Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 December 1896 — Page 7
He Wm Bore. “Drummers”—sometime* called commercial travelers—are Jlke ministers and doctors, fond of chaffing each other. “I’ve a great story to tell yon, boys,” said a drummer to a group in the corridor of the Iroquois last night. “I don’t think any of'you ever heard me tell it before.” “Is it a really good story?" asked ono of the party, doubtingly. “It certainly is.” “Then I’m sure you never told It before.”—Buffalo Times.
ASKING QUESTIONS.
IT IS A WOMAN’S PREROGATIVE, AND SHE USES IT. Timely Question* and Prompt Answers Have Resulted In Great Satisfaction to Many Women. Sensitive women hate to ask their physicians those delicate questions that only a woman understands, and there-
fore write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., as she has J ever proved Am their most ac- yOßgr curate adviser, and knowing * that their X; letters will be read and answered by one
of their own sex. Thousands of such letters have been received within a few months from those afflicted with the various forms of female diseases, and it is needless to say the answers have brought comfort and relief. That sense of dragging in the groin, dull pains in small of back, retention, suppression of menses, bearing-down pains, headache, nervousness, blues, etc., are symptoms that require prompt measures. The cure is, in most cases, rapid. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound should be promptly taken, and Mrs. Pinkham will furnish any advice required, free. Following is another letter of thanks:— “Please accept my thanks for the
little book which you have •V sent me. It has opened IT-. my eyes, and told me that there is a ’ \ remedy for suffer--0 / women. There is no need for if 'women to sufV * er > ** they will \ ' onl y take Lydia 1 \ E. Pinkham’s \ \ wwl Vegetable Com- \ \ *P P I suf- \ \ W sered for years A with painful \ f menstruation, thinking there was no remedy for it; but after reading
your little pamphlet, I thought I would give your medicine a trial, and it is wonderful how quickly it relieved me. I recommend it for all women who suffer with painful menstruation. ” —Mrs. George Nehbboss, Crittendon, Erie Co.. N. Y.
The Cyclist's Necessity. EXTRACT
Is ths REPAIR KIT for all ACCIDENTS. Unequaled for Quickly Healing Lameness and Soreness of Huscles, Wounds, Bruises, Stiffness, Rheumatism, Rub thoroughly with POND’S EXTRACT after each ride to keep muscles supple, pliant, strong. Try Pond’s Extract Ointment for Piles. Avoid Substitutes — Weak, Watery, Worthless. Pond’, Rjctoact Co., 76 Fifth Atomic. New York, “Yours lat Coit.” Columbia Bicycle Calendar 365 memorandum pages—36s squibs of cycling interest —l2O little thumb-nail sketches—an office and home convenience. Because there are just a few words of triphammer, unanswerable argument about bicycle qualbuilding, this 'la, (T calendar is paid, for hve HO. CO., Hartford,Conn. P^-rTp—i j^TABULESI 5 REGULATE THE • STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS • ; AND PURIFY THE BLOOD. J # ♦ 1 RIPANS T A RULES are the beat ! I Medicine known for Indigestion. J « Biliousness, Headnche. Couatipa. « « tion, Dyspepsia, Chronic Diver • {Troubles, Dizziness, Bad Complex- • lon, Dysentery, Offensive Breath, • * and all disorders of tke Stomach, I J Liter and Bowels, J O « Blpans Tabnles contain nothing Injurious o O to the most delicate constitution. Are pleas- * ♦ ant to take, sate, effectual, and give immedl- * J ate relief. J • THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., $ • 10 SPRUCE STREET, NEW TORE CITY. •
LURED TO HIS DEATH.
