Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 May 1893 — Page 3
ABQYK XVKRTTHnm irrjsr, a nee’s Golden Medical ry purifies the blood. 1 means, it readies, op, and invigorates •art of the system, try blood-taint and , and Ur every dist comes from an inacr or impure blood, it inly remedy en sure ctive that it can be ted. ~:rills to benefit or core, svour mohey back, diseases are many, different in form, bot like in treatment. • the torpid liver into 1 action, thoroughly ad enrich the blood, re’s a IM»s ||||j The “ Discovery * does thu as nothing else can. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, ; Biliousneas; all Bronchial, Throat, and Long Affections; every form of Scrofula, even Consumption (or Lung-scrofula) in its earBar stages; and the most stubborn Skin Diseases, are completely cured > WHAT OTHERS SAIT. "THAT TERRIBLE DISTRESS." LIVER TROUBLE, BILIOUSNESS, NERVOUS PROSTRATION, AND KIDNEY DISEASE. Treated by Eight Physicians Without Benefit. CURED BY LIVURA. * Lirmu M’r’o. Co, Dear Sirs :— u For / I about S years 1 have L WbW f been afflicted with Liv* wSv j * r tr#nh l®> causing me l<A MAf I to become rery Bilious, j■ Wj K I bad headache centin* . V* r ~ 40, \_ . jit ndly, my appetite was jd&e a<g/very peer, and a death* ... ' jßjs&Si ly faintness at tho pit of thestonaeh nccom- • A P anled by a terrible ;-> '^A«£2^jsf “ distress. During the —I past two years my Mb. P. B. Abciier. Kidneys became rery wit and pained me so badly 1 could net rest. Owing to extreme nerrensneis I was unable to attend to my business, and in January I came dswn with Karroos Prostration* Eight different Physicians have had me under their care, but 1 grew worse Instead of better. Learning of PUCHEB’S LITHRII began taking it and my ImproTemeat was noticeable from the ~ first.' 1 bare taken 3 bottle* and am ENTIBELY CURED, able to attend to my work, and havo not felt so well for 6 years. I give all the credit to PITCHER’S LIVURA, Respectfully, F. B. ARCHER, (30 West Concord Street, Dayton, Ohio. -SI LIVURA OINTMENT The Great Shin Cure. Cares Eczema, Salt Rheum, Pimples, Ulcers, Itch, and all affections of the skin. Reals Cuts, Bruises, burns, scalds, etc. Sold by all Druggists. or by mail. Price 85 Cents. L The Livuiii. M’r’a. Co., Nashville, Tenn.
it,] i f , W«mm B »■ TBVi B w I HRV^ShIRBBJR^HBb =S "'' f It Cure* Cold*. Coughs. Boro Throat. Croup. Influenza. Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stage*. Css at once. You will sen the exoellent effect after taking tht first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Largo vottlcs 60 cent* and *I.OO. _ ,
The Davis Hand Cream Separator and Feed Cooker Combined, a . Completest of outfits for a dairy farmer. This machine has an attachment which, when the bowl has been taken out, is dropped into the Separator so that a belt can run to the churn. Write for furthei particulars. Davis Si Rankin Bldg, and Mfg. Co., UdO to 254 W. Lake St., Chicago, 111., Manufacture all kinds of Creamery Machinery and Dairy Supplies. (Agents wanted in every county.) wqr?p, SUCKER Tho FISH BRAND BLICKBR Is warranted waterproof; and will keep you dry In tho hardest storm. The new POMM EL SLIL'KJUI Is a perfect riding coat, and eoren the o»Ur« saddle. Bawaraoflmitations, Don't buy a aoat if the “ Fish Brand" Is not on It. Illustratsd Catslneue thee. A, J. TOWER, Boston, Mas*. . Garfield Tea as: Pure*Tick Headache,HeetoreeComplexloaTßavet Doctor® Kla. sample frse. Q tanau. T«a Co.. its it'. Oth St.. N.T. Cures Constipation With Pastes, Euamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure tho Iron, and barn ted. The Rising San Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will gnake several boxes o t Paste Polish,
| MISCELLANEOUS ROTES. Obelisks were probably the first monuments. A tree-planting day has been established in thirty-eight States. In 1892, 5,500,000 persons in this country had life insurance policies. Every gem known to the lapidary has been found in the United States. In the space of a minute the polypus can change its form one hundred thneßr ' The Mississippi and its tributaries have 12,854 miles of navigable water. A Jersey City man has a museum of door knobs numbering over 3,000 specimens. 1_ Many of the leading Government buildings at Washington are on the Greek style. A child with three arms, it is said, was born one day recently at Logansport, W. Va. Twenty-one per cent, of the men employed, in our merchant marine are unable to swim. Germanv makes an excellent brand "of “Scotch’’ whisky, which finds a ready sale in India. Tennessee will have at the World’s Fair a beech tree on which Daniel Boone engraved his name. Excessive rope-jumping caused the death of Bessie Woodward, a little girl of Washington, D. C. There are one hundred aud twen-ty-two different varieties of roses in a garden at Lexington, Fla. Near Dearnut, in Morocco, a natural aqueduct of rock carries a river over a wide and deep gorge. The Moors of Arabia and Spain were the first to display colored globes in drqg-store windows. The organs of smell in the vulture are so delicate that it can scent its food for a distance of forty miles. A third set of natural teeth has come to bless Mrs. G. Stephens, of Albany, Ga. Her age is ninety. Since 1840, thirty-seven vessels, of which a part of the name was the “City of, have been wrecked or lost. A Salishbury (N. C.) farmer says that hogs watered exclusively with well water will be free from cholera.
