Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 40, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1895 — Page 7

Is Your Blood Pure If not, it is important that you make ft pure at once with the great blood purifier, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Because with impure blood you are in constant danger of serious illness. Hood’s Pills Voltaire was afraid to sleep in the dark and.mvariably woke if his candle wont out. Change of Life. ■When a woman approaches the change of life she is liable to have a return of all the menstrual derangements, and other ailments that afflicted her in former years. The direct action of MeElree’s Wine of Cardui on the organs afflicted, make it the best remedy for use during this period. Mrs. D. Pennington, West Plains, Mo., says: “I had been suffering from change of life and it took the form of dropsy. The doctors lold my husband it was useless to prescribe for me any more. About that time we got Dr. MeElree’s book on the treatment of female diseases and decided to try the Wine of Cardui Treatment. After using nine bottles, 1 am well.’’ Prepared Breaklast While Asleep. Somnambulism lias in all ages furnished many curious illustrations, and among them may be noted one that occurred in a Utica, N. Y., residence a few days ago. The husband and wife were aroused by the breakfast bell ringing in the ‘middle of the night. They arose and discovered that it was 2 o’clock, but on going down to the dining-room they found breakfast waiting for them. They were greatly alarmed at the condition of things, for they at first imagined that the hired girl had suddenly gone insane. After a few minutes, however, they discovered that she was asleep. She had got up, started the fire, prepared the morning meal, and had it ready for serving, but was sound asleep all’ the time. The gentleman was about to summon a physician, when the wife dashed a glass of cold water in the girl’s face and she awoke.

IN DESPAIR. A FEN PICTURE. t Many Women Will Recognize It. [S7rcTAI.'rO OVB LADY SEADEBS.] “Oh, lam so nervous! No one ever Buffered as I do! There isn’t a well inch in my whole body! I o honestly think my lungs jfy. are diseased, my chest f -La pains me so; __r-*Y* -J but I’ve no *k cough. I’m so weak at my T'" : V' I stomach, and have in- X. A' ; 'i digestion horribly. \ Then I have palpita- 1 p \ tion, ami my heart N . ■ A hurts nn . How y l ' ■s. '>4 lam losing y/ 7 • t) flesh! and tills y headache near- f _ -SiM j, ly kills me: and . I the backache J- A — Heavens! I A had hysterics > ,’F : \ g yesterday. H jKfii ß . a ,4 ] There is a 6 — ’ w eight in the lower part of my bowels, bearing down all the time, and there are pains in my groins and thighs. I can’t sleep, walk, or sit. I’m diseased all over. The doctor? Oh! he tells me to keep quiet. Such mockery! • Inflammatory and ulcerative conditions at the neck of the womb can produce all the above symptoms in the same person. In fact, there is hardly a part of the body that can escape those sympathetic pains and aches. No woman should allow herself to reach such a perfection of misery when there is positively no need of it. Lyaia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound acts promptly and thoroughly in such cases; strengthens the muscles of the womb, heals all inflammation, and restores that unruly organ to its normal condition. Druggists are selling carloads of it. Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., will gladly and freeiy answer all letters asking for advice. Mrs. E. Bishop. 787 Halsey Street, Brooklyn, N.Y., suffered all the above described horrors. Now she is well. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cured her. W rite her about it. 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 trieii it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now m his possession over two hundred certificates of its value., all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from tlie 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 weex 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.

