Democratic Sentinel, Volume 17, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 June 1893 — Page 7

Language of the Press.

It may be interesting to note the variety of languages employed in the world’s newspaper press. They are as follows: Armenian, Arabic, Assamese, Bengali, Bohemian,Burmese, Bulgarian, Caranese, Cherokee, Chaldean, Croatian, Chinese, Czechish, Danish, Dutch, English, Estnish, French, Flemish, Fiji, Finnish, German, Gujarati, Hebrew, Hindi, Hindustani, Hawaiian, Hungarian, Greek (ancient and modern), leelandic, Italian, Japanese, Javanese, Kafir, Kalmuck, Latin, Lettish, Magyar, Malay, Malagasi, Maori, Marathi, Moldavian, Norwegian, Persian, Portuguese, Polish, Rouman, Russian, Ruthenian, Slavonic, Servian, Siamese, Singhalese, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Syriac, Tartar, Tamil, Telugu, Turkish, Urdu and Welsh.—Albany Express.

Gen. Hancock’s Grave.

A paragraph going the rounds o r the press saying that “the grave of Gen. W. S. Hancock, at Norristown, Pa., is without a mark to distinguish it from the grave of the poorest pauper,” is declared to be without foundation by the Philadelphia Record, which says: “The honored remains of Gen. Hancock lie in a granite vault in Montgomery Cemetery at Norristown, in a lovely spot on the banks of the Schuylkill. The vault was built at his own expense to receive the remains of a beloved daughter who lies beside him. Every year the grave is decorated with flowers, and the surroundings are neatly kept.” A bill is now before the Pennsylvania Legislature appropriating $25,000 for the erection of a monument to Gen. Hancock in the Norristown cemetery.

Caution to Customers.

Nothing of original or superior merit but hast its imitations and counterfeits,even to imperiling the health of communities. For this reason the proprietors of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters caution their patrons to scrutinize every bottle offered (and it is sold only in bottles) and verify its many marks of genuineness. A sufficient warning to tho'-e meditating fraud can be found in the unbroken line of judicial decisions, exposing and severely punishing every one detected in counterfeiting the Bitters, and the redoubled efforts that are being made to protect the public from the deception of these unprincipled pirates. Remember the Bitters is sold in bottles only, never by tbe gallon or in bulk.

To Dredge the Yukon for Gold.

The hull of the steamer Rustler oi Juneau, Alaska, built by Farlo &, Engelbrecht for the Boston Mining company, has been transferred from Lake Washington to the harbor, and is ready for the machinery now being built at the Vulcan Iron Works. The steamei is CP feet lone with a 10-foot beam, and specially constructed with a view tc work on the Yukon River. Many stories have been told about the fabulous wealth concealed in the bottom ,oi Alaska’s most celebrated river, and it is with a view to dredging that she has been built.—Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Ask your grocer for a dollar’s worth of Dcbbins’ new Perfect Soap, 5c a bar. If he hasn’t it he will get it. A bar is worth two bars of any other 5c soap ever made. Roswell G. Hour, who was raised in the West and went East to grow up with the country, uses the identical chair (hat Horace Greely used to sit in, and he writes for the Tribune on its founder’s favorite subject—agriculture. In 1891 there were in (his country 638,402 Freemasons and PUP,OOB Odd Fellows.

