Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 December 1888 — Page 3
LIFE IN THE WHITE HOUSE.
Unde Sam DoeANot Provide for AU of the President'* Expenses. Milwaukre Sentinel’* Washington Letter. Perhaps the lady readers of the Sentinel might like to know something of the experiences which Mrs. Harrison will have when she reaches Washington as the wife of the President. Will she pack simply her trunks with wearing apparel and move into a house completely furnished and filled with beds and bedding, silver and tableware, servants and cooking utensils, or will all or any of these have to be brought along or provided after she gets here? That is a question very often asked, and with a good many others, as to horses and carriages, coachmen and waiting maids, cost of and payment for the necessaries of the kitchen and dining-room, &c. It is a curious fact that ail the Cabinet officers are furnished with horses and carriages at Government expense, but that the President is not. The Cabinet officers are furnished horses, carriages and coachmen, and the horses are kept at Government expense. If the President wants any of these things he must supply them himself. There is a stable near the White House, built during Grant’s time, with plenty of room for horses, but every President who comes finds it empty. And of course it costs him a lot of money to fill it. Whoever sells a h irse or a carriage to the President of the United States expects to get about 25 per cent, more for it than he would if he sold it elsewhere. Of course the President must have three or four carriages and several horses. Whether Gen. Harrison will bring any with him or buy them is not known, probably he will buy new carriages, and of course a President’s horses must be thoroughbreds. And he need not expect much of them after he gets through his term jn the White House either, ter Washington pavements are hard on? horses, as President Cleveland’s big seal-browns show. The President is also obliged to furnish his own driver. Albert Hawkins, a big colored man brought here by Grant before he became President, is still driving at the White House, as he has done ever since Grant’s? term, and will probably be re-enaged by Mr. Harrison; but if he does it will be at his own expense, for the Government does not pay Albert’s salary. Inside the White House Mrs. HgQfison will find employes waiting to be re-en-gaged and paid for their services. The steward, who has charge of the bitchen and dining room, the various subordinates who sweep and dust and cook and attend to the table and table ware—they are all private employes. Down in the basement, if you pass at the proper time, you see the laundry work of the White House going on. All these employes are, however paid privately. Of •course there is a yearly appropriation for the contingent expenses of the White House, but this is intended more to keep up the furniture and furnishings generally than to pay the cost of the hire of servants. On thing that Mrs. Harrison will find is a completely furnished house —solid silver, the finest of china, linen ter the table and bed chambers, elegant furnishings in the parlors and fairly good in the priva’e parts of the house. The private dining-room is on the first floor, just across the hall from the state diningroom.Thin ia~ the only room on the first floor used by the family of the President. The parlors are used for the callers, and the entire family or “living” rooms are on the second floor, There are, perhaps, half a dozen of these, scarcely more; a sitting rounrortwo near to the circular “library room,” where the President sits during his business and working hours, and several handsomely, .furnished bedrooms and dressing rooms. An elevator carries the family downstairs at meal-time and when thev go down for other purposes if they desire it, but as a rule they walk up and down the broad, easy and luxuriously carpeted stairs and through the handsome and always attractive corridors which lead the way to the dining-rooms and parlors on the first floor. There they find everything ready, ter the experienced steward is able to relieve the mistress of the White House ■of all the cares of housekeeping—if he is well paid for it. V 4#: .
The Beet-Sugar Industry.
