Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 December 1890 — Page 7

In Montreal.

Secretary—Among those who have applied far the position of a man who used to be a cashier hi a New York bank. He embezzled the funds of the bank and skipped over here. President—Give him the position. Secretary—What! Give, it to a man •with such a record? President—Certainly. He doesn’t dare to embezzle our funds, for he can’t skip to the United States for fear of being arrested. A Canadian with a clear record might do so. He is just the man we want. — Munsey'a Weekly.

Fine Playing Cards.

Send ten (10) cents in stamps or coin to John Sebastian, General Ticket and Passtnger Agent Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway, for a pack of the latest, smoothest, slickest playing cards that ever gladdened the eyes and rippled along the fingers st the devotee to High-Five. Beven-Up, Casino, Dutch, Euchre, Whist, or any other ancient or modern game, and get your money’s worth five times over. An ordinary man during an average life will drink about 175 hogsheads of liquid.

Jor Qire of y r .. 9(r . Stiffness SWectS° rßt iess $y^ up J£ g s OJVEO KIVJOY® Both the method and results when jSyrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts .gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, 'Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sysItem effectually, dispels colds, head- • aches and fevers and cures habitual ‘constipation. Syrup of Figs is the " only remedy, of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in ‘its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most ! healthy and agreeable substances, ite many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug- . gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who 1 wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY.NEW YORK, N.Y. n B TFIITrt I Instructions FkEls to Uli I A N I V I inventors. 43*Write at r U I | 11 I ,1 | once for hand-book of I Fl I Lv 11 J U j information. J. B. CIIAILE £ CO.. Washington, D. C. HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address for forms for application and full Information WM. W. DUDLEY. BLATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS. Attorney at Law, Washington, D. C, (Mention, this Paper.) Tutt’s Pills enable the dyspeptic to eat whatever he wishes. They cause the food to assimilate and nourish the body, give appetite, and DEVELOP FLESH. Office, 39 & 41 Park Place, New York. SSOO REWARD will be paid to the agent of any scale company who will say over his own name as agent, that the Jones 5 TON WAGON SCALE, S6O is not equal to any made, and a standard reliable scale. For particulars, address only Jones of Binghamton, Binghamton. N.Y. MOTHERS’ FRIEND MAKES CHILD BIRTH EASY IF USED BEFORE CONFINEMENT. Book to “Mothers’’ Mailkd Frek. •RADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. ATLANTA. SA. SOLO BT AIA PaPGCICT. DADWAY’S Fl READY RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUEROR OF PAIN. Far Sprains, Bruises, Backache. Pain in the Chest or Sides, Headache, Toothache, or any titer external pain, a few applications rubbed on by hand act like magic. Causing the pain to instantly stop. For Conxestions, Colds, Bronchitis, Pneumonia. Inflammations, Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Lumbago, Sciatica, more thorough and repeated applications are necessary. AU Internal Pains, Diarrhea. Colic. Spasms, Nausea, Fainting Spells, Nervousness, Sleeplessness are relieved instantly, and quickly cured by taking inwardly 20 to 60 drops in half a tumbler of water. GOe. a bottle. AU Druggists. DADWAY’S n PILLS, An excellent and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. The Safest and best Medicine in the world for the Cure of aU Disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according to directions they will restore health and reuew vitality. Prine 25 ci*. a Bax bald by all Drnggixt*

WILL BUILD AIR SHIPS.