ANTONIO MACEO THE VICTIM OF SPAIN’S TREACHERY. Inmrjfnt Commander, with Hie Staff, Shot Down—Marqnia Ahumeda Lays the Plot—A Conference Invitation Brings the Bebel to the Shambles. Led Into a Trap. Jus to Carrillo, a well-known Cuban of Jacksonville, Fla., brother of the Cuban general Carrillo, has received the following letter from a trustworthy correspondent in Havana confirming the reports of the death of Antonio Maceo, and showing that he was kilted by treachery: “Our brave general, Antonio Maceo, and the grqpter part of his staff have been murdered by the Spaniards, Maj. Cirujeda acting the part of assassin, with Dr. Maximo Zertucha as an assistant in the horrible drama. “Convinced that notwithstanding his enormous army he could do nothing against our gallant leader, who had so repeatedly defeated the Spanish generals in Pinar del Rio, Weyler conceived the idea of appeasing his beastly instincts by cold-blooded murder, and making the best of the secret relations between Dr. Zertucha and the marquis of Ahumadn he planned with the latter his diabolical scheme. Weyler took the field, and in his absence Ahumada proposed, through Zertucha, a conference with Maceo, to take place at a certain point in the province of Havana, with the view of arranging plans for the cessation of hostilities. The basis was to be Cuba’s independence and a monetary indemnity to Spain, together with certain advantages that should be agreed upon for Spanish commerce and Spanish capital invested there. “To carry out the plan the agreement was that orders should be given to the detachments of troops stationed on the trocha in the section between Mariel and Guanajay to allow Maceo, with his staff, to pass the military line unmolested. Time was required to mature these arrangements and to give them all the ap-
pearance of truth. Ahumada feigned that before acting he must make them known to Weyler for his previous approval. This explains the sudden arrival of Weyler in Havana and his prompt return to Pinar del Itio. “The conditions and place of the meeting having been agreed on, Maceo crossed the trocha over the road to Guanajay without being molested by the forts, but as soon as he arrived at the place decided upon he and his party were greeted by a tremendous volley from the troops under Maj. Cirujeda, who lay conveniently in ambush. Most of the officers on his staff fell with Gen. Maceo. Zertucha is alive because he was aware of the scheme and remain in the rear.” < Dr. Palmn’s Statement. Dr. Estrada Palma, of New York, made the following statement: “I received a telegram from my agents in Jacksonville, affirming the news that Gen. Maceo and his staft came into conflict with Ahumada, Weyler’s lieutenant, and were murdered. Dr. Zertucha was present. Gen. Weyler, on addressing the crowd from the balcony of his palace, in Havana, seemed anxious to shun the responsibility of Maceo’s death. That was apparent when he declared that the ‘victory’ belonged to Ahumada. It is possible that his conscience began to feel the pangs of remorse. “This very act of the Spanish governor proves the strength of the revolution. They cannot crush it by open warfare. They must resort to the assassin’s knife. They dared not face Maceo, so they had to stab him in the back.”
BAD DOLLARS GALORE.
Counterfeit Bilver Money in Wide Circulation. Shrewd counterfeiters, supposed to be located in British Columbia, China, Honolulu, or Mexico, have flooded the West and the Southwest during the last ten months with real silver dollars, as good or better, in point of bullion contained in each coin, than those issued from Uncle Sam’s mints, and of equally excellent workmanship. Secret service officers have been at work for nearly a year trying to locate the place of manufacture of these dangerous counterfeits, but it is only recently that they have acknowledged the extent to which the bogus coin has been issued and put into circulation. The dollar in question will stand any assay test and can be detected only by a clever expert. But they are counterfeit just the same, and the people who manufacture and “shove” them will, if captured, be tried for counterfeiting. Andrew Mason, superintendent of the United States office in New York, says: “I got hold of two of (them while doing some work in the San Francisco mint about ten iponths ago. The coins I examined were of excellent workmanship and calculated to deceive almost everybody. They contained enough silver of sufficient fineness to stand any assay. Indeed, one that I assayed was only 1-1,000 deficient in fineness, and it was ju&t a little over weight—contained more silver than the standard dollar issued from the Government mints, in fact. There were two or three slight points of difference between the counterfeit and a true dollar which would lead an expert to detect it upon close examination. One of the letters'in an inscription was imperfect, and the tip of one of the eagle’s wings was also a little ont of line, but it w«s a most dangerous counterfeit.”
GREAT PEACE TREATY.
