Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 September 1890 — Page 7

We’ve heard of a woman who said she’d walk five miles to get a bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription if she couldn’t get it without That woman had tried it. And it’s a medicine which makes itself felt in toning up the system and correcting irregularities as soon as its use is begun. Go to your drug store, pay a dollar, get a bottle and try it—try a second, a third if necessary. Before the third one’s been taken you’ll know that there’s a remedy to help you. Then you’ll keep on and a cure ’ll come. But if you shouldn’t feel the help, should be disappointed in the results—-you’ll find a guarantee printed on the bot-tle-wrapper that’ll get your money back for you. How many women are there who’d rather have the money than health ? And “ Favorite Prescription” produces health. Wonder is that there’s a| woman willing to suffer when there’s a guaranteed remedy! in the nearest drug storeDr. Pierce’s Pellets regulate the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Mild and effective.

nURIFY YOUB I BLOOD. But do not m the dangerous alkaline and mercurial preparations which destroy .your nervous system and ruin the digestive power of the stomach. The vegetable kingdom gives us the best and safest remedial agents. Dr. Sherman devoted the greater part of his life to the discovery of this reliable and safe remedy, and all its ingredients are vegetable. He gave it the name of - Prickly Ash Bitters I a name every one can remember, and to the present day nothing has been discovered that is so beneficial for the BLOOD, for the LIVER, for the KIDNEYS and for the STOMACH. This remedy is now so well and favorably known by all who have used It that arguments as to its merits are use. less, and if others who require a corrective to the system would but give It a trial the health of this country would bo vastly Improved. Remember the name—PRICKLY ASH BITTERS. Ask yo,ur druggist for it. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO., ST. LOUTS. MO

-fO ■C Dr. White’s Dandelion Alterative. I find it the best remedy for Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, ' and all disorders of the Stomach, Liver makes weak and gives to the old tCee vigor -»T youth, IF 'STOTT HAVE Malaria or Piles, Sick JBeadache, Costive Bowels, Dumb Ague, Sour Stomach and Belching; if your food does not assimilate and you nave no appetite, Tutt’s Pills .Will cure these troubles. Price, 25 cent* Beecham's Pills cure Bilious and Nervous Ills CLEAVELAND RATCHET WIRE fig—|=WF== xx x x Lightner and Governor The only Wire Lightner adapted to any pos> (wOo.l or iron). The only devise that will prevent sagging or breaking, as it yields automatically when wires are on traded by excessive cold Wes her. Gtroulars Free. OLKAVBLAND FENCE CO., Maul’s of Lawn, Field and Country Fences, SO, SI ana SS Biddle St., Indianapolis. THAT is SO I YOU should KNOW The true “Philosophy of Success.” Every young Salesman, Agent and Business Man should have it, every youth should know Its fundamental truths. Thought force the great force in nature. Hypnosis In business. Practical application. Every man a hypnotist. Power of suggestion; Philosophy of Ones influence fivsr others. How different men are Influenced. Develop the latest for ces within yon for ‘‘thia faculty of influencing others can be cultivated toon almost unlimited extent." Do not hesitate, but get ‘'Philosophy of Buoce.e’ ’at Once. Entirely nev. Only 790. Foetal note or moaey order. PBUGRKSdIVE PUBLISHING CO., Box 4XO, Peoria, lit MM HALF RATES Farming Regions WESTyWyTHWEST, HORTMWEST. I iiLtisSkWi' riflfsblll I i|B « jrwiudctfttw;

PLACES THAT ARE HOT.

