Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 July 1888 — Page 3

® o« o © o©o © o YOU SUFFER from Biliousness, Constipation, Piles, Sick Headache, Sour btomach, Colds, Liver Troubles, Jaundice, Dizziness, Bad taste in the Mouth, etc. —You heed Suffer no loncrerWarner’s SAFE Pills will cure you. They have cured tens of thousands. They, possess these points of superiority: sugar coated; purely vegetable, contain"no calomel, mercury or mineral of any kind; do not gripe; never sicken; easy to take;mild in operation; and for these reasons are especially the favorites of women. Ask for Warner’s SAFE Pills

No One Can Be 11l the blood is "kept pure. Many •who long suffered from bad blood, indicated by weak and wasting kidneys, sores, aches, indigestion, etc., owe their complete recovery to the use of Da. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, and maintain their good health by timely resorting to it again and again as occasion may demand. It makes humanitarians sad to see invalids use improper medicinesThe only safe cure for weakness of the urinary and digestive organs is to make the blood rich, red and pure by using this best of all alteratives, a remedy widely endorsed by physicians who have examined into its composition and curative effect It is a perfecter of manhood and womanhood. Robust health and strength invariably takes the place of illness and distress if Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla is made use of. ' • /■jJTHAT the best remedy for coughs and colds, soreness of the throat and lungs, consumption and other pulmonary distress is Dr. Wist ar’s Balsam of Wild Cherry. It quickly allays inflammation and checks decay. No other remedy in the United States has such a large and uniform sale. People have found out that it quickly cures a cough or cold, relieves asthma, checks consumption, and therefore they determinedly refuse to take any substitute that may be offered in place of the reliable M’ustar’a Balaam. JOHN O. PARK & SONS, Proorletors. Cincinnati. O.

’‘The best and surest Remedy for Curextf I all diseases caused by any derangement of I the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels, ’ Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilious Complaints and Malariaof all kinds yield readily to the beneficent influence of It bi pleasant to the taste, tones np the system, restores and preserves health. ? ft Is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to Tr ye beneficial, both to old and young, p I a B* vd Purifier it is superior to all | j h. S-'-t everywhere at 11.00 a bottle. $93 SBffing MacMnff Ftbb! We want one person inavery village, .town and township, to keep in their homes aline of our AICT BAM I*lX3} to those who will keep and simply show these samples to those who call, we will pend, free, the very beat Sewing Machine manufactured in the world, with all the attachments. This machine is mado after the SIMGKR patents, which have expired. Before the patents run oat, this style machine, with the attachments, was sold fo£ 193; it now sells for >SO. Header, it may seem to you the most WONDERFUL THING ON EARTH, but you can secure one of these machines ABSOLLTJCLT FREE. provided your application comes in first, from your locality, and if you will keep in your borne and show to those who call, a set of our elegant and uneoualed art samples. We do not ask you to show these samples for more than two months, ariathefifhey become yuttr own property. The art samples are sent to you Alist ILTTELY FREE of cost. How can we doall this?—easily enough.’ Wc often get as much as $2,000 or >'»,< 00 in trade from even a small place, after our art samples have remained where thev could be seen for a montt onW<f. TV6 uwd uuu peiwm lu each hKallij ,ull met the country, and take this means of securing them at once. Those who write to uaat once, will secure, FREE, the very best Sewing Machine iritnufiketured, and the finest genera! assortpent of worts of high art cvvr sUown together in America. All particutars FItKK byranm mail. Writ* at once; a postal card ~ on which to write to us will cost you but one cent, and after you ——know ■XL, übfwild irftii (w-jtnhiilf iam nn farther, why, nn done. Wonderful as it seems, you need no capital—all is free. Address at once. TRI E A DETECTIVES WaauStavreryCreaw. bmianbiaf ntalMrwtal to mtSmtm fcrriM. tnirlai, aatreuwsry. Fartoalan »* SrußuaaStlMttfußvMu Ce.M AraUttMtatiJl

STANLEY AND TIPPOO TIB.

