Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 23, 1891, Page 12

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Willing to Be Hangman. At the last session of the California legis- lature an act was passed that created a new oftice—that of public executioner. It was not and was much excited over the event. who was attracted by the shots, according 10 the Leader, complimented her advised hor to shoot a prisoner made a leap for liberty and got away. His jump frightened the horses, which becamn unmanageable and required all of Henderson's attention, whilo the fugi- reputed father, and a motion has been made in court foranew trialof the celebrated onse. At Novada City the information charging Shorift George W qualified by intoxication for the discharge of his official duties, waa dismissed in the su perior court on the ground that the justice of the peace who bound Dunster over for trial had no jurisdiction, The Grass Valley Telegraph says: “The apple trees of this section are loaded with fruit, but there will be no more apples than will Suffice for the codlin moth. In this tion a large acreage is deyoted to feasting Dunster with being dis- | CURING DISEASE WITH WATER Dr. Qarriker's Paper Read Befora tho State Eolectio Medioal Society. THERAPEUTIC PROPZRTIES OF AQUA PURA Action of the Organization on Water in Physiological and Pathological 1SN -TWELVE PAGES and re-action of tho vital economy, take the hot full bath, for what Is true of the whole body s equally true of all its parts, When the sirface of the body is exposed to | heat which is aoove 81,2, the nervous sys tem i stimulatod, the blood aotermined to the surface, the vessols of the skin becomo congested and engorged, the circulation in the viscera acceleratod and the quantity of blood diminished, while the engorged organs aro temporarily relieved: but in the ratio of the fntonsity of the heat will this vascular congestion incroase, till tho vessels of the skin become so overstretched that when the impression is met by vital reactiou these vos the reactive power of the systom,or part, will be exceedingly foeble, and the tomperature of the water must not ba less than 110 de- grees, the application gentle, reaction per- mitted, and tho temperature’ of the water | lowered gradually, as the reactive forces of | the system become stronger. | "Observation of the laws of action and reac- tion should be strictly observed in active and passive hyperwmia of tho brain, as wator s a very potent remedy, and When abused in the treatment of this delicate organ, fatal tesults may easily follow und | doubtless n have. [ Wo havoactive hyperamia when the oves f ) sels are so relaxed that their vital power of | are oright, pupils contracted, face flushod ghter the next timea tramp came | Hve disappeared through the brush and to | tho worms produced by that moth. Peopie Conditions of the Vital coutractility is destroyed and they remain | and hoad very hot. Then tho iudications Rupposed, by the law-makers who voted that | prowling around. | the darkness. Dawing was handeuffed at | havo very little show at the apples.’” 4 | perfectly and pormauently faceld with cor ro cold or water applications to the Bl exccutional penaities should bo consum- e e . on oy O | Jean Rennult attempted to commit n erim Economy, responding loss of fauetion, while tho nery- | wholo head, repeated suficiontly often Lo ro- fmated in the state prison, that there would : e | impticatod with ’x‘xi."l:umm brotBeN, Who :uulm-..\.m upon .\1:-‘ luc?nllv ;uln\-“n-\m;»u r 4(‘;1;;\:({“\:\wv;.';\'ll\'}“ l;;;{}".;."\l .\ml"ll ”’.. ‘\4 ;: .:‘v‘:..p (perature by conduction and re- " o » for b of chokjn, during the storm of F'ri: VoIS TeORBLLY GoR vioted b On N IMEIRuE | in Los Angeles, but was forled by the wife of g fons o ory orgu paired o e 1 actio i : e any great scramble for the job f choking were recently couvioted of counterfelting. | oy Polica commissioner s Collins, who con- One of most fnteresting and instructive | FAtio of the intensity of the heatand the vepe- | We passive hyporamia when the oyes ©ff a man's wind, says the Sacramento Bee, ! € A ranchman living in Newfork greek, bY | yrouted him with a.g@volver. | Tuis 18 | papers read befors tho Staty tho Mouical | tition of the bath, | are vriget, pupils dilated, faco flushed and ut a prominent member of the ‘“rural 400" I ranch near Buford station on the Union the name of Buker, while riding e £80£9 | tonaulvs socond offensoflb haing assaulted Ll TELE tic Moaical ‘The argument long endured abovo the body | the head slightly hot: and 'this passive hypor: s o soul that rises to the emergency aud man Hill in W recently betwoen Newfolk and Green River | ("8 JOCO0T Fenilagel ML TRRGACE | soclety atfts sixteenth annual moeting i this | temporature is in any degroe vitalizing is ex- | winda in:roases as the oves become more and asks for the pleasant privilege of strangling | set out afoot in search of her cattle of which | In Niuta county found a number of steets | gy o fiw's vuive while thedtier was attempt- | CILY was that of Ur. M. A, Carriker of Ne- | tremely absurd, more dull and_expressionlass, pupils dilated, Pprovie to death. sho owned a fow head. She seoms to have ‘l"'n! 1\‘m in clos 1;x'n(vunr"_v”m n:«r:»lll\ nllhvnrl- ting to arrest him. A braska City, professor of materla medica, | The experience of every man who has la- | faco cool, and forchead marks a temporature v v vi o 3% N | pon closer examination o ho 0 nals 0 " PP hol rouglh the heated season an he col but ¢ above norma JKorn county 8o tho fronk with 8 can | boe bowildered by the storm and porished | discoverad that thoy had il boon shots Tho | ‘The Sacramento turnvitein is making pre- | therapeutics,diotetics aud hydro-thorapeutics | BOFed through tho heated season nud the con- | but Httle above normal, | 5 0 e s ek o als that iy | within 200 yards of her home which was lit- | owners of the cattle are Messrs, Budd & Me- | purations for the recepllon and cntertain- | jn the Cotner university at Lincoln | stvoks, a3 Seeil RS ‘ovory. Hatvidaat wio Hay | tanse, thS INAIGANDNS 106, vaSHECBOGI or bungling & man's neck equals that of his b of the other tarn¢EIho wilt visit that | =1 ) i ke, as well ns every individual who ha . the indieations are, W I 211 dosigns upon tho Enghish language, ho | o moro than o but. Mrs, Seigtried wast | Jay, Bdward Swan and Swith & Lifes, | R0t R Sy SR GBRGL e dpon the s bager was entitled “Hydro-Therapy™ | foilowod bathing for a considerabie time in | over the hoad, hot as can be endured, or hot ul e Rivel o office. aws | g - ary - a 1 ey have offere reward o Vo0 for the AN JUN0 ¥y C RS ¢ S Tollows T vater, ou, . sach a differen applic ons, either oqUel ropeated Bhould ot be given the office. OUF Iaws | about sixty-two years of ago and in alm os | [C8 WS GREECE 8 Seant BLEGOTOF U0 | fourtecnth grand turnesfostival. The first To clearly Wnderstand tho thorapeutfo re- | Lo, ATE Water, ought to teach a diffarent | applications, either {requontly ropoated ta provide that the deatn penaity in this state | dosutute circumstances. Sho was confinad | itiad tho outrage, 0 public demonstration wifl be u grand torcly. | Iations of pure water to the pathological con- | My porsctis-and soms physiclanscshat | Kud hs Yital Toaotion SUCIRIGE THY (BN hall be by hanging. Cruel and gnust Y the eounty hospite Thevenne | . age. yroceasl v 0 milit and | ditions of the boc At sl Muny persons and somo physicians—b and as vital reactic 508 the temper Bonco tho writer of the following letter will Ber hotne aganst the advice of the county | Underflow water investigation, will make a | {8 ST hatricipate. 