The pendant ear ring which deformed the ears of our grandmothers promises to return into fashionable favor. A safety pin swallowed by a cow belonging to John Smith, of Kingston, Ontario, caused the animal's death. Two hundred dogs are annually doomed to death in the University of Buffalo, for physiological experiments. An Oshkosh (Wis.) farmer has been fined for cruelly punching the eyes out of a cow and wrenching her tail off. People who own chickens in Hutchinson, Kansas, are compelled by law to inclose them in coops from March to October. A calf with a wing growing from its shoulder-blade may be seen on the farm of A. M. Chisholm, near Hecla, South Dakota, An electrician in Nashville, Tenn., says that it would be dangerous for women wearing crinoline to cross the electric car tracks. Among the new diseases are listed typewriters’ backache, telephone earache, gum-chewers’ lockjaw and cigarette smokers’ insanity. A rent or cut in an oil-cloth may be readily mended by laying a piece of sticking-plaster underneath,sticky side up, and bringing the edges of the cloth together. A brief attack of neuralgia caused a remarkable change in Miss Fairy Musetter, a nineteen-year-old belle of Fostoria, Ohio. Her hair has become as white as snow.
The State owns and protects the mountain sheep of Colorado. Ten years’ imprisonment in the peni- ' tentiary is the punishment for any person convicted of killing one. Mahomet’s injunction against the use of ardent spirits is so well obeyed even at this late day that it is an extremely rare sight to see a drunken Mussulman. One healthy house-fly in the course of the summer, lays four times, and each time about eighty eggs, making 320 for the season. It is estimated that in one season the product of a pair of flies amounts to 2,080,320 eggs. |\A scene in the passing of the red man was witnessed in the early morning at Dalles, the other day. A procession of Indians wended its way up the railroad on Front street, two members of which bore on a board a dead body wrapped in a blanket. They were eu route to ono of their islands, where they bury tho remains of their departed friends, in the Arm belief that from these places their spirits will be escorted to the happy hunting grounds. —Portland r Oregonian. In a recent lecture in London Sir John Lubbock gave some interesting reminiscences of mixed metaphors perpetrated by speakers in the House of Commons by which he showed that Scotchmen are able at times to wrest the laurels from Irishmen in the matter of Hibernicisms r He recalled ono speech by a solemn Highlander in which he gravely informed the House that a certain apSriation of £2,000,000 for the an war was a “mere flea-bite in the* ocean;” while another Scotch member remarked that “you may depend on it, sir, the pale face of the British soldier is the backbone of the Indian Army.”
A Street-Car Cat.
