Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 18 January 1893 — Page 3
SLEDS
prices on these lines for the month of Januaiy.
CA
Music
SKATES
Of All Kinds at Lowest Prices.
ROSS BROTH ERS., 99=Cent Store.
You qan buy Groceries cheap now as well as dry goods. It will not do to be out of the procession.
So here goes:
Twenty-five pounds New Orleans Sugar ..One Dollar
Twenty-one pounds Yellow Sugar .' One Dollar
Twenty pounds New York A One Dollar
Nineteen pounds Conf. A Sugar One Dollar
Nineteen pounds Granulated Sugar.. One Dollar
Twenty pounds Good Rice. .. One Dollar
Twelve pounds Choice Rice One Dollar
Sixteen pounds Raisins .One Dollar
Twelve pounds Choice Raisins One Dollar
Thirty-four pounds of Hominy One Dollar
Fifty pounds Bea Hur Flour Ninety Cents
Twenty-five pounds Ben Hur Flour. .... .... Forty-live Cents
Fifty pounds White Rose Flour Ninety Cents
Twenty-five pounds Whtte Rose Flour Forty-live Cents
Fifty pounds Pure Gold, best Minneapolis.One Dollar and a quarter
Twenty-five pounds Pure Gold Sixty-live Cents
One Barrel Pride of Peoria Five Dollars and a quarter
Fifty pounds Pride Peoria One Dollar and I'orty Lents
Twenty-five pounds Pride Peoria Seventy Cents
Furniture and Queensware--We are making
Barntiill, Hornaday & Pickett.
OO TO
Introducing the Popular
A O S
—1N-
THE
D-A-Go
A 4-act Scenic Comedy drama by
Richard F. Carroll.
Realistic Scenery,
Startling Sensations, Touching Pathos, Infoctious Comedy,
PricM 35? 5° 75
Con Cunningham
For Your HATS and FURNISHING GOODS.
The Warner
IS THE PROPER THING FOR HOUSE-CLEANING.
E O S IT IV E
HALL,
Thursday Evening,Dec 19.
spcc ci.il
Father of •,
The Warner Elevator M'f'g Co.
680 to 700, West 8th street Clndn.mU.Ohlo
••A HAND SAW IS A GOOD THING, SHAVE WITH."
Hydraulic Elevators,
See their 18#2 machine!
BUT NOT TO
fit!
B.T flU Hew York.<p></p>FULLSTOCK
A
BIR®
Price 60 eta.
Of All h.ltlnof
Feed
ANI)
Flour.
o. K.
Try Our Corn Meal.
We do all kinds of crushing
and grinding.
Honest weights and fair deal
ing.
Tuneful Medleys, Artistic Dances.
Shepherd &Kerr,
At the corner of Grant avenue
and West Market itrcet.
DAILY JOURNAL,
WEDNESDAY. JAN. IS, 1893.
Jg ASOCIAL SESSION.
A Larsrt Reception and a Pleasaut Card Party Last Evening. One of the most elaborate and successful social affaire of the seison was the reception of Mr. and Mr». W. P. Ilerron at their beautiful residence on College Hill. The residence was brilliantly lighted uud being decorated with the most beautiful of plants and llowers made a striking contrast to the bleak winter! outside the hospitable doors. The chandeliers and mautels were garlanded and festooned with holly, smilax and carnations until they presented a perfect picture of (lowering summer time. The dining room was decorated with exquisite taste and the table entwined with the fragile suiilax and appropriate flowers, being set with a most elegant service. During the evening a delicious punch was borne through the rooms of entertainment to the gueate. The number present was unusually large and fully 175 were received and most pleasantly entertained during the evening. The reception was a social event of a most successful character and the hospitality of the entertainers was both open and captivating.
I'l'A AM) CAUli 1'AIII'Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Goltra and Mr. ind Mrs. Will Goltra entertained quite a large party of their friends last evening at a toa and card party. The party proved to be a most pleasant and entertaining one in all its details. There were about ten tables ut the cards and the pr17.es were quite elegant. Mis. Newt Foster won the first ladies's prize and Mrs. J. R. Iionnell the booby. Mr. Ed VanCnnip won the gentleman's prize ind Charley Goodbar the booby. \mong those present were J. X. Foster ind wife and Cl.arliy Gccdbiirand wife
Ladoga.
Harry Millican's Die: Fee.