4 Guglam, © 1! Feldtions to the hoalthy or- | seom to think thatd fow long aud strong | 1 have discovered no exception to the laws ot be aljowed to tal > ms before- e > i 1 | start from Fort Collins and go by wagen into g ol S ; haths will answer the purpose of many short | that I have stated, which should govern the oo , Bjowed Lo talk to the victims bofore- | physician. Her husband, Peter Selgrriond, | LTl o f\{,(‘ll’,[’,,|,f:.i,,§'\\-w,“,",m atn| Hop erowers along thel amento river | You will first obsorve and recall the fact | aud weuk e " 1 Purpose of many ERUATHAL SR THLAFHAL T80 O WAtSRATiEN SR h SR IR EYS WY 00 died at that institution last winter and was . Fott. a ” are somewhat alarmed ofer the appearance | that water constitutes the groatest part of | sy L £ v | logical at gl 1 Diiaxo, Kern county, Cal.—Honerable i o point Fort Laramie, and from that \ | v | "Tuis is the boliot of many pe | physiological and wil pathological conditions Bord of PHeed Difoctats: I here frum the | goriod by the county, e ey Mrs, | place r to Chaventie. He suys tho | Of great numbers of tHo destructive hop | tue bulk of the body. It composes more than | thy sprines and waterie & ANY Tt alimonthey don fients there ahotid ¢ gt octs here frum the 1 Seigtried has conducted the ra one. 4 AL | aphis, or lice, on the v y or are | four-fifths of the mass o o blood Tl R ud tvatering places an A ptary ¢ oments t snou Japers Ut al wen who dse a murier air 1o ot 1 Lok [ data sc gliceted hius not boen ure s e A 0y Eeoth oo nre | Chn Beyanonte ot tHo, araptancoisgMote | davs or tvosks, do thele bataing for ¢ { b a modification of the internal use of water e e hung in staft prisen and as most officers and collated, but e is satistied that stof the luxu olds south of Suc- | Ui en-olghts of the suostance of tho | "t wouia bomoro fatal b when thore is intense inf ation necom think it onery ‘\nwlu~Xu\mn;!p|'fl|n|>‘\hl,'l'l‘ ¢ % ‘I\I‘ ming. e % valleys a great deal of water for irvigation | T Il:“l“"ll‘r‘ ady ..ymi\;,’((.';‘: ;.;nlnrl:m I]'mlg [ :l‘.\\.lln;‘u o ;-‘ \,‘]; :"4 A viu :-I\‘V wfr ‘.l-" philosophical if they should lertake | panied by vomiting, diaernoen or dvsentery. \th vty , v ircen River w school house can be secured at a depth of some eight feet, | POICS e insee bolieved to have been | various colorless fluids and secretions of the | their eating and deinking veral months | In these conditions the indications are cold with aply to you fur the job. i will reen River wil @ a school hous can be secured at a depth of some e IR Lalu 3 LB L A wnd drin veral hing ov man you let mo too fur 8 | COst 5,000 This will apply to Wyoming and Colorado | lutroduced in that section from roots brought sy < |in as many days, or for a pationt to take the | extornal applications, freaucntly tupeated dclcts apiece. | 1 oave bulped too linch @ man | Whalen canon, nar Lusk, s tho scono ot | and western Nebraska, Ou the upland the | there from Oregon and Washinglon. 'In | Wator fs the only velucle that convess | EELETE DR L AIL AU R H RO LB L b F i n moisoty. ftwas me that tide the not. | some recent mining strikes. water can only be reached by boring to great | thesc states it has wrought great havoc in b MI“V‘“ erlal to the ’1 od, and Sorou ta severe and prolonged case of typhoid | thereby allaying the inflammation by conduc: Bo i no how to do it. my dady has soured on +'ch 5 bs. The results of the government in. [ Past yeurs. : Y . i h Bt NG At aalrLe fORHE | Tevor, tion and reaction me and don't hulp me any mor w weastle expended £17,060 for schiool pur- ations will by published next Jaouary, | There is au excitement in political circley | Srowth aud replenishment. ' | " Becauso some ndure without | Internaily the modification of application 18 wodent mary tho wimin he wanted me to | Poses during the last year. Groen tiver peoplo are_trying to have u | at Merced. The board of supervisors brought | Itisthie only medium through which waste, | apparent injury v vapor or hot | warm drinks, us lomonade, frequently re mary and i maryed A pirt lockin girl that is ion feet of lumber will be frun | road built into the vew Victoria mining dis- | to_light that the county auditor aud treas. | Offute, exizaneous ot disintogratod mattor AiE for au hour or two every duy in the year, | peated, slightly below the body teimperature, hensum and we now have a lot of children to v Fork of Uiata county this | trict which is in tho Uinta mountain, one | Urer have paid some &,000 of the county | conveyed from evary part of tho svstein 10 | the fact does not prove that it is beneficialy | 5o that the interual vital ronction will bé suport. She will doe to surch wimin Bundred miles south of there. It 18 claimed | oney for a roud right of way whicl was | thy e e oy XD it Lihe LOUY | While physiology demonstrates that it must | mild, and thereoy not awgravate condition ori-oners as they cant hide eny from anator Matorhnh } soresentativo | that Green River is the nearest rail notapproved or authorized by the board, [ Water is the ouly solvent, diluent aud | bo {njurious Which bold Wit Will InVAHHbIY 808 ot We g0 Tiithe best Hiciaty Heae an. you x-Senator Tabor ha ..\1,;1. are [y:l:l\fl' Al A o BV he road may be accepted by tho board. If | detergent In oxlstence for unimal and vege s well might it be pretended that becauso t is impossible to drink flcient quan will lielp an onest famly by givin me the job, | Ji¥estigating the new strikes in the Atantie | oy G veled by ranchmen e 8o, things will be smoothed over, but if not | tabls ulimentary, and excrementitious ma- | many persons imbibe two or three ounces of | tity of cold water, in th conditions, to ef. Answer this quick and have no red tapo i Henry's Fork. Hitherto ove from the Bas- | the bondsmen may buve to stand it. v. while some take | fect sc intoxicating liquors dai their **honest quart” a day, for twenty years, | increaso that alcohol is wholesome. gravate There is as much _delusion on this subject | same law, of using waterin health and disease as thereis | vere diar on without r i, which will nontary action, and theveby ag- o difficulty: and observing the warm clysters are indicated in so 1va and dysentery. about it. Idont drink licker nur have mno | iraging reports have been received b habbits, and I go to chirch overy Sunday | from samples of uiarble seut to Lincolu from rite quick. Your Oucrable Survent DLy, Joux O, SipNeER. Laran 1t 1s the only material capable of circulat- ing in all the tissues of tho body, and pene- trating their finest vessels without vital irri- tation or mechanical injury sett mine which runs $0 700 in silver to | _ Solomon Adkins, a well known citizen of the ton has been hauled to Carters' station | Napa county, was accidentally shot and = _ | ou the Union Pacific and shipped to the Den- | killed at bis home near Oakville. In com- ic Repuolican: The town was full | ver smelters, Itcost §20a ton to bring it in | pany with his stepdaughter, Miss Mamie i . of campers today, most of them bound for | jn wagons and many teams huve been engag- | Close, he had started to get a cow. Miss ,..f.l.fi.