Decatur Democrat, Volume 36, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 17 February 1893 — Page 3

ssws—m—MW——iw- ■ i ■ i He finds It "a wonderful cure for n bnd cough.* Mr. Wm. F. Amleraon, 841 Water Ht.,New fork City. N. Y.,givos title endorsement: “I have found Dr. Bull'e Cough Syrup the wonderful euro It i» rnpresuntod to bo. It le just tho thing for a bad cough." Tiiehk would boa groat deal less mischief done in tho world If inoro people ■buttered. T wokiws OP WOitBX « ttced Dr. Pierce’* I A Favorite PrescrlpCl?tz W tion — those who X'WvX JL wnut to be made vl strong, and those ]\_/l| Wmty who want to be av*J I made well. It >/■*** builds up, invigor--4 V P AwWKI ntes, regulates, and 47 TkSSkM cures. // I fWa lfß for y° nn ß M I K ,rlß J u,t enteriu « I ffiOWNul womanhood ; for /A J women who have reached the critical “change of life"; for women expecting to become mothers; for mothers who are nursing and exhausted; for euery woman who is run-down, delicate, or overworked. For all the disorders, diseases, and weaknesses of women, “Favorite Prescription” is the only remedy so unfail-' Ing that it can be guaranteed. If it doesn’t benefit or cure, in every case, the money will be returned. It Cure»Colda.Congli»,Bor« ThreatCroup,Tnfiraara,Whaopinr Couch. Brooch it: * and A, th ma. A aertala euro for Consumption in fint stages, and • rare relief id advanced •tags,. Use at once. Ton will see the excellent effect after taking the Srst dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Irfxgo bottles tO cents and SI.OO. Friendly Regard tis never entertained by the children for a medicine that tastes bad. This explains the popularity among little ones of Scott’s Emulsion, a preparation of cod-liver oil almost as palatable as* milk. Many mothers have grateful knowledge of its benefits to weak, sickly children. A SLIGHT GOLD. If you are troubled with a slight cold,, get rid of it at once. Do not delay, delays are dangerous. We can cure you for nothing if you will do as .we ask. Write your address on a postal card and send it to the Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111., and they 0 will send you free by return mail a trial bottle of Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure. We want you to try it because we know it will do you good. “MOTHER’S •. FRIEND” .* is a scientifically prepared Liniment and harmless; every ingredient is of recognized value and in constant use by the medical profession. It shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book ‘•To Mothers” mailed free, containing valuable information and voluntary testimonials. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, *1.50 per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Gi. Sold by all druggists. CEE D S W o WARRANTED.. O ■jßest in th© World. Ww By mall, postage paid, 1 cent a package and up. Qrand lotof EXTRAS given with every order. Prettiest and only free Catalogue in the world with pictures of ail varieties. Send yours and neighbors' address. R. H. SHUMWAY, ROCKFORD, - ILLINOIS. ' I rOb" totair ptvild.n). No FTS ■“• TUomsd. oohel. Brad tc la .UnuM VIM JJ O. W. F. BNYDEK. M. !>., Mail Dept. 4. McVicker’s Theater, dxlcajgo, 111. . — M a« Ire Unmarried erad your Glow W QU leisure and S-eent stamp and reoelvoby return mail a pleasant sur- »• prise. Climax, 410 Ara.. Chicago. | BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD.| W&S , Enamel , stain the hands, injure the iron, and bum red. The Rising Sun Stovo Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and tho consumerpay* for no tin or glass package with every purchase. |HAS All ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS ’■

DOINGS OF CONGRESS. MEASURES CONSIDERED AND ACTED UPON. At tho Nation’s Capital—What Is Being Done by the Honate and House—Ob’ Matters Dlapo.ed Os and Now Ono. Considered. The Renato and House. Tho Rou-e Tuesday made fair progress with ono of tho great appropriation bills. That legislative bill npprop'lmes upward of *21,500,000. Aside from a review of iho condition of the trea-ury hy Mosers. Dinuley and Dockery— divergent views—and an attack on the clvll-servlro law by Mr. Dearmond tbo proceedings were uninteresting. b'enntor Chandler managed toglve a political twist to the debate in tho Renato on the automatic-coupler bill. Ho brou tht up a resolution in tho Nation’ll Democratic platform which denounces the Republican party and tho Republican Senate for not having provided legislation for tho protection of railroad employes, and he insisted that the position of so ninny Democratic Senators avnlnst tho bill «as neonslstent wllh their party fealty. Hn twitted them with tho fi c that only seven of them had voted to take up the bill for the repeal of tho Sherman act, knowln r tie declurat'on of the National Democratl.'Conventton on the subject of silver, and knowing tho en'rentles of the President-elect to have tho Sherman act repealed before Mnrch A Mr. Woloo’t, while arguing a ainst the automaticcoupler bill, said that no other Senator Mian