Harper's Young People The street cars in a certain Western city have small stoves in the centre of each car for the additional comfort of passengers in cold weather The driver on one of these cars had reached the end of his route one cold day last November, and was the car to the other, when a halfgrown, half-starved and bedraggledlooking kitten came mewing across the road and ran into the car. It curled up under the warm stove in great - contentment, and the kindhearted driver, who was also the conductor, allowed it to lie under the stove during the down-town, trip. He begged a saucer of milk of milk for the little waif at the other end of the route, and after lunch, for which she was manifestly grateful, kitty went back to her snug
place under the little stove, and during the day she and the condttetor became such good friends that be left her in the car when he went off duty that night. He did not put her out the next day, and before a week she became the pet of the public, and quite an attractive card to that branch of road. She was a pretty, playful, little gray and white kittle, ’ and made friends with all the passengers. The children played with her, the ladies petted her, and most of the men paid ner 6ome attention. One lady tied a pretty scarlet ribbon around kitty’s neck, and the next day another lady fastened a tiny silver bell to the ribbon. As for things to eat, kitty has them in variety and quantity enough to make a .dyspeptic of her. During a single trip she had gifts of a choice bit of raw steak offered her by an old Irishman on the car, a big oatmeal cracker and some gumdrops presenten by a little girl, a lump of loaf-sugar, a lime, a sandwich, some peanuts, and a link of sausage. Kitty had been on the car five weeks when I heard from her last, the most happy, contented, and petted little puss imaginable. When the weather is fine she often rides out On the platform with the driver who has been such a true friend to her, and whose conduct is proof of the fact that there is a kindly, generous heart beneath his rough garments. You can’t make a poker player believe that a pair beats three until he’s been the father of both twins and triplets. . When ; y.OU have nvftr-ftxertftd ynnrself, by running, jumping, or working, there is nothing that will relieve the soreness of your joints and muscles so quickly and effectually as {Salvation Oil, the greatest cure on earth for pain. 25cts. The well-bred man is nowhere so certain of his standing as in a crowded streetcar.
Here It Is.
To the man who labors with his hands, physical trouble Is a very serious thins. It is not merely the pain ne endures, racking and tormenting as it is, bat the prospective loss of time, money and place haunts him and aggravates his suffering. He is bent on having prompt relief and sure cure. He wants the best and the proof and here it Is:—Mr. W. H. Bcliroeder, Glibertville, lowa, stat’d, April 10, 1884, that he haa used St. Jacob’s Oil In his stables for horse complaints and upon himself for rheumatism, and had found it the best remedy he had ever tried. Again, Feb’y 11,1887, he writes: “I have used St. Jacob’s Oil for rheumatism and sore back, as stated, and it cured; and for burns and bruises it does its work as recommended to do. I always keep it in the house and recommend it to ray neighbors.”—Mr. John Garbutt, 556 Minna St., San Francisco, Cal., writes: “Some time back I sprained my knee and suffered agony until I tried St. Jacob’s Oil. The result was a speedy and permanent cure.” —Miss Ida M. Fleming, 7 S. Carey St., Baltimore, Md., says: “I had been afflicted for two years with ne -ralgia, and tried every means to get rid of the tormenting disease. I had been i ven so much quinine that my nervous s\ s-jji was seriously injured. I was advised to Jacob’s Oil. which I did, and it relieved me entirely.” It doesn’t always require a Dig-mouthed man to make abroad assertion. - =
“LOOK AT THE MAP.”
The Route to be Taken by Many Visitors to the World’s Fair. Almost any map of the United States shows the location of Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Louisville and other large cities. From each of the three cities named draw a straight line to Chicago. The line drawn from Pittsburg will touch at Salem, Alliance. Canton, Massillon. Wooster, Mansfield. Crestline. Bucyrus, Lima and Van Wert. Ohio: Ft. Wayne, Columbia City, Warsaw, Plymouth and Valparaiso, Ind. That from Cincinnati will traverse a thickly settled portion of the southwestern part of Ohio and run the entire length of Indiana from southeast to northwest, touching at Hamilton and Eaton. Ohio; Richmond. Hagerstown. New Castle. Anderson. Elwood, Kokomo, Logansport, Winamac/Crown Point. Ind. The line from Louisville will pass through the entlVe length of the Hoosier State and In Its course would touch Columbus. Franklin, Indlanapo.is and Logansport. A line drawn from Pitts Durg through Columbus, Ohio, to Chicago would incline slightly to the southward and would pass through Steubenville, Coshocton. Newark. Urbana and Plqua, Ohio: Union City, Hartford, Marlon, and Logansport, Ind., and run direct from those points to the World’s Fair site. A line from -Madison, Ind., would also pass through Indianapolis and Logansport in its direct course to Chicago. Such lines placed on the map would Indicate the routes to the World's Fair described by the Pennsylvania Lines, which traverse the populous portions of Western Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, leading direct from Pittsburg, the natural gateway from the East, and In a straight course from Cincinnati and Louisville, the natural gateways of the South, to the World's Fair City. Beginning with April 89th. World’s Fair excursion tickets to Chicago will be sold from all tlcfct stations on the Pennsylvania Lines. The going coupon will be valld from the d»y of purchase until October SOth, and the return coupon will be good for return passage up to and including November fiih. The sale of these tickets will continue daily until October :oth, and will be governed by consistent reductions In fare. Both the going and return coupons will be valid for contlhuous passage only. No stop-over allowed. Any ticket agent of the Pennsylvania Lines will cheerfully furnish detailed Information regarding rates, time of trains, etc. The recent extensive Improvements on the Pennsylvania Llnea, for the event In question, make them the desirable thoroughfares to Chicago from the territory tre versed by them. The through time from every station Is exceptionally fast and the first-emss train service affords every desired convenience for an enjoys ble trip.