Relations Subsisting Between the « Explorer . and the Former SlaveTrader. New York Tribune. Major Barttelot, commanding the little garrison at the mouth of the Aruwimi, has written a letter to a friend in London, expressing grave apprehension of disaster, but the facts on which he bases his judgment have not been revealed. Mr. Ward, one of his assistants, will soon arrive in England with dispatches from the post containing the latest news from the upper Congo. •- Mr. Stanley landed at that point and entered upon his perilous enterprise. Since July no direct information has been received from him. Deserters from his column reported him to be alive early in October. On Nov. 2 Emin sent dispatches from Lake Albert, stating that no tidings of the expedition had been received. Mr. Stanley has confidently expected to reach Wadelai during October, and the protracted delay, as well as the lack of decisive information, alike tend to excite grave alarm.

The only conjectures which have been formed respecting the cause of delay or possible disaster have indicated treachery on the part of Mr. Stanley’s ally, Tippoo Tib. This is the mercenary chief and slave-trader who escorted the explorer’s caraven across country to upper Congo in 1877, when he made his famous descent of the river. He is the most powerful chief known in the region between Lake Tanganyika and Stanley Falls. He was probably responsible for the assault upon the European station at the latter, point which preceded Mr. Stanley’s return to the Congo valley. Tippoo Tib resembled in his authority over native races and in his character and occupation Zobehr r whom General Gordon was anxious to have as an ally at Khartoum. Mr. Stanley knew that fie could do nothing without Tippoo Tib and thought that he could purchase the slave-trader’s support by giving large bribes to him and by investing him with supreme authority at Stanley Falls. The two men met in Ranzibar early last year and made a bargain. Tippob Tib accepted the office of Governor at the Falls, agreeing to defend the station against Arabs and blacks, and being promised a handsome salary from the Congo Free State. He also signed a contract for supplying 600 carriers who were to accompany Mr. Stanley to Wadelai and to transport Emin’s large stock Of ivory to the Congo.

• When Mr. Stanley’s expedition ascended the Congo, Tippo Tib went to the Falls and took charge of the station, with the title of Governor. He was expected to send provisions and men to the upper Aruwimi while the column was on the march. The messages received by Major Barttelot from the expedition in July stated that supplies and reinforcements were urgently needed. Tippoo Tib commanded two of the four approaches to Wadelai, and apparently was able to send supplies to the Aruwimi valley, but neglected to hold to his agreement. If disaster has overtaken Mr. Stanley his Zobehr will probably be held responsible for it, since through inaction or treachery on his part the progress of the expedition has been retarded and its rescources crippled and exhausted. Tippo Tib was willing; white in Zanzibar, to agree to abstain from slave-traffic at Stanley Falls and to take arms against slave-raiders. It is probable that when he arrived at the station and asserted his authority as Governor, the instincts of the old slave-hunter revived. Possibly he ascertained that he could make more money in the slave trade than he could by supplying Mr. Stanley with provisions and transporting Mr. Emin’s seventy-five tons of ivory across country to Congo. At any event this is as plausible an explanation as can be offered for his treachery by which the success of the relief expedition has been imperiled.

IN THE AFRICAN DIAMOND MINES.

Searching the Natives—Their Cunning in Hiding Diamonds. New Ybrk Bun. “One of the most curious sights to be seen at the diamond mines,” said a recently returned trader, “is the inspection of the Kaffirs as they come up out of the mines each day. These natives are hired for a period of six months, during which time they are not allowed to go outside of the inclosure at the top of the mine, called ‘the compound,’ containing only a circle df huts in which they sleep and a store at which they may purchase tobacco, snuff, beads and trinkets dear to the savage heart. They work constantly in the presence of w'hite inspectors, who watch them closely to prevent their secreting any diamonds about their person during the day, and at night when they come up out of the mine they are led out one by one through a narrow passage, fenced in on either side with barbed wire fences and each man removes the lit.tlu.hit.of clothing-he wearsbefore he enters the narrow door which admits him to the inspector’s room. His •clothing he canies-m-his hands to-the officer, who proceerls-to-exttHffnedfr carefully; then- looks into -the Kaffias ears and nostrils and mouth,under his tongue, between his toes, into the snuff ot-Uk baeco box he Sometimes carries, and feels all through his woolly hair. The Kaffirs frequently cut a deep gash in the fleshy part of the hip, into which they

