Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 32, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 August 1895 — Page 7

Makes the Weak Strong Hood’s Sarsaparilla tone* and strengthen* the digestive organs, creates an appetite, and gives refreshing sleep. Remember Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the one True Blood Purifier. Ho/vi'c Pi Ila the after-dinner pill and lIOOU » rlllS famUy cathartic. 2*c.

Nice Gruel

A missionary’s wife, Mrs. Paton, had been very ill on a lonely island in the Pacific, and when she recovered sufficiently to write to her friends at home she thus described one of her experiences: When I was able to take an intelligent view of my surroundings, this Is what I first remember seeing: John (her husband) sitting by my bedside with an old straw hat on the back of his head and a huge tin basin between his knees half full of what tasted like very thin, sweet porridge, with which he was feeding me lovingly out of the cook’s long iron spoon! He assured me that it was water gruel; that he had got into the way of making it nicely now; but that he could not find a clean dish on the premises to put it in! He was so proud of his cooking that I asked for the recipe, and you have It here: Equal parts of meal, sugar and water—a cupful of each for one dose; boil all together till there is a smell of singeing, whereby you know it is sufficiently cooked!

From the Four Winds.

A wholesale dry goods merchant of New York recently gave a supper to twenty of his friends engaged in the dry goods business in the city. As one of the guests happened to speak of the State in which he was born, the host made inquiry into the nativity of the others, and it turned out that the twenty men were born in twenty different States of the Union. Five were natives of New England States, four of Southern States, seven of States running from New Jersey to.the Mississippi, two of States beyond the Rocky Mountains, one of Nebraska, and one of New York. The host of the occasion was a Harlemite by birth.—New York Sun.

I AM 1 WORKING GIRL. I Stand Ten Honrs a Day. [•rtCIAL TO OVB tADT HEADERS.] k.XJ-* " " -*X7 * “I have sufXX sered terribly I 'S XjjßjiSSbii. r \ with bearingI I down P alns > J yL 'WBM ] giddiness,backJr WW ache, and kid ‘ I JPa 1 ne y trouble, te* jJmSr I L V dia E- -PintII \ I ham's VegetaIV JS&. I bl® Compound has given me new lue. I recommend it to all.” Maggie Lukens, Thirteenth and Butte Streets, Nicetown, Pa. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DOULD 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). He has now in 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. Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated pimples loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the mpst frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things foj everybody to learn is that constipation causes rnore than half the sickness in the world,especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the bopk, free at your > dmggist’s.or write B.F.AUenCo.,36sCana’, Bt, New York. Pills,io< and 254 a box. Annual Mie* mor. than 8,000,0(10 boxaa. M ..THE BABY’S LIFE depends on the food It gets. Insufficient nourishment is the cause of much, of the fatality among infanta. Improper food brings on indigestion. If the food is right the digestion will be good, and “Ridge’s Food.” is the best. There Is nothing “Just as good’’ or “nearly jw good.” It is the best in the whole world. Have you a baby? lit life depends upon how it xs fed. Sold by Druggists. 36c up to $1.75. WOOLRtCH A CO.. , PALMER, MASS. H Best Cough Syrpp. IMies Goodl Use B in tima Sold by flmggtstg. ||||

KILLS THE HOPPERS.