■ Apots Where Our Highest Temperatures Would Be Called Cold Wares. Pittsburg Dispatch. Hottest of torrid spots upon the summer earth is Aden, at the mouth of the Red Sea, where the English government maintains a coal pile for its navy and a force of soldiers to watch the pile, lest it be set afire by jealous powers. They lead the life of lonely salamanders upon their isolated rock, with a view of almost boiling sea in one direction, w4th wide stretches of baked sand in the other, and behind them rugged ranges of mountains, dry and red, where no green thing is ever seen to grow. No matter whence the wind may blow, it brings no moisture to the straits of Bab el Mandeb—even dew is a rare phenomenon, for the clouds which appear in the sky at sunset serve as blankets to make the night stagnant with heat more unendurable than the blazing sun by day. About once in four years the thermometer registers aa low ae SO degrees in the coolest part of the day, just before sunrise; the lowest point of orjtegg£.oightaisfuHys'idKgrFiffswftisnaiL2 But with the sun returns- the heat; hour by hour the murcury in the thermometer emplates the course of the sun in the sky; it climbs higher and higher, and brings more discoms fort to suffering humanity. Shortly after midday it reaches its highest notch; which it maintains until nearly sunset, and it is never lower than 135 degrees in the shade, —. It rains on this blistered military post about once in three years, and that is the sole water supply, for there are no springs, and well-borings tap nothing but seams of eternal drought. As much else in Arabia King Solomon is credited with the responsibility for the Aden reservoirs, and, to this day, they are called King Solomon's well. Here is collected the water of the triennial shower, and, by economical use, it may be made to last until the rain comes again. Bad as is the case at the southwest corner of Arabia, it is even worse at the southeast angle, where lie the Bahrein islands just off the coast of Oman. It is almost as hot here as at Aden, and there is the additional discomfort that it never rains at all. Dates grow upon the islands and provide for the population ; for their drinking water they are forced to seek it in the sea, which is the last place where one would expect to find fresh water. Strange as it may seem., not a drop of water is drunk by the Bahrein islanders which has not been brought from the bottom of the sea. Springs exist at a depth of several fathoms, and the only way of getting a drink is to dive for it. Waterbearers go down with empty skins and bring them up full to peddle the precious contents. It is not within the tropics that one finds the maximum heat, nor is the heat of the torrid zone so insupportable as summer extremes in more perate zones. —If the recent hot spell in Chicago had occurred in the Java season it would probably have depopulated the archipeligo with cholera, yet the average heat of the Maylayan islands is more than eighty degrees. The cause is riot far to seek; the people are accustomed to a climate of moderate range, and do not have to exhaust their vitality in supporting great cold for a large portion of the year. Their syss terns grow used to a certain amount of heat, and their mode of living is conformed to that standard. Australia is probably the hottest of the temperate lands inhabited by white races, and it is at the same time almost the driest, excluding such absolute deserts as a large portion of the Pacific coast Of South America. From the time when its summer begins, in September, until the coming of winter, in July, the earth gives up all its moisture, almost the largest bodies of water dry up, the air is dry and day by day the sun se'ads down ever fiercer beams. Adelaide, whioh is upon the south shore of the continent, finds 115 degrees no unusual temperature for Christmas and an additional 10 degrees scarcely calls for comment in the journals. Not content with the appalling state of the thermometer in the shade, they expose it to the sun and find to their dismay a temperature of an where from 150 degrees to 190 degrees. Sheep and cattle die. yet men manage to live, and, despite the torrid heat, never have ice. The nearest approach to a cooling drink is water from canvas bags, which is cooled by constant evaporation. There is an interesting comparison—America uses ice water and suffers sunstroke; Australia, with much greater heat, knows neither sunstroke nor ice water.

Americans In Turkey.

Bev. Haye In Kansas City Star. Our government has not much more influence in that region. We do not mean business in anything we say when we speak. Let an Englishman be maltreated and the trst thing they know a lot of shotted English ships are in some of their harbors, and word is sent that the man must b* released and the legal rights settled afterward or they will open fire. If an American is maltreated, we first settle the legal question while the man stayd in jail, and then after he has been well punished by maltreatmentrin jail, they may let him out with a great show of def-; erence to foreign influence. But that foreigner will be careful not to get into trouble there again, rightfully or wrongfully. We were told this story: One of the missionaries, while traveling in xmeof the interior sections, cnraped, ,ono night near the camp of the Go vpNbrof tiie province; not supposing that he had anything to do with the

other camp, he paid no attention to it. To punish him for what he thought neglect of proper respect, the Governor the next morning went to him and maltreated him shamefully. The proof is clear but the Turkish government makes this reply: “The Gov? emor is a good Mohammedan, and no good Mohammedan would do such a thing; therefore he did not do it,” and as a result the man has never been tried We were told the American. Minister had done his best to bring the man to trial, but nothing is done. The English Minister has attempted to exercise some influence, but is practically told that it is none of his busis ness, as the man is not an English subject.

INGALLS ON LIFE AND DEATH.