PREPARING TO NAVIGATE THE UPPER REGIONS. F. N. Atwood, of Chicago, Claims to P« Able.to Build a Ship that Will Go-Ap-plication Made for Lotrers Patent on Twrnty-two Separate Devices—A Company Incorporated to Carry Out the Inventor’s Ideas—Description of the Principles of the Projected Machine. [Chicago dispatch.] F. N. Atwood, a graduate of the boston School of Technology, and formerly a marine engineer, has been diligently struggling with the problems of aerial navigation for the last twenty years, and has just made application for letters patent to protect no less than twentytwo separate devices he has completed. The inventor was visited by a reporter at his office, room 513 Rialto Building. He talked freely of his experimenis. “Any one can build an air-ship,” said Mr. Atwood, “but the problem is to make it navigate the air. We may attach a gas bag to a freight-car and call the combination an air-ship. Two important and elementary principles are to be observed in making a vessel that is to navigate the air successfully. “Every one knows that so many cubic feet of gas will lift so much dead weight. Gas enough may be carried on any airship to lift the vessel and its cargo. The other important point, then, is to propel the vessel after it is elevated.” Mr. Atwood has devised a wind-wheel or fan to be driven by steam or electric power, by which he claims to be able to drive an immense air ship at a high rate of speed. A company has teen incorporated in this city, known as the Chicago Air-Ship Company, by G. O. Shields, W. B. Bogeoh, F. N. Atwood, and H. Haupt, Jr. The capita! stock is $200,000, of which $160,000 has been placed. As soon as the remainder of the stock is placed the company will organize under the State law, and work on the proposed air-ship will be commenced. The first vessel to be built will br 270 feet long. 48 feet high and 40 feet wide. It will have two lifting wheels and two driving wheels, each ten feet in diameter. These are to be driven by steam or electric power, and from numerous experiments and tests that have been made both in this country and in Europe it is known to a certainty that these wheels can be made to lift several thousand pounds each when revolved at a high rate of speed. There is to be a large gas dome with two auxiliary domes inside. Underneath this there is to be a cabin or house about 100 feet long and 20 feet wide. This is to be well lighted, heated and comfortably furnished. Underneath the house the engine will be placed, so that its weight will serve as ballast for the vessel. One of the devices which it is designed to use is that of the kite. The air-ship will be built with large aroplanes or wings aggregating at least 7,000 square feet of scaling surface. The belief is based on scientific experiments that the vessel may be lifted by its engine and air-wheels to a height of, sr.", 5,000 feet; that both the lifting and driving power may then be shut off—as a railway engineer shuts off his steam on a downgrade—and the bow of the vessel slightly depressed, when the weight of the vessel will drive it in whatever direction headed, even against a strong wind, at a terrific rate of speed. The curvature of the earth’s surface is such that the vessel, starting at such a height as that mentioned, would scale fifty to 100 miles before it would again touch the earth. When the vessel approaches within 500 feet of the earth the bow may be again elevated and the driv-ing-wheels set in motion, and it will rise rapidly on the same kite or scaling principle, the momentum acquired by the downward run aiding the engine in the matter of maintaining the great speed already acquired. Another principle to be utilized is that of the parachute. In case of an accident to the machinery or gas reservoirs, the vessel could not fall i apidly to the earth. The same aroplanes already mentioned, together with long wide wings, which hang from the sides near the top of the vessel, and which would then be thrown out by any downward motion, would give such a vast air surface that the vessel would settle down as slowly and as safely as the man who descends with his parachute. Mr, Atwood has devised a plan for supporting the vessel on land that is new in aeronautics. A monster pivot, framed into the bottom of the hull of the air-ship, to which is attached an aircushion, supports the main weight of the vessel. Six other posts or pivots are set into the hull at different points, to the bottom of which are attached wheels or casters. These are set on adjustable springs, so that they will adjust themselves to any irregularities in the shape of the ground. The main pivot being ahead of the vessel, and a rudder set at the stern, the air-ship becomes a great weather . vane, and no matter how hard the wind may blow or how rapidly it may change its direction, the bow of the vessel will turn just as rapidly and will always head directly into the wind.

Thought to Be Funny.

“Hark! Somebody is playing a delightful bit from Wagner.” “O! that’s only James shoveling coal into the furnace. ” — Life. “Did I understand you to say that miracles do not happen in these days?” “You did. ” “Then you were wrong. My plumber has just failed. ” —St. Joseph News. “When my husband and I quarrel we don’t permit the children to be present. We send them out of doors, so they can hear nothing.” "Oh, now I understand why they are always on the street.”— Fliegeudc Blatter. “So ycU are looking for an honest man,” said a friend of Diogenes to him. “Yes, sir.” “How will you recognize one when you see him?” “He wi 1 return a borrowed lead-peaciL” Washington Post. “Do you understand that Bronson has finally decided to enter the state of matrimony?” “Yes. I think so; at least he told me he was.going to Utah.”—Brooklyn Eagle. “Did you know that Miss Bjones was going to marry young Smyth? “I know it; but I cannot understand how a girl as intelligent as she is can consent to marry a man stupid enough to want to marry her. "-—Life. “I can’t find where that plumber did anything to this heater." “Neither could I. I told the man, but he said we’d find it in the bi Ji. * — Philadelphia Times.

FACTS ABOUT CIGARS.