-‘f:u\'"”1-11".'.’,‘.{1'11|".z’.l",‘ u(:'_':‘!::f .';r“:}::: among topers. Some porsons say that they [ These simple general laws understood and “OI1A Tl Long™ is Dead. Gold Hill. ed for the season. Close'carried a shotgun, which by some ( fHrel VRS 000 H A8 Avenuss Of 140 | Lave taken prolonged “hot water or hot air | strictly observed, will gratify the fuithful “Old Bill Long,” one of the best known | Swan Brothers are about to begin work on e ans was discharged, and the load took of- | it Seonomy Gud cleansing the body uaths daily ot weckly for montlis aud years, G TUh fauli ey N Ll ""i““: haracters in the San Juan country, Colorado, | their contract for a well for the Rawlins “alifo tin Mr. Adkin's leg, below tho knee, car- e conw i e and nave experienced nothing but beneti 0 the results obtained by the most_poten Lhbbeeds TIELCOMELETES At e ki P ryiug away o portion of the bone. He oniy | , nvater is the ouly fluid that can be usod a5 | “Human beings have been addicted toin- | drugs adwinistered by the law.—Simillia recently diod at Opuir. There was notn | Whwrworks L e L A Lassen county editor has boen convicted | FUSF M BLRTC a beverage in hoalth, that rogulates the se- | yoyicating liguors for more than four thou. | Stmillibus Caranteur,™ “Contrara Contrar- pamp 1o which he had not boen, and few o road between Landers and Rawlins is | of being a horse thief. : : arh cretions and excretions and which supplies | sond venis, i tho more they dre injured by | i Curanteans “Contraria O A ¥ L ime op | MOW in good shape. The first freignt team 4 hs s ho averago temperaturo for California | the blood with & constituent, that adds more | sond ¥ears, and the more they are injured by | I8 Curanteqr,” or “Contrarla mines upon which he had not at one timo or | FRXR €00 SbAP John Martin, a Napa horse thief, has been | sumnors, as deducted from a record of | to plumpness of form, beauty of foature, and | Lo the mora thelr experionce convinces | Upponenda. 2 muother worked. Exposure and drink atlast [ “ 000 R SEEE o ds have been | S€Bt toSan Quentin for nine years. thirty-cight years combined with thoso of | potmanent normal action of overy furction | LNOM that they cannot do without aicobiolic | And when the discase tends ‘mv:\r.]l & mtm illed nim and he now lies at rest in the littlo | takon up by individuals and corporations Miil men of San Francisco are now willing | the signul scrvice, is 71.8 degrees, the aver- | of bady and brain, than all the stimulants T.ly”m.“‘"""' A 11"",’1“'\" and n;m of the L) v Wi R Skl dr':"; vavoyard at Ophir. “Old BII" was well | north of Rock Springs. . to arbitrate with striking bench hands, age of the sizual service tables for tho past | and tonics kuown to the medical profession. | pmrkable vitality. bower of Sudutance and | thorapoutist and ho has laid his woapons by 1OW 85 an oro scrter aud a cook, but more | Over eight hundred acres of oil landshavo | To a quarrel at the W, P.C. mino, near | thIrtesn vears i (4{v_ml"":"l";’\l“v*l“}lmm‘téfi Whea diseaso has marshaled its destruct- | 1hat humanity is sometimes remarkably | to wateh the unwelcome tormination, hydro- esoccially in his connection, supposed or | beon taken up around Green River. Wells | Keeler, John Lyach shot and killed Mat RYBARS UATBOMGLL IR WS4, 74 B GRAL 70, | £oo forces against the citadel of life. no su tough therapy has and will cool and calm a fovered :r,'»',“’\‘, “\'l‘;| “lm;“ ‘m‘-"\f r"'hnr'l-(l" mincs. | will shortly be put down. Anderson. At el St g | Stauce that is not a constituent of the organi- | "4 "A¢ i the reacting power of the vital | brow and burain it he had & thorough acquaintance ctively, n ous system, or stimu- organism, so must be the temporature of the | late the waning powers of life to novmal uce water. tion and to health. 'lie person of good physique, strong diges Therefore, us un cclectic system of medi- tion, perfect assimilation and blood r cine,and as eclectic or progressive physiciaus balanced circulation and normal innervation, | teach us to understand uo tess of the action may bathe in cold water five-sixths of all the | of drugs in health, or their pathogenatic ac- days of his life, and enjoy perfect health of | tion, and of their action in a’ strictly patbolo- Tho Elkhorn stock i aile the coolest summer was | zation, like water, so rapidly, successfuly urds at Belle Fourcne | The fourth vrial of L. A. Powell for the [ thatof 1581, 685, The highest and lowest | permanently and sanatively relieves nerve arc being enlarged. It is thought 250 car | murder of Ralph S. Smith commenced at | summer temperature in thirty-eight years is | tension, reduces temperature, slow cireula- loads will bo shipped from there this year. Redwood city. 108 and 44, tion and respiration, ostablishos secrotion and ore sorter, and lots of practi He co I'he Union Pacitic oil house at Green River, It is possible the Pacific Mail steamship excretion by holding in solution the disinte- do good and rapid work when he wisnc recently rebuilt, was again atiacked by | company will remove its dock from San 'ran- grated materials of the blood and conv was rarely long out of a job. He would, how- | flames last week und narrowly escaped de- | cisco to Oakland ever, at irregular intervals, get on big sprees | struction. and would not go to work again as long as he | Thr ore—such knowledge as ore sorters obtain 1s cortain, He had the natu aptitude which goes to the making of a good Colorado. Tramps who visit La Junta are at once put | them to the excretories to be elimivated from 1 The customs officials in San Francisco | to Work on the streets. the body. candidates for the ministry in the | seized a contraband r b eerore atee conatitutan Hobil boity and brain, and not realize any discom- | gical condition, and tho natural laws that e it e S i s a0 e oplum manufacturing | Eik river reached the highest poiut for [ -therefore sice witer constitutes not 188 | fort or injury from cold bathing. should govern their admiuistration. D O | B oh Dot b0t i e Aunpd s descons. | plantinthatal seven years last week. than sevon-cighths of the entiro weight of the | All porsons, juveniles aud adults, of feeble | But by thoughtful observation, diligent to drink. It”was throughout the San Juan | by Bisuop Talbot in the Evauston church | © Oivia Larsen, a Swedish girl who had re- 5 Beus G | body, since it is indispensavlo to life and | iiiulation, fnnervation and reactive power, | research and untiring v My e b el the general opinion that whenever *Bill [ next Sunday. oenily i nerived tn BanT FEanbINo0, was Many farmers in San Louis vailey are ex- | heaith, and since it vossesses therapeutic | it buthe in water very near the tempera: | abled to comprohend as thoroughly the i J;nm * worked in rich 4r|\;‘\u-‘|’xl(:ll|:11:;\;l 'I‘u‘u:;ll m'_l‘nu lehml|<||: p‘rnx:m-. to ruvlulhn('hun‘h dentally asph, w’i"‘l"m;“‘xw\“ 1lu fx“uy:lu,nm‘. LRy ll?::!