Democratic Sentinel, Volume 22, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 December 1898 — Page 4
fifeffuvratu SAI bfiUAY, DECEMBER 3. 1898 S-r»terea<i‘ the poskffflc at Renseelaer. Ind as eecoad-cl aae matter.)
Lou’svill-s Dispatch (dem.): If we should write a ton of copy on the sul ject of trusts we could not say as much as the last sentence of the following clipping says, viz: “Loudon, Nov. 22. —The Birmingham Po q t understands negot ; ations have beer be** gun betwe n certain prominent houses in London and New Y irk for the format! m of a colossal trust for the purpose of operating financially and commercially ’n Cuba and the Philippines Everything de" pen upon the amount of support obtainable from the Uni" ted Slates government.” H re it all is in a sent nee. All trusts at last dep nd ‘upon the amount of support obtain" able from the United stat s government.” In this beauti" ful and child-like sentence we see the reason for the life and profit of all the trusts, b ’ginning at the Mother Eve of the trust Eden (th« gold trust of 1873) end winding up with the latest ‘htn egg,’ or chittling trust of 1898. All, each and si.igly, depend on the ‘amount of support obtainable from the United States government.’— This isjthe breath of their life an 1 the cause of their being. The United States government ,says: ‘L t there be*another t.ust.’ and, 10l the old parent moth lays anew egg from her endless e g I ag, an I behol i a new trust is hatched, but it is attached io the old g Id trust mother at o' e end and the sust; ining, life-giving United “tates c± America cord at the ther, and so the daily press immediate t y announces is birth and pre licts for it a brill.ant and prosperous future. A pretty bit oi dainty work for the fingers is tin making of one’s own monogram. This requires a little patience and ingenuity, To make a monogram you must first print your initials non a piece of paper separateiy- Print them rather large and "ut out carefully, so that each letter is perfect. Lay the letters, two orl .ree, u- as many as you have in your initials, upon a piper, a d ca r efully intertwine them until ou have secured a pretty combination. Now paste upon a piece of paper and mark cp re fully around the outside. Remove the letters and you have now a perf® :tly d"a wn in mogram which you can coi y upon your table linen or clothing.
REFLECTED HER PROFESSION.
Her Dress and Hair Betrayed that Bbr Was a Schoolma'am. "How unconsciously men and womeß take on the atmosphere of their surroundings and avocations,” remarked a man recently to a New York Advertiser reporter. “I can recall an illustration of that fact in an experience I had eorne years ago. I had been so long accustomed to the association of women Behooi teachers that I am rarely mistaken when I come Yn contact with one. A prinlneut woman teacher from a nortki era city was expected at an educations meeting. I had never seen her, but received a telegram asking me to meet ber at the train. I was sure I would be able to identify her. I went through the train, which was crowded with pa» sengena I looked around and soon found the teacher. She was perfectly jUntonlahed when I came up and saidi "Lb thia ICtos Blank?” “ 'Yes, that Is my namy she replied, *btrt how did y<«i know me?’ *1 did Dot explain, but it was easy enough. At first glance I saw her hair was short, that she wore eye-glasses and had on a plain-looking sort of gray cioth dress. Any doubts I might have had were Boon relieved as I noticed hangtag from her watch fob a amall globe, bring a miniature of the earth. Another earmark was a small hand satchel that snapped loudly when she ctoeed It I knew I could not be mistaken, and results showed I correctly the profession of that wom-
Salary of the World’s Rulers.
The President at the United Btetee n salary of $50,000 and a itouaai the Emperor of Auetri* and King Of Hungary gets $3 876,000, beeldee •taral palaoes; the King of Italy gets $2,868,000; the King of Prussia gets $8,852,770, hut nothing as Emperor of Germany; the Czar >aa afi income of 112,000,000, out of whldh he supports the grand dukes and the court; the King of Spain gete $1,400,000; the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, $2,176,000; Che President of France gets $120,000, and a like eum for entertainments; the President of Mexico goto $50,008; the Emperor of Japan gets $3,000,060; and jjo one knows what the Emperor of China gets. The King of Greeee gets $200,000, and the President of the Swim Confederation has a salary of $3,000. This last; named ruler is the only on» grho dees not receive the use of a txmye
TBebaji mummies have been foun< Which give proof that, fn the days of the Pharaohs, there were dentists who Ailed decayed teeth with go.'d.
BEAUTIFUL SEA SHELLS.
