Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 July 1893 — Page 3
bodily troubles that come U JM, -. women only hag a guarantees cure in Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pro scription. That will bring yvt safe and certain help. It’s a powerful general, as wel as uterine, tonic and nervine, and it builds up and invigorates th* entire female system. It regucuws and promotes all the prove. 1 functions, improves digestion, . ing sleeg, and. restores health and For ulcerations, displacements, bearingdown wmattkuna periodical peins, and all and weaknesses, “Favorite Prescription" is the only guaranteed remedy. If it ever tails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. In every case of Catarrh that seems hopeless, you can depend upon Doctoi Sage’s Catarrh Remedy for a cure. „ It’s proprietors are so sure of It that they’ll pay SSOO cash for auy incurable case. Sold by all druggists WHAT OTHERS fI AY , BLOOD POISON BODY COMPLETELY COVERED WITH A RASH AND RED EVERYTHING ELSE FAILED BUT LIVURA CURED. Lhtba M’f’o. Co. Gentlemen “My ■? Ilttlc girl hod niooa Pol ' son; bei system was all run down, her body was completely covered witt ‘ a rasl * an<l horrid red blotches, owing to the 'r Smk oh. tntensc licking she could |QKaM|HEjHK uot sleep. Her digestive organs were in a ,ery Vita Corbett. bad condition; she com. plained of pain in the limbs and we were very much alarmed abotit her. We tried everything we could think of but nothing had the desired eßeet until we found PITCHER’S LIVURA. She had not been taking LIYUBA more than one week when her eyes looked natural again, her anpeflte improved, and before the second bottle had been used, the rash and blotches disappeared, the Itch, log left, and she is now PERFECTLY WELL and has gained flesh. All due to J»ITCHER»S XTWHA. Very Sinccrly. Mbs. John Corbett. 543 ’Madison St., Huntsville, Ala. 31 LIVURA OINTMENT > The Great Skin Cure. Curds Eczema, Salt Rheum, Pimples Ulcers, Itch, and all affections c* the skin. Heals Cuts, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, etc. Sold by all Druggists, or by mail. Price 8v Cents. Thv Livuba M’f’o. Co.. Nashville. Tenn flttu ™ WAKNINIi Which nature is constantly giving in the shape >f boils, pimples, eruptions, ulcers, etc. These thow that the blood is contaminated, and some msistance must bo given to relieve the trouble. fWEK3| Is the remedy to force out these pot - AM sons, au( j enable you to GET WELL. “I have had for yean a humor in nay blood, which made me dread to shave, as small ty>ils or timples would be cut, thus causing the shaving to >e a great annoyance. After taking three bottles HfSRB my face is all clear and smooth as it gajlujtam should be—appetite splendid, sleep •«■■■*■ well, and feel like running a foot ill from the use or 8.8.8. ~r. Chas. Heaton, 73 Laurel st. Phila. Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, —TRAVEL VIA THE Cj)jLOtII3VIUt,NEwALBArr»CHICMomato THE SHORT LINE to CHICAGO AND THE Worm sFalr Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Omaha, Denver, San Francisco, Portland, Seatie, Tacomo, Los Angeles, Spokane Falls, Helena, AND ALL POINTS IN West and Northwest The only line running Solid Pullman Perfected Safe ty Veetibuled Trains. The only line running Dining Care between Indianapolis and Chicago. Magnifi cent Pullman Sleeping and Parlor cars. For rates maps time tables, etc. apply to &■■ I. D. BALDWIN, D. P. A., No. 98 8. Illinois St., Indianapolis, Ind. James Barker, G. P. a.. Chicago. "flj’s Cream Balm wild cure Price BO Cento. c Apply Balm into each nostril Ely Bros., M Warren St.,N.Y. ■ 00 ” |fe"» Designer&EhfraiteK i WOOD. ZINC AND HAT.FTONE CTTN. BERT POLISH IN THS WOkum. ~ DO NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which •tain tho hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril* liSnt, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains sir ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. lAS Al ABMDAL SAI,EJ3,OOOJOIS,
TOPICS OF THESE TIMES.