“l;":\!ll‘t:‘:l"f‘m\\!;r‘:ml:;:i_\ll l"““ Irt'*ly"“”::;'c ture of the blood, and gradully lower the | mutable laws that control the action of el way in some manner or_another with a dea is summer at Rock Springs. The mission- et A aprict -+ di he state horticultural society wiil holc S ¢ superior betnie: | ratuTe OL it Whter ERIEHE UDGLHOBNIOT | Sot of the rich specimens, Ho was supposed to | ary board will furnish two-thirds of the | . n¢ first apricots of the season sold in and of magnetic force, which cirs ion, moro vigorous and the reactive power of the | promotes innervation aud thrills the pawers system stronger. of life with health and strength and restoves If this law of vital reaction and corre- | lost vitality by its subtle, yet vitalizing sponding temperature of the water be not | power. strictly, scrupulously observed, the vitality, [ And teach the students wko attend our tho tonicity of the nervous system will be: [ medical colleges not only that cleanliness ot come gradually weaker and the functions of | the bedy is essential to health and longevity, the body more impaired, though the skin be | but how and when to use this wonderful ion | dial agent known to the science of medicine. | 1o body bee ore active, innervation | culates the blood, equalizes the cireu thero must be au infallible law, which should | te, body become moro active, i \tion g oty Picots, of the season sold i | annual meeting and fair fn- Grand Junc i iy o s proposod to ropresent Loadvillo at tho | 0vert s use in hoaith, and. 'bo an absoluto ehed thi 1" that whenever ho was at tho age of ono hundred and. eight years, | WOTIA'S fair by a largo cyclorama, giving a | 1iCIEvariabie KALIC 1o i Pndications in dis gm o nlu G fim ¥ lm w t_u_:l eimens | herds that will pass through thero this sum- | gjght months and twenty-nine days. " | view of the city and mines X N st ror ‘m‘lr B thar dlkease s and schl them. It s certain that for a long | Wk from Texas. Tho Shasta county fair next fall will be | ;Nolwithstanding the cry of ovor-prode: | , negative quality: that it is the effects of un- time a number of people of Ouray were on | Ihe Ruwiins fire dopartment elected theso | o|d 4 Redding during the first week in | LoU, there will be ularger area in crops in the | phygiological voluntary habits, The condi- I8 atan and. guarded. o’ teallsiegalatiy, gMicors: Thomas Reld, chiefs . H. Clause, | Septomber. There will be no racing. s b L A tions of the body m disease aro impure blood, watching for Bill Long and his gold ov aud Carl Bryant, treasurer, ¥ Cherokee miners are tuking out an average Sy ekt (hilz it huve collected twenty sacks of rich gold ore | funds necessary. whilo sorting gold on the Argentine in Mar- |~ /hreo large dums have been built a mile shall basin. The ceneral opinion was that e | cagr'of Lusk to hold water for tho through unhealthy secrétions, obstruction of tho ex- cles Young Mrs. Blaine's Conquest. When Mrs, Marie Nevins Blaine was in foux Falls, S.D., recently the trial of the ndwn Plenty Hovses for the murder of Licutenant Casey was in progress, and she went tothe court room to hear the testi- mony, which impressed her somewhat favor- ably to the prisoner, says the New York Press. Her sympathy could not remain un- expressed, and when the trial was over Plenty Horses, with his lawyer, calied on herat the hotel. There werea numoer of persons present, ladies and gentlemen. After Bome conversation Plenty Horsos ex- pressed a desire to speak alone with Mrs. Blaine, which she consented to gratifv, won- dcring what he could want. When they wero alone he begged her to give him somo chewing gum, for which fio was longing, but was 100 proud to ask in the presence of oth- ers, and whea she had given him gum he begged further for a clean shirt and for a biue ribvon such #s she was wearing. Plenty Horses got all his requests gratitiod, and has since given his Indian friends to understand that the ground Mrs. Blame walks on is sacred in bis eyes. Japs Take the Places of Coolies. A great many Japauese are working in the hob fields in Sacramento county, California. 'he restriction act has had tho effect of transforming the inaman from an humble aud submissive servant to s proud and im- perious dictator. A whim 15 enough to thiow a gang iuto a strike, and to cross his purpose 15 to invite his expensive displeus- ure. The Chinese on these occasions have tho best of it, because to permit them to abandon a fruit or hop crop in the widst of tho gathering is more costly than to yield to their demauds. Chinese labor is carcer than it used to be, and the cunnivg Mongolians are taking advantage of their position, The hop growers have had experiences with tue Chinoese last year nnd the year before, and flew to iutes, and this season to Japanese for relief, Last summer the Chinese discov- ered that hops had advanced in price and the coolies were quick to take advautage of the opportunity to boost their wages. 1t is some- thing of @ condescension nowadays for Chinese to work at all, In this condition of aflairs the Japanese are dropping into the luces that used to be filled by the coolies. t’l“xn the Chinese, the Japauese readily adapt themselyes to the customs of the cout- try. ‘They wear civilized clothing and buy ther food of American crocers and butchers. Thus far they have been generally confined In their work to trailing aud trimming the hop vines and similar work. Working Rich Paint Mines. Orders are coming in 5o rapidly for the product of the paint mines near Rawlins, Wyo., that the Denver City paint mills company which operates them is prospecting the deposits preparatory to putting a larger force at work on them. The hematite of ivon mine 13 two miles north of Rawlins. It has becn operated for a number of years and produced hundreds of carloads of red ore, which has been shipped to all parts of tho United States, and bas been used and thoroughly tested for both ivside and outside work. The most notable use to which it has been put s the painting of the famous Brook- lyn bridge, the architects declaring in favor 'of the Rawlins aint for lightness and durapility. 