Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 April 1895 — Page 7
Spring Cleaning Ib such a trial that men say “Let the 1 ized and enriched, and thus sustains the house take care of itself.” But the con- i nerves and all the bodily functions, scientious wife feels bound to risk “I take Hood’s Sarsaparilla every health and strength in this annual strug- ' spring, and it is the only medicine I use gle with dust and dirt. The consequence | through the year. It enables me to do of her feverish anxiety over extra work my house cleaning and farm work all is depletion of the blood, the source of through the summer. It.helped me very all life and strength, manifested in that much for palpitation of the heart. I think weak, tired?nervous condition too prev-I Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the medicine for alent at this season and very dangerous everyone, and all who take it -will never if allowed to continue. What every man be without it. I have also used Hood’s and woman needs in the spring is Hood’s Pills, and they are the best I ever tried.” Sarsaparilla. It keeps the blood vital- Mrs. F. 11. Andrews, S. Woodstock, Ct Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the Public Eye To-Day
Mice Made to Work.
A Scotchman has invented a threadspinning aparatus, and is said to have trained two mice to work it The mechanical principle of the contrivance is a small mill which is operated by f the paws of the mice. They can each wind on and off from 100 to 120 pieces of thread per day, and to do this they must supply a motor power by which a course of miles could be traversed. It is assorted that the mice perform this task daily without apparent fatigue, and that a half penny worth of flour furnishes them with food enough for five weeks. During that time the little animals have spun about 3,850 threads each, a yard and a half in length. The twinkling of the stars forebodes bad weather, because it shows that there are aerial currents of different temperatures, thus probably indicating atmospheric disturbances.
“HELP I” A WOMAN’S DESPAIRING CRT. It is Heard. A Prominent Actress Escapes Great Danger. [STBCIAI. TO OUB LADT BXAMBS.J How startling is a woman’s cry for help! “What can Ido? Where shall I go?” She \.Y( knows not. This cry goes out A \ today from every city, town, and \ \ hamlet in this \ \ J country. \ \ I It comes from \ A . / women who are \ \\ ~W ,/ suffering tortures \ XJ JF / of body and mind \ J wk from some form of female complaint, y Many, through natu- .■’S\ 'll;/ ral modesty, do not W ffwla consult physicians, y for many dread their examinations. They know not whore to seek for help. /fin Eg This alarming con- jKM ju| B dition of things is ,B| | K| •imply wrong. The Fj ; R gS peculiar ailments of c ; S|j (1 women are curable, /■I h II! ® addin most cases Ikl m wBl very speedily. Lydia til | rSfi E. Pinkham’s genius .Wffl i 'MI and liberality have ' 03 given to every woman ® ’ C JSS a sure and consistent means of relief. No woman should J/ aS Buffer when she can obtain free advice. J She can state her case fully to Mrs. Pinkham, woman to woman, without reserve, and the answer will come from one of her own sex. Be one of the vast army of women who write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., and preserve your health. “ Only a woman can understand a woman’s ills.” A prominent actress, in a letter to Mrs. Pinkham, says: “ . . . You cannot imagine the fearful condition I was in when I first wrote to you. I was simply of no use to myself or any one else. I dad worked hard, and my nervous system was shattered from womb trou dl e & n d travel- \ lin g constantly. I ran the ’ gauntlet #\ A doctors’ Ju iff theories, JF~~~ till heal th and mone y xMjr ** were rapidly vanishing. . . . I’m all rignt now, and am gaining flesh daily. I follow your advice faithfully in everything. Thank you ten thousand times for what your knowledge •nd Lydia E. Pinfc/iam’s Vegetable Compound have done for me.”
The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). Hehasrtpwln 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 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. I was afflicted with- cutarrh last autumn. Dur- BSTcffifofrl ing the month of'October J could neither taste nor FEV£ R smell and could hear but little. J i tea* cured it.—Marcus. GcO. RABBI Shautz, Rah’wayy N. J. CATARRH Opens and ceanses the baeal FaiWrfe/Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the bores. Protects the Membrane from Colas. Restores the SenaeH of 1 aste and Smell. The Balm u quickly absorbed and anew relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents. at driiKKists or bv mail ELY BROTHERS, M Warren Street. Rew York.
HE WAS A “BUFFER.”