Mr. Chandler could have found a political advantage in It, After a great deal of talk back und forth no action was taken on the bilk On Wednesday the Senate resumed consideration of tho railway car-coupler bllL Mr. Peffer took excei tlon to some remarks made by Mr. Wolcott, reflecting, as Mr. Peffer thought, o i the farmers and workingmen of the country, ard ho hoped that the bill would pass, no matter ho v much It might cost the railway companies He had no -qualms of conscience on that point. Mr. Gorman argued that the organization of Tallway employes could accomplish more in the way of imi r ivement than all theleglslall'in that could be pfledon tho statute book. Mr. Cullom declared 1 had get to be a question whether Congress would put money against the blood of railroad employes, and whether money was mo-e valuable than tbeliv.aof these men. Various amendments were offered, but without action the Senate, after an executive session, adjourned. The Speaker lai 1 before the House the House quarantine bill, with Senate amendment, anj Air. Raynor moved a concurrence. Afew jnoments before 1 o’clock Doorke.’per Turner announced the presence of the Vice President aud S nate of the United States, and the vast assemblage ro-e with one accord to do them honor. The Vice Pres dent took tho chair assigned to him at the right of the Speaker, -and tho. Senators occupied the first four rows of tho seats to the right of the presiding officer. The counting of the. electoral vote wa, jtlren proceeded with, and at Its completion the .'•cnate re- ■ turned to its own hall. When the Senate retired the Bouse re umed In committee the consideration of the legislative appropriation bill. Without disposing o tie bill the committee and the House adjourned. Thursday was silver day in the House, and the friends of sliver were victorious in the fight by a majority of fi They sustained tho demand for the previous qu-stlon on the resolution setting apart Thursday and Friday for tho consideration of tho bill repeating the Sherman act. The whole of the day’s se-slon of tho Senate after the morning hour was devoied to a discussion of the railway automatic car-coupler b 11. At noon the Senate went into executive session, and the doors remained closed for more than half an hour. zWhen they wore reopened tho unfinished business, the automatic car-coupler bill, was taken up. but, without concluding the consideration of the bill the Senate adjourned. The time of the House Friday was taken up by the pension debate. The bllloproposes an expenditure of $160,000,000, a cut of *6.000,000 from what was asked. Mr. Mutchler argued in support of the changes in the pension laws recommended by the committee There were, he said, thousands and mjiny thousands of men who were on the pension rolls to-day who bad never heard the whistle of the bullet or yet the roar of artillerv. Mr. Grout admitted that the amount of money required for the payment of pensions was r large one. But it must be remembered that the bulk of it was for invalid veterans -or for the widows of men ''ho had lain down their lives for their country. He was opposed to the transfer of the Pension Bureau as proposed by the bill. Without closing the general debate the committee rose and the Hou«e took a recess. The debate In the Senate on the automatic carcoupler bill was not of an enlivening or even an interesting character. The Vice President presented the memorial of the Chicago Chamber of Commerce favoring the anexatlon of the Hawaiian Islands, and it was referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. The bill to provide for sundry Ugh houses and other aids to navigation was passed as It came from the House The calendar was taken up and several minor bills >■ ere passed. The conference report on the b’ll to restore to the public domain a portion of the White Mountain Anache Indian Reservation was ( presented and agreed to, and tho Senate adjourned. The bill to promote the safety of employes and travelers upon railroads by compelling railroad companies to equip their cars with automa’ic couplers and continuous brakes, and their lo'omotb es with driving-wheel brakes, was finally disposed of in the Sena e Saturday. The substitute f or the House bill of last session was agreed to and tho bill passed—yeas. 39: nays. Id Tho onlv other important piece of legislation done was the agreeing to the conference report i n ’he fortifications bill and making the Nicaragua Canal bill the unfinished business. The session of the House was not without Interest, but it was without result The attempt of the Democrats io limit the time for debate on the pension appropriation bill was firmly resisted by thtf'Repnblicans. and the strong m'norlty came out victorious The result was that, without termination of general debate, the Bouse adjourned. James G. Blaine. A mysterious Mail. Was not born to die.—Minneapolis Tribune. The most illustrious American.—Boston Record. Big-hearted, g<yierous, and bitter. —New Orleans States. The greatest American of recent times. —New York Tribune. The foremost private citizen of the republic.