Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 May 1895 — Page 7
Is Your Blood Pure If It U, yon will be strong, vigorous, fall of life and ambition; yon will have a good appetite and good digestion; strong nerves, street sleep. Bat how few can say that their blood is pore! How many people are suffering daily from the consequences of impure blood, scrofula, salt rheum, rheumatism, catarrh, nervousness, sleeplessness, and That Tired FeelingHood’s Sarsaparilla purifies, vitalizes and 'enriches the blood. Therefore, it is the medicine for you. It will give yon pure, rich, red blood and strong nerves. It will overcome that tired feeling, create an appetite, give refreshing sleep and make you strong. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye to-day. H nnH ’c. Pi 11 c the after-dinner pill and 11UUU * ***!» family cathartic. 25c His Loss. “Well,” said Mr. Tripkins, as he sat down to his desk rather later than usual, “they’ve been to see me at last” “Who?” “Burglars.” “Tou don’t mean it?” “Oh, yes.” “Then I suppose you’ll have to borrow spoons to use at dinner to-night” “No, the spoons aren’t silver. They didn’t touch ’em.” “Take any money or wearing apparel?” “No.” “Well, I don’t see what excuse you have to be blue.” “Maybe not but when you get attached to an animal it Is hard to lose him. They went over the house and couldn’t find anything worth taking, so they stole my wach dog.” Black Sea Frozen. In 764 the Black Sea was frozen to a distance of fifty miles from shore. The Hellespont and Dardanelles were frozen and the Sea of Marmora was passable for cavalry.
GIRLS. WILLING, ABLE, AND AMBITIOUS, But Often Held Back by an Illness They do not Understand. rSPECIAL TO OU* LADY HEADERS. *) A young and intelligent working-girl of f ßrooklyn, N.T., graphically pictures the working-girl’s life. Day In and day out, > month after month, she toils. She is the S&gQ bread-winner of the family, and must ©/a work that others V or shine, warm||P' /1 tVv/ or cold, she must y II 1\ \ \ get to her place I In I \ \ / sharp on time, II I V 1 shine and glad- / ness all crushed she goes on yJ tures only one" of thousands. Some work in cramped positions, but the great majority of working girls, so to speak, live on their feet. Among the latter the symptoms of female diseases are early manifested by weak and aching backs, pains in the lower limbs and lower part of the stomach. The “monthly period” is irregular: with some profuse, with others a cessation. The sure symptom, leucorNioea, is present, and with faintness, weakness, loss of appetite and sleep. She may be sure that a womb trouble assails her. She knows not where to go for aid. Miss Mary Smylie, of 2078 Susquehanna Avenue, Kensington, Philadelphia-, Pa., urges < herfellowworkVegetable IIL. \ Compound. s\ f jKaS gS ft She says: “I jffi 1 Wi g; am a working- i Tr < S' IS girl, and must U la ful menstruation and kidney trouble; and my head was so dizzy I could hardly see. I began to take your Lydia Pinkham’s Compound c some time ago. It was highly recommended to me by a friend. Now I feel like a different girl: no more aches and pains. I am praising it to every one. Our Druggist sells lots of it. Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things foi everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in the world,especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book,free at your druggist’s.or write B.F.AllenCo.,36sCana’, Bt., New York. Pills ,io<f and 25$ a box. ' Annual ulei mors than 6,000,100 bole*. w.moHimr Washington, 8.0 l ■ 3 yra in last-war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since PUTEftTS talned. Write for Inventor’s Guide. ELSE FAIIS. „ an Best Cough byrup. Tastes Good. Use PR IW tn time. Sold by druggists. I*l
JUDGELYNCH’S WORK.