Soma Little-Known Truths About the - Nicotine Delectable*. “A good dinner without a cigar is like a beautiful woman with one ave.” says the Spaniard. * * ' Every one knows what a cigar is and the usq to which it is put, says the New York Telegram. No one will deny its widespread popularity, although some question its beneficent effects upon the human family. Yet, while postage stamps, monograms and cigarette pictures have all found enthusiastic collectors; but one man has been found to face the many difficulties attending a collection of cigars gleaned from all parts of the world. Capt. Mike Flaherty is well known in the tobacco world and has a wide circle of acquaintances among the pilots, from whom be now and aga n received a present of a queer-looking cigar from some foreign land, and it was this decided him to commence his present collection, which now numbers about 150 varieties of cigars, about each one of which a quaint, interesting story might be told. In the first place the word “cigar” is of modern date, and is derived from the fact that when first smoked cigar# they were shieked in the orchard, or “cigarypl,” sog'a’led from its being the abiding . pjace of those soothing, sleep-pi-6EUicmg insects, the calm crickets. •flonpe “cigarro,” a small roll; “cigarton,” afarge rblb, and ultimately “cigar, ” linked aven in name with the sound in hature. The first cigars made toy the Spaniards were of tobacco loosely rolled and held together by the silken lining of corn shucks, and always with a straw running through the center, to be withdrawn before smoking, so as to secure a good draught These were first introduced into England in 1787 by the son of a Spanish grandee visiting London, and from there spread through all Europe. This is the history of the birth of the cigar into civilization, but we must look considerably further back to find the first records, and then can find no origin, but only data, of its being in existence. The cigar of the native Bornean, living in the Indian archipelago, is a black roll three inches long, tapering to either end, the outer leaf covered with a network of gray veins like a cobweb. These might be aptly called “dude killers.” They were smoked by the old Dyaks, and the smoked inhaled to intoxication, while at the weddings the bride and groom held cigars in their hands, and after their heads were knocked together three times, each placed the cigar between thedips of the other, and the ceremony was ended. The cigar in the collection came from Chittagong. When the Patagonian smokes to really enjoy himself he gives a smoking party. All assemble in a hut, seating themselves in a circle, with a bowl of water in the center. A cigar is lighted and passed around, each one drawing into his lungs as much smoke as possible, and retaining it as long as he can, lying flat on his face, with his curious cloak thrown over his head. As each expels the smoke, he groans and grunts until a perfect babel reigns. Then a fresh cigar is lit, and as it passes around quiet comes again. After the third cigar, each smoker sits quietly for a few minutes, takes a drink at the bowl, and silently flies out. Religion is supposed to form the basis of this custom.

An Equivalent for Suicide.

If we allow our bodily Infirmities to mike away with us through neglect, have we such tin immense moral edvantaga over the deliberate suicide? Scarcely. For example, the deadly progress of Bright’s disease, diabetes, acute nephltis and gravel is sure—often terribly iwift in the catastrophe. Moat people of average information know that this is the simple, untarnished truth in regard to those widely prevalent maladies. To delay judicious medication is specially suicidal in each cases. The means of restraint is to be found in Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. Give an Impetus to the action of the kidneys with this safe and reliable diuretic, and the infant complaint is shorn at ite birth of the power for evlL Allow it to grow, and anticipate the worst. The Bitters, which R-unihilates these growing troubles, also eradicates dyspepsia, rheumatism, malaria, and liver complaints. Appetite, sleep, and vigor are also promoted by It.

Murdered by a Statue.

The death of Kenith, the half-mythi-cal King of Scotland, was one of the most curious and remarkable in history, if it may be called a historical fact It seems that Kenith had slain Cruthlintus, a son, and Malcolm Duflus, the king and brother of Fennella; she, to be revenged, caused Wiltus, the most ingenious artist of the time, to fashion a statue filled with automatic springs and levers. Finished and set up, this brazen image was an admirable work of art. In its right hand Wiltus placed a ewer and in the left an apple of pure gold, finely set with diamonds and other precious stones. To touch this apple was to court death. It was so arranged that any one guilty of such vandalism would be immediately riddled with arrows shot from loop-holes in the statue’s body. Kenith was invited to see the wonder, and, kinglike (just as Fennella hoped), tried to pluck the imitation fruit. He was instantly riddled with poisoned arrows, dying where he fell.

Business Education.

Educate your sons and daughters by sending them to the Bryant & Stratton Chicago Business College, Short-hand Institute, and English Training School, located at the corner of Washington street and Wabash avenue, Chicago, 111. This is the Great Business University of America, and the only college with which the world-renowned firm of Bryant & Stratton are personally connected. Send 10 cents to pay postage on magnificent 112-page catalogue, inches, printed on finest enameled paper, and illustrated with 30 elegant full-page engravings.