Every one adm’i-pp thu ni . Since coming south 1 have receive numerous inquiries from northern people for sea shells, aud now 1 .un pre ared to anew r ves, 1 can send you shel'Sf for 1 ha,e made quite h collection of lovely s el>, both from our own const, and the c-ral reefs, and som;> beautiful o es from the West Ind'a islands, I. . will mail a dozen or more differ n’t kinds, no two alike, to any one who sends a stamp forpostage.
MRS.F. A. WARNER,
Jours,
Jacksonville, Fla
LIVE TOPICS OF TO-DAY.
The French National Library has 72.000 books on the French revolution. A Liverpool glass manufacturer baa a chimney at his factory 160 feet high built entirely of glass bricks. From Bologna and Berne, as well as from fictitious universities In the Unit-ed-States, fraudulent medical degrees are being issued. Capt. Slocum of Boston, with his thlr-teen-ton sloop Spray, has reached Newcastle, New South Wales, on bls solitary sail around the world. Food is served In one of the London restaurants on electrically heated plates so that the guests can eat leisurely and still have the viands continue warm until the close of the meal. A Colorado genius claims that be has found a way to telegraph without wires from one mountain top to another In an east and west direction, using atmospheric strata which are already electrltied as his conductor. The apparatus employed has not been publicly described, but the Inventor is said to be experimenting In Colorado and Utah, and he says he has transmitted messages by his method over a distance of eighty miles. The case of Mr. Newcomb and others whose bands have been damaged by continuous exposure to “X" rays recalls that the World has several times suggested the Intimate connection between these rays and heat. If accepted theories are correct the only difference is one of vibration, and further experiment will probably show that X rays In excess have to a limited extent the same disorganizing effeht on animal tissue that is produced by excessive heat.— New York World. The most highly paid ruler is the Emperor of Russia, who receives, says the Solden Penny, the nice little salary of £2,200,000 per annum. The Sultan of Turkey get* £1400,000 a year; the Emperor of Austria manages with £912,500, while Emperor William only receives £730,000 a year. Lower still is the King of Italy with £585,000, while Queen Victoria has exactly the same Income, which is unfair, seeing how much greater her empire la. The President of the French Republic gets £488,000, but the King of the Belgians can only boast of £126,000.
Never Saw a Railroad Train.
In this age of progress and Invention and rapid travel and all that sort of thing, there are not many people in the United States who have lived fer half a century within a few miles of a metropolitan city and not ridden on a railroad or street car. Mrs. Nancy Rowland, of Lone Jack, Mo., Is one of them. She is 64 years old and has lived far sixty years within thirty-five, miles ot Kansas City and was never In a city until she came tn town this morning. She came from Lee’s Summit ever ths Missouri Pacific Railroad, and it Wat the first time she had ever been In a railroad car. She never saw a streel ear until this morning, when she rods up town on one from the Union depot Mrs. Rowland’s lack of womanly curiosity is not the only remarkable thing about her. She is the mother of eleven children, and all of them are alive and In good health. The eldest is 48 and the youngest 18 years old. She has two grandchildren, and there Is not a sickly one among them. Mrs. Rowland was never sick a day In her life and never took a dese of medicine until three years age, when she had a slight attack of pneumonia. She has never drunk coffee, has never seen a play or a circus, was never to a dance, never saw a woman In bloomers and was never out of Jackson County since she was 14 years o?d until to-day, when she took a train at 1 o’clock to visit her married daughter, who lives In Oklahoma.— Kansas City Star.
The Usefulness of a Jest.
He stood upon the platform of his ear, serene and smiling, when every cardriw er and truckman on West street was swearing and curaing. The jam was tremendous and the street was packed frven curb to curb. Yet whenever he spoke it was with some good-natured jest, and the truck drivers turned out of his way and let car No. 78 go by. Ho hailed them all with merry badinage, and the surliest of them grinned from ear to ear and gave him back all that be sent. “It’s easy,” he said to mo confidentially. "When once you get a man to gntUe he’ll do anything you want him to 00. Did you see that surly chap driving the beer wagon? I kept chaffing him until I got him to laughing, and when a man once lets a smile chase over Mo face he’s a goner. I tell you, my friend, that even down here in West street good-nature will go further in getting your own way than all the yelling and cursing.” And the philosophical oar driver whipped up his horses and told the charioteer of the ice wagon ta front that no man could stop things up as he did unless he were from Cork. The ice wagoa turned aside, and the iceman grianod •nd said that he wan from Llmertcta-* New York Herald.