THE CORINTHIAN CANAL. The opening of the Corinth canal, irr Greece, on the 17th ult., marked the culmination of one of the most remarkable engineering enterprises ever carried to eompletion by man. The canal was projected six centuries before the Christian era. and its construction was actually begun-by the Roman Emperor Nero in the first century, who, soon desisted, and more than 1,800 years passed away before work was again resumed, by the Hungarian revolutionist, Gen. Turr, under a concession from the government of Greece. The canal follows the old lines established by Nero’s engineers across the Isthmus of Corinth and is but 6,200 meters in length. It has been entirely constructed in the past ten years, at a cost of $14,000,000, and steamers can pass through it in less than an hour. It will doubtless be .of great advantage to Athens, and i will shorten the time from Western i Europe to Constantinople and the Orient by nearly a day. The opening of the canal was celebrated with great festivities in which King Georgios I. of Greece and a multitude of distinguished men took part. It is one of tho most interesting public works in the world, and is remarkable both on account of its commercial importance and historic associations.
EGYPTIAN ENTERPRISE. The land of the Pharaohs, where ancient civilization and arts had reached a high state of perfection long before the dawn ottheChristian era, relics of which are still in existence that astonish the modern world and baffle the science of scholar and engineer, after a lapse of many centuries of ruin and degradation, is apparently pwaking to the importance of resuming its relations with j the balance bf world, mid although it can never hope to resume its ancient place as the most advanced among nations, it can well hope to adopt, and profit by, the progress of modern thought in its many triumphs over material things. The Egyptian government, which is of the most paternal character, practically owning and cultivating the soil, is taking steps for the storage of water for supplying the people during the low stage of the Nile, so that summer rice may be grown, and is vigorously pushing the reclaiming of desert land in order to extend the cultivation of sugar cane, which is a highly profitable crop. In pursuance of this policy Egyptian engineers have pushed their investigations to the headwaters of the great river in [the great equatorial lakes. It is proposed to build dams at the outlets of the Albert and Victoria Nyanzas and connect them by telegraph with the lower Nile, so that the supply may be regulated with some degree of accuracy. The great annual floods pour down a volume of water that is wasted, even if it does -not do untold damage. The project of regulating this flood by means of natural reservoirs held in check by dams at the headwaters is believed to be entirely practical, and if carried out will be another great victory l?y man over the forces of nature. The same means would prevent the great and ruinous floods on the Hong Ho in (JJhina, that so frequently destroy untold thousands of human beings, and the terribly destructive visitations that with almost yearly regularity devastate the lower Mississippi region in our own country.
TIME THE HEALER. “Time at last sets all things even” is a very old adage, and a very untrue and misleading one. Unfortunately time does not set all things even, and a very large percentage of the wrongs endured by the human race at the hands of their fellow men are never righted, on this earth, at least. The usual application of the lidage is that he who treasures up a wrong and waits will in due time be avenged by the course of events over which he practically has no con trol. The hope for revenge is a very human desire, and in many cases a very laudable one, but unhappily it cannot be said to be a very satisfactory solution for the wrongs or remedy for the misfortunes that mark the pathway of life. Time indeed brings many changes, and the onward sweeping years reveal a kaleidoscopic change in the conditions of all. Those who in their youth gloried in the sunshine of prosperity, in middle life and old age are often doomed to hardships and poverty and disease, while the child of their pauper tenant, through long years of honest toil and well directed eftort, has come to a position of affluence atad power that is gall and wormwood to the old-time haughty neighbor. Such contrasts and changes are common enough, indeed, in this
free'land of ours, but are by. no' means the rule. But the-kaleido-scope also turns in a larger field, afid tne changes that result are startling and often sad. How the years roll back to the older class of people as they read of the meeting of the widows of Gen. Grant and Jefferson Davis at Cranston-on-the-Hudson, lastjweeh. In itself an event of no importance, yet potent for a transformation scene such as no magician ever dreamed of. Time the healer has made it possible and even proper for these relicts of departed chieftains to meet on a footing of mutual regard and esteem. The bitterness of the past has disappeared, and these lingering representatives of the warring elements that drenched the land in blood scarce three decades ago can well exchange civilities and weep their retrospective tears together. A NEW “PLAN.” James Buchanan, of Indiana, Gen. Wca ver r otvarious localities, Edward Bellamy, of down East, and many other visionary philosophers, have from time to time evolved and developed sundry and divers schemes to insure to every man, woman and child, .without regard to age, color, sex or