—Boston Journal. America has produced few more brilliant men.—Richmond State. The greatest living exponent of the word American.—. Toronto Empire. A trenchant speaker, sharp, aggressive, adroit in diplomatic fencing.— Boston News. The genial, inspiring, affectionate, typical American.—New York Commercial Advertiser. Wrought for his country. An inspiration to the American spirit.—Minneapolis Journal. He was a master of intrigue, a wirepuller who well understood howto manipulate machine politics.—London (England) Telegraph. -■ The leader of his party in the stormiest period of the republic, he enjoyed honors enough to sattsfy all reasonable hopes.—New York Herald. Won the respect and admiration of those who contended with him face to face i», public life.—Philadelphia Record. ‘ ‘ The Republic n party loses its most distinguished and capable leader and the country a statesman—New York World. ■ ' The United Stages loses tho man who < has been distinctly her greatest man' within the present generation.—Sai Francisco Chronicle. His greatness will best be measured and hie enduring fame will be built upon the later period of hl* life —Bt. Paul I> ion e4 Press

Tho Mexican Snratogn. Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico, t ~ plaza in the center of tlie city, was under tho blaze oY a hundred lights and fragrant with tho perfume of rare flowers. Tho shrubbery was stirred with the whispers of an evening breeze, and the waters played from the great stone fountain in their midst. Sixty musicians, comprising the military band stationed at Monterey, discoursed the sweetest of weird Mexican airs, and hundreds of people threaded the walks, or filled the seats placed at convenient distances about the charming place. It was a lovely scene, as I saw it thfs April night, and, beside what there was in it to charm the senses, hero in their best garb were displayed tho habits, customs and the lights and shades of Mexican life. Two evenings a week there is like a panorama moving in Monterey, and, doubtless, many other places in Mexico, but 1 have chanced to see it here only. There the high, the low, the rich and the poor gather on the walks and amidst banks of roses, to enjoy the beauties of their land, its delightful climate, and the recreation that their Government thus provides for them. I took my seat cn tne plaza the evening after I reached this strange countrv, to enjoy and observe, the picture. Half the population of the city S’ emed to be out of doors and centeied in this one spot. The scene cannot well be described. Each one’s fancy must paint it with such tints as will naturally suggest themselves. Perfect order reigned. Not a boisterous word or act could be beard or observed. Every one seemed to he quietly enjoying the lovely things that both God and man had provided. No noisy children romped among !*ae flowers; no jolly laugh or hearty talk broke in upon the happiness of the hour. People here never talk loud, or are noisily animated. This perfect decorum at once attracts attention and provokes comment. I have found it as manifest in private as in public. The people appear to be always serious and tragical, rather than cheerful and hopeful. It may be in appearance only, however. It is this retiring disposition, though, that makes all classes delicately sensitive and the Women jealous. People here rarely laugh, and the women always look thoughtful and sometimes even sad. They have beautiful hair and eyes and small hands and feet. They seem born and reared out of the sunlight, and in tho evenings, when they stand at the glass less windows and look out through the grating, you Often see faces that recall the pictures of Charlotte Corday .peering from between the prison bars.—Cor. Philadelphia Press. The Proper Position for Sleeping. A German, Baron Reichenbach, has occupied many years studying tho art of bed-making, or rather bed-placing, and maintains that improperly placed beds will shorten a man’s life. If a mere magnet exercises an influence on sensitive persons, the earth’s magnetism must certainly make itself felt on the nervous life of man. In whatever hemisphere, you may always sleep with your feet to the equator, and let your body lie “true as a needle to the pole.” The proper direction of the body is of the utmost importance for the proper circulation of the blood, and many disturbances in the organisms have been cured by simply placing the bolster in a different point of the compass from that it bad occupied. Let such as have hitherto been in the habit of sleeping With their heads where their feet ought to be take to heart the example of the late Dr. Elschwester, of Magdeburg, who died recently at the age of 109 years. The most unhealthy position, we are told, is when the body lies due east and west. Some observers assure us that to sleep in such a posture is tantamount to committing suicide, and that diseases are often aggravated by deviations from the proper postures.