Sang Froid of a Typical English Sentry While on Duty. A certain popular general takes delight in talking to young soldiers especially when he is not recognized. One day a Lancashire recruit was posted as a sentry on the General’s quarters. One of the servants gave him something to eat A moment later, a short, elderly man, attired in a tweed suit and gaiters, with his billycock over his eyes, came up. “What dost ta want heer?” said the sentry, “Oh. I belong here,” said the stranger. “And what are you doing, eating, sentry?” “Naw, I’m not. If tha had been two minutes later, I wud have been fair on to job tha knaws.” “What have you got—bread and ham?” “Naw, guess agin.” “Bread and beef?” “Nay, it’s not; guess agin,” said the sentry. “Well, then, it’s bread am) mutton.” “Eh, tha’s reet. Wull tha ha a bit?” “Thanks, no,” said the stranger. “But as you don’t appear to know me, try and guess who I am.” “Eh, tha’s a’ reet. Tha’s general’s groom.” “You’re wrong; try again.” “Well, tha moight be the general’s butler.” “No, but you are getting nearer.” “Eh! thow moight be th’owd buffer hisself.” “Right,” said the stranger. “I am the old buffer himself.” . “Eh!” gasped the sentry, shaking violently, and holding out the food. “Howd this while I gie thee a chuck up (‘present arms’).” The genral turned away to hide a .smile he could not suppress at the sentry’s confusion. A few days later, at his inspection, the general said he had met men at different times and places who failed to recognize him, and hoped it would not occur in future. Our Lancashire lad, who expected to get severely punished, was heard to say: “He’s not very big. but he is every inch a soger, tha knows.”
The Courtship of Miles Standish.
Encouraged by the hearty welcome given to these two American poems, Longfellow, in 1858, published a third, “The Courtship if Miles Standish.” In this he told no pathetic tale of parted lovers, nor did he draw on the quaint lore of the red men; he took his story from the annals of his own ancestors, the sturdy founders of New England. As it happened, he himself (like his fel-low-poet, Bryant) was a direct descendant of John Alden and Priscilla, the Puritan maiden, whose wooing the narrated. “The Courtship of Miles Standish” is only less popular than its predecessors, “Evangeline” and “Hiawatha;” all three have been’takefi to heart by the American people, all were composed during the brightest years of the poet's life, when his'family were growing up about him, when he was In the full possession of his powers, and had already achieved fame.—St. Nicholas.
Tortured Worse than Tantalus.
Mrs. Scribbler (impressively)—Whatever you do, never marry a newspaper man. School chum—Why not? Mrs. Scribbler—l married one and I know. Every night my husband brings home a big bundle of newspapers from all over the country and they ’most drive me crazy. School chum—The newspapers? Mrs. Scribbler—lndeed they do. They are just crammed with the most astonishing bargains in stores a thousand miles away.—New York Weekly.
The Evolution
Of medicinal agents'is gradually' delegating the old-time herbs, pills,' draughts and vegetable extracts to the tear and bringing Into general use the pleasant and effective liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy se? that jt is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all leading druggists.
Here’s a Porker for. You!
The town of Bridgeton, N. J., is not much given to boasting, but it modestly steps forward and claims the record in the line of hogs. A monster porker was slaughtered there a few days ago that tipped the beam at 1,024 pounds. Il was '7% feet long, measured 6 feet 6 inches around the girth and 18 inches through the back.
$100 Reward. $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all Its staves, and that Is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting 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 proprietors nave so much faith In its curative powers that they offer Ono Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls tt> cure. Send for list of Testimonials. ' Address. F. ,1. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. HF-Sold by Druggists, 75c, » We have not a debt of $6,000,000,000 like France, nor yet of £587,000,000, like England.