insert a diamond and then bind it up in such a way as to entirely conceal the stone, and another common trick is to cut and irritate a place on their legs until it Incomes a deep wound, in which they may secrete a diamondwitlf'Bmall chance of detection,. Occasionally a Kaffir will swallow a diamond, and, if undiscovered, will hasten home and take; an emetic to recover the stone. If, however, the inspector suspects him he is compelled to take the emetic in his presence, wjiich frequently results in the discovery of the concealed stone. 1 At the end of six months the gang of natives are discharged and return to the tribe, and another set 1 of workmen take their place. As soon as they receive the small amount of money paid them for their labor, they proceed to invest it in some of the most singular purchases. A favorite possession is a small American trunk with a lock and key which they fill with various trinkets and ornaments, and if they can find and purchase an English officer’s scarlet coat they put it on over their bare skin and walk off with the trunk under their arm as proud as peacocks. “The natives know well the value of the precious stones they handle, and, in spite of all precautions, it is believed that very many are stolen every ytear. It is impossible to wash the soil so thorougly that some small stone will not remain. A woman living near a mine kept a quantity of fowls which, when killed, very often had, among the pebbles in their crops, the small rough diamonds which they had picked up, attracted by their glitter. An English lady had employed this woman as a nurse, and, learning of the little box of stones she had collected from her fowls, the lady sold them for her servant in London, receiving for them a little more than sioo. : 1

HOW ANTS LIVE.

Their Love of Cleanliness and Their Modes of Burial. In spite of the multifarious duties and tasks that are imposed on these tiny burghers, they still find time to clean and adorn their worthy little persons. No spot, no atom of dust or anything else uncleanly will they t,heir bodies. They get rid of the dirt with the brushy tufts on their feet or with their tongues. They act for all the world like domestic cats when they clean and lick themselves, and they assist one another at the toilet precisely like monkeys. Their sense of cleanliness goes so far that the naturalist often finds, to his unpleasant surprise, the colored marks that he had applied with so much care on his “trial ants” removed by their dirt hating friends. They keep their dwellings just as cleanly. But the conveying away of their deceased brethren, whose bodies they appear to regard with the greatest antipathy,gives them more trouble than anything else. When some members of ant community which Mr. Cook kept imprisoned died and could not be removed those remaining seemed affected with the greatest horror. For days the insects ran about seeking a way out, and ceased only when completely exhausted. The ants belonging to the camponorous species seized the dead and threw them into the water pail, which they converted into a sepulchre. Ordinarily,though, the ants are said to treat their dead with more reverence. They even possesss their own graveyards, which lie in Hie vicinity of their nests. They convey their deceased companions thither, where they lay them down in orderly little heaps or rows. - —-- —.— It is only the corpses of their fellows, however, that they treat in this manner. Dead strangers they throw out like something unclean, or tear the body in pieces. Even between the master and slaves of the same community Miss Trent says she has observed a mode of burial. While the masters find their last repose in a special graveyard, side by side, the slaves lie like heaped up refuse near the nest, despised equally in death as in life. The ant cemeteries are often thickly populated, for their life is short. The male lives only through one summer; the females live somewhat longer, and the workers die of old age in the eighth or tenth year. ... , ■ ' ,

What “Society” Is.