The Doom of Humanity and the Universe—The Future Hope. From the Eulogy on Senator Beck, Pronounced August 23. The right to live is, in human estimation, the most sacred, the most inviolable, the most inalienable. . The joy of living in such a splendidarid luminous day as this is inconceivable. Toexietiß—exultation . -To live for- - ever is our sublimest hope. Hnnihilation, extinction, and eternal death are the forebodings of despair To know, to love, to achieve, to triumph, to confer happiness, to alleviate mysery, is rapture. The greatest crime and the severest penalty known to human law is the sacrifice and forfeiture of life. And yet we are all under sentence of .death. Other events may hr may not occur. Other conditions may or may not exist. We may be rich or poor; we may’ be learned or ignorant; we may be happy or wretched; but we all must die. The verdict has been pronounced by the inexorable decree of an omnipotent tribunal. Without trial or opportunity for defense; with no knowledge of the accuser, or the nature and cause of the without being confronted with the witnesses against us, we have been summoned to the bar of life and condemned to death. There is no west of error, no review. There is neither exculpation nor appeal. All must be relinquished. Beauty and deformity, good and evil, virtue and vice, share the same relentless fate. The tender mother cries passionately for mercy r for her first born, but there is no clemency. The craven felon sullenly prays for a moment in which to be aneled, but there is no reprieve. The soul helplessly beats it wings against bars, shudders, and. disappears. The proscription extends alike to the individual and the type. Nation* die’ and races expire. Humanity ' itself is destined to extinction. Sooner or hiter it is the instruction of science that the energy of the earth will be expended, and it will become incapable of supporting life. A group of feeble and pallin survivors in some sheltered valley in the tropics will behold the sun sink below the horizon and the pitiless stars glitter in the midnight eky. —The last man will perish, and the sun will rise upon an earth without an inhabitant. Its atmosphere, its seas, its life and heat, will vanish, and the planet wilt' be 'an idle cinder uselessly spinning in its orbit. Every hour some world die', unnoticed in the firmament; some sun smoulders to embers and ashes on the hearthstone of infinite spqce, *nd the mighty maze of systems sweeps ceaselessly onward in its Voyage of doom to remorseless and unsparing destruction. With the disappearance of man from the earth, all traces of his existence will be lost. The palaces, towers, and temples he has reared, the institutions he has established, the cities he has < builded, the books he has written, the creeds he has constructed, the pnilosophies he has formulated—all science, art, literature and knowledge will be obliterated and engulfed in empty and vacant oblivion. The gr< at globe itself, ———— -- Yea, all whieh it inherit, shall dissolve, And, like this insubstantial pageant faded, Leave not a nek behind. There is an Intelligence so vast and enduring' that the flaming intervals between the birth and death of universes is no more than the flash of fireflies above the meadows of summer; a colossal power by which these stupendous orbs are launched in the abyss, like bubblesi.blown by a child in the. morning sun, and whose sense of justice and reason can not be less potential than those immutable statutes that are the law of being to the creatures He has made, and which compel, them to declare that if the only object* of creation is destruction, if infinity is the theater of an uninterrupted series of irreparable calamities, if the final cause of life is death, then time is an inexplicable tragedy, and eternity an illogical and indefensible catastrophe. No, Mr. President, this obsequy is for the quick and not for the dead. It is a strain of triumnh. It is an affirmation to those who survive, that as our departed associate, contemplating a«< the close of his life the monument of good deeds he had erected, more enduring than brass, and loftier than the pyramids of kings, might exclaim with the Roman poet, “Non omnis moriar.” So, turning to the silent and unknown future he could rely with just and reasonable confidence upon that most impressive and momentous assurance ever delivered to the human race: “He , that believeth in me, though he were ! dead yet shall he live; and whosoever . liveth and believeth in me shall never die.”

Natural Pride.

New York Herald. „ j run out in , the ra|n with Ui your hat on?' ■•Mhmma, my head can’t get wet I’ve had it shingled.’’

Goldsmith’s “Vicar of Wakefield” rt as sold for a trifle to save him from the grip of the law. Milton sold his copyright of “Paradise Lost” for $72, at three payments, and finished his life in obscurity.

Commendable.

All claims not consistent with the high character of Syrup of. .Figs are purposely, avoided by the Cal. Fig Syrup Company. It acts gently on the kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the system effectually, but it is not a cure-all and makes no pretensions that every bottle will not substantiate. /

Lost in a Chicago Wilderness.

