Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 29, 1882, Page 7

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TITLE AB . . Lands and L MONEY TO LOA N NOTARIES PUBLIC AND COUNCIL BLUFFS - - MRS. D. A, BENEDIGT, To get my Holiday Suppliss, - Where oft I bought befsre, BOSTON TEA GO, 16 Main Street. _OFFIGE £ ht and 8old. AT LOW RATES. CONVEYANCERS. Oh, meet me at the Store THE LEADING DEALER IN EAIXIIIR GG OO DS, 837 Broadwav, Counocil Bluffs, Jowa. Is the old Favorite and EFRINCOIERF.A X LINGD FOR— CHICAGO, PEORI 8T. LOUIS, 'MILWAUKEE. DETROI T, NIAGARA FALLS, NEW YORK,BOSTON, And all Poluts East and@outh-East. THE LINE COMPRISES Rearly 4,000 miles. Solid Smooth Steel Track 1l connectlons are made In UNION DEFOT8 has_a Nationsl Reputation e boing the reat Through Car Line, and 15 univorsall onceded to be the FINEST EQUIPPED Rall. oad In the world for all clasacs of travel. Try it and you will finé travoling » lnxury Instcad of a discomtors. Through Tiokets via thin Colobrated Line fos wale at all officos in tho Weat, All Information about Rates o ¥are, Slecping Car Acocmuodations, Time Tavlos, &c. wilt choerfully glven by applyining o T.d; POTTER 9 Vico-Pres't & Gon. Manager,Chicage, PERCIVAL LOWELL, Gen. Passenter Agh. Chicaqo, W. J. DAVENPORT, Gen, Agent, Conuicll Blufts, H. P, DUELL, Tickot Agh. omaim 1 ['pooM 20 180 103) iTEvana [Wrought or Cast Iron.] MOST POWERFUL! | FURNAGES IN THE WORLD. RTICHARDSON, BOYNTON & 00 CHICAGO, 1LLS: Embod; 2 improvements, Mor, HA G e e e Ly g | and u'larger volume of pure furnace made. f0)d by Piercy and Bradford, Omaha. GOLD ROPE. Thelntrinsic merlt and superlor quality of our Gold Rope Tobacco has induced other manntuc- turers to put upon the markot #0ods similar to our brand Jn name snd siyle which aro offered and sold for less moey than the genuine Gold Rope. Wao caution the t ade and consnmer to see that our name snd trade mark aro upon each lump. The only genuine and original Gold Rope Tobacco {s manufactured by THE WILSON & McNALLY TO BAOCCO JOMPANY. i AND BLOOD OR SKIN DISEASES IN ANY STAGE, Disappear before the perfect alterative and tonio effect of the greatest of all Blood Purifiers, Itso completely roots out all ison from the blood and braces the deb- litated system, that diseases of this nature disapperr like onaff before the wind, 8, g‘ 8., cured me of Ecalp Sores, Bores Nostrils and Kars, after erar¥thln wn to the medical profession had failed, Three months have passed since [ quit taking 8. B, 8.; there is nosymptom of the disease 1emaining; permanently cured, an any I am tands nnrljlltdslo:r Blood Dis- eases,” NO, 8, TAGGART, BSalamanca, N, Y, “§, 8, B, stands without a r, The ofession will bave toacknowledge it Becifio for Blood Disenses.” Dr N, L. GaLLoway, Monroe, Ga, “About four or fiye weeks ago I was ailicted with & very aggravated type of BloodDisease. I commeuced using 8 'S, 8, and after taking the first bottle felt wo wush relieved tfut I bought five more, and am glad to say, after using four of them, fa e e T PHYSJEI_I}H Al months,” C, G. RaroLrr, 3 Lichmond, Va. “‘After suffering from the worst Blood Diseace for more than two years, sud have ing been treated by several eminent physi. cians, confined to my room und bed the greater part o he ime, my body covered with copper-colored sores from the size of a pea to that of silver half-dollar, I was well nigh in despair. At last I commenced taking S, 8, 8. Ina short time I began to improve in flesh, all the sores healed,and T could feel and know that I was wel to 8, 8. 8, mnst the credit be given of my_entire restoration to health, I have nof)taken a dose for over six m apd a8 free from sores or blew ol Lorrie Ross, Atlant d after taking the fir n two weeks w ble the waters + W, Re, Tmpro of 8, “Our science bas not wmade known acom- bination equal to 8. 8. 8, for skin or blood diseases.” T, L, MASSENBUKG, Ph. G., Macon, G, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS vill §ivo mope Hoal ( CHICABO, ROCK ISLAND AND PACIFIC. D. Moines ONICAGO, CTICAGO AND NORTHWRSTRRY. Accon, RANRAS Doy Mall and Express.. Depart. Overland Ex. | COUNCIL BLUFFS RAILROAD - TIME TABLE. URLIXGTON AND QUINCY. 