Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 20 January 1893 — Page 3
SLEDS SKATES
Of All Kinds at Lowest Prices.
ROSS BROTHERS.,
RE
You can 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 'Jne Dollar
Fifty pounds Bej Hur Flour Ninety Cents
Twenty-five pounds Ben Hur Flour .Forty-live Cents
Fifty pounds White Rose Flour ..v. Ninety Cents
Twenty-five pounds White Rose Flour........ .Forty-live Cents
Fifty pounds Pure Gold, best Minneapolis,One Dollar ami a quarter
Twenty-five pounds Pure Gold Sixty-five Cents
One Barrel Pride of Peoria Five Dollars and a quarter
Fifty pounds Pride Peoria One Dollar and Forty Cents
Twenty-live pounds Pride Peoria Seventy Cents
Furniture and Queensware--We are making special
prices on these lines for the month of Januaty.
Bamhill, Homaday & Pickett.
OO TO
680 to 700, West 8th street
BRWAItB
AND
O. K. FLOUR At $4 per Bbl.
Try Our Corn Meal.
We do all kinds of crushing and grinding.
Honest weights and fair dealing-
Shepherd & Kerr,
At the corner of Grant avenue
and West Marketitreet.
=Cent Store.
9p
Con Cunningham
For Your HATS and FURNISHING GOODS.
The Warner
Father ot
The Warner Elevator M'f'g Co.
"A HAND SAW IS A GOOD THING, BUT NOT
SiSPOLIO
SHAVE WITH.
18 THE PROPER THING FOR HOUSE-CLEANING.
OF c,lTOF
AFULLSTOCK
Of All Kinds of
Feed
Hydraulic Elevators.
DON'T
Flour.
See their 1802 Auichinc!
Cinclnnat!»OhIo
TO
COCOAS SOLD /""X
VAN CHONFEN^ CVCCOL ~BEST
AND COES FARTHEST)—
Is Manufactured on Solentlflo Principles. Highly Digeatlblo and Nutritious, known all over the civilized Globo as tho Peer of oil Cocoas.
IF
AS SOJjOTiME
yon are in need of a clonk or any thing in the millinery line we are sell ing them at about one half price.
ABE
IiEvr.N'sos.
Choice Apples
Only 75o for a half bushel of Baldwin apples this week. JOB TATJ.OR.
forget to see the grand bar
gaina in remnants of dress goods and novelty robes Biechof is offering during his January cut price sale.
Many a life has been lost because of the taste of codliver oil.
If Scott's Emulsion dicl nothing more than take that taste away, it would save the lives of some at least of those that put off too long the means of recovery.
It does more. It is halfdigested already. It slips through the stomach as if by stealth. It goes to .make strength when cod-liver oil would be a burden.
Scorr &
DOWN*.
Chemistt,
IJI
South 5h Avuu«,
"Yoiudruggiit Scotl'i Emulsion of fod-llrrf •U—*11 druggiali •yirjwbw. do. |i.
DAILY JOURNAL.
FIUDAY. JAN. 20, 1893.
A BIG TEING.
The Carroll Estate of Lebanon, WeBt Vir
ginia Secured for Orawfordrvilie Heirs,
White, Humphrey it Heeves yesterday rocoived a letter from local attorneys of Lebanon, West Virginia, apprising them that the affairs relative to the Carroll estate had boon adjusted and that the land would bo sold as quickly as possible. I he land is a (5,001) acre tract abutting on Lebanon ana much of it is quite valuable. A wish offer of SGO.OOO has been mude for it already but Mr. Heeves Htates that the land is worth at least calculation §100,000. Mrs. Martha llutledgo, mother-in-law of Kobert Davis and Gua llutledge are both iutJrested iu the estate and will receive large slices of cash. Old man Carroll died some years ago leaving his large estate to his wife who more recentlv died intestate. The few heirs were scattered all over the counliy and as more wero in Crawfordsville than anywhero else White, Humphrey Reeves became attorneys for the whole lot. They made proof of heirship, aud curried tho case to a successful termination. They will shortly receive tho cash aud divide it among tlio heirs retaining tho usual luxuriant and tropical commission.