World’s Fair Excursions to Chicago via Best Roots—The Pennsylvania Lines.
Commencing April 85th. World's Fair Excursion Tit kets to Chicago, will be sold from all ticket stations on the Pennsylvania Lines. Consistent reductions In fare will he made and sale ot tickets will < ontlnue dally until October SUth, Inclusive. Return ooupons will be valid until November sth. Any Pennsylvania Line tloket agent will furnish details upon application.
Why not, indeed? When the Royal Baking Powder makes finer and more wholesome food at a less cost, - whicßPevery housekeeper familiar with it will ? j - affirm, why not discard altogether the oldfashioned methods of soda and sour milk, or home-made mixture of cream of tartar and s °da, or the cheaper and inferior baking powders, and use it exclusively?
A Glib Salesman.
Fliegend© Bittetter. • V' ■ '' :. ; / / ■: Business Man—l’ll buy nothing more from you. The last suit of clothes you sold me shrank terribly after a single shower of rain. The coat doesn’t reach as far as the waist and the trousers are up to my Traveling Salesman —Then you have a first-class bicycle suit, and the best thing you can do is to buy a wheel.
An Observing Child.
Little Ethel —I don’t want any cake. Papa—No cake? What’s the matter? Little Ethel Mamma said it wasn’t quite perfect, an’ when she says her own cake isn’t quite perfect L it must be awful. Marlow —So Bessie has actually allowed herself to marry that old miser, eh? Ethel (sighing)—Yes, emulating Andromeda, you know. Marlow —How so? Ethel —She is chained to the rocks! . *•.
When Traveling
Whether on pleasure bent or business, take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as It acts most pleasantly and effectively on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale in EO cent and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Though tho farmer’s life is filled with trouble all the year round, during the next few weeks he will have an especially harrowing time of it. : J Beecham’s Pilt.B are a painless and effectual remedy for all bilious and nervous disorders. For sale by all druggists. The man who falls in love with his head only never gets a wife to suit him. In 1850 “Brown's Bronchial Troches” were Introduced, and their success as a cure for Colds, Coughs, Asthma, and Bronchitis has been unparalleled. Misfortunes frequently come in small pairs and play the deuce with a reckless young man. GThere is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together aid until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. Fer a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to ure with local treatment, pronounced it lnccurable. clenoe has proven catarrh to be a coniti utionul disease, and therefore requires, constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market It is taken internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They ofTer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure, end for circulars and testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O IF"old by all druggis ts, 75c, When a man attends lodge and gets full he calls it ‘’work.” —p-— —
World's Fair Number.
The Youth’s Companion publishes this week an extra Fair Number of 36 Pages, with 60 Illustrations, and a cover in ten colors. This is the largest and most elaborate number that has ever been published by The Companion during the sixty-seven years of its history. Yvhether you go tq the Fair or stay at home you should nave this number. It will be sent free to any new subscriber received in May with $1.75 for a year’s subscription. It can also be obtained of newsdealers, or by sending ten cents to The Youth’s Companion, Boston, Mass.
