Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 22 November 1894 — Page 3

Pains in the Back "I had >been afflicted for several years with what the doctors called Diabetes, and >offered terribly. The pain in my back was aeonixing in the extreme. Hood's \_ Sarsaparilla and OJ* Hood’s Pills cured ’v-H j- \ me - ow * c** l KO f to church and attend oth** nieet- \ ings with pleas\nre’ 1 * lw *y® ke<? p C Hood'S Pills bv Mr. John Brnn*ton me - In inv whole life 1 never met anything that did me so much good as Hood’s Sarsaparilla ‘ Experience teaches a dear school, but fools will learn by no other.’ I was oace foolish enough to listen to a druggist who claimed tn have something anterior to Hood's. ani took another medicine. If I had thrown my dollar in the street 1 would have been a gainer.” John Branston. care of John Greet ham. Wellington. Ohio. Hood’s',-’Cures Hood’s Pills cure CeustlpattOQ by re.torin ■ t’,< y , !; a £ the alimentary canal. To I the I yes. An oculist sounds a warning to those who would keep their eyes in good order. He says: It is injurious to rub the eyes whi <• they are inflamed bv the cutting winds and the dust raised thereby, and e.;t ally so to bathe them and go out immediately again in the air, as t nen there is danger of catching cold. .Most of the eye troubles in cold weatherare caused by imprudence in r b ing or 1 athing. in rubbing the eves the tear line from the outside to the nose should tie followed though the majority pass the lingers from the inside outward, which, he asserts, affects the sight and causes "crows’ feet.” ■Mutts. Muffs first came into use in 1540. They were introduced by doctors, who wauled to keep their hands soft and warm while riding from the house of one patient to that of another. Women soon copied the doctors, a d the latter at once abandoned the fashion and began to use great fur gloves instead. Youiuj Girls Suffer From the same causes which make so many women miserable. This being the case, what is your duty, most loving mother? You know that irregularity, suspension, or B retention, severe headaches, waxy complexion, depression, weakness, loss of appetite and interest means trouble. /.yt/nz _ E. nkham's I'egetable Compound should be given at once. It is the most effective remedy for irregularity or suspended action known to medicine. Twenty years of unparalleled success and 20 thousand women confirm its power over all those dreaded diseases peculiar to women. All druggists have it for you. Accept ti e truth and be well. * WORLD’S-FAIR ★ IIIIGIIKKT award: ,"~ E , ™QR E£ IZ> I CL’ I iX'AU Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for I INI VABI DS The-Aged. Ax Incomparable Aliment for the Growth and Protection of INFANTS and CHI LO REN A superior nutritive in continued Fevers, And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases; often in instances of consultation over patients whose digestive organs were reduced to such a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was the only nourishment the stomach would tolerate when LIFE seemed depending on its retention ( And as a FOOD it would be difficult to conceiveof anything more palatable. Sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot, JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. | It is the medicine above .all others for catarrh. T Wul is worth its weight I |tn gold. 1 can use Ely's €’o’o), ( Balm with safety ■ all that i' ahai — el imed for it.—J). ll'. . i Eperry, Hartford,Conn. HI ELY’S CREAM BALM Opens and e’eanses the N*«al Passages. Allays Pain and Inflammatb n, Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste ana Smeii. The Baku is quicKiy absorbed and gitea relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agre» able. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street. New York. CURtS WhtrtE ALL ELSE FAILS.Bj Kg Best Cough feyrup. Tastes Good. Use ggg E3 in time. Sold by druggists. |«jj

CAUSE OF THE DEFE AT INEXCUSABLE DIVISIONS IN THE PARTY RANKS. The Inability ol th. President to Work Harmoniously with Contres*—Krpnblican*. Thonsrh Triumphant, Triumph as a Minority Over a Divided Majority. The Result. Democratic defeat results immediately from deplorable and inexcusable : divisions in the party ranks and more remotely from a series of blunders at| Washington in which Grover Cleve laud was the master spirit of evil. If he had had a proper appreciation of the foe that was to be encountered , when the Democratic party set out toI destroy the protective tariff robbers of this country ho would have summoned Congress in March. 