Mrs. Theresa■ Hartson Albion, Pa. Misery Turned to Comfort Kidney Troubles, Sleeplessness, Distress in the Stomach— All CURED. “Albion, Erie Co., Pa., Feb. is, ’93. "I can truly say that Hood’s Sarsaparilla has done more for me than all the prescriptions and other medicines I have ever taken. For fourteen years I have suffered with kidney troubles, my back being so lame at times that I Could Not Raise Myself up out of my chair. Nor could I turn myself in bed. I could not sleep, and suffered great distress with my food. I have taken four -bottles of Hood's fcarsaparilla with the most gratifying results. I feel like a new person, and my terrible sufferings have all gone. Life Is Comfort compared to the misery, it used to be. I can now go to bed and have a good night’3 rest; can eat heartily without any distress. 1 am HQOd S Parilla GUj*SS willing this should be published for others’ good.” Mbs. Theresa Hartson. Hood’s Pi|ls cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. Fm BP jjP* J 3 A sensible Cook Book ■ ■ $ I w for practical people. gHE Pffl § Tells bow to make v•' &. i ■ tbe best Brown Bread, ■ A QSB Bn ■ the best Meat Stews, ■mi —— the best-liked Fish or Meat Hash, Plain Cake, Apple Pie, Baked Beans, Doughnuts, Delicious Puddings from odds and ends. Tells how to' economize and still set a good table, and also tells how to always have a good appetite and keep strong and well by tne use of the grand remedy of the Indians, Kickapoo Indian Sagwa. This valuable and Practical Cook Book should be in every kitchen; and we will send it free to any address upon receipt of a two-cent stamp, to pay postage. Address, Healy & Bigelow, New Haven, Conn. Ely’s Cream Balm tomcat WILL CUKE BfpATAß^kol emanate^ I^Price^SiTcents^J Apply Balm into each nostril. |• ELY BUOB. 86 Warren Bt_ N. Y. J®£l BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD.

ISpl aS£Jo us H

with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Store Polish is Brilliant, Odorless,*and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS.

THE WORLD'S FAIR CITY.

correspondence: The > > visitor to the World’s S'- Pair will have seen "the 1” grandest show on earth” 'fN when he gets through jr j with that great intertill lii irWT7 national exposition, but W M-’Uu i' e w iii not h ave fully mT"# nrti* 1U P r °fited by the opporrrvr(A tunities his sojourn otJnV.!4UU t° rß unless, in addition, v <Ly he has devoted at least SySjM?) a iew days to an inspection of the wonders of the World’s Fair city Itself. Chicago is the metropolitan marvel of the universe, and the stranger who takes in its main points of interest intelligently may gain an experience profitable, pleasing and instructive, and know in the true sense of th§ woid what a real, modern city, and a representative American city at that, means, in these latter days of rapid progress. There are older cities, but not one in the galaxy claiming over a million inhabitants' is so typical of the elements that go to “make the desert bloom as the rose,” and perform the transition in an incredibly brief space of time. As is it wonderful to contemplate the fair White, City at Jackson Park as the result of only two years’ labor, so does it require a stupendous effort of the imagination to realize that Chicago, in less than half a century, has sprung up as if by magic on a site which, in the early ’4o’s wai the lone home of the prairie wolf and the wild swainp fowl.

A Bit of History. Viewed in a historical light Chicago has something more to boast of than the novelty, rush and bustle of the average frontier town of mushroom growth. Tragedy haunted its inception, mighty strrows dignified its maturer ,growth. The visitor contemplating a passing glance at the fair city by the lake, or the sojourner outlining a systematic inspection of its artistic, mercantile, and material splendors may, therefore, both profit by a preparatory peep into the story of the great metropolis, for the same is unique and impressive. Its original name, “Cheecagua,” derived from that of a long line of Indian chiefs, was a happy selection, for it signified “strong.” It was first known’geographically as Fort Che.’agou in 1683, having been located as a station or stopping place by the good French priest, Father Marquette, ten years previous. It shared the inconsequential fate of border points until 1804, when the government built Fort Dearborn near its lake limit, which was destroyed by the Indians in 1812, amid a general massacre of its white inhabitants. Bebuilt, around this border stockade began to cluster hardy pioneers from the East, their numbers increasing, until August 10, 1833, a town organization was lormed, the leaders of which, together with representatives of the government, the following month met in council with some 7, t00 Pottawattomies, who held an aboriginal claim to the district and arranged for their removal west of the Mississippi Kiver. Then Chicago started on its race of wealth and progress. Four years later it emerged from obscurity as a full-fledged city with some 4,000 inhabitants, in ten years it had 30,000 people, in twenty 112,000, and, in 1871, fairly reaching the 300,000 mark, its proud inhabitants went to sleep one