MACHINE THAT SLAUGHTERS 8,000 BUSHELS A DAY. Minnesota Scientists Tackle the Farmers’ Terror in a New Way— Canvas and Kerosene Send the Pests to Death. “Hopper-Doxers.” Minnesota scientists hare tackled the grasshoppr pest in a new way. Canvas and kerosene is the combination, before which the tiny hoppers go down to their death. Out there it is known per-dozer.” The State pays the’wqiflases of the slaughter, and the slaughter is terrific. Think, if you can, of 8,000 bushel baskets packed with hoppers. That was the average record in a day of killed and wounded insects at the height of the scourge. Dr. Otto Lugger, Minnesota’s expert on bugs, is the man who utilized the curious “hopper-dozer,” says the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Why he calls it by that name it would be interesting to know. Perhaps it is because it sends the hoppers to their last sleep. He was invited to do something to rid the farms of their voracious brigades of hoppers early this summer. He found evidences of enough of them to kill all the crops in Minnesota. The rains helped to kill off some of them, but science had to do its share iu the extermination. In the neighborhood of Taylor’s Falls Dr. Lugger found a grass-hopper-infested district covering fifty or sixty square miles. The insects were descendants, he thought, of a previous generation which had made trouble in 1800. They were of the so-called pellucid or California variety. There happened to be a State appropriation for killing hoppers, and this was tunned over to the executioner. “I had 200 hopper-dozers built after the most approved fashion,” said Dr. Lugger to a correspondent, “and purchased sixty barrels of kerosene oil. All we asked of the farmers was that they run the machines. That they were anxious to do this Is shown by the fact that there was a fight for the machines. Every farmer In the section wanted one and wanted it at once. We could not get them built fast enough to supply the demand. The same thing was done at Rush City, Duluth and other points, although there were not as many of them furnished at these places. I estimate that these machines killed about 8,000 bushels a day during the time that they were all running. I do not think that this is exaggerated in the least, as there were over 400 of the machines, and at the end of a day’s work from three to ten bushels could be taken out of

THE “HOPPER-DOZER,” BY WHICH 8,000 BUSHELS HAVE BEEN KILLED IN ONE DAY.

each machine with a shovel. Just about one hopper in ten that dies does so in the machine, so you can see that my estimate is not a large one by any means.” “What is the nature of the machine?” he was asked. “It is something of the nature of an overgrown dustpan, and is made of tin. It is about eight feet long by two feet wide, runs on three small runners, and is drawn over the ground by a horse. At the front of the machine is a trough filled with coal oil, and behind this, at right angles, a piece of canvas rises to a height of three or four feet. As (his machine is drawn over the ground tfie hoppers jump into it, the canvas them from jumping over. They fall into the oil and that is the end. “Some of them strike the oil head first and die instantly. Others only touch it with their feet or bodies and are able to jump out again. It makes little difference in the end, however, as they cannot live over three minutes if they have even the

THE GRASSHOPPER.

smallest drop of the oil upon their bodies. The fact that only those which get into the oil head first die instantly is the reason that such a small percentage of them are found in the pan at the close of the day's work. “Of course the hopper-dozers are bnly a makeshift. I am conducting experiments now which I hope will show me a much better way of getting rid of the pests than the very clumsy one of gathering them up on a dustpan. A little while ago I read in some paper that in certain counties in Colorado the hoppers were dying , in great numbers with some sort of a disease. I sent to the postmasters of a number of towns in that State asking them to send me some of the insects that were diseased. I received a large number, and there iA-uo doubt in my mind that they are really afflicted with a disease that is contagious in its nature. We are trying to find out if the insects which we have In this State are liable to this disease. If bo we will then know hbw to deal with them in a scientific manner.”

BARRED BY A RAILROAD.

Illinois Central Refuses to Allow Chicagoans to Cross Its Tracks, Actual conflict between citizens and armed officers of the Illinois Central Company on the Chicago lake front because passage to and from the lake front was denied to the people brought the question of rights to a decisive issue. Mayor Swift declares the''Orisis has been reached. He proposes to protect the people against a repetition of the outrage of exclusion. John Dunn, assistant to the president of the company, announces he will not budge from the determined stand taken by his force of men with revolvers He says citizens were denied right to cross the tracks out of regard for their lives and intimates the corporation will fight any opening of streets. In short, the company's position is construed by city officials to be a determination to stick for alleged vested rights. This earnestness on the part of both contestants makes any more conferences and consequent agreements impossible. Chicago’s lake front on Wednesday was in the possession of fifty armed men, hired by the Illinois Central Railroad Company to blockade passage to the harbor from Randolph to 12th streets. They had club* in their hands and revolvers in