1893. If that had been done, the mandate of the people. as even in the elections of 1890 and 1892. would have been far more potent than it was in 1894, when Congress tardily got to work on the Wilson bill; and many a man who, this year, sulked or held back or openly traded with the enemy, would have been in line doing loyal service in the cause of reform. The almost inconceivable folly and stupidity of that delay was the fault of Grover Cleveland alone. Nearly all of the other blunders by the Democratic party grew out of this one fatal mistake. Started wrong, it went wrong, and at every turn it was given a further impetus in the wrong direction by some mischievous utterance from the White House. The inability of the Democratic Preslent to work harmoniously with a Democratic Congress, and all of the scandals and heart-burnings naturally growing out of such a condition of affairs, produced innumerable factions and gave renewed courage to a party that had been twice repudiated by overwhelming votes. Republicans win now, not because they deserve to win, nor because they constitute a majority of the ]>eople, but because their opponents are rent by feuds and jealousies, most of them foolish and all of them despicable. Republicanism, rejuvenated for the moment by calamities of its own contrivance, has triumphed again, but it triumphs as a minority over a divided majority. The doctrines that it is right and desirable for one man to tax many men for his own benefit is in the ascendant again, not because the millions who have scorned it have changed their minds as to its inherent scoundrelism, but because they have been disappointed in their leaders and have failed to act in concert The theory of the monarchists of Europe, ably supported by our Carnegies and Pullmans, that government should take' care of the rich and the rich should take care of the poor, has received new life, perlmps, but it is still hateful to an overwhelming majority es the American people. The Democratic party has not been convicted of the Republican party's crimes. It has been punished for its own shortcomings. It has fallen to pieces temporarily because it has lacked intelligent leadership and because the administration which it put into place Ims not justified the high hopes which were centered in it. The party of monopolies and trusts, now triumphant, will enjoy a brief respite. but its doom is written in the very figures that record its victory. Taught in the school of experience, divested of many illusions, and. more valuable than all else, thoroughly awake to the nonsense of the hero worship which has been its curse for many a day. the Democratic party is now in a position to reorganize on rational lines and to resume its rightful place in the polities of the republic.—Chicago Herald. The Landslide. Every trust and every combine is joining in the hurra it over Tuesday's victory. It is a great boost for them.— St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The next Senator from New Jersey will be a stralghtout Republican, not an assistant Republican like McPherson or Smith.—Kansas City Star. Veni, Vidi, Victim. We were whipped by our own people, but we will up and at ’em again.—Joliet Times. Better times are sure to come under the tariff reform regime, and there is every reason to expect that at the next general election the Democratic stay at homes of 1894 will rally at the polls ready and eager to do their full duty.— Boston Globe. The party was compelled to go before the country in a campaign of apology and excuses for a failure resulting from the most brazen and indiscreet asininity upon the part of men pretending to be Democrats and fighting the administration.- Springfield (11l ) Monitor. The Democratic party of course will reform its lines and prepare for the Presidential contest of 1896. New York domination of its policies has ended forever. It will go into the next national contest under Western leadership and upon a Western platform.— Evansville Courier. No defeat can dismantle or disintegrate the Democratic party. Whatever the effect may be on party organizations, whatever the result may be to individuals, the principles of Democracy, which have existed since the foundation of this republic, will continue forever.—Albany Argus. There is one thing certain, and that is that the Wilson tariff bill cannot be repealed in two years, and during that time the people will have a fair opportunity to judge whether a tariff for revenue is preferable to u tariff for the protection of monopolists, that makes millionaires at the expense of the masses. —Kalamazoo Gazette This defeat is not due to what Dem-

ocracy has done, but to what It didn’t do. It has lacked the courage of its convictions. It has dallied with the Delilah of protection. It has, in the Senate, been afraid of hurting the feelings of the minority and has dawdled and dickered and burned Incense to tradition and courtesy. Had all the laws the Democracy demanded been passed promptly at the special session in 1893 we would not be standing today in the ashes of our hopes.