Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 October 1889 — Page 6
THE WONDER OF CAJAH FOND
It is Full of Floating Islands from Which Flsharmen Troll for A dispatch in a New York paper from a place in Minnesota announcing as a remarkable fact the discovery of a floating island in a small lake in that state inclines the residents of this neighborhood, says a Honesdale (Pa.) letter to the New York Sun, to the belief that if one float ing island in a state so famous for natural Curiosities as Minnesota is considered as a wondor they have been living all their lives with a still greater wonder close by without attaching any great importance to it They have a lake a mite from Honesdale which is filled with floating islands. This lake is known locally as Cajah pond. It is 200 feet above the village. It is dotted with a dozen Or more islands. These are covered with trees, some of them twenty feet high, and a dense growth of thick-foliaged bushes. The island bottoms are marshy, but the soil is stiff enough to sustain easily the weight of the fishermen who troll for pickerel from the islands in the summer fishing season. In the summer these little islands are pleasing ing variations in the beauty of the scene the lake presents to the spectator as he gazes upon it from the hills that encircle it. If the wind happens to be strong and variable, as it generally is on the lake, the visitor who looks upon the lake for the first time can hardly help being startled to see these islands moving about from one point of the compass to another as the wind shifts. On one day these islands may be seen huddled together in one spot, and on another day perhaps they will be seen scattered widely apart An island from which the fisherman casts his line at one end of the lake to-day will in all probability invite him to it from the other extremity to-morrow. The largest of these islands was some years ago partial to the lower end of the lake, and hugged the shore there with only slight changes in position day in and day out During a stiff wind one day this island tacked first to one side and then to the other side of the lake, moving slowly the while to the upper end until it was floated against the shore at that end. It remained there for two years through some of the hardest winds that blew off that shore. One day while three pickerel fishermen were fishing from the island's outer edge it suddenly was seized with a whim, induced or prompted only by a gentle wind, and before the fishermen knew it they found themselves fifty feet from shore. The island floated slowly across the lake until it had almost reached the shore, when a counter-breeze struck it and sent it down the lake. It finally landed near the spot where it started from a year ago, and it has remained .in that vicinity ever since, simply taking a short trip now and then to and fro across the lake, but alwaya-retHr ning to or near its mooring. Although these fair islands are constantly shifting thoir places in the lake they annually add perceptibly to their area. There are six or eight ol them and the scientific theory is that in time the roots of the trees that cover them will extend down into the water so far that they will anchor the island in the lake, and that by the slow but certain processes of nature they will be increased in size until the surface Of the lake will become solid la nd.
Carious Cause of Death.
A fortnight ago Aaron Smith left this city for Swanton, 0., to superintend his father’s estate. Shortly after arriving he became ill, and died a fewdays later. A post mortem examination was held. The result of the investigation was singular. A large artery had grown between the heart and lungs, and the lungs were as hard as stone, caused, it was suppos'd by the physicians, from inhaling iron dust at the safe works where he was employed. In the heart was an opening of about half an inch, caused by his severe efforts made to breathe.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
He Returned the Compliment
“One of the funniest incidents that happened under myobservation during the late war,” said Colonel Mosby, “occurred in a cavalry fight in the Shenandoah Valley along in 1864. In the midst of a sharp cavalry engagement with Sheridan’s men, in a charge near Berryville, there came crushing like a whirlwind into our lines a Yankee soldier on a big black horse. A score of men tried to stop horse and rider, but the old black’s blood was up and he went on clean through the lines before he was under control. The rider was sent to Libby Prison and we mustered the black charger into the Confederate service. A few days later we charged some of Custer’s men, and I’ll be if that old horse didn’t return the compliment by carrying a •reb' into the Federal lines and never came back.”— Washington Post.
Cologne Cathedral Struck by Lightning.
The big stone cross on the south tower of the Cologne cathedral was struck and smashed by lightning recently. Great pieces of it fell to the pavement with such velocity that they were crushed to powder. Two men lost their lives in placing the cross orrigin ally. The perilious job of repairing the damage just done will be undertaken within a lew weeks.