night,, to awaken with their homes, their palaces of industry and art, all the accumulated wealth of years,swept into nothingness at a single fiery breath. The Great Fire. The great conflagration of Oct 9, 1871, thrilled the entire world with its sudden awfulness. One division of the city and the richest part of another ■Were entirely devastated. When men found time to reckon up their losses, 200 lay dead. 9s,sott were homeless, and property to the value of $620,U(M,000 was in ashes. Such a disaster might well induce men to give the spot over to the bat and the owl, or, slowly rebuilding, stagger back to half their former greatness. Not so Chicago! Phcenix-like, it arose from the embers of desolation. “Besurgam” was its hope, “nil desperandum” its motto. In a day a new building arose in the burnt district, in a week the debris was disappearing, in a year old scars were covered over. Financial panic and a second fire beat

vainly against its stout walls a few years later. The progressive spirit of its people could not be daunted. A new Chicago bloomed forth, grander than the old. Purified as by tire, the Garden City builded better than it knew—its foundations set upon the solid rock of business integrity and fraternal enterprise, it stands to-day the pride, the hope, the boast of the Western hemisphere. * Chicago’.* IVpu’jitfoo. In 1890, the census awarded Chicago a population of 1,101,233, since when annexations and natuial increase have probably carried the figure a quarter of a million higher. It has become the center of 76,863 miles of railroad, representing. thirty companies. It lias nearly 4i 0 miles of street, horse, electric, elevated, and cable railways, one company of which has transported 75,0(0,000 passengers in a single twelve months, and its annual general growth has an average of fully twenty per cent. Its yearly clearing-house business is over four and a half billions of dollars, its lumber receipts 2,(00,000,000 feet, grain receipts 235.000,000 bushels. Its stock yards cover over four hundred acres of ground, its school buildings number 219, its magnificent hotels are among the largest and best appointed in the world, while its ten, fourteen, eighteen and twenty story business buildings are to the new be-

holder marvelous as the pyramids of Egypt. The stranger starting out to take in the principal points ot interest in the city can do so on ai economical and satisfactory basis, if he will primarily block out his intended tour. Nearly every building or spot of importance is accessible by horse, cable, or elevated cars, and the fare is uniformly 5 cents. The parks that surround the citv like glittering emeralds in a fair crown, the cemeteries a little farther removed from the city’s bustle, the stock yards, the hospitals, the churches, the charitable and reformatory institutions, the rolling mills, and other industrial works ere all within an hour’s ride of the city’s center. After the visitor has devoted a single luxurious day to a drive along the magnificent boulevards, taking in a general idea of picturesque Chicago, he may visit individual points of interest more cheaply and at his leisure. The edifices of the business center alone are worthy of studious attention, while the water, police and fire systems, the harbor and its shipping, the public library, and the municipal, county and government buildings and institutions ure rich with a detail that will interest the eye and expand and instruct the mind of the beholder.

THE MASONIC TEMPLE. (Chicago’s highest building.)

Good Manners. To think before you speak. To avoid joking in general society. To start new topics when the old ones become worn or personal. To talk in such a way as to amuse or entertain one’s interlocutor. To make the topic suit the time and place, avoiding sermons in ballrooms. To be generous, and to praise and admire when one can conscientiously do so. To remember that every other parent considers that his children are prodigies also: To avoid repetition in the matter of story-telling, personal reminiscences, and the like. To remember that a fool may pass for a wise man if he know enough to hold his peace. The agreeable man is he who can and will listen attentively, intelligently, and sympathetically. To remember that conversation is a fine art, from which base matter must necessarily be excluded.

CHICAGO IN 1837.

DR. BRIGGS A HERETIC.