Permanent Court of Arbitration for Anglo-American Affairs. The negotiations between the United States and Great Britain for a treaty of general arbitration, covering all subjects of difference between the two Englishspeaking nations, present and prospective, has advanced to a stage of completeness far beyond that which the public has had reason to expect. The purpose of Secretary Olney and Sir Julian Pauneefote is to conclude the negotiations within the next three weeks. All the substantial features of the treaty have been agreed on, and from the present status of the negotiations it is believed the following will be the important terms of the treaty: “1. A term of five years from the date of the exchange of ratification within which the treaty shall be operative. “2. A court of arbitration of six members, three to be drawn from the judiciary of the UKited States and three from the judiciary of Great Britain. “3. The submission to this tribunal of all differences between the two nations, now pending or to arise within the period of five years, this not to include the Behring'Sea question or the Venezuela question, now before independent commissions, but to include the question of the boundary between Alaska and British North America.” The completion of this treaty will mark an important epoch in the relations between the two English-speaking nations, and in the judgment of those who have been most identified with its consummation it will be the most important document of a peaceful character in the history of their mutual dealings. The President made passing reference to the subject in his recent message, and the negotiations have proceeded with surprising unanimity, so that those engaged in the work confidently believe that it will be fully agreed upon, and the signatures of the contracting persons placed to the documents within the period named. Aside from the previously referred-to points it can be stated in a general way that the terms of the treaty and such as to “clear the board” of all the vexatious questions which have arisen between the United States and Great Britain. These have been numerous in recent years, and
ANTONIO MACEO.
some of them have threatened serious consequences.
GONE WITH A GYPSY.
Princess of Chimay Elopes with a Hungarian Fiddler. The Princess of Chimay and Carnman, who was a rich American girl, has ruined her life for the sake of a wretched Hungarian musician, named Tsigane. She has deserted her husband, Prince Joseph of Chimay and Caraman of Belgium, and her two children and has fled with a man who only recently made a scanty living by furnishing gypsy music in Paris restaurants. She had been married only six years, and the splendor that marked her wedding has not yet been forgotten, even in Paris. The Princess was Miss Clara Ward, of Detroit, Mich. She was worth $3,000,000 in her own right. Her elopement with this Hungarian musician has amazed her friends. Where she could have met tha man or how the meetings which must have taken place could have been so skillfully arranged as to be kept secret, are
mysteries to Parisian society. Prince Joseph will at once institute proceedings against his wife for divorce, and will claim possession of the two children whom she left behind in her flight. The elder is a girl, Countess Marie, born in 1891, and the younger a boy, Prince Marie Joseph, born in 1894. Prince Joseph is a member of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives. His ancestral home, a magnificent estate, is in the province of Hainault.
Madge York and James Gentry.
Gentry, who was an actoj in the same company with Madge York, murdered her in a fit of jealousy. He was sentenced to be hanged, and is now confined in a Philadelphia prison awaiting the time when the sentence is to be carried out. None of his friends or relatives is allowed to see him, and he is said to be going insane through remorse and solitude. The memorial organ presented to the First Presbyterian Church of Richfield Springs, N. Y., by Mrs. Emmons Blaine was dedicated Sunday afternoon. Edward Armbruster, aged 65, an old soldier, until recently in the Dayton, Ohio, soldiers’ home, committed suicido with paris green..
PRINCESS OF CHIMAY.
AWFUL LOSS OF LIFE.