LABOR NOTES.
Steel pavements are in use. English railways pay a ion for eoal. Pittsburg reports a scarcity of laborers. American building trades employ 2,000,000 hands. A Colorado wheat-field employs 300 hands. At Newport |521,000 was offered for a cottage, The vessels that prose the ocean in six days burn 400 tons of coal daily. About 4QO Belgian and English glassblowers in America go home each summer. Boston has 7,000 organized tailors. They want New York tenement-house work boycotted. At Jacksonville, Fla., 400 cigarmakers struct to have their pay brought to their benches. Two Holyoke (Mass.) mills that were to shut down if Cleavland should be elected are closed. Boston has a Merchants’ week. Storekeepers from the towns around have their fares paid to the city. In the manufacture of boots and shoes the work of 500 operatives is now deme by 100 with the use of machinery. In the manufacture of flour modern improvements save 75 per cent, of the manual labor that once wasneccessary. New Hampshire compels working children of from fourteen to sixteen'to go to school three months of the year.
By the use of coal-mitfing machines 1«9 miners in a month can mine as much coal in the same time as 500 miners by the oldjnethods. In the manufacture of brick improvdevices save one-tenth of the labor, and in the manufacture of fire brick 40 per cent, of the manual labor is displaced. In stave-dressing twelve co-laborers with a machine can dress 12,000 staves in the same time that the same number of workers by hand could dress 2, - 500 staves.
England allows children of thirteen to work if they attend school half the day. No one under eighteen and no woman can work over sixty hours week. The Lynn Lasters’ Protective Union paid $12,000 for ground for a hall to contain a lecture-room, library, bil-liard-hall, etc. The protective union has 10,000 members.
A railroad in the Northwest built 1,000 miles of line in half as many days, and had at one time 20,000 men at work, nearly as many as Napolean had in battle at Marengo.
London boss bakers make from $5 to sls per week, workman from $8 50 to $6, cleaning up boys $2. Each is allowed a loaf to take home. Most of the bakers sleep in the shops. The number of immigrants who have passed through Castle Garden so far this month is 11,919, a falling off from lastyear of 2,405. Since January 210,818 immigrants ; have arrived. Last year during the same period, the number was 228,839. Many Brooklyn grocers' will not
sell non-union bread, since the bakers struck rather than leave the union. Co' operative bakeries are talked of. The organization has reduced a day’s work from seventeen hours per day to eleven, and to thirteen on Saturday. The trade organizations of the Hebrews of New York are steadily growing in strength under the sillful management of the organization known as the United Hebrew Trades. The Hebrew Purse-makers’ Union has just been organized, and the membership of the Hebrew Jewelers’ Union has beeu considerably enlarged. The Hebrew Musical Union has been reorganized on a co-operative basis.
The steel pen trade at Birmingham is reported as buoyant, the average weekly production exceeding 160,000 gross, something that would give an aggregate annual product of 1,198,080,000 steel pens. In her Majesty’s stationary office one year the consumption of steel pens was about two millions against half a million of quill ones. In the clubs the proportion of quill pens used is larger than that in the government offices.
Watting for the Syndicate.
Texas Sifting}. " Charitable Lady—‘lt must be very tiresome to sit here day after day, playing the same tunes over and over? Organ-grinder—That it is, mum! Oi was afther givin’ it up a phwile ago, but Oi t’ink now Oi’ll shtay till Oi’m bought out be wan o’ thimEnglish syndicuts. As a proper precaution against the use of deleterious substances upon the family table, purchase articles that are known to be like Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder and Delicious Flavoring Extracts, the most perfect made. Starvation enables mon to make fast me to the grave.
To Detect Impure Water.