—London World. Decidedly Shakr. A trembling hand, on uncertain step, fidgetiness. Indicated by restless shiftinc from one place or posture to another, usually mental annoyance at unexpected noises, are among the indications of extreme nervousness. These seem trifling, but the health of men and women in this condition is “decidedly shaky,” liable to be overthrown disastrously by causes which the vlgc-.ous might defy. To fortify the nervous system, general vigor must, through the medium of re-enforced digestion.and a renewal of an impaired power of sleeping at night, be raised to a healthful standard. A guarantee of this is Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which reestablishes digestion, bile secretion and the habit of body on a permanently regular basis, thus renewing that bodily equilibrium, which is followed bv a gain of strength and nerve tranquillity. For kidney complaint, rheumatism, neuralgia, and as a preventive of the first attack or subsequent return of malarial disorders, this medicine is without a peer. Thrice daily take a wineglassSul. A Shrewd Pareqt. “I don’4 know what is the matter with my son. Since he went to the university he hasn’t written to me once.” “Why don’t vou do as I did’ When I didn’t hear from my Emil I wrote us follows: ‘Mv dear boy, how are you? Enclosed you will find a S2O bill.’ Bull took good care not to enclose the bill. The result was that be wrote by the next mail, complaining that the money had not reached hiui.”—Fiiegendo Blaetter. His Cross. Druggist—Well, my little man, what can I do for you? The Little Man—l want a bottle of paregoric to put me to sleep. z Druggist—Aren’t yon pretty young to be troubled with insomla? The Little Man —Not when I am rooming with triplets.—Now Ydrk Suu. State or Ohio, City of Toledo, ( Lfcab County. i Fhank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chi key & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State afore’aid. and that ssid firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARSfor each and every case of l atarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. ISSu. . . A. W. GLEASON, , j seal. notary Public. Ball’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally end aeU directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. JS3*Sold by Druggists, 76 oenta. A Musical Instrument. Tin Peddler (who has mot with an accident)—What vkll I do now? Effory wheel off my wagon is broke. Summer Boarder (consolingly)— Leave thobins In the wagon just as it is and perhaps you can sell It to one of the boarding-houso keepers for a piano.— New York Weekly. Jo Safer Remedy can bo for Coughs and Colds, or any troubrerbf the' Throat, than "Brosen's Bronchial Troches." Price 25 cts. Sold only in Boxes. At Supper. Cusband (irritably)—Can’t yon remember where I said I left my glasses at breiskfast this morning. Wife—l’m sorry, dear I really can't. Husband (peevishly)—That just shows the forgetfulness of you women.—Harvard Lampoon.

ss.

Borreslimcnta for tho Million. Automatic coin-feed machines, which Is the ujodorn name for nli'kel-lu-thu-slot devices, are being introduced in London by a philanthropic association, for the supply of solid and liquid refreshments at a low price. Freshly made leverages, such as tea, coffee, and aerated waters are to bo obtained, ns well'as malt and spirituous liquors Tho main Idea Is to make this system of sale beneficial to the musses bv offering them cheap but good articles of food and drink; but It is said that its application will bn extended to tho supply of handkerchiefs and small articles of dress. The price at which tho various articles arc to bo sold would bo so low as to rapidly saddle the organizers of the scheme wit h a heavy deficit, and it is proposed to render the system self-supporting by utilizing tho machines and the wrappers and carriers’of some of tho goods as means of advertising. Trade In Gun Fllnta, Not many people know that there is still a considerable trade hi flints for gnus. Yet thousands of flints arc shipped every year to Africa, where the natives are still using old guns, when they can get no other, and these flints meet with a readv sale, payment being given In ivory and other valuables. Nearly all tho flint comes from tho chalk cliffs along tho English Channel, where it occurs tn inexhaustible quantities in the form of nodules varying in size from a Anger to a child's head. Tons of it are brought to this country, unintentionally, in chalk, and in the neighborhood of a plaster mil) on tho outskirts of Newtown, L. 1., bushels of flints are piled around the fields. There is little or no true flint occurring as a native product in America.—New York Sun.