Ladies' Day.
The saloon appertaining to The Terre llaute House in the Maiden City, where Con Meagher lives and Nancy Hanks broke the record, recently fitted up a magnificent bar which was the wonc'.er and admiration of the natives. It was promptly acknowledged to be the foxiest beer house in Indiana, and when on the day of the opening the first bar keeper reaplendent in a while apron covered with red polkn dotB and with shirt, collar and cuffs to match, turned the amethyst studded faucet or the mammoth silver beer keg, enthusiasm knew no bonds. It was declared on all sides that solo possession of amh a paradise by the men would bo cruelty personified. Accordingly it was voted to have a ladies' day upon which the fair ones of the city could view the splendors of the place and sip the "cool foaming" and other delectable drinks over the walnut bar. "Ladies Day" proved to bo the social event of tho Terre Hauto season and was an affair of exceptional brilliancy. The management was assisted not a little by Mrs. Spudy Winks and other society ladies who served free lunch and well spiked pnnch from fairy grotto in one corner. Ladies' Days have become premnnent features now and their recurrence is becoming startlingly frequent.
Installation of Officers.
Last night at New Kiclimond the new officers of Washington Camp, No. 12, P. O. S. of A. were publicly installed by District President 8am D. Symmes, of this city, who was accompanied by Sam J. Billman and Howard Griffith, of camp 0. The installation was witnessed by a large number of people and speeches were made by the now officers and some of the visitors. The following are the officers installed:
Past President—F.M.Smitli. President—W. P. Coffman. Vice-President—C. A. Taylor. Master of Forms—Wrn. Stites. Recording Secretary—T. S. Patton. Financial Secretary—W. S. Alextnder.
Treasurer—S. R. Tribby. Conductor—Marc Lucas.: Inspector—Geo. Steel. Guard—S. P. Harrimau. Trustees—-Amos Ebrite, C. A. Taylor, VV. S. Alexander.
RECOLLECTIONS.
W7hat a blessed thing is memory Lfow it brings up the pleasures of the past, and hides its unpleasantness! You recall your childhood days, do you not, and wish they would return You remember the pleasant associations, while the unpleasant ones are forgotten, Perhaps to your mind comes the 'ace of some friend. It was once a pale, sad face. Tt showed marks of pain, l'ues of care. It teemed to be looking into tl hereafter, the unknown future. And then you recalled how it brightened, how it recovered its rosy hue, how it became a picture of happiness and joy Do you remember these things? Many people do, and gludly tt»Tl how the health returned, how happiness came back, how the world seemed bright. They tell how they were once weak, nerveless, perhaps in pain, certainly unhappy. They tell of sleepless nights, restless days, untouched food, unstrung nerves. And then they tell how they bacame happy, healthy and strong onoe more, l'ou have heard it often in the past, have yon not? You have heard people describe how they were cured and kept in health? You certainly can remember what it is that has'so helped people in Amorica. If not, listen to what Mrs. Annie Jenness Miller, who is known universally as the great dress reformer, says: "Six years ago, when sufferiug from mentul care and overwork, I received the most pronounced benefit from the use of that great rnedic'ne, Warner's Safe Cure." Ah, now you remember. Now you recall how many people you have heard say this same thing. Now you recollect how much you have heard of this great cure.
Now you are ready to admit that memory is usually pleasing, that the highest pleasure comes from perfect health, and that this great remedy has done more to produce and prolong health than any other discovery ever known in the entire history of the whole world.
ARSENIC FIENDS.
Women Who Are Slaves to the Deadly Drutr.
Tho Fearful R.T.lf.Uon# of
a
Druggist
Concerning the Habit! of tbe Vl«tlBi of th« Fatal Serve Tonic.