HE HOLDS COURT AT DANVILLE, ILLINOIS. Infuriated Mob Hangs Two Fiends— Jail Doors and Walls Wrecked with Battering Rams of Telegraph Poles and Railroad Iron. End of Two Brutes. Early Saturday morning a mob which, »t Danville, 111., had been in possession of Vermillion County’s jail for several hours, succeeded in locating John Halls, Jr., and William Royce in their cells, took them outside and hanged them for assaulting Miss Laura Barnett. From midnight, when tho crowd first made its appearance at the jail doors, until the victims were reached, it was the determined, desperate struggle of a frenzied mob to mete summary justice, battling against heavy oaken doors and iron bars, and occasionally halted by the grim stand of a little band of defenders of law and order under the command of Sheriff Thompson. No amount of parleying on his part and no amount of plea from his wife could withstand the mob which had but the one object in view.
HALLS.
At 2 o’elock Sheriff Thompson sent for Judge Bookwalter, of the Circuit Court, Who addressed the crowd from the jail corridor. He counseled them to peace and »rder, and for a minute, and but a minute snly, his words were heeded. Then another desperate attempt was made to teach the cells where the two men were lecreted. Finally Royce was located Crouching and shivering with fear. A Icore of hands dragged him unceremoniously from his hiding place underneath the wooden bench which serves prisoners is their bed. Half dragged and half puahKl he was hustled into the dining room Ind Beated on the table. A rope was (laced over his head, and while part of
BATTERING IN THE JAIL DOOR.
she mob kept close guard over him the Ethers continued the search for Halls until ke was discovered in another and more femote portion of the jail. At 3:15 o’clock the mob secured both of the prisoners nnd started toward tho kridge with ropes about their necks. They Ivere hanged almost upon the scene of their crime. Citizens of Danville joined the infuriated farmers in their work of tengeance. The story of the crime had keen the topic of discussion all day. Busiless was practicnlly suspended and shopkeepers and their clerks gathered in knots In the street corners and discussed the Effair with farmers who flocked to the tity during the day. Shortly after nightrail ominous mutterings were heard and tome openly counseled the more quiet of their neighbors to take summary vengeance on the perpetrators of the crime md not take the chances of tho law’s ielay or the technicalities which might Erise and eventually free the men. As early as 10 o’clock the crowd congregated on the main street, and it only Heeded a venturesome leader to proceed to the jail at once. Thut leader was soon found. From whispered threats the cry Erose for vengeance, swelling on the night dir until it echoed nnd re-echoed from one End of Danville to the other. A rush was made for the jail, where, under fear of lust such a proceeding, the guard had been re-euforevd, but constituted only a handful of men to face a frenzied, bloodthirsty mob, wrought up to an indescribable pitch and bent only on having the lives of the two cowering men within. Clamoring at the jail doors, the mob was met by Sheriff Thompson, who denied admission and, retiring behind the doors, locked and double bolted them. Rash for a Battering Ram. This action of the sheriff only added fuel to the already blazing fire of indignation. A hurried search was made for some instrument with which to batter down the jail doors. Part of the crowd rushed away, returning in a few minutes with a hemlock telegraph pole, which willing hands grasped ns a battering ram. The stout oaken doors of the jnjl were constructed to withstand any ordinary assaults, however, and the efforts of the mob proved futile until another party arrived with a steel rail.
