Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 22, Decatur, Adams County, 14 March 1895 — Page 7
A Valued Russian Official. Count Woronzoff Dochkoff. the Rustian Court Minister, who is one of the most important off rials in the State, was one of those chief friends of the late Czar and the only surviving one. At the new i zar's earnest request he will remain in o i ce until the corona* tion takes lace. He will regulate the ceremonial of that great event, Besides regulating the court ceremonial he has the management of the Czar's private propertv, which bi ngs m a revenue of *10,000,00(1 yearly. Wool from Wool, The latest wonder among the textiles is a abrie woven from the fibers of wood which has been put through a special chemical pro ess. This important method of treating wood fiber, which renders it eoual to wool or < otton for ail practical purposes, is of German origin, and is known as the "Mesteriich process of chemically treating wood snip. ” It was introduced during the year just closed. PROOF ISPOSITIVE THAT LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Is Daily Curing Backache, Dizziness, Faintness, Irregularity, and all Female Complaints. i [snci.l. to ova last aunns.) Intelligent women no longer doubt the value of Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound. It speedily relieves irregularity, suppressed or painful menstruaAft Hons, weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, leucorrhtea, womb trouble, flooding, nervous prostration, headache, general debility, etc. Symptoms of Womb Troubles are dizziness, faintness, extreme lassitude, "don't care,” and "want to be left alone" feelings, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the “blues,” and backache. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will correct all this trouble as sure as the sun shines. That Bearing-Down Feeling, causing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in perfect harmony with the laws that govern tho female system, is as harmless as water. It is wonderful for Kidney Complaints in either sex. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills work in unison with the. Compound, and are a sure cure for constipation and sickheadache. Mrs. Pinkham's Sanative Wash is frequently found of great value for local application. Correspondence is freely solicited by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., and the strictest confidence assured. AM druggists sell the Pinkham remedies. The Vegetable Compound in three forms,— Liquid, Pills, and Lozenges. 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. Hi 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 vaiue, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. 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 needles passing through them; the same with 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 is 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 all Druggists. A friend advi- d me t<- Rag 11 try Ely's Cream /Salm, fBAkW?M and aft- r le-iag it sir weeks 1 believe museif eared of catarrh. It is jfrr a most valuable remedy. Ep — Joseph titeicarl, - • Lf’Sj '' Greli.d dfenuc. lirankly», 2Y. K CATARRH FLY’S CREAM R ALM Opens and c eanaes the Alla a Pali* and Inflammation, HeaU the Sores Protect* the Membrane troro Colds Re•torea the Sendee ot • aate and bin ell. The Balm is quick;y abeoibea and rive* tenet at once. A particle is a>p'ied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price sf* cert-*, at druggists or bv mail ELY BROTHERS. % Warren Street, New York. THE TOBACCO HABIT If» a curable dPea<*-. In most ca«ps one box of our will effect a permanent; cure. Bv mail SI.OO per box. Should a second box be necessary, will mail for 75 cents. PEERLESS MANUFACTURING CO.. teT- Bx. 8. St. Paul Park, Minn, PATENTS.THIDE-ftAiIKS. Examination and Adaice a* to Pateatab ity cf Invention Send for Jn‘*-Mtora’ (iuide. or Ho* to Get a Patent Paxaw* O’laukklu Waahingian. D. Q B” c-xis v.’-.i.i a., she mis. w tea Bar. Cough Lj-run. Ta*u-j Good. Uae in Ume. Sozd by drupgiata. Mm