* Answered. Itds not always safe to bo too confident In your assertions, even to an ignorant man, tor he may get tho better Qf you in an argument. This truth was well illustrated in a story told at a recent conference In England on technical education in villages. One speaKer.refcrrlng to the prevalent ignorance about common things, said that he once saw a laborer digging flints in tho chalk,and asked him if ho thought they grew. “No,” was the reply. “1 don’t think about it; 1 knows they da® “Then place a flhit on your chlmnevpieco, and see how much it grows in a twelvemonth.” “Ail right, sir, and do you do the same witli a tater and see how much that grows. ” A Slave Trailer's Burled Gold. A search tor buried gold is being conducted under peculiar circumstances by a man and woman, eleven miles out on the Nolensville pike. The parties engaged in the search are E. C. Beardsley of Pittsburgh, who claims to be State Geologist, and Mrs. L. A. Cook of New Orleans. The story goes that Mrs. Cook had a dream that a slave trader buried 8185,000 in gold in earthen jugs during the war and that this fact and the location of the gold was revealed to Mrs. Cook in a dream. The parties are stopping at a local hotel aud visit tne supposed location of the buried treasure every oay.—Atlanta"Constitution. The proprietors of Ely’s Cream Balm do not claim it to be a cure-all, but a sure remedy for Catarrh? and Cold in the head. I have been afflicted with catarrh for 20 years. It became chronic and extended to my throat, causing hoarseness and great difficulty in speaking; indeed, for years I was not able to speak more than thirty minutes, and o tan this wllh great difficulty. I also, to a great exent. lost the sense of hearing. By the use of Ely’s Cream Balm all dropping of mucous Jias ceased and my voice and hearing nave greatly improved.—Jas. W. Davidson, Attorney at Law, Monmouth, Hl. Apply Balm into each nostrlL It is Quickly Absorbed. Gives Relive at once Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mall. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St, New York. Why They Sighed. He—How the trees are moaning and sighing to-day. She—So would you if you were as full ot green apples as they are.—Life. Important to Fleshy People. We have noticed a pago article in the Boston Globe on reducing weight at a very small expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp for a copy to Betina Circulating Library, 86 E. Washington street, Chicago. 111. The older a man grows, the more he thinks there is nothing new under the sun. "That unrivalled complexion." said a prominent New-Yorker, alluding to a lady acquaintance, "was the result of using Garfield Tea.” Send for free sample to 319 West 45th street, New York City. A man’s clothes are always in need of brushing.

Hood’s Cures The marvelous cure of Mias Lettie Huntley, of Cortland, N. Y., has attracted widespread atr'h tention. She was nigh p-j w 5 to death’s door with I f , X hemorrhages caused by \JC p ulcers in the stomach. yS* 1 Could eat nothing. When the physicians said ?- MKs. there was no hope, her mother urged her to try Miss Huntley. Hood’s Sarsaparilla. She reluctantly consented, and in a few days felt stronger, bloating subsided, appetite gradually returned, and in a month she could walk across the room. In six months she was as well as ever in her life, and has been In perlect health ever since. She says: "I know that Hood’s Sarsaparilla and that alone, saved my life.” HOOD’S TILLS cure Liver Ills, Jaundice, 81l lousness, Sick Headache and Constipation. RIPANS TABULES nculatoj the stomach, liver and bowels, puri- t fy the blood, are safe and effectual ;> /STrHIfGUPn the best medicine known for bilious i pc jKT t «,/pes*. constipation, dyspepsia, foul • breath. headacL'e.mental depression, A painful digestion, bad complexion.♦ and all diseases caused by failure of ♦ the stomach, liver or bowels to per f form their proper functions. Persons given to over- f eating are benefited by taking one after each ne»l. T Prioe.tS; sample. Iftc. AV Druggists, or sent bj mall.T RIfInS CHEMICAL CO.. 10Spruce St., New Y ork. X ■•••••••••••••••••••< *>••••••••••••! Established 1850. * of each nook by dingle and brook 7Ae Uraltng b.ossouu loan and look. A POT OF DR. 0. P. BROWN'S PPCrinilQ reaches and cans digests I nCvIUUd through the pores, snousi e drllrnnai dilation, heals inflammation, ittnoAL banishes pain. 25&.VL, DragOINTMENT $40,000,000 Earned by the Bell Telephony Patent in l»l. Yom invention may be valuable. Yoh should protect it by patent. Address tor full and intelligent adtlos,A* V ctargs, W. W. DUDLEY » CO.. Solicitors of Patents, Facile Bldg.. O> F St. H. W, Washington, D. C. Jftntion Mt paptr. CURE. w Cures Consumption, Coughs. Croup, Sore Throat. Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee, Fora Lame Side, Back nr Chest Shiloh's Porous Plaster will give great satisfaction.—gs teats. •

“Each Spoonful has done its Perfect Work,” Is the verdict of every woman who has hsed Royal Baking Powder. Other baking powders soon deteriorate and lose their strength, owing to the use of inferior ingredients, but Royal Baking Powder is so carefully and accurately compounded from the purest materials that it retains its strength for any length of time, and the last spoonful in the can is as good as the first, which is not true of any other baking powder.