Orang® Judd Farmer. Fill a perfectly daan quart bottle half full of wate-, cork and shake it; remove the oork and see if any odor can be detected at the mouth of the bottle. Cork the bottle again, and put it in a warm place for a few hours, or set in a pan of hot water for an hour. Shake, uncork, and test again by smell. If an unpleasant- or faint, musty odor is perceptible, the water requires more minute investigation. The school Jtest—*a~to- evaporate a quart of water to dryness in a new tin pan or cup, and note the character of the residue, and what happens when it is strongly heated in a metal spoon. If the sediment left after evaporation is small, and bn' being burnt, o'n a metal spoon give rise only to such an odor as comes from burning vegetable matter, the water is not greatly contaminated with sewage. But if the sediment is in considerable quantity dark in eolor, and burner, giving off the peculiar odor of burning hair or other animal matter, then the water is foul.
Breathing the Germs of Disease.
To inhale the germs of disease with their daily breath is ihe fate of izens of malariascourged localities everywhere. The endemic atmospheric poison may, howeyer. be rest of itven.nu and rendered innoxious by a defensive u e of Ilostettei’s Stomach Bitters. .Thia preeminently sage ami effective—remedy and rafeguard not only eradicates the disease when developed, but enables ;he system to safely brave i s assaults. Every phys cal function Is confirmed in or rest ireo to regularity; the circulation quickened if sluggish, and a bilious habit, whicu of itself < egets a proneness to both intermittent and remittent types of malarial disease, where extrinsic atmospheric ca, se- exist, fiowerfu ly counteracted by this inimitable fortifying and defensive agen , which has, moreover. none of the -'i-agreeabls c iar«cteTistics .f a draitic cathartic or an aldaloid. Fever and ague, oumb ague andague~cake, and the caleutnra of the Isthmus, are conquered by it sure y, pleasantly. Rheumatism, neuralgia, ney and bladder troubles, constipation and indigestion yield to it.
A Rochester man makes 150 words per minute on the type-writer.
No Cure No Pay.
It is a pretty severe test Of any doctor’s skill when the payment of his fee is made conditional upon his curing his patient. Yet after having for many years, observed the thousands of marvelous cures effected in liver, blood and lung diseases, by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, its manufacturers feel warranted in selling it, as they are now doing, through all druggists, the world over, under a certificate of positive guarantee that it will either benefit or cure in every case of disease for which they recommend it, if taken in time and given affair trial, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded. Torpid liver, or “biliousness,” impure blood, ‘skin eruptions, scrofulous sores and swellings, consumption (which is scrofula of the lungs), all yield to this wonderful medicine. It is both tonic or strenth restoring, and alterative or blood cleansing.
Chronic Nasal Catarrh positively cured by Dr. Sage’s remedy. 50 cents, by druggists. Cigarette girls get $1 per 1,000; some make 1,100 cigarettes in a day. ■ REV. H. F. CARSON, Scotland, Dak..,says: “Two bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure completely cured my little girl.” Sold by Druggists. 75c. The Texas Federation of Labor has indorsed Henry George. Those who use Dobbins’ Electric Soap each week, (and their name is legion) save their clothes and strength, and let the soap do the work. Did you ever try it 1 If not, do so next Monday sure, Ask your grocer for it. The stationary engineers have 10, - 000 members.
The Homeliest Man In This Town,
As well as the handsomest, and others, areinvited to call on any druggist and get free a trial bottle of Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat and Lungs, a remedy that is selling, entirely upon its merits, and is guaranteed to relieve and cure all chronic and acute. Coughs, Asthma, Bronchitis and Cdhsumption. Large Bottles, 50 cents andll. Texas negroes own 1,000,000 acres and $20,000,000.
Notice— Dropsy Treated Free. Please read the aa. of Dr. H. H. Green & Sons elsewhere in this paper. His proposition of furnishing a free trial of his treatment it seems to us would at least induce patients to try their treatment. The New York Central Labor Union will put up legislative candidates.
A Wonderful Flesh Produce.
This is the title given to Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil by many thousands who have taken it. It not only gives flesh and strength by virtue of its own nutritious properties, but creates an appetite for food. Use it, and try your weight. Scott’s Emulsion is perfectly palatable. Sold by all Druggists. Derby, Conn., will make the new postal card,
Copy of Original.