Moving Sidewalk.
Authorities of Paris have under omk rideratlon a proposition for a ata of electric railway from the base to the top of Montmartre (a hill In the Qty of Paris), which b to be quite similar to the moving sidewalk which was exhibited at the World’s Fair. The speed of one of the platforms is to be three kilometers per hour, and that of the other, which contains the seats, is to be six kilometers per hour; it Is capable of seating 6,000 passengers kt one time on 840 platforms, each of which has two double-reduction motors of 'fifteen horse-power; the maximum power r» (ufand is said to be 180 horse-power.
An English City’s Industries.
Birmingham turns out every week, among other articles, 14,000,000 pens, 8,000 bedsteads, TO,OOO guns, 80,000,00$ out nails, 100,000,000 buttons, 1,000 saddles, SJXMkOOO capper er bronae cals* snd VkOOO pairs es spectacles.
Moonshine Whisky in New York.
The other day i* ths city of New York revenue ofleers raided a cellar on Blvington street, where illicit whisky was being made, and seised nearly a dozen barrels of mash and 80 gallons of the contraband liquid. They were led to the raid by the fact that whisky was selling for five cents a glass in a large number es places on the east side, and suspecting crookedness they set a watch and readily located the HiloIt distillery. The capacity of the place wm three gallons an hour and the product was sold to saloonkeepers si the rate of 26 cents a gallon. In v a king of the affair a revenue MWeer i<i that there are many such places Id ew York and Brooklyn and that it la 'er to carry an such opemtl«a« taw out in the country.
“For Headache I don't believe there ever was so good a pill as Ayer’s. I have been a victim of terrible headaches, and never . found anything tp relieve me so quickly as AYER'S PILLS" C. L. NEWMAN. Dug Spur, Va, FARMS i<OR SALE. We have for sale several tracts 'f land varyihg in size from 40 acres to 280 acres, which will be s Id at prices to suit the t ; mes. Only a small cash payment is required, balance on easy payments at 6 per cent, interest. Prospective buyers will find it to their advantage t > call and see us. Hollingsworth Hopkins, Rensselaer. In Every Thursday the Year Round. In more than half a million homes The Youth’s Companicn comes every week, the welcome guest of youn and oldread with equal interest by every member of the household. The beet of fiction, pjetry, sketches of travel, instruct ve articles, comment on current events an . selected miscellany and anecdotes fill its columns from week to week and from year to year. The publishers promise th..t the v lume foi 1899 will surpass 11 former ones, tn variety, interest and value. Amongthetwol ni’dieddistinguished contributors already engaged are Hon. John D. Long, Secretary of the Navy, Edward Everett Hale Henry M. Stanley, arah ' me Jewett, W D Howela, Poultney Bigelow, Herbert E Hmnbltn, Hon Ca 1 Schurz. Rt Hon James Bryce, John Burroughs, Robert Barr, Thomas Nelson Page, Bret Harte, William Black, Alfred Austin, Andrew Lang >md Pr William A Hamm nd. All subscribers to the 1899 volume will receive The Companion’s new Calendar, exquisitely colored, with a boner of stamped gold The paper will be given free also from the time subscription is received until January 1.1899, then a, full year to J inuary 3, 1900 A handsome iltoctr ited announcemen and sample copies will be sent free to any one addressing The Youth’s Companion, 211 Columbus A v e-> Boston, Mass.
Beating the Foreigner*. A few years ago most ot the maslolins, guitars, harps and other similar nstruinents sold iu this country were -manufactured abroad by hand. One factory in Chicago last year turned out 12,000 banjos, as many or more guitars, and 7,000 mandolins. The same concern also makes harps, and makes them with many mechanical improvements over the old style of imported instruments. They are said to excW greatly the foreign Instruments in ew wry respect.