RUCH IS THE VERDICT OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. After a Long and Exciting Session the Finding of the New York Presbytery Is Overruled—All Crop. Reported Very Backward. A Decisive Majority. Despite his masterly defense and the heroio efforts of his friends, the enemies of Dr. Charles A. Briggs triumphed in the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church at Washington, and the appeal from the verdict of the New York Presbytery aoquitting him of the charge of heresy was su-stained by a vote of 383 to 116. The Clerk announced that 499 men responded to their names on the final roll-call. Of these 116 voted not to sustain the appeal, 85 to sustain In part (which Is equivalent, however, In the summing up to sustain), and 298 voted to sustain wholly, making the vote 383 to 116. Dr. Briggs was not present when the voting was taking place, as he had been excused' by the Moderator, at his own request, from the morning session, giving as his reason the fact that ho had become very weary from the long sessions. Dr. Brown sat at the table and recorded the vote for his own purpose, while in the galleries, one of the most interested of the hundreds of people who crowded the church, sat Professor Smith, of Cincinnati, pencil and rollcall in hand. Thirty-four votes were taken, one for each specification, tefore the roll was called. All the specifications under the first, second, third and fifth grounds of the appeal were sustained. Two under the fourth ground were lost. These relate Ito the charge that Dr. George Alexander, Rev. Mr. Arreghi, Dr. Henry M. Field of the Evangelist, President Hastings of Union Seminary and Dr. Henry Van Dyke made speeches at the Presbytery trial taking the manifestations of prejudice. The other specification lost was that Professor Brown, Dr. Field, Dr. Hastings, Dr. Van Dyke and Dr. J. H. Mcllvaine took part in the trial after manifestations of prejudice in the conduct of the case. T hree or four of the specifications were sustained by apparently so close a vote that the commissioners were counted. The one relating to the directors, officers and professors of the seminary who had voted to acquit Dr. Briggs in the presbytery was sustained by a vote of 233 to 234. The members of the New York synod voted almost solidly against sustaining the appeal, which was a vote for Dr. Briggs. One of the professor’s able supporters, who did not wish to speak for publication, said that the present was only the beginning of tho trouble.

UNITED PRESBYTERIANS.

Many of tho Preachers May Not Attend the Fair. The thiriy-ninth general assembly of the United Presbyterian Church of North America, held at Monmouth, 111., was dissolved Wednesday evening. Most of the delegates originally intended visiting the World’s Fair before returning home, but the bar of the assembly deprived many. Tho special committee on young people’s work reported 664 societies, 28,092 members, and contributions of $30,000. Xenia, Ohio, and Albany. Oregon, presented Invitations for the next meeting of the general assembly. The latter place was chosen. The committee on missions will meet a week previous to the assembly at Portland, Oregon. A special committee was appointed to formulate plans of union with the Holland Christian Reform Church. The board ot eiucation committee reported having distributed aid to theological students aggregating $783. A resolution of the committee prevailed that In the future no aid be given beneficiaries unless they are absolute abstainers from tobacco. Appropriations aggregating $314,458 wore voted for the various boards, including General Assembly expenses. The committee on reform submitted the following resolutions, whioh were adopted: We urge upon our people to break the bonds of partisanship and in the exercise of the elective franchise make the overthrow of the liquor traffic the foremost consideration; that a bureau of reform be established at Washington to Influence national legislation; that Christians should patronize only such papers as are friendly to the Sabbath and Christian reform. Statistics show eleven, synods, sixtytwo presbyteries, 805 ministers and 935 congregations; total contributions, sl,400,000.

ALL CROPS VERY BACKWARD.

Farm Work Has Proceeded as Well as Common in the Northwest. Generally tho week has been favorable to crops In the Atlantic coast and Gulf States, and the condition of cotton Is reported to have been decidedly Improved In the Carolinas, Georgia, Florida, and Texas. In the West ana Northwest, however, while the weather has been favorable for the prosecution of farm work, It has been too cool for rapid advancement of vegetation and quick germination of seeds. Special telegraphic reports show the following conditions: Illinois—Rainfall excessive in southern and central portion, retarding planting! meadows and pastures good; wheat and rye heading: eight counties report cut worms and army worms in corn and meadows; much com being replanted. Indiana—Weather favorable to crops and farm work; plowing and com planting nearly finished; in most counties wheat, oats, rye, and grass In good condition. Michigan—Cool weather retarded crop growth considerably; grass making heavy growth; early potatoes, rye, and barley doing well; planting com. Wisconsin—All crops promise excellent yield except apples; corn and potato planting about finished; dairies and cheese factories in full operation. Minnesota—Wheat and grass growing nicely; too coot for corn; com planting progiesslng slowly; barley and flax seeding general. lowa—Weather favorable to grass and small Sain, but too cool for quick germination; nomal growth of com.

