Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 39, Petersburg, Pike County, 8 February 1895 — Page 7
WAS IT A MIRAGE? What Was Tbought to be the Wrack of tha CUcora Sera by Tboownds of Chicago, ana with Moving People on the Deck— Toss heat to Uto Kttrae Foaud Nothtac hat a Plank Covered with Seagull*. Chicago, Feb. S.—Great excitement prevailed for hoars this afternoon and evening among the people along the Illinois shore of Lake Michigan from South Chicago to Whiting, Ind., oh , * account of a general circulation of the report that the hull of the steamer Chicora was floating ontside the ice fields between these ports, and that the forms of human beings could be discerned moving on the hull. The search so far conducted, while it has not led to the discovery of anything in the shape of wreckage or rafts with living persons on hoard, has not beep productive on account of darkness.' The report was believed by the Graham & Morton Transportation Co. officials, who made arrangements to bring tha frlthds of the Chicora's crew* from lien ton Harbor to this city by special train, but when the tugs returned without finding anything encouraging the order for the train was countermanded. '— The hope of seeing loved ones, which had died in the breasts of the relatives was born again, only to be crashed by the news of. the tags’ fruitless tripL Old lake men who have studied the Chicora disaster place no credence in the positive statements of reliable persons that they saw the hull of the steamer and human beings moving on jgjit, for the simple reason that since the ill-fated vessel left Milwaukee two weeks ago to-day, for Benton Harbor, with twenty-seven souls abyard, westerly winds have invariably prevailed. They would blow any part of the Chicora toward the Michigan shore, where the wreckage has, been found, and it is not possible, in their opinion, for the hull of the vessel to have drifted toward the western shore.
* However, the tugs Protection and Calumet, which were sent from this city to VVhiting to verify the reports, will resume the search this morning. The crews on the tugs say they spied in the gathering gloom which obscured their vision an object which looked like the hull of a vessel or a raft and that on their trip from Chicago they encountered hummocks of snow-laden ice with numerous gulls thereon, which might easily have been mistaken for part of a vessel occupied by human beings by the hundreds of excitpd persons who lined the lake Shore. The object which gave birth to the most intense excitement and cherished hope in three states was first spied off South Chicago at 10 o’clock yesterday morning. It appeared to be ten feet high and li>0 feet' long, and it was lying between large ice floes. It was floating south. The police were first informed, and they called on the lifesaving crew to get out the boat from Jackson park. An attempt to reach the supposed wreck in the life boat was frustrated by the pack ice which was wedged against the shore for-miles. The fire boat Chicago made a similar effort, but had to abandon it after fighting the ice for an hour. * At 1 o’clock the tugs Protection and Calumet were ordered-from the Chicago river to make the trip to Whiting. The Calumet remained at South Chicago, while the Protection crunched the ice for several miles beyond Whiting, which is twenty miles south of this city. At 9 o’clock the Protection returned and the captain reported that the only tangible thing that had been sighted was a plank covered with gulls and ducks. The coal supply of the tug was not sufficient^ to continue the search and its compass got out of order so that it had to whistle for help from the Caulmet, or the,search would have been coutinued in the dark for a little longer. The most remarkable thing in connection with the alleged discovery is that scores of marine men with glasses, and other people equally reliable under ordinary conditions, declare positively that they could see men moving on a raft or a vessel’s hull. The object was also seen by the people of Hammond, Ind., which is several miles south of Whiting. Newspaper bulletins in the city added to the popular excitement, everybody -hoping even against their cooler judgment that the report wras true, yet at the same time doubting that human beings could live for tyro weeks in the freezing weather which has prevailed. A relief train was sent on the Baltimore & Ohio railroad from South Chicago to Whiting at 4 o’clock and returned at 7:30. The people on board saw what they took to be the wreck lying stationary off Whiting, and it remained so until darkness shut the object from sight. BOLD WORK BY BljtRGLARS. Tfie New Orleans Office of the Standard Oil Company Robbed. v, New Orleans, Feb. -Le^One of the boldest robberies ever flerpetrated in this city occurred yesterday morning at 2 o’clock at the office of the Standard Oil Co., corner of Claiborne and Josephine streets. Three masked men held ud the watchman at the muzzle of a pistol, and, after binding him with ropes in a chair, almost totally demolished the safe m their efforts to open it. The robbers secured about $350 in silver.