their pockets. They were tastruetod to use both if necessary on any person who insisted on his right to an approach to piers in navigable waters, and, in carrying out the instructions, they compelled a score of women to' imperil their live* Wednesday night. This climax of the contest between the corporation and the municipality was caused by the action of the company in retaliation for the order to tear down the Van Buren street viaduct. Special Officer O’Keefe was called into the general manager's room and ordered to secure a large force of assistants. He was informed that at suudown the people were to be taught they had no right to a passage to the lake front. He was told to furnish his assistants with weapons and to arrest peacefully iu all cases where a beating was not necessary, any man, woman or child who tried to enter Chicago from the steamboats. This order, said to be without precedent in the history of maritime matters, was put into working force at the time when the people were returning from Lincoln Park and Windsor Park Beach by boat.

TAYLOR HAS THE MONEY.

South Dakota's Defaulting Treasurer Has Raised the Cash He Promised. W. W. Taylor, the defaulting treasurer of South Dakota, has been in Chicago the past three weeks. The purpose of his visit was to collect SIOO,OOO, which, besides all his other property, he will turn over to South Dakota. He said he had been entirely successful in his mission and the money now in hand was ready to

W. W. TAYLOR.

be paid into the treasury. It has been a question of considerable doubt in the minds of the citizens of South Dakota whether Taylor would be able to raise this SIOO,OOO. Now that he has raised it a much easier feeling will prevail. “I am going to Pierre to plead guilty and be

sentenced,” said Taylor, “and I am anxious to be serving my time.”

CROP CONDITIONS.

General Outlook for Corn la Flattering:—Much Rain in Places. The reports as to the conditions of the crops throughout the country and the general influence of the weather on growth, cultivation and harvest, made by the directors of the different State weather services, say that the general outlook for an exceptionally fine corn crop continues flattering. Except in the Dakotas and Minnesota where it is somewhat late and in Indiana where it is maturing slowly, the crop is generally in advance of the season and early corn is now practically made over the southern portion of the corn belt. Kansas and Missouri report much of the crop made, and in Missouri the largest crop ever raised in that State is promised. Six hundred lowa reports, all counties being represented, show the condition of corn as much above the average in sixty-one counties, above average in eight counties, while thirty counties promise a crop below the average. In Nebraska corn is in excellent condition in the southwestern part of the State and in the counties along the Missouri liiver; but has been much injured in the southeastern section, except in the river counties. In Indiana, while corn is maturing slowly, it is in good condition. In Ohio the outlook is less favorable, being poor in the uplands and on clay soils. Kentucky reports corn prospects unprecedented. No unfavorable reports respecting corn are received from the Southern States except from portions of Texas and the Carolinas, where iu some counties drought is proving injurious. In Texas cotton is needing rain on upland; and the southwest portion of the State, North Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana report improvement in the condition of cotton over the previous week, while the outlook in South Carolina is less favorable. In Missouri there has been too much rain for cotton and the crop is grassy and the outlook unfavorable in Arkansas. Spring wheat harvest has begun in North Dakota and continues elite-' where in the spring wheat region. Tobacco is in good condition in Virginia and growing rapidly in Kentucky and continues in excellent condition in Maryland, but in Ohio it is not doing well. Light local frosts occurred in Northern Indiana and in Northern Maryland and in the mountains of West Virginia. No damage reported except slight injury to corn in Maryland. Drought continues in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Southern Texas and in portions of Maryland anti the Carolinas, where crops are being injuriously affected.

Philip Kauffman and Michael Snyder were arrested at Coney Island, New York, charged with running an illicit still at Neptune avenue. The men rented the house one year ago, since which time they have lived in it and carried on their work. The whisky was stored in a cellar under the rear extension of the house. Sir T. F. Wade died at Cambridge. He was born about 1820 and entered the army in 1838, serving afterward in China and elsewhere. He was advanced to the rank of K. C. B. iu 1875 for his exertions in negotiating important treaties with the Chinese Government and obtaining treating facilities in that empire. Louis Stern, of New York, was sentenced at Kissengen, Germany, to two weeks' imprisonment for insulting a public official and to pay a fine of 600 mark* for resistance to the authority of the state.