Here’s a Record-Breaker.

A Neosho County (Kan.) farmer eent this mixed order to a Chanute merchant: •“Send me a sack of flour, five pounds of cofe and one pound of tee. My wife gave birth to a big baby boy last night, also five pounds of corn starch, a screwdriver and a flytrap. It weighed ten pounds and a straw hat. ” The flora of Europe embraces about ten thousand species. India has about fifteen thousand, the British possessions in North America have about five thou.sana, the Cape of Good Hope and Natal about ten thousand, and Australia about ten thousand. The leaves of the common sundew arc provided with hair like glands which secrete a sticky substance, upon which minute insects are caught, the glands, set in motion by the struggling captives, bend over and enfold them, and they are digested as food. Musk, derived from two little sacs on the belly of the musk deer, D regarded as a most important remedy for nervous troubles. It would be more used were It not so costly.

The Took Them Back.

They had quarreled, and the highspirited girt said, as she handed him a small package: “There, Mr. Ferguson, are the presents you have given me. Now that all iaover between us, sir, there should be no reminders of the foolish past.” “You are right. Miss Keener.” he said, humbly, “and I suppose I must return the gifts yon have presented me. ” “I never gave you anything, sir, that I remember.” “Indeed you did." “Sir, I ” “Miss Keeter—Katie!" he exclaimed, with something that sounded like a sob, “I value them beyond everything else in this world! It will break my heart to return them, but there is nothing left for me to do. ” ‘ “Will you kindly tell me, sir, what things you speak of?” “I am speaking, Katie, of the kissesy you have given me. They are not mine now. It is my duty to restore them. Forgive me, darling, but I cannot go away without .’V “Oh, George!” ******* When the clock struck eleven, about three hours later, George was still returning them. Ladies, attention 1 If any readers of this paper are wearing the shoulder cape, now in fashion, we hereby advise them to make dog blankets of them—or throw them to the dogs—and adopt a more sensible and safe outer garment. These abominable abridgments of hygienic decency invite intercostal neuralgia, lumbago, pleurisy, rheumatism, consumption, and pneumonia, and already promise to make more business for physicians than any othe' folly or fashion for a long time.— Dr. Foote's Health Monthly.

Natural Science.

Patrick—Phwy do ye be wearin’ thot heavy coat a warrum day loike this? Mike —Oi had th’ coat wid me, an’ it’s asier wearin’ it than carryin’ it. Patrick —That’s ph were y’r mishtaken, Moike. Wan day lasht wake Tim Murphy, who kapes th’ saloon beyant, axed me to go t’ th’ daler’s an’ get him a dimijohn of whisky. I wint, an’ th’ dimijohn waz so heavy Oi took some swigs out av it, to lighten ft, but begorry th’ moor av it Oi droonk up, the heavier it got, until Oi cudn’t carry it at all at all.

8100 Reward. 8100. The numerous leaders of this paper will be pleased to le.vm that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catairh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acti::g directly upon the blood and 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 proprietor's have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Bend for list of testimonials. Address, F. ,1. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. jOa-Bold by Druggists, 75c. He Was Only “sub"-ing. Teacher—Why, Johnny, your clothing smells strongly of tobacco. Have you been smoking? , Johnny—No, m’m. Teacher—You must have been. Johnny—No, m’m. Teacher—Then where does such a smell of tobacco come from? Johnny—Oh, I jest minded a butt for a feller for a few minutes. — Boston Herald. Pork soap is white. Brown Soaps are adulterated with rosin. Perlumti is only Eut in to hide the presence of putrid fat. tobbins' Electric Soap Is pure, white and unscented, Has been sold since 1865.

The Matter with Base-BalL Foreign Visitor—l understand that your national game, base-ball, lt> not so popular as it was. Why is that? American—Well, you see, It’s this way. When you bet on a base-ball game, you have to.wait all the afternoon for the result, but when you bet ou a horse race you can lose your money in two minutes.— Street & SmUh's Good News. Ordinary potato bugs, dried and powdered, are used for raising blisters. , COUGH AND COLDS. Those who are suffering from Coughs, Colds, Bore Throat, etc., should try BKbWN’s ' Bronchial Trochrs. Sold only in boxes. \ When a man has to chalk his head and use a shoe-horn to get his hat on, it is time for him to put on the blue ribbon. “A foolish woman is known by her slovenlv house.’ Get wit and earn good repute by using SA FOLIO. Try a cake In your next house-cleaning.