THE ELBE DISASTER. A Body and Wreckage from the Ill-Fated Steamer. London, Feb. 4.—The skipper of the smack Delta, which arrived at Lowestoft yesterday, saw a small boat and a human body in dark clothes floating in the North sea about forty miles southeast of that port. Other skippers who came in yesterday say they passed doors, furniture, spars and boxes. Six life-belts and three lifeboat tanks have been picked up on the Suffolk coast. They body are undoubtedly frorr tlieill-fated steamship Elbe.
AGRICULTURAL HINTS, CONVICTS I^OR ROAD WORK. Jlir. Ruiilruon. a Ca.ycgm County T.. SopenrliiKr, Tellit Ills CxpwteMe. If there were a probability that the state or county authorities would appropriate funds sufficient to employ free labor in the construction of our common roads. I would strenuously oppose the employment of prison convicts on the work. I believe that true economy would be found in building up our highways through the intelligence and skill of honest industry. More work and tietter work would be secured and the expenditures would meet with a wider circulation in the community and would subserve more diversified interests. Hut it is concedcd^. that neither state nor county authority has reached, or is likely to reach, the advanced position where appropriations will be made adequate to the construction of roads by the of the free and honest citizen. If this be true, then it is equally obvious that the friends of “good roads” must depend on theusqftf such means in the furtherance oi their projects as may be offered. r Last year the employment of convicts on the common roads was entered upon in this county | Sp far as this section of the state is concerned the work was experi mentaL The legislature appropriated §15,000 to be spent in building roads within thirty miles of the three prisons of the state and the money was divided, each prison receiving $5,000; to this sum, by subsequent act of the legislature, the agent and warden were authorized to draw SL6G6.66 for guarding, sheltering and the care of the convict s. Out df that sum was paid the civil engineer and surveyor from the state engineer's office6 at Albany. The agent and warden, a friend of “good roads,” pushed the work vigorously and faithfully. During the few months left to him. he built and completed three miles of macadamized road, using broken stone and gravel | fox top dressing, which were thoroughly rolled by steam roller. He also prepared many miles of road" under the
direction of road commissioners ana has opened ditches and turnpiked three miles of road on the west side of -Owasco lake, and has constructed many sluice- | ways for the carrying' off of surface l water—one of the most essential things ( in the proper construction of roads. r 1 am informed by Mr. Stout that not an attempt was made by a convict to escape and that he found it necessary to employ but one guard for ten convicts. The threat to lock a man for the day in his celj and to keep him from his outdoor work was sufficient to secure discipline. ?y This evidence of Mr. Stout’s would seem to. negative the statement recently made by Superintendent Lathrop in an interview published in the New York papers, wherein he is reported as saving that it required at the^Danuemora prison two guards for each convict, and that $3,000 was expended from the road fund in securing two escaped convicts. TShe superintendent of state prisons does not agree with the legislature, nor does he agree with himself. Two years ago the legislature provided for the work/of 200 convicts on the roads; last year it extended the number to 600 convicts— and the superintendent made no official protest. In his report of 1894,' through one of his agents and wardens, he says: “Taking into consideration that the convicts worked only eight hours per day and that they, as. well as their keepers, were inexperienced in roadmaking, the above showing (of the roads made) is one that is entirely satisfactory. That a limited number of convicts ean be worked successfully at road building is now an established fact and that the road constructed is a first-class one is conceded by every one -'ivho has seen it.” The road here referred to is the road constructed at Dannemora prison in Clinton countv, which he denounces in his newspaper interview. Agent and Warden Stout could not have been advised of this change , of fronton 'the part of his superior, for, in a carefully considered letter, addressed to one of onr citizens and written within the last month, the agent and warden thus expresses himself: “I am thoroughly convinced that the scheme of building roads by convicts is a step in the right direction. I think we can build macadamized roads throughout - the country for from $SO0 to $1,000 a mile, and in my annual report to the superintendent of prisons this year, I shaJjfirecommend a larger appropriation fjrbuilding and repair- - ing roads. I find where I have worked that the farmers are becoming greatly interested and have rendered assistance in the way of donating stone and team work. 1 also believe that in the -future appropriations should be made and that it would be advisable for the districts in which the work is done to join the state forces and work their road tax in connection with work done by the state authorities.” I assume that the statement made by Agent and Warden Stout, that the macadamized road could be constructed for {J800 per mile by convict labor, intends to include only the cost of material, of teams, machinery and guards, and assumes that the labor^f the convicts cannot be charged to the expense account; otherwise it seems hardly possible that his estimate would be sufficient. If he is correct, then we would be compelled to admit that con* yiet road building is the cheapest attainable means for the making of good roads.—William P. Robinson, in Auburn (N. Y. ) Advertiser.