Sheriff Thompson and his men warned the storming party to desist, but were met with hoots and jeers. The little band of defenders was powerless against the fast increasing mob, and when the furious blows, urged on with vengeful hearts, shivered the main door, they retreated behind the inner jail. The hallway was too narrow to permit effective work with the railroad iron, and a shorter piece was secured. With this the second door was attacked, and at 1:15 o'clock in the morning gave way before the impetuous mob which surged through the gap and demanded the keys of the cell in which the prisoners were confined. Tr and Royce were thoroughly frightened and cowered in the darkest corner of their cells, shivering at the sound of the imprecations on the outside and the victorious acclamations of those who found themselves in possession of a hitherto impregnable fortress. They begged for mercy, but Sheriff Thompson was utterly unable in the face of the determined men thronging the corridor to afford them any relief. In fact, with him discretion had overcome valor, and he with his little band retreated still farther before the angry administrators of lynch law. But with their battering ram of railroad iron the mob quickly wrecked the interior of the jail, and the end was soon over. Thursday eveuiag about 7:30 o'clock
Mias Laura Bennett and a friend. Miss Lillian Draper, were returning from an evening stroll. They were crossing the Vermillion rives foot bridge when they were attacked by Halle and Royce. Miss Draper escaped and gave the alarm. Halls and Royce were both well-known young men of Danville, and for several years had borne an unsavory reputation. They were arrested on complaint of Miss Draper, and further identification by John Downs, an old man who met violence at their hands while endeavoring to assist the girls. Funerals of the Fiends. The funerals of John Halls, Jr., and William Royce, the victims of mob violence, occurred Sunday. Both were attended by more than a thousand friends of the families and neighbors. The services over young Halls were conducted by Rev. Air. Griffin, of South Danville, at the Halls’ residence, a modest fourroom cottage. The burial was in the Danville Spring Hill Cemetery. The services over Royce were held at 2 o’clock in the afternoon at the residence of his father, Sylvester Royce. Rev. W. A. Anderreck, of the Danville Baptist Church, conducted the ceremonies. Royce was buried in a country cemetery, known as the Atherton graveyard, about three miles southeast of Danville. The citizens of South Danville, where Halls and Royce were born and raised, deplore the lynching, but say the boys received their just deserts. Royce was a carpenter, working with his father, who also followed that trade. Halls was a coal miner and addicted to drink. The evening of the assault on Afiss Barnett he was intoxicated. At the supper table his parents vainly begged him to remain home, fearing that he would get into trouble of some kind. Indianoln, Afiss Barnett’s former home, praises the work of the lynchers. The little passenger depot there was encircled by a dense gathering of people Saturday afternoon when the train steamed in bearing among its passengers the three’ leaders of the mob which lynched Halls and Royce. The appearance of the men was greeted with wild shouting and words of commendation. Excitement ran high and everyone was overjoyed at the revenge secured for Miss Barnett. The leaders talked freely of their midnight task and told of the devising of plans and of the gathering of the elans. One of the number who led the lynchers stated that he expected trouble at the hands of the State, but did not expect to be punished for the part ho plnyed. He was under the impression that the grand jury would find bills against some of the mob, yet he thought no jury could be found
ROYCE.
which would find the men guilty. The lynchers will pay tho. damage done the county bastile, which will not exceed S2OO. Hie amount will be raised by voluntary, subscription. Aiiss Barnett’s condition is improving and she has been removed to her father's home in lijdianola.
From San Diego all along the coast northward great beds of a remarkable seaweed exist This Weed is commonly known as the giaht kelp. It lias an uncommon economic value. Its growth is peculiar. A full-grown specimen has a stem measuring. three to four hundred feet in length, clutching the bottom of the ocean, while it bears on the surface of the water an air bulb, from which a tuft upward of fifty feet long of streamer-like leave* extends, each leaf being thirty to forty feet long. The stem which anchors this floating mass, though no thicker than a common window cord, is of great strength and flexibility, and has for ages been used by the Indians for fishing lines, being first cut of the required length, varying from ten to fifteen fathoms. It is then soaked in fresh water, in a running brook, until it is nearly bleached, then stretched, rubbed to the required size, and dried over a fire. When dried it is very brittle, but when wet it is exceedingly strong, and
equal to the best flax or cotton fishing lines.
The proprietor of a Fifth street house yesterday told the new clerk to try his hand at window dressing. “I want you to fix that window up so that every woman on the street will look into it,” he observed. The clerk was one of those clever little fellows that you read about in the city papers. He went at it. He made a curtain of solid black velvet and suspended it from the tbp of the plate glass close to the inner surface. “What on earth are you doing?” cried the senior member, happening to come along that way. “Making a mirror of the window,” complacently answered the clerk, as he shook out a fold very carefully. “If the women won’t look at that then I’ll miss my guess.” The clerk drew $3 more in his envelope at closing time.—Cincinnati Tribune.