1t s claimed for this paint that for brick coloring it has absolutely no equal in the world. The supply seems virtually inexhaustible. Work- men have been engaged in sinking to find, if possible, a more solid body than that which s hitherto been taken out at the surface. North of Rawlins four aud a balf miles are the ochre mines. Shipments from there bave just begun, 8 contract being made to furnish two carloads a day. From tests made it is claimoed that this mine produces the finest ochre in this country, beiug withip © per cer:t as fine as the imported article, and 80 per reut finer thau the only othor wanes of the kind found in Amorica, located in the southern part of Tennessee, She Shot T o Low. For a week or so Mrs. Ray who lives in Cheyenuc noticed a man with a heavy over- coat and slouch hat skulking around the prewmises. Her husband is employed nights ot a saloon and Mrs. Ray is left aione. One ening, just as sho put out the light and was vreparing to retive, she saw the mau come in the yard and erawl to the ber window. He was close agains house when she grasped her husband's re- volver and fired through the winaow at the crouching man. He jumped and ran for the side (au«l when she fired the secoud tme, The entire lower of the window Was toru out by the su but her aim was bud and the ng Tom escaped univjured. Murs. Ray is a slight, nervous looking woman, P A colored man has been in Rawlins looking over the ground with a view to starting a paper i the interest of democracy wnd his race and the world at large. The experiment Crook county, has been and a half miles of Sundance. forty-nine acres of excellent land. Larawie is making another brave effort to build a road to the Gold Hill mining camp. This time the route selocted is by way of An outfit 13 now at work, Judge Scott of the district court recently decided in a case brought before him at Sun- dance that the £ poll tax laid by the counties vecause in conflict with the state constitution. Work on the Buffalo extension is progress- Men have been working on 5 at Merino and gotting ready ng beyond, which will soon be agricultural station of Libby creei. ing favorably, material var commenced, Judge Jesse Knight of Evanston, not find- market for a few head of stock which he destred to dispose of, shipped them to Chicago and realized 4 cents per pound on the transaction. I'he Warren live stock company leased for a term of years from the Bay State company creek in tho Hillsdale for 000 acres of vicinity of Pine Blufis and ing purposes. mines at Carbon stated up again last Monday after being idle "The outpat is exp about two hundred and twenty-five cars a weok from each place, Rov. R. E. F and Hanna ‘whom nothing is known, arrived in eld, for a number of years | cisco from Yokohama, where they were found pastor of the First' Presbyterian church of Cheyenne, died of paralysis of the heart, superinduced by nervous prostration, tho re- suit of an attack of grip. Leyeune Sun: Assessor Stahls, while out on his recent ofticial trip, met the usual num- ber of immigrants moving westward, and on inquiry founa that one-half of them were en- route to the Gold Hill mines. By direction of the president the military post at Mammoth Hot Springs in the Yeliow- stonoe National park, heretofore styled Camp will hereafter be known designated as Fort Yellowstone. ‘The storm last week in Wyoming was of in- calculable benefit to the ranchmen. The rain to the United at Laramie, signal observor, was .50 two days, equal to twenty inches of snow. Episcopal jurisdiction of Wyoming and 1 Wednesday, lasting s includes tho Wyoming and The list of speake vishops of Utah, Laramie’s council has been petitioned to extend the sewerago s with the plans originall questing that a tax be levied for tho purpose the expense of the extensions. The cost is estimated at §10,000, has soldhis sawmill on the orthern to Abe Per- in accordance mapped out aud re- line of tho C'heyenne & singer, an old freighter, who will take it into The will is said to rs ready for shipment already loaded on the ¢ to Laramie, Rankin Brothers, proprietors of ih line to the Gold Hill ¢ iteen horses for use on their line. trade guaranteed amount of business on the stages that would fitable to run them, but travel hos been sufficient to save the board from any deficit on that score, William Newman, charged with murder in the first degree, pleaded guilty to manslaugh-* terat Sundance, He was sentenced to eighteen mp, last week bought and killed Andre at Belle Fou indictod as an acquitted two woeks ago. The Black Fork canal which in Ninta county i with a lateral thirty feet wide at tho top. milo long and half a mile wide will be built partly on the old Fort Bridger reservation, e ostimate is made that 25,000 acres of land will be irrigatea by the canal. Business men of Rawlins have incorpo- \ing and loan association, divided into 2,3 shares and the association is to contnue bus- iness for five years. The trustoes are H. Rtas- Isaac C. Miller, Blydenburgh, Chas. u. Juugquist, Emanuel Stuver, John C! Dyer and Jobn E. Osborne. ‘Tue new fan at No. 5 coal mine at Almy is be fan house is of brick And stouo and absolutely fire-proof and safe from The fan is & new Gubal twenty Itis run by @ sixty-horse power to seveuty revolu- comber last 1da Opp, who w ccessory to the crime, is projected to be thirty miles long miles in length. pital stock just tinished engine aud at a sixty-fiv jon pace discharges 100,000 cubio foet of air. 'be average speed, however, will bo thurty- five revolutions and 50,000 feet of air. Deputy Henderson last week arrested Diek of Hulett, for counterfeiting. 1o Suudance with the through of #3,000 a month, and 1t is all done in a small way by means of rockers and sluices. Thomas N. Wand of San Francisco, for- merly prominent in political circles, had a paralytic stroke, affecting his left side. The machine wood-workers of San Fran- cisco have joined the carpenters aud joiners in the demand for the eight-hour labor day. Antonia Frederica, a stone catter, was ar- rested in_ San Francisco_for murder com- mitted in Pennsylvania in May of last year. It is said that a syndicate of European spirit dealers is belng formed to buy up the principal wineries and distillerics of the state, William Travers, who in December, 1880, killed Jomes Daly in a drunken quarrel, has peen convicted of manslaughter in Nevada City. Fleveu small boys aro in jail at Los 1geles on charges of petty larceny. They belong to an organized gang of young erim- nais, The office of the police property clerk in an Francisco was burglarized and watches and money belongiug to parties under arrest were taken. W. H. Robinson, deputy warden of the Folsom prison, has tenderea his resignation, to take effect Juno 1. He has been in ofice three years, At Fresno John Noble, a business man and butcher of Maderia, was sentenced to one year's imprisonment at San Quentin for cat- tle stealing. T'wo iusane American tailors, concerning an Fran- wandering in the streets The low authorizing the,boards of super- visors to pay #1 for each shado tree planted aloug the public highways of their respective counties, have been repealed. Last scason California fresh feuit ship- meunts alone took from the east about $4+,000,~ 