TWO SHIPS GO DOWN.

AT LEAST TWENTY-SIX LIVES ARE LOST. British Vessel Prince Oscar Strikes an Unknown Boat—ln Tea Minute* Both Go to the Bottom—One Entire Crew and Six of Another Lost. Horror in Mid-Ocean. The British steamer Capac, from Valparaiso, brought to Philadelphia Thursday night seventeen shipwrecked mariners and the news of a terrible disaster that occurred on July 13 n short distance south of the equator. The mariner* are the survivors of the crew of the British ship Prince Oscar, which was sunk after collision with an unknown vessel, which also went down, but with all hands on board. Six of the Prince Oscar’s crew were drowned soon after they left the sinking ship by the capsizing of the small boat into which they scrambled. From the size of the unknown vessel it is thought she carried a crew of at least twenty men. The seventeen survivors were huddled into one small boat, with neither food nor water, but were fortunately picked up by the British ship Dharwar, from Melbourne, Australia, for London. Krom that ship they were transferred to the steamer Capac and, without money or clothing, they were landed. Captain Clipperton, the English consul, will care for them until they can be sent to their homes.

Midnight Disaster. The disaster occurred shortly after midnight in latitude 9:30 south, longitude 28:20 west. The Prince Oscar, which was bound from Shields, which port she left May 27 for Iquique, laden with coal, was going at a clipping gait on the port tack before a brisk wind and with all canvas set. It is estimated by the crew that she was making about six and a half knots an hour when suddenly there loomed up directly under her bows a four-masted vessel. The mate asserts that the stranger had no lights burning, and aftei she was sighted it was impossible to alter the course of the Prince Oscar. The iron hull of the latter struck the unknown full amidships, knocking her almost on her beam end and crashing through the woodwork until her prow was more than half buried. The stranger went over almost on her beam end* as the Prince Oscar backed away from the rebound. As the crew of the Prince Oscar stood peering through the darkness they saw the stranger partly right herself and then she rapidly began to sink. They listened in vaiu for some signs of life, but not a cry for help nor a word of command came from the stricken vessel. The pumps were manned, but there was no hope from that source. Life boats were ordered cut adrift, and the men were told to jump and swim for their lives. They all went overboard and with the exception of two unfortunates reached the small boats. Captain Henderson, who was the last man to leave the ship, went over in his night garments and swam fully two miles before he was picked up. Three Days of HardNH’i\>. Both boats hovered about the scene of the wreck until daylight came, when they headed they knew not where. Twentyfour hours later a heavy sea struck the boat commanded by the mate and capsized it. The occupants, eight in number, were thrown into the sea, and the already overcrowded craft which Captain Henderson commanded put quickly to the rescue. They were successful in getting four of them aboard. The rest wers drowned. There were now seventeen men in the small lifeboat, with nothing to Cat, nothing to drink and barely room to stretch their weary limbs. The sun was broiling hot, and their hunger and thirst were almost unbearable. Toward evening of the second day one of the crew discovered a small cask of fish oil stowed away in the boat. This was dealt out to the survivors In small doses, and they used it to moisten their parched lips and tongues. For three days and nights they floated thus on the bosom of the South Atlantic, and just as they were about to abandon hope they sighted the ship Dharwar from London, bound for Melbourne. They succeeded in attracting the attention of those on board and were soon on her decks.

SUPREME JUDGE DIES.