Novel Fish-Lines.
THE LYNCHING.
Catches the Men, Too.
An Egg That Holds Two Gallons.
One of the most interesting specimen* in the National Museum at Washington, D. C., is a cast of an egg of most gigantic size, which was found in a guano bed on the Island of Aladagascar, about twenty-five years ago. The shell of this egg will hold almost exactly two gallons of liquid, which would make is capacity equal to 14S averaged sized eggs laid by the common barnyard fowl. The bird which laid this mammoth egg is now extinct, and has been for probably 20 years. To the scientist—who knows it by Its bones and eggs—it is known as the epiornls, and its restored skeletons prove it to have been a bird at least twelve feet In height Arab sailors who visited Aladagascar centuries ago, when the epiornls was still living, are believed to have brought back the stories concerning It which finally developed Into the fabulous narratives of the roc.—St Louis Republic.
Not Guilty.
The most popular man in a Western town once got into a difficulty with a disreputable tough who was the terror of the place, and whipped him In a manner eminently satisfactory to the entire community. It was necessary to vindicate the majesty of the law, however, and the offender was brought up for trial on a charge of assault with intent to kill. The jury took the case and were out about two minutes, when they returned. “Well,” said the Judge, In a familiar, off-hand way, “what does the jury have to say?” “May it please the Court,” responded tho foreman, “we, the jury, flud that the prisoner is not guilty of hlttin' with Intent to kill, but simply to paralyze, and he done It”
AFTER THIRTY YEARS
THE BUCKEYE STATE CONTRIBUTES THE STORY OF A VETERAN’S SEARCH. How Fred Taylor, a Member of tho Gallant 180th N. Y. V. I. Finally Found What He Has Sought Since the War Closed. (From the Ashtalmla, Ohio, Beacon.) Mr. Fred Taylor was horn nnd brought up near Elmira, N. Y., and from there enlisted in the 189th regiment, N. Y. V. 1., with which he w<*nt through the war, and saw much hard service. Owing to exposure and hardships during the service, Air. Taylor contracted chronic diarrhoea, from which he has suffered now over thirty years, with absolutely no help from physicians. By nature he was a wonderfully vigorous man. Had he not been, his disease nnd the experiments of thedoctors had killed him long ago. Laudanum was the only thing which afforded him relief. He hud terrible headaches, his nerves were shattered, he could not sleep an hour a day on an averuge, and he was reduced to a skeleton. A year ago, he and his wife sought relief in a change of climate and removed to Geneva, Ohio; but the change in health came not. Finally, on the recommendation of F. J. Hoffner, the leading druggist of Geneva, who was cognizant of similar cases which Pink Pills had cured. Air. Taylor was persuaded to try a box. “As a drownig man grasps a straw so I took the pills,” says Air. Taylor, “but with no more hope ot rescue. But after thirty years of suffering and fruitless search for relief I at lust found it in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. The day after I took the first pills I commenced to feel better, and when I had taken the first box I was in fact a new man.” That was two months qgo. Mr. Taylor has since taken more or the pills and his progress is steady and he has the utmost confidence in them. He has regained full control of his nerves nnd sleeps us well us in his youth. Color is coming back to his parched veins and he is gaining flesh and strength rapidly. He is now able to do considerable outdoor work. As he concluded narrnting his sufferings, experience nnd cure to a Beacon reporter Airs. Taylor, who has been his faithful helpmeet these many years, said she wished to add her testimony in favor of Pink Pills. “To the pills alone is due tho credit of raising Mr. Taylor from a helpless invalid to the man he is to-day,” said Airs. Taylor. Both Mr. and Mrs. Taylor cannot find words to express the gratitude they feel or recommend too highly Pink Pills to suffering humanity. Any inquiries addressed to them at Geneva, Ohio, regarding Air. Taylor’s case they will cheerfully answer, as they are anxious that the whole world shall know what Pink Pills have done for them nnd that suffering humanity may be benefited thereby. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Compnny, Schenectady, N. Y.. for 50 cents per box, or six boxes for $2.50.