F. E. Osthausin Globe Democrat. The beet-sugar industry in Germany has grown to large proportions in the last twenty years, and has been thoroughly systemized It was introduced in Hanover in 1864, and sugar is now produced in all the southern portion of Hanover, the larger part of Brunswica, the Prussian part of .Saxony, and also in a part of the Kingdom of Saxony. Perhaps two-thirds of all the German beetsugar israised in these localities, ft requires very fertile ground to raise the «ugar-beet, and bone dust, phosphate, Ghilian saltpeter and composts are freely used. The plant is exceedingly exhausting to the soil, and farmers to preserve their ground observe strictly the rule of rotation in crops, only planting a field in beets once in seven years, as a rule. The planting is done in May. The ground is thoroughly prepared beforehand. It is plowed twice in the fall preceding, the first plowing to the depth 'of 4 inches, the second 16 or 18 inches. Then just before planting it is harrowed and rolled until it is as hard and smooth as a floor. The seed is drilled in rows
one foot apart When the young plants are about three inches high they are thinned ouj, leaving three or four in a hill, one foot apart, and these are subse-, quently reduced to one in a hill. The cultivation la done mostly by plow, the crop being plowed abqrrt four times in a season, both lengthwise and across the rows. The women and children, meantime, are constantly going over the field keeping out tjae weeds by hand. The gathering season extends from September 15th to February 15th. Men go ahead with long spades and loosen each hill, the women and children following, who lift the roots out of ground andpile them together. After the tops are removed they are either taken directly to the community factory 6r covered deeply with earth to preserve them. The factory system is a very interesting part of the business. Factories are established in each neighborhoods In all , the successful ones capitalists are rigidly excluded, and only farmers may hold shares. Each farmer must, for each share he holds, cultivate from three to five acres in beets. The average product is from 17,0C0 to 18,000 pounds per acre, for which the farmer getsabout 90 pfennig per 100. He is guaranteed a sure market for his crop at a fixed price, and gets a dividend out of the profits at the end of the season. The pulp of Abe beets, after the sugar is taken out, makes a first-class food for cattle, and this the farmer also gets at a fixed price. The cultivation is subject to inspection by the factory, and each inspector must not only be a first-class farmer, but a chemist. He must live close to tbe factory, and gets a good salary, besides a per cent, of the profits. Most of the sugar goes to the refineries at the larger cities. At each factory is also a Government inspector, who examines each lot and fixes the tax. Each wagon-load of beets is sampled by a chemist, and if they fall below a certain grading as to percentrge of sugar, they are rejected. This is to prevent the use of inferior composts, which would make large large beets with little sugar in them. One nice feature about the business is that on all the sugar which is exported the Government re 6 turns to the farmer an amount which irf equivalent to the tax. This results in a very large portion of the crop being exported.
CURE OF PNEUMONIA.
Hess Road, Niagara Co., N. Y., ) March 24,1886. / About a year ago T was taken with a severe pain in both lungs. I was first attacked with a violent chill, then a dreadful pain and then a cough accompanied by considerable fever. It looked Very much like a bad attack of pneumonia. A friend of mine procured five Allcock’s Plasters. One he put under each arm, one under each shoulder blade, and one on my chest close around my throat. In a few hours the cough ceased, the pain gradually abated and I broke out in a profuse perspiration. I fell into a profound sleep, and the next day was almost well. I wore the Pl’sters eight days afterwards, and have never had any trouble since. William A. Sawyer. There are six Protestant churches in Hinghman, Mass., without a pastor. •‘I am wea’y iof living,” moaned poor Mrs. Black "For I’m fairly worn out with the ache in my back; Mv nerves Ate a chain Of weakness and pain, And my p >or head la aching at If It would crack.” "Now don't be discouraged,” cried good Mrs. white, "It is never to dark but there’s promise of light; I can tell you. in brief, Wbat wilf give you relief— Pierce's Favorite Prescription will soon set you right.” It is the only remedy for woman’s peuliar weaknesses and ailments, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee' from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case or money will be refunded. SeegWfmtee'on bottle wrapper. Large bottles (100 doses) sl. Six for SS. Family worship—First babies.
Can a Man Swallow a Cannon-Ball?
Well, “that depends.” He can if his throat is large enough and the cannon ball not too large. 'The question really seems worthy of some consideration in view of the size of some of the pills that are prescribed for suffering humanity Why not throw them “to the dogs,” and take Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets? Small, sugar-coated, purely vegetable, perfectly harmless, in glass and always fresh. .. The Senate is considering and will push to a vote the tariff reduction bill. Don’t You Know that'you can not afford to neglect that catarrh? Don’t you know that it may lead to consumption, to insanity, to death? Don’t you know that it can be easily cured? Don’t you know that while the thousand and one nostrums you have tried have utterly failed that Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy is a certain cure? It has stood the test of years, and there are hundreds of thousands of grateful men and women in all parts of thecounty who can testify to its efficacy. All druggists. It is odd that a fruit dealer should do a fruitless business.