The farmer who makes plenty ol ten-ceni batter in summer and no twenty-five-eent butter In winter, will never lie‘much in love with the dairy business. It is the cow that does good business every day with ordinarily fair care, and ' not the cow that is made to perform wonders under pressure, that the farmer wants. j
RAILROAD \ECHOES. As KARLT as 1849 the Connecticut legislature passed a law abolishing grade crossings. | Forty thocsaxd tons of steel wire will be used in building the bridge across the Hudson river, at New York. The Southern railway will have a building on the grounds of the At* lanta exposition. The buildings will be used as a depot, and will hare space for exhibits by the railway company. Representative Doxovax has introduced a bill in the Michigan legislature to require railroad companies operating in that state to issue mileage books which shall be good on all roods in the state, end shall also be redeemable and interchangeable. At Plattsmouth. Neb., Judge Chapman has declared the transfer switch law, passed by the legislature twe years ago, unconstitutional, the principal reason being that it fails to properly amend and repeal tfce old law pertaining to transfer Switches. [' The first car load of cattle shipped on a railroad was from Elgin, 111., to Chicago, in 1S51. As there were then no stock yards or chutes, planks were laid from the car door to the ground and strips of board nailed across. The’' rate was three hundred per cent, in excess of the present rate between those points. __ MIND THESE WELL. Never lean with the back against anything that is cold. 5; i Never begin a journey until the breakfast has been eaten. Keep the back, especially between the shoulder blades, well covered; also ; the chest well protected. Ix sleeping in a cold room establish ; a habit df breathing through the nose, ! and never with the open mouth: After exercise of any kind never ride in an open carriage or near the window- of a car for a moment. It is ’ dangerous to health or even life. When hoarse speak as little as possible until the hoarseness is recovered from, else the voice may be permanently lost, or difficulties of the throat be produced. | “ Merely warm the back by the fire, and never continue keeping the back exposed to the heat after it has been comfortably warm; to do otherwise is i debilitating.—Philadelphia Times.
MEN OF MONEY. Lucien Baker, the new senator from Kansas, is 48 years old and is said to be j worth about $100,000. It is said that J. -Morrison Fuller, a young millionaire of Boston, and a j Harvard graduate, is an enthusiastic | anarchist. Joshua M. Sears has regained his position as the heaviest individual taxpayer of Boston. His tax is $48,019.93 on real estate assessed at $3,751,000. W. A. Clarke, the Montana mine owner, is building a million-dollar palace in New York. His fortune is estimated at from $20,000,000 to $40,000,000. Thirty years ago Mr. Clarke arrived in Montana with a pick on his shoulder._ JEWELRY NOVELTIES. Cut-glass handles for umbrellas are new. Those of Rookwood pottery, too, are much’carried. Bangles arc again to the front, and are in the form of stones set on a mere wire of gold, which look as though they were set in the arm itself. A novelty for a fob is a small gold dictionary containing a number of words over which is pi heed a glass which magnalesthe infinitesimal letter. Oval miniatures on porcelain, or with that effect, are late French novelties, seen in New York shops, and are worn as belt and neck buckles, cuff-button vnd corsage ornaments- _____ k THEIR FAVORITE FOOD. Jeremy Tatlor adored baked salmon. lie once said that a man who did not like salmon could be guilty of treason. Robert Herrick said he could live on rosebuds and eherries if they were served by the hands of the vtoman he loved. Murillo said that no man could eat coarse food and have the soul of an artist. His own diet was generally very plain.
