Marshall County Independent, Volume 5, Number 41, Plymouth, Marshall County, 22 September 1899 — Page 7

PROGRESS. "With time, comes progress and advancement In all lines of successfullj conducted enterprises. Success comes to those only who have goods -with superior merit and a reputation. In the manufacture of laundry starch for the last quarter of a century J. C. Hubinger has been the peer of all others and today is placing on the market the finest laundry starch ever offered the public under our new and original method. Ask your grocer for a coupon book which will enable you to get the first two large 10 cent packages of his new starch. RED CROSS, TRADE MARK brand, also two of the children's Shakespeare pictures painted in twelve beautiful colors as natural as life, or the Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, all absolutely free. All grocers are authorized to give ten large packages of RED CROSS STARCH, with twenty of the Shakespeare pictures or ten of the Twentieth Century Girl Calendars, to the first five purchasers of the Endless Starch Chain liook. This is one of the grandest offers ever made to introduce the RED CROSS laundry starch, J. C. Hubinger's latest invention.

Ttie Hurinene. The Burmese will sacrifice any prospect of money-making to go to a feast. Thee are called pives, and often the entertainment is elaborate. I remember going to one in Upper Burrma. There was a good deal of dancing, but neither the host nor his guest danced; that would have been undignified. The dancers were paid, and tiiey twirled lazily or jumped excitedly as occasion required. Most of the time, however, was spent in chatter and smoking. Smoking is the only thing at which the Burmese are industrious. They start smoking at the early age of 3, and they emoke themselves into the next world. Girls smoke quite as assiduously as the men, and as the cigars are very bis many a pretty mouth is strained to accommodate a giant cheroot. Pall Mall Magazine. $2.50 SENT FREE. There never was a better opportunity for our readers to test free of charge a new and remarkable treatment for diseases of the stomach, liver, heart or nerves. Thousands testify to the skill of Dr. Miles, the celebrated Chicago specialist. Col. E. B. Spillman, 9th U. S. Regulars at San Diego, Gal., gays "Dr. Miles Special Personal Treatment has worked wonders in my son's case, when all else failed and after I had spent $2.000 ta the best medical talent. Dr. Miles is a wonderful specialist." Send for $2.50 worth of free treatment to Franklin Miles, M. D., L.L. B., Adams and State Sts.. Chicago. Please mention tbis paper. Two IM lis. From the Indianapolis Journal: "Wickwire "My cigar man tells me if I will stick my cigars in my vest pocket eo that the small end is out instead of the big one I'll lose less cigars." Yabsley "I got a better plan than that. Stick 'em in your coat pocket, so they don't show at all." Oklahoma. Its wonderful resources and superior advantages to homeseekers are set forth in a handsome illustrated pamphlet just issued by the Frisco Line Passenger Department. Copy will bo mailed free on application to Bryan Snyder. General Passenger Agent, St. Louis, Mo. Flwece You. The Maid "Oh, how I should love to see a real live train robber." Conductor "Sorry, miss, but the Pullman car porter has gone up in town somewhere." II int to Housekeepers. For a self-rising Buckwheat Flour you will find iii "Van's Buckwheat" the ideal of pcr-ctiou. Try it and be convinced. Nervous Oyster. Oysters are such nervous creatures that a sudden shock, such as a loud thunderclap, will kill a whole boatload. Iliisiness Chance. An etatl:shel loislne.- of t;rmd KapMa. Mich., wanu man - R iaVt; :' h.iixlMnz a Itjik Ii of It biisl-ne-a. A small Investment necessary tecure the pli on. No srheiim r singulation. l.n't anwwer tliU i)bm jtoii tihu limine!. A4il-e-.. giving reference., FOUNTAIN 15AT1I KUU'SII CO.,Oran.l lUpidi, Mich. Tommy "Who was the lady you spoke to?" Willie "That's the lady that lets my ma go out any afternoon but Thursdays and Sundays." Look at yourself! Is your face covered with pimples? Your skin rough and blotchy? It's your liver! Ayer's Fills are liver pills. They cure constipation, biliousness, and dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists. Want your noiist.tr he or beard a, Leautiful Tirnwn or rteh Mark ? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE USr H 4 t.l Kmii, N H. WILL KEEP YOU DRY. Don't be fool r J with a mackintosh or ruM f r co.it. If you wanta coat that will kef p you dry int'ien.irJest storm buy the ! ish lir.-inj Slicker. If not for sale In your town, wrl'e for catalogue to A. J. TOWER. H ston. Mas?. rAtlx'i) 1 Uli OALL M,r.. Hamilton t o.. III. I.aiir I'm ninit. Itiir A pl-A. Itlij Corn. 1)1; C over. Mild ( Untat. I.ivr KKKK. 1 . ftcre tC.uou.liUcrjl.SO'. yo acres UOO