CANCER CURED.
Dr. F. L. Pond is having wonderfull success in the treatment and cure for cancer at the cancer hospital at Aurora, 111. There are numbers of cures recently made by him wSh are truly wonderful. Those afflicted should not hesitate, but should go there for treatment at once. For information, address Dr. F. L. Pond. Aurora, 111.
A Radical Cure for Epileptic Fits.
Aknilium JC IW»« To lire Elltur—Please inform yoir readers that I have a positive remedy for the above nanied disease which I warrant to cure the worst cases. 80 strong is my faith in the virtues of this medicine that I will send frees sample bottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who willgive me his P. O. and Er press address. My remedy has cured thonsande of hopeless cases. H. G. ROOT. M C . 183 Pesn Bt.. N, Y.
Holiday Excursions via Pennsylvania Lines.
Excursion tickets at low round trip rates will be'lsold by the Pennsylvania Lines west of Pittsburgh on Dec. 24th, 25th and 31st, 1888, and Jan. 3d, 1889. No tickets will be sold to adults for less than 25 cents, nor to children for less than 15 cents. "
Phoenix expects to be the capital of Arixona. , We gratefully acknowledge the receipt from Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co.,Lowell,Mass., of a bound set of their Almanacs for 1889, making a handsome and valuable presentation volume. Besides tbe various editions in English adapted to North and South America, Australia and India, there are editions in French, Spanish, German,Portugese, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Bohemian and Welsh; also specimen pages of the pamphlets issufed by the firm in eleven other languages, including Italian, Finnish, Turkish, Armenian, Bulgarian, Polish, Hawaiian, Gujarati (India), Burmese and Chinese. Nothing could better illustrate the extent of the business done by the company than tbe fact that’ such a polyglot almanac is called for, the cost of which must have been immense.- bpr ourselves, we confess that we should often be lost without ,Ayer’s Almanac, accustomed, as we have long been, to rely upon, the accuracy of its calculations and we have no doubt to those in need of it Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is equally trustworthy as a medicine. The familiar vellow-covered pamphlet can now Be had at all drug stores. Dr. Tapner has an idea that he can be buried alive for four days and come out of the grave all right
Deafness Can’t Be Cured
bv local application, ax they can not reach the diseased poriiou of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and thut la bv con>t tuttonal remedies. Deafness is caused by an i - fl-med condition of tbe mucus lining of the Eust-cbian Tube. When this tubegeti inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and.unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube re«to"d to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of en are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an iuflitned coalition of the mucus mrfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deatness (caused by Catarrh) that we cannot cure by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Bend for e.rcuiars, free. _ F. J. CHENEY <t CO. na_S old by D uggists, 75c. The credit system is stretched a good ways when a cannon can be charged with guppowder. —St Louis Magazine. Deserving of Confidence.—There is no article which so richly deserves the entire confidence of the community as Brown’s Bronchial Troches. Those suffering from Asthmatic and Bronchial Diseases, Coughs, and Colds should try them. Price 25cents.
Figs.
The fig harvest this year has been good. T4»e whole crop that practically supplies Europe anfl America and a great-part <sf’ Asia Is gathered from a very limited acreage. The average yield is about 25,0 O,COO pounds. The fig gardens lie along the valley of the Meander, especially around the ruins of Ephesus. The gathering employs all the population of the neighboring villages, and the subsequent processes of drying, sorting and packing give employment to all creeds and nationalities. Turks and Christians work together side by side. jf
A Metropolitan Noise.