Van Wert, Ohio, July 11, 1889. Rheumatic Syrup Co.. Jackson, Mich: Gents—l his is to certify that I had what is called sciatic rheumatism so badly that I was all drawn over to one side. My hip sank in so that you could lay your hand in the cavity, and I could do no work for’ over one year. I tried some of the best physicians and did almost everything I could hear or think of, and nothing did me any good until I purchased a bottle of Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup of Hines & Son, druggists. Van Wert. O. Four bottles cured me and have never had it since. . ?.lbebt Kino. We certify to the above testimonial. , Hines & Son. Druggists.
Hibbard’s Rheumatic and Liver Pills.
These Pills are scientifically compounded, uniform in action. No griping pain so commonly following the use of pills. They are adapted to both adults and children with perfect safety. We guarantee they have no equal in the cure of B'tcfc Headache, Constipation. Dyspepsia. Biliousness; and, as an appetizer, they excel onv other preparation.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby wu sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she hod Children, she gave them Castoria.
A GRAND OLD SUNSET.
A Sketch that Gave ». S Ooct the Soubriq uet of “Sunset. ’ 8. 8 Cox in Ohio 1 Statesman, 185’. What a peculiar sunaet was that of last night! How glorious the storm and how splendid the setting of the sun! We do not remember ever to have seen the like on our round globe. The scene opened in the west, with a whole horizon full of golden interpenetrating luster, which colored the foliage and brightened every object into its own rich dyes. The color grew deeper and richer, until the'golden luster was transfused into a storm-" cloud, full of finest lightning, which leaped in dazzling zigzags all around and over the city. The wind arose with fury, the slender shrubs and giant trees made obeisance to its majesty. Some even snapped before its force. The strawberry Beds and grass plats “turned up their whites to see Zephyrus pass by.” As the rain came and the pools and the gutters hurried away thunder roared grandly, and the fire bells caught the excitement and rang with hearty chorus. The south and the east received . tlie Copious showers, and the west all at once brightened up in a long, polished belt of azure, worthy of a Sicilian sky. Presently a cloud appeared in the azure belt in the form of a castellated city. It became more vivid, revealing strange forms of peerless sanes and alabaster temples, and glories rare and grand in this mundane sphere. It reminds us of Wordsworth's jplendid verse in his “Excursion:” ;
•‘The appearance instantaneously disclosed Was of a mighty city, boldly say ' A wilderness of buildings, sinking far And self withdrawn into a wondrous depth, Far sinking into splendor without end.” But the city vanished, only to give place to another isle, where the most beautiful forms of foliage appeared, imaging a paradise in the distant and purified air.
The sun, wearied of the elemental commotion, sank behind the green plains of the west. The ‘ ‘great eye in heaven,” however, went not down without a dark brow hanging over its departing light. , The rich flush of the unearthly light had passed and the rain had ceased; when the solemn church bells pealed, the laughter of children rang out, arid joyous after the storm is heard the carol of birds, while the forked and purple weapon of the skies still darted illumination around tie Starling College, trying to rival its angles and leap into its dark windows. A pocket mirror free to Smoker’s of“Tansill'B Punch” 6c. Cigar. Read Dr. Barber's card in another column.
A Beautiful Picture Free.
For a 2-cent stamp (to pay postage and wrapping) we will mail a panel photogravure of our popular picture, “Kissing at Seven, Seventeen, and Seventy.” Address the makers of the great anti-bile remedy. “Bile Bean,” J. F. Smith & Co., St. Louis, Missouri. •
TTJACOBSOn TRADE Re Me •Alhl CURES PERMANEMTLT—kumbagn SOLD BY M Druggist and. Dealers. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore. Md. (Itetabllahed 1R50.) INDIANAPOLIS (ReorgaßlxM 18853 Business universitv Willi BLOCK. OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. f SIDMAN, HXEB A 03BOSH, Prine ’pa 1 s and ftcpriital. Ladies and gentlemen educated for profitable employment, by a course of training at this institution. Book-keeping, Business practice, Shorthand, Typewriting, Penmanship and English. Larg? faculty. Individual instruction. Class drills. Eminent indorsement Open all year nternow. Attractive city. Expenses moderate. Write to us. illustrated Catalogue, Free.