I had often met her, this pale nymph of the sidewalk, and oftentimes when the electric light fell full upon her face she had seemed so frail and white that my imagination had pictured her to be some ghostly visitant of the great city, coming back with a morbid pleasure to the haunts of her wretched life in the same way as wo visit places where we have wept our bitterest tears. A strange vigor seemed to animate that frail form, for it sped swiftly along, and often, when I had resolved to follow it, flitted from my sight as if it had dissolved into the heavy, murky atmosphere and become a very part of the great city's unwholesome breath, says a writer in tho New rk Mercury.
One night the pale nymph suddenly turned and entered a drug store, where 1 happened to be acquainted. 1 waited until she had taken her leave and then made haste to ask the clerk who she was. 'An arsenic eater/' he replied in a nonchalaut tone. "The name on her prescription is 'Mrs. Dcvore,' but no doubt that Is an assumed name. She comes once a week to renew her prescription, which, by tho way, bears the signature of one of our well-known phj-.sicians. "Yes," continued the drug clerk with a simulated sigh, "there are manysuch they grow whiter and whiter until 1 seem to be playing the hollow mockery of dispensing a death-dealing drug to death itself. And then they don't corns any more. 'You ask me if 1 don't think am doin(? wrong to sell such a virulent poison to this woman. Well, possibly so. and yet by coming to us she prolongs her life, for if we refused to fill the prescription she would simply have resource to some one of the arsenical preparations advertised in the daily papers. There are hundreds of 'pick-me-ups' sold in this city which contain arsenic, and while it is a fact that this poison is largely used in different parts of the earth as a skin bcautifler, yet that is not what this woman is after. She uses it as a nerve tonic—it being one of the strongest known to the medical faculty. 'Interested in this woman, are you? Well, my advice to you is not to let your imagination encircle her head with what is called the halo of romance. She is just a plain arsenic eater, which drug she probably uses to get reliel from some nervous ailment of the nature of chorea or St. Vitus' dance. 1 you could see her in the daytime your 'pale nymph of the sidewalk' would not attract you so strongly. Nay, 1 warrant, you would be repelled by her heavy, dull eyes, her colorless lips, her parchment-like skin, her general look of utter weariness and subdued suffering."
A TEXAN'S PET CENTIPEDES.
Altir Tii«\v (inl I.ooto Tliolr (IffniT ll»d lt»e C»r In ISlni8t*lf.
"1 was froinff to New York srnne time afro." saiil a traveler to a St. Louis niobe-l'einocrat niau. "At :i way station in Indiaua a little old man eutered the sleeper, carrying a wooden box bored full of small holes. The car was crowded, and nearly everybody had pone to bed. The newcomer ordered his berth made up, ami retired to the smok-ing-eonipartment i-ar for 11 few whiffs on a black brierwood pipe that was strong enough to curl the hair on a wooden Indian. When he started to retire he picked up his perforated box. The cover had come off, and the little man stood starinfr at it with such a look of hopeless, helpless despair that 1 ventured to ask him what was the matter. 'Matter'" he shrieked in his thin falsetto that went through the car like the note of a bagpipe, 'matter? I Jiad six centipedes in that box which I was taking home from Texas, and the last mother's son of 'em has got eout'.' "Well, sir, if you had exploded a pound of dynamite iu that car you would not have created greater consternation. Men and women came tumbling out of their berths in theii nightcaps and shortstop clothes. One woman scratched herself on a pin. declared that a centipede was in hei clothes and got rid of her scant habiliments in one time and two motions. A fat man, who was a victim of prickly heat, imagined that ho could feel a centipede making its way down his spinal column and could with difficulty lie restrained from jumping out of the cat window. Mosquito bites were, magnified into deadly wounds aud the whole train ransacked for doctors. The colored porter stood on the rear platform and shook as though afflicted with the palsy. Everybody crowded into the next car, shook out their clothes gingerly and made hasty but fearful toilets in the presence of half a hundred horrified passengers. There was no more sleep that night. I had forgotten rny meerschaum pipe, and in fear and trembling went back to recover it. 1 found the wretched author of all our misery poking uround with his box, looking for his lost pets and mourning because he found them not. 11 said he paid two dollars apiece for them in Cisco, Tex., and the very thought o( being twelve dollars loser nearly broke his heart."
An Old Mulberry Tree.