Justice Howell E. Jackson of Tennessee Passes Away. Howell Edmunds Jackson, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, died at his residence at West Meade, six miles west of Nashville, Tenn., at 2 o’clock Thursday afternoon In the 64th year of his age, of consumption. Judge Jackson was appointed by President Harrison in 1890. He had been In failing health for the last four years, but It has been only in the last eight or nine months that the progress of the disease began to cause his family and friends uneasiness. Quite lately he seemed to improve slightly. He went to Washington

JUSTICE HOWELL E. JACKSON.

to sit in the second hearing of the income tax cases. He stood that trying trip only fairly well, and after his return home appeared to lose strength rapidly. Judge Jackson was twice married, the first time to Miss Sophia Malloy, daughter of David B. Malloy, a banker of Memphis, who died in 1873. To this union were born four children, as follows: Henry, Mary, William H., and Howell Jackson. Henry Jackson is at present Soliciting Freight Agent of the Southern Railway, with headquarters at Atlanta, Ga.; W. H. Jackson is District Attorney of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad at Cincinnati; Howell E. Jackson is manager of the Jackson cotton mills at Jackson, Tenn. In 1876 Judge Jackson married Miss Mary E. Harding, daughter of Gen. William G. Harding.

Sparks from the Wires.

Twenty residences were burned at Berlin, Md. Loss, $200,000. Miss Stella Dye w'as burned to death in her father's house at Arlington, Ind. N. C. Narramore, a well-known Los Angeles statesman, was killed by robbers on his California ranch. Charlotte Neilson, well known to the American stage, was quietly married at the chapel of the Church of the Heavenly Rest in New York to Joseph H. Neill, a wealthy planter of Guatemala, Centsal America.

•?.. w ivr.S ~t>!l ' Tit - Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. 8; Gcv*t Report Royal gte ABSOLUTELY PURE

He Strack the Ex-President.

Gus Butterworth, the poular bonlface of the Ridgeway House, Is probably the only living man who, literally speaking, struck a president of the United States and received thanks instead of a term in jail for if Mr. Butterworth once gave it to Benjamin Harrison in the neck and he lives to tell the tale. It was while President Harrison was living in his Cape May cottage. Mr. Butterworth was running a hotel not far from the executive residence. One day while enjoying a ride on a trolley car Mr. Butterworth, who happened to be sitting behind a short, thick-set man with gray hair and beard, noticed a very large, healthy mosquito getting its bloody work in on the back of the thickset man’s neck. Acting on a very natural Impulse, Mr. Butterworth raised his right hand and brought the palm of it down on the back of the man’s neck with a resounding slap. The man turned quickly around and Mr. Butterworth saw that he was the President of the United States. “I beg your pardon," said Mr. Butterworth, “but there was a mosquito on your neck.” “Thank you very much,” remarked the chief executive, cordially. “Judging from the force of your blow I don’t think the Insect will give me any more trouble. I don’t use slang very often, but this Is the first time I ever got it in the neck—at least in that fashion." Then Mr, Butterworth plucked the dead mosquito from the President’s neck, and he and Mr. Harrison entered into a pleasant chat on general topics. Mr. Butterworth has that mosquito yet. —Philadelphia Inquirer.

Her Kind Act.

My friend Mrs. B is one of those good-natured women who are always wanting to make other people comfortable. She happened to be in the railway station the other day when a man she knew came in. He said he was golpg to Pittaburg. Now, it happened that Mrs. B , whose husband is a director, knew the conductor of the Pittsburg train. He passed through tue waiting room just then, and Mrs. B called to him. “Conductor," she said, "this is my especial friend, Mr. Smith. He Is going on your train, and I want you to show him every attention possible.” The conductor of course said he would, but when he went away Mr. Smith turned to Mrs. B with a sickly smile. “I did intend to go to Pittsburg to-day, and I was In an hurry, but, on the whole, I think I'll wait for the next train.” And he Rinded the kindhearted woman a slip of paper. It was a pass, but it was made out to ono Jones.—Washington Post.

A Ghastly Spectre

Disease Is ever, but in no form Is It more to be dreaded than In that of the formidable maladies which attack the kidneys and bladder. Bright's disease, diabetes and gravel may alike be prevented, If inactivity of the kidneys is rectified In time with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, sovereign also In cases of rheumatism, dyspepsia, constipation, malaria, biliousness and nervousness.

“Too Thin" Is Shakspearean.