Notes of Current Events.

1 Insurance companies lose $400,000 by, a fire in Santiago, Chili. The business portion of Newton, Miss., burned. The loss is $50,000. ' Several incendiary fires, causing small losses, occurred in Cleveland. ! Ex-Gov. Forakeb, of Ohio, delivered the Memorial Day address at New York. Four cases of small-pox were discovered in a Bohemian boardinghouse in New York. David Starr Jordan has resigned the presidency of Leland Stanford, Jr., University. i , ; jx ~ Children decorated the graves of the soldier dead at Gettysburg on Decoration Day. The dam of the great reservoir at Austin, Tex., was swept away, causing a loss of $50,00:). E. Nelson Blake, of Massachusetts, was elected President of the Baptist Home Missionary Society. The authorities of New Orleans were scored by the grand jury for non-en-forcement of the gambling laws. Miss Laura Weaver, daughter of Gen. J. B. Weaver, was married at Des Moines, lowa, to A. R. Ketchum* son of Mrs. Harriet Ketchum, the lowa sculptor. The Brazilian Congress has refused to appint an intervenor to settle the troubles in the State of Rio Grande do Sul. This refusal is based on the ground that the national army should be used to suppress the rebellion,

A Matter of Health \‘ * * .-I *f- "T j j VjVj ;-J :)( IT costs more to make Royal Baking Powder than any other, because its ingredients are more highly refined and expensive. But the Royal is correspondingly purer and higher in leavening strength, and of greater money value to the consumer. The difference in cost of Rc>3 7 al over the best of the others does not equal the difference in leavening strength, nor make good the inferior work of the cheaper powders, nor remove the impurities which such powders leave in the food. Where the finest food .is required, the Ro3 7 al Baking Powder only can be used. Where the question of health is considered, no baking powder but Ro3 T al can be used with safet3 T . All others are shown by official anatyses to contain lime, ammonia or alum.

SET THE CHILDREN TO WORK.

An Ingenious Knglitttimnn Who Combined a Swing and a Much-Needed Pump. An English writer on inventive geniuses telle a story (reproduced in Harper’s Young People) of a certain August Pireh, who is the happy possessor of a dozen fine, healthy children. Mr. Piroh, so tho story goes, had a tract of land that could not bo used for the want of water, sinoo it was far from any available stream or other body which might prove of use in tho fertilization of his acres, and h w to irrigate tho land without spending a large sum of money was a mystery which for a long time Mr. Piroh co ild not solve. Ho figured out tho cost of a well, and found that his resources would permit of his digging a sixtyfoot well and tho puri haso of a cheap pump, but how to make tho pump work was a question. Suddenly his inventive mind suggested a solution. He remembered his children nnd lio a'so called to mind a certain largo family swing he had seen in a neighboring town. He know the swing w..uld please the childron, and he hoped that through it their ploasuro might bo aide to serve his Interests. The well was bored, the pump was sot up, and tho swing wai put in working order. "Here, now, toys,” said he, when all was ready, calling tho children to him, “oomo out here and get in this swing. I’m going to give you something to play with." In live minutes the children wore flying backward and forward through the air. The pump worked up and down gayly as you ploaso, and a four-teen-inch stream of water I owed from the well. Mr. Plrch’s schome had worked. The children do not know that they are working, as tho swing is some distance from tho well nnd is connected with It by an iron rod which works the pump as tho swing moves backward and forward. The scheme has worked well, and It Is said that tho youngsters pump enougli water during their day’s sport to irrigate a largo tract.

Don'ts for Men.