THlE MARKETS. » New York. Feb. 4. CATTLE—Native Steers..... S 4 <X> © COTTON— Middling. © FLOUR—Winter Wheat...... 2 75 © WHEAT—No. Sited. 5634© COltN—No. 2. .... OATS—No. 2.. 34 PORK—New Mess. .. 11 2a ST. HO CIS COTTON—tMidilllajt... 5 BEEVES—Fanev steers...... SCO Medium. 4 20 HOGc—Fair to Select ...j.— 3 So SHEEP-Fairto Choice.. 2 75 FLOUR—Patents. 2 50 a Fanev to Extra do.. 2 00 a WHEAT—No 2It3d VViuter. © COHN—No. 2 Mixed... 38 a OATS—No. 2 . © RYE—No.2.... M © TOBACCO—Lugs. . 3 uO © L nf Burley... 4 50 © HAY —Clear Timothy.. 8 50 © BCTTElt—Choice Dairy. 11 © EGGS—Fresh. © PORK—Standard Mess (New). 0 85 © BACON—Clear Rib . © LAUD—Prime Steam. © CHICAGO. CATTLE—Shipping. 3 90 © HOGS—Fair to Choice.. 3 75 © SHEEP—Fair to Choice....... 2 75 © FLOUR—Winter Patents- 2 50 © Spring Patents. 3 10 © WHEAT—No.2 Spring.... 52*4© No. 2 Red.. 50 @ CORN-No. 2 . 40*© OATS—No. 2.. © PORK—Mess (new)...... 9 62*© KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 4 25 © HOGS—All Grades— . 3 45 © WHEAT-No^ Red. 50 © OATS-No. 2.... 29 © CORN—No. 2. © NEW ORLEANS FLOUR—High Grade.. 2 50 © CORN—No. 2. © O'.'CS—Western. .. 35 © HAY—Choice .. 14 50 © PORK—New Moss. © BACON—Sides OJ'ITON—AHUBHiig... . . LOUISVILLE WHEAT—No. 2 Red. .. CORN—Nor 2 Mixed tear)OATS—No 2 Mixed...... 32 © PORK—New Mess.... 10 75 © BAOON-Ciear Rib... 6*© COTTCN—Middling. . © © S3*© 43 © 1895. 4 50 bti 3 15 58 7i VX 35 11 75 5* 5 E0 5 20 4 0) 4 00 2 *50 2,30 51 38)4 20K 51 800 12 00 10 75lT 17 19 10 00 5* 654 5 85 4 20 4 00 2 6. 3 50 55 503£ 41 27* 9 75 5 00 3 95 51 30 40* 2 93 47 35* ‘ 15 50 10 75 «* 5 M* 423£ 1234 11 CO 7
Speaking from her Experience, After years of practical use and a trial of many brands of baking powder (some of which she recommended before becoming acquainted with the great qualities of the Royal), Marion Harland finds the . Royal Baking Powder to be greatly superior to all similar preparations, and states tha t she uses it exclusively, and deems it an act of justice and a pleasure to recommend It unqualifiedly to American Housewives. * V The testimony of this gifted authority upon Household Economy coincides with that of millions of housekeepers, many of whom speak * from knowledge obtained from a continuous use of Royal Baking ^ Powder for a third of a century. - * KOVAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-VORK.
Mr. GooDcaiuo—“Yes, I do feel in rood spirits this evening. Mv bov has passed his examination!“ TtleEan '“Well, Idon'toee anything in that. So has lain?.'’ Mr. Goodchild -“Er—Indian civilP* The Earl—“Ho;, bankruptcy!”— Punch. THE PiSO COMPANY.