L. lJ LJ A

ISLBiiE

THE JAILER'S BABY.

It was all th fault of the baby. So the jailer said, and so everybody believed. At the same time it was declared absurd that a baby should be allowed companionship with a murderer, and beyond all decency that bottles of laudanum should be left within its reach. Indeed, there was a great deal of talk, and much disappointment over the affair. Not sinco the lynching of the negro Tilly, two years tefore, had there been a hanging in the jail. And this time it was to have been conducted on the strictest principles of the hangman's code. So very proper were all the arrangements that the citizens spoke of the coming "execution" with quite the decorum which an eastern town would ue to discuss a pink tea. Small wonder then that everybody especially those holding tickets of admissionwas outraged. In fact, so much was said that the jailer resigned and lie and his wife with the baby, who had done all the mischief moved to another town. The jailer's wife declar- ! ed that his nerves seemed dreadfully upset about the whole thing and she was glad he had given up the "jail business." Farming was nicer work anyhow, she allowed, and the baby seemed to thrive better. As for the baby himself, he told me in strict conGdence just how it happened. The prisoner had never made the slightest effort to escape. From the time sentence was pronounced he seemed to begin to die. He would sit for hours without moving a muscle would neither eat nor drink. A horrid sort of stupor possessed him, from which the kind-hearted jailer was powerless to rouse him, until one day he thought of hiß baby, Ted, the only bit of sunlight in the gloomy house of bondage. The lovely child blossomed like a Sharon rose in this desert of sin and death, and the very sight of him might, o the jailer thought, bring peace and healing. So one day the baby was brought to the death-watched cell. His tousled, yellow head peered curiously in, and his small voice had a ring of pity in it us he said: "Dark, poor man." And the prisoner came to the grating and stretched out eager handrj, clasping the tiny fingers rested trustfully in his. And nobody disturbed them, for the "poor man" was crying, and so they were not afraid. The baby came again, and often, and they noticed that the prisoner would always eat what he brought; a bit of candy or a dirty lump of sugar was his daily offering, and it was never rejected. One day the jailer came, too, and they both watched the boy. He was playing horse with a piece of pine THE MAN SEIZED IT. board. The prisoner glanced at It and said, grimly: "Won't they need that in the yard?" The jailer could not answer, but kept his gaze on the baby, who had distracted the attention of the guard in the corridor. The prisoner grasped the door with both gaunt hands, and, putting his ashen lips as near the jailer's ears as the bars would allow, said, sullenly: "Have you any idea of how you are going to die?" The jailer was alarmed and distressed. He had hoped to lead the prisoner to forget his impending doom, if only for a respite of an hour, but this question showed him how poorly he was succeeding. He pretended not to hear, and made a move as if to go, but the child ran to him and, putting the stick through the bars, lisped: "See, horsy?" A smile distorted his face as the man took the piece of wood, then let it drop with a shudder, speaking rapidly and low: "Dying is bad enough, I suppose, under any circumstances, but none of us is heroic when forced to sit, day by day, for a certain hour. when we are to begin the process of 'rotting in cold obstruction.' God! can you think, man, how it feels? What devilish irony in the fate that I, who have always hated any public display" he ehoked and the baby laughed "should die in this way should per a t a i . m m iorm ine iragtay ui my nie Deroro a gaping crowd. I tell you, man, it must not shall not be!" His voice eank to a whisper, but his face was so livid with fear and threat that the jailer grasped his baby and moved away from the cell door. The man behind it laughed a dry, highpitched laugh. "I beg that you won't be frightened I am not going to do anything violent. except to myself, if possible. Do you hear, man? Except to myself. Listen to me. Every night you pray that baby may never be in such a devil-ridden hole as this cell. Ily -those prayers, and a you hope for mercy for him, I charge you have pity and listen to rne. I have thought of escape. I do not for death. What would life be to me now? I killed him for her. and now now I must die for him. lie it so, but not that way" and he pointed to the bit of wood the child had dropped Cod! not that way!" Then as the j.iil er moved a little nearer, the man stag gered to his feet and whispered hoarse Iy: "An old bottle, I could break it in pieces; or a rope but no, the guard would see me. Some drug anything, so It be strong enough, but bring it oh, let me have it before before they come to me!" Not a word had the jailer spoken during tMs plea of agony. Then the guard ramp up with the little one. "Tlui kid wants to kiss 'man,'" and he prisoner stretched hirf arms through the grating and stroked the curly head. The beautiful baby face lit up with an angel's smile. "Ily-by. man," he said, and his father carried Mm away, with no sign of response to