000, and sanguiue people believe the coming season will be fully as successful. Work on the flume of the Golden Feather mine, above Oroville, will be completed in July. The English syudicate which owns the mine has already expended 300,000 in developing it. George Faylor's suit against several San Francisco legislators for a commission on the sums they received on their votes in_the re- cent session is to e pushed. The defendants have been served with summons. The *“‘clock game’’ has been revived in San Francisco since pool selling on races was shut off by ordinance, and now Chief of Police Crowley is endeavoring to get another ordi- nauce passed that will supress it. A consigument of 312 packages, containing 15,176 gailons of brandy, which has been in storage in the Unitod States bonded ware- louse for the Natoma vineyard will go to Bremen, Germany, by sea from Sacramento, Rey. Alexander, a Presbyterian minister of ancisco, is devouncing the president because he “‘drinks publicly, and marks about the quality of California wine by speaking of wine growing as a great state in- dustry." Giuseppi, on trial in San Francisco for rape, was discharged by the failure of the jury to agree, which stood one for acquittal and eleven for conviction. An investigation is talked of as to how the disagreement was procured, Judage Wallace in San Francisco awarded Sarab Althea Terry $1,250 as her share of the late Judge Terry’s life insuranc The whole ifisurauce was £,000 and the remainder was divided between C. W, Terry and Joseph C. Campbell Colonel E. 8. Weeden of Chicago recently bought of the Thermalito Colony company 440 acres of laud near Oroville for 31,000~ an average of nearly 850 per acre, As soon as practicablo the tract will all be set out in citrus fruits, Clyde, a young son of T, E. Smith, of the North Arm, died after a orief illness resulr- ing from poison. 1t seems that the bay wanaged to get bold of and eat some vitrioled wheat. He got suflicient of the poison o causo his death, George W. Cushing was acquitted in Francis co of the murder of Dennis Dri: S coll, The latter had entered the room of Cushing's mother and Insisted upon her gotting up und going for beer for him, whereupon youug Cushing shot and killed him. Any person 15 cligible to membership in the National guard of California who is a resident of the state, able bodied, between the ages of cighteen and forty-five, and neither a Chinaman uor Tndian. Citizeuship is not a requisite qualification. For the first quarter of tha present year the gross earnings of the Southern Pacifio were $10,574,990, and for the same period last %, & gain of 81,151,430, The op- nses were $1,375,107, as against $1,748,107 for tho corresponding period last yeur. A man in London writes to Judge Coffey of San Francisco that he can prove that or at | Floreuce Hlythe, the heiress of the late Mil- the Bear Lodge country, the ! liouire Blythe, was uot the daughter of hlll‘ miles long and will furnish wator for 1,000 acres of fine fruit land in Grand valley. Hay is scarce and high priced in Cotorado Springs. Alfalfa commanas $17 a ton at the stack, and is not plentiful at that figure, Pueblo is beginning to_make preparations for her state fair next fall, Judge Royal has accepted the presidency of the association. Farmers on the Divide are still clinging to potatoes as their principal product, and more of them will be planted this year than ever. Captain Nichols of the penitentiary board of commissioners is preparing for surveying the state diten throughout central Colorado. The Colorado Springs. Larden company sold fifty tons of milk last month and de- livered it to customers aj the rate of fourteen quarts for $1. On the Boston farm in the Arkansas val- ley 1,600 acres have been well plowed and made mellow. This area has been seeded to alfaifa and oats. A prospecting party of efght persons,headed by Elmer Kane, will shortly start on an_ex- pedition down the grand canon of the Colo- rado in search of mineral. All butchers in Leadville, Breckenridge and Dillon are after beef cattle, and such ac- tivity in the beef market - has not been expe- rienced before for a number of years. The stage road between Ihu and Rico has been shoveled out and ‘How the stages are making regular trips clear through aud freight teams have commenced to haul. This spring the orchardists of Otero county have set out upwards of six hundred acres in fruits of all kinds, This makes the acreage in tho county nearly one thousand two hundred A wealthy company has been organized to develop the marble beds at Yule creek. The marble ledge is 800 feet in thickness, sur- mounted by a white statuary marble bed 250 teet thick. Near Alamosa ave six large wheat farms connected by telephone with the office of Manager Colt in Alamosa. In daily opera- tions a larga saving and great convenience is effected by this means, Denver is discussmg a proposition to erect a mammoth coliseum, which shall be one of the largest in the country. It will be con- structed primarily for the use of the Kuights Templar convention in 1802, Cattle are commanding a better price in the maket than they have sinco 1886, Losses last year were smuil as compared with pre- vious winters and altogether the year prom- ises great things for local cattlemen. A well is being put down near Castle Rock in the umiuirnliuu of striking oil. There is a good flow of water at a depth of 1,100, but this is not what is wanted. ‘The boring will be continued to a depth of 2,000 feet. vagle valley, and particularly that portion embraced in the watershed of Gypsum creek, will produce a large amount of wheat this year. The mill at Gypsum bereafter will supply tlour to that section of tho state, Eugene Weston of Cauen City is collecting Fremont county minerals, ete., to exhibit at the Pueblo wineral palace. He intends to have a miniatare derrick, pump hoase and to represent the oil industries of Florence, Dan Osborn, a rustler from the Little Thompson, hus made a seience of plowing by using six plows attached toa jumbo traction engine. Dan's engine and six plows can roll over from ten to twenty acres of ground per ay. Portions of the couatry near Long- mont, were visited by a destructive hail storm, doing great damage to the promising crops. In the Hygiene settlement orchards were stripped aud the grain and and alfalfa beaten into the ground. T, W. Volentine shipped last week from Fort Collins a steer within a week of being three yeurs old that weighed 1,970 pounds. ‘This steer is said to have been pastured on clover in summer, fed on alfalfa in winter, and lived entirely outdooms. The Salt Lake, Colorado & Gulf railway has been incorporatea in the secretary state's office for £100,000. The line to be by »xtends from Fort Wingate, on %he Atlantic & Pacific railroad in New Mexico, to Corte: 11 Montezuma county, Colo., thence to Salt Lake City. Articles of incorporation of the Rocky Mountain pipe line company were filed with the county clerk of Puebjo coun’ The ob- jects are to