NORTH GERMAN LLOYD STEAMER SALIERE GOES DOWN. Two Hundred and Seventy-five Persona Perish—Disaster Dae to s Foe —Ship Was on Her Way from Bramen to Buenos Ayre*. Daahea on the Hoclcs of Spain. Crashing through the mist into tha Corrubedo rocks off the northwestern coast of Spain, the North German Lloyd steamship Saliere foundered in a few minutes, and all on board were lost Two hundred and ten passengers were on board, and the crew consisted of sixty-five men. There was no time to take to the boats and all went down with the ship. News of the terrible disaster floated to Villagareia with the tide. An overturned boat with the name of the vessel painted on the stern, spurs and planks torn from the ship as it crashed into the rocks, were swept to shore as silent witnesses of the fate of passengers and crew. Not one human being on board was able to reach safety, though it may be possible some were picked up by passing vessels. The sinking of the Saliere may be one of the mysteries of the sea. The Saliere was bound from Bremen to Buenos Ayres, by way of Corunna and Villagareia. Advices from Bremen and Corunna state that the passengers were mostly in the steerage, and consisted of 113 Russians, Galicians, six-ty-one Spaniards and one German. The vessel had put in at Corunna, and was heading eastward for Villagareia, when it crashed into the jagged rocks, which are always given a wide berth by mariners. Just why and how the miscalculation was made which swung the Saliere one point too close to the terrible reef may never be known. The only explanation is that an ocean mist shut out the rocks, and that the dense fog prevented accurate bearings being taken. The steamship rounded Cape Finisterr* and proceeded southward toward its last stopping place before it reached Buenos Ayres. Villagareia is a town of less than 2,000 inhabitants, situated between Cape Finisterre and the City of Vigo. The Saliere expected to pick up more passengers at Villagareia, bound for Uruguay. A heavy mist hung over the sea and a strong wind was blowing from the south when the,Saliere was about due to head toward Villagareia. The vessel could easily have been seen from the shore but for the mist, ns the channel between the rocks and the coast of Spain is only about five miles wide. A miscalculation, and the Corrubedo rocks were responsible for the greatest disaster which has ever occurred In the Bay of Arosa. Nothing was known of the fate of the vessel until the floating wreckage reached Villagareia. The fact that the rocks are only about five miles from the mainland and that none of the passengers or crew had been able to reach the shore led to the belief that the Saliere must have foundered within n few minutes after It had struck on the reef.
PLAIN TALK BY CULLOM.
Illinois Senator Pleads for Intervention in Behalf of Cnba. Senator Cullom Thursday raised his voice in the Senate in Cuba’s behalf. He not only made an eloquent speech, but preceded it with a resolution which, if udopted, will pledge the United States to the extinction of Spanish title ajrd the termination of Spanish control of tha islands nt the gateway of the Gulf of Mexico. Mr. Cullom is not an orator, but he is a very impulsive speaker. His exhaustive and nt times eloquent review of the history of Spain’s oppression in Cuba was closely followed by Senators Sherman, Call, Hoar, Mills, Palmer and others, who have been particularly interested In the Cuban question. “All the diplomacy of the ages never found a prayer by which slavery could be dethroned," said Senator Cullom, in opening. “It required the humanity of Lincoln and the progress of the republic to open the prison walls to liberty and make glad a waiting world. If we wait for precedent we shall wait forever,” declared the Illinois Senator a little later. “If a precedent is needed we shall make one. Cuba to-day is lost to Spain. The public proclamation of Spanish defeat may not have been officially and definitely announced, but in truth and fact the submission of Cuba will never again be yielded ns of old. Tribute of $25,000,000 to $40,000,000 annually so long exacted will never again replenish the treasury of Spain. The struggles of 1895 and 1890 sadly crippled Cuba, but they will ruin Spain. The American people are coming to the consideration of the Cuban situation ns they already have in certain other cases, as a great political question: a continental question, if you please. And being a political continental question It will be decided ultimately by the continent whose interests are most clearly involved. Geographically considered, Cuba cannot belong to Spain. She is in American waters and politically is entitled to statehood in the continent of American republics.”
ODDS & ENDS OF SPORT
There will be no Michigan State baseball league next season. During his baseball career, Walter Brodie has not missed a game through sickress or disability. The ’varsity crew of Univergity of Pennsylvania begins training under Coach Ellis Ward about Jan. 1. “Tommy” Ryan has accepted an offer of $2,500 to fight George Green in San Francisco, before the Olympic Club. President Pat Powers, of the Eastern league, says that four of his clubs made between $5,000 and $15,000 last season. The Chicago ball club will-play Sunday games until the city of Chicago- or the State of Illinois decides such a practice illegal. The District Attorney of Kings County has decided that Corbett and Fitzsimmons will not be allowed to bring off a fight at Coney Island. Dr. W. S. McDowell, of Chicago, who has repeatedly competed for the Diamond Sculls at Henley, without success, states that he intends to try again next year. Mr. Lehmann, the crack English rower and trainer, is much encouraged over the work of the Yale crews, and thinks that the men have done some decidedly level rowing. The reported intention of bicycle manufacturers in this country to equip all of their ’97 wheels with brakes, unless otherwise requested by individual buyers, is very gratifying. Barry, the oarsman, signed articles in London, on Wednesday, for a match with “Jake” Gaudaur, for the sculling championship of the world and £250 a side, to take place on the Thames in Aprii next.