It may be interesting to know that there is still an old mulberry tree, a cutting from Shakespeare's tree, planted by Garrick in the garden of tho house occupied bj* the late Mr. Fisk, at the corner of All Saints' street, Hastings, says a correspondent of the London Notes and Qtaeries. I clipped the iuclosed announcement from the Manchester Mercury of October, 1799: "Died, a few days since, in his seventy-fifth year, Mr. Thomas Sharp, clock and watchmaker, of Stratford-upon-Avon, and sole purchaser of the mulberry tree planted there by the immortal Shakespeare."
A CURE FOR BASHFULNESS. To many persona life is a burden when in society, on account of sn inveterate bashfnlness. They never know what to do with their hands or how to set or stand. This is often caused by ill health, the body is inactive and sluggish and the mind is depressed. If this is the case get a 50 cent bottle of Los Angelos Raisin Cured Frune Laxative from Moffett & Morgan, and by its use vou will recover your health and spirits.
Oun prtoes are the lowest daring January and February. COLSIAN MURPHY.
Dress (iootfs.
Hlack s!lk fln'-iiod Henrietta 4fc!n««. wide only 04c per yd. actual price 0.u\ Ail wool silk Itnlrfhed Henrietta •K'inc. wt black ami colorsonly 44a. worth tioe. -0 pieces all wool cloths, plnkl ultd tflrtpe* in 37e. worth (Vie. 1 piece* all wool cloth at 1 Po pot yd.. worth «:»c. 2 pieces black silk at tl2c. per yd. worth $1,
an extra bargain. pieces 21luc. black (troirruiri silk, .actual value M.75, will sell for per yd.
Table Linens Hint Napkins pieces Ocriiiini linen dtiniesk r.'Se per rd., worth 4"c. 10 pieces worth 03c. nod 1«c. per v1. uo nt
4 2c '20 do/., all linen towels at 20 do/,, daniesk towels at 17"
0-1 papeiell bleached
INC.
10 4 papercli bleach •«. 'Htc. 0-7 papcroll uuhlcached lfn\ 10-4 imporcl! unhlcuchcd 17c l.onsuale muslin 7lsc Marbuville muslin 7*je. unbletichcd muslin dr. 7:?r. unbleachod niMslln .V.
Opp. Court House, Main St.
NICKEL AND ITS USES
Tests of this alloy have beeu mude incompetent authorities and the effect of the addition of small percentages of nickel to steel is seen in greatly reduced tendency to oxidization and increased strength. As an example of 1 lie superiority of this nickel steel the following results of one of the tests may be given: A steel containing lour anil seven-tenths per cent. of niekel "showed an ultimate strength of thirty per cent, and elastic limit of sixty to seventy per cent, higher than those i#f mild steel,with a nearly equal ductility, and the valuable quality added of less liability to corrosion." The authority who obtained these remarkable results adds: Think for a moment of this in connection with the erection of the Forth bridge or of tho KitTel tower. If the eugineers of those stupendous structures had had at their disposal a metal of forty tons strength and twen-ty-eight, tons elastic limit, instead of thirty tons strength anil seventeen tons elastic limit in the one case, and say twenty-two tons strength and fourteen to sixteen tons elastic limit in the other, how many dilliculties would have been reduced in magnitude as the weight of materials was reduced! The Forth bridge would have becomo even more light and airy ami the. tower more net like and graceful than they are at present." And Sir Frederick
Abel, in his presidential address at the Leeds meeting of the British association, remarked: "It has been shown by Riley that a particular variety of nickel steel presents to the engineer the means of nearly doubling boiler pressures without increasing weight or dimensions."
HICK
Used Millions
$7,500. $7,500.
More Stock on hand than we ought to hive at this time of the
We want it sold! We wili have it sold! We must sell it! And in order to sell it quickly we cut prices to cost and in a 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:
Calicoes.
Tndigo HliuM at "•(•?. Shifting Prints at nil 7-c l^uicy Prints ior "n*.
Luce urfuitm
1
A Hedtcnl Father's F»tl.