NEWS OF OUR STATE. A WEEK AMONG THE HUSTLING HOOSIERS. What Oar Neighbors Are Doing—Matters of General and Local Interest Marriages and Death. — Accidents and Crimea— Pointer. About Dur Own People. Minor State News. Logansport electric light company has reduced the price of lighting one-third. Fort Wayne is to have a company of cavalry. It will be the only one in the States, A Bartholomew County farmer has sold $9,360 worth of butter to one firm in thirty years. David Lykens. aged 23, of Delaware County, accidentally shot himself with a rifle, and will die. " a r.i.ACE White, a Terre II ante carpenter. went hunting. His gun exploded, killing him instantly. □lnce.ndaries fired the barn of Isaac Allen, near Anderson. Seymour bloodhounds are on their trail. .lof.Ottf.ruy, Evansville, attempted to drive across the tracks in front of a train. His horse was killed and he was badly injured. The inmates in Prison North number 820, an increase of 165 over last year and the largest number ever confined in the institution. A thief has been making the rounds of Carroll County. He rides in a spring wagon and puts his stolen goods in a box labeled "Snakes.” Bask robliers at New Carlisle blew open the outside door of the vault in Service's Bank, but were frightened away before obtaining any booty. Ski nk farming in Porter county has become quite an industry. They are raised for their oil and furs which sell readily and at good prices. At Sullivan a grindstone burst. One piece crashed through a two-inch plank, plastering, laths, and weather boarding, and landed outside. Mrs. Frank Culver of Frankfort, has invented a patent petticoat which is said to be capable of being adjusted to the ever incoming new fashions. The Commercial Club of Richmond has passed a resolution by which the next State Encampment of theG. A. R. will be asked to meet in that city. The students of Wabash College vigorously opposed the action of the college president in forbidding college ball teams to play with professionals. Duck Creek, flowing through the center of Elwood, is to be converted into a monster sewer and covered. By so doing $250,000 worth of land will lie reclaimed. W. R. Stevens, an Elmwood employe of the Diamond plate-glass factory, has instituted suit for SIO,OO0 damages against the company for injuries received while in their employ as engineer. Fbank Serber, a young man employed in Coleman's barrel-heading factory at Terre Haute, was fatally injured by being caught up by a belt and drawn with terrific force against the pulley. John McDonnell, John Ratcliff, David Overman and others of Marion, have formed an association with a view to building an electric railway from Marion to Independence, in the southwestern part of Grant County, about sixteen miles. Last summer Nathan Coflinburg of Montgomery County, was injured by a bridge breaking down while lie was driving across. He asked the County Commissioners for damages, and they offered him $75. This he refused, and brought suit for $5,000. The case was venued to Fountain County, where be was award $1,056 The case will be appealed to the Supreme Court. Miss Lizzie Lei:, 18 years old, daughter of William Lee, was terribly burned at Jeffersonville. Shj was replenishing the lire in the stove, when a coal fell out and lodged against her dress and she was soon enveloped in flam‘s. Her screams attracted attention, and her father succeeded in extinguishing the flames, being himself badly burned. Miss Lee's injuries are very serious, but she will recover. Mrs Maroai.et Wilson, an aged flatly of Seymour, who resides with her daughter, Mrs. Doll Kennard, has been ill for some time with grip, Tho other night she started upstairs caryinga lamp. When she reached the top she fainted, falling to the bottom and fracturing herskull. The house caught fire from the lamp, but the flames were extinguished before much damage was done. Mrs. Wilson is in a critical condition. The jury in the ease of Janies Truelock, Thomas Kirk and Lee Martin, charge with grave-robbing, at Franklin, returned a verdict of guilty. The men were each given six years in the penitentiary. The offense for which these men were convicted was that of stealing the body of James Curry, a prominent citizen of the country, who died some