the wild look of entreaty In the eyes of

the doomed man. Next day the baby came again. This time he passed the guard, returning his challenge "Hullo, two-year-old!" by only a dignified stare. He toddled up to the prisoner's cell, and the first glimpse of the yellow head brought the wretched occupant forward. Hia attention was attracted to the small tin can the child carried "See there!" And the little one prcudly tapped it against the iron gratir.g. With feverish haste the man seized it, and with an effort wrenched off the cover. Inside was a small bottle containing a brown liquid, which he smelled, then sighed as with Infinite relief. A sec ond's hesitation, a glance upward. which wa3 more a despairing inquiry than a prayer, and he raised the phial to his lips. Then he crawled to the cot and crouched upon it, while the baby tip-toed to eee. Only the baby! No pitiless crowd of ghouls; no vultures watching the dying struggles of their prey; only the baby! And to the dying man's vision the aureole of hair and beckoning hands were those of a heavenly spirit. The phial dropped to the floor, theshaven head sank back, and the pris oner was free. Gertrude Gunning. HAS A CHAMBER OF HORRORS. How a Certalu New Orleans Man Entertains His Friends. "I have a chamber of horrors at my lodgings," said a man about town who takes great pride in his fantastically decorated apartments, "that has proved a tremendous hit with all callers. To be absolutely accurate, it is a cabinet rather than a chamber, and consists primarily of an old cupboard. The history of the collection it contains is somewhat peculiar, although it is not the history with which it is generally accredited. One day, when I was prowling around the place, I ran across a lot of old rubbish in the closet. It was such debris as old shoes, hats, broken crockery, and so on, and I was about to chuck it out, when I had an inspiration. I thereupon cleaned up the cupboard and arranged this plunder on the shelves, each article bearing a label. For instance, a broken hatchet was inscribed, 'Weapon used by Li Yen, the notorious Chinese highbinder, in the commission of eleven murders.' A rusty tin cup was ticketed as 'The cup from which Mrs. Deborah Simkins poisoned her husband and six children.' Visitors were cautioned to beware of the arsenic which still adhered to the bottom. One of my old razors, spoiled by chiropodistic exploits, figured as 'the celebrated suicide razor with which seven men had taken their lives.' Then followed a detailed list of the. victims. Several innocent sections of clothes line courted fame as various hangman's nooses, and a tin platter was put in the collection as the plate from which a certain notorious murderer devoured his last meal. One of my year-bcf ore-last's shoes was labeled Shoe worn by Jack the Ripper and left in the room of his last victim,' and a discarded four-in-hand did duty as 'a necktie taken from the corpse of Billy the Kid, the celebrated Apacho desperado.' These are merely a few samples. The outfit included a little of everything, from cigar stumps to tin cans, and occasionally I would pick up some picturesque addition on the street. Altogether the cabinet has proved the most attractive feature of my establishment, and I have noticed that it exerts an extraordinary fascifcition upon lady visitors. A number of little parties have been organized especially to see it, and everybody gees away delightfully thrilled. The schema is something I would recommend to anybody on the lookout for pleasing novelties." Nev Orleans Times-Democrat. Home for Familie of Itandit. Not actuated by remorse, but by j.wre philanthropy, Jim Jenkins, hunter of outlaws, has concluded to devote all his money to the maintenance of a home for the orphans and widows of men he has run to earth, in particular, and of criminals of the great Southwest in general. Jim Jenkins, now or Kansas, is now 65 years old and has spent forty years as a scout and hunter of bandits and train robbers. In his way he has made about $50,000. Among the distinguished outlaws he has ehased were Jesse James and his brother, Bob Ford, Bill Dalton and Bill Cook, while he was the leader of the band that caught Cherokee Bill in 1S95. In the Dalton raid in Coffeyville, Kas., Jenkins was shot eight times. Ho estimates his bag of bad men at about 150. The home, which is being built on a 5,000-acre farm owned by Jenkins, near Pryor Creek, I. T., is to cost $20,600. Buffalo Express. Snrfaee Observation. The remarks made by a country ma when he gets his first view of the ocean are not always remarkable for depth and appropriateness. A stroller on the beach of a Massachusetts seaport overheard the opening remarks of a farmer and his wife who had come from northern New Hampshire, a3 he subsequently learned from their conversation. "Well, I feel to be glad we've come, William," said the woman, with a eigh of pleasure, turning from the sea to face her spouse. "Would you ever have believed there was such a sight of water in one place in this world?" "No, I wouldn't," returned William. "And when you consider that we can't see any but just what's on top, It's all the more astonishin', Sarah, now ain't it?" Hoortilng Homo Industrie. "The International peace conference lias turned cut to be a good thing for this country." "How do you mfraii? "liook how mauy orders wc arc receiving fioin other countries for pew ships and guns." Ohio State Journal. CoittpreNaeJ Flour. An English process for compressing flour into blocks in molds. Is Faid to render it less liable to Mniospheric arid insect damages, without, impairing it3 bread-making qualities, and it requires less space. The spear points oT temptation maj be use das spur3 to urged us to God.