asthma. jk Popham's Asthma Specific. Belief in tkn minutes. 1() gltu „ an hour for three '-' ' ■lßsmkliU'U* I hope the man that TOtWIMiMpimEMW invented theHwcirie m«j here everlaatius Ute and Wenning while he 11 tea.'Sold bi 21 diussiaU. fl per box by mall, postpaid. Trial package free. Address T. FOPHAM.Tkuuu>blpuia, Pa. The Oldest Medicine in the Werld it Probably DK. ISAAC THOSI’SON'S acripilon, and has bean In constant use for nearly a century. There are few diseases to which maniuna are subject more dhjtres&n« than sore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies nave been tried without success. For all e sternal inflammation of the eyes it is an infallible remedy. If the direc tlons are followed It wllljaever fall. We partfoularly * CO., Tboy, N. Y. Established 1797.
JOSES, HE PAYS THE FREIGHT. •-TON WACOM SCALES, SHUT BIAM BOX W-H JBMUup-—-MASS TAM SIAM. ] * Freight Paid. |fl ~~ Warranted tort Yean J| Ageete Wasted. Send far Tenn*. farmers* Barn and Warehanse Saalaa. ’ W JOB Ml OF IIBOHAMTOB, Binghamton.B.Y. WANTED— Traveling salesmen; rend your nd lres and reference to Keystone M fg. to. (Inc.) Girard. Erie county, Pa., and they will mail you. free, a fu l outfit, including model of an article that scllsi rapidly to the trade in every town and city, and upon which tnev will pay you a liberal commission; whole outfit weighs e ounces. _______ l and expenses AOCRI O p. 14 .rwamu to •»! «ur,o<.<lWASTES h r aunpls sad live si Imm. Sals', paid " ’ prswp»<7 sad ssrwiss •« advaaoa. Pul I patfill icvltn and musi>l, mm FREE. Ws ata,).••
The Liver And kidney*are or;aiu which it. Is important should be kept in good condition, and yet they are overworked and abused by nearly everybody, until they become worn out, clogged u» or diseased. Hdod’s Harsarari la cures all diffi. cullies with the.-e organ*, rouses tbe.u to heitlthy uetiou, and tones the wuo.e dige tiye orgaui.."-. • I have been using Hood's Sara ia ilaLrfedl gest ou and liver rouble. It li..s greatly ben titled tuc Mid I think it s fn ly as good a medicine as c aimed.” E.S-Cn k*bi.o, euief engineer tire de art meut, Stonington, Ct. Hood’s Sarsaparilla by.aU.dnwis-B. $1; mx W $5. Prepared oik ly by G. 1. HOOD da CO., Luwd.', Mx&S. 100 Doses ’One Dollar. • Ely’s. Craam Ba.a, WILL CURE CtiILOBEHF® OF CATAHKH. Apply Balm info'each nostril. ELY IlltuS,’6 Aarrendt N. Y vs* J RAlhik KAHMi i.aiN! H. .. d|H ki l - - MoSfi 4If there's one set of men who appreciate a good waterproof coat it is the farmer. He knows that a “ Fish Brand Slicker” costs him less per year than any garment made. Did you know it rains or snows one day in three the whole year through? A “ Fish,Brand Slicker ” makes every day a pleasant day to its lucky owner. Go anywhere with it iff" rain, hail, sleet, snow, or blow, it is wind and water proof. Costs less than rubber, and lasts ten times as long. Rubber is good for show days, but will rip in a week. If you want a coat for hard wear and hard weather, get the “ Fish brand Slicker.” Every good thing has its imitation, so has the “ Fish Brand Slicker.” Look out. Beware of worth! ess imitations, every garment stamped with “ Fish Band” Trade Mark. Don’t accept any inferior coat when you can have the “ Fish Brand Slicker” delivered without extra cost. Particulars and illustrated catalogue free. A. J. TOWER, * Boston, Mass.