time ago. Kiri? and Truelock reside in Indianapolis, while Martin’s home is in Greenwood. The 6-year-old child of William Spigle, a farmer residing six miles south of Frankfort, died under peculiar circumstances. A few days ago it fell, striking on its mouth with sufficient force to knock out a tooth. The wound began to bleed, and though a physician was summoned, the flow of blood could not be stopped and the child bled to death. A few weeks ago a younger child of Mr. Spigle died in the sam • manner, the bleeding being caused in this instance by a pin scratch. Patents have been awarded Indiana inventors as follows: George H. Archer, assignor of one-half to R. Dahlen, Terre Haute, touch regulating devise for pianos; Edward Goof, Franklin County, door or window screen; Jeremiah Herring, assignor of one-half to W. E. Gerding, Fort Wayne, eaves trough hanger; Fred Shunting, Fort Wayne, transformer; Lafayette Johnson, assignor of one-half to J. H. Stotsenburg, New Albany, new electric lamp support and cut out; Matthew It. Moore, Indianapolis, steam boiler; Joseph L. Potter, assignor to 11. G. Olds. Fort Wayne, wood pulley; Francis W. Robinson, assignor to Robinson & Co.. Richmond. straw stacker; William S. Rowell, Muncie, measuring and drawing instrument; Lee H. Williams, Indianapolis, water closet valve. Chabi.es Dill, r.ged 9, Farmland, while playing with a revolver, pointed it at Frank Jones, aged 11. and pulled the trigger. The ball entered Jones’ face, inflicting a fatal injury. Dull says it was an accident, while Jones deciares it was done in a tit of anger. At Mentone, as Mrs. W. S. Charles was rendering lardon a ga-< line stove, the lard ignited causing an explosion. Mrs. Charles being at work near the stove her clothing caught tire. The flame.; completely enveloped her person. destroying her hair and burning the flesh ot her limbs so severely that her toe nails dropped off. It is thought her injuries will prove fatal.
TASTE FOR WEDDING CAKE. A f* oat office flat Making Free iu Cleveland with lx*tter« anil Package*. “Have you ever heard of our postoffice rat?" queried a handler of Cleveland mail addressing a writer for the Leader. “He is a kleptomaniac, a born thief, I guess,” continued the clerk. "He steals letters, and we cannot keep him from it. He has a taste for wedding cake, too, and his conscience never restrains him from indulging it. We have set a trap for him repeatedly, but he is too wise for us.” The clerk then discoursed concerning the habits of the distinguished rodent. “He hides among the rubbish of the room,” he said, “and has several means of ready access to the outside world. He takes charge of affairs when we are out. The other day he was seen sitting upright on the table nibbling at a package of hickory nut kernels which happened to be sidetracked during transit through the mails. Not long ago a box of wedding cake got lost. A card was mailed to the sender to come and correct the address she called, but when we looked for the package it was gone. “A feeling something like that w hich crept over Old Mother Hubbard when she went to the cupboard to get her ‘poor dog a bone’ gradually gained possession of us. The rat had made off with the cake, and the closest search revealed only scattered fragments of precious sweetmeat. We thought for a long time that some inquisitive person was taking certain missives, but our suspicions proved to be unfounded. One day we discovered several of the missing letters near a hole made by the rat under a desk. He had taken them as far as he could, and then bade them good-by.” The rat makes the correcting clerk’s office his principal rendezvous. It is there that stray letters and packages are held for a time to ascertain their correct address or for additional postage. WAS GOULD INSANE? • Financial Worry and Physical Exertion Not the Greatest Destroyer of Human Life. For Humanity’s Sake*After Thirty-six Years of Nerve-Creeping Slavery, He Tells How He Was Set Free. Caldwell, N. J„ Man h 11. IS9s,—(Special.)