DEATH THEIR DOOM. THIRTEEN PILGRIMS TO ST. ANNE’S SHRINE PERISH. Second Section of an Excursion Train Plows Into the First—Pullman Cars Telescoped-Wheat Drops Five Cents • n Chicago—Cornell Wins. Mas a Fatal Crash. At Craig s Road station, Quebec, a pil- ■ Krim < * ursion on the Grand Trunk road . from Sherbrooke was being run in two sections. The first section stopped at Craig s Road to cross an uptrain, when the second section ran into it, the engine ; plowing through the Pullman and first- | class car. Thirteen persons were killed : outright and over thirty hurt. Ten | passenger cars and the engine were ! wrecked. The pilgrims were en route to the ' famous shrine of St. Anne de Baupre, ' where every summer large numbers of ! sick and crippled gather to invoke the I saint to cure them of their diseases. The i trains were made up of residents from ’ Sherbrooke, Magog, Windsor Mills, and ! surrounding parishes. The forward train j was making good time, having left Rich- J mond at 10 o’clock the night before. On ■ the rear of this train was a Pullman, in | which were the priests and others in ' charge of the party, and it was in this i car that most of the loss of life occurred. The first train reached Craig’s Road, ; which is fourteen miles west of Levis, about 3 o’clock and stopped at the tank ' to take water. Precautions were taken 1 and the semaphore thrown to danger against the following train. Only the trainmen were out and about, attending to their duties. The Pullman in the rear was wrapped in silence and the sleepers were unaware of the terrible fate hat was rushing upon them. Suddenly there was a great crash. The second train coming at full speed dashed into the rear Pullman of the first section. So great was the impetus of the colliding train that the engine embedded itself in the palace car, and the latter plunged forward and partly telescoped the firstclass car immediately in front. Every berth in the Pullman was wrecked and some of the occupants who were Killed never knew what happened to ’hem. They died sleeping. Others awoke to their horrible surroundings and position, maimed, bleeding, and bruised, conscious of little else hut the agony that racked them. The cries of the wounded and the moans of the dying, and the outpouring of passengers from cars that were not badly damaged, and the hurrying for.ns of the uninjured trainmen with their flickering lanterns, all combined to make a sight seldom exceeded in its horror. CORNELL THE WINNER. Sensational Result of the Long*Ex« pected International Boat Race. All the flower of England’s nobility, society and college folk saw Cornell defeat the crack English eight, the Leanders, without rowing against them in the first day’s race for the Grand Challenge cup of the Henley regatta. The Leanders were not ready when the gun was fired and the Cornells started over the course alone. The winners of the two other races for the Grand Challenge cup were

f?.’. /y n h v\ \x\v MEMBERS OF THE CORNELL UNIVERSITY CLUB.

the Eton and Trinity eights. The Trinity erow beat the London crew by six lengths, while the Eton boys came across the finish line with a quarter of a length of clear water showing between its stern and the prow of the Thames boat. Every good American expected that Cornell would win. Every good American is sorry that it has won in form and manner as related by cable dispatches. Not that Cornell is to blame for the outcome; the American crew was leady to start when the umpire, a Briton, gave the word “Go;” the British crew did not start, and the Americans won without opposition. It is a barren victory. Obviously, the Leander crew was in a state of poor discipline, for in answer to the empire's question, “Ready?” one of its Members said “Yes!” and Cornell had got inder way in obedience to the command ’•Go!” before Leander’s coxswain had countermanded his comrade’s “Yes!” The grand challenge cup now Is a trophy of Cornell, bftt it is a trophy won by misadventure of the Leander crew, rather than of conquest. Th« expectation was of victory for Cornell; its crew had made better time than that of the Leander in trial rowing trips over the course; its style of rowing was considered better by cmnpehuit judges. The best thing that can be done is to row the race over tgain. Tie? grand challenge cup is the most coveted of rowing prizes. Il van be contested over only by amateirs who are members of a university, or of a publfc school affiliated to a university, or are members of her Majesty’s army or navy. The cup is held by the winning crew until it is defeated by another. It was believed in America that Cornell would capture the cup. It has captured it, but under existing circumstances it nay be well that it shall capture it again. PANIC IN THE PIT. Wheat Drops Five Cents a Bushel ’Mid Exciting Scenes. Tuesday was the most nervous and exciting day the Chicago Board of Trade has seen since the farmers came into town some weeks ago and bought wheat up from 52 cents to 82% cents. Wheat declined 5 cents, and many an excited man chased his fortune to the brink of the wheat pit to see it sink out of s ; ght. And these crazy bulls, says n Chicago dispatch, brought their grappling hooks in the shape of reported damage to Northwest crops by hot winds, and threatening frosts, etc., and dragged the pit, but they couldn't find their gold. Surely enough, It seemed to be a bottomless pit. The bulls were never in it at all. The bears ran the whole show from the start. Wheat opened up at 67 5-Bc, and in three