3F YOU WISH A - purchase one of the cele- TwtZ-Jl • Prated SMITH k WESSON > arms. The finest inwl arms /7 aver manufactured and the Ujj )l Wtti first choice of all experts. Kml Manufactured in calibres Si. 38 and 44-10#. Bln- ftSßr vie or double actlon Safety Hsmmerlass and IKS' Target models. Gtfßructed entirely of best a uality wrought steel, aarefully luapected/for workmanship and stock, they are unrivaled for toGh, durability and accuracy. Do not be deceived by cheap malleable cast-iron imitations which are often sold for the genuine article and are not only unreliable, fbut dannreus. The SMITH & WESSON Jttevolverß are all stamped upon the barrels with firm’s nanae, sddreM and date«*of patents and are guaranteed perfect in every detail. Insist upon having the genuine article, and if your dealer cannot supply you an order sent J) addresa below will receive prompt and careful »'V_ntion. Descriptive catalogue and prices furnished upon appllcatlon. SMITH & WESSON, Mention thia paper. _ Mass. GREATuniu H TUBULAR WELL AND H macMne - PROSPECTING MACHINE g H promptly. SELF CLEANING. Drill dropa M t® BOHaaeaZh II CATALOaUE "FREE. CT® LOOMIS & HYMAN, TIFFIN. OHIO.
X>3R.. ■W'. SC. H-A-ITU3BXV a Gives special attention to all delicate dlseasee of both soxs. Regulating remedies furnished. Cancers, cures guaranteed without the knife. Troubles successfully treated, a Cure guaranteed, for the successful treatment of any other ills not mentioned call on or address. DR. SABBIB? tSi South Illinois Street, Indianapolis, Ind. > All letters containing so stamp promptly answered and medininas sons to ordes. HH HALF RATES ■CVmII] - TO THE -i ■“Farming Regions WEST, SOUTHWEST, NORTHWEST. For particulars call on your Ticket Arent or address t. 8. XUBTIS, Owx’l Pass. Agt.,C. B. * Q. R. m SB UARMCNTS auanANTgCD TO FIT jp without tryino on. W O @EREE ® jMeL cfflWßk l3 ? return mall full descriptive MOODY’S NEW TAILok system of dress cutting. Any lady of ordinary IntentsaSsßfiSaA K ence cttn easily and quickly - SSaSBwKu ' earn to cut and make anv garyfrnJtSwlWtisl ment, iu any style to any nieasure for ladv or child Addres. MnnnvA.cn Cincinnati ri $75.00 to $250.00 Agents preferred who can furnish a horse and give their whole time to the business. Spare moments may be profitably employed also. A lew vacancies in towns and oities. B. F. JOHNSON & CO., 1009 Main Street, Richmond, Va. Please state age and business experience. Never mind about sending stamp for reply, B. F.J.4CO. IM Hahlt. The only certala t I I Iwl and easy cure. Dr. J. L. VI ■ V ■■■ Stephens. Lebanon. Ohio.
ixOGANrsT’ORT, itxtxx Established 1867. Decidedly one of the best, most successful and thorough in ths State. Investigation invited. A College of Book-keeping, SHORT-HAND Type-Writing, Penmanship and kindred branches. Patronised by prominent buslntsi men. Catalogue and circulars mailed tree to "E. 4. HALL, President. BRIANT & STRATTON Business College JOSEPH H.