Mr. Geo. W. Twist Coloma, Wls. All Run Down A Puzzling Case— How Health was Restored Gained from ISO to 170 Pounds. “A tew years ago my health failed me, and I consulted several physicians. Not one could clearly dlagnoss my oase and their mediulne failed to give relief. After much persuasion I commenced to take Hood's SarpaparlUa. Have taken several bottles and am much Improved. From an all run down condition I have been restored to good health. Formerly I weighed HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES 19> pounds, cow I balance the assies at 17A pounds. Hood's Sarsaparilla has been a great benefit to me. and I have reccomended it to friends, who realize good results by its use." Qeo. W. Twist, Coloma. Waushara Co.. WjsHood'a Rtu.* cure liver Ills, sick bead ache, jaundice, Indigestion. Try n box. 86a
The Boisterous Atlantic
I( a terror to timid voyagera, scarcely lets on aocount of the perils of the deep than tho almost certainty of tea sickness. The best ouratire of mal de mer Is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. which settles the stomach at onoe and prevents its disturbance. To all travelers and tourists, whether by »ea or land, it presents a h»PPy medium between the nauseous or Ineffectual resources of the medicine chest, and the problematical benefit derivable from an unmedicated alcoholic -stimulant, no matter how pure. The jarring of a railroad oar often produces stomachic disorders akin to that produced by the rolling of a ship. For this the Bitters is a prompt and certain remedy. The use of a brackish water, particularly on long voyages in the tronlcs. Inevitably breeds disorders of the stomach and bowels. Hostetler's Stomach Bitters mixed with impure water nullities its impurities. Similarly it counteracts malarial and other prejudicial Influences of climate or atmosphere, aa well as the effects of exposure and fatigue. Ur« it for kidney complaints, rheumatism and debility. --It Is hard to tell a man’s bent when he is in straits. J. F. Smith & Co., New York City: Gentlemen —I find Bile Beans Small to be perfection, and cannot get along without them In tho house. Please find enclosed 50 cents, for which kindly send me 2 bottles. Mrs. A. A. Tobias, Cloverdale, Cal. When the harness-maker gets strapped he naturally buckles down to business.
PROMPT, COOP WORK, RHEUMATISM. Mr. Willet F. Cook, Canajoharie, N. Y., writes: '* Awoke one morning with excruciating pains In iny shoulder. Tried various reliefs for sudden pains without effect; went to my office (he pain became insufferable • went home at u o’clock and used ST. r w■ ■ ■ OIL! effect magical, pain ceased, and at I o’clock went , to work; cure permanent.”, I NEURALGIA. Little Rapids, Wis. My wife suffered with such intense neuralgic pains in she face, she thought she would die. She bathed her face and head with ST. JACOBS OIL and it cured her in ‘our hours. GXY?T. curry-.v>tp
Ijgig DOSES Cures Consumption, Conghs, Croup, Bora Threat. Bold by all Druggists on a Guarantee. Fora Lama Side, Bade or Cjirtt Shiloh's Porous **Uster will giro gnat satisfaction.— s$ cents.
SYKES’ SORE GORE The Great Remedy for CATARRH. The large number of certificates received ot the virtues of this preparation in the treatment of this unpleasant disease abundantly attest Its efficacy. It Is the only medicine on the market adapted to Catarrh, that performs what’ it promises, and effects not only a speedy relief, but a permanent core. Unlike many nostrums now before the public, It does not dry up tern porarilythe nasal discharges, but eradicates the producing cause thus leaving the system In a sound and healthy condition. Ask your druggist for a bottle of Sykes’ Sore Care for Catarrh and Atmospheric Insufflator, and yon will be healed of the malady. For aale by all druggists. ROSS GORDON, Lafayette, Ind. Wholesale Agent.
WHENYOUWANT THE BEBT j-) , AND THE BEST ADDRESS J. I. CASE T. M. CO., RACniK, WIS. free. A n|jHl Morphine Habit Cured In lO |Kll|HtoaOditrK. No par till cturrd. Wl i Won, J.fiTESHEN«,l.*bsnon,Ohio.
TH H^^EgE The Hartman Steel Picket Fence Corti ao more than aa ordinary olinij wood picket affair that obe tract* the tl«w and will rot or fall apart in a abort tin*. The Hartman Pence U artUtio In <wba, rrotocu tho r round* withoot conooallar them aad in practically KVEBLiStIHQ. 11 nitrated Catalogue with Price* and Toettmonial* Mailed Pree. HARTMAN MFG. COMPANY. BEAVER FALLS. PA--102 Cfcaafetn St. Me* Ytrki 508 SUW St. C&tufti 51 wd 53 S. Forsyth Bk, Atluta.Ga.