Don’t wear an abundance of jewelry; it shows u lack of rellnoment. Don’t wearunpolisned shoes;,it ehowa a lack of neatness which is not commendable. Don’t carry a gold-headed cane; If someone presents you with one, koep It In a chamois skin bag .or a glass case. Don’t wear largo diamonds; men of the best taste wear small ones, no matter bow large their bank account may be. Don’t wear a silk hat with a sack coat; good taste forbids it, oven if Banker l’rinoe Is seen every day on State street wearing both. Don’t carry a cane to business unless it is used from necessity; canes are for the promenade, not for the rush and whirl of work. Don’t think that you do not care a rap for fashion; you do, and whenever you purchase any wearing apparel, watch yourself and you will see that you always choose the latest. Don’t allow tho handkerchief to peep above the pocket lapel; if you have a handsome one, and must display it,take it out boldly and wipe away imaginary tears, causod by your hard lot.

The Ladies.

The pleasant effect and perfect safety with which ladies may use the California liquid laxative. Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, makes it their favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look for the name of the California Fig Syrup Co., printed near tho bottom of the package.

An Ancient Miller.

There is an old miller, 94 years of age, living nine miles from Versailles, Ky., who has been running the same mill for about eighty years. He started it before the war of lhlg, when but a boy, and the waters of the Elkhorn Creek have kept it going for him ever since. He can shoulder a sack of grain with great ease, reads without glasses, and his mind is as clear as it ever was. Hid away in the ouiet regions of Elkborn Crebk, he scarcely knew that thero was a war raging around him from ltjfll to lt#>s. * Foil weak and Inflamed eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye-water. It Is a carefully prepared physician’s prescription. Zeraii Corkers, the mathematical wonder, could mentally raise any sum less than three figures to the sixteenth power. At the equator tho average ..annual rainfall is 100 inches. N. K. Brown’s Essence Jamaica Glnaerls a Wonderful toulc. None better. Try It. 25 cents.

fA FULL STOMACH ought to cause you no discomfort whatever. If it does, though—if there’s any trouble offer entinjj—take Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They’re a perfect end convenient vestpocket remedy. One of these tiny, sugar-coated, anti-billous granules at a dose regulates and corrects the entire system. Sick or Bilious Headaches, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and permanently cured. They’re the cmallest, easiest to take, cheapest, end best. They’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money Is returned. a ——. is perfectly, permanently, §23 01 positively cured by Doctor /ML ■ S Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. JogiM The proprietors of this medgSSMK n 8 icine prove that by their jgß B offer. It’s SSOO cash for a ® w case of Catarrh which they cannot cur*. By all druggixu, GO cants.

Sardou Always Sure of Success.

“I was so certain of reaching th«top," said Hardou onee, in discussing his oareor, “that one night when I had not oven money enough to buy my supper I went qulotly home and quite seriously deliberated how I would furnish my castle, which I wante I to buy as soon as I had a million. 1 now have tho castle, though I’m not quite a millionaire. ” Sardou was referring to his chateau at Marly-le-BoL He also owns a magnificent residence in Paris and a villa at Cannes. "I still remember,” ho continued, “how another time I took a pencil and drew a book-case of carved oak as a pastime. To-day a desk made after the satno design is standing in my study in Paris. Hut It often happened to mo that without a sou in my pocket I entered an antiquary’s shoo to examine Some valuable objects, and on leaving would say, ‘I will buy it later on, when I get rich.’ I have a beautiful oil painting of Bernard Plllassy at Marl.v-le-lioi—it had to wait ten years for me! I have stored away a mass of slumbering material which only needs an awakening to unfold itself."—Million.

How's This!

Wo odor Olio Hundred Dollars reword for any Cano of catarrh that cauuot bo cured by taking Halt’s Oatarrb Curo. I’. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo Ohio. Wo, tho undersigned, have known K. J. Chaney for tlio hut 13 years, and believe Idm pevfootly honorable in all business transactions, and tlnaneially able to carry out auy obligations lliado by their firm. West & Tun ax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Waldzno, Kinnan & Mabvxn, Wholesale DrngKlHts, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Core is taken Internally, anting directly upon tho blood and mucous surfacos of tlio system. Tonttinoulain sunt fryo. Price 75 cents per bottle. Bold by all Druggist. it.