II. J. Milligan, trustee in the S. A. Fletcher estate, lust evening paid into the court $7,000, being the final divilend in the estate. This trust has been pending in the court^early nine years, and in connection with the receivership is the largest assignment that has been idminifctered upon in this county. The dividend received by creditors, including the present one, will exceed per cent., of which Milligan will have paid about 4 4 per cent, and Wallace, the receiver, :38 per cent. The appraised value of the property turned over to Milligan was about 8770,000. He has paid the individual creditors of S. A. Fletcher and creditors of Fletcher & Sharp something over 8970,000, being $200,000 in excess of appraisement. He shows 850 sales of real estate. Milligan's compensation will amount to almost $."5,000.—
"The Dago,"
The attraction at Music Hall Thursday night will be the CarroIIs in their new four-act eomedy-dratra, The Dago. As may be surmised by the title, The Dago deals largely with the life of an Ttalian among the slums of New York. The basis of the plot is the abduotion of a child heiress by an Italian renegade known as the Dago, who upon a promise a large sum of money, contracts to put the little one out of the way in order that his charming associate, an adventuress, may inherit the vast estates, she being the aunt of the child and next in kin. Among the many striking and realistic scenic features are a view of Brooklyn bridge, the Great Blizzard, the Dago's Attic, and the Ditsjlvii Mansion. The CarroIIs are supported bv a strong company.—-/'nws Xot/'r?
Gospel Teaipt-rauco Meetings. Begir.nitg on Friday night, Jan 20, series of gospel temperance meetings will be held at Good Templars' hall, under the auspices of Haddock lodge, flic services will be conducted by O. S. Wade, Grand Chief Templar of Indiana, an indefatigable and untiriug laborer in the temperance cause. He is a christian gentleman, a pleasing and forcible speaker and a man of great forethought and eloquence. Everybody IB cordially invited to come out and hear him.
Another Ice House*
Martin ,V Hon aro building another ice house nt the dam with a capacity of 1,000 tonB. The inner walls will be built urot, the house filled with the fine lfi inch ice that is now so plenty and later on the outer walls and roof will be built. We will then have the largest supply of ice ever put up in Crawfords
ville.
FLOUR
At $4 per Bbl.
More Kootn.
There is still much room for le\e!o] ment in the dry goods business Crawfordsville and McClure A- Graham had this in mind when they bought the room next to the Trade Palace. They will connect their new aquisition by archways and increase their stock.
A CURE FOR BASH FULNESS. To many persons life is a burden when in society, on account of an in veterate baehfulnesfi. They never know what to do with their hands or how set or stand. This is often caused by iil health, the body is inactive and slug gish and the mind is depressed. If this is the case get a 50 cent bottle of Los Angelos Raisin Cured Prune Laxativ from Moffett .V Morgan, and by its nee von will recover your health and spirits
OflB prices January nnd Mrarnv.
are the February.
TEE CONDITION OF THE MASSES.
A Few Pertinent Questions—Labor Saving Machinery—Interest. The ancient propeey of a time, when every man should sit under his own Tine and fig tree still seema to be in the distant future, and seemingly more distant now than it was several decades ago, fer the percentage of those who are homeless now is greater than it was twenty or thirty years ago, although labor saving appliances are constantly increasing by which homes can be more rapidly and cheaply multiplied.
This state of things is causing a great deal of discontent among a large proportion of the people, and justly so, for the whole people should partake in the benefits that should accrue to all from modern progress. But instead of being partakers in the benefits that aocrue to society from the use of labor saving appliances, they feel that they are crushed by them. So strong is this conviction that labor saving machinery has been destroyed as the enemy of men who must earn their bread by the sweat of the brow, and they have sympathizers who ehaie this view with them.
The Rev. Mr. Taliuage expressed the wish that not another labor saving machine might be invented in the next five hundred years. Entertaining such an emphatic view of the evil effects on the condition of laboring men he undoubtedly believes that we have too many labor saving devices now, but at what point would be drawn the knife. If wo admit that labor saving machinery is an injury and a hindrance to the well being of mankind it must logically follow that the line cannot safely be drawn this side or the days of the patriarch Abraham. In the opin:on of others labor saving machinery has nothing to do with the oauses that depress and degrade the laboring masses. That on the contrary it the other and real causes were removed that have brought them to their present miserable condition that labor Baying appliances would be an immense aid to better their surroundings
The real oause of the degraded condition of the masses in the estimation of the majority who have any views on the subject is that they are in fault themselves. That they are needlessly idle and extravagant in the expenditure of their earnings and also in useless and injurious expenditures at the saloon, iu tobacco in all its forms and that in many other ways they waste the means that if properly used would make them prosperous and happy. Xo doubt that to the idleness, waste and vices with which great many are justly chargable is the true cfluse of the homeless and miserable condition of a great many poor people. But allowing to these causes all that may be due to them in making homeless and miserable people, they do not account for any very considerable part of them.