00 p m THE DAILY BEE-FRIDAY. DECEMBER 29 i WATANIL, 8P, LOVIS AND PACITIO Depart. * Arrive. 8 Mall and Ex.. 9:45am | Mall and Ex,, 4:30 pm. Cannon Ball. 4:30 p m | Cannon Bail.;11:05 a m KIOUX CITY AND PACTFIC. Ari I [ For Sioux C ity Fem Sloux For Fort Niobi 2 Nob Frm Fort Ne am| Neb.. For 8t. Pau p m | From §t. Pavl..8:50 a m CHICAGO, MILWAUKER AND 8T, PAUL. Leavo Council Bluffs. Arrives Council Bluffa, Mail and Ex am | Mail and 6:55 p1u | ¢ Atlantic Ex pm | Atlantic tl CITICAGO, MILWAURKR AND BT, ¢ Leaves On . Arrives at On Mail and am | Pacific I ¥ t Atlantic Ex..{3:40 p m | Mail and E: *Excopt Sundays. {Excopt Ssturdays. §Except Mondays. Daily. Counctl Blufts & Omaha Street R. R. Leave Council blufls. Leave Omaha. Sam9am10am,|8am9am 10am,|s Mamim2pm3p|ilam, ipm 2pm,3p(d m, 4pm,5pm,6pm. |m,4pm,spm,6pn. The Tree Question. To the Fditor of The Chicago Tribune, Norwmay, Ttn, December 21.--The intereat you have taken in forestry - duces me to sond you some intere: ting facts, and, what ia more, specimens, proving the valao of the kpecisns cat aips, not only as a durable wood, but 88 growlog to a largoe size, when po. mitted g0 to do; and, moreover, as wnapplyitg lomber ospable of & kigh fiieh and of bringing out most beau tifal eolors. The impreesion, I find, is widesp that this tree, however valuablo for ita durability as puste to and for be set In or on the ground, railrozd ties, eto , never gr good.sizad troe lite the hlack- aud other trees ndaptod for lum overlooking the roseon for this of faots which is aimply this, the in vary seldom per than needed for a fence-post or house- support till the fatal “woodman’s-ax” brings it to the groun Knowlng T was a tres-man, and had lacely raid momothing publicly aboat this particular tree, a gentloman at Mound City, Ill.--Uapt. Adkins, of the United States river improvement servico—a fow days ago tnvited me to inspect some catalpa posts which had boon set in tho ground in that city twonty-seven yenrs ago and lately duy up. I found lying in a pi'e some twonty or more posts of this kind, not one of which seemed at all decayed, except that in a {ow carosa vory littlo treo itted togrow larger and grows a fine fodder weighed four tors. The Marshfield ecommittee awarded me the preminme on a yield of 99 3 7 bushe's to the acre. They adopted 70 pounds of ears for a bushel, one ot the committee having purchased the ssme kind of corn at that weight, and it shelled 56 pounda The ‘Scituate ¢)mmiites adopted 76 pounde, as there woro some twenty entering for the premium, and ueed that weight for all, irrespeotive of drguoss, which weight made the yield 91 11.19 bushels, The same field was planced again this season. Firstplowed, then dressed with eight cords ot barn manure, and shoroughly harrowed in, and planted as the previous year, ex. cept the drills were six fect apart. o | The corn camo up and grow sixty stalks to the ronniog rod. Tt was cultivated out tw and later in the senson I went thro and mowed the weode, a0 I did not consider it wiso to pull them out on acoount of the drouth, No hand hoe was used either year. The yield, adopling 66 pounds for s bneliel, was 110 bushels per acre, or 76 pounds of eara gave 100 bushels. The roason I had drilled six fest apart was, I intended to seed down the field, and walted for rain until too late, but the distance was beneficial to the corn, It grew longer oara and thereby a heavier yiold of qrain, *'I think this mothod best whero land s heavily manured, as it is posei- of what is called the sap-wood was slightly sffected. 