Boston Herald. Mrs. Burnett’s two handsome little boys are with her, and, as usual, are considered living reproductions of that adorable child, little Ixrrd Fauntleroy. The original of “Little Lord Fauntleroy” is Mrs. Burnett’s younger son, Vivian, who has experienced in his small life many of the incidents related in “Little Lord Fauntleroy.” Cedric’s acquaintance with the apple-woman,for instance, is taken from real life, so to speak. An incident that did not appear hr tire’ Story was recently told me by an intimate friend of Mrs. Burnett. One day Vivian Burnett asked an old apple-woman, whom he religiously patronized in Washington, if she were “in society.” “My miuuma ik in society; are you?” “Bless you, no child, I reckon I ain’t in what you call society. Wbat is it?” “Society,” said Vivian, “why it’s a thing where there's lots of people who atFcnnw-to vcmr-hogse, and—tlicy cuine up to your mamma, who is in the draw-ing-room looking very beautiful, in a lorely jlress T aiid they shake hands with her and say,‘Why, how do you do?’ and then they gabble" gabble, gabble, gabble, gabble, and then they come up again to your mamma and say, ‘Oh, I’m so sorry, but I must go now, good-bye,’ and then they go away and that’s all.”

The Biggest Man in York.

N.Y. World. . Buffalo Bill is probably the best known man in New York City. Wherever he goes he is recognized and pointed out by the crowds. Hisdong, waving hair and white sombrero assist materially in the identification.

Marion Harland.

The celebrated authoress, so highly < ste.emed by the women of America,says on pages 103 and 445 of her popular Work “Eve’s Daughters; or, Common Sense for Maid, Wife and Mother.” “For the aching back—should it be blow in recovering its normal strength—an Allcock’s Porous Plaster is an excellent comforter, combining the sensation of the sustained pressure of a strong warm hand with certain tonic qualities developed in the wearing. It should be Kept over the seat of uneasiness for several days—in obstinate cases for perhaps a fortnight.” “For pain in the back wear an Allcock’s Porous Plaster constantly, renewing as it wears oft. This is an invaluable support when the weight on the small of the back becomes heavy and the aching incessant.” . ■*t •.. ■ “What becomes of the old moons, pa?” ‘‘The old moons, my son? Why, they die of newmoonia, to be sure.” Don’t ruin your stomach by using pills and oathartie mixtures advertised as a cure for indigestion. ' Chronic weakness of the digestive organs is the result. The best remedy for giving real strength to the liver and kidneys is Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. It is not a mere relief, but truly cures impure blood and all diseases of the urinary and digestive organs. There is a vast difference between an out-put and a put-out. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets Possess Pow erful Potency,Pass Painlessly, Promote Physical Prosperity. —Pittsburg Ghro&icles If- the Democracy continues to hug this bandanna idea it may find that if has been nursing a wiper in its bosom.

How to Select a Wife.

Good health, good morals, good sense and good temper, are the four essentials for a good wife. These are the indispensables. After them come the minor advantages of good looks, accomplishments, family position, etc. With the first four, married life will be comfortable and happy. Lacking either, it will be in more or less degree a failure. Upon good health depends largely good temper and good looks, and to some extent good sense also, and the best minds must be affected more or less by the weaknesses and whims attendant on frail health. Young man, if your wife is falling into a state of invalidism, first of all things try to restore her health. If she is troubled with debilitating female weaknesses, buy Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It will cure her.

It is natural enough that our brewers and their employes should get at lager Leads. . Au ugly complexion made Nellie a fright, Her face was all pimply and red, Though her features wera good and her blue eyes were bright, “What a plain gin is Nellie,” they said. But now, ss by magic, plain Nellie has grown As fair as an artist’s bright dream; Her face is as sweet as a flower new-blown, Her cneeks are like peaches and cream. As Nellie walks out in the fair mornitg light, Her beauty attracts every eye. And as for the people who called her a fright, “Why, Neilie is handsome”: they cry. And the reason of the change is that Nellie took Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, which regulated her liver, cleared her complexion, made her blood pure, her breath sweet, her face fair and rosy, and removed the defects that obscured her beauty. Sold by druggists. By a mere transposition of the two first letters of his name, Alger could have made himself the most popular candidate at Chicago, The best and most desirable Hotel in Boston is the United States, where there is no attempt at style, but a great deal of attention paid to the comfort and pleasure of patrons.—Boston Herald, April 12,

As It is Spoken.