—Terre Haute Gazette. We assumed too much from the landslide of 1892. The people knew they were oppressed, they knew something was wrong, so they took the Democratic party at its word ami swept Republicans from power. Democracy was dazed. It lacked decision. A start was made in the right direction by the repeal of the purchasing clause of the Sherman law. It would have been better had that extra session been called earlier still. It would have been still better had it continued in session until the McKinley law was repealed and a new law formulated on Democratic lines enacted—Toledo Bee. Fixing th** Responsibility. While the United States Senate was dilly-dallying with the tariff last spring the Democratic party lost its opportunity of retrieving this year the disasters it sustained at the polls last year. There is not the slightest doubt about the hard times being the main cause of Hie political overturning. Were the results different in the West from what they are in the East there would be some reason to suspect that different influences were at work, but the returns from the polls are the same in every State. While the Senators were making long-winded speeches at Washington about the tariff, business continued paralyzed simply because men did not know what the ultimate outcome of Congressional disputation would be. Neither manufacturer nor importer dared to do anything, for he could not tell what customs duties he would have to compete with or would have in bis favor. There was nothing to do but wait, and those out of work, and anxious to earn a living for themselves and their families, had to go hungry and wait with them. It was the Republican party which laid the foundations for the financial crash of last year, but it was the United States Senate that could not rise to the height of an emergency, and would not promptly repeal both the Sherman silver purchase law and the McKinley tariff act, which prolonged them, and which is therefore responsible for Democratic disaster. Had Congress acted with that celerity which the country expected, business would have brightened up long ago. and the effects of the panic would have disappeared with last season’s snow. The good results of Democratic rule would have been felt last spring, and the party could confidently have appealed to the people for their verdict on its work. Now there is no hope of a reversal of the popular verdiet, as rendered under misunderstood circumstances on Nov. 6th. so that it will have any effect, until 1896. Then the country will be once more prosperous, in consequence of Democratic rule, and the good work which lias been interrupted will be resumed. The Republicans, the defenders of monopolies and trusts, are jubilant just now, and perhaps they delude themselves into believing that they are in power once more for a generation to come. A Democratic Congress and a Democratic President will be elected, nevertheless, in 1896. ThP Smoking Chimneys Speak. Standing before an immense judience in the city of Pittsburg, in a city and State most noted for its manufactories of iron and its long adherence to the fallacies of protection. theUnitedStates Comptroller of Currency, J. 11. Eekles, uttered the following words without contradiction or the fear of contradiction. The smoke rising from hundreds of factories even while he spoke proved the truth of his words and bore eloquent testimony to the revival of industry under the Wilson bill. Mr. Eekles said: Bank deposits have increased, and within the period of one year from October, 1893, to October, 1894, the loans and discounts have shown the enormous increase of $200,000,000, more than sixty millions of which had been since the passage of the tariff measure of August. On the subject of the tariff bill, Mr. Eekles said it was not what many Democrats expected or desired, but' was an improvement upon any ever instituted by the Republicans. The effect of this legislation, he said, is already manifest in those rekindled fires that gave this city as elsewhere substantial prosperity. It has set in motion the wheels and spindles of many mills. It has quickened the pulsation of every branch of trade and commerce. It has destroyed the discontent which prevailed in the vast army of the employed, and given to the laborer the employment which he has so long desired.— < lakland County Post. Ideal Taxation. The principle on which national taxation should be based ought to be precisely the same as that which underlies State, county and municipal taxation. The burden should be placed on property and not on consumption. That condition of things is met exactly by the principle of the income tax. That tax is an ideally Democratic measure. It is a tax for revenue only. It is a tax levied in proportion to men’s ability to pay and in the ratio of the benefits they receive from the Government. It is a tax upon wealth, not want; upon accumulation, not industry: upon superfluity, not need. It is as near an approach to absolute justice as can be devised in connection with the need for taxation.—Grand Rapids Democrat. The Democratic party stands for an income tax, a tax on wealth instead of want, on what men possess not on what they eat and wear.

Highest of aU in Leavening Power.— Latest L. S. Gov’t Report Absolutely pure