Lazy Coots of Servants.
Far Southern domestic arrangements approach In some aspects those of the East Indies. There Is a host of lowpaid servants, each with a small specialty, and many of them living at their own miserable homes. Nothing is accomplished save by strenuous insistence on the part of the mistress, and all provisions unconsumed and not under lock and key go to the several homes of the servants.
They Cure the Cause.
Most of the discomfort in life comes from the stomach. You’ll admit that without argument. The proof is in your own stomach. A great many seemingly different diseases come from the common cause —a disordered stomach. Coming from one cause, it is natural that they should all be cured by one medicine. Itipans Tubules not only cure the disease—they cure the cause. They are good for dyspepsia, biliousness, headache, constipation, dizziness and all troubles of the stomach, liver and bowels. Druggists sell them.
An Unique Book.
An unique book, by an American millionaire, Is to appear shortly. Mr. Heber Bishop, who possesses incomparably the finest collection of jades in the world, recently visited Pekin, and made large additional purchases. Now he proposes to publish a volume on the subject, which will cost SIOO,OOO to bring out, the binding alone of each copy running to $l2O. The edition will be limited to one hundred copies, which will be distributed by the author to the chief governments of the world, many of the crowned heads and the principal public libraries. Then the plates will be destroyed, and the volume thus rendered one of the rarest and most valuable in existence. The jade is by far the most valued ornament of the Chinese, perfect specimens fetching enormous prices, and its delicious green and white will lend itself to exquisite illustration. Columbus, 0., is the wheelmen’s paradise. It has 121 miles of asphalt pavement, and everybody rides. He hath a poor spirit who j is not planted above petty wrongs. The devil comes to the wedding when people marry for money.
I Take no Substitute for I 1 Royal Baking Powder. I I It is Absolutely Pure. 1 P All others contain alum or ammonia. j|
Awkward Speech.
One of the first duties of a lecturer Is to consider his audience. This should be done while he Is preparing what he is to say, lest he be put to the necessity of hurried and awkward qualifications while on his feet An exchange reports that a professor was lecturing to a class of three young ladles, and In the course of his remarks came to an exposition of his views as to woman’s functions In the body politic. “Women,” he is reported to have said, “are the element of beauty In human life. Their business is to mnke life graceful, and they can’t do that, you know, unless they themselves are pretty and graceful. If a girl Is not pretty she might almost as well vanish from the face of the earth—that Is,” he explained, as he looked at the three sober, spectacled faces before him—“that Is—er—unless—she is tolerably pretty, you know.”
Nothing Succeeds Like Success.
Tho success achieved by uien and things are not always based upon merit. lint a success well merited and unprecedented In the annals of proprietary medicine, should these ever come to be written, Is Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, a botanic medicine, discovered nearly half a century ago, and the leading remedy for and preventive of malarial, rheumatic and klduey complaints, dyspepsia, constipation and biliousness.
Farm Mortgages.
The largest amount of farm Incumbrance is in New York. Next comes lowa, then Illinois, followed by Pennsylvania, Kansas, Ohio, Wisconsin nnd Missouri, In the order named. We think Plso’s Cure for Consumption Is the only medicine for Coughs Jennie Pinckard, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1,18W.' The amount of silver used for currency In tho world Is placed at $2,000,000,000.