— - flitl|l> 1i IJ JI I I RELIEVES INSTANTLY, ifcol RW— BUT BROTHERS, 56 Warren St, New York. Price 50 ■ piSO’S HEMEDY FOR CATABRH.-Best. Easiest to use. J- Cheapest Relief Is immediate. A cure is certain. For Cold in the Head ithas no equal ■ it to an Ointment, of which a small particle Is applied to the nostrils. Price, 50c. Sold by druggists or sent by mall. Address. E. T. Hazcltink. Waiten, Pa. MS REPAIR YOUR OLD STOVES and SAVE YQURMONEY. Th, Korthwastem Stove Repair Co. of Chicago, Manufacturers and Furnishers of the Hardware Trade. Repairs for all Stoves and Ranges Manufactured. Ask your Hardware Dealer to order for you. C2TCUT THIS OUT, ANSWERING THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS: 1. Name of Stove 2. Number of Stove 3. Named Maker 4. Latest Date of Patent 5. Wood or Coal 6. Is Coal.put in on top by removing lids? 7. Is the lining Brick or Iron ?; 8. Has the bottom Grate one or more parts ? 9. Give your hardware dealer the names of parts wanted. BE SURE to order from your hardware dealer only. He will order wtiat you want from us. Don’t destroy your old stove, but repair iL ▲ little money will moke it aS good as new.

Never Neglect a Cold.

Dr. Austin Flint says In the Forum: **Tt is probable that a person with an inherited tendency to consumption would never develop the disease If he eould toe protected against infection with the tubercle bacillus. In the light of modern discoveries consumption can no longer be regarded as an incurable disease." It is no exaggeration to say that Kemp’s Balsam, when taken in time, has saved many from consumption. At all druggists'; 50c aod Si. Sample bottle free.

Love and Money.

He said, “I know I am poor and Helen is-rich, but she loves me and is ready to overlook my poverty." She said, “John is a good matj, and I have enough money for both. Love without riches is better than inarriage where there is no affection. ” / And the world said afterward in a whisper, “Poor fqols! Money/Will always /fiuy love, but I understand ne has to ask several times before no gets 15 cents.”— Judge.

It’s a Fact.—ls anything in the world will make a man of common sense feel moaner than anything else, except when he pinches his Angers in the crack of a door, it U when he has had a quarrel with his wife. Quarrelsome people usually are bilious, and have a bad liver, and should always keep a bottle of Dr. White’s Dandelion in the house as a safeguard against family jars. Powdered cockroaches contain an active principle called “anti-hydropin, • which is most effective in the stimulation o» the kidneys and serves as a check to the complaint mentioned. Mamma, your little girl grows more pale and thin eac.i day. It nee.!* Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyer. Get her some befoie it is too lat>, It is much easier to got too much of a good thing than it is to get too little of a bad one. Fon a disordered jiver try Beecham's Pills. Strangely enough the woman who is well preserved is frequently not very sweet. Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses of Piso’s Cure for Consumption.

Save the Boys And save the girls-from their intenae sufferings from scrofula and other foul humors in the blood by giving them Hood's Sarsaparilla. Thousands of parents are unspeakably happy and thousands of children enjoy good health because of what this great blood purifier has done torthem. It thoroughly eradicates aU trace of scrofula, salt rheum, eto« and vitalises and enriches the blood. ‘Scrofula bunches in my neck disappeared when I took Hood’s SarssparlUa.* A. R. Kxujtr, Parkersburg, W.Va. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by ail druggists. *1; six for *3. Prepared only by C. 1. HOOD A CO. Lowell, Maas. tOO Doses One Dollar SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure is without a parallel in the history of medicine. AU druggists are authorized to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can suecesstully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the Uniled States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child lias the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price io cts., 50 cts. and Si.oo. If your Lnngs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. patents® PATRICK OTARHELL, Att'y *t Law, WMhingt'n D.C. | Ing the lest i-iialuo? *’instant I 11/ relief for cold or perspiring feet. On sale LJr everywhere, or sent free on receipt of to cts. few Sample package free at atoros, or mailed for a >V dime. Illustrated I'amnblet Pres. IF TBB PBUINM CO., WOULD B’LD’G, M. T. FAT FiOssgsg Mam* this paper when you write. Ask your Druggist to order It for yen, MENTION TH 13 PAFEK wmen wiutimm vq a»vb«tm*m.