New York sun. Kansas City Resident (on board train to sir, we have reached the metropolis of the great and growing West at last. We are in Kansas City. This is Eight Hundred and Fortieth street. Stranger (peering out of the window) —Well, what is that peculiar noise? Kansas City Resident—That, sir, is croaking of frogs Our climate here will raise any thing. j Moxie has created the gratest 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 tew days; cures liquors and tobacco at once, and has recovered a large number of cases of old, helpless paralysis as a food only. A Nebraska man is dying from a mule bite.
The Population of the United States
is about sixty miMions, -and we-would say at least one-half are troubled with some affection of the Throat and Lungs, as those complaints are, according to statistics, more numerous than others. We would advise all our readers not to neglect the opportunity to call on their druggist and get a bottle of Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat and Lungs. Trial sizes free. Large bottles sOc and sl. Sold bv all druggists. “Let’s coalesce, and have less coal,” said the Trust.
WORTH KNOWING.
The worst Scald or Burn can be cared without a scar if C’ole’n Carbollaalve is prompt ly used. It instantly stops the paitt Sold bj Druggists at 25 and 5(, cents.
Sflacobs Qjl 6 LTi> ilT H ac d acHJ\CIATIDA PROMTIWBLMAIIENTIY Druggists, and The Chas-A-VogelerCd-Balto-Md’ Diamond Vera *» Cura FOR DYSPEPSIA. A POSITIVE CURE FOB INDIGESTION AND AU Stomach Troablaa Arising TharaftMa. Tour Drugfitt or general Dealer wta oet VeraCura for you if not already in stock, or it wUI be sent by mad on receipt of •& cis. (t> boxes 31.00) in stamps.. Sample sent an receipt cf 2-cenl eZmp. UM CTARLM A VOGELEB CO.. BUtlmere. M 4. Buts Pxopneture and Manutaciurets. ChHdrai Cry ter Pitcher’s Castorta. When Baby ws» ana, we gave Mr Camera. When she wag a Child, ane cried tor (Jamoria, When she became Mbs, the chum to Qamorla, Whan she bad Children, she gave Utas Oaatoria
“Tacky" A New Word.
“Tacky” is. a new word which has just found its way into the American language. Its origin is obscure, and the efforts of several Easteren papers that have devoted themselves to the subject have failed to reveal it Its meaning, however, is well defined. “Tacky” means any person or anything in bad form. Persons that are a little “off” in the social scale are“tacky.” An inferior actor or play is “tacky.” The word, in fact, seems to be an equivalent for “dizzy ” or- “anida,” -and in an interest ing Mid useful menber [of the language whicii promises to exclude those hackneyed terms. The English language is annually growing richer. The United States Geological Survey gives some mining statistics that show something of the wonderful wealth of this country, judged by the immense mineral output for the past year. The total value of all minerals mined in 1887 was $538,000,000. This is $70,000,Oi Omore than the output for 1886, and over $100,(K0 greater than that of 1885. The year’s yield is not only the greatest ever produced in this country, but it is at least $100,000,000 greater than the output of any other country, and, leaving out England, is greater than that of all Europe. A real estate boom is gn at Roanoke, Virginia.
Digest and Be Jolly.
Did ever any one s-e a lolly dyspeptic? We trow not. what natural cheerfulness is proof against the almost ceaseless bodily annoyance of ctionic indigestion? People whole stomachs are constantly exhibit the utmost peevishness and nervous irritability. Happily for them-.slnce tbe irritable and nervous prematurely fret themselves into the grave--tian-quility ot tne stomach and ren wed good tomper awa t them in a sure quarter, if they will but seen it. The genial stomachic, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, breeds cheerfulness by insuring its essential pre condition—easy digestion. Biliousness, too. and constipation, malevolent companions of the banshee, dyspepsia, vanish a'ter a brief but steady course of tee national altera ive. Many a temper naturally sweet, but co-tinually soured by the combined attack of this trio of imps, passes the boundary of monomania Prevent this possibility with the Bitters Malarial fevers, rheumatism kidney complaints and debiity are truly relieved by this standard medicine. The prohibition pier—•A dfy fiock.