Idin cf tag d Ditch Mta. In the matter of the petition of Robert Michaels' et al. Notice is hereby given that a petition has been filed with the Auditor of Jasper County, State of Indiana, and viewers h .ve been appointed who have viewed and reporied said v<ew which is on file in iny offiee. The hearing of said petition upon 'ts merits will be ho-rd befor* he Board of < ommissioners of Jaiper County, State of Indiana, on Thur <1 «y, the Bth day of December, 1898, the same being the Fourth day ot their Decembe term, 1898. The prayer of said petition is th it a ditch be constructed on the following rome, to-wit: Beginning 20 feet South and 100 feel Eai-t of the northeast corner of the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of -lection twenty five [2s] township twe ty-nine [29] north, range seven [7] wes', in Jasper county, Indiana and running thence east a org the south side of thi pubric highw y e distance of 1550 feet, theuce north 4 5 degrees east 450 feet theme noith< a iterly along bn old ditch 720 feet to the w st corporation line of the Citv of Rensi elaer, being d-o thrwest line of Benjamin and Magee’s Addition to Rensselaer, where it terminates. T is proposed work will a ect the land of the following persons: Robert Michaels, Peter Hordeman D»vid B. Nowels, ChaiL-t Grant, Garland G ant, and Trustee of Maiion townshiv, Jasper County, Indiana. HENRY B MURRAY. Auditor Jasper County November 12—19 1898.
Sb of Bearing of Poioo. n the matter of the Petition of Robert F. Dobbins < t Notice is hereby given th »t p. petition has been filed with the Auditor of Jasper County, State of In' iana, and viewers have been appointed who have, viewed and reported said view which is on file in my office. The bearing of said petition upon its merits will be reheard befor the Board of Commissioners or Jasper county, State of Indiana, on Thursday, the Eighth day of December, 1898, the same being the Fourth day oi their December Term, 1898. The prayer of said petition is that a main ditch be constructed on the f lowing route, to-wit : Beginning at a point 70 rods east of the southwest corner of section Ten (10) township twenty-seven <27) north, ~ango six [6] west, in White county, Indiana, and running thence in a general north and northwesterly direction to a point 924 feet south, 20 degrees east of the quarter corner between sections twenty [2O) and twenty nine (29) north, range six [6) west, where it terminates in what is known as the “Little State Ditch” Also a branch of said main ditch, be 1 ginning at a point 50 rods north of the southeast corner of section ten (10], township twenty-seven [27) north,,jange six (6) west, in white county, Indian a and running thence in a general northwesterly direction to a point 4440 feet down stream from the source of said main ditch, terminating in s id main ditch.
This proposed work will affect the lands of the following persons— Nicholas Zimmer, John Zimmer, Maguie Zimmer, Margaret Zimmer, Mary Zimmer, Jacob Zimmer, Emma Zimmer, Catherine Miller, Anna Johnson Henry B. Harris, Franklin Duv 1), Gamaliel Garrison, Marena J. Blake, and Trustee es Jordan township, Jasper county, Indiana, Robert F. Dobbins Farnum R Curtis, George Vincent, Nason Coulthuist, Louis Sharkey, Osborn Ashley, Jacob E Brown, Andrew Picks, John Jordan, Trustee of Carpenter
township, Jasper county, Indiana, Trustee of Princeton township, white county, Indiana, Charles N English, John W Powell, Reuben R Petitt, unknown heirs •f Reuben R Petitt, Nicholas Wagoner, Job Banes, Edward Culp, Mary K Vincent, Martha Miller, John H Hicks, Minnie Hicks, Frank Foltz, Jaeob Wagoner, John Powell, Robert Miller, John Wagoner, Sarah Dickenson, George R Dickenson Sarah M Bunnell. A H Hop> kins, Martha Rousch, Jacob Finkelmyer John Kellner, Valentine Dziabus, Benj,’ Hart Henry Shide, Philip Wagoner, George E May, Bernard Steine, Adam Wagoner’s heirs, Albert Bchpib t, Joseph Nissius, Albert May, Charles Bflco ro HENRY F. MURRAY, Auditor Jasper County November 12— J 9 1898
feiaM, lifawfa st Renssdaer Time-Table " In effect November 28th, 1897. uOUIH BOUND. No 5- Lou sville tail, Daily 1065 am • 33 -IndianapolisMail, 1 45pa. N j 39—Milk ae< omm., Daily, 613 pn No 3—Louisville Exp ress Daily 1112 No 45—Local freight, 2 40 NORTH BOUND] No 4 Mail, 4 30 a m Mo 40—Milk accom.. Daily, 731 ” so 32—Fast Mail, 955 “ xNo 30-Cin.to Chicago Vestibule,6 32 p m No 6 —Mail and Express, Daily. 327 * •No 38— 2 57 p m No 74 752 * No 46 9 30 a m • Daily except Sunday x Sunday only No 74 carrier passengers between Monon and Lowell Hammond has been made a regular atop for No 30 W. H. BEAM, Agent.