— Since one of our prominent citizens suffered so terribly from tobac«’> tremens, has made known his frightful experience in behalf of humanity, the ladies here are making tobacco-using husbands’ lives miserable with their entreaties to at once quit tobacco. The written statement of S. J. Gould is attracting wide-spread attention. When interviewed to-night be said: “I commenced using tobacco at thirteen; 1 am now forty-nine; so, for thirty-six years I chewed,smoked, snuffed and rubbed snuff. In the morning 1 chewed before I put my pants on, and for a long time I used two ounces of chewing and eight ounces of smoking a day. Sometimes 1 had a chew iu both cheeks and a pipe in my mouth at once. Ten years ago I quit drinking whisky. I tried to stop tobacco time and again, but could not. My nerves craved nicotine and I fed them till my skin turned a tobacco-brown, cobl. sticky perspiration oozed from my skin, and trickled down my back at tho least exertion or excitement. My nerve vigor and my life was being slowly sapped. 1 made up my mind that I had to quit tobac *o or die. On October 11 stopped, and for three days I suffered tin* tortures of the damned. On the third day I got so bad that my partner accused me of being drunk. I said. ‘No. I have quit tobacco.* ‘For God’s sake, man.’ he said, offering me his tobacco box, ‘take a chew; you will go wild,’ and 1 was wild. Tobacco was forced into me and 1 was taken home dnzeil. I saw double and my memory was beyond control, but I still knew how to chew and smoke, which 1 did all day until towards night, when my system got tobacco-soaked again. The next morning I looked and felt as though 1 had been through a long spell of sickness. I gave up in despair, as I thought that I could not cure myself. Now. for suffering humanity. I’ll tell what saved my life. Providence evidently answered my good wife's prayers and brought to her attention in our paper an article which read: ‘Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away ’’ “What a sermon and warning in these words! Just what I was doing. It told about a guaranteed cure for the tobacco habit, called No-To-Bac. 1 sent to Druggist Hasler for a box. Without a gram of faith I spit out my tobacco cud, and put into my mouth a little tablet upon which was stamped No-To-Bac. 1 know’ it sounds like a lie when 1 tell you that I took eight tablets the first day. seven the next, five the third day. and all the nerve-creeping feeling, restlessness and mental depression was gone. It was too good to be true. It seemed like a dream. That was a month ago. I used one box. It cost me sl, and it is worth a thousand. I gained ton pounds in weight and lost all desire for tobacco from the first day. 1 sleep and eat well, and I have been benefited in more ways than I can tell. No. the cure was no exception in my case. I know of ten people right here in Caldwell who have bought No-To-Bac from Hasler, and they have been cured. Now that I realize what No-To-Bac has done for me and others, 1 know why it is that the makers of this wonderful remedy, the Sterling Remedy Company, of New York and Chicago, say: ‘We don’t claim to cure every case. That’s Fraud’s talk, a lie; but we do guarantee three boxes to cure the tobacco habit, and in case of failure we are perfectly willing to refund money.’ I would not give a public indorsement if I were not certain of its reliability. I know it is backed by men worth a million. No-To-Bac has been a God-send to me, and I firmly believe it will cure any case of tobaccousing if faithfully tried, and there are thousands of tobacco slaves who ought to know’ how easy it is to get free. There’s happiness in No-To-Bac for the prematurely old men. who think as I did that they are old and worn out, w hen tobacco is the thing that destroys their vitality and manhood.” The public should be warned, however, against the purchase of any of the many imitations on the market, as tho success of No-To-Bac has brought forth a host of counterfeiters and imitators. The genuine No-To-Bac is sold under a guarantee to cure, by all druggists, and every tablet has the word No-To-Bac plainly stamped thereon, ami you run no physical or financial risk in purchasing the genuine article. Scientists predict that in a century's time there will be no disease that is not curable.