SOMETHING NEW.

A DtscoTry That Is Expected to Herolutioniz a Great Industry. Just as Americans begin to feel that they are upon the verge of developing superiority to Great Britain not only in shipbuilding, but in the steel trade, in which such a number of valuable foreign contracts have lately been taken by our manufacturers in the facs of British competition; and just as nature seems to encourage the American aspiration by showing that .the English coal mines will be exhausted within another fifty years, science seems to be coming to the aid of the Britisher and may be about to open new fields of competition in steel in which America must take part if she is to maintain her hard-earned prestige. The discovery has been demonstrated in London, and is being made much of by the British press, that the ability to produce perfect steel by casting it in a vacuum made by liquid hydrogen with a process that is not proposed to make public, has at last attained practicability. A company has been formed with a capital of 30,000 to experimentally develop the process, and if the plan is as successful as Prof. Dewar, the discoverer, presumes it will be, the air bubbles that now cause flaws and weakness in steel will be done away with, and a metal will result such as the world has never seen. To say that this means a possible revolution in the steel trade is to put it mildly, and if the English government can control the process, as it is now intimated may be the case, then American scientists and those of ether coun tries will be put upon .heir metttle to get eevn with the Britishers. Liquid hydrogen, which is the great agent now discovered, is described as a clear, colorless, transparent and very volatile fluid, no clearer than pure- water, but only one-fourteenth the density of water. In its lightness it is out of all proportion to any known liquid. A piece of paper when placed in it sinks. The difference between liquid hydrogen and liquid air is as great if not greater than the difference between the ordinary temperature and liquid air. Liquid hydrogen places temperature at within twenty degrees of absolute zero, which is represented by 491 degrees Fehrenheit and 273 degrees Centigrade below zero. The boiling point of liquid hydrogen is 252 degrees below zero, at which it is capable of enormous pressure. The discovery must affect every problem of physics and chemistry. Its possibilities are illimitable. It may revolutionize the methods that have beeen laboriously built up during the last three hundred years. Marine Journal. EXPOSITIONS AT PARIS. In view of the approacl ing French exposition, it is interesting o note tin enormous increase in the extent and success of the various expositions held at Paris, says the Scientific American. The first occurred in the year 179S. It brought together the modest number of 110 exhibitors and cost only $12,0C0. The buildings, of wood embelished, were erected on the Champs de Mars. Twenty-live medals wer a distributed. The second took place three years later (1801) in the court of the Iouvre. It represented 220 exhibitors ami quite eclipsed the first. A third exposition, opened the following year at the same place, collected 550 exhibitors. This was a veritable triumph. Napoleon I. inaugurated the fourth exposition, which was held on the Esplanade of the Invalides in 1S0G; there were 1,422 exhibitors. This figure was carried to 1.C22 at the fifth exposition in 1S19, in the palace of the Louvre. The sixth (1823) met with little success, as also the seventh in 1827 in the reign of Charles X., in the palace of the Ixmvre. As an offset, the eighth, opened on the Palace du Carrousel in the reign of Louis Philippe, gathered no less than 2,487 exhibitors. This success was accentuated in the exposition of 1S39, held on the ChampiElysees (3.CSI exhibitors), and in that of 1S44, also on the Champs-Elysees (3.9C0 exhibitors). The exposition of 1849, again on the Champs-Eij'sees, cost $300,000. The first universal exposition was that of 1855, which caused the construction of the Palace of Industry. The expense rose to $2.300,000. There were 23,954 exhibitors and more than 5,000,000 visitors. Then came the wellknown expositions of 1S67 (52,000 exhibitors), of 1878 (52,835 exhibitors, and 1G.C00.000 visitors), and 1S8D (55.4SS exhibitors and 32,500,000 visitors). Simple Life at the F.ljsee. The rule of life at the Elysee is as simple as circumstances will permit, except when obliged to give official entertainments, M. and Mme. Ixjubet take their luncheon at 12 and their dinner at 7 in a small dining-room, the furniture of which is as plain as the menu on the table, though now and then they have an intimate friend to join them at the former meal. M. Ivoubet, however, simple as are his tastes and frugal as is his fare, is fully alive to the importance of maintaining the dignity of his olfice; and it may be taken for granted that he will, when he returns to Paris from Rambouillet and Montelimar, between which places he will, if all goes well, spend his wellearned summer holiday, put himself into training for the severe social duties which the president of the republic will have to discharge during the exhibition year. A New Metal. Deadwood (S. Dak.) Spec. Chicago Record: A new metal has been discovered in the bottom of the Detroit and Deadwood Company's shaft in Two Hit, which thus far has puzzled the mining experts of thi3 city. Iu appearance it is white and resembles platinum. It is malleable and pcr.'cctly ind strut tible. All of the known a ,;d seem to have no r ffevt on it, although it answers the description of several well-known metals. It carries s.uue Eold, and there seems te bo large quantities of it. One doesn't get rid of bills by tearing them up, but they are dispoied of for t'ie time being. Ex.

OF VARIOUS SPEECHES.