The people at the World’s Dispensary of Buffalo, N. have a stock-taking time once a year and what do you think they do? Count the number of bottles that’ve been returned by the men and women who say that Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery or Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription didn’t do what they said it would do. And how many do you think they have to count. One in ten? AW one in five hundred / Here are two remedies—one the Golden Medical Discovery, for regulating and invigorating the liver and purifying the blood", the other, the hope of weakly womanhood, and they’ve been sold for years, sold by the million bottles; sold under a positive guarantee, and not one in five hundred can say: “ It was not the medicine for me!” And—is there any reason why you should be the one? And—supposing you are what do you lose ? Absolutely nothing I instant Relief. I 111 V|o Large trial Mm.lOq. KTiiuF S “IflTAlltili Ao I HmA ‘"Mnwrpc" bA I Annll “TOiKL. rO STEREOPTICONS CH, ,tt. oo ' MAGIC LANTERNS. ■WCM A 10m JOHN W.MOimiSe lIELNcM UN WaahlngtOß, D.C. ■ Sjmlnlaatwar, Ua4judlcatingclalma,attyataoe. Memory Mind wandering enrad. Booka learned: In one reading. Terthnonlala from all parte of the globo, Pro.peotm roar FUSIONS! The Disability BUI is a law. Bojdlere disabled sinco Ibewarareentitiod. Dependentwldowgandparent* now dependent whoae span died from effects Ofaimy A XMAS HEALTH GIFT (Ex«rol*«r Complete $5) ffl Is Bg*T or Alu CincucAK Fagg. Books: For "An Ideal Complexion .]■ & Complete Phyktcal Development." fl IT JC Ills joetk. "Health St Strength in "wt\ I* •“ Physical Culture," 40 Ills s* cts. Chart of p» I Ad. JNO. E. DOWD’S Vocal A Physical Culture school, 116 Monroe St. ChlO&gO a • rmv Popham's Asthma Specific Gives Immediate relief. By® It In believed to be the AHTHMA Remedy nism_>n>fijliknown to humanity. An ovidenco we give a Trial Package HIKE. Bold by Drugglsta bent by maiL postpaid, for fl per Box. Address THOB, FOPHAM, 8001 Midge Avenue, Phtiada. »”Down With High Prices/’ THIS SEWING MACHINE oiwxsTr slOl Top Buggta»,|M.oc HarnessfT.Bo Road carta,..ic.co Wa«ona,>e.o» SB.9C Family or Store Scale, 1.00 A MS-lb. Farmers’ Scale.... S.SO *ooolk. Hay er Stock Soak. .40.00 Forge and Kit of T 0015..... .M.O» 1000 other Articles at Half Price. CEIOAQO OCALX 00. CMcage, 111. combihingsarticl?S)S. wwioi' furniture. WHEEL LUIWEQ MVO.CO., 14AN.8UlSUrMteta.iK ' -VASELINEFOR A ONE-DOLLAK BILL sent ns by malP we will deb ver, freoof alt char Ken, to any person Ite tbo United Siatea, all of the foUow.ng articles, carofully packed: One two-ounce bott'e of Pure Vaselinelo cts.. One two-ounce bottle <>t Vaseline Pomade.... U * One jar of Vaseline Cold CreamU “ One cake of Vaseline Camphor Ice.lo « One cake of Vaseline B >ap, undented 10 • Onecakeof Va«ellneSoap.exqu<sltelvscente<l 2S • One two-ounce bottle of White Vaseline2s • BLW Or, for pelage Mampe, any single article at the prieanamed. On no account be persuaded to accept yfum yoiir drwigisl anu Vaseline or preparation therefrom unless labeled with our name, because you will certainly receive an imitation which has little or no vajue. Chesebrottffh Mfg. Co.. 24 State Bt., N. T. FORME! One HOE STOP-CYLINDER PRESS; bed 31x46; perfect running order; S4OO. Address CRAMER, AIKENS & CRAMER, MILWAUKEE, WIS. «I prescribe and fully en. irse Big G as the only tecific for the certain com ’ this disease. . H. INGBAH AM, M. D.. Amsterdam, N. Y* We have sold Big Gtorj lany years, and it haa. given the boat of satis* faction. D. B.DYCHE&CO., ! Chicago, 111. 1,00. Hold by Druggists. f.N.O. ! No. WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. VI ptease any you saw the advci-tteernent. hi this paper.