Catarrh Is a complaint which affects nearly everybody, more or less. It originates in a cold, or succession of co'ds, combined with impure blood. Disagreeable flow from the nose, tickling in the throat, offensive breath, pain over and between the eyes, ringing and bursting noises of the ears, are the more common symptoms. Catarrh is cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which strikes directly at its cause by removing all impurities from the blood, building up the diseased tissues and giving healthy tone to the whole systeip. Stuffed'-tip Feeling ‘ For several years l have been troubled with that terrible disagreeable disease, catarrh. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla with the very be.-t results. It cured me of that continual dropping in my throat, aud stuffed-up feeling, Mrs. 8-D. Heath, Puinanq Conn. For 25 Years “For 25 year , I have neen troubled with catarrh in i e head, indigestion, and general debility. I COU3IU led to try a bottle ot Hood’s Ssrsaptrilla, aud it did me so much good that I c mtinued its use till f have taken five bottles. My heuth basg eatly Improved, and I feel like a diffeant woman.” Mrs.J.B Adams,Newark,N j. Hood’s Sarsaparilla BoliFby all druggism. «tv>ia iur >o. prepared only oy C. 1. HOOD & CO.. Apothecaries.Loweil.Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar SYKE'S Sure Cure. THE GREAT REMEDY FOR CATARRH
Tbelarge number ol certifl.ia-ea received of the virtues of this preparation in the treatment of thl« unnleasaot disease, abundantly attest its efficacy. It is without a rivtfL It is the only rrediclHehOW on the market adapted to Catarrh, that performs what it promises and effects nor only speedy relief but a permanent cure. Unlike many nostrums now before the public, It does not dry up temporarily the nasal discharges, but eradicates tbejproduclng cause, thus leaving the system in a sound and healthy condition Ask your dtuggistsifor a boule of Sykes’ Sure Cure for Catarrh and you will be healed of the malady For sale bv all Drn jgists. ROSS GORDON, Lafayette, Ind, Wholesale Agent ( jja, HELP "22 YEARS EILERT’S Dini/ extract Of MUK tar™wild cherry Hub cured all coughs, colds, bronchitis, and relieved asthma and consumption for all who have used it. Is not this an evidence of its merits and reliability? It Is a nirt and safe medicine for all bronchial troubles, and never fails to give satisfaction. Try it under a full warrantee. Price, 60 cents and SI.OO per bottle Prepared by Kmmbbt Poopbibtamt Co.. Chicago. 111. sls. MB free Trade PRICES 1 fBOTZITIOSI so losorouzw |HW®^S4S b »I MSIS Krasl f-il We are now seiline our WESTk HP improved sheer sewirc maVW KS CHIRE— “ante aa cut —complete B with all attachments and war JbtS ranted for 5 years tor only sls. IF Ma 1 Bend for circular and see full deU , JSJt scrintion of this and other styles to M- K. SCULLEN & CO., 781 We,t st - Chicago. dl uHLEuIIILII Hfffc&'KX l-centitamp. Wages S 3 Per Dav. Permasenl rorltlcn. Ns postals lowered Money idvuoed for wsees. advevtlsius. etc. Centennial Manufacturing Co., Cincinnati. Oh.p. SKUNK! RACCOON! MINK! and all other Fars bought tor ca«h at highest prices— ais j Hunters' and Trappers’ Guide; Reliable. Bend for circular st once E. C. BOUGHTON, 30 Bond St.. New York. LADIES, LOOK! N-w price-list of Rug maraif —' chines, Patterns, Yam, <tc . and boos of beaufliul colored pattern designs free. Agents Wan tod E. ROSS A CO., Toledo, 0 V relieved:noocsi ar ootae. Laws aeat fra* A W.B.daraAek Afca. Weaaamaa.Ba.aafeaMse<B UHUESTUDY. Book-keeping, Busina t hUbIE Forms. Peumonship, Arithmetic. Shor • hand. etc.. thoronahly tsneht br M AIL. Ci rcular* traa Mi«VK»n MUIMI BaOele.M.V.