Chicago Herald. Ward Thirty-three of the city of Qjicago is a great big thing. It is ten miles long and three miles wide, and contains 19,200 acres. Ward Thirty-three is watered by one noble river, the Grand Calumet, and encloses one entire body of water, Hyde Lake, besides being entitled to three and a half miles of shore line on the Calumet Lake, with all the rights, privileges, and hereditaments thereunto belonging. It also shares dominion over Wolf Lake with the sovereign State of In diana, and has more .than a xnile_squar» of -the waters of that inland sea within its own confines. There are sixty railroad stations and seven Post Offices in the ward, and the population is fairly estimated at 100,000. . A party of hunters was gunning in section 25 when I walked down there. Snipe shooting had never been better, and each of them was burdened with a bag full of game. They rowed me across the outlet of the lake, and 1 started south over the low lands. Woods are plentiful down here, and they hid 138th street, which is the southern boundary of the city. The sky was clouded, and I was not certain about my direction. Blackberries and wild currants grew thick on the bushes, and furnished an excellent dessert for the dinner I hoped to find later. I was tryibg to travel in a southwesterly course, and I wondered all the forenoon why I could’t find the Michigan Central tracks. Tliere were paths through the wood, and I tried my best to follow them and still keep my direction, but about noon I came out square on the south shore of Lake Calumet. I had been lost in the forests of Ward Thirty-three.

Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder and. Delicious Flavoring Extracts are exactly as represented, free from all adulterations, and the rribst perfect made. No mouse has ever caught a woman yet. Why airthis trepidation'! A man who has practiced medicine for forty years ought to know salt from sugar: read what he says: Toledo, 0., Jan. 10, 1837; Messrs. F. J. Cheney & Co.—Gentlemen:—l have been in the general practice of medicine for almost forty years, and would say that in all my prectiee and experience have never seen a preparation that I could prescribe with as much confidence of success aa 1 can Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by you. Have prescribed it a great many times, and its effect is wonderful, and would say in conclusion that f have yet to find a case of Catarrh th ■ t ifwoud not cuie, if they would take it according to directions. Yours truly, L. L. GOBSUCH, M. D., Office als Summit st. We will give SIOO reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY <fc CO., Proprs., Toledo, 0. Ba_Sold by drugglsis, 75c. There are a good many things that go without saying, but a woman is not one of , them. r •

Some Foolish People

Allow a cough to run until it gets beyon the reach of medicine. They often say “Oh, it will wear away, ’ ’ but in most case it wears them away. Co uld they be induce to try the successful medicine calle . Kern’s Balsam, wbieriis sold on a positive guarantee to cure, they would immediately -see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Price 50c and 81. Trial size Free. At all druggist’. When a leader sees that his arguments are lame he should not hesitate to call a halt.

The Great Spring Medicine—The Blood is the Life.

Gentlemen; I have been troubled with •bad blood for some years, but recently purchased two bottles of Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, which has entirely cured me. As a blood purifier it has no equal, and I also take pleasure in recommending it as a tonic, alterative, and reliable rheumatic remedy. Very truly yours, S. E. Ferguson, Eaton Rapids,Mich, This is to certify that we know Mr. Ferguson, and believe the statement made by him to be true. We unhesitatingly recommend this remedy, as we believe it to be the greatest family medicine on our ■helveßr~~~"^~~~Wn;wgg | ga~S Soule~ Eaton Rapids, Mich. Sold by all druggists. Prepared only by The Charles Wright Medicine Company, Detroit, Mioh.

Hibbard’s Rheamatie and Liver Pills.

These Pills are scientifically compounded, uniform in action. No griping pain so oommealy following the neo of pula They are attained to both adults ana children with perfect safety, wo guarantee they have no btusl in the cure of dick jyeodecAs. Conidletioit. Dyspepsia. Biliousness: and, as an iqpeUxor, they excel any other propaim* lion. Explained at Last.— The fact that Washington never told a lie has been satisfactorily accounted for. He never went fishing. The fact that Dr. White’s Dandelion Alterative has become the most popular Liver and Kidney Remedy is also easily accounted for. It is anhonest medicine, made of the best and purest materials that money will buy, and performs all that is claimed for it. Try it. Is Prickly Ash Bitters good for anything! Read what Frank Griggsby, ot Dodge City, Cas., says: “For three years I suffered from a disease that my phys« icians pronounced incurable. My friends had given me up to die, when I was in« duced to try your remedy. I took it for three months and have gained 82 pounds in weight. Am a well man and Prickly Ash Bitters saved my life. lam under lifelong obligations to this will never cease to reoom mend It." - T ..- ; .'c: - . - ' ■ - J “Do good with that thou hast, ar it will do thee no good.” If you know all about BAPOLK) pnt your knowledge to use. Beecham’s Pills cure Slat-fl earlache. Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses of Piso’s Cufefor Consumption

A Reprieve for the Condemned.