The Haiti more American says that the indignation of the passengers on a Western Maryland train was aroused the other day by the unusual spectacle of a richly clad boy of five or six years, whose legs and feet were perfectly bare, although the day was a cold one. The child was accompanied by his mother and sister, who were evidently people of wealth and refinement. On inquiry it was learned that the boy was the son of a prominent physician, who had lost several children with throat diseases, until he hit ori the idea of turning his children out barefooted. The experiment proved to be a perfect success. The barefooted boy was the picture of health. At the union station in lialtimore he rnn around on the cold bricks totally unaware if any discomfort. People are constantly shocked and amazed at seeing the children of this gentleman going about, barefooted, winter and summer, but inasmuch ns it saves their lives, in his opinion, he is indifferent to criticism.
Marketing in .Spain.
It is not the custom for ladies to go to market in Madrid and even the Hrst cook in the great houses disdains to expose herself to the jokes of the market women. It falls to the place of the second cook to do the marketing and she prefers to pass her life in the position, for it has many perquisite's. It is understood that she expects her commission ou all she buys ami as prices vary this is easy without detection. She is too dear" is sometimes said when a servant is discharged, but no imputation is made against her character.
price on any of our Lace
One ihiid ofl' t»: Cortaius, Lares for thi* sale.
1
each.
Naokids at a biu reduction. pieces serein at o'tc. per
Muslins*
Immense stock of I'mbrel'a^ at a I lion on i'rnier pt sees. Hosiery aud I'mlerwenr,
All \wh)i Merino
Corsets.
Hoyal ISnby" I'ort IVInr.
If .you are reduced in vitality or strength by illness or any other causc, we recomuienil the use of this Uhl Port Wine, the very blood of the prape. A grand tonic for nursing mothers, and those reduced by wasting disease. It creates strength improves the appetite nature's own remedy, much preferable to drugs: guaranteed absolutely pure and over live years of age. Young wine ordnarily sold is not tit to use. Insist on having this standard brand, it costs no tnore. *1 hi quart bottlos, pints 00 cts. Hoyal Wine Co. For sale by N vcAi Booc.
Strength anil Health.
1 If you arc not feeling strong aud htaltLj1, try Klectrie Bitters. If "la grippe" has. leftyou weak and weary, use Klectrie Hitter3. This remedy acts iiircct.lv ou liver, stoniHch and kidneys, gently aiding those organs to perform their functions. If you arc aflllctcd with sick headache, you will find speedy and permanent relief by taking
Klectrie Hitlers. One trial will convince you that this is the remedy you need. Law bettks only-.VJc at Nye Hone's driu.' store.
When n.'ibv w&s sick, we garo hor Castorla. When sbtwns a Child, she cried for Castor.'*.
Whan she became Miss, she clung to Cutorls.
When she had Children, Bhegave tbem CutoriA.
I.a Urtppr..
Uurir.g'the prevalence of the'gri'p|.c the .} past seasons it was a notiecab'e fact that.! those who depend upon Dr. King's Nmvj Discovery, not only hud a speed recovery, but oscuped ull of the troublesome after iiffeets of the malady. This remedy seems lo have a peculiar power in effecting rapid cures not only in cases of la grippe, but in all diseases of throat, chest aud lungs, and hat cured cases of asthma, and hay t'evcr of long standing. Try it and be convinced. It won't disappoint. Free trial bottles at
N.ve ,V
headache, whether frotn const:- ijecamo so deaf
Booe'sdrng store.
pation, indigestion or from impurities iu convererition. 1 suffered terribly from tho blood, is cured by Irish U^ib lea.
eale. Ltrom Ely's Cream Baltn and be cured. It is worth SI,000 to any man, woman or BISCHOK iB ottering some grand b:ir child suffering from catarrh.—A. iv gains in blankets and oomfo rts. Newman, Grp.yling, Mich.