1In this {ree, as is wol! known, the sap, or white wood, 18 quite limited, so that if ail had de- cayed it would not have affected the value of the poste, As proof of what I have hero stated 1 herewith submit for your inapection a sccion of one of those fence-posts covering six inches above and a like istance below tho ground eurface, ¥here decay is always most rapid, (Chis and other samples here alluded v will be deposited with H, W, S, Cleaveiaud, lanaseape architest, room 2|10, Washington street ) What, however, interested mo atill more, because illustrating a point i . | volved in mauch more doubt, was a pile of specicsa catalpa lumber, cut rom a tree grown on the Ohio river *[hard by, which atrangely enough, con- idering the scarcity of such lumber, I found piled within ten feot of tho posts and beside the mill where sawed. The proprictor-—whose name I regret o say I bave forgotten—kindly con- ented that I should saw off a section of the top board of the pile, not be- cause it was tho widest—for 1t was not—but that it sufliciently iilustratod he point I had in view, the width of he board. As you wili ses, it is over wenty-five inches in width and was aken from a log sixteen feet long and over four feet in diameter, cut for the meanufacturs of hand boats or ekiffs, This, too, I offer for your inspection, and will “e found as above indlcated by thoso having doubts on this sub- oot I also doposit a sample of the wood rom Medical The trostment of all diseases and | ficultios pocullar to females specialty. JACOB SIMS, Attornoy and Coansellor at Law, COUNCIL LLUFFS, IOWA, Offico—Broadway, betwoen Ppractice in State and Fedo troots, Yill urta 'D. M. CONNELL, Funeral Director and Undertaker. No. 17, North Main 8t., Councll Blufs, Calls promptly answered at all hours, nizbt or ay. New hearse and ) ondon y are run in coun, MBS, B. J. HARDING, M. D., AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Eleotrapathie Institution, delphin, Ponua, Office Cor, Broadway & Blenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. y to the Union Pacifle 3 begin their trips at Electrician tion . ) Lisside my wife, s competent lady, will attend adion, ¥, M, LOCKWO0O] MAURUR & ORAIG, |ARTISTIC POTTERY, Rich Out Glass, Fine French China, Bilver Ware &o., COUNCIL BLUFFS 840 Buospwar 'BATH INSTITUTE, FUR LADIES & GENTLEMEN, Corner Bryant Street, ( One door north of Doh | thore suffering from r | Neuralgin, Lumbago and other distressing ml- ments may find relfef in the timely uso of either the | Thermo-Electric = ¥edicated Bath 1 desire and hope for the patronage of physi ians who may wish for their patients 1his auxil and will give any so directed every possible s Opora House, where Colds, Rheuratism, MRS, H, J, AILTON, M, D,, ND SURGEON, CounoiliBluffy. Sublivan & Fitzgerald, DEALERS IN GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, COrockery, Glassware, BOOTS, SHOES, ETC Also agenta for the fojjowlng lines of Steamship Companies : Cunard, Anckor, Gulon, Steamship Companice, DR AFYTS on the Roysl Bank of Ireland and Bank , Dublin, Those w10 intend to send for tricnds to any part of Europe will find ib to thel: of Irela niereet to call on Sullivan & Fitagerald, AGENTS, [ 848 Broadway, Counoil Bluffs American, and Blete when dregzed, taken from tho samo board, from which will be seen tho high finish of which it is suzceptible, and the rich colors that are broughi out by the mechanic. The lato lament- ed E, E. Barnoy, rallroad car-builder, of Dayton, O., who experimented with this lumber, and has written much in favor of this epecies of the catalpa tree and its cultivation, has well said—and I may add with not a particle of per- eonal interest to bias his judgment— “‘this {s & most valuable wood, not alone for railroad ties and posts to be 83t in and on the ground, but for gén- eral and ornamental purposes, such as house ard car finishing, furniture, ete,” In conclusion I will ropeat the cau- tion heretofore given to those desiring to piant young treer: Be suro you buy the right kind, and will add— least it muy be said that I have ‘‘an ax to grind”—that my stock of catalpas is all sold, Jesse W, Ferw, Fattening Poultry. Ameriean Poultry Yard, No green food is now des’rable. All you axe aiming for is to put additional flesh upon these fowls, and to do this in the shortest pessible time. Solong as they eat woll they will increase in weight, up to a certain