7 (Pi ffg . vjl J ATER’S CHERRY PECTORAL ts file best of al) cough cures. It allays Inflammation of the throat and speedily removes irritating muew from the bronchial passages. Mrs. L. P. Cutler, 47 North Washington sq.. New York City, says : “ When I was a girl of 17 I had a cotigh, with profuse night sweats, and Ayers Cnerry Pectoral cured me. I have recommended this preparation in scores of similar cases.” •* Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J. Cr Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Bold all by DruggiaU. Price ; six bottles, CREAKBALM Cleanses t he I Nasal Passages, U \ N | Allays Pain and I n fl animation, Heals the Sores, Restores theHC* / sTgjX CT Senses, of T and Smell. Try The Cure A particle is applied into e»ch nostril ebd is agreeable. Price 50 cenfs at druggists: by mall, registered. 6 1 cents. ELX BROTHEKS, 56/warren St., New Yoik WHY YOU SHOULD USE SCOTT’S EMULSION of COD LIVER Oil* WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES. It is Palatable as Milk. It is three times as efficacious as plain Cod Liver Oil. It is far superior to all other socalled Emulsions. It': is a perfect Emulsion, does not separate or change. It is wonderful as a flesh producer. It is the best remedy for Consumption, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting Diseases, Chronic Ccugh and Colds. Sold bis all DinrrisU. ’ CTbu oluesi int-dicine in the world is probably Vfe Dr. Isaac Thompson’s U El.'. BRATI'D EVE WATEII This mti.le is a carefully prepared Physician's prescription, and has been in constant use nearly a century. CAUTION.—The only renuine Thompson's Eye Water has npon the white wrapper of each bottle an engraved portrait of the inventor. DR. Isaac Thompson. with a fac-s!mile of his signature; also a note of hand signed Joint L. Thompson. Avoid all others. The genuine Eye Water can be obtained frotuAll Druggists. JOHN L, THOMPSON, SONS & CO., TROY, N.Y. NORTHERN PACIFIC IILOWniCERAILROUUnSa FREE Government LANDS. QraiLUOKS or Aegis of each In North send
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS CA|| HAVE o|iE YOUR CHOICE OF THESE WATCHES Our Selling Price of Genuine Silverine or Gold- |a<W k !■ •ntlneWatchesreducedtoß3.es. ■ ■ ■ ■■■ mm To introduce rar M>LTD GOLD ANB SILVER WATCHES, —f . " ■ ■?£? re Activ « Agents at on c and convince New Customers that we ars tbs I— «o CHEAPEST JEWELRY HOUSE IN AMERICA, we make O THFsiLVER«E hl ■/ €O.OO BA wanfnted not to tarnish, looks and wean better than Solid Mlvam T? JS M Ml S. it >»harder, jtrougeraadheavier. ItbDoatand Damp ProaC lai SB /M S 3. • quality possessed bv no other watch in the world. It is the etronnK UJ CO «X most durable and without doubt the Clioapeit Watch in the market. This —I U_ 3 WnMraV S“ *- ’’“‘A!’ now ">l d by many parties for from $15.00 to $30.00 each. tarn CD Wo now offer you (fcr the next aiaty daya) one of tlieae watchee ad Ss “■ 13 z B 1 ’ f- or ‘bo •*“' Hanttaff SE ca YSHr —• Case 54.!>5. Stem Winders *£.oo extra. < -3K EZ = THF RALntMTIMF tra 25 05 * * InC IaULUEH I IRE ing Cases, and are of the elaborately *** £3 J— end beautifully Engraved Pattern that have heretofore only been found m the most oxjienuie wetehea, ami are made of that perfect imitalMaa of Pure GoId—<IOL»EWTINE-one loiid metal. In appearance like Solid Gold, and can only be told by an expett with acid test. These haTe th * Bpring * nd ® a * ic !