or four minutes had sunk to This was a great surprise to the bull element, which hoped for a firmer market. The hulls tried to talk, but were choked off. A week ago when the market was hang- ' ing fire they were somebody, for they I could frighten the bears with a little tele- ■ gram telling tow wheat was growing into the shock something of ’hat kind, but Tuesday morning their chinch 1 ugs were dead, their hot winds didn’t blow, i and their frost melted. If the bulls were disappointed when the I price of September went to they j were doomed to greater disappointment I later. They smiled when a little rally to was made, but that market was only fooling them when it went up there. It soon turned around and came down hill , liukity-cut again* and sold down to 64 cents. But this wasn’t the bottom. A*.ong toward the close of the session the ‘ pt ice simply leaped over the Go’s and ■ closed at 62VGc. In New York the specukitive pyrotechnics at the Produce Exchange were dazzling to both the bulls and the bears i in wheat, and l>oth factions were equally j astonished. A drop of 5 cents a bushel j made the hair of the bulls stand on end i and it made the bears blink. That makes I 8 cents in two days. The bulls thought i the course of prices altogether too much like tobogganing. The sudden tumble—- ! the greatest in years—caused a great deal of excitement and interest in Milwaukee. ■ The fact that wheat closed at G 2 C-8 cents | represented a drop within twenty-four hours that was calculated to create al- ' most a panic WEATHER AND CROP BULLETIN. Signal Service Report on Temperature and Crop Conditions. ’ | The official crop and weather bulletin ‘ ; for the past week shows the average to be ; ' three to six degrees cooler than the aver- ' i age throughout the Mississippi and Ohio < Valleys. Heavy rains have fallen in Ok- : lahoma, Missouri and the northern portion of the Gulf region. Through the ' Southern States the average fall has been I from one to two inches more than the . usual amount. The lake *egi >n and upr per Mississippi Valley had practically no t rain. Nebraska and the Dakotas suf--1 sered materially from drouth. Corn has made very rapid growth during the week and. except in Michigan, the 1 general outlook for this crop is exoellent. 1 i Arkansas reports the largest crop in years, and in Kansas, Nebraska, lowa, - Illinois and Missouri the outlook is most . promising. The general outlook for spring ■ wheat continues most flattering. Winter wheat harvest is practically completed s and thrashing continues general. Some - damage in shock has been caused in Maryr land by he avy rains; also in Missouri and ? ' Kansas. Tobacco is growing well in Ken- ? tucky. but the crop is uneven. In Maryt land it is in excellent condition and in Ohio it is improved, except in the central part of the State, where it is suffering from drouth. From the Central and I Southwestern States the reports are as • follows: i Illinois—Last week very favorable ex- - I cept in southern counties; wheat ami rye - | thrashing general, yield light, quality - * poor; oats harvest completed in southern e and progressing in central counties; straw o short, yield light; corn growing finely s and generally laid by; Laying continues il with very light crop. e Minnesota —All late sown crops and r grasses injured in south half by drouth e now intensifying and spreading; rainfall