The Monon’s New Station in Chicago. All Monon Route trains now stop at the 47th Street Station, Chicago. Tickets will be so d and baggage checked to that point. Pa sengers alignting a t that station can take the 47th Street Electric Line and reach any part of the great southerp portion of Chicago within a few nJnutes’ ride. The Union Stock Yards is rea .hed in s-'ve minutes. /Tickets may be parch used and baggage shecked at 47tb Street Station. Through Sleeper ro "VV ashington and Balttmori The new Monon thiough sleep -i between Chicago and Was' ingtoi ind Baltimore has oecome sr pop ular that it is oiten n ceseary t< put on an extra. Requisitionsfo; berths should be made at least a day in advance. It is attached to fain No. 31 which leaves Monor at 5;12 a m. and arrives at Washington at 6.47 a. m. and Baltimore 7‘55 the following morning. W. H. Beam, Agent. hiir-cli JL>ivc 'tory. PRESBYTERIAN. Sabbath School, 9-30 a. m. Public Worship, 10:45 a. xn. Junior Endeavor, 3:00 p m Y. P. S. G. E., 6:30 p m.‘ Public Worship, 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m'. METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Sabbath School 9:30 a. m Public Worship, 10:45 a. m. Class.Meetiag, 11:45 a.m. -pworth League, Junior, 2:30 p. in. Epworth League, Seni r. 6:30 p. m Public Worshi 7:30 p. m. i-l worth League, Tuesday, 7:80 p. m, I’niyer Meeting, Ti r av. 7:30 p. m CHRISTIAN. ■ l ie Schoo), 9:30 a: m I inOioWorship, U:lsa, m luvior Endeavor, 2:30 p w » P. S. O. E., 6.30 p. m ’nblic Worship, 7,30 p m nyer Meeting, Thursday. 7:30 p m.
When dandruff appears U is ttsu* ally regarded as an annoyance, R should be regarded as a disease. Rs presence indicates an unhealthy condition of the scalp, sooh'ch, if neglected, leads to baldness. Dandruff should be cured at once. The most effective means for the cure is found in AYER'S HAIR VIGOR. It promotes the growth, of the hair, restores it when gray or faded to its original color, and keeps the scalp clean and healthy. "For more than eight years I wag greatly troubled with dandruff, and though a young man, my hair was fast turning gray and failingout. Baldness seemed f 1 inevitable until I began to -Svftr- ÜBC H flyers The dandruff haa been entirely removed and my hair is 11 ow smooth IM"**"" and fflossy and fast roBW!’ gainvg it.; original color.** —L- T. VALLE, Allenton, WElbtf' * Mo.
Judge Healy’s is the place for shoes—Gents', Ladies’ and Child* reii’s. Don’t target it. We wish to .nionn the public that we aie better than ever preparea to gnud their wheat corn and leetl we Uo a gen eita custom business, take wheat on deposit, grind iye flour and buckwheat iu se isun and pay Lhe highest market price tor good wheat JBTOKEK A DIY MUjEING Cc We are prepared to do ah kinds »f plain and ornamental ireseopainting in oil or water. We will lake your old paper off aiij make >our room clea.i ami healthy (yuu ..now paper is not heaitfly) as heap as you can put on good pa-» t ier. It you want your furniture -enewed, floor painted, or colors compounded, hard or soft wax tins ish, call on VV . J. Miller, House, oign and Decorative Painter.— studio in old band hall over posi office. ts.