Al (to Ed)—“Allow me to introduce you to Monsieur Le Comte Aratole de la Vieille Roche.” Ed—“ A-eh! Delighed!” Ti Count“Eserke.vouse parlez li Frongzay, moussion?” Le Comte (feeling insulted)—“No,sir?’, Ed —“You should learn it, sir.” Exit. Ed (half hour later at club) —“Oh,those Frenchmen! They never were linguists. Why,l met a man to-day who didn’t speak his own language.”

Moving Rrpidly.

Policeman (to citizen clinging to lamp post)—My friend, you will have to move on. .. Citizen —Move (hie) on! Gra-gracious, ofshur, I’m (hie) makin’ fifty milsh *n hour now.

A Guide to Chautauqua Lake.

With routes and rates of excursion tickets to Niagara Falls, St. Lawrence River, and New England points, over the Chicago and Atlantic and Erie Railways, will be forwarded on application. Through Pullman sleeping-car service on all through trains New York and New England, via Chautauqua. Solid trains to New York. Ticket office 105 Clark street, Chicago. Addr«es, ‘

General Western Passenger Agent Erie Railway, Chicago.

Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castorii Wben Baby wm nek, we gave her Casiortu. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorta. When shn barwmn Mt—, she Clung to Pastoria, Whenshe hart Candren,she gave them Pastoria.

fiAINT YOUR BUGGY for ONE DOLLAR Paint Friday, run tt to Church Sunday. The original and only reliable is COIT & CO’S ONE-COAT BUGGY PAINT. Warranted not to crack, bik-ter. peel, or turn ■ white aod to wear at least one year Eight Fashionable Shades. No Vanush necessary. lirtas hard with a "aMaa." Indispensable to Farmers. Livery-Men. add Repair- M ® ■ Shops. wm defi-er. free •» expense, enough to paint your Buggy upon receipt ol One Polla. COIT «*> COw. Mfrs.. CHICAGO. W*. - - —...Lk.. ~—... ... ' -7- •. • •

W. H. HURLBURT,

Phenomenal Memory.

Washington Special. Apzi Smith, Superintendent of the Senate Document Room, who is famous for his phenomenal memory, was sitting in the Senate restaurant the other day when the private secretary' of Mr. Edmunds approached him with a letter in his hand which he handed Mr. Smith to read. The letter contained a request from a constituent of Mr. Edmunds for a list of the people* who had put in claims for damages under the French SpoilatioifTreaty growing out 1 of the war of 1812, The private secretary told Mr. Smith that the Senate was extremely anxious to comply with the request, but did not know where a list of the names could be found. “You will find them,” said Mr. Smith, “in executive document No. 170, forty-first Congress, second session.” This proved to be a fact, and it was one of the most remarkable illustrations of memory that could be given. Out of thousands of documents that are printed every year Mr. Smith is able to remember all of the most important, not only by title, but by number, and whenever a Senator calls on him for information he is usually able to supply it from memory without referring to the record.

The Opening of the Campaign.

To open the campaign with any hopes of speedy success, attack the enemy, malaria, before it has a chance to intiench. An obstinate foe ’twill prove if yojt non’t go right at it If you are prudent, too, you will nave fortified upon the first intimation of its pre»ence in your neighborhood. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is the mtdiclual ammunition that you require. Every form of malarial fever yields to thia flue preventive and remedy, For constipation, liver i-omplaint, dyspepsia, nervou.-ness, and kidney trouble it is no less effective. Residents of ma. larial localities, and persons sojourning in or b mnd tor the great W»st, should select this medicine as a means of dtfence against the frequent visitations of miasma. Those in delicate health, the aged and ens ebled, should in eve y instance retort to this signal in vigorant. Use It for weak nervi s. ' -, ■ • When barge meets barge then comes the tug of commerce. Moxie has created the greatest excitement as a beverage, in two years, ever witnessed, from the fact that it brings nervous, exhausted, overworked women to good powers of endurance in a few days; cures the appetite for liquors and tobacco at once, and has recovered a large number of cases of old, helpless paralysis as a food only. Mournful numbers—A balance on the wrong side of the sheet.