Wretched men ana women long condemned to suffer the torturea of dyspepsia, are filled with new hope after a few doses of Hostetter's Stem* ach Bitters. This budding hope blossoms into the frultnion of certainty, if the Bitters is pertinted in. It brings a reprieve to all dyspeptics who seek its aid. Fiatu.enre, heartburn, sinking, at the pit of the stomach between meals, the nervous tremors and insomnia of which chronic stion is the parent, disappear with their hatetui progenitor. Most beneficent of stomachics! who can wonder that in so many instances >t awakens grateful eloquence in these who, beuefitted by it, speak voluntarily in its behalf. It requires a graphic pen to describe the torments of dyspepsia, but in many of the testimonials received by the proprietors of the Bitters, these are portrayed wjtha vivid truthfu ness constipation, biliousness, muscular debility, malarial fevers and rheumatl-m are re ieved by It. Why is it that people with good impulses are generally lazy. A soap that is soft is full of water, half or two-thirds its weight probably, thus you pay seven or eight cents per pound for water. Dobbins’ Electric Soap is all soap and no adulteration, therefore the cheapest and best. Try Dobbins’. A Binghampton car driver savs his work is like an organ. It is full of stops. Dr. John Bull, of Louisville, Ky.,showed his love for little children when he invented those dainty little candies he named Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers. It’s fun for the children, but it’s death to the worms.

Distress After Eating Indigestion And Dyspepsia Are Cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla £LECTRIC N BELT _ Aiyn Patenteb Auc. isl, 1887, Improves July 30,1889 owEx’SEticwKe GALVANIC BODY fi£LT SUSPENSORY rill tSjgsSffiA *. Rheumatic ComI< n nta iLun>b«go, General Nervous Debility, Kidney -?**’****. Nervou»nee» Troubling, Sexual Exga BKr. & Y PAIR or W ri’ 51 *"* ep *P’”S < OX 1 io e DATB TRUL SI-oWJ ELECTRIt, IIfSOLES.,SK,i ®®assMsaßSi fto ip plain ae«sl*d Mention this paper. Ad Area* OWEN ELECTRIC BELT A APPLIANCE 00, 306 North Broadway, ST. LOUXB. KQ. 826 Broadway, NEW YOBK CITY. TAROID A new method of compounding Tar. SURE CURE for PILES, SALT RHEUM and all Bklr. Blaesses. Send 8 2c-gtanjpß far Free BamIndianaDruggi.etesupplied by D. StewartJand A* Keifer A 00., Indianapol. ■. I EUEDV DEUunSI Can have email and / ulurll rEnOUrt pretty feet by usings I simple, natural method, the discovery of a A noted French chiropodist A lady writes: “I /\ have used two packages of PEDINE, and X A the result Is wondWtUL I wear a No. 2 shoe ///J now wlth although heretofore requiring (tJ/® s large 3 - ha * exceeded my most sanguine 11/ expectations." If you are interested in the Jr subject, send for free Illustrated pamphlet. PEDINE is safe, harmless, and unfailing, y . By mall, securely sealed, 60 centa. THE PEDINE CO., 258 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Want to Know ijJOleyd»yU'niliHS«bont the human system, k * trrij&ilth saved, disease (goto to anMfdjgfiU of ignorance and iudlMretton, mow to aU forme of dieease, IBow to Old Xyee, Rupture, mrnoeis.eto., I How to Marriage and have price babiees land an odjxptAf Doctor’s Droll Jokes, profusely illueItatcd. Send ten cents tor new Leagh-Cur* Boek eaUM SENSE AND M. HILL PUB co.. 12D fast 28th Bfc, New Yort. REmE>: 4 . Pw. tarn*—j%nr Mr . Wb«a I your j)' Idn. W IrirtwwA IW oMMha 1 ai«Mih6M«K z eMMwAtemy wrt. 1 wm BfWßdbioaM. W/ / I 664 081 1M» vsti !«•■»> WOTS wMhasMßsw. I \ \\ 111 I chwfbfiyrewMsmeM 611 % 1 111 ' lam NM. M wwUHNmnDaoi, 188. tm M-JCvujcaH. MsM arrta* fe. qataff, 18. qLw.r.«NVOn, a&a*Me.«Met..«MceiM A P EMTC send for oircnlare.&c, of new book; non AUENIu other like it; rare opportunity. Addre t Gbj. W. Fbanci, 7 New Chambers St.. New York.