in north half ample; haying general; barley, winter wheat and rye harvest begun; corn growth good; wheat prospects continue excellent. South Dakota—Aßove lormnl temperature, high southerly winds, two exceedingly warm days and inly scattered showers, mostly light, have been injurious to small grain 1 grasses over a numof counties: corn grew rapidly and potatoes did well; rain needed genm-ally. Nebraska Cool, dry week: wheat and rye harvest has progressed rapidly in southern counties and thrashing commenced, the yield is less than half a crop; oats ripening fast; corn has made good growth and is in fine condition, some early planted tasseling. Kansas —Cool, cloudy week, with excessive rains, have generally stonped harvesting and thrashing and injured grain in shock, but has been ben filial to all other crops and furnished abundant stock water; corn generally tasseling and beginning to silk and never more promising; flax, fruit, pastures and potatoes fine. lowa—Weather favorable except serious need of rain in some eastern counties; oats harvest begun, with prospects of heavy yield; corn has made rapid advancement and other crops are in satisfactory condition. Michigan—Showers over upper peninsula which were poorly distributed; in lower peninsula there has practically been no rain, and drouth continues with great severity; hay and wheat very poor crops, and oats will give a light yield: corn is just beginning to show effects of drouth; if rain comes soon it can yet help corn, potatoes, pastures and gardens. Ohio—Favorable for thrashing wheat and hay harvesting; light yields reported; coj ii, outs, late potatoes and tobacco have improved in growth from rains, except over middle section, where drouth retards growth; pasturage very poor, and water becoming scarce. Indiana —Warm, fair weather favorable to harvesting; end of week favorable to corn and potatoes, and both crops are in finecondition and growing rapidly; thrashing wheat and rye continues; yield better wheat and rye continues; yield better than expected in localities; haying continues; crop poor. Wisconsin —The past week has been hot and dry; haying about half completed; rye and barley harvest in progress, and the crop is generally good; corn and potatoes unaffected by drouth, end growing rapidly: oats promise a good crop; pastures very poor. 'There is ev a ry reason to believe that if Howard Gould hits promised to marry Miss Clemmons he will do it. That girl is a protege of Buffalo Bill.

, 0 ( aft 'J* s O votes'- u ’ ABSOLUTELY PURE

Free to Decide. Whether a woman acts wisely or un- ' wisely in remaining unwed, is a ques- • tion no one save herself can satisfac- i torily answer; but that there is a fast increasing class of women who either do not marry at all or do not marry young, everybody must admit. It seems to me, says a writer in Scribner’s, that fathers of sense not quite recognize the duty that this fact im-1 poses upon them—the duty of making ; such provisions for daughters that they shall, as far as possible, be free to • marry or not, and shall not be im-1 pelled to do so from the mere need of ‘ a home and support. Os course this : provision must vary with the means of the father. It may take the form of an adequate income, secured by a proper investment, or it may be a training in some occupation that will yield an income, or it may be in part one and in part the other. The main point, so far as the daughters are concerned, is that marriage shall be a matter of choice, that a fairly comfortable and independent life shall be made possible without it, and that no woman shall feel forced, or tempted, not to put too tine a point upon it, to become a wife to secure such a life. I know that the problem is not a simple one, and that its solution is not easy; but ease and .simplicity are not the prevailing characteristics of a man’s duties to his children of either sex. This one is none the less imperative on that account. It Is Not Modern. People are apt to consider that golf in England is quite a modern introduction, and it will be news to many that it was popular and that it flourished pretty close to London more than a hundred years ago. Evidence of this may be found in a fine engraving by Valentine Green of a picture after L. F. Abbot, entitled ‘‘Golfers on Blackheath” and dated 1710. Ten Thousand Miles or Thirty, It matters not which, may subject you to sea sickness on the “briny deep” Whether you are a yachtsman, an ocean traveler, out for a lay or two’s fishing on the salt water, or even an inland tourist iu feeble health, you ought to be provided with Hostetter's Stoma'h Bitters, a valuable remedy for nausea, colic, biliousness, acidity of the stomach, malaria, rheumatism, nervousness and sick headache. Lay in an adequate supply. The Cheerful Idiot. “This thing of changing swords into plowshares,” said the Cheerful Idiot, ‘•is no great shakes of a metamorphosis.” “No?” said the shoe clerk boarder. “No. It is merely changing guardin’ tools into farm implements.” —Indianapolis Journal. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price 75 cents. Typewriting is right in the line of economy. A pen is saved: therefore a penny’s earned. Enclose a stamp to any agent of the Nickel Plate road for an elaborately illustrated art souvenir entitled “Summer Outings.’7

tYou can carry the little vial of Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets right in the vestpocket of your dress suit, and it will not make even a little lump. The “ Pellets” are so small that 42 to 44 of them go in a vial scarcely more than an inch long, and as big round as a lead pencil. They cure constipation. One “Pellet” is a laxative ; two a mild cathartic. One taken after dinner will stimulate digestive action and palliate the effects of over-eating. They act with gentle efficiency on stomach, liver and bowels. They don’t do the work themselves. They simply stimulate the natural action of the organs themselves.