Embrolderiestttl reduced ^id xlovcs, hhu colors, our $1 jrlnw lor T.n\ Anoh'ujmt buttoned jrio\e I'or.n.nv. ig redue
LIV,
IIOAC
tor Lttdica onlv
worth Xx.\ Muses lllack French Ribbed Hose, value 50c, at :iUc.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Oastorla.
had a severe attack of catarrh and
1
r0!iri„g
25 cents at druggists. ye )y'a Cream Balm, and in three IT will take colder weather than this W(*k* co"u1'1
could not hear common
jn
niy
head. 1 procured a bot-
ft8 ('R'elJ,K9
to keep the crowds nway from our store to "ho are aillicted wheu there are so many big bargains on «'f
'ev,'r
Powder
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia No Alutu.
of
fi»rter'Vehb yd^ tor l*'eiton'sSwMiisdown \oc All Zephyrs 5c. on oz. Note io: ter pnper I »-he«
real
Ladles' .Jersey l/hion tMiits, worth *l/J/». at XoC MIspe*.' i-nlon Suits, worth 75c,
KO
for 4be.
All t'iuldron'.i IItutarwivir it reduced prices. Ladles' WhiK* All Wo .b^rsev Hlbbed Wts worthfl.^5, for ii»c.
|,
llal'V Corsets« for this saloonlv 5c.worth fl Our*! Detroit Corset WuijM, lor i'n» All other corset* reductd.
Humlkcrchlcl's,
Ludlos' Hemstitched Corded M-irded worth ?1 '.'e, |/o for 5c. \i l'htibruid"red, •'Or-ha'ndkorehieLs,, for l\M:e. (ienV's Whl'e, colored border, pr 4c each
Come to this Big Sate and save monev.
The Cheap Dry Goods Man
I
rim Mmir Ailvnnlnj-i** of HII Alloy of -Mold1! UIMI SU-«-J. Fur a long time nature's hints wore neglected or disregarded, but in patents were, taken out in Kngland and France bv different individuals for the preparation of nickel steel, says the I'opular Science. Monthly.
SAVED BY A SLIPKNOT.
M. Thouar. in his diarv. hept during his explorations in the l'ilcomayo deltas tinder a commission from the Argentine fjoverninenl. describes an experience which prompted him eternal vigilance in regard to snake*.
He was l.viutf in his hammock: the ficrgeant of bis jruard was asleep under tree close by. Suddenly he noticed an immense serpent coiltd about, the sergeant's leg and extending its head toward his bare chest.
What .should he do? To wake the man meant certain death to him but how to kill tho creature or attract It nway without waking him? He recalled a method if capturinir the cobra in India.
He prepared Blipknot. \\y stealthy, almost imperceptible movements he attracted the serpent's attention. It turned its head. Then he leaned from his hammock and with a long piece of grass tickled it gently on the throat. It raised its head. He cast the noose over it and drew It. tight around the serpent's neck.
It was not a moment loo soon. The sergeant awoke. FTe fainted with fright, but the danger was past. The slipknot had saved him and a stroke of the saber cut off the serpent's head.
IOJIUS
ooul', ,l,od,
dl8eflfr-
catarrh, take
Homes—40 Years the Standard.
year-
great
»lovi»s
uiwl Mitts.
ot children's mitts onlv
JU)0 pairs pair. 10 do/. ladies' all- wool mitts or.lv l^cv
wor
iit.d
Not io
in boy. -.von t."
•t t«»r -'V
Millinery.
Aii, fell hrtt Inour Mock for' Any
r*«.«neh
fell, hut for
m»e.
Tips birds, winys. vch «»is nud every thircelse rodueed oue-halL
ami HBA VLS.
Wc hnve m!mur Uoo lo:iks to next month, nnl if wsmt ou nooi'ject with u%. Von eau buy p*oj»os'' to carry over sinule ment.
ell tins and the price i•* as I do .not.
rtnmirtH at atal Ilelnw 1'ost. '-Mi d'•/. nil wool skirt pattern* at Ic. ei cost.:
Factory blanket*
Crawfordsville, lncl
ADVICE
Head
It Wu« Thrown Ovcr a h^rprnt's .limt tn Time. The trnvelerin the unc.iviU/,e.l regions of South America has 1» face many perils. If he escapes the savages, who are adroit and bitter enemies if lie enn Kecurc water and food, and survive the intense heat, and believes bis expedition has every chance of MICCOSS, he amy die within an hour from the bite of a poisonous serpent, says Youth's Compaiiiun.