*HE U. S. Government offi- S daily reports ROYAL Baky ing Powder superior to all others in leavening strength. % (Bulletin 13. Afl Def t.f. }<».) It is the best and most economical. i RpVAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. Gfi
Cold Feet. This derangement is attributable to defective circulation of the blood. Coldness of the feet mostly c omes on at niuht. and will olton prevent a i ergon sleeping 1 long after he has got into : bed. Treatment Half an hour before bedtime walk up and down the room briskly, or run up. and down stairs. Rub the feet with thehandsora fleshbrush. Diptnem into hot water, without suffering them to remain in any length of time. Drink some warm . beverage just before going to bed. In , winter time, wear boots instead of ; slip; ers in the house. Do not sit long ; together, but every now and then get up and walk about. These, and many other simple expedients, may be adopted to prevent this unpleasant sensation. Inventor of the Modern Plow. An exchange with an antiquarian , turn of mind declares that Thomas •Jefferson invented the modern plow. There were plows, of course, thousands , of years before the time of the sage of Monticello, but he first laid down the mathematical principles that underlie the construction of the plow, and so enabled any blacksmith to make one. A plow consists of two wedges, a cutt ng ana a lifting wedge, and Jefferson discovered and enunciated the proportion of each and the relations each bore to the other. Before his day no two smiths made plows alike. Now they are all made in accordance with a mathematical formula. Hardware. Starfish are found at almost every depth in the sea. Some have been drawn up from 2,000 fatnoms. A B«nk Faiiure. AN INVESTIGATION 1 DEfIANDED. 1 I ______ 1 A general banking business is done by the human system, because the blood deposits in its vaults whatever wealth we may gaiu from day to day. This wealth is laid up against “ a rainy day ” as a reserve fund —we re in a condition of healthy prosperity if we have laid away sufficient capital to draw upon in the hour of our greatest need. . There is danger in getting thin, because it’s a sign of letting down in health. To gain I in blood is nearly always to gain in zvhole- j some flesh. The odds are in favor of the 1 germs of consumption, grip, or pneumonia, if our liver be inactive and our blood impure. or if our flesh be reduced below a healthy standard. What is required is an > increase in our germ fighting strength. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery enriches < the blood and makes it wholesome, stops the waste of tissue and at the same time builds up the strength. A medicine which i will rid the blood of its poisons, cleanse and invigorate the great organs of the body, vitalize the system, thrill the whole being with new energy and make permanent work , of it. is surely a remedy of great value. But when we make a positive statement that 08 per cent, of all cases of consumption can, if taken in the early stages of the disease, be CURED with the “ Discovery,” it seems like a bold assertion. All Dr. Pierce asks is that you make a thorough investigation and satisfy yourself of the truth of his assertion. By sending to the World s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.. you can get a free book with the names, addresses and photographs of a large number of those cured of throat, bronchial and lung diseases, as well as of skin and scrofulous affections 1 by the “ Golden Medical Discovery. ” They t also publish a book of 160 pages, being a ‘ medical treatise on consumption, bronchitis, < asthma, catarrh, which will be mailed on receipt of address and six cents in stamps. 1
Jacobs Oil is made to cure “Forbid a Foo! a Thing and That He Will Do.” Don’t Use SAPOLIO
NOTICE! ?N H TH?s FF p E APER !LL NOT APPEAR ACA!N SI,OOO PRIZE WALL PAPER. I If you are going to paper this spring, send a full description of the different rooms, together with their height, (A what they are used for, color effect desired, etc. to ALFRED PEATS, and he will make selections of the most mwT suitable styles and colors from his Prize Designs and other patterns, and W ) MAIL YOU SAMPLES FREE. 9? Prices of Prize Design Wall Papers range from 15 to 30c per roll, and in addition we have over One Alillion Rolls of other papers some of them as low as 3c per roll. V 7 If you have any use whatever for Wall Paper, do not fail to SEND AT ONCE FOR SAMPLES. y / AGENTS MAKE MONEY. If you will take the agency for our Prize Patterns and other papers, and solicit orders from those in your ® ) neighborhood who are going to paper this spring, we will send our Agents’ Sample Books on receipt of your /A references and SI.OO to cover cost of books, and pay a handsome profit on all orders you obtain. ALFRED PEATS, 832-834 W s Madison St.. Chicago. S