Alexander H. Stephens may have used the phrase “too thin,” but he was not the author of It, as has been asserted. In Shakspeare's “King Henry VIII.’’ It occurs as follows: “I come not to hear such flattery now, and in my presence; they are too thin and bare to hide offenses.’’

Tobacco Tattered and Torn.

Every day we meet the man with shabby clothes, sallow skin and shambling footsteps, holding out n tobacco-palsied hand for the charity quarter. Tobacco destroys manhood and the happiness of perfect vitality. No-To-Bac is guaranteed to cure just such cases and it's charity to make them try. Bold under guarantee to euro by Druggists everywhere. Book free. Ad. Sterling Remedy Co., New York City or Chicago.

A King’s Plaything.

Playing cards were Introduced Into Europe by a crusader about 1300 to amuse Charles IV., king of France, who had fallen Into a gloomy state of mind bordering on madness. The hearts were originally called Caesars, and were designated to represent the ecclesiastics.

Wheat, 48 Bushels; Rye, 60 Bushels.

Those are good yields, but a lot of farmers have had them this year. You can have them in 1896 by sowing Balser’s Red Cross of the North winter wheat, monster rye and grasses. Sow now. John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wls., send catalogue and samples of above free, if you send this notice to them. C. N. U.

A Candid Opinion.

When an old woman sees a new woman she exclaims, “For pity sakes!’’ Hall** Catarrh Care. T« taken Internally. Price 7t> cent*. Falsehood always endeavored to copy the mien and attitude of truth.—Johnson. Piso’s Cube for Consumption relieves the most obstinate coughs.—Rev. D. Buchmuelleb, Lexington, Mo., Feb. 24,1894. We reform others unconsciously when we walk uprightly.—Mme. Swetchlne.

! Fai* Sailing through life for the person who keeps in health. With a torpid liver and the impure blood that follows it, you are an easy prey to all sorts of ailments. That " used-up ” feeling is the first warning that your liver isn’t doing its work. That is the time to take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. As an appetizing, restorative tonic, to repel disease and build up the ntaded flesh aad strength, there’s nothing to equal it. It rouses every organ into healthful action, purifies and efiriches the-blood, braces up the whole system, and restores health and vigor.

Bone Food,

One of the NewTork fbod reformers who would improte the diet of mankind has put out a proposition for the eating of bohes, after they are ground fine. He holds that Under the existing regimen, the bones of the human frame are not property supplied with the chemical elements weeded to them In sound and vtgdfous condition, and that these elementy can be most easily obtained by'consuming the powdered bones of the adlmals ordinarily used for food. He would sprinkle's steak or chop, for example, with bone dust, after the manner In 'Which It 51 sprinkled with salt and pepper, and he maintains that thus the taste of the meat may be greatly improved.— New York Sun. • ll( .

To Cleanse the System

Effectually yet gently, when costive er bilious, or when the blood is Impure or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dispel headaches, colds or fevers use Syrup of Elga

To Utilize the Earth's Heat.

“Current Literature" thinks that one of the triumphs of the future engineers will be the sinking of a shaft 12,000 to 15,000 feet into the earth in order, to utilize the central heat of the globe. So great a depth, it is believed, may not bo impossible for the improved machinery of the coming scientist Watdr at a temperature of 200 centigrade, which will be obtained by these deep borings, will heat houses and public buildings, to say nothing of the power it would furnish. The plant once paid for, the only expense would be the keeping of the pipes In good condition. 1 ' Nature would do the rest ’ ’• ■ v h

Wisconsin Resorts.

Excursion tickets ars now oqrsalo by the Chicago, Milwaukee' and ;St- Paul Railway to Burlington, Elkhorp, Delavan, Milwaukee, Pewaukee, Hartland, Nashotah, Oconomowoc, Klibourn, Sparta, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Lake Minnetonka, Tomahawk, Minocqua, Elkhart Lake, Ontonagon, and'all resortd of Wisconsin, Minnesota, the Michigan Peninsula and the Northwest. Special low rates made oniFriday, Saturday and Sunday of each week to Wisconsin reaorta For rates, tlmij tables and further information, apply at ticket office, OS Adams street, or Union Passenger Station, Canal, Adams and'Madison streets. f • 1 ■ < 1 ' .11

Life Briefly Summarized.