“German Syrup”^ Two bottles of German Syrtlfr cured me of Hemorrhage of the Lungs when other remedies failed. I am a married man and, thirty-six years of age, and live with my wife and two little girls at Durham, Mo. I have stated this brief and plain so that all may understand. My case was a bad one, and I shall be glad to tell anyone about it who will write me. Philip L. Schbnck, P. O. Box 45, April 25,1890. No man could ask a more honorable, bus*. ness-like statement. » MTARRH V IN CHILDREN For over two years my little girl’s life was made miserable bv a case of Catarrh. The discharge from tne nose was large, constant ana very offensive. Her eyes became inflamed, the lids swollen and » very painful. After trying various rente* 1 dies, I gave her The first bot- , tie seemed to|£»2»s3aggravated* , disease, but the symptoms soon abated, and in a short time she was cured. Dr. L. B. Ritchey, Mackey, Ind. Our book on Blood and Skin Disease* miUnd tree. Bwwt Wvfc*t* ■ Eli’s Cream Bairn Ifcs&'Sdl WILL. CURE ■cgjfffi.v’Jpl CATARRHS^*! Prlo 5J Cnts. Apply Bilm into each nostr 1y8r05.,53 Warren t..XI ■aPMeinaiJoHs w.mommia ijLildlUll Washington, O.c! |WSuccessfully Prosecutes Claim* ■ LwtoPrincipal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureeu. »3vr»lnla«t war, 15 adjudicating claim*, stty air-"
W. L. DOUGLAS S 3 SHOE noTVtp/ . Do you wear them? When next In need try a pair, they will give you more comfort and service for the money HU.-.- MHHM,, W. L Douglas Sloes are mast In iHttr Utes?'Ssss.. *■_ jIf you vrant a fine DRESS SHOE don’t pay $6 to SB, try my $3.50, $4 or $5 Shoe. They will fit equal to csstom made and look and wear as well. If you with to economize In your footwear, you can dose by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. My name and pric j is stamped on the bottom, look for it when you buy. Take no substitute. I send shoes by mail open receipt of price* postage free, when Shoe Dealers cannot supply yes. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. sßr, lEWIS ’ 98 of LYE iaE I Powderedand Perfumed (rsrtnrxD) The strongest and purest Lys iBRTJq mode. Unlike other Lve.lt being KUn * fine powder and paoked la a can JEil d with r movable 11A the contents ISfß* are always ready for use. Will AHV make the best perfumed Hard Hoap In 30 minutes without boilMm ing. It Is the best for cleaning mm r> waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, ■ I v'- closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PKNNA.SALTM'rOCO. Gen. ngta. Pblla., Pa. return mill, fan 5^ MH r F\E»EL ocrtptlve circulars of AT* fioOST’IMBWand KOODT'S IMYBOVSD tgf TAILOE SYSTEMS Of DBXSS CVTtIMO. Jlevticd to Sou. These, only, are the M ff|\ genuineTAlLOß SYSTEMS Invented and II im i copyrighted by TIQT. S.W. MOODY. BeI lllli ware of Imitations. Any lady of ondlIJVBjBL nary intelligence can easily and qnlckrHH ly learn to cut and make any garment. AINU in any style, toany measure, for ladles, men andchildren. Garments guarsn■s*» atrltaßraigaiiaafiKt: I THE LATEST SENSATION I World's Fair Bonn-hir Playing Car da, consisting oC (Deck of is Card*. via: Kina Qae«n, lack, aud hpos ~ards. <*u the fact of each Card it tuho.jrat.he4, tm keen eo'.tn •, "ik of the 4$ different Aetuinut. toreim. tint dtate Building* of the Wo.-If « Fat-, making the most beautiful and unique I’ecS ■»! playing Card* net put ou the market—the best-aeUlnx novelty yet produced. Aceiitk wautt-d. Sample Deck. M rente. Specialty Publ'u* <>•. lul M. Hal«t*d St Cklcaso. 111. MMim—hubmj Designer&Ehjre&K | I|?DIAJ2AP2IIS,-^' woon, zu»r; and hAlstons cbts. Ml i i ff* A m® Bwppertti'etejrPILESBsSBS IN u, ie—o3 IN Of*Lß ■ rwo'* kerned/ to* Cmsrs ts MM J Best. Fastest to Pm. end Cheapest, flg ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mall, Me MT. Easeklno. Warsaw IW. Bi