Illiiii:::!" T he easiest cleaning is with Pearline. Yes, easiest for every- — body. Whether you’re doing H the hard work of house-clean-lll 1 ' C \ yourself, or having u \ '\\ \1 I i done, get Pearline 'N /h\ vfl Mi an d S el - through with it. 11 y \‘v ' d° more work, better 1 / \ f j work, quicker work, than > \ /Y J\ anything else. 1,,.,.. " \ Von ought to look out 1 I for the wear and tear in nTnrin j r house-cleaning as well as in washing. Some of your delicate things won’t stand much rubbing. They're meant, especially,to be cleaned with Pearline. C pyxrl Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you “ this is as good as” or “ the same as Pearline.” IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled, 10-rw -»1— if your grocer sends you something in place of Peariine, be honest— send it back. JAMES PYLE, New York. Bear in Mind that “The Gods Help Those Who Help Themselves.” Self Help Should Teach You to Use SAPOLIO

Thousands of camels were taken to Western Australia from India, and the camci caravan has largely supplanted the bullock team there. They thrive upon the natural shrubs of the country. When Traveling. Whether ou pleasure lient, or business, take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectually on the kidneys, liver, and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. Fos sale in 50c. and $1 bottles by. all leading druggists. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. IF the storm of adversity whistles around you. whistle as bravely yourself: perhaps the two whistles may make melody.

Advertising pays: Newspaper advertising pays best of all. Our most successful and prosperous merchants and tradesmen, whose blight record lias added | imperishable luster tothehistory of American commerce, can all testify to this truth from personal experience. The newspaper is the commercial traveler in city and country home, who tells at the tireside, to its evening circle, the merits of your wares and merchandise, if you are wise enough to employ it to speak for you. It never is neglected, never goes unheeded, never speaks to inattentive or unwilling ears. It never bores. It never tires. It is always a welcome visitor and meets a cordial reception. It speaks when the day is done, when cares vanish, when the mind at peace and at rest is in its most receptive mood. Then it is that its story is told and all who read treasure what it says, and are influenced to go where it directs for the thing of which it speaks. What other influences can be so potent to help trade as this quiet but powerful nilvncate? Let it lieeome a salesman in every home for your wares. Let it make its mighty plea for your benefit. And we assure you it will do more than all other influences to promote your business and put money in your purse. In our long experience we know whereof we speak. Try it. Pettingill & Co.. Newspaper Advertising Agency, 22 School street, Boston, Mass.; Mutual Reserve Building, New Y ork City. You can’t measure a man’s religion by the length of his face Sunday. The Trust After No-To-Bac. Chicago Spe lai —Reported here to-day that a large sum ot money had been offered tor the famous tobacco habit cure called No-To-Bac, by a syndicate who want to take It off the market. Inquiry at the general offices revealed the fact that No-To-Bac was not for sale to the trust at any price. No-To-Bac's success is marvelous. Almost every Druggist In America sells No-To-Bac under guarantee to cure tobacco habit or refund money, Queen Elisabeth was very profane and when angry would Kick and cuff her maids. A Bright Eye is a sign of good health, ami if the stomach is not in the best of condition the eyes will show it. Ripans Tabules will make the stomach right and keep the eyes bright and clear. Freight in Alaska is still transported almost exclusively on dog sleds. Summer Tourist Kates. The Northwestern Line (Chicago and Northwestern Railway) is now selling excursion tickets at reduced rates to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Ashland. Bayfield. Marquette, Deadwood, Dakota, ’ Hot Springs, Denver, Colorado Springs. Manitou, Salt Lake City, and tiic lake and mountain resorts of the West and Northwest. For rates and full information apply to Agents of connecting lines. Illustrated pamphlets, giving full particulars, will be mailed free upon application to W. B. Kniskern, G. P. & T. A., Chicago and Northwestern Railway, Chicago, 111. London manufactures $2,500,000 worth ot umbrellas each year. Piso’s Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung trouble of three years’ standing. E. Cady, Huntington, Ind., Nov. 12, 1891. An English law makes it a crime to crop the ears of dogs. Pimples are inexpressibly mortifying. Remedy—Glenn's Sulphur Soap. “Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c. The Nickel Plate road has compiled a list of country homes along the south shore of Lake Erie, willing toaccommodatesummer boarders, and a copy will be mailed to any address by enclosing a stamp to any agent of the Nickel Plate road or to B. F. Horner, General Passenger Agent. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syhup Mr Children teething: soit-ns the ruihs, reauces iuflamruation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle.