The above is the stylp of the firm which manufactures Piso's (Jure for Consumption and Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh, At Warren, Pa.. The company was recently incorporated, succeeding E. T, Hamitine, under whose name the business has been conducted for many years. In fact the business was established in When $95 was paid for the first barrel of sugar bought, that was 33 cents a pound ;other ;hiops were proportionately high, as much of the Piso Cure is now sold for 25 cents as was then lor $h«0While the firm has been a very pwstrtenir advertiser in newspapers, its aggregate outlay annually has been comparaliively small, so* that the steady and rapid increase in Shies to their present liurge prejjortions certainly indicates that Piso’s Cure for Consumption possesses high merit as a remedy for coughs, colds and throat and lung troubles generally. The pleasant taste of the cure has doubtless contributed materially to its popularity. Growth in business has necessitated the invention of numerous labor-saving machines. Notable among these tre apparatus for washing, filling, corking and sealing bottles with which three men easily turn out 2,000 bottles an hour. In the advertising department improved machines in the bindery finish 100,000 Pocket Book Almanacs in a day with only twenty operators. Another lalior saver is the box machine on which one man puts together a thousand ■cartons daily which are filled 'with a dozen Piso’s Cure for Consumption by another man in the same space of time. The Piso Company gives steady employment to a small army of workers; of both sexes, and its uniform liberal treatment of 'employes is a topic of much favorable comment among the citizens of Warren. Altogether the prosperity of the company appears to be peculiarly deserved. Scttob—“I have come to ask for your daughter, sir.” Father—“Take her, young man. You are the only one who wanted more than my daughter’s hand.”—Syracuse Post. •_ 6100 Reward, 6100. The reader of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for fist of testimonials. Address, F. J. Chexst & Co, Toledo, O. EgTSold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills, 25 cents. Mbs. B—“Have vou any near relatives, Norah?” Norah—“Only an nuut, mun.: an’ she isn’t what you might call near, for it’s in the n orth of Ireland she lives, mum.” Actors, Vocalists, Public Speakers praise Hale’s Honey of-Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Wanted for Chemical Purposes—A. lady dissolved in tears.
\v ON THE ROAD to recovery, the ^ ~ young woman ' who is taking Doctor Pierce's . Favorite Pref scription. In maidenhood, wo- * i® manhood, wifeV . hood' and motherhood the “ Prescription ” is a J T supporting: tonic \and nervine that’s peculiarly aclaptea to her needs, regulating, strengthening and curing the derangements of the sex. Why is it T
So many women ewe tneir Beauty to ur. 'Pierce’s Favorite F:rescription? Because beauty of form anti; face radiate from the common center—health. The best bodily condition result* from good food, fresh air and exercise coajjk i with the judicious use of the “ Prescriptio ” If there be headache, pain in the back, bearing-down sensations, or general debility. or if there lie nervous disturbance, nervous prostration, and sleeplessness, the “Prescription” rei.rhes the origin of the trouble arid corrects it It dispels aches and pains, corrects Sisplacemenjs arid cures catarrhal inilamnn .iion of the lining membranes, falling of the womb, ulceration, irregularities and kindred maladies. “ FALLINC OF WOMB.”