The Fanner*' Telegraph. “A rural farming district in Michigan,” says the Engineering Magazine, “has provided itself with a telegraph lino eight miles in length, connecting a largo number of scattered farms with the village store, the proprietor of which officiates as telegraph operator, express agent, postmaster, and so on. The total cash expendiditure for the outfit is said to have been only some §2OO, while the expense of maintenance, which is but a trifling sum, I? assessed equally upon the owners. The small cost and enormous convenience of such a system as i this in country districts, ought to lead to a more general adoption of the plan. Especially after the expiration of the telephone patents in 1884, such a system of intercommunication by wire would be possible in every township throughout the country. The individual expense would be almost insignificant, and in tho item of useful travel alone would save many times Its cost every year.” Opportunities for Recommendation, A literary man relates that he made_a proposal of marriage to a charming young woman, and she asked for a day , or two in which to consider the matter. The next afternoon he received from her , a package accompanied by a note, in- , quiring, “Do you think it is safe?” Ooening the package he fonnd these books: Froude's “Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle,” Daudet’s ■ “Artists’ Wives,” “Tho Unhappy Lovers ’ of Men of Genius,” and a copy of a well-1 i known magazine containing an essay > ■ advising ypun# women uot to marry ! ■ literary men. , — r Kxjflained. Featherstone —Will your sister be down I soon, Bobbie? r ; Bobbie—l don’t know. She’s putting - on a new dress and it takes some time. Featherstone (impatiently) — What ■ does she want to put a new dress on for? Bobbie—She expects another gentlei man this evening.—New York Herald. —HfeL i DO ¥OU LIKE TO TRAVEL! ; READ THIS ABOUT CALIFORNIA! ’ The WABASH RAILROAD has placed , on sale low rate single and round trip tickets to all principal Pacific coast points, giving a wide choice of routes both going and returning, with an ex1 treme return limit of Niue Months, t Stop-overs are granted at pleasure on , round trip tickets west of St. Louis and ' ; tho Missouri River, and by taking the i WABASH but one change of cars is nec- ■ essary to reach Los Angeles, San Fran1 cisco, San Diego, Sacramento and Portland, Ore. Remember the WABASH is 1 the peoples favorite route and is the only line running magnificent free Reclining Chair Cars and Palace Sleepers (n all through fast trains to St. Louis, Kansas > City and Omaha. For Rates, routes, ’ maps, and general information, call upon ’ or ud< ress any of the undermentioned ‘ Passenger Agents of the Wabash System. 1 R. G. BUTLER. D. P. A., Detroit. Mich. F. H. TRISTRAM. C. P. A.. Pittsburg. Pa. P. E. DOMBAUGH, P. A T. A., Toledo. Ohio. » R. G. THOMPTON, P. & T. A.. Fort Wavue, lud. , J, HALOERMAN, M. P. A., 201 Clark St.. Chicago, 11l G. B. MAXFIELD. D. P. A., Indianapolis. Ind F. CHANDLER, G. P. & T. A., St. Louis, Mo. • Unlike the Dutch Process fTft No Alkalies r 3 —OR — Other Chemicals 9 are nse< ' in tke preparation of w. BAKER & CO.’S | MBBreakfastCocoa AM which is absolutely rH K.pVl pure and soluble, OS I y'fell It has more than three times i m 3 I f ’pH the strength of Cocoa mixed ' ' * Starch, Arrowroot or I Sugar, and is far more eco- • nomical, costing, less than one cent a cup. ; It is delicious, nourishing, and easily | DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mais. | Or. Scott’s Electric Plasters. (Nothing in thia Wide World equals them. And evenbody ; knows it. Cures Colds, Conghs, Chronic Rheumatic Pains, etc., etc 1 ;, str money refunded. I But send SI.OO | SBC Each I f or four (4) of them, and get free of charge a pair of his Electric Insoles, and mention "Comfort,” and you will get his new bo ’k. "The