Afraid of Poverty. Poor Thin". Miss Sylvia Green has a fad which is hers by inheritance. It is for money, I But, unlike her mother. Mrs. Hetty 1 Green, it is not for the making of i 1 money, but for saving it. She is eon- ; 1 stantly in fear of the poorhouse and is I < afraid to spend a cent. She has s3,i>M>,- I i OGO in her own right from her grand-I : father, but spends nothing. She is ! i agree .ble to live with, being ouiet, | 1 amiable, and accommodating, though ‘ ' not so cheerful as she might be. She : is not stingy to the household, but will I 1 not spend anything on herself. She ' t has devised almost every kind of bank ! 1 for saving her spare” change and >s 1 < always looking ahead into the futur< with her money hidden in her hand or ; safe-keeping. Her friends say that > this is the result of early training, and will be eradicated if she ever comes into the fifty or so millions her mother will leave tier. New York Sun. Doubtful Dainties. In the dingy restaurants frequented by the lower orders of Rome, Florence, and Naples, a dish composed of a harmless wood serpent’s flesh is regarded as something of a dainty. Parisians of the inferior classes are al-o great eat- : ers of fried snakes, but unwittingly so, I . for the reptiles are palmed off on them as eels. The snakes are caught in the wilder part of the Vincennes Wood j and brought up to a special market near the I’lace de la Republique. It is ; ■ probable, however, that even if the i members of the poorer classes there ■ who occasionally indulge in eels were I apprised of the fraud practiced at their expense they evince no loathing nor even lack of appetite, seeing that they are ready to devour not only horseflesh, but meat of mule, donkey, and dog, any day in the week. One Woman’s Testimony. This is the day ol shams. J know a , woman who is supposed to entertain lavishly, yet who rarely receives a guest. I call her functions "ghost parties,’’ because they are only the shadows of the substance, the event it- ( self being purely imaginary. Why, I that woman has gained the reputation for entertaining, and has received no end of dinner invitations on absolutely nothing at all.’ I have suspected her tactics for some time, and now Tan quite sure that what i assert is indeed true that in nine cases out of ten her ■ dinners are purely imaginary. She ■ has a clever way of finding out who U ; engaged, to whom, and then she asks people who she knows cannot come to her house and so scores to her social account, with no other outlay than her < crested paper and dainty seal. The Knut Was Not Tied. Rather an odd couple applied at the ‘•Little Church Around the Corner" a few days ago to be married. Ho was handsomely dressed ami about 25years i of age, while she was younger and i quite pretty. As soon as they hati announced what they wanted the woman paused and said: "John, hadn’t we better wait?” ‘'Why?” lie asked. ‘‘Well, we've only got S6O, and maybe i the lawyer won't give you yo.>r decree I if you don't pay him and—” But before she got any further she > was informed that Rev. Dr. Houghton j didn’t marry divorced That ’ settled it. there was no marriage.— New York Morning Journal. ■Millet as Cow Feed. Millet is almost always cut too ripe to make good cow feed.' Horses like it after the seeds have matured, because the seed is rich. They will fatten on it. So, too, might ji cow that was intended for the shambles. But the woody stalk of ripened millet is not compensated for to the cow by extra amount of nutriment in the seeds. It will do to have the millet seed fully | formed when the cron is to be put in ! the silo. That preserves its succu- . lence, the feed is richer and better for it. I’eware of Ointni- nts tor Catarrh that : Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. ' Such articles should never be used except on 1 prescripti -us from reputable physicians. a< the | damage they will do is tenfold to the good yr u ! can possibly derive from them. Hall s Catarrh ' Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. To- : ledo, O , contains no mercury, and is taken in- • ternally, and acts directly upon the blood aud mucous surfaces of the system. In buying . Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the gemiii.e. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio/ i by F. J. ( heney & Co. Sold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. Bees. One species of bee more determined to secure safely and privacy tashions a neat tubular gallery of clay outside its doorway, and at the entrance of these ; galleries a number of the pigmy owners are always stationed, apparently acting the part of sentinels. a Good Investment for 1895. Everyone appreciates good value. The ‘ Youth'a < oj/ipfuonn for 1M95 oilers the larg- ; est amount of entertaining and instim-tive reading for $1.75. a year’s subscription. The prospevtufi for the next volume pre- 1 sents an irresistible array of stories,articles : on travel, health, science, anecdotes of fa- * mous people, ana a great variety of whole- I some reading for all the family. To new subscribers The Companion will be sent free until January. 1895, and a year from that date, including the Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Double Holiday Numbers. It conies every week, at a cost of $1.75 a year. The Youth’s Companion, Boston. Mass. Giglamp—One of the papers gave an •account of the recent, wanderings of Mrs. Brown-I'otter. Damitaii Why. she hasn’t gone astray again, has she? A new broom sweeps .clean, but it doesn’t sweep half as clean as a new hired girl with an old broom.