LOOK OUT FOR BREAKERS AHEAD when pimples, L A\ eruptions, boils, 111 u\ and like manifesto®/ Yu tations of impure dSfifjtVi \\\ blood appear. They \\\ wouldn’t appear ff V \V\ your blood were \W pure and y° ur R y s - JftfefchXjgL yt\ tem in the right EgjWgfjSw \\\ condition. They \V\ show you what you need—a good bloodyV _ y purifer; that’s what C- y OU when you ..Trct/ll J take Dr. Pierce’s / J \| Medical A A V . -fc/ Discovery. U J •Lor Y 14 carries health Hi iW* 1 With it. All Elood, YU Skin and Scalp Dis- ' V eases, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofula, are cured by it. , It Invigorates the liver and rouses every organ into healthful action. In the most stubborn forms of Skin Diseases, such as Saltrheum, Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas. E.«ls and kindred ailments, and Scrofulu, It is an unequaled remedy. KIDOEB'B p*Btiu!s!S?lS: KHUHHHMBMBUW-Luluetuvru, Mut
For Cure ol Sprains, Bruises, ST. Jacobs oil on the ..BASE BALL.. Field Is lust wHat all plauers Gall It, “the best.” SAPOLIO IS LIKE A GOOD TEMPER, “IT SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE.”
DABWAY’S n PILLS, For the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Constipation, Costiveness, Indigestion, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels, Files, and all derangements of the Internal Viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals or deleterious drugs. OBSERVE the following symptoms resulting from Disease of the digestive organs: Constipation, Inward plies, fullness of the blood In the head, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, fullness or weight In the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering of the heart, choking or suffocating sensations when In a lying posture, dimness of vision, dlrzlness on rising suddenly, does or webs before the sight, fever and dull pain In the head, deficiency of perspiration, yellowness of the skin and eyes, pain in the side, chest, limbs, and sudden flushes of heat, burning in the flesh. A few doses of lIADWAY'S PILLS will free the system of all the above-named disorders. Price is cents per box. Bold by all druggists. BADWAY ft 00., New York. DYSPEPSIA and *how to lose It." Our booklet will Interest you— If you’re a dyspeptic. Hailed Fees for the asking. WEART ft CO, Philadelphia, Pa.
Consumption was formerly pronounced incurable. Now it is not In all of the early stages of the disease Scott’s Emulsion I— will effect a cure quicker than any other Bp known specific. Scott’s Emulsion proF motes the making of healthy lung-tissue, Bh relieves inflammation, overcomes the excessEd ive waste of the disease and gives vital Por doughs, Golds, Weak Lungs, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Consumption, Scrofula, Anmmin., Losrf of Plesh and Wasting Diseases of Children, Buy only tho genuine with our tradetrade mark. mark on salmon-colored wrapper , Send for pamphlet on Scott’s Emulsion. FREE. Boott A Bowno, N. Y. All Druggists. 60 cents and 91.
GOT A BABY BOY NOW.
Happlueaa in a Southern Man'a Home —Telia About the Kcd Flag of Danger at the Kuilroad Crossing— Warning to America's Men. “For twenty-six years I have used tobacco in great quantities and of late years took to cigarette smoking,” writes Mr. W. E. Simpson, of Lecompte, La. 1 want to go *>n record that tobacco has robb""- me of many years of life and a great Heal of happiness. I realize it now as 1 compare my feelings and my condition with that or a year ago, when I was a tobacco saturated cigarette fiend. Many and many u time did 1 try to quit smoking myself into eternity, hut I could not put through a day without suffering extreme nervous torture, which would Increase hour by hour till finally, to save myself as it seemed, from almost flying to pieces, I hnd to light the little, white pipe-atlck and swallow the smoke. One day I reud in my paper "Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away,” Just what 1 was doing. It came to me like the warning of the man who waves the red flag of danger at the railroad crossing, and said that No-To-llac was an absolutely guaranteed relief from tobacco slavery. I did not believe it, but like a drowning man grasping at a straw, I commenced taking No-To-Bac. The effects were magical, it destroyed the nerve craving, and desire for cigarettes. Two boxes, would you believe it, made me well and strong. I hnvo gained mentally, physically, in vigor and manhood, and with the brain free from tho nicotine and a breath no longer befouled with tobacco smoke I am so nappy to-day to write No-To-Bnc did it all a year ago, so the cure Is time-tested and tried, not only In my own case, but several of my friends who buve also been cured. Wo hare a baby boy now. My wife and I feel that all this happiness started from the time when 1 first used No-To-Bnc, and in evidence of our appreciation and lu order that the memory of the happiness may be perpetuated in n living form, we want to name our babv boy after the man who wrdto the line “Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.” No-To-Bae Is popular hero and all our druggists sell It. Hardly a day passes but somebody asks mo about No-To-Bae, so I don’t want you to hesitate to use these lines in any way that you think will make known to suffering humanity the happiness thn,t there is In No-To-Bac for the many men with nleotlnized brains and weakened resolutions. If they will only rnnko up their mind lo save the waste of vital power—to say nothing of the money —now going up lu smoke and out In tobacco spit.