The finest line of box, calf and winter tan shoes for ladies and gents, also the best stock of boots ever brought to this city, at Judge Jdaley’s, tne “fine ould Irish gin> utiuin/ who will take great plea* surem ehowii g them to you. Dr. I. B.Washburn tests eyes by the latest methods. The best lenses put in any desired frames. It does not pay to ruin your eyes with imoroper and cheap lenses Satisfaction guar an toed whan pro sible,
■ Any intelligent, industrious per son looking for employment wo’d do well to cotreepond with the Parliament Publishing Company, about the Perspectoscope, a de* scription of whidh will be found in th s issue of the paper. The in-» strument was invented by a mema ber of the company and they have undertaken to put it on the market./ The well known reputatior >f the firm is sufficient guarantee that there is no humoug about it. At any rate, it would cost only a postage stamp to find out all about it. Charles Vick, the Optician, says that his business is improving ngh, along His long experience, and the fact thathe keeps constantly on hand only first grade goods , explains his cloim
Do You Know What a PFBSPECTO COPE s? If not, read on a little further. Tiie Perspectoscope is a new thing in ; optics, just patent" ed, made to supplement ihe Camera, and more than doubles its valu-s and the value oi its products. It is the picture maker or the piature view- r, what the telescope is t j t b e astronomer. The planets, to the natural eye, are beautiful; but when the telescope is turned upon 1 hem they are gran Jus l so with the i‘erspectoscooe, it rev beauties in your pictu'es wl ich you had no idea existed. It gives the true perspective from a single picture, showing every part of the scene in the exact position and proportion that you saw them when you placed the camera-men just as tall, rivers as wide and mountains \ as distant, as if you were again Jooling at the objects themselves. .Any one having a camera loses half ihe oleasur of taking pictures if he does not have this instrument Everybody who buys a c mera now includes the Pirspe ctoscope as a part of the outfit. Everyone having a stock of r holographs w ll get in fin* itely more pleasure out of them, if they are seen thro’ the Perspectoscope, for, where;, s before a glance at a s picture wa.* sufficient, thro this wonderful instrument one will gaze and gaze. The price of the Perspecto** scope, cover ;d with M rocco, is two dollars; but we will send you an introduction simple for one doll r and t enty-five ents, if you will there'iter show il t other perr ons who a e int* erested in the camera or photographic pictures, and tell them where you p irch" ased it, and we will agree t refun the on eon return of the instrument, if it does not cone up to description. The Parliament Publishing c o 324 DearbornSt Cnicago
.aft 1 If you want to raise colts that will be the best for general purp e, c that will bring the highest price on the market, go to the Lafayette .mpor Ing Co., 33 North Third Street, and see thedr fine lot of German Couch 3ta lons, just Imported, or if you want to buy a stallion on terms tha? he will pay himself out, call on or address THE LAFAYETTE IMPORT; <G CO., . ,!,„„!!!! ,|n |L In<L
F, A WOOD! TO &QO, Real-Estate’ Agen ts Foresman, • na No. 76: 280 acres, finely improved, 5 miles south st of Rensselaer; a very desirabl > firm; will be sold on favorable terms at $45 per acre. 78: 160 acres, well improved,2 miles from town; long time. 84: 320 acres, unimproved, one mile from rb. town; 60 miles southeast of Chicago; price $lO per acre; will take S6OO in good trade. 86: 160 acres, all fenced, town site on the farm, large hay barn, store building, hay scales, etc.; on 3-1 by., a bargain a + S2O per acre. 89: 80 acres, unimproved, two and one-half miles from town; price $12.50 per acre; long time at 6 per cent, interest. 96: 40 acres, unimproved, two miles from town; $lO peracre on good terms. 98: 400 acaea, unimjmovedi 4 from two a
Farm Loanw Wo are prepared to make Lu tn oans at a lower late of inteus tian any other firm in Jasper county. The expenses will be as low the lowest Call and see ns. office in Odd Fellows’ Temple, nt a» the Court HouseWARREN & IRWIN. R. 8. Dwiggins has returned to Rensselae’ and wil’ make this ctiv his permanent home. He has opened a law office and will devote his entire time to the practice of his prof ession. He quit the practice about fifteen years ago on account of his health which is now ully recovered. See his ard in another column. MENICUS LENSES The particular advantage these Menicus lenses possess are that they give much more correct secondary axes and when adjusted to the eve yield more perfect vision through the periphery of the lens rendering the field of vision mu’jh larger and more distinct. 7he above is a scientific fact.— If you want a pair _f these lenses of ih* best material in the world, c rrectly adjusted to your vision, notify, or call on Dr. Chas. Vick. the Opt’cian, Rensselaer, Ind.
ElSt A strictly hloh-srade Family Sewing Machine, possessing all mofe n improvements, fiuoronieefl Eoool io me Best. Prices very reasonable. Obtain them from your local dealer and make comparisons. Mt Httiiig Go. 3^ eb ??^, ! v BFi.ViOERF. II U Wheeler&Wilson Sewing Machine. Rotary Motion and BUII W ever ns’Agentb wauled lor c.l 1L occupied territory."
J udge Haley exolusiveboot and shoe dealer, has purchased s large stock of fine shoes, latest styles, direct from the factory. . Call, examine goods, and learn p ices. Pioneer nwlimEfT) fHMa EV, Pcit « s: , lint < ORt-l, et< . nJ i qua rohaicrj at tuc xut v EST Jou. but the best stock slang yo & y is invited to call. T H E HIGHEST PRICES IAID FOE Good Cat t le, FJ.J. eiglesbach. PiODrietor _T- JjTooli 