period, treated in this manner, and two or three weeks will bring them to thetr beet, If they become cloyed, and lose thelr appetite at an early date, after thus being cooped up, kill them off at once, They have reached the most profitable day of their existenco, and will no longer improve in the desired dircc- tion, In this eimple way we havo fat- tened many previously well-kept fow!s in three weeks's time satisfactorily, and we have known many hundreds thua fattened that have dressed hand- somely in some days less time; the mode thus bricfly recommended being economical, as well as expeditious, cleanly, and very oconvenient, A greater amount of flesh can be pro- duced in proportion to the grain fed, when confinement is resorted to, and, if the prisoners are well attended, and the term of incarceration does not last too long, there is not much danger of disease. Oune Hundred and Ten Bushelsof Corn Per Acre. - | Mixvor and Farmer, It i generally well known that Mr, Charles O, Ellms, Scituate, Mass., was the owner of the noted Jersey Belle, whoso butter record for the year was 704 pounds, but 1t is notso well known that he is one of the premium corn raisers of tho state, He having se- oured the first preminm on the best acre of corn raited in the town, two years in succession, and securing the remarkeble yleld of 100 bushels of corn in such an unfavorable season as the last, we wrote him asking him to give our readers the methods of cul- tivation, which he has done as followas: one acre of corn that was en- terdd in the neason of 1881, for the premiums offerad by the Marshfield Agriculinral and Horticultural society, and a citizen of Boston, for the best one acre of corn raised in Scituate had beon In graes for twelve years, It was plowed and twelve cords of barn manure harrowed in, Corn planted in drills three and a half feet apart, by a horse and Bullings' plan- ter, dropping seed (twenty quarts) and 200 pounds of Bradley's phosphate at the same time in one hour, It sowed five kernals to every eleven inches. The corn came up thick and was firet f'""d out, throwing the dirt away rom the corn; then a cultivator was used twice. The variety was Long fellow, which usually has & small cob blo to got sixty ears to the running rod, thereby securing a large yield of grain, But back of all this, I have a herd of cows to help moe out, and they aro tho ones that deserve the credit; with the large amount of manure they furnished, 1 have no trouble to raiso corn, “‘My herd consiats of three daugh- ters and two granddaughters of the great Jersey Bolle, and some others, headed by Amideo, son of the late Oharles Sharpless’ celebrated cow, Young Paney, for which he paid $2,600. Amidee was sired by Lord Byran, imported in Black Bess, who, with Lady Maud (2 daughter of Tiord Byron), carried off the honors ef the Centennial,” How to Husk an Ear of Corn. Kansas Farmer, In last weok's Farmor E. W. Brown tolls us how to husk an ear of corn, requeating if any one had a better way that would make it known, As I think [ have a better way, I will give mine: COatch the ear with the left hand, thumb towards the butt, and the lit. tle finger about opposite the tip of the corn (not the husk) In- sort tho husking peg o as to tako not loss than one-half ot the husks, bring down with a quick motion, piving them a sharp pull at the butf; close the Jeft hand around the remainder of the husks, at the same time grasping the ear with the right hand, thumb toward the tip and the little finger near the butt, and break off by press- ing the tip of the ear from you with the thumb, and at thesame time bring the butt tawards you by a short, quick jerk with the fingers, still holding to the husks with the left hand, I takes foewer motions by thia method than the other, and every mo- tion takes time. A person unaccus- tomed to this way, may at firat find it diffioult to bring tho ear out clear of huske, but by carefully following the above directions and a little practice, there_will be no trouble that way. Lest Mr. Brown try this way long enough to get the ‘éhnn" of it and roport, . 