legs. After having tried the ususl remedies with no relief, I re- sorted to 8, 8. 8,,and am glad to that six bottles has effectually nu:x . 8. LeNresty, me, Ga. I suffered from scrofula 17 years, My shin bones were covered with ul- cers and one mass of rotten flosh, and the odor was almost unbearable, All remedies and treatments failed until I began taking 8. 8. 8. Previons to. taking 1t I at times could scarcel walk. Now I can walk all day, and have to thank 8. 8, 8. and it only for my cure. Tros, McFARLAND, Atlanta, Ga. 200 Bome thirty years ago there lived fu Montgomery, Ala, a young man who was terribly afflicted with Scrof- nla, After being treated for a long time by the medical profession of this town with no benefit, he commenced taking 8. 8. 8, After persistentl taking it two months he was cnre Being acquainted with him for 20 years thereafter, I can testify that the disease never returned. J. W. Busuor, J. P,, Hot Springs, Ark, [ 1'2“9 will be paid S0 sy ind, on uL oot sl slum or any ral substanoe, BWIFT SPECIFIO Price’ot Small sise, 9100, jars #old by all Dmeeist il foom & i form ot 1o ne You w guredity n, m::m‘ Pa., -n“ wan w0 thatt e o tor than for years. I cannot praise your Biters t00 much.” R.Gibbe, of Buftalo, N. Y., writes: ‘Your urdock Blos » Bitters, In chronic diseases of the lood, liver aud kidnoys, have been warked with aioeess. . Thavo used ‘with best results, for torpidity of the liver, aod in a0 of & friend 5t mine wulloriug Hom diopey, the effect was marvelous." Bruce Turner, Rochester, N. Y. \wiltes: 1 bave been subject to sorious disorder of the' and unablo to attend to_business; Bitters relieved me before half & il e ) 11 suforod with ' dull pain_ thiough Ty Toth lung and shoulder, Lostmy wprits, appetite and oolor, and coid with aifioulty. kéep up all tter oo di- 'was used ‘cure me,* ' | day.” Took your Burdock Blood n it 6o paln since firsh weck af- rdock Blood Bitters thol mprovement wad 80 visiblo that I wag ast . 1 can now, though 1 yoars of age, o s falr and teasonable dey's. C. Blacket Robisson, proprietor of The Onnada Presbyterian, Toronto, Ont., writes: *‘For years 1 sufféred greatly from oft-recurring headache. I used your Burdock Blood tors with foand [ o, ud e It 1 Detter than for years " Hra. Wallues, Baftalo, N, ¥ , writes: *1 bave nsed Burdock Blood Bitters for nervous and bl ous » adachos, aud can & i Yo anyone 0 & & cure for billiouaness. “Bre. tha’ Mullnoliand, Albagy, N. ¥ , wrttest “For boveral yuars | ave sulfeied ticm olt-secar- ring billious headahos, dyspepsia, and com- lafite peculiar 10 my s0x. ¢ jour Birdock Biood Bittors 1 am sntirely relieved.* Prics, $1.00 per Bottie; Tria Botties 10 Ot FOSYER, MILBURN, & Oo., Praps. BUFFALO, . X. 0. Bold nmwhiufinéol ' A il package of ' BLACK-DRAUGHT %

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