Pico della Mirandola, a learned Italian of the fifteenth century, was eloquent in twenty-two languages, and M. Fulgence Fresnel was familiar with twenty. In the seventeenth century Nicholas Schmid, a German peasant, translated the Lord's prayer into as many languages as there are weeks in a year, and in the next century Sir William Jones could converse in twenty-eight different tongues. The fame of Elihu Burritt, the learned blacksmith, who died some twenty years ago, is still fresh in memory. Burritt mastered Latin, Greek and French while plying his hammer at the forge, and he made as light of translating Icelandic sagas as of shoeing a horse. There have been nhenomenal linguists in all ages, from the far-away days of Mithridates, king of Pontus, who could converse with his subjects in each of their twenty-five different tongues, and from the days of Cleopatra, who never used an interpreter in her relations with the world's ambassadors. Mnslc KilU a Horse. Muric caused the death of a beautiful 3-year-old filly at Florence, Ala., the other day. A farmer drove his valuable young mare into town, and as he was driving up the principal street a brass band suddenly struck up its blatant music. The mare had never heard any sound like that before and so startled was she that she dropped dead in the shafts of the trap. A veterinary surgeon who examined the carcass declared that the mare had died of heart failure, due to excitement, caused by the sound of the unaccustomed music of the brass band. Roanoke News. DIZZY SPELLS. Coloma, Wis., April 1!, ISO. The free sample of Zaegel's Swedish Essence of Life you so kindly sent nie in response to my letter arrived, and was prepared and used according to your directions. I am pleased to say the medicine acts admirably in my case. Since taking it my general health has wonderfully improved, and the dizzy feeling in my head is entirely gone, eiialdinir mo to think and act with a clear mind. MRS. C. ROCK. The great blood purifier Zaegel's Swedish Essence of Life is to be Two Week's Treatment Free. given away free to readers of this paper. This medicine cures Rheumatism; Stomach, Liver and Rowel Complaints, by removing dteoixe germ f nun the hkunl. Hundreds of letters like the above on file in our office are xroving this every day. A reward of Ö00 Dollars in (Sold will be given to anyone who can prove that they are not genu inc. A book telling all about its wonderful cures and a free sample, large enough to convince you of its merits will be mailed to all who write toM. R.ZAKGEL CO. V. O. Rox 8:51, Sheboygan, Wisconsin. A 2c. stamp .should K enclosed in your letter to pay the postage on this free sample ' Z&ECEL 5 ESSENCE! TOLD BY FIGURES. One of the oldest cannon in existence has just been fished out of the bottom of the Thames river near Twickenham. This archaic cannon is 2S inches in length and about 4V inches in diameter, being made of bars of iron strengthened with hoops of th2 same metal welded together. Compared with one of our modern "peacemakers," as they are ironically called, one of these old cannon is a mere child's toy. They were originally mounted on rude blocks of wood, fitting in a sort of socket. Their discharge was a very undecided feature in their operation, and the death-dealing articles fired at random from their mouths were round stones and rough globes of iron. SUFFERED 25 YEARS. In a recent letter to Dr. Hartman, Congressman Botkin says: "My Dear Doctor lit gives me pleasure to certify to the excellent curative qualities of your medicines Pe-ru-na Congressman Botkin, of Winfield, Kan. and Alan-a-lin. 1 have been alllicted more or less for a quarter of a century with catarrh of the stomach and constipation. A residence in Washington has increased these troubles. A few bottles of your medicine have given me almost complete relief, and I am sure that a continuation of them will effect a permanent cure. Pe-ru-na is surely a wonderful remedy for catarrhal affections." J. r. Botkin. TIip most common form of summer catarrh is catarrh of the stomach. This is generally known as dyspepsia. Congressman Botkin was a victim of this disease twenty-five years. Pe-ru-na cures these cases like magic. Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, O., for a free book. The microbes that cause chills and fever and malaria enter the system through mucous membranes made porous by catarrh. I'e-ru-na heals the mucous membranes and prevents the entrance of malarial rerms, thus preventing and curing uieso affections. The heathen worship an idol of etone but nothing short of an Idol of gold seems to satisfy civilized men.

Iii Ml

"X. "V "V k " ! ilia Srf L.'ll V -v

A CAPABLE mother must be a healthy mother. The experience of maternity should not be approach ed without careful physical preparation. ' Correct and practical counsel is what the expectant and wouldbe mother needs and this counsel she can secure without cost by