By still others the causes assigned for the depressed condition of the masses is what they are pleased to call a vicious urreucy, or a protective policy by which they are made to pay more tor what they consume than they ought to pay. But the one great cause to which
ib
due more than any one cause, and perhaps all other causes combined, is hardly ever referred to as a factor in producing the present state of society.
TUE FAC'TOli INTEREST.
Mr. Bellamy in his hovel, "Looking Backward," illustrates the present condition of society as a part riding in oach and drawn by a part of the rest. This is not only the present condition but has been the condition of the masses all past ages. That mank:nd should have been divided into superior and inferior, or served and serving classes was the direct result of part syttems, and es pecially so in a state of chatel slavery. But surely as we are emerging from the dark ages and making all men free and wjua) in contemplation of law, the condition of the masseB should become I letter from year to year, but instead they are sinking deeper and deeper in he plough of despond. Since this is so it is worth while to make the inquiry whether their environments are not worse now than they have ever been in the past.
They must in some way be forging the chains that bind them. Mr. Bellamy in the opening chapters of his novel says: "I shall only stop now to say that interest on in vestment was a species of tax in perpetuity upon the products of those engaged in industry, which a person possessing or inheriting money was able to levy. It must not be supposed that an arrangement which seems so un natural and preposterous according to modern notions was never criticised by your ancestors. It had been the effort of law givers and prophets from the earl iest Bges to abolish interest, or nt least to limit it the smallest poBsiblo rate. All their efforts had, however, failed as they necessarily must so long as the ancient social organizations prevailed At the time of which I write, the latter p:irt of the nineteenth century, governments had genernlly given up trying to regulate the subject at all. By way of attempting to give the reader some general impressions of the way people lived together in those days and especially of the relation of the rich and the poor to one another perhaps I cannot do better than to compare society as it then was to a prodigious coach which the masses if humanity were harnessed to.
It was firmly and sincere!} be:eved that there was no other way in which society could get along, except the many pulled the rope and the few rode, and not only this, but that no very radical improvement even was possible ither in the harness, the coach, the roadway or the distribution of the toil. It had always been as it was and it always would be so. The other fact is still more curious, consisting in a singular hallucination wlrch those on top of the coach generally shared, that they were not exactly like their brothers and sisters who pulled at the ropes, but of finer clay, in some way belonging to a higher order of beings who might, justly expect to be drawn. The strangest thing abont the hallucination was that those who had just climbed up from the ground, before they had outgrown the marks of the rope on their hands began to fall under its influence."
Pursuing this figure of speech still further it may be snid that other coaches have been added and enlarged so that the fortunate passengers can take their servants with them whenever they wish
mi
lowest during COT,man
&
have them to minister to their habitB ot idleness and luxury. One of the peculiar conditions of society ia that the whole community, not engaged in pulling the rope* wero as
Dress Uools. ttnlshod Henrietta 48}!h\ wide
Black bilk
only iMe per yd. actual nrk*e Ail wool aUk finished Henrietta 4rtltn\ wi »e Muck and colors only 44c., worth (S&e. 20 pieces all wool cloths, plaid and stripes at 37c. worth tr»c. 15 pieces all wool cloth at 10c per yd., worth Jl5e, 2 pieces black silk at per yd. worth $1, nn extra bargain. pieces 2linc. black (Jrocralti silk, actual Value $1.75, will sell for per yd.
Table Linens and Napkins. •V pieces German linen damcsk iJSc per yd'.', worth 45c pieces worth One 4-Jc •JO do/., all linen towels at oc, each.
nnd T0c. per yd. .jro at
20 do/, damesk at 1 Napkids at a
Imktowels
«c., worth a0c/i
reduction,
pieces serein at :*4e net
Ji iisllns,
9-4 paperell bleached 10-4 paperell bleached 20c. b'7 paperoil uublcaehed In. 10 4 papercli unbleached 17c, Lonsdale muslin 7J jc Marbuville muslin 7?^c. hMiC. unbleached muslin tfiv 7Vje. unbitmched muslin
Opp. Court House, Main St.
willingly in the service of those on the
coaches as those pulling at the ropes.