‘» ♦<» flnMt Gold Watch; they nl credit ofcarrying a magnificent Gold Watch, and which for use u inat as UKt!!r ff '/ VB ®desirable. Ladies’ end gents' size ONLY *B.9S. Hnntins Casa Ki tl: 95 ' s *«n. winders *B.OO extra. READ WHAT EX. “ evSf ft'SeMß PERTH SAY. "I am well pleased with the watch; think at the pries flWvv / \A~jar the best "The best movements for the money I ever saw. aSI Jr ‘‘This bring! a watch and good time within the reach of all.” "I have /fe/ 7 iln / W Ax ’’’ Vl A thoroughly examined your watch and think it the best watch I have ever I XsA, V'v rHf id® I ,ten * or ,ke money.* -WU-l! Fw/ mb-afcl TIRE *“>> w,tch ’>«■» »handsome Elgin style, ■ " vHUI" V Jp’stll snfc ffVlLmLnlw lever movement, extra ruby jeweled, cut SfiHU [I H I / t'h 1 expansion balance, quick train—l 800 beats to the hour-and each Watch is Mil \r I I'M I accurately adjusted to heat and cold, and atmospheric changes upon leaving \ JKCSh. ’Wk l lS J she factwy, and la thoroughly overhauled by our expert WateiMßeaeea A\ I before leaving our place. We guarantee each walch to keep excellent time, iE»/ zAvfflZ i/ £?d to give perfect tvtisfsction or money cheerfully refunded; each Mf/p NW / Watch warranted for a period of Five Years, OUR RRRRU OFFER: m s On receipt of this advertisement and 88.95 a>q neVK We will send either One of these beautiful M wo.od Yrt fr. fl 'A. watches, securely packed, to ary address; but ■ -EMlh Ml 3* BE we will not send more than Ono cf these ■ 131 ■—< r //i, Watches to any Ono person at this price. If WMBF /iff wg </) VS more than One walch is ordered, send us the 'Mrjl name and address ofcach purchaser for each watch., 3B K""S--I?s^lS»ffve7.wA¥7oS , l!Jl'Srd 1 .,55:E1‘ ▲LOGUE, which wo lend free with each weOch. In order to protect ourtelve* from Hl >ew»l«r» and apacuUtwa ordering in largo 2nd it ® a‘.r, that wa to :<t Watch t club and ds to send $19.75 tehee) and WVSw addressee vS?5&zXy dBWp I % aEvSU i likely to /elry, and ?r for five », we will » watches; f you one lately free • trouble. - -Cr y person ~ „ ,O n easily teeure five subserfbers in a sfngte day or evenfc?. TYy and see. Or if you sell, or cause the rale of six of these wfctchw different times, within the next sixty days, we wril eena yon je free. One watch sold in a town is sure to sell pawr mor» r us. They are the best selling watch in the market; all cometc, fully warranted, only $8.95. Send your order ucE-tdte ely NOTICE.-Thst all may «» e ““ mc <ore paying for same, we will send them by e *-F2 S3 •# k a-* hh privilege of full examination at the Express Office, if ©Oft reach watch ordered is sent us in advance, as a «^ aran “® »d faith. If found perfectly aaiirfactMT and exaellyMreprented, you can pay the balance (88.45) at the fxprera O®“ id take the watch, otherwise you do net bavo to pnr one «mb > every penon sending Cash with fhoOrdcr WSJMB <• ill sendVbeautrful TWO STRAND, DOUBLE CURB, OLD PLATED CHAIN AND?CHARM FREE, rite today. Send all money by Boat Office lloney Or; I ;'..™ ress Money Order, Bank Draft, Postal Note er Bepstertd leiito, deratonoe Our Catalogue seat free. Persons living away from an express office can bare Uurfe stehes sent by Registered Mail by sending inti amount with tha dee and 25 cents to pay poetage and registration. When sent t mail registered, they are as safe as by express. HE HARRIS WATCH CO., lo ’ c Chicago Ledger y»yx: Thogeof oar renders wanijat a good wntcii lor little money can obtain om by addressing ibe Barria Watch uo. Jt ta a roliabw t ous.-, $150,000 TTBETIVEN AWAY in Real Estate and Printing Machinery to the pnrchaajra of the Firgt Edition of the two elegant 21x28 ineti Pictures, (in two color*) oj Anderaonvtlle and Libby Priaona They are art and household oreamenM of great historka, interest giving Unity of the most - 1 P “idtt Ulre ' *° SOCIETY. «5 THIRD AYR., CHICAGO