if OTHER" IHJGOD

and consulted a physician, but not become pregnant. Speinrr one of vour books. I

mv troubles and askinir for advice. You an-

swered my letter promptly and the directions faithfully, and rauch benefit that I cannot Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable pound enough. I now find pregnant and have begun its use again. I cannot praise it i. ciiougu. Mrs. Pr.RLEV Moui.ton, Cz Thetford, Yt., writes: "Dear Müs. Pinkham I think Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is an excellent medicine. I took several bottles of it before the birth of my baby and got along nicely. I had no after-pains and am now strong and enjoying good health. Baby is also fat and healthy." . Mrs. Chas. Gfreig. 304. South Monroe St., Balti more, Md., writes: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham Before tak ing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was unable to become pregnant: health is much improved, and and pride of our home." NO TWO FACES Are Alike Not w i t listund Injj lle Apparent Resemblance of Many. "Washington Star: "Physiologists tell us," said a New York lawyer to the writer recently, ' that no two faces are exactly alike, and I think they are correct, although we often hear of one person being the exact image of another. That this is largely a matter of imagination can be proved by investigation. I have in my office a clerk who is constantly mistaken for myself; several people say he resembles me so closely that I must he joking when I deny the relationship. In order to ascertain how much reason there was for these statements I took the fellow to a photographer's one day last week and we both had our pictures taken together, and I would defy any one to point out a single point of resemblance. My clerk, however, regards the matter as a good joke, and I half suspect he acknowledges relationship in a good many ca?es intentionally, so as to cause complications. I have shown the photograph to several people who have made the mistake, but it has no influence upon them whatever, and it is impossible to convince them against thr" will." DEWEY'S VICTORY. Dewey Will See IU Famous IS:itUe Kefousht at Chicago in October. The Battle of Manila, Wabash avenue and Hubbard court, Chicago, surpasses all previous and combined attempts at battle reproductions. Every visitor to Chicago should see this wonderful piece of art mechanism and reality. The night storm at sea, the night firing of the Spanish forts, the Ardois night signals, Manila Bay by moonlight, exploding mines, sunrise on victory, terrilie roar of the guns from tho American fleet, the entire battle Hec.