8. BozArTH, Larrie River, River Co., Kan. About Apples. The buyers all want red applos. They say they sell the best. This fancy for color has given Baldwins o boom, as they are red and handle and ship well. There is another advant- age for the fruit—-the tree Is hardy and a couatant bearer. I do not like the apple to eat, but on account of its market value and the hardiness of the tree and strong bearing propen- sity, in an orchard of 100 trees I would plant seventy-five Baldwins Too many varieties of froit are a nuisance. They make an endless amount of work, and many kinds, while they have a value for home use, are unsuited for keeping or shipping, They do not pay. The Esopus Spit- zouburgh, I think, is the daintiest, fl - vored apple that grows, My mother would have no other for her minco pies and company apple sauce—-this had to be extra nice, you know--bat slnce the country has bacome so open, exposed to the cold winds, the trees winter-kill. The Spitzenburgh wants protection and a virgin soil. The latter requirements can be made vp in part by the use of ashes, and the former by planting wind-breaks ot overgreens, I treated a stunted Fameuse apple tree twenty years ago with & wheelbarrow load “of leached ashes, and that tree ehows the benefit of it to this day., Simehow, we all like the kind of apples we used to eat when we wera young, and so Rhode Tsland Greenings, Gilliflowers still have a place in our hearts and in my orchard. They bring to mind the times when neighbors used to ‘“‘come over and spand the avmin’"~thuu old-fashioned, informal visits, in which apples filled ah fmportant part of thesocial cheer, They used to keep company with the doughnuts when we were young, A Drove of Posesums, Charlotte Observer. Mr, E. T. McCord, of Possum Walk, this county, left last Thanks- giving dsy for the mountalos to col- lect & drove of possums, and ioforma- tion received from him yusterday indicates that he has been eminently euocessful, He arrived at Davidson College about 10 o'clock yesterday with 123 porsums, which i;o drove along the rosd as if they were so many hogs He camped at Davidson COollege lust night, securing the drove by means of poles, having ten possums tothe pele He keeps three dogs barking all night, and these keep the possutas so frightened that they hold o firm grip to the polos with their tatls and never think of loosing thelr grip until sun-up, A Royal Eagle. Walker Connty (Gs.) Messenger, J. H, McWhorter killed last Fil- day, one-half wile from his house, an eagle that measurod six and & half feet from tip to tip. Color black, with brown head and white tail. The spread of the claw a little over seven Inches, The royal bird had tried to secure a duck for his vext meal, but failed, Mr, MoWhorter loaded bis gun with 1 ———en THE OTTAWA CYLINDER CORN SHELLER, amall buckshot, and at the first fire broke the oagle’s leg, but falled to bring him to the ground. When ho flow off ke followed him, and sucoeed- od in getting a shot at him on the wing, whioh put an end to his prowl- ing. Logan's Ind Reforms. It is reported that Senator Logan contemplates offering & resolution of inquiry in the senate as to the coat of Indian education, with a view to as- ocertaining c fliclally whether the pres. ont aystem of educatlon is not defect- ive and extravagantly oxpensive, Mr. Logan was one of the senators who took western trips last summer. Like the reat, he brought back a great deal of more or less useful information, That which Mr, Logan obtained led him to believe that the present system of Indian oducation is inefficient and costly to the verze of extravagance. He belioves that it should be abol. ishcd and that a system of practical education, which would prepare the men to be soldiers in our army, or furmers on their reservations, and the women to be housekecpors after the olvilized foshion, shouid be substituted for it. He m hat the present ays- tom Is not only e tially defective, but gross abuses cxiat in its practloal workings. In a