May-Day on the Plains.

Tho Ist of May could happen twico a week on the plains without disturbing anybody much, for it is almost as easy for tho Indian to move as to stay whore ho is, particularly as he makes his wife do the moving. Tho Indian’s tepee is meroly a cone of polos, light, branchless saplings, laid with their butts in a circle and their tops byund togethor. Around this is thrown a cover of canvas or dressed skin, with an.pponing at the top foj,thei;«senpe'’r)Psm<)Kß,,uncl'ia Man Is left open' d!/ -the side for a door. When ho moves it Is only necessary to roll the canvas into a wad and tie it to the polos, which are strapped to a pony, with the heavy ends dragging on the ground.

Poisoned by a Brass kettle.

Nicholas Schlosslor, of Hunnysldc, L. 1., died In great agony the other day after eating soup which had been kept In a brass kottlo for some days.- Mr. Hchiessler and his wife were both taken ill. They rallied under a physloian’s care, but Mr. Sehlessler had a relapse and died before tho nurse could summon a doctor.

Work for Workers.

Are you ready lo work, and do you want to make money? Then write to H. F. Johnson & Co., of Richmond, Va., and sej If they cannot help you. Secretary Erkins has beon so successful in his llnancl&l operations during tho past decade that ho is already spoken of as the coming “richest man In the country." One dose of Reocham’s Pills relieves sick headache In twenty minutes. For sale by all druggists. 25 cents u box. There are forty-eight VM-ioties of tho common fly.

Won _ Sciatica mclCAcbes Sfumcif IT Has no EQUAL - COLLARS AcCUFFS.-—-BrSßfcJjSggdfr lO«>ITC»I)»tNI!TMttU>^^~»iABiMRMUSiaO7TAMO?I The best and most economical Collars and Cuffs worn. Try them. You *lll like them. Look well. Fit -well. Wear well. Sold fortlij cents fora box of Ten Collars or Five pairs of cuffs. A sample collar and palrof cuffs sent by mall for Six Cents. Address, airing size and style wanted " A»k the dealert for them.’ r _ Reversible Collar Co.. 71 Kilby St.. Boston. WESTERN FARM LMDS! A pamphlet descriptive ot the farm lands of Nebraska, Nortnuest Kansas and Esstcrn Colorado, with sect onal map. will be mailed free to any address on application to P. K. KUSTIB. General Passenger Agt. C., if. tQ. K. It, Chicago. 111. Barfield Tea sp, Cures Sick Headache,Rente re* Complexion.Save* Doctor*’ Bills. Sample tree. OißnrmTxa Co..SI# W. 15th St., N.Y. Cures Constipation MENTION THIS PafER •iuvuiim re adtutuuu. A' HarmW M •j/C f\ »«*» treatment (by prac- vJ I c" tldng phvrlcian). N* ■ *• Thotz*»ndt cared. Send 6c in *tamp*4 \ ■ 1 i . O. \V. F. SNYDER, M. I>„ Mail Dept. MoVlcker’s Theater, Chicago* 111* PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Elimination and Advice as to PatentablUty of Invention. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or How toQet a Patent. Patuck O’Eamixij, Washington, D. a

“German Syrup” Judgb J. B. Hill, of the Superior Court, Walker county, Georgia, thinks enough of German Syrup send us voluntarily a strong letter endorsing it. When men of rank and education thus use and recommend an article, what they say is worth the attention of the public. It is above suspicion. “ I have used your German Syrup,” he says, “for my Coughs and Colds on the Throat: and Lungs. I can recommend it for them as a first-class medicine."— Take no substitute. • J NEARLY 1000111 L IN A LITTLE OVER & |IQQO BfllWUTEsj pThe New Fast Train! VIA THE — ? Lake Shore and N. Y. Central Route. 2 CHICAGO TO NEW YORK] MW2O HOURS? |«y) Lv.Chicago 2:00 P.m. f Mmi A Wrisp*ii:ooa.m.2 gjgwtasHbnj >a.j.*mith. <. k. wu.hkr.T ‘ CLEVELAND, CUICAUU. 5