Crusade Against Street Cries.
C. 11. Campbell, of the London County Council, haa begun a crusade against street cries in tho niotrouolls. He proposes that tho council shall regulate them, prohibiting the crying of wares when it can be shown to bo a nuisance to residents. Shades of Charles Lamb! ... . wl. ... Holt's Catarrh Cure. Is a constitutional euro. Price 76 cents. V- .. - Guinea was named from a West African word, meaning “abounding In gold.” Mrs. Winslow's Bootbwo Hxsur for Chtiarra toothing: sottons the gums, rsauoss lnflsmmstloa, tlUys pun, euros wind colic. SB oontu s bottls.
Do You Wash? Of Course - 1 (Do you Wash QUICKLY? nirr/Do you Wash EASILY ? DU l]Do you Wash THOROUGHLY? (Do you Wash CHEAPLY? You may IF you will use Santa Claus Soap The best, purest and most economical soap made Sold everywhere. Made only by THE N. R. FAIRBANR COMPANY, CHICAGO.
BEST nr THE WORLD. % ttiWycv \*> \vu\n wnvh\\e&\|/ ©THE RISING SUli STOVE t POLISH hsj blacking of a stow. THE sun paste POLISH for a wick, after-dinner shine* applied and polished with a cloth. Morse Bros., Props., Canton, U.fi. A* KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment whoa rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting tho world’s best products to the'neeas of physical being, will attest the value to health of tho pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tho remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most .acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has givei* satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- 1 neys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup 00. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered.
ASK YOUR DRUatHST FOR ★ The BEST * FOOD POR Dyspeptic,Delicate,lnfirm and AGED PERSONS * JOHN CARLE ft SONS, New York. * bKeShort
Baphaal, Angela, Babena, Tame Tk» "LINENE REVERSIBLE" arotho Best and Moot Economical Collars andOuffh worn; they are made of fine cloth, both sides finished alike, and, being re. ver.-lble, one coUar Is equal to tw o of any other kind. They fit to ell wear well and look well. A box of Tn Dollars or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-live Cent*, A Sample Collar and Pair of Cuflb by mall ter Mg Dents. Name style and size. Address REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMP ANT, v rumm it. new row. u nut st„ mitii * lEWIS’ 98% LYE dRk _ !■ Powdered and Perfumed. (patknted.) fgSsHr'wL tv T ? l ®Wrongest and purtsthyemm*. HRoA U»Uko other Lye. it being a tine, USSbA (.Avow tier and parked In a can with removable lid, the contents are aiw ways ready lor uae. Will make the JEBB&jaf oest pei fumed Hard Soap in 20 min. utea without boiling, it lg the beet gam for cleansing waste pipes, disinfeefrHV loss rinks, closets, washing bottlea, mS paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SALT MFG. CO. Oen’l Acts., Philo., Pa. an. P. No. 2 a-N* UrflEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS 11 please say you MW the advertisement In this paperv