speech in the senate last week be thus described what he saw on three reservations: ‘At one place whero the Indians had been sustaining themselves for two hundred years peacoably and quictly, who have never had an out- break since history has known them. I found a achool house with school books and echool furnniture all piled up in one corner of the room. School had been taught thera, they told me, and so the white wan said, for four years, I examlned for two days through tha: Indian town to find a man, woman or child who could speak the English language, but did not find one who oould speak three words, The government hed been paying for the education of those people for four years, I didn't find any echolars at the echool, aud didn’t find the teacher there. He had been gone for eight months, I found a church bell in the middle of the house, in the middle of the floor of the school, that cost $200, and there was no church. I saw another tribe of Indians who were 180 atrong. Not one of those Indians ever lived inside of a house, unleas he was captured and taken inside of a fort. They live in the brush, what they call ‘hogaus,’ on the ground. They sleep on skins, live on melons and corn, and raise sheep, and they are a rich tribe of Indians, At that Indian res- crvation there was a school house built, I suppose with government money, out of hewn stone as large as any of the large first.class schoot houses In the city of Washington, Ta thac school house they had recitatior. rooms, the finest school furniture, all kinds of books and large maps hung on the wall. They hlg & dormitory for the sleeping of Indians that would nccomodate two hundred, and yet there wus not a scholar at that school, but the books were piled up all around in the cornors of that school houce, I saw that, I vlsited some ten tribes of Indlans I have spoken of two. 1 will speak of one more. The last tribe, then, I shall refer to without mentioning the name. I went to the Indian agency, and there I found a school house. The school house was twelve miles away from the Indian agency, so that the childron either had to go and board there with the agent, or had to travel twelve miles to the school. They refused to do either, and yet this government has paid teachers and the books show that they have taught 75 schol The chief of that tribe is a very in- telligent man, though he could not speak English, and I had to use anin- terpreter, -nJ throngh him he told me that they never had five scholars at any one day in that school, and they got & few old women and their chil- dren te go In there at different times and |u£ for about an hour and look over the pictures, and then they charged them all as scholars, I believe he siated the truth,” THE BAD AND WORTHLESS Are never imitated or counterfeited. This is especially true of a family medloine, and it is positive proof that the remedy imituted is of the highest value. As soon as it had been tested and proved by the whole world that Hop Bitters was the purest, best and most valuable family medicine on earth, many imitations sprung up and began to steal the notices in which the press and people of the country had expressed the merits of H. B,, and in every way trying to induce suf. foring invalids o use their stuff in- stead, expecting to make money on the credit and good name of H. B, Many others started nostrums put u) in similar style to H. B., with vari- ously dovised names in -which the word ““Hop" or ““Hops"” were used in away to induce peeple to believe they were the same s Hop Bitters. All such pretended remedies or cures, no matter what their style or name ls, and espicially these with the word ““Hop" or *Hops" in their name or in any way connected with them or their name, are {mitations or counterfeits, Beware of them. Touch none of them. Uso nothlug but genuine Hop Bitters, with & bunch er cluster of green Hops on the white label, Trust nothing else, Druggists and dealers are warned against dealing in fmita- tions or courterfelts, . AL AGENT GEORGE F. CRAWFORD, VWEQLES AXE