A Great Surprise

Is in store for all who use Kemp’s Balsam for the throat and lungs, the great guaranteed remedy. Would you believe that it is sold on its merits and that any druggist is authorized by the proprietor of this wonderful remedy to give you a sample bottle free. All druggists sell Kemp’s Balsam. Large bottles 50 cents and sl. . ROUGH ON P.Lua. quick, complete cure. 60c BUCHU-PAIBA. (treat Kidney Remedy. SI WELL’S HEALTH REN KN ER for weak men SI W r LL’B HAIR BALAAM. Tigray, gradually restored color; elegant tonic dressing. 50c. BOUGH 0N ITCH” Ointment cures Skin Humors, Pimples, Flesh Worms, Ring Worms, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Frosted Feet, Chilblains; Itch, Ivy Poison, Barber’s Itch, Scald Head, Ecaema. 50c. Druggists or mall E. 8 Wells. Jersey City. N. J. . . “ROUGH ON RATS,” for rats, mice, bugs. 16c. “Rough on Catarrh.” Only absolute cure. 60c. “ROUGH ON CORNS." Hard or soft corns. 15c. ‘ROUGH ON TOOTHACHE.” Instant relief. 15c. Prickly Ash Bitters is an unfailing cure for all diseases originating in biliary derangements caused by the malaria of miasms tic countlies. No other medicine nowon sale will so effectually remove the disturbing elements and at the some time tone up the whole system. I t is sure and safe in its action. If afflicted with Sore Eyes,use Dr.lsaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c, LOOK YOUNG, prevent tendency to wrinkles or ageing of the skin by using Lbaubkllb Oil. Preserves a youthful, plump, fresh condition of the features. A transparent, alabaster skin. 81.00. Druggists or exp. E. 8. Wells, Jersey City. N. J,

A Tribute to the Hired Man.

Nebraska State Journal; “7 The life of the hired man is not a happy one. He works about eighteen hours in the field every day, and when dark-

We Point with Pride To the “Good name at home,” won by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. In Lowell, Mass, where it is prepared, there is more of Hood's Sarsaparilla sold than of all other medicines. Whole neighborhoods are taking it at the same time, and it has given tne best of satidaetion since Its introductlon ten years ago. This could not be if the medicine did not possess merit. If you suffer from Impure blood or debility, try Hood’s Sarsa oar ilia and you will realize its peculiar curi’ive power. “I had i alt rheum on my left arm three years, suffering terribly. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla.and the salt rheum has entirely di appeared,” H. M. Mills, 71 French St, Lowell, Mass. Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Sold bv all druggist*. sl;sixforss. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD& CO.,Apothecaries,Lowell, Vass. 100 Doses One Dollar. Pl E|fA harmless, positive sad permanent Recuper* ULCRstiveof Falling Manhood, and Strong Nerve and Blood Food. »1 per hottie. Bold by drua■Bßßßtruta. GLEE CO., 38 N. State Bt.. Chicago, ill.

Cincinnati JULYan i « Mr A OCT. 27th- * * f T * fit-A, amfflsmojiaiioW GRAND JUBILEE calibrating the Sattlament of the Northwestern Territory. UNSURPASSED DISPLAY. excursionsayes from all points:

ness he has to feed a lot of inappreciative hogs, milk several cows which are old enough tq know howto milk themselves, and do about three thousand Other cjiores for which he receives no extra pay. Nobody ever heard of the hired man going on a strike, however. He Jpilg along unostentatiously and never branches out as a labor reformer. All honor to the hired man, who earns his every loaf of bread by a gallon or two of sweat.