Rd d ■ iVh lii ■ DADWAY’S II READY RELIEF, CUIUM ANI> CIUCVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of tho Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. OPIUM THE WORST PAINS In from on* to twontf nunuti'H. NOt’ONK HOURnftorrindingthlH advertisement need any one SUTTER WITH PAIN. Itudwiiy’a Ready Relief In a Bure Curo far Every Pain, Hprulna, llrul.i'., Pallia in the llaok, Cheat or Limb*. It w>i the Eh-itt it ml U the Only PAIN REMEDY 'Jhnt lnatnntly Htopn the meet excruciating pnlnu.atlava InMuinmatlon. and cut/'n Pmiiio.tloiiH. whether of the l.ungM. stainarh. Howeln, or other glimda or organa. liv one application. A half to n leaHiioouful in half a tumbler of water will In a few luluutea cure Craimia, SpiieliiH, hour Ht<iinn:'h. lle»rtbum, Neryommeoa. Hhienlci-Hiiesa, hick Headache, Diarrhea. Dysentery. Colic, Flatulency amt all Internal pallia. There ,a not a remedial uiient In the world that will cure Fever and Ague nnd all other Malarious, Uillleua and oilier tevern, aided by RAHAVAY’!? RETIiJf 0 uulo * ly “ RAD WAY’S READY Fifty oenta per bottle. Hold by Druggl.xts. lIE BIJKE TO GET RAUWAY’H. CURES RISING .. BREAST “MOTHER’S FRIEND" oiforod child-bearing woman. I have been a mid-wife for many yean, and In each cut* whoro "Mother’* Friend" hadbeennaed it ha* aceompliihed wonders and relieved muck suffering. It 1* tho best remedy tot rising el the breast known, and worth the prioe for that alone. Mbs. M. M. Bsejstes, Montgomery, Ala. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of prlco, 81. W per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Bold by all druggists. Atlanta, OA.

Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Constipation, Sick-Headache, elc. 26 cents per bottle, at Drug Stores. Vi Write for sample dose, free. J.F. SMITH & York■ Electrotyping AMO OTEREOTYPING The attention of ADVERTISERS, MASTIFACTCKKRN and PRINTERS is called to our superior facilities for turning out FIB.STCRASH EJLKCTKOTYPING or STEREOTYPING. We guarantee satisfactory and prompt service in these lines. AnUTDTIQrDQ desirin s a large ° r sma ** HUILn I lULi\U number of Electrotype* of an advertisement should get our prices bofore placing their orders. We make a specialty ol Designing and Engraving Advertisements for all classes of trade. MANUFACTURERS types of Cuts for Catalogue Illustrations wilt find it to their interest to communicate with us. PRINTERS having long runs ol pressI mil I Lilt) work, which can be les&med by duplicating forms, and thereby save the wear of type, will make money by having their pages electrotyped or stereotyped. We can return forms in six hours after receipt at our office, accompanied by plates of the same. ' w OUR LINE OP NEWSPAPER-HEADING TYPE Is the largest to be found in the West, and we make a specialty of furnishing Headings for alt classes of publications. Specimen books, showing the largest assortment of Newspaper Headings ever exhibited, will be sent to Printers and Publishers upon application. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION M. 18. 81. n SOUTH JErrtRSOI ST.. CHICtBO ILL kippers wimKSßsSßfe hi in > MTEmsS'WMSSKSSsss . ' taineq. Write tor Inventor’sOmt-itL Wl IWIII DR.J.STEPHEIt* Lebanon.OhX C ' N - U - AA 23-OX WHEN writing TO ADVERTISERS, i InthS ptperV 17 70 ““ W “>«. advertlaem "Si Plso’s Remedy ft. Catarrh Is On _J_RgL_E»jgtto_Bse. and Cheapest. [ ■ SoU by druggist* or sent by suuL H &X. BeaelFna,Wauen Pa. 0