The Twelve Suns of the Hindoos. The Hindoos have very odd astronomical ideas, among others that there are really twelve sons, which take ‘‘turn al suit ’■ supplying our planet with light and heat. They that these suns are brothers, but some are much younger and weaker than the others. Mis the wife of an English official. while talking with one of these learned Brahmans during the month of November, was given the following curious bit of astronomical lore: “Some of these suns are the elder brothers, and much stronger than the others so strong, indeed, that they can kill men. This month we have a young sun brother, and next month a still younger one. and then the two youngest or the twelve weaklings that can hardly melt snow!’’ THE MODERN WAY. Commends itself to the well-formed, to do pleasantly and effectually what was formerly done in the crudest manner and disagreeably as well To cleanse the system and break up colds, headaches and fevers without unpleasant after effects, use the delightful liquid laxative remedy. Syrup of Figs. To Keep Thein Awake. A document is kept in a church in Harlem Holland, which tells that in the year 162.5 a certain Hans Zink was engaged, for a sum equalling a little over a shilling a week, to wake up all th* se in the congregation w’ho went to sleep during the sermon on Sunday. Zink was a human alarum for twenty years, but at the end of that time was dismissed, because he had been caught napping himself while preaching was going on. SIOO Reward, *IOO. The readers of this paper will lie pleased to learn that there is al lead oiit* dteaued that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that Is catarrh. Hall s Catarrh Cure is the only podtiv? cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beim: a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting •llrectly upon the blood au l mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors nave so much faitli In its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any ease that it fails to cure. Send for list of Testimonials. Address. F. ,1. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo. O. l2£r\Sold by Druggists, 75c. Intelligence of Plants. Plants very often exhibit something very much like intelligence. It a bucket of water, during a dry season, be placed a few inches from a growing pumpkin or melon vine, the latter will turn from its course and in a day or two will get one us its leaves into the water. Think of it ladies! Y’ou can permanently beautify your complexion with Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. "Hill's Hair anil Whisker Dye,” Black er Brown, 50c. In London there is an army of female clerks, the number being not less than 50,000. Afteb physicians had given me up, 1 was saved by I’iso’s Cure.—Ralph Ejhkg, Williamsport, Fa., Nov. 22,1894. You cannot make a bad egg good by mixing it with good ones. Attend the Fort Wayne Business College, A fiery sword barred paradise, a fiery tongue reopened it. THE method pursued by the Nickel Blate road by which its agents figure rates as low as the lowest seems to meet the requiietiienis of the traveling public. No one should think ot purchasing a ticket until they first inquire what the rate would be over the N ickel Plate road.
BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD. ’ EESOwi i DO HOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which ' stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. H>S AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS. TAPE-WORM •*ure Cure within 2 Jioura. No ino»t*ren»euu6fc (/Tie d<Mip (price §2 gii44r;in'e«*d sutti«*ient. GUABANI KivMEDY < 0., Dulsenlle, N. ft HIGHEST AWARD WORLD’S FAIR, -i For C ° ND| Dyspeptic,Delicate,lnfirm and AGED PERSONS TheSAFEST Food ln THE SICK ROOM FOR INVALIDS ‘ Convalesce^ 5 • J Mothers, In fants Z CHILDREN f J DRUGGISTS. John Carle&Sons, New York. 1 ■ : year we commenced an elaborate plan of advrrtltnnr, hut i • : re were half through Ol R AIHICKTISI 'll NT9 JIIN4II‘FAHH». Whvf Btetu-r WK « IRE O > EiO'H tL'I HA WITH Bl S’* ICSB. There was but one thing to do; wiihdraMf the adverti...ng end devoU every energy to fill.ng the ordere with which we were flooded. Tin- we did. and handled with reasonable crornpinevs a most unp recounted year’s bnsiness. 'VI I'll ErtLaRUKIA F4CIOKIES, IVCHFtSKh FAtILIITESL IHENTY HRAXCiI HOI SEB FROM WiHi H TO IILB IF. Ol K faUOb”. WE CAN SOP < ARE FOR ALL WHO 1 ORE. I>tst year we could not reduct pnees he-ause we were comp. l>d m some way to hunt lliedemaiid for Aermotor goods. We wmid have been satisfied with lower prices, but why create a demaud which we coui.i i t supply? We have made the heaviest purchases of steel and material bought in America thie '-ar and at unprev wUnted prices, and have made terms to dealers which enable them to make unprecedented prices. In q it! tv, character, variety, fini-h, and accessil> l.ty to ■ “II stock of goods and repairs, we are without competitors. In <ur [ ian f advertising last rear, we prop ved to furn -h a !i • | above we did not complete the advertising, and the feed cutter was not put out. We now propose to make amends m the folio ring manner. We wII at tiotitice in this paper our SEW ALL-STEEL VIRY BVFERIOK ILE» ClTlElt, WORTH s4O»islO rash yith order, f o. b. Cincago. Only one to one person, he to irnish addresses of ten ne -hhortHhe oeght to have s mio.uing in our line. Cut, descripUvu at<d full iuformatiop regarding it will appear soon. oeai’-e to caution tmr. ar/ainKf pasfistf •t/v.s,. v,.,-/ y .null ottf/Hn.' The temj.taIsom om pn >t of th9 fUener to ootrch ; treat, frtddr'l to t.'ie legitimate cl " ir ®^l th9 t-alrr. 7o be sure *Y- - ■ you get tho >cjK-rprt-eandarti‘ , .*■’ t <>, write ua of •four peei/s ard u-iU be protected. Wo ... bv! ■ " Be.a ;»>• of tne ' output of our factories we <re enabled to have specialTl|l"“tools tot each piece, uni thus re-.uce the hand labor ill on it to merely picking up the material a-;d laving it S I down again. So small Laa become the cost of labor put! 1 on the mater 1 w, ich w» ' • ■" I ■ i ■ : be--ome the largest dealers in I ■ material in the country; erne- rial, of c ■ »e. be- B. J ing made up in the forte of •eei galvanixed after c->m- fix /■ pletion windmills, towers t Itmg and fixed), tanks, pumps, etc., To such an extent has this become true, H ib and te such an extent has the price of our goods (and! i on th-t account the vol* ume of our business ret- j|/4 \’M dered competition tmpoeS > .th FO( R LAI’UF WIMIMILL COAL’EKAS AKE Bl niKIR TO A ERS OF ( S THIS YFIR THEY DU IT HE. TAI SE WE HAKE THE ONLY AESOLITELY RFLIARI F AW SAFE TOWER: BE( Al SR THEY CAS Bl Y OE 18 AHEAPEU rmv THEY CAS Blll.ll: BEiAISE WE ALONE ARE I’RgFARED TO KAIV4M7.E E'ERiHIIYH AFTER IT IS < <)■- PLETKB. A<SD COHPLETK EVERYTHING EXA< PI.Y RIGHT. These concerns are wise, foi, even though they may not furnish the Lest of wheels, the wheel will have the best f supports. Send to us your name and address, and those of your neighbors who may need something in our line and therebv d® them a goo<i turn. The Aerm«t»r Co. is one of the most successful business enterprises which has been launched in recent times hi succeeding adver-isc uents wdl )>r s ussed and mad® elear the lines on which that success has been worked out. It was done by a farmer's boy. A careful following of these advertisements mav suggest to some other farmer's boy a career. Aermotor Co., lloekwell A FUlmureSts , Cb.eagw. W. L. Douglas’ S 3 SHoErl T ’^A Bt &. 2 CORDOVA NT. BENCH & ENAMELLED CALF. -3W FinlCalf&Kansaboi POLICE,3 SOLES, WORKINGMEN’. p ‘EXTRA FINE!>I. 7 -SBOYS'SCH33LSHGEi • LADIES--3' BesTP SEND FOR CATALOGUE BROCKTON,MASS. Over One Million People wear tho V/. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes AH our shoes are equally satisfactory They give t’ie best value for the money. They equal custom shoes in style and fit. Th Mr wem-ing quaUtien are unsurpassed. The prices are uni rm,-—stamped on sole. From to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. 1 . W. N. U. - 11—95 It hen H ritiiig to AdvertiMers, say you saw tiie Advertisement iu thia waper.