-.-iheil hv men who fought behind the guns at Manila. This wonderful i exhibition is open every day, Sunday I included, from 9 o'clock in the morning until 10 o'clock at night. Above all, 1 do not miss Manila when you go to ' nu: i jjicau. Tall Women in i:nlanI. The Duchess of Portland is the tallest woman in England. She married the duke in 1SS3. She was then Miss j Dallas York?. The duke is the lord of 300.000 a year and owns half a dozen castUv, among them being the j incomparable 'Wolbeck, where Lady Peggy Primrose spent her honeymoon. The duchess devotes most of her time to the furtherance of temperance work. There are now published in Paris 2.5S5 periodicals, nearly 100 more than mere issued at the corresponding date last year. W. L. DOUGLAS S3&S3.50 SHOES Worth $4 to $G compared with other makes. Indorsed by over l.OOO.OOO wearer. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES 1IIEe.KMlK bf H. L. Dnuplat nur aad price taaipr4 aa button. Take no Mitwtitiito clnlmod to he a pood. Lar-ret lmtkcnt of and t-tiors In tlie world. Y our oViilorMiotiW keep tlipm If not- wc will hpu1 vou ati:ilron rrre't.t of tirlce. Mrtt I klud of leaiher. tire. r.nd width. ilulu ur cap loo. W. L DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass. BATTLEoFtV nntll A Wabash Ave., S. of Auditorium. Chicago, A wonderful reproduct n of the trrcatrst naval victory In Motory. iK'wry's voyage from Hons Konc at ros llio llllirir r-u. j ir'mi ni b iic in- . nrse typhoon at nl,'lit with new and Martllnp e:ec- I Irlcal effect. The American fleet enlacing the Rpanlidi batteries at the ontraiK-e of Manila Hay. Tha l'.ay of Manila hy moonlight. The wonderful llhtintr effect In Old Manila ami Cayl:e at nljint. Tropical ; fiinrlne. Th" discovery and complete destruction, of j the Spanish fleet oil Cavite. Opeafrotai) A.M.lolOr.M. BULBS D RECTFROM THEGROWER. Tlvnt inths, Tuli?". Croetis, Jonquils, Anemones. Kunmicuiiis.Ialiurns, OiladioU, Amaryllis, t'ychunon. I ri-O xias Oxalis, (Vmviillarins, Siir;cas, Azaleas.KlKKtoüoTulrons, i Clematis, Koses niul all kinds of inivcellaneous j Itiilha. Koots and riant. A copy et our nw tall c;it- i alogUO beutlre. Address l!ul.rbturh Hr ...V.a J d,. Is Seid. tit!- :i;lv t'oaipounded ef the It --t M -'ei ,a's. LÜKtS WtltHt ALL LLht rA LS. LJ Beat Oouuh fcyrvtp. Tastes tJood. Vec Vtlrt tlmtv. holt1 rT miisrvls'.

CANDY CATHARTIC.