Every Cause but the Right One. Your headachg: Yon lav. .it; to every cause; but the true one—indigestion. So few people know what indigestion really is. Hardly know they hare it. The curie is Itipans Tubules. A single one gives relief. Ask your druggist
The late James W. Scott, owner and publisher of the Chicagp., Times-Herald and Evening Post, came of a newspaper family. His grandfather’,'as'Well as his father, were newspaper jnen, nnd he became active in the chosen field of his life labors very early in life. He was born in 1849, at Wadsworth, Wis., but when only a few years eld moved with his father to Galena, 111. Here.the attended the public schools, after , which he took a course in Beloit College. His first schooling in the newspaper,,business was in the job office attached to his father's paper at Galena, where h e learned the trade of practicaPprinter. In 1873 he started the Galena Industrial Press. This was a success, and tW'W f yesrs later he went to Chicago, determined to embark in still wider fields of journalism. He bought an interest in the Daily National Hotel Reporter, whiclA was a financial success, but Mr.*Scott, was too ambitious to content himself with anything short of a great general daily newspaper, and in the spring of 1881 he entered upon the, management of the Herald. The success of the Herald was phenomenal, and made
NEW KIND OF RACE SULKY.
Peculiar Invention of a Hartford* Conn., Mun and His Claims for It. A horse lover in Hartford, Coon., has devised a sulky that may acctfiflplish wonders in the development? of ispeed in trotting horses. In running against time a horse should have as nearly absolute freedom of wind and limb as possible, besides being relieved of draft. lu other words, he should be as nature designed him, and the inventor of'the sulky claims that it more nearly accomplishes that end than any device yet made known. As shown in the cut, the driver’s seat is over the horse's hips, with the wheels a trifle in advance of the middle of the animal’s body. The central upright, extending from the wheel to the seat, is on a
LATEST FREAK IN SULKIES.
slight incline and must necessarily help propel the wheels, thus reducing the draft to the minimum. A surcingle supports and steadies the shafts, and straps running from it to the pockets that inclose the ends of the shafts keep the sulky from running faster than the horse. The only necessities in the way of harness are the breastplate, the surcingle and the bridle, leaving the utmost freedom to the shoulders and the chest, as well as to the lungs by reason of less tightening of the girth. If the horse rears or otherwise misbehaves, the sulky must go up with him, and if he makes a sidewise movement he must land the sulky where he lands himself, with no danger of dishing the wheel. The inventor says that no “training
ENGLAND’S NEW SPEAKER.
William Court Gully, the new speaker of the House of Commons, is a son of James Manby Gully, M. D., and was born in London in 1835. He was educated by private tutors and at Trinity College, Cambridge, being admitted to the degree of<M. A. in 1859. In 1865 he married Elizabeth Anne Walford Selby. He was called to the bar at the Inner temple in
JAMES W. SCOTT.
for Mr. Scott the enviable reputation which he for years held as one of thu foremott newspaper men in the land. Later Mr. Scott was instrumental in founding the Evening I’ost, and but a few weeks before his death successfully negotiated the arrangements'' by which ths Herald absorbed the Tinies, and assumed the title of Times-Herald, under which it is now published. For three terms Mr. Scott was chosen president of the Press Club. He belonged to more soeial-jand political clubs than any other man in Chicago, and he was a favorite among the members of all of them. His exertions during the tight for the location of the World’s Fair were untiring, and he did much to secure the victory for Chicago. His sudden death in New York was peculiarly tragic. It came literally in the hour of his success. He had just secured control of the newspaper properties to the building of which he had given his best energies. Tired, but looking confidently to a future in full consonance with his hopes, he prepared to take a little rest. Just over the threshold he was stricken down.
down” of overweights will be necessary when his vehicle is used, as the heavier the weight, within a reasonable limit, tlie more easily the vehicle will be propelled. He also says that a horse may be more easily controlled from the new location of the seat than when the driver sits back of and a trifle lower than his horse.
Five cents was the value which a Texas farmer once placed upon a min, ister’s prayer. The story is told in the Epworth Era of the Rev. H. 8. Thrall, one of the pioneers of Methodism in Texas. In company with a number of itinerants, who were on their way to conference, Doctor Thrall stopped to spend the night With an old farmer. It was tlie custom then to settle the bill at night,’ so that they might rise about 3 o'clock in the morning and ride a good way before breakfast, and lie by in the heat of tlie day. Doctor Thrall, acting as spokesman of the party, said to the old farmer after supper, “We are a company of Methodist preachers going to conference. If you will get the family to getlier we will have prayers with you.” After prayers, one by one settled bls bill. Doctor Thrall’s turn came, and he asked for his bill. The old farmer replied: “Well, pa’son, I charged the rest 25 cents, but bein’ as you prayed for us so good, I won’t charge you but 20 cents.” The brethren had the laugh on Doctor Thrall.