* -j M. W. DUNHAM'S OAKLAWN FARM. n 3,000 PERCHEROIK gjKRk French Coach horses, IMPOBTSB. STOCK ON HAND, 300 STALLIONS of sarvioaable age; 160 COLTS with ■J BROODMARES (Win faal M by Brilliant, the m-At famous living slra). Mr Beet Quality. Prleee SsasaaaMl, ■ Term, Easy. Don’t Buy wttboat taw»Mt. E ing this Greatcat and Host ItceMsfal I Breeding oT Amerloa. ’ ta-di-ggrriSmiir—.. fnrMT iht H r ff~~ M. W. DUNHAM, WAYNE, ILLINOIS. IS «h«. .HlChlr.™ C. W R’v Wl Jwi g MMa. (K.t.bH,hediaso‘.> inSMUiroilf Hh wrattoK IS*. ” " Business universit y North Peuiylmia BL, Opp. PMblSet. | •EZDIUS, Ezra a oszora, MndpaU tad Pwptetau. Best facilities for Business, Short-hand, Penmanship, English and Actual Business Training individual instruction. Educate for profit—least expensive in time and money. Attractive City. Graduates- hold lucrative positions. A strictly business school. Open all year. Enter now. Write to us. Elegant Catalogue, Free. WORMS. Children Suffering fren. these destructible parasytes can't be relieved by so-called worm iosengee which only tickle the palate. The time-tried, tested cure -a B. A. Fahnestock’* Vermifuge. you value the life of your child, don’t wait untd spasms and incurable sickness seizes them, but get his wonderful -emedv at once: it never iwta JONES Iron t-""’. Su-el Beariogs, Brest mMMfiiuiSg.L. Tare Beam and Beam Bor for S6O. \ Kverv sire Scale. Bor free price lia. \eS3Pvt*Ti»' mention ,hl« paper and addrea. f IF JURIS OF ifiRHUHTRi. * w BINGHAMTON. N. uorse Big as the only tn specific forth- certain cur. » J ' DAVB.XjI of this disease. „ - AHbaaranteed no, O . H. INGRAHAM. M. D., Mjw ocnaa etrUtarw Amsterdam, N. T MrdMijbyU. We have soid Big G D.R.D/OTE*a> ik ~~ BoldbyDrngglst’ IPlso's Remedy for Catarrh is the Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mail. K liOc. E. T. Haseltlne, Warren, Pa. m CONSUMPTION I hive a positive remedy for the above disease; to its use thousands of cases of the worst kind and of long standing have been cured. So strong ismy faith tnttaefficacy that I will send two bottles free, together with a valuable treatise on this disease to any sufferer. Give Express aafl P.O.address. T. A. Slocum, M. 0., 181 Pearlßt„ K.U. PJL-Krilnel.».tl. Stille. RAZORS KNIVES If you have forgotten the name of tbe firm advertising Razors and Pocket Knives by mail, write at snee to ALLING <Sc LODGE, Madison, la*. GLEK.--Best Blood Food known. »1 bottle; sent prepaid. House lot free with each bottle. Send for description GLEK CO., 33 North State Street, Chicago. , <ta pw- to B 8 a day. Samples wyrt* KA ggn, wta not under the horse s feet. Write Brew* <JjMter Safety Rein-Holder Oo„ Holly. Mteh, > V 5 o—r v [ xNDFLe When writing <o Advertisers readers will rvulera tavor by tueul.oalug tbio paper, mLrvo at some ana maao more money working tona dee at anything else In the World. Either ret Coetly ontM raxs. Term* vnna Address. Tbi” a to* Sucmaa. M-WSS