That Feeling Of exhaustion expressed in the words “all run down,” indicates a thia and depraved state of the blood, reacting upon the Nervous Syst un. Nothing, will reach this trouble with more speed and certainty than Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. “ I was all run doWn,” writes Mrs. Alice West, of Jefferson, NV. Va., “ heforej began to take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and now I am GAINING IN BTBINGTH every day. I in ten. - usingft till my health is perfectly restored.” " Being very weak and despondent after an illness which caused freqtleut loss of blood, I tried Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and two bottles have restored me to my former health,” writes Miss Blanche S. Brownell, 4 Boylston Place, Boston. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, Prepared byDr. J. C. Ayer & Co.. Lowell, Mass, told by al! Druggists. Price *1; tu bottles, gS. a UM ALL DISORDEM OFTHt? Stomach, Liver andßowels PACIFIC Kg STRICTLY VEOETJfcJBXJB. iLxs. Brox HBAPAcaa. Lina Complaints. Loh ,r appbtitb. Boiovmsm, Nnrovims, jav.> lie- Ito. PRICK. M era a. CO.. »T. LOVIS. MO.

MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Wholly unnke artlflolal systems. Cure of mind wandering. Any book learned in one roadink. Clares of 1087 at Baltimore, 1008 at Detroit 1500 at Philadelphia, 1118 at Washington, laid at Boston, large classes of Columbia Law students, at Yale, Wellesley, Orberlin, University of Penn., Michigan University, Chautauqua, Ae.Ac. Endorsed by Richard Pbootob, the Scientist, Hons. W. w. Abtob, Judah P. Brnjamix, Judge Gibson, Dr. Bbown, E. H. Coot’ PrTn, N. Y. State Normal College, Ac. Taught by correspondence. Prospectus post ran Irom PROF. LOIBETTE, 237 Fifth Ave.. H. Y, ’LO6AN- <™.MA6NirKrHT . ANO CIRCLE* - - INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA -- «I prescribe and fully same Big G as the only lectflc for the certain cure ! this disease. . H. 15 GRAHAM, M.D., Amsterdam, M. Y. We have sold Big G tat faction. D. R. DYCHIta.CO., Chicago, 111. 1.00. Sold ty DruggW laSTHMACUR£d| ■ German Asthma Cure pever/aitdo give ■ mediate relief lu the worst caeesfuirares comfort-■ ■ able Bleep; effects cures where allothera fait A ■ ■ trial emvineu the,most skeptical. PrieeoOe. »*><!■ ■ Sl.OO,oil»ruggistsor bemall.Samftfe FREI.B I AWN TENNIS AND CROQUKVSETS I.H ww I w out-door games of all descriptions. D A QC BALL AND BOATINC OUTFITS D A O to. but grade, at lowest prices. F| C M INC RODS, TACKLE, ETC. ■ O us all modem styles sad inprovotoeata PH NQ and Hunters' Accoutrements toS Wll 0 at leu than manufacturers’ prices. JENNEY A GRAHAM CUN CO., Chicago. Band tor Catalogue, and meation this paper. UftMC STUDY. Book-keeping, Business IT U 111 L Forms, Penmanship, Arithmetic, Shorthand, etc.. thoroughly tooght by MAIL, circulars free. Bbtaxt’s Bvsmus Oolites. BtHnttd'. W. Y I. Stovkena. lehaaoa Okla. H A ATY’T?'D Trc “ t ® d * nd cured without the vAlaVjlbJLtknUe. Book on treatment sent free. Address F.L.Pond-M.D. Aurora, Kane Cn.Hl. By return msiL Full Deaerlstios, FREE ass; INU 87-18 IMDPIE When writing to Ad verusers readers will confer a favor by men«-»«*«t< this Pagtoi. 1,1 ' ' ~ a . ' - '■ *