Mr. J. L. Macadam, the illustrious Scotchman who invented the kind of paving which bears his name, is said to have been, a guest at a large dinner given in honor of Sir Walter Scott. Being asked to respond to a toast, Mr. Macadam rose, and at the end of his speech proposed the health of “the great Sir Walter Scott, the colossus of literature!” In an Instant Sir Walter was on his feet, and lifting his glass, exclaimed: “Here’s to the great Mr. Macadam, the colossus of roads!” After a woman gets married, her husband discovers when he talks that she Is no longer a good listener.
1860, became a queen's counsel in 1877, and was made a Bencher of His Inn in 1879. He was appointed recorder of W igan in 1886. He unconsciously contested the Whitehaven division for Parliament in 1880 and 1885. Since 1886 he has sat for Carlisle. In politics he is a liberal and a supporter of Mr. Gladstone’s Irish policyj /
A Nickel Standard.
Prompt Rejoinder.
■OYAL BAKING POWDER is the purest and strbngest baking powder made. It has received the highest award at the U. S. Gov’t official investigation, and at all the Great International Expositions and World’s Fairs wherever exhibited in competition with others. It makes the finest, lightest, sweetest, most wholesome bread, cake and pastry. More economical than any other leavening agent. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 10« WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
To Save Trouble.
Messenger boys have always been looked upon as strange geniuses, butan especially strange one has Just turned up. He works in a retail store, and his chief duty is to deliver newly bought hats to the purchasers and obtain receipts for them. Several days ago he was given a hat to carry to a customer, and when he returned to the store the proprietor looked at the receipt book. The last signature had a suspicious look, so he called the messenger to him. “This does not look like Mr. Blank's handwriting?” said he. “Sir!” exclaimed the boy, in a scared tone. “Did he write this?” “N-n-o, sir.” “You wrote it, didn’t you?” "Yes, sir.” "What did you do that for?" “Why, he wasn’t at home, so I just slgued the receipt myself.”
UNWISE POSTPONEMENT.
Neglecting a Duty Which Ought to He Done Now. On general principles there is no more foolish method of taking life easy than by .deferring an obvious duty. Especially foolish Is the person who postpones the work of cleansing his blood. There are many reasons why tills work should be done In the spring. This is the cleansing season, and the blood needs cleansing before all things else. That tired feeling is due to a vitiated condition of the vital fluid. Th<? pimples and other eruptions, which appear are indications that the blood has become loaded with Impurities which should be expelled at onee. In no other way can health be maintained. Now there Is but one true blood purifier prominently In the public eye to-day, and that is Hood’s Sarsaparilla. By taking a few bottles of this great blood cleansing medicine the bodily health can be built up so that when the warm weather comes the system will be able to resist the debiliatlng effects of the heated season. Those who start with good health in the spring, given them by a thorough cleansing of the blood by Hood's Sarsaparilla, will be likely to pass through the summer without serious Illness, and when the autumn comes they will they are supplied with strength’’which they had never known at that season before. The work of cleansing the blood in the spring is oae of the most important duties of the season, because pure blood means good health, and good health is essential both to happiness and to the highest usefulness In the world. There are thirteen miles of bookshelves In the British Museum, London. Wb have not been without Biso’s Cure for Consumption for 20 years.—Lizzie Febhell, Camp St., Harrisburg, Pa., May 4,1894. _ 21 We produced in 1893 1,019,490,130 bushels of corn.
FOR ALL THE ILLS THAT PAIN 6HN BRING -ST. JA6OBS OIL CURB IS KIWO} AllKe with ACHES itj Everything. “IF AT FIRST YOU DON’T SUCCEED, TRY SAPOLIO
Rub a oub bus. THRXX MAID3ATTHBTUB, * All using Santa Glaus Sqab, Millions dqthesame. Sold everywhere. Made only by THE N. K. EAIRBANK COMPANY,
Rain Tree.
In one of the Canary Islands there Is a tree of the laurel family that rains down occasionally in the early morning quite a copious shower of tears or water drops from its tufted foliage. This water often collects at the foot of the tree nnd forms a kind of pond, from which the inhabitantsof thenelghborhood can supply themselves with a drinkable beverage that is absolutely fresh and pure.