If a woman-gets what she wants to wear and a man what he wants to eat, there’s no reason why they shouldn’t live together and be happy.—Now York Recorder. w

These Men Are Much Alike.

The man who dsesnot advertise in summer is like the man who does not sprinkle his lawn in dry weather.

Keeping Their Spirits.

The coal dealers appear to be tolerably cheerful fbr men who are losing so much money as they say they are. Beauty marred by a bad-complexion may be restored with Glenn's .Sulphur Soap. "Hill's Half and Whisker Dye," Black or Brown. 50c. In every sphere of life the post of honor Is the post of duty. .... ,i—- - --V ■ J I . Winslow's Boorante Sntu» for Children Mx re £»*te won '

“Wash us with Pearline! “ That’s all we ask. Save us from that dreadful rubbing— It's wearing us out! “We want Pearline—the original washing-compound—-the one that has proved that it can’t hurt us—Pearline! Don’t experiment on us with imitations! We’d rather be rubbed to pieces than. eaten up.” “Use the Means and Heaven Will Give You the Blessing.” Never Neglect ‘ A Useful Article Like i SAPOLIO I ■ 3 •• . - .' ■t. ii‘. ’t? • r,i ‘ ’ i'’r , . ■ Rub a bub bqb. Tmxbi maimatthbtVß ' /JTw Jfijl All uam® Santa Glaus sbar * ti-‘ ' i Millions dothibami, ; ■ * . ■ ■ : Sold everywhere. Made only by TR|E N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY* ]■ ' I MWHNNMWWUUMBBUWVUNWUWWraUQnUMNNNNMNMi

Ban nr m wokia, Vwr % H \ c.Vkgh'quess X\x\s >l/ @TME RISINOKR STOVE POLISH in cakes for mttdl blacking of a sSssn. -me sun pasts POLISH forawriefi after - dinner akiaa. Mens Bro*., Prep*., Canton, Mass ■ Mrs. James Taylor, who resides at No. 82 Bailey avenue, Kingsbridge New York, on the 14th of December, 1894, said: “My age is 66 yearn For the past two years I have had liver trouble and Indigestion. I always employ a physician, which I did in this case, but obtained no beneficial results. I ! never bad any faith in patent medicines, but having seen Ripens Tabulae recommended very highly In the New York Herald, I concluded to give them a trial. After 1 using them for a short time, I found they were just what my case demanded. I have never employed a physician since, which means •2 a call and fl for medicine. One dollar's worth of Rlpans Tabulee lasts me a month, and I would not be without them if it were my last dollar. They are the only thing that ever gave me any permanent relief. I take great pleasure In recommending them to any one similarly affected. (Signed) MRS. J. TAYLOR." UmVERSITYOFNOTREDMIIg (Main Building.) Th* Pifty-serond Year Will O*«e ’X'TJXDSSUM. T. WHV'X'. »«L 10*0*0. , OOOMKH IS 1 Classlot, Letters, Sclenco, Law, Civil and nMhaaSoaf Engineering. Thorough Preparatory ant Commorclsl Cours**. ST. J»VUU>'*,llAt.L, for bore under 10. toatotaMto! th* oompleunM* of lu equlpinnnt. A malted auaiaw •t candidate* tor the eooloelneileal *t*te win bo remStod at ep*cl*l rate*. Catalocuoa onnt true on atetioaUea to BBT. ANDRKW MORRISSET, C. S.O. Notre Dame, Indiana. * ASK YOUR DRUOmsf FOR /Nursing Mothers,lnfantsZ CHILDREN dr JOHN CARLE A SONS, New York. ♦, MTEHTSErwBSaM C. N. U. Na. ss-ns —— to WHBN WRITING TO ADVERTIHEBS please say you aaw the adverttoeansna In thia paper.