ITS

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writing to Mrs. Pinkbam at Lynn. Mass. Mrs. Cora Gilsox, Yates, Manisteo Co., Mich., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham Two years ago I began having such dull, heavy, dragging pains in my back, menses were profuse and painful and was troubled with leucorrheta. I took patent medicines

received no benefit and could wrote to von tellinc vou v t I followed derived so praise Com myself but since I have used it my I have a big baby boy, the joy I'rrlmtorir AMriologj. A correspondent of the 1ir.don. Times, wr'ting from l'.u.-.hire, Persia, states that excavations at Su.a hao produced inscriptions and relics of a very interesting character. Su?a was probably "he most aneient and important city in the world's history, compared with whieh both Babylon and Nineveh were modern cities. The excavations, which are being conducted by French scientists, have already given us the names of eleven kings at Susa hitheito unknown to history. A new cuneiform inscription is now being deciphered. The data are supposed to belong to a period when Egyptian civilization was in its infancy. Some tine specimens of the Flint Age have been found. Susa. it is stated, was at one time the capital of the Chaldean kingdom. S15.00 PER WEEK. We vvi.l p::v a Hilary of l.Vxi ier wek ar.t expanse 1 r Jn:in with t nitro"! ic- nur l'uiiltrv i 'iTi,T''iit :.ml l.:c K Kit it '.lie .untry. Ki-r. rt-qi:;.r U. AtUlre-s ith vtucip. Acme Mts,'. Co., Kui ! Moiii'-f. Iowa. At Wardhury. Norway, the longest day lasts from May 21 to .Inly 22, without interruption. Blysclf Cnred, After Itope.it ol Fail'ires, 1 will !nfriM H l.ll.-t. cl t ..r..h:ti I.;iuiia:inm, Opium. ..m::h -t' m-t f:'i:m. !iue euro. ilr. !. 11. iUliIwin. I'.'. i .'V.'. hi'u', Iii. Too many people have a penchant for confessing their neighbor's sins. FITS rvrmsnent ir i i:rrd. V fits nrni Tonrnw .'el first day mm f lr. KM u-' itvt NtTe I.e.-U.rt-r. S"iwt tr I'KKII !Sv!.H t'"' lltl and tr"ti-e. La. V II. Ki.ist, Lti.,a-i Arc.'i fct., I biU.JcIHu, 1. The coal trust wiil no doubt prove to be a powerful cindcr-cate. All Inteitiii;il Tronhle l'reveiitetl. Ten ifiii w-r;ti 't j M-v'n:i"ii Kill' ti riuin'" In rf.n-tr I . : i ' s and Inwral expeti-e. 1"- t!iyn it ! of l'asi-art't caii'ly "-n 1:. i t I'm-it-!, n.-, ve . 50.. "Man proposes " but he usually needs a lot of encouraging. Fio's Cure for tVmumpilon is the only cough ineiliein used in luv house. 1). C Alt.rig.it. MiJUinbur,'. Pa.. "Dec. 11, "IG. The secret and siuves- of love 1 IU sincerity and t-irnplielür. Hall's Catarrh für Is a constitutional cure. Trice, 75c. Every deserter will get what Jonah had a whaling. When All KKe rat'. Try Yl-Kl. Drug "-tort's r mail J e'c.,CraforJsviilc,lnd. A noble failure is oftn better than ignoble success. Coe'tt Cough Iial-ain fsthcol.yMptid !"t. It Hl l.ti fik up cold q'H.'Vct ti.an wt!;in lie. 1: al a j i ciia'.de. Trvit. No true man ever has :ny use for a hypocrite. Mrs. Window Soitltlnir Symp. For crilWln-n teetriiiitf, mfteus the jr'"", reduce, ttr CtiiUuilon.iilUyuik.u.ci.rci wiuJcoilc 2-c a t'lttla. Life lies deeper than its leaves. ' WS" BÜOKWHEAT IMMiP Finest Flavor. x B! Instant risinQ Get a Pack3irc From Your Grocer. V j f 3f")C? , UIaIO I TO CALIFORNIA You will practice Rood economy lr writing C. S. CRANE, C. P. & T. A., St. Louie, for particulars. BIO Gsl Your Pcnslca PÖÖ DOUBLE QUICK Write CAPT. OTARRELL. Pension Afcent. 435 Nrw York Avenue. WASHINGTON. l. C 8fi! rlf7J Wanted f.rtn. hiiiarv. t C a mow f Im V.W iff L.C1 ftcxufnvs. Viifrr i'omh experience in cited. Y..l. UOl '.ri i U li o -t., Th'.U l aW. N. U. CHICAGO. NO. 39, 1890. vhcn Answering Advertisements liindlj Jlcntioa This Paper.

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