Like a Machine.
Which kept In order ruus smoothly and regularly, bo the bowels keep up their action If menaurea are taken to keep them In good working order. Thia Infers, of courae, that they are out of order. The aureat recourse then la to Hoatetter'a Stomach Blttera, a laxative mild but effective, which la alao a remedy for dyapcpaln. nmlarln, rhaumatlam, uervouaneaa and kidney trouble.
Gave His Life for Love.
Walter G. Nicholson, of Milwaukee, Wls., lost all his money In speculation nnd, fearing that his wife might come to want, ho committed suicide. Ho had carried tin Insurance of $20,000.
The Lowest Rates Ever Made to the South
Will be In effect vin the Louisville and Nashville Railroad on March 5, April 2 and 30, 1895. Round trip tickets will be sold to points in Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and West Florida, and one way tickets to Florida at about half the regular rates. Ask your ticket agent about it, nnd if he can not sell you excursion tickets write to C. T. Atmore, General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky., or Geo. L. Cross, N? W. P. A., Chicago, 111.
A Dog Ate His Nose.
Harry W. Seymour, of New York, Is suing a restaurant keper for SIO,OOO because tho hitter's dog bit off Seymour's nose aud ate It Cold winds roughen and chap the skin. Glenn's Sulphur Soap softens and reunites it. "Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c. Only about oue-flfth of our country is straight up and down, like Switzerland. A baby slu has no more right to live than one that Is old enough to vote.
What an ordinary man eats and the way he eats it would be enough to give dyspepsia Ar to an ostrich—unless the ostrich were wise enough to asjF aist his digestion from to time with an efficient 0 combination o f vegetable extracts. Such a St is TV g 'She Dr. Pierce’s T 9 Pleasant Pellets. * They are the pills ff Vi -par excellence JgkJTfor those who OXp sometimes eat the wrong things and too much. They stimulate action in all of the digestive organs. They stop sour stomach, windy belchings, heartburn, flatulence and cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, indigestion, sick headache and kindred derangements. Once used they are always in favor.
BEST IM THE WORLD. • an 4 ioi > H ©THE RISING silNt STOVE POLISH in• cakes for general blacking of a stove. I THE SUN PASTE POLISH for a quick . after-dinner anine.i applied and pol- 1 iahed with a cloth. i Morae Bro*.. Prop*., Canton, Maas., U.S. A. \ • J 1 steel | V J with covers, all 'w /van I zed after /In nests of ten, Bto 12 feet\ /high and 30 to 36 Inches ln\ fdiameter, at 2Nc. per gallon.! f They do nefl rust, shrink, leak, alvei I tsete to water, nor al|qp foreign eub-| Istanoee to set In.* They Can be put! I In garret or barn and thus are protected! Ifrom freezing. They take no setting* \up, ere cheaper than wood. Tank* % subetruoturea of all ahea made to # % order. Send for price (let and g, X deelgneforeubstrueture and X a O watereuppiy. - I 7>XAER MOTOR CO-J/ftll U 2 GflU ER - ’** i -or Pl 4 •▼•r «to> to think how completely tho Aermotoi Da. eode the modern windmill buiinwa 1 Bow it has mono** •liaod thia entire lina of manufacture because or its ideas. tnTMtiano, d«ii*ne, qualities and prices, or forced others Mbe litoral and servile imitators f Witness the stool the back geared pumper, the high feared power lalll, tho eteel towers, fixed and tilting, tho (aivanhlnfi et work after completion, tho frinder centrifugal toed/ the improved IrrlraUA* and other pumps, tho all eteel 1 pole saw—one of Ui4 moot popular things wo ever pul out —tho stool Storage and stock tanks. Everythin* wo have? touched wo have bettered and cheapened. It is tho thine we have delighted in and it has paid. Wo have established a ooore of branch houses, so as to have all these gixxia near those who want them. The Aertuotor Co. has but one more ambition. It wants to build and fill one more new building. It hoe 8 aotoo of land at its present location unoccupied by buildings. It on* peels to commence in Juno to cover that 9 acres with a single building. 