The device interest was in force
among themselves. Whenever one workman could get the device in force against his fellow workman he did so, nnd all Bhared the hope ihat fortune might favor them so that soouer or later they would get a place on one of the coaches.
They were no able to see that while the device was in force among themselves that the only effect was to transfer a very small part of their earnings from one to the other. While the device in the hands of those on the coach was used to transfer the products of the laborers ahiiOBt wholly to themselves.
But if the many are to be saved from still further degradation and to lift them out of tho present low condition into which they have fallen the government must grapple with 'this question of intore&t more than it ever has done before. It is true the power of aggregate and combined capital is very great but the power of the people by the exercise of the powers of government in their hanns is vastly greater for the correction or suppression of any evil whenever they see fit to exercise it.
Samuei, B. HOEI
To
the Bemef Committee amj Pook Families
or
Cuawi-orosvili.e—Shep
herd fc Keer will give a ten pound sack of meal to each poor family in the city of Crawfordsville on an order from the Belief Committee in the ward iu which they live, and present the same at our place of business at the old brewery mill, corner of Lafayette and Grant avenues. This offer will be good till the 2.r.tb of Jan.. 18!W.
Siini'UEiii) X- KEEII.
AOKTJI r.V/O.V.
.1. S. Graham's health is improving. W. J. Wray is hauling wood to New Market
Miss Edith Young went to P.nccoon Saturday. D. B. Wray sold a nice lot of hogs a few days ngo.
The extreme cold jyeatber cheeked all kinds of work. Joe Thomas has ret lrned to Boone county to work.
J. S. Graham nnd wife visited at Mosca Carver's Sunday. Miss Jennie Holiday has itturhod io her home in Frankfort.
Armantrout & Childers have bought some timber of J. B. Dooley for wood. W. B. Poynts visited Xoblesville the last of the week, they say to bring home a hotter half.
A few young men were brave enonf, to visit their best girl. Sunday ever:og notwithstanding i.ie e: edi j. cold w»nther.
A IIEWAnUEIl
Eye,
Greene, Joe. Block. Fit,..g of glasses a specinlty.
Chotrr
Ouly 7Tm for a half bushel of Baldwin apples this week. Joe Tavi.ok.
Don't
forget to see the grand bar
gains in remnants of dress goods aud novelty robes Bischof is offering during his January cut price sale.
0
Used Millions
$7,500. $7,500.
More Stock on hand than we ought to ive at this linte
We want it sold! We wiSi have it sold! We must sell it! And in order to sell it quickly we cut prices to cost and in many instances at much below cost. You have only to refer a few of the following prices to convince you of the truth of our assertions:
CHticoes«
1 ndi)M Ulues at Tie: Shirt injr flint* a« 4'j all 7-c l''ane\ Prints for .*ic.
I.ace urtaius.
One third oil the price on any of our Lace Curtak s, Laeesatul Kmbrniderle*ad reduced for this sale-.
Immense stock of I'lnbrePas at a bt*r redue ion on former price*.
Hosiery and I'iiderwenr,
All wo,)l Merino llo*o for Ladies only worth 'inc. Misses Hlack Kr»*n«%h Hibbcd Hose, real value aOe, at "J0c.
Ladles'Jersey I'nion Suits, worth '$l,.2r. ai
S.'k-/ MIsm's'
l.:nlon
It
By means of this device of "interest' their power over the laborers pernm ually increased, so that if there is need
Suits, worth '^c, ro for 4Uc.
All Children's Underwear at reduced nriees. Ladies' White All-Wo »t Jersey Uihbcd A'eMs, worth I'of 70c.
Corsets.
Italic ','orsets for this sulconly ?.V.worth Ourtl Detroit Corset Waist for t?e. Ail other cornets reduced.
Handkerchlcf-v
Ladies' Hemstitched Corded Horded worth
Of, jro for ."»e. ftmbroid'Tcd. \'0c handkerchiels., for 12'je. Kent's White, colored borders, for 4c each
Come to this Big Sale and save money.
J,
The Cheap Dry Goods Man
will take colder weather than this
lo, keeP
the Ci0WliB
,lwa.\
wl'en
lh?re
sale.