TO WOMEN
II you would protect v^ursell (torn Painitil. Profuse, Scanty, Suppressed or irregular. .Menstruation von must use
BRADNELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR
(JAIITK'C.V•
ii.r.r., April'.It, ISM.
Tills wilt ceriil'y u:. two inemliwrH of my Immediate famtlj, lifter leaving sintered tor venra from IflctiKiriiat RrreMilurlt}, ticluK treated without In-held tiv pliysueinnM. were at ieriirtli cutniiii'tely ui cVty ouu llrtKlflrld'n S rmnte Cti-^ulnlnr. !ti ••fleet trt truly wovetvilel. I. *\V. SriiAriui:. ,,lt lo WOMAN tii.'ill.'il I'lllX. luluablu luforuiutli'ii on u!! f.- 1.-
JRADFIELD REGULATOR CO..
ATLANTA, GA.
ms SJ i.i: ny ALij OHrauraTn. Hold bv Nve& L'B.
TAlii: lot It
PICTURES
The Fair
To be Framed.
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago
Route. & St. Louis R.
Waenor Sluepors on nlphttrains. Berft
TRAINS
AT
I-H.KI:
ern day couches'*!) all trnlne. A1 Connecting with solid Vestibule tralua nt BloomlDtfton and Peoria to and from
BMJUT
river. jenyorand the Pacific coast. At Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Springfield and Columbus to and from the Kasttvni and »v board cities,
OilAWFORDBVlLIiK. OOING WEST.
No. 9 mall 9:00 a, No.7 ma11(d.../ ,12:40 No. 17 mall :H0 in No. II R.xpreHP in
OOINO KA.MT.
No. 1ST Mall (d) C:0U a No. 2 Kxprcsf No. 18 Mail 1 :!.*» nm No Mail f»:l8 prn
ONE DOLLAR
EVERY HOUR
riMily «urmi by uny 0110 of dther -«*x 111 niy purl of tin* country, who willing to work indu*. triouitly at th" employment whkh funil.-)n Th* lubor is light nul plejifuut. ami von run uo\ ri-'k whatever. Wo lit yon on! roinnlcte,.*0 »li:it/ you can civo il?e bimincs«) trial without ••xp«*n.-e to vonrM-lt'. For l!u»«e willing'0 «io a little work, this is Mi.- »r:m.l«^t olfrr nunle. Vou can work nil «lav. or in
TIH-
IIJIV
»-v»nin^ only. If you are em.'-
ploxcd. iinti ItiiM.' a few £pare hours nt your «)i». |.oal, utili/e them, ami iuld to your income, our hujijiie^.- will not. interfere sit all. Von will h»- atnaze.l on the -tart at the rapidity ami ea.-e in which vou ama.-* dollar upon dollar,day in au*l
out Kveu bi'ginner* are
SUCCE^Jiul
from the
tlr^t hour. Any one can run the btiHiie.-s none fail. Voti sliouM try nothing elje until you
MH?..
for youixlf what you can d» at the biiJ-ine^a which we oH'er. No cuidrnt r.^ked. Women arc fraud workers nowarlay1 tio-v make a? much men. They should try thi" tnisine, a* it is^o well adapted to them. *Vri«e at once mid fee lor yourself. AiMro^ IS. I! A l.l.T'TT A* '0.»
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Agents Wanted on Salary
Or cotnmlsRlon, to handle tho New Patent* Chemical Ink Erasing Pencil. Tho quIckoMand greatest selling novelty ever prodncedo Krases Ink thoroughly in two seconds. No abrasion of paper. Works like inuglc. -00 to JtOO percent profit. One Hgent's sales amounted to ftiSO In six days. Another, f.'W In two hours. Previous experience not necesKHry. For terms and lull particulars, address. The Monroe Kraser Mfg Co. LaCroJ'se.Wis. 44i