■MMFreUEVESINSTANTLY. 11 —RM BLY BROTHERS, 68 Warren St, New York, Price BO Indianapolis Business University Old Bryant * Stratton School, North Pennsylvania St., When Block, Opposite Poot-OSto*/ yS?;’entersay Ura* elective o?pXerhS Diplomaireeatnaduation; a strictly business school In an unrivaledeonmiercialcenter; superior Egl Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. iKb Irw Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the KV R-jlj taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists. Ett W? WATERPROOF COLLAR on CUFF ——| THAT CAN BE RELIED ON THE MARK Hgt-tQ. X>l»<3OlOy I BEARS THIS MARK. MARK. HEEDS se LAUHOEHIHD. CAR BE WIPED CLEAR IM A MOMEKa THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATEHPROOa COLLAR IN THE MARKET.. ' '

Walter Buhl & Co.' manufacturers or s F!UIRISI!s - gas or S SEAL SKINS in the country and ' make a specialty o £* ei,in s Ba ml j.icms I» lIIW SACQUES A IO hill NEWMARKETS i p' n Ac, « &c ’ -Ask your merchant for them. WALTER BUHL & CO., DETKOIT, MICH. lEWS’ 98 per cent. - L IjYE Powdered and Perfameth OMSt-rA [PATENTED] PtwA IX The Strongest and Purest LYE QKMWfa '* made. Will make the best perjMtagwT fumed Soap in 20 minutes withBHm out boiling, it is the best for disinfecting sinks, closets, wsshBfS ing bottles, drains, bartels, prints. ■ ■ etc. IJL. PENN. SALT M’F’G CO., Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa. BORE WELLS II m Our Well Machines are tho most Iff * 111 VIIU I I RKLIABLB.DUBA*LK.SUCCKMrUL! 111. JVW They do MOKE WORK and make GREATER PROFIT. 1M- XDmHA They FINISH Weik where KA Ml II I ZM other* FAIL! Anr els*, t IgUSj* Inches to k inches diameter. LOOMIS & NYMAH, TIFFIN. - OHIO FREE » MOTHERS’ FRIEND MAKES CHILD BIRTH easy IF USED BEFORE CONFINEMgNT. Book to “Mothxrb" MamincFßU. BRADFIELD REOI LATOR CO., ATLANTA. 04 Sold bx all DBu<.axara. NEW Pension Law. THOUSANDS NOW KNTITLKD WHO HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address or forms of application and full information. WM. W. DUDLEY, EATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS, Attorney at Law, Washington, D, U; (Mention this paper.) PENSIONS The disability bill is a taw. Soldiers disabled since the war are entitled. Dependent widow,and parents now dependent whose sons died from effects of arihy service are included. If yon wish your claim speedily and successfully pros- |*MEC TAUUED ecuted, address, JAfflEO I ANNEIIJ Late Commissioner of Pensions, Washington, 0. C. r". »2 t0() 108 ft. DIIDDI/D Anybody can lay it. IL IJ D DILII Guaranteed water-tlgh Write far 800 l dreulv. Sample mailed free if yon. —.. T"IT"WT /I STATE SIZE OF BOOF. Ls | || IL’ I N | GEO. E. GLINES, ILV VP 111 V West® road way, N. Y. I—WM. IFITCIEr co. 102 Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C. Pension Attorneys of over 25 years’ experience. Successfully pros ecute pensions and claims of all kinds in snort e»t possible time. »»JS(O FEE UNLESS SCO CEBBFUL. . fOTjrn®i^i^£S. brC i Elin ■**! young men and women in this | ifcW | country owe their Uvea tleif I B IAJTYaIII health and their bapptoess to I ■ W < 11.1 Ridge’s Food, their daily diet In Infancy and CMldh.od having By Druggists, Um" OLD CLAIMS rCnOIUHw Settied under NEW Law. Soldiers, Widows, Parents send for blank ang' Elicad nCNQIONQ New Law ’ DELI* OI Vlh O soldiers, widows r and relatives entitled. Apply at once. Blank I and instruction free. SOULES Jk CO., Atty* Washington, D. C. HFBie iOaie Thm»ands KnttUC.IuW IV 1* tied under the New r Act. Write immediately for BLANKS for apI plication, J. B. CBALLE « CO., Washington, D. C. JOHN W. MORRIS DE. I* &81 Vr I* Washington, D. O p Successfully Prosecutes Claims. I Late Principal Examiner U s.Pension Bureau . 8 yrs in last war,ls adjudicating claims,atty since u i t IN U 39—90 INDPLI3