Doctor's Store." free. This Is the season for these articles. Remember M invested now will insure yonr health all winter. Agents get 100 per cent, profit on all coods. j Those ordering now get our 150 per cent, profit offer for the winter. Write now to CEO. A. SCOTT, 842 Broadway, New York, N. Y. iE’rjE’C by return malt, fall d»r" FC 11 aertptive circulars ol MOOBYTRKWand MOODY'S IMMOVXB TAILOB SYSTEMS OF DBSSS CUTTING. Vtevired to date. These, only, are tire genuineTAlLOK SYSTEMS Invented and copyrighted by FBOF. D. W. MPODY. Beware ot imitations. Any lady Ot ordinary Intelligence can easily and quickly learn to cut and make any garment, in any style, to any measure, for ladies, (men and children. Garments guaranPROGRESSIVE EUCHRE. ’ I Send at once to Johs Skbastian, G. T. A. C.. R. I. tP.R. R., Chicago, and receive, postage nauj. the ill ekes t deck of cards you ever handled. TEN CENTS . per pack, postage stamps, for one or many. ; PATENTS! PENSIONS! I Sendtarlnventor'sGnide.orHoWteCbtainaPatent. I Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Laws. PATRICK O’FAKHILL. Washington. D. C. ‘t. W.N. U No. T-to ; Wften Writing to Advertisers, say you 1 taw tho Advortiaeiuont lu this paper. ■■ Piro's Remedy ft>i Catarrh Is the QQ ; | Best. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest Sold by di uggisls or sent by mail, gjl HI 50c. &T. Haxeltlne, WarreA Pa. - 0 •

In the Liver. The natives of Costa Rica believe that memory and powerof thought are located in the liver. That Is precisely what wo believe. How would the departed feel if memory was not in the liver? —Exchange, the modern invalid Has tastes medicinally, in “keeping with other luxuries. A remedy must be pleasantly acceptable in form, purely wholesome in composition, truly beneficial in effect and entirely free from every Objectionable quality. If really ill he consults a physician; if constipated’ho uses the gentle family laxative Syrup of Figs. You can’t go out on a lark at night, and rise with it the next morning. Weak Lungs are Strengthened. Pleurisy Pains relieved, and Asthmatic symptom’s j subdued by Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, a | sovereign remedy for all Coughs and Colds, j The children say that the smaller the teacher, the crosser she is. FITS*—AII Fite stopped tre# l by Dr. Kline’s Gre Nerve Restoier. No Fits after fir< day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise $2 -bottle tree-te-Fit caaea. bend to pr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Phila, l a A man must ruin himself; another man cannot do it for him.

JirSW? ; / €i]eni} / ’of r P<kiq. ; ■ It fights to hjll. p Ir wins it) Settle-, aj?d (ontf> o's 0 'f All cannot possess a SIO,OOO Souvenir (This sum was paid for the first World’s Fair Souvenir Coin minted.) in the shape of a coin, but many can havefac-similes of this valuable wotk of art —only special coin ever issued by the U. S. Govermnen*— **’ Meh. United States Government World’s Fair Souvenir Coins— The Official Souvenir of the Great Exposition—--5,000,0000f which were donated to the World’s Columbian Exposition by the Government, are being rapidly taken by an enthusiastically patriotic people. As there early promised to be a demand for these Souvenirs that would render them very valuable in the hands of speculators, the ExpositionAuthorities decided to place the price at SI.OO for Each Coin and sell them direct to the people, thus realizing £5,000,000, and using the additional money for the further development of the Fair.. •Considering the fact that there were butj,*w,<w of these coins to be distributed amomg 65,000,000 people, in this country alone (to say nothing of the foreign demand,) and that many have already been taken, those wishing to purchase these mementoes of our Country’s Discovery and of the grandest Exposition ever held, should secure as many as they desire at once. _, — Realizing that every patriotic American £“*ol* [ A will want one or more of these coins, and in order to make it convenient for g-< 1 him to get them, we have made arrangefc^'VCFVWIIO FC ments to have them sold throughout J the country by all the leading Merchants i If not for sale in your town, send SI.OO each for not less than 1 five coins, by Post-office or Express Money-order, Registered Letter or Bank | Draft, with instructions how to send them to you, all charges prepaid, to Treasurer World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 111. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE gen Sex A sewed shoe that will not rip; Calf, vySK seamless, smooth inside, more comfortable, tK' stylish and durable than any other shoe ever Bv sold at the price. Every style. Equals custom* a t \wß made shoes costing from £4 to £5. C » The following are of the same high standard of De f WE 2/1 1 \ merit: e? R NSS « v£Stk $4.00 and $5.00 Fine Calf. Hand-Sewed, O Nfc $3.50 Police, Farmers r.n 1 Letter-Carriers. DC A '3 aMMRvIm 50. $3.35 an.l sJ.oo for Working Mett. *# At. >, v«h sx.oo and $1.75 for Youths and Boys. Sgs’-j .ft ■mil -irTU $3.00 Hand-Sewed, | FOR — —-® \<®k $3.50 and a.oo Dongola, j LADIES. $1.75 for Misses. & IT 13 A DUTY yon owe yourself *° 6** 1120 beat value tor yooi money. Economize In your R , \MHL footwear by purchasing W. \ Li. Douglas Ehoes, whloU 11HI5 IS THE . vO. ~ ae thousands can teeMm? Will give exclusive sale to shoe dealers and general merchants where I have ■ments. Write lor catalogue. Ifnot for sale in your place send direct to Factory, statuME iund, size and width wonted. Postage Frfcc. \V. L. Douglas, Brockton, Mass. 1 — 1 .. . — ri )7^R^^a*- IcHTNINC — The 60 Day Cabbage. V A l This is absolutely the earlieet cabhare ia t' e world. Seed Ter - V • c * rce ’ I*’ 1 ?-* S O*-’ K 4 lb -' U> jTHE EARLIEST VEGETABLES v Wil! be in great demand this spnng and w ill fetch big price*. > ir To have the earlmat. plant Sailer a »««<!». njy S' I 'Jr W&Kwj pkgs. Earliest \ v<etable Xoveltiea, |i. postpaid. fiKIsHP FOR 14c. (WITH CATALOGUE, 19c ) , Jflgr our seeds everywhere, »a send, postpaid, upon * 1 S ; x Weeks’ Rai!.«h, 10c. fa all 9 ra*b<-<w, feCTCTafeM 1 Silver State Lettuce. 15c. lut-d - 1 “ Giant Prolific Tomato 2Pe. ZX. f I ** Lung Qiatr Cucumber, I fie. »»r»rw 5 BnHiaatFtvwerSeeds,3se. ALL FOR 14c. iWrtT SALZERS SEED CATALOGUE 14 I’ finest pub'ish*d. Cost* us over |so,trtk)l It Is gladly If r mailed upon r ee;pt of Be. poatage. E UU VAY JOHM A. SALZER SEED CO., La Crmc Wla " ■ - . ... . ? •- 71 - *" ;.•■• - ■ . ■

“German. Syrup” ' Boscliee’s German Syrup is mora successful in the treatment of Consumption than any other remedy prescribed. It has been tried under every variety of climate. In tho ' bleak, bitter North, in damp New ' England, in the fickle Middle States, in the hot, moist South —everywhere. It has been in demand by every nationality. It has been employed in every stage of Consumption. In brief it has been used by millions and its tlie only true and reliable Consumption Remedy. • Garfield Teas , Cure. Sick J Bilik. Sample free. Gihhsxd IkA

nures (jonsupdiiuri iIENTION THIS Fa PER wm«h wbitinu to s»ri*Ti»M. AT f j TAKE THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BR’OHT AND- ( NEW ANO Mr COMPLEXION IS BETTER. ’ Mr doctor nay» It acts gently on the .riorrseb. 11-w ’ and kidneys, and is a plea.ant laxative. Tills drtwM ! Is made from herbs, aud 13 prepared lor um as easily as tea. It is called LAKE’S HEDICIHE AU dru K lsu *eU it at 50c an i |1 per J 3 ft, .end Vonr nddren far/ free r • ■ux«e» tiM bowel' <"»** <!»»• I" neo’thr,-u>i* ts mW tars. Address ORATOR P. WOODWARD. Lkßcy, M. Y. 9 nCIEiESS ANO HEAD NOISES CUREO ISEarbr Peck’s invisible Ear Cu«h fora. H h ispem h««rd. Successful when all remedies fail. Seid COCK Ft Write feir boo> of proofs T