1 -Q ' 1- ■ and NEURALGIAS - v bmAU i w

Cranky Cherubini. At the Paris Conservatorv. then under the direction o: Cherubini. B rlioz was an unruly genius, and not in favor with his teachers, especially the precise and ‘‘classical’’ Cherubini. < >ne examination day. Cherubini was running over a piece which Berlioz had submitted, when he came upon a < omnlete re.-t of two meas res. "What is that?” he asked, in his usual ill-natured tone. "Mr director,' said the pupil, “I wished to produce an effect which I thought could best be produced bv silence.” "Ah. you thought it would produce a good effect upon the audience if y<> i suppressed two measures?” “Yes, sir.” “Very good. Suppress the rest: the effect will be better btil I.' ’ A CHILD ENJOYS The pleasant flavor, gentle aetiop and soothing effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bilious, the most gratifying results follow its use: so that it is the best family remedy known, and every family should have a bottle on hand. In the Same Crowd. An American girl, on being asked by a certain pompous and self-satisfied Lord Somebodv-or-Other among what people she had met the most perfect, polished, and cultured gentlemen, replied sweetly: "Among the British nobility, my lord.” “Yes.” said the questioner, beamingly. "I felt very sure you would so reply, and among what people have you encountered the ea t reverse, if I may ask?" "Among the British nobility my lord." answered the lady without hesitation. Whereupon the conversation flagged. imperial Granum, as a prepared food, has attained the Acme ; of being a Standard Preparation, one of firI Safest and Best Known io the World, an.l I an be truly said that no preparation offered I for sale is ludre ear, fully prepared ana thor- ; oughly tested, or mee:s with a more wel- : come reception and universal approval, or affords more relief to invalids, to nursing : mothers, infants and children, and aged per- ’ sons. This has been confirmed by thou- | sands of testimonials from chemists, physi- ’ clans, heads of families, and the pre-s. At the great World's Fair, Chicago, 1893. Imperial Granum was granted the highest j honors, Medal and Diploma, and was re- , commended as a delicate and digestible nutriment, easily prepared and suitable for i use under all circumstances, and especially : adapted in its properties for the nour'shI meat of invalids and children.—New York : Churchman. One half of the world doesn’t know : how the other half lives. It is just as j well, perhaps. It saves thousands of divorces and cyclones of family troubles generally. sent> your full name and address to Dob- ; bins’ Soap Mfg. Co.. Philada.. Pa., by return mail, and get free of ail cost, a coupon worth severs! d, liars, if used by you to its : full advantage. Don't delay. This is worthy attention. The anarchist objects vociferously to monopoly, but if it were his monopoly you would not hear him speak so loud. ! Instead 'of Tbifliso with a Had Cold i use Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, which will loosen the phlegm, subdue innanimation. I and certainly save your Lungs and Threat I much dangerous wear and tear. — In evening dress a man should believe all he hears, to 1 e consistent with his swallow-tail coat. Only a trial of Piso’s Cure for Consumption is needed to convince you that it is a good remedy for Coughs, Asthma and Bronchitis. A ’POSSUM is good to eat until you taste it. «My dear fellow, she is an angel. How exquisitely lovely her complexion is. They say she uses Glenn’s Sulphur Soap” No RAILROAD man or map ever tells ! the truth. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for bcok. A benefit is always experienced from the 'first bottle, and a’perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like ne.lles passing througli them;, the same w Ah the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful.in water at bedtime. Sold by ' Druggists. SHOCKING I A mild, conJ. \ x.7 tinuous current of electricity cures. Get a catalogue by writing THE OWEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 209 State street, Chicago, 111 CO Tn *<Q r.r ‘lvy earned svl ing thr !*■ tV , :iv UU lU OiU Machinema«le. Write for <-.rcnl r and easy terms. Hoosier Washer Co., Fort Wayne. Ind. Mrß. Winslow’s So< thing Syrup for Children teething: sottms the gums, reawes inriftrnmation, allays pain, cures Mind colic. 25 cents a bottle.