CATARRH IN THE HEAD.
A Constitutional Disease, leqilrlaf a Conatttntional Kerned;, Catarrh In the head consists of inflammation of the mucous membrane In the nasal passages, and sometimes It extenus to the air cavities which cover a considerable portion of the face. Catarrh in the head frequently destroys the senses of taste and smell, and its tendency is always debilitating. The best authorities say catarrh is Just*as surely a constitutional disease as Is scrofula. It is caused and promoted by impyre blood. The teaching of experience proves that'"the true way to cure catarrh is to purify the blood. The one true blood purifier is Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Thousands of such statements have been written by honest, straightforward men and women; they have been published year after year; and their genuineness is beyond any possible question. If you are suffering from catarrh, do not daily with snuffs, inhalants and useless local applications. Take the direct road to health. Clennse the stream at the fountain hend. Purify your blood with the one true blood purifier, Hood’s Sarsaparilla. In a short time you will be convinced of the wisdom of this course. Hood’s Sarsaparilla will give you an appetite, tone and strengthen your stomach, make rich, red blood and remove all the disagreeable symptoms of catarrh by permanently eradicating the causes which produce them.
Crushing.
The comment made on Lord Beaconsfleld upon the occasion of his maiden speech in the House of Commons, that he “went yp like a rocket and came down like a stick,” was not more scathing than one recently applied to a rather conceited young Insnman, reported 1 in the Westminster Gazette: In a certain Irish college the student at his oral examinations lwis to give his answers from a pulpit, before the board of examiners. Once a student, who had no mean opinion of his attainments, ascended the pulpit with a self-satisfied and hopeful air. The examiner, determined to “lower” him a Jlttle, plied him with a series of difficult interrogations. Hardly a single correct answer was given, and when his time had expired the studeut descended nnd returned to Iris place greatly crestfallen and humiliated. “Now,” said the victorious examiner when he caught the eye of his victim again, "if you had gone up ns you came, down, you would have come down as you went up!”
Farmers Feed Boston's Poor.
The benevolent generosity of the farmers enables the kind people of Boston to make a free distribution of fruit among that portion of the city population who would otherwise be denied even a taste of it during the season of ripening. The farmers as a class are not privileged to bestow their gifts in money, but when they bring forward their offerings it is done in good measure and with a contagious heartiness. The poor people of the North and South Ends nnd in the city outskirts have reason to return their gladdest thanks both to the farmers and those who interested themselves in their substantial pleasure. Acts of this character perform a truer service in bringing about the conditions of social fraternity than the repetition of any number of precepts, without the support of practical illustrations.—Boston Courier.
The Modern Mother
Has found thut her little ones are Improved more by the pleasant Syrup of Figs, when # In need of the laxative effect of a gentle remedy than by any other, and that'lt Is more acceptable to them. Children enjoy It auu It benellts them. The true remedy, Syrup of Figs, Is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only.
Let Home Stand First.
Lot home stand first. No matter how high your ambition, no matter how far your talents or your Influence may reach, before everything else build up a true home! Be not its slave; be Its minister. Let It not be enough that It is swept and gurnlshed, that its sliver Is brilliant, that Its food Is delicious, but feed the love In It. Then from Its walls shall come forth the true woman and the true man. What honor can be greater than to find such a home? What dignity higher than to reign Its honored mistress? What Is the ability to speak from a public platform, or the wisdom that can command a seat on the judge’s bench, compared to that which can insure and preside over a. true home? To be the guiding star, the ruling spirit In such a home Is higher than to rule an empire.