BUYER AND SHIPPER OF EGGCS. No. 519 South COUNCIL BLUFFS, Main Street. IOWA I pay the highest Market Prica and Deduct no Commiission, A .E. WA Y NE & CO. (Buccessors to J. W. Rodefer) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND |OWA ALL GOALSI ALSO CONNELLSVILLE COKE,CEM Office No, 84 Pearl Street, Hleventh Avenue, Oouncil Bluffs, NEW STORE. New Eroods. NEW YOE& PRIGES. For Dry Goods and Fancy Goods go to L. HARRIS, 734 Lower Broadway, SHORT LINE ~OF THE— OEIOCAGO, Milwaukee & St. Paul RAILWAY Is now running its FAST EXPRESS TRAINS trom OMAHA AND OOUNOIL BLUFFS ~WITH— Pullman's Magnificent Sleepers ~AND THE— Finest Dining Cars in the World. IF YOU ARE GOING EAST CHIUAGO' MILWAUKEE, Or to any point beyond; or IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH To ST. PAUL OR MINNEAFOLIS Take the BEST ROUTE, the Chicago, Milwaukeed 86, PaulR'y Ticket office locatod at corner Farnam and Fourteenth streets aud at U. P. Depot and at Millard Hotel, Omaha, £ Bee Time Table in another columa. F. A, NASH, Genoral Avent, Q. H, FOOTE, Ticket Agent, Omaha, 8.8, MERRILL, A, V. H, CARPENTER, ENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Yards Oor., Highth Street and GRAY'S BPECIFIC MEDICINE 8pormator: rhes, Impot: ency, and all Disoascsthat: follow aa & fi’n“ TAKINQ. voquence ot AFTER TARING, -Abuse; a8 Loss of Momory, Universal Lasst tudo, Paln {n the Back, Dimnoss of Vision, Pre mattiro Old Age, and many othor Disoases thad load to Insaniby ‘or Consuroption and & Prema fure Grave. £&Full particulars in our pamohlet, which wo_deairo to send freo tv mall to overy one, #47 Tho Bpecific Medicine 16 sold by, all drugiiste b §1 per package, or 6 packages for §6, or will bo sent froe by mail on reot1ph of the money, by addressing ~ THEGRAY 4EDICINE 00; Buffalo, N.'Y. me ~oof mety e of MepEittare L one i, Liood) dver o nervee | You witl hel sarea i ouung Hop B Iyon erest| Boid by drog. piy we i " ista. Send fos Fow e vy Circuler t DOCTOR STEINHART'S ESSENGE OF LIFE. FoR OLD AND YOUNO, MALK AXD FXMALK. It 1a o muro, prompt and effectual remeds for In. D, dige Intermittent Fevers, Wang of Apy rvous Debility 1o all ite oal f Brain Power, Prostration, Weak . Tt e nervous waate, refuvenates the faded_intellect, strenghthens the enfeobled brain and restores surpris g tono and vigor o the exhausted or- ans, The experience of thousands proves it to an invaluable remedy, Price, $1.00 bottle, or six for #65. For sale by all druggists, or sen necure from obwervation on reoipt. of price by 2460, 8 DOCTOR STEINHART'S General Manager, General Pass. Agent. J.T. CLARK, GEO. M. HEAFFORD, General Sup's, Ass’t Gon, Pass, Agent. EOURST S EUROPEAN HOTEL, ‘The most centrally located hotel in fhe city, Rooma 76c, $1.00, $1.60 and §2.00 per day, Firet Olass Restaurant connected with the .HURST. - . Prop Corner Fourth and Locust Btreete. B8T. LOUIS MO.. Samuel 6, Davis & 0o, DRY GOODS JOBBERS AN D IMPORTERS. Washington; Ave. and Fifth 8t, ST. LOUIS MO. SUPPOSITORIES ! The Great Popular Remouy for Piles. Sure cure for Blind, Bleeding & Itching Piles Aud all forms of Hemorrholdal Tumors, These Burrosrokims act directly upon the ooata of the Hlood Vessels, and by their astringent offocta gently force the blood “trom the swollen tumors, andby making tho coats of the veins strong, prevent their refilling, and hence & radi- cal cure is sure to follow their use, Price, can:la - hol.l :’n'r l;le b lflm“hhfi sent b‘ mail on receipt of price, by s fpstitute, 718 Ollve str bt Lot To Nervous Sufterers THE QREAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. Dr, J, B, Bimpson's Bpecific IVEEN WD K €300 . 10 1o & posjetve cure for b Weoknoes, npotancy, and all diseaou reculting trom Bolf:Abusc, a8 Moutal Anxicty, Loss Momory, Paing (o the Ba de, and discases "‘" SOIORS. |!|h( load 0 Price, Bpeciflc, §1.00 per package, of alx pack: of 84,08, Adkirees al Srdere s o B. N1ME ON MEDIOING CG., 100 Main 84, Buliao 8old 0. ¥ Goodumas, 3. aod & dragglateerery where.) 8 daw

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