Mrs. Frank Camfield. of East Die inson. Franklin Co.. N. i V., writes: “ I de< a itj ray duty to expres my deep, nestrt-felt g atttude to you for ha ing been the means, u nder Providence, of re storing me to health, for I have been by spell s unable to walk. My troubles were of the womb — infiamm i tory, and bearing-dowr sen-' sations and the de btors all said, they coui i not
Mrs. Cam field. cure me. Twelve bottles tf Dr. Pierce's wonderful Favorite Prescription has cared me.’' NEEDLES. ,c SHUTTLES, 2 REPAIRS. r For all SewmtrMaeinnee. I STA.NnARD GOOH6 Only. TJ»« Trmic Supplier. , Pen*! forjr&o:e«iileprtce f lint. Bl.atoCK M e'd Go., i 915 X*<k; us£»iu>iXouuvUo
“I’m a little worried .about mr wife, and would like to have you run up and sec her.” Doctor -“What are her symptoms?” “She allowed me to leave the house without asking for money.”—Chicago Inter Ocean. WHO WINS THE *300? A novel way to obtain a suitable name for their great, yes, wonderful new oats, has been adopted, by the John A. Salzer Seed Co. They offer 8300 for a name for their new oats; their catalogue tellsall about it. Farmers are^ enthusiastic over the oat, claiming 200 bushels eon be grown per acre right along." Vou will want it. Farmers report six tons of hay from Salzer’s Meadow Mixtures; 112 bushels corn per acre in a dry season, and 1,161 bushels potatoes from two acres. IF roc WILL CUT THIS OCT'AND SEND IT with 10c postage to the John A. Salzer SeedHCo., La Crosse, Wis., you get free their mammoth catalogue and a package of above 8300 Prize Oats, [k] At the Money Changer’s.—r feutenant— “What! yon demand 15 percent, interest for three months! Don't you blush to own the fact?” Banker-“I change money; color never J”—Memorial d'Amient. Out In the Cold. Political candidates may be unexpectedly left out in the cola when the returns come in, but people who elect to use Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters for dyspepsia, liver, kidcey or bladder inactivity, constipation, malarial complaints or nervousness, are never lelt in the cold or elsewhere. Well may physicians lend their unqualified sanction to this uinehonored and unfailing medicine. “Woman,” said the sentimental boarder, who is-uamarried, of course, “woman is the sweetest fruit of civilization.” “Yes.” assented the cheerful idiot, “she does make a a great jam at the bargain counter.”—Cincinnati Tribune. *5.00 to California Is price of double berth in Tourist Sleeping ‘ Car from Kansas City on . the famous “Phillips-Rock Island Tourist Excursions.” Through cars on fast trains leave Kansas City Wednesdays via Ft. Worth and El Paso, and Fridays via Scenic Route. Write for particulars to G. D. Bacon, G. A. P. D., 106 N. 4tfi St. St. Louis, Jtfo. John Sebastian, G. P. A., Chicago. Wife (severely)—“I’d have you know, sir, that 1 always keep my temper.” Husband (soothingly)—“Of course you do, my dear. Of course you do, and 1 wish to goodness you’d get rid cf it.”—Detroit Free Press.
Bcxcmvo Their Remarks—The suburban* ite who had beeu'waiting at the staticn f cr tha gates to open was preparing to grasp a hto and cumbrous bundle of higgage in such* way as to.lift it when the sarcastic traveler near the radiator remarked: “That istft exactly what you would call an easy-piek-t^ is it?*’ “1 think,.sir,” replied the suburbanite, eying him sharply, “voti will find iba able to budgct.’*+-Ctucago Tribune.
KNOWLEDGE A Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet* ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure, liquid laxative principles embraced in tho remedy, Syrup of Figs. * Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, tbe refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fever* and permanently curing constipation. It has gjven satisfaction to millions and ^ met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weak- . ening them and it is perfectly fretf frost every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrupy Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of FigB, and being well informed,"you will not accept any substitute if offered.
| If you have Rheumatism .
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LAIRETTE SOAP BECAUSE IIS TEE BEST. PUREST 5 MOST ECQHOWCAL SOLD Evmwiisss 1MKFATOBKMMMIIY.5T.loms. JSAK * Bf
•* We think Piso’s CURE for CONSUMPTION isrthe only medicine for coughs.”— JENNIE PfNCKARD, Springfield/HI.* October i, 1894.
....CURES WHERE ALL TASTES GOOD. USE SYRUP. PNT.4.
CLOVER SEED [ Largest grower* of tinuu and Clover Seed* in j [ America. .WO acres. Our Grass Mil urea last a, [ UteU.ne. Meadows sown in April will give a rousing ’ 1 crop in July. Prices di>t cheap. Mammoth farm seeu ' ) Catalogue and san»i le of Gra*s Mixture, free for ?c. i. I postage. 40HV A. SlUtit hJCSR lt»., la Crosse, W<«. i
Uf A MXCn T Local ajtento for the National, ww I KmI ■ Syndicate of new»j*per» ant. magazines. So capital or ex perieoce required. i’ aye JT6t» *150 per n» nth. Addreas The National C«^ St. Louis, Itaa A. N. K., B. 1538. RKES ITKITISC T« AWVKKTISERS I'LEAt* Hale that job uv the A4nitiMBC«l la tilt aaerr»