BEST IN THE WOtUD. THE RISING SUS *JtWt N\ STOVE POl !SH in f cakci for general Aj> p /j blacking of a stove. the sun paste I. POLISH for a quick V LABOR after dinner shine, N THE applied and polished with a cloth. Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Mass., U.S. A* iFriendsOats (Kiln Dried) K B s x rior Rolled < Oats... / i Sold only in 2=pound 5 r Packages | j At All Grocers ( a MUSCATINE O*T MEAL CO. 8 f MUSCATINE. IOWA K Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things foi everybody to learn is that constipatios causes more than half the sickness in tUa world,especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book .free at yous druggist’s,or write B.F.AllenCo. ,365Cana’ St., New York. Fills,io<? and 25$ a box. Annual sales more than 6,000.000 boXM. ☆ HIGHEST AWARD* WORLD’S FAIR. * The BEST ☆ PREPARED SOLD EVER/WHERE. * JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. # "TEXAS . — VIA Do you know that the iurmsr Js=m more opportunities for making moaey in TEX2AB han almost any State in this great country? Interest yourself in the subject and see how true this is. REMEMBER. THE WABASH Is the Great Steel Rail Highway to all poin’< West and Southwest. For Rates, routes, ma’g and general information, cal) up« n or addreK the nearest Agent of the Wabash System, or write to R. C. BUTLER, D. P. A., Detroit, Mich. F. H. TRISTRAM. C. P. A.. Pittsburg, Pa. P. E. DOMBAUGH, P- &T. A Toledo. Ohio, R. G. THOMPSON. P. & T. A., Fort Wayne, Ind J. HALDERMAN. M. P. A., 201 Clark St.. Chicago, Il|. J. M. McCONNELL P.&T. A .Lafayette, Ind. G. D. MAXFIELD, D. P A., Indianapolis. Ind C. S, CRANE. G. P. & T A.. St. Louis, Mo. Kl® , THE BABY’S LIFE .1 < pen-In on the food it gets. Insufticient nourishment is the cause of rnueh of the fatality among infanta. Improper food brings on indigestion. If the food is right the digestion will be good, and "Ridge’s Food' - is the best. There is nothing “just as good" or "nearly as good.” F is the best in the wliola world. Have you a baby? Its life dei>end» upon how. it is fed. Sold by Druggists. 35c up to $1.75. I WOOLRICII & CO., MASSPWESELL - PRINTING OFFICE OUTFITS at reasonable rates ard upon liberal terms Writ» >i>r PAiirrcrr.Aßs. KUt L W \YXK Pilß UNION, Fort Wayne, Ind. X Thomas P. Simpson, Wtahlnßton. ! t Is ■ j No att’s fee until Patent ob» ■ ” " 1 w talned. Write for Inventor’s uuldr F. W. N. U. - - - - No. 9J When Writing io say y:;3 •aw the Advertisement in Ibis paper.