7 stories high. Thia Will give it 14 more acres of floor Kase. Thon when the public demand requires more goods an can be produced with thia added apace, it will refuse to extend further, or make any effort. It will have done its share to anaply that demand. It will then turn away al) new ooroore. rSTIL THAT TIMW IT RXFW’TA 10 COjlTllftu TO fICFFLr, TH! WORLD WITH THB aBKATRR FART <>T ITR WIND WHr.ILS TOW KUN, RRISDKM, rxKD C’tTTRRN TV RM. rriILfkIBRRVZM »«WH, StflL uroiuuil AND STOCK »ARM, RTRKL RVIWTRrCTIIUK ITC, BTC_ OIL. VAIIIKD ATTRH COHTLKTION, If WILL CONTIIIVB T» DIAL WONT LIRERALLT WITH fSR PtRLIC. PI RNIBH HI. FAIRS AT A LOW FKIt'R, AIR DR TUR ORRAT RODIL jqt .RR.nt.LiNa wind Mwrr aid watrb hTmli Moir on thr world. ajuhotor co., chicaoo Beecham’s pills are for bil-l iousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste 1 in the mouth, heartburn, tor-, pid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, 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 for everybody to learn is that constipation [ cansea more than half the sickness in the' world,especially of women; and itcanalf be prevented. Go by the book,free at your Araggiat’s, or write B.F.AUenCo.,36sCan»’. St., I lew York. Pills,io4 aud 254 “ box. Ana».l mor. than 8.nf10.000 box.*. 1 - ■ ■■■'» .. : ..... k, L ..PpUCLAS $3 SHOErif;s.‘A**K%. cordovan; 1k riRNCHAKHAMtUCDCALF. W 4 * 3 - Fine Gau&Kangaro(l MhaM ♦ W POLICE, a SOLES. WUBgJ»z.»i.’’Boys'St»«iSHKl ■ ’ * LADIES • naocKTOH.MAas. Over Oae Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the beet value for tho money. They equal custom shoes In style and fit. Their wearing qualities are uneuroassod. The prices are uniform,—.stamped on sole. From Si to Sg saved over other makes. U your dealer cannot supply you we can. THE CLARK SYNDICATE COMPANIES' FAPMINGLANDS WESTERN FLORIDA MANHATTAN WMS OEAR&ORN 5R A ten sere fruit or vegetable farm on a Trunk Line Railroad, from Bn to 810 per acre—Sß rash and M cent* or one dollar per week, payable weekly o* monthly. No taxes, no intereat, until paid fort equally favorable term* on larger tarmH. Every ma* can have a home paid for In lean than two yean. The Garden Spot of the World. Three Uropa a Year. , These lamia will grow all kind* of frnltt and veget, able*. For healtbfulneva, mildness and equability of climate, nearness to market, schools, eburehosanq other need* of advanced civilization, these land* ate uneoualed. Send for printed matter, or call. TffIJMWESCALH For catalogue aud prices write to THE HOWE SCALE CO., Chicago, St. Louis, Cleveland, Minneapolis, Kansas CL <h 1 n PAYS "POR ill 111 In 100 high grade u. ■ a ■h 111 nape™ in Illinois, fig I* u) IU \ I HI r X.mcs III I U Li papers for ■ NW WJV SEND FOR CATALOGUE. * CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, ‘O3 South Jefferson Street, - Chicago, IIL eO©OGQ@OO and all stroll ar com ’ Hints absolutely cured. Weart’s E. P. WEAKT B CO4 Philadelphia, Pa. PATENTS. TRADE-MAMS. Examination and Advice as to Patentability of Im ;ventiou. Send for Inventors' Guide, or How to Gel .a Patent. Patrick O'l's.bkki.L, Washington. D. a ' fl I" I I VS YOUR IDKAS. If original, we VL I I will Hnd a market fortitem. Full parall I I tlculare upon receipt of stamp P. A. , wLelw CO., 7 9 Station B, Cleveland, Ohio DATEHTC ???.’“£* F-Shnpson. Washington. . rAIEN I « untll Patent o£ ' talned. Write for Inventor’s Guide. | Mrs- Winslow's Soomro for Childrwn teething: softens the Awns.reauceelnflsmmatioii. I allays cures wimTooHm 8 o»nta a bottle C. N. U. NO. 17-95 VTHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS I please say you Raw the advertisement In thu paper.