Brscuor is offering some grand bargains in blankets and comforts. Ik
you are in need of
11
A Head Slim
right at. tlie seat if difficulty, is iice-wi-pusbed by the sure and steady aim of I)r Sage's Ca.arfh liemedy. Dont fool around Willi pop gun. nor a "Flint-look," when tins reliable "Winchester" is wittiin reach: Or. Sage's uclment of catarrh is tar su perior to the ordinary, and when directions int in are ensoiialny well followed, results in a 1 permanent cure. Don't longer be indifTer
eM io
for more coaches or they desire a more remedy. is offered, in good faitli, for usurious style of living this device en- S".
ables them to do so. To those who ride
on the coaches it is very desirable that the people should be made to believe that the miserable condition of the many is due to their own vices and idleness, and to encourage them to more diligent labor and to increase their substance by using the device of "interest" to increase their goods without labor. Mr. Ballamy says that governmsnts despaired of regulating "interest."
ttie verified eialms of tlii» unfailing
I.OVV'H
IIEN.
A Liberal Offer.
i'oini(/
now 1 can
of 'igor, Ir.lUi
the use Lrish iTorb like it. viae nt all drug
and ease follow Ten. Childrt stores.
en- ano throat uiseast only, Dr.
ltrcum.
Love's young dream was a very bright one. and its fultHlmcut will be bright, too, if tho bride will remember that she is a woman, and liable to all ills peculiar to her sex We remind those who are suffering from any of these, that Or. Pierce's Fuvoi ile Prescription will renow the line of youth in pale and sallow cheeks, correct irritating uterine diseases, arrest and cure ulceration and infiamution, and infuse new vitality in a wasting body. "FavoritePrescription'" is the only medicine for women sold by druggists, under a positive guaran tee from the uianulacturers, that it wil give satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years.
Venires to Hear Tenttman it. Henry Thome, traveling secretary of the Y. M. C. A., writes from Exeter Hall, Strand, London, February '2, 1888: "1 desire to bear my testimony to the value of Allcock's Porous Plasters. I have used them for pains in the back and side nnsingfrom rheumatic nnd other causes never without deriving benefit from their application. They aro easily applied and very comforting. Those engaged as I am in public work which involves exposure to sudden changeB of temperature, will do well to keep a supply of Allpock's Porous Plasters in their I portmanteaus."
I,a 0'rlpif\
During the prcvailcnee of the gri|.|:e the past seasons it was a notiecnble fact that those who depcud upon Dr. King's New Oiscovery, not ouly lmd a speed recovery, but escaped all of the troublesome after affects of the malady. This remedy seems to have a peculiar power in effecting rapid cures not only in casts of la grippe, but in all diseases of throat, chcst aud lungs, aud has cured cases of asthma, aud hay fever of long standing. Try it and bo convinced. It won't disappoint- Free trial bottles at Nye .V Hi'oe'a drug storo.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Oastorla.
1
1 had a severe attack of catarrh and I became 60 deaf 1 could not hear common I conversation. I suffered terribly from roaring in my head. 1 procured bottle of Ely's (Jreai.i Balm, and in three weeks could aa wMl
bb
lever could, und
Bay
to all who are afflicted
with the worst of diseaser, catarrh, take Ely's Cream Balm and be cured. It is worth SI,000 to any man, woman or child Buffering from catarrh.- A. E. Newman, Gnvyling, Mich.
".•In I'art In]a Sioi in
but iii a moment of calm reasoning try 'Itoyal ltuby Port Wino." It is the purest and best wine of its class. Good body, cxccllent flavor and great strength. Keon. I omical too for medicanal and family use-
Let it convince you itself. Quart bottle. |1 KI, pints lid ctt. For sale by Nyc&Hooes
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria*
Powder:
Tbe only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia No Alum.
of
Homes—40 Years tlie Standard.
ot
the
ADVICE
°"r
8lore
are so many big bargains
Abe Lf.vinkon.on
cloak or any
thing iu the millinery line we are selling them at about one half price. I Auk Levin-son.
llJfc
by its proprietors, the World' Medical Association, Buffalo, all druggists.
"eil(^
Disponsarv N Y. At
When Baby was sick, wo garo her Castorl&. When slit was a Child, she cried for CostorU. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave Uiom Cutorla.
year
a ureat
IO
*lo\ cs and Mitts.
•W0 pair's of children's milts onty 7u-. pair. 10 do/.. Indies' nil-wool mitts oi.lv l.V pair, worth 2.V to ".Oc. •*)0 do/.. and hook kid irioves, black eolots. our *1 jdove for :»c,
A elegant tmttoncd gln\e tor
per,
and
Notions.
(iarter Webb 2 wis for ."c. KeltoifsSwansdown It if. j»v Vio.v, /.vorih All Zephyr- pero/. Note tetter paper 24 rdtrni*. loi 'T»c,
rc
Millincr\.