DOS”T be fooled. ■ 1 ’ r ■-? You want seme RIPANS TABULES. Your druggist'? supply is exhausted. He Las something “ just as good.’’ Why does bo say this ? He thinks you a simpleton. He has a right to his opinion, Rut to express it So plainly Is brash. His opinion may be right, But. his statement Is not true Tell him so! Get what you ask for, Or nothing! 1 ,1 TEXAS, MEXICO and CALIFORNIA. .w ’ / In connection with the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & S< utl ern Ha.lway, loxes <fe Pacific Hallway. International & Great Northern Railroad, and Southern Pp. Uic Railwav Known the ONIA TIU EM)I 1 Hl KN |{<H Tl. hasula ed inservice a 'I hrough Eirst-Ciass sleeping ( ar and Tourist Sleej ing Car, leaving Chicapo daily at 10:5€‘ A. M., via St. l ouis to Little R >< k, Malvern Hot Springs), Austin. San Ante nio, Laredo (where a direct connection is made wnh through sleeping car tor the City of Me.xi o . El Paso, Los Aug-les and San Francisco. is the only line from ( b cago vhich can offer this excellent service. Ca l or write to any ticket agen of the Wabash or connecting lino for priired matter : hawing time, route, rates, de. scription of cars, etc., or R. G. BUTLER. D. P. A., Detroit, Mich. F. H. TRISTRAM. C. P. A.. Pittsburg, Fa. P. E. DOMBAUGH, P. & T. A., Toledo. Ohio. R. G. THOMPSON. P. <v T A., Fort Wayne, Ind J, HALDERMAN. M. I’. A., 1 ( lark St., Chicago, 111. j. M. McCONNELL r. a- T. \ . Lafayette, Ind. G. L>. MAXFIELD. D. P. A., Indianapolis. Ind C. S. CRANE. G. P. &T A., St. Louis, Mo. W. L. (MjClas ’ S 3 SHOE NO SQUEAKING. r 45. Cor’DCVAN, FRENCH&ENAI-’tIIEDCALE VA.’SS-OFlNECAlf&iaNGArail W ISSX°POLICE,3 Soles. ■? : $ 2Ji. 7 -sßoysSchoclSkex z - bestD° NCO M. rtC'hL. ' SEND FOR CATALOGUE W’L’DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS-. Yau can eave money by wearing the W. L. Douglas €3.00 Shoe. / Because, vro are the lat-- st manufacturer’ this gradeof shoes in t ho world, and guarantee their value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you against hi;;h prices and the middleman’s pn Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them s< Id everywhere at lower prices for the value given than any other make. Takeno«ut> e'.'.tut”. I* yvurdenlercT’in* t supply you, we cam NICKELpATC SOLID THROUGH TRAINS THROUGH I ALICE IM JILT SLEEPING < til’s liri-v - . Chieage. Buffalo, New Ycik and Boston. ]'"rr?’es ro'hr nf irmat a call on neare«t Ti -1.4 Agent, or address A W. JOHNSTON, B. F. HORNER, Gen'i Superintendent. Gen’l 1 a».-enger Agent. CI.KVELAND O. DURARLE-EASILY \ PPLIEI*. This roofing Is manu-f-u’tured from natural y j- 1 : iuii a-piiaii maleria! -, .and will not dry up and become brittle ' umPr exposure to too \fi JmSwR w. at her as coal-tar roortugs do. Srnd fur Frrr Sam* P' ' ’’ 1 Circulars to WARREN CHEMICAL t - & mfg. CO. 93 Fl |.i<» ST., Xvw York, I . S. A. AJJP.TO-PATE CLGTKIHG Sold direct tv consumers AT lowest PRI< Eg ever before offered. Buy direct from importers and manufacturers We ship Willi PRnil.Fi.l <)>' EXAHIMTIOX. We '■ '■ ' U per .-I it. \ tailor !,t <uit - Fall or winter oven ata, !'■ ecu lunar; n Suits $2.18. 'Hr -py n KovrtiitKTS 4 xj-i »ALTV. Sendt - :ay , ■ '"’’bi: : mammoth catalog, address OXFORD MFQ.CO.,’ '< iMBjrBepLT.M 344 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. FREE! Kuppeti’s racebleach A ■ P rec ‘ atin C die fat; tiiat of iadiea r wJSjBk U"i u*ed tuy 1»■ • liiea. h.-cu JT account of price, which is $2 r»«r bottle. »nd |a ordir that all raay jpve it a fair tr al, I <s*- ’SV w ieDd * S « T ‘P , » Bottls,a*;»!y packed, all -X* chares prepaid, os receipt of 25c. FACE Sm? BLF »>H removes and cures a solutely all mES * r - Pimples, moth, blackheads, sallow, ne—. • e.T.enia, wrinkh-s. or roughness of akin, and beaut.Ges tbeeonipiexicn. AddresH Mme. A. RUPPERT. Dept. E. 6 E. 14th St .N.Y. City, r* a Rs r* cnRED wtib AIM V CrE out KNIFE. Scud f ?r circular. FREE, containing names and addrcsßesot over persons cur -d by Baehe er’s I amousPi it r 'li atment. -I. H.BAt’HELER. M.D., Cancer special!st.3B Monroe st., Grand llapids. M .ch. PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Ex,j in action and Advice as to Patvat-.b :itv <t inv. ntb.ii. Send for Ircentors’ Guide, or How to Gel a Patent. Patrick OT arkell. Washington. 1. C, KiODER'B 4- kiiMtowa, Aiiaar uUrUPi ATICRS Chronic cured bv the nnLuicfl I IvlH w< iid- rful vr'it at Leedy Mineral ’ ’ T t. X\. N. U. - - . . No. 4 7 91 When Writing to Advertisers, any j'oum* this Advertisement in thin paper.