Bow’s This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. V. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Toledo, 0. We, tho underslguod, have known K. J. Cheney for the last 1 s years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and financlally able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Tolodo, O. Waldlng, Klnnan ii Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 78c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. The anabas scandens, or climbing perch, is a Brazilian fish that will cross great stretches of dry land or climb any tree that comes In Its way. Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp’s Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Large bottles, 50 cents and 81.00. Go at once; delays are dangerous. A sign in a restaurant reads: ’’Try our electric pie. It is full of currents.’^ To speculate in its original sense was to look out of the window. Like a touch of nature, which makes the world akin, the use of Glenn’s Sul-> phur Soap beautifies the complexion of young ladies in every part of the universe. Nobody works harder and gets less for It than the hypocrite.
One Hundred Doses One Dollar Is true only of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. You get most for your money and practice true economy when you buy Hood s Sarsaparilla Which purifies the blood and cures catarrh, etc. Hood’S PillS with*Hood'sSarsaparilla!
SPRAINS ■■ ■- PAINS*
A New One.
“They say Brown is married to a new woman." “Yes. I believe this is wis fifth."— Cleveland Leader.
False Witnesses.
There ere katvee now mad then net with who reprotent certain local hitters end poisonous stimuli ts Identical with or possess!n* properties skin te those of Hostottor’e Stomach Bitters. These scamps only succeed la foisting their trashy compounds npea people unacquainted with the gennlne article, which la si much their apposite as day la to night. Ask sud take no substitute for the grand remedy for malaria, dyspepala, constipation, rheumatism and kidney trouble. Sharks grow a new row of teeth for every year of their age until they reach maturity. The Jaws of a fullgrown specimen can be extended about eighteen Inches. Buckingham’s Dye for the Whiskers la the beet, handiest, safeat, surest, cleanest, most economical and satisfactory dye ever invented. It Is the gentlemen's favorite. It disgusts us to see others doing the foolish things we do.—L. A. W. Bulletin. My doctor said I would die, but Plso's Cure for Conaumption cured me.—Amos Kelner, Cherry Valley, 111., Nov. 23, ’OO. Some floating waps turn fallow and r*ncl(l. Dobbins’ FI noting an rax Soap does neither. The Borax la It blaaches It with ago, sud ths odor is dsUchttui Try It onoe. use It alow*. Order s trial Ist si your grooor. Insist on red wrapper*.
Celebrating in 1897 its sevcnty-h'rxt birtnTub Comfanion often its readen many vlf Hk exceptionally brilliant ieatures. The two Mil hcmlapheres have been explored in search Jjy JSSlfe. XKc Youlhs I WKrW (ompanion | f >V T awJv In addition to the S 5 staff writers The f viSg Companion, Contributor* number fully 200 of Vs the most famous men and women of both His Mammi Lillian Nosoica, continents, including the most popular writers SfcwVo";™"" ot fl e‘ ion *° me o, „ ,he m ° st eminent W companion for 1»07. statesmen, scientists, travellers and musicians, yljf I for tbc Slbok family. | V f Tub Companion also announces for 1897, Four Absorbing Serials, W k t Adventure Stories on Land and Sea, Stories for Boys, Stories (or Girls, W cK Reporters Stones, Doctors Stories, Lawyers Stories, Stories for Every- ck W boay all profusely illustrated by popular artists. Six Double Holiday Uif Numbers. More than two thousand Articles of Miscellany Anecdote, it# Humor, Travel. Timsly Editorials, “Current Events,” "Current Topics’ - Vs and “Nature and Science" Departments every week, etc. W $ One of the most beautiful CALENDARS issued this year yb will be given to each Now Subscriber to The Companion, m \l/ It Is made up of Four Charming Picture* ia color, beautifully executed. \l# .1. It* else 1* io by 14 inch**. The •übl«ct* are delightfully attractive. Thia .'l-. 