construct and operaté a pipe line from Florence 10 Pucblo for the transporta- tion of oil and other fluids, and the capital stock is $100,000 in 1,000, shares. The busi- ness is to be carried on fu Florence, Pueblo and Arapahoe counties, with principal of- fices in Denver, Editor Paddock of the Boulder Tribune was knocked flat by “Haunk'" Stevens. The two hiave always been jgeod friends. Mr Paddock in his Tribune put some language into Stevens' mouth, unaat the street rail- road franchise, at which - Stevens took of- fenso. When the two met by accident, Stevens said; “Paddook, what did you put that in the paper about e for:" and before Paddock had time to answer or explain Stevens hit him with his open hand on the left jaw and felled him loto the mud. cretories, unequal temperature, unbalanced circulation and inervation. Therefore the indications are—remove ob- structions, wash away impurities, supply healthful nourishment, regulate temperature, circulation and inervation, relax intensive and intensify torpid action, and what like water, with its concomitants, can and does answer these indications ¢ By n]\]l!_\'iug the above propositions to the causes that produce, and the conditions that coustitute disease, wve will find the symptoms which indicate, and the argument to demon- strate that water is a remedy of general and of universal apvlication; and that water, ad- ministered according to the infallible laws of indication, has and will restore moroic phy: cal conditious to a normal state when the single and combived action of the most po- tent drugs are utterly powerless to effect this result. The rule observed by many physicians the use of water is to ‘recommend that tem- perature that feels most agreeable to the pa- tient; but this method is as often wrong as right, and will injure the patient, or retard the curative process, as often as accelerata it. he layity observe no rule, and they are as likely to bathe iu cold water when it should be tepid, or warm when it sbould be cold; and because they do not rescive tho benefit they desire they reiterate the teachings of the fathers in medicine, who taught that water was a death dealing agent in fevers, and that cold water during and after confine- ment, internally or externally was unprofes- ;wxml, illiterate, and savorea of charlatan- sm. Careful observation and experience have tong sinco taught me that such a use of the “water of physical life” is in harmony with a system of medicine which is without a de- “tined and reliable system of symptomatology ; and the results of such a use of water is us detrimental to th stem as the commnou method of prescribing drugs without definite and specific¢ indications which are based on a correct pathogenesis. Therefore, the law, which I have learned, is invariable and infallible, for the use of water, in health and disease, is that of vital action and reaction. But to elucidate this law of vital action aud reaction we will state other subordinate laws, the first of which 1s that as the tem- ature of the water is so will be the vital If the temperature of the water be above ninety-cight and one-half,orabove that of the organ or part to which it is applied, we have stimulaticn of the nervous system, elovation of the temperature, accaleration of the circu- lation and respiration. The blood |s determined to the surface, the peripheral vascluar system, increases in turgescence, and the vital forces are stimu- lated in the Tatio of the water temperature. If the temperature of the water bo below ninety-eight or that of the part or organ to which It is applied, we have sedation to the nervous system, temperature, circulation and respiration. The peripheral vascular system looses its natural luster, the vessels bacome contractod, the skin cold and lifeless, and the vital forces are depressed in the exact ratio of the tem- perature of the water used. We understand, too, that 1n a physiological and pathological condition of the orgunism, tho second subordinato law is that the vital re-action agalnst water is in an _inverse ratio to the temperature of the water used. This law is absolute unaer all circumstances and couditions of the body during life. To demonstrate this law, take a full cold vath, and we have exactly the same vital phenomena, action and re-action that our bodies are subject to undergo every day and hour of our lives; varying only n° degree of the temperature of the water and the re- active power of the boay The hrat impression of the water, when cold, causes the blood to recede from the cap- illaries, the vessels contract, the blood is do- termined to the viscera but the vital forces soon met this impression by an increased do- termination of biood to the surface to equal- ize the tamperature, and soon the capillaries become distended, the nervous system invig- orated, tho tomperature increased and warm glow over the body follows the cold bath 1 this process be frequently repoated the result is to develop the superficiul circula- tion and in tho same ratio relieve the on- gorged cireulation in the viscera, remove iu- | ternal excretory accumulation, equalize the | eire ulation and invigorate the entire system. This determination of the circulation to the surface in consequence of the re-active impression of cold water van not be a morbid process in any sense whatever, If we go intoa very cold atmosphere our bands aad face become cold and pale, the the vesscls contracted and bloodloss; but, if the re-active power of the system is equal to the temperatura of the atmosphero they soon appear red, turged and are warmor than bo fore the exposure. A repetition of this procoss, like that of the cold bath, when not violent is reall sanatory and indispensible to perfect healtl end vigor, and may bo continuod o life time &mt o most grailfying wnd highost saua. results. 0 furiher demonstrate this law of action 1 » an as the polished marble, . As is the equilibrium of the tempera- tura, circulation and innervation, so must be the temperature of the water used If the extremities are cold, they must be warmed before any cold baths be given. This follows from the law of vital reaction and inust bo carefully observed, as no benefit is every derived and serious or fatal injury may be dons by violation of this law; aud from this principle we deduce the fact that ail cold bathing should bo done in the first partof the day, when there is equalized temperature and circulation and nearest normal lunervation, therefore strongest reactive power. Since the vital forces are weaker in the second part of the day, innervation more foeble and vital reaction loss strong, very cold bathing should be replaced by warm water, or a temperature in the ratio to the reactive power, at that time of the day, 6. From the law of action and reaction we deduce thoe fact that all full baths should be taken three hours after a full meal, and one hour before the meal. Cold water has remarkable power for sedation, and hot water egual power for stimulation, relaxation