Any wh»I felt ha* itiour v.t» Any Wrench felt h-tt for Uiv. Tips, lord1-, wiiiws, vci i-i.w else rodueed one-half.
•k for XV, ..
nsd every th'u:)r
Clonks and Jslta vls.
We have about '"'On cloaks to m'»H this and ne.xt month, and If vou wain one. the price is no object with u«. Vou can buy it as do notpropose to carry over a single garment.
t'/anncis at ttnd Itvhnr *ot 'J'- d'»/ :ilI wool shirt patterns'U.U lc: eaci^ I'aetory blankets at cost.
Crawfordsville, Ind
TO 0ME5
If you wot'iJ protect yourself
from Paints si. Suppress^! or struation vou must use
Jrofuse,
Scanty,
Irregular Men-":
BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR
CAItTKICivll.l.K, April 2U, 18W1.
This will ttcrtilA ih.-it t.wu members ol' my Immediate family, all'-r luivinjt sulToml for rears
fi*om
itioiiKiniitl
irrcuularlty,
being treated withunt 'nenelit by physieuin*, were at length completely,-tired'by one bonk* of
Uradllcl.l'i. l*Vm:ile
Ke^-ii'lainr. its
effect ia truly wonderful. .1. \V. m-uanu". 'took to WOMAN FkKK. Whl"h contft!n« valuable Informui lwi ti ali U'hwdc
JHADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, CA. htjlt SALli in' ALI, bltUGGISTS.
Sold bv Nve & Co.
A YOI I
PICTURES T' The Fair
To be Framed.
Big 4
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago
Route. & St. Louis R.
W&Riior Sloopors on trains. IJoRt moo era a&y coaches on all trains. OonnectliiK with solid Vestibule trains Bloomltiffton and PeoriHto and from
hhovit
rivor,'Denver und the Fuclflc coast. At iudiauapolls, Cincinnati. Kprlnglluld anO Columbus to and from the Knatorn and son hoard cities,
TRAINS AT OriAWFORDSVILIiE. GOING WKHT.
No. 9mall 0:00 a, in No.? mall d...j a in No. 17 mall 1 n» No. ft Expreefi (i:4Hp in
GOING RART.
No.12 Mail (d) 'JiOO air No. 2 Kxprese n:th»ftiu No. 18 Mall 1:1 f» pin Nn.8 Mai! fi:l nn-
ONE DOLLAR
EVERY HOUR
18 m*i!y hv iv our of «*i''
*«-x hi
uiduhx
any
part of'tln* country, who I? willing to wurk in«Jutriously at tin* otnploynK-nt which Jurni-!i. Dip labor irt light and pleasant, ami vou run no ri«k whatovnr. Wo lit you out rompuM*-, so that vou can give the businosH a trial without «'XjH*n« to \ourM'lf. KurthoH' willing to lo little work, this is* thr j.Tun-Ir»st ot!*r math-. Vou can work all dav, or iu 11n* uvrnin^ only. If you are emplovil. .iii'i have a few spare hour* al your di-|iu-a!, utilize thciu, ami add lo your income,our bii"iue-- will not interfere at all. Vou will iMMiuiay.eci on the start nt the rapidity ami eae bv which you
dollar upon dollar, day in aud
t'iav out. Kveii he«innerr are sucri'-stul from the liM hour. Auv one can run the husim«* tion» fail. Vou -imuld try nothing ehe until vou tee for vour-elf what you can do at the bu^ines* which we oiler. No cardial risked. Women are u.rand worker nowauTO- they nifike a« inuch :i* men. Thev shouhl trv Jlii* hu»'iw\-.», a^ it s'o Well fulapted io tlu-IIJ. Write :lt "lice and *ee for *onr-elt. Aildress 2. II A!.1.1/1"!' A'
|5o\ WHO.
ISirlluiid,
M'-
Agents Wanted on Sakry
Or eon.mission, to handlo tho Now 1'nlcni Chemical Ink Erasing Pencil. The (luleket-t aud (ireatebt selliliK novelty ever produced. Erases Ink tliorouKlily In two scconds. ali.-aslon of Iiapor. Works like maple. 200 to :100 per cent oflt. One B(tcnt'8 sales amount ed to 90120 In six days. Another, ».'« In two hours. Previous experience not necessary. f'*or terms and full particulars, address, I ho Monroe Knutor Mf* Co. liaCroHse.Wis.