11/ Calendar U published exclusively by Tun Yotrra'a Comaanion and could not 11/ be (old in Art Store* for leu than Ona Dollar. .-I-. Subscription Price of The Companion $1.75 a Year. aj in a.i. u | >•* SrtMitSw* wfe* will <mt mt tklt «llp aad ••■« IS *« mu* ! hi/ Iff I 12-CO OF > with BOM* aad addr**» aad gl.tl wUI r*«*lv*: Iff w: : - vm hi/ 'I C&lsndsr j fill - “luiiur tar retata. \ off I. __ ■ ) Ally Ml*r*d wimair. fa. au*l «o*tl; gift «(1W kin* , 1 W \y ; > fr ee, j no. t*. \l/ Mv The Youth's Companion. 201 Columbus Boston, Mass. yjv
SW/A? ** y° ur own baby or your neighbor's YY that drove sweet sleep away? It's all tin-! necessary. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, sweet to the taste, mild but effective, stop sour stomach and colic in babies, and make papa's jjw lively, tone his intestines and purify his 4?CASCARETS Ln ?^ DY They perfume the breath and make things all right all forprfce. Adif™ ,0c *> 25c *> ot •Terumo mmidy oompany, ohioaoo oe New vow. CATHARTIC; t t t ritgtttttf ITT t r mi ntrt ttm mim t Ttt tit tt t i n , V A-head' of Pearline ? Not'a bit of it! That is out of the question. Probably not \ one of the many washing-powders IAX I that have been made to imitate , M, Pearline would claim to excel it M in any way. All they ask is to be A “the same as” or “as L /\i as ” Pearline. But they're V not even that. Pearline is today, just as it has been from the 1 ■ first, the best thing in the world for ever)' kind of washing and cleaning. Qnri /A Peddler* end some unscrupulous grocer* will tell you “ this is as good as" OCIIU or "the same as Pearline.” i IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled, rj 1 and if your grocer sends you something in place of Pea,line, be 11 JtfaCK honest —tttta it back 624 JAMES PYLE, New York. Economical, >a>. Cleanly, Jteiiamtlm TOmii.'TillrT n?°xl*raill ~ blfl < Simple. Available for Grain fifflß Kc 'lMmaa BEms* Elevators, Creameries, Cider Mills, jgal Printing onU'es, Grinding Mills, Ventilating Pans. Dynamos,LatmBKM " ■ 1 drle8 ' Sl “'>Tl Factories, Foundries, Vfral Machine shops, etc. Will run with WSSk PrKWwr&ttfflf i-ll natural gas, artlllelal gas, gasoline \IgJBL rT*nnl HMTTIffIF ¥i ll'tlßiflTli>~ ilt ln ffl or kerosene as fuel. Always ready uOTk IS/ ES3Mar” K Bj239 6 lor work; requires no attention. YjA. fig mMaSßgiß&y• bend for descriptive circular, and State your wants. WHEN YOU WANT TO LOOK 1 ON THE BRIGHT SIDE OF THINGS, USE SAPOLIO
sfa A g% Will par for a 6-LINE adrertlMmeni IP four weeks in 100 hl(h (rad* Illinois mill newspaper*—loo,ooo circulation per week 4 I 111 guaranteed. Send for catalogue. Ktanlif IW Oard-llnlon, 988.JeffersonBt,Chloaao.
St. Jacobs Oil the foil. Use it and promptly feel the cure. That’* all, but that is something sure.
To California in 72 Hours.
The California Limited, via Santa F«| Route, leaves Chicago 6 p. m., Wednesday* and Saturdays, reaching Loe An. Celts tn 72 hours and San Diego In 79 hours. Returns Mondays and Thursdays. Connecting train for San Francisco via Mojave. Through yestlbuled equipment of superb Pullman palace sleepers, buffet smoking car and dining car. Most luxurious service via any line. Dally California express, carrying both palace and tourist sleepers, leaves Chicago 10:26 p. m. For descriptive literature address G* T. Nicholson, G. P. A., A. T, Sc S. F. By, Chicago. Agitation Is the marshaling of the, conscience ot a nation to mould its laws.
Lane’s Family Medicine
Moves the bowels each day. In or. der to be healthy this is necessary* Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 23 and 60c, Tinware was first made in this country in 1770. Mr*. Wln-low’* Boots!** Srmnv tor OhlMrm* teething: eorten* tb* gum*. nancM laflxmmatloa, kll*;* pain, cur** wind 00U0. M o*at* • bottle.
C»N. C. No. 61-90 when whiting to adve rttskrb tv please say you saw tbs sdiarttssssa* la tlda paper.