and debilitation, therefore all forms of bathing when the body is exposed to a low temperature should be ef- fected n the shortest possible time, to be sanitary in the strictest sense, The same infallible laws that govern the external use of water, coutrols its internal administration, under ail circumstances and in every condition of the body in healty and in disease. We will now. brifly, observe the appii tion of these laws in leading pathologi lesions. When pain s idiopathic and presents in any part of the body from sub-circulation and innervation, there will be neither redness, lLieat nov swelling, and the iudications are heat above tho body temperature, which re- lieves by action and stimulation. ‘When pain is traumatic, and the above conditions are present, the indications are the same. But when there is pain, heat, redness and swelling, idiopathic or traumatic, the in- dications are cold applicatious, which relieves and removes the pain by conduction aud re- action. ‘When idiopathic pain or traumatic pain is not relieved by heat above the temperature of the body, the indications are alternate hot water with cold applicationt, which will when possible remove the pain by stimu- lation and reaction of the vital forces, When pain is the result of materis morbi, the local treatment is obvious from the pre- ceding conditions, The systemic treat- ment, every practical physician understands, consists in removing accumulations, washing away impuritics, |~-t\ml|1|u;z tomperature and circulation, establishing innervation, and when this is doae secretion and excretion are more active, and the cause of the pain and the sufferings are removed, and with them the effect. And what like water can affect these changos in the same time, leaving the econo- my so free from depletion, from derangement of function, and from traces of materis morbi to still retard innervation, ana react against the, too often, large doses of strong and bitter deugs— provided always that the laws ot vital action and reaction and corres- ponding water temperature be carefully ob- served, In every conceivable acute disease known to the profession, there are two conditions of the circulation and of tho nervous svstem, general or local, which are diametrically op- posed to each other aud which naturally re- quire different modes of treatment These conditions of the circu cither general or local, active hyperaemia and passive hyperaemia, and of thé nervous sys. tem exaltation and depression. In all ¢ of the first condition the blood is eir rapidly and freely, so that a larger ¢ of blood 15 circulated n a given time health In this stage of any disease there is a pow erful nerve tension,and arterial and capliliar contraction. We meet these pathological conditions as they present. If the active ny peraemia is violent, we observe the law of vital action, and meet these phenomena with cold or iced water frequently repeated, and 1n the exact ratio that the nerve tension dimi ishes and tho arterial and capillary contr tion relaxes, do we iucrease the temperatu of the water. 6. For, as the nerve teusion, body tempera- ture, and arterial and capillary contraction are, 50 is the vital reactive power, in health and suy discase. It is also an infallible law of the vital econ- omy, that every electro-positive condition must have an electro-uegative condition; theretore, it follows that, whild this active hyperaomia exists, thero i3 & passive hype a0min, near or romote to the electro-positive coudition, and by the law of reaction it fol- lows that this electro-positive coudition is supeiseded by passive hy peraomia. al ation are 08 ‘ulated antity than in Then the biood circulates slowly, sluggish- | ly, the nervous system and blood vessels are relaxed and Lhe quantity of blood circulated 0 the electro-negative organ or organs in a glv‘cu time must be less tuan in a normal con- ition, 1u this stage we observe the law of reao- tou, . K tne passive Lyperaswia be iuteuse, -~ substance, water,which constitutes the great buik of thevital machioe, and the never varying laws that should guide them in its administration in health and disease. Then, as a school of medictne, we can philosophically combine these three forces into the greatest, grandest, sauative thera- peutic system that concerns physical lifo. Were it not for the teachings of the “fath- ers in medicine,” which have come through gonealogy to the masses, who believe today that cold water in acute disease siguifies death to its victim and that the practi of hydro-therapeutics, without drugs, indicates professional inability, therefors —does not merit due compensation. He who under- stands thoroughly and will take as his therapeutic weapons, _electro-therapeutics and hydro-therapy can, I beliove, do more to alleviate suffeving humanity with less injury to the vital uomy than tho most erudite drug therapeutist 1u the land. - She Killed a Big Rattler, Mrs. Chris Unlenkamp of Green Valley, Cal,, had quite an adventure with a *‘rattler.” Sue was walking through the field not far from the house when hier attention was at- tracted tothe vigorous varking of the dog she had with her at some objoct in the tall grass. She drew near and found it to be a ratilesnake coiled up ready to strike, and making lively music with his rattle. A man would haye looked for a rock, but this was not Mrs, Ublenkamp's weapon, She left tha dog to watch the suake, and stepping to the Louse, brought out the shotgun. — With this he quickly put the reptile out of the way, It was a very large one and had seventeen rat. tles and a button. Decay of a Famous Post, Old Fort Halleck is situated thirteon and o half miles southeast of Halleck station on the line of the Central Pacitic in Nevaua. The buildings of tho once famous fort are badly dilapidated and getting worse daily. The row of pretty little cottages that wero formerly occupied by the oficers are gradu- ally crumbling away, whilo the stable, bar- rack, guard house, commissary and various other buildings on the rescrvation show too plainly what time will do towards destoyi property wheu neglected. The old fort wa situated on o beautiful little plateau, sur- rounded by a thick growth of cotton wood and well suppled with water, and when oc- cupied by Uncle Sam’s boys in blue was home-like and attracti very fort within Nevada's boundary line: and oponed to settloment has becu abandoned ONE ENJOY Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasaut and refreshing to the taste, and acts ic'nlly yet promptly on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind wver pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in | its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most pogulnr remedy known. yrup of Figs is for sale in 50¢ and’ 81 bottles by all leading drug giets, Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who | wishes to try it. " Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, uisviLE, «r. WEW YORK, M.Xo

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