MONEY A aplend'd Jr story for I and ® GIR L - The story is of a hero who worked hard to earn his spending money, with many yrx jyfxrais and triumphs, V; g\ and how unselfishly he VIA spent it. How detcrinitiation overcame poverty. A boy who Y/ Y \ could think how to *** earn money in spite of obstacles, and could act nobly, even at a loss of his own pleasure. A pure story—sent free to any boy or girl who will pay the postage —onlya a-ccnt stamp 1 required. Curtis Publishing Co., Philadelphia,’ Pa. a gaeots a r h r r Wgffgre) FEBFECT easlfrm '• ll0o «t by return mall descriptive «• KS clrculxrs of k:bh’: hiw sysum CFORISSCOHINA Any u<sy of or<u " ©UR® nary Intelligence caD easUy an <l quickly learn to cut and make any garment, In * ny sty>l ° 10 * ny measure for lady or chlld - Addreat MOODY & CO., Cmcinnati, O. DROPSY [ jjl TItKATED FREE. Positively Cured with Vegetable Remedies. Have cured many thousand cases. Cure patient, pronounced hopeless by th«» best physicians. From first dose symptoms rapidly disappear, and in ten days at least two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. Send for free book of testimonials of miraculous cures. Teu days treatment furnished free by mail. If you order trial, send 10 dents in stamps to pay postage. DK. H. H. GREEN A BONS. Atlanta, Ga. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS Bred cross diamond brand. Rafe and alway. reliable. Ladles, A aek Druggist Ibr Diamond th-and, in red, metslHo boxes, sealed with blue /KVX ribbon. Take no other. AU pills in pasteboard boxes, pink wrappers, are \ljr danseroua eounterfclto. Send 4c. v (stamps) for partloulars, testimonials and “Relief for Ladles,” in luttr, by return mall. A'ams Zoper. _____ Cblchmtar Cham’l Co., Sadlsoa FhUa., Ffc E 1 prescribe and folly endors. Big G as the only Curas In specific for the certain cure TO » of this disease. “1 G. H. INGRAHAM.M. D., f/Bg MMoßirietam. ■ Amsterdam, N. Y. ES Mf<oaiyby*e We have sold Big G tor faction. Ohio. D. li. DYCHE & CO., W Chicago, HL SlsOOs Bold by Druggists, DR. PARKER’S Medical & Surgical Institute J 16114 N. Spruce St, Nashville, Tenn. Treat and Cureall Chronic DlsDeformities and Surgical Cases. Sexual Diseases of Men, Women and Children the resu-lts of Imperfect Development. Evil Habit) or Excessex. Opium and the Whiskey Habit, etc. Sanitarium and Private Lying-In Hospital in connection. Write for circular. gR g"" “ CURES wHERfALL ELSEFAJLS BF Best Clough Syrup. Tastes good. Uaa B! in time. Sold by druggists. gl DOUBLE MK ■ ■* |r KiFIESnwH U PISTOLS7S* watchsb. cum®, dm. Olaeianatl, Ohl®.
BASEBALL C 8 7 in. x 5Tn. 70 pages. Illuminated Cover. SENT FREE on application enclosing one ( c) stamp by addressing TIIJEODOIUS HOL. taN n, f. O. Box. 180, Philadelphia. nPIUMvs.MORPHINE I Home or Sanitarium Treatment, Trial U Free Address THE COMPOUND OXYGEN ASSOCIATION, FORT WAYNE, IND. I AOICQ’ Kng ' Tan, F Pilis. Base, prompt, esLnUlLu fectual. Try the original and only genuine Woman’s Salvation. Oir. and sworn testimony 1 ftps. Pkg by moil 81.04. Warranted. DR. CATON, Box 5257, BOSTON, MASS. UHIIE STU DY. Book-keeping, business tonne nUIHL Penmanship, Arithmetic, Shert-hand.eto thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars free. BRYANT’S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Buffalo, N. Y. m.. PRICE-LISTS OF RUG MACHINES, fcjglk—?. Patterns and Yarns, and Colored Rja-IHaffirr/j Pattern Book free. Agent* Wanted E. BOSS * CO.. Toledo. Ohio PATENTS naMMiMVQMMwvmMi Bend for Circular. 4b F" to RS a day. Samples worth 82.15 FREE; 30 lines notjunder the horse’s feet. Write Brewster Safety Rein-ilolder (Company, HOLLY, MICH. INC 40—89 LNDPLS When writing to Advertisers readers will confer a favor by mentioning this paper. VDIIIC II PM Learn Telegraphy here and we win lUvnU IH LR help you to good situations. Address American School of Telegraphy, Madison, Wis. MENTION THU FAPXR nu wainse se uuuxul