previous condition of servitude a free and independent income untrammeled by the laws of supply and demand, the state of foreign trade, or the depressing influences of Wall street gold bugs or western Napoleonic financiers. In later days “Peffe.ri.sni” has had its sway, and Kansas has been a hotbed for the development of financial dreamers and impracticable reformers. The very latest phase of this tendency of mod em thought is the “plan” of Cyrus Corning, of Topeka. He proposes, to increase the circulating medium and ignore the Constitution and Federal Government at one fell swoop. Money will abound in lavish quantities. The People’s party in the meantime will die, though that, is not a necessary tenet of the scheme, but rather a result of its beneficent workings, the transcendent condition of mankind when they shall come under the workings of the “plan” making all such organizations superfluous and unnecessary. The. silver question will also be silenced forever. Interest will be reduced to the actual cost of making loans. The element of capital does not enter into the “plan.” Mr. Corning has worked his plan at. Bennington, Kan., to his own satisfaction by the aid of a Mr. Robbins, who furnised the capital that is to be the death of all capital. Mr. Robbins was a country merchant. His store was transformed into a labor exchange. Exchange checks in the denominations of United States money were issued, money, according to Mr. Corning's ideas, having no value except as a medium of exchange. Anything which the people will accept as money is money. The exchange had everything in stock that farmers want, and would buy everything that farmers had to sell, paying out and receiving the exchange checks as so much cash. Government money received for farm products sold „ abroad was turned into goods. Exchange checks were used as money in all private trades between farmers. The plan is for managers of exchanges to give bond for the redemption of all checks issued by them. The Bennington Exchange has been in operation for eight months, and is declared to be an unqualified success. A similar exchange has just been started at Topeka and arrangements are being made to start others in various localities.
A MUNCHAUSEN WANTED. A startling and blood-curdling horror may be looked for any day in the neighborhood of Lincoln Park, Chicago. It has been a surprise that some enterprising agent of the Associated Press has not before this given to the world an account of it —in advance. Such oversights are almost culpable in purveyors of public intelligence. The material for the coming tragedy is furnished by the wild beasts in the cages of the famous pleasure ground. They occasionally break loose and wander at will along the aristocratic thoroughfares of the North Side. ' The elephant went on a jamboree recently. The sea lion got out of his tub and sailed into the lake. A man was bitten by the wolves accidentally released. A bear roamed into the surrounding wards. All the conditions are favorable for a first-class casualty. A Winchester rifle might come very handy for World’s Fair visitors. Miss Braddon has realized Sir Walter Scott’s ambition, to make £IOO,OOO by fiction. She has fiftythree novels standing to her credit and is still able to supply & new' one when it is demanded. Time was when Miss Braddon said that if she eould’make sls a week aba would be happy.
You want the Best j y Royal Baking Powder never disappoints; never makes sour, soggy or husky food; sir never spoils good materials; never leaves lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake; while' all these things do happen v. ith the best of cooks who cling to the ’ old-fashioned | tnethpds, or who use other powders. z || If you want the best food, Royal E 4 Baking Powder is indispensable <
PEOPLE.
r Mme. Paul Bonnetaiu has had a ride worth chronicling. She accompanied her husband, a novelist, to Africa, and has just completed a solitary and adventurous journey through the bush to the Niger. The adventurous couple were accompanied by their little daughter. Queen Victoria is not a scrupulously neat woman, and those who meet her on her few public appearances comment upon the dustiness of her bonnet and the crumpled state of her collar. She is always a little awry, and although she will start out, of course, in a spick and span state of elegance, always returns more or less disheveled. Very oriental-looking is a bonnet of ombre miroir velvet in rich dark blending of brown. green and red, arranged round a small flat jeweled crown in turban-like folds, with three black ostrich tips at one side, one of them quaintly caught down over the jeweled crown. The' bon • net is fringed all around with a narrow gold hued fringe, and when on the head it is wonderfully stylish and unusual. Mme. Severine, the French journalist, has a co-laborer, whose share in the division of labor is to fight duels with the irate individuals | whom madame’s articles has enraged. Recently this fighting partner had a duel with a Socialist offended by one of Mme. Severine’s articles, and appeased ium by being run through the arm.
The only woman who is a professional horse trainer is an English woman, Mrs. Chailoner, the widow of a well-known jockey and the sister of another one. When her husband died*' she knew how to continue his business and she did it. Her eldest son is following in the footsteps of his parents and the four younger ones are all good jockeys. 7 . Dr. Koch, the renowned bacteriologist, nearly lost his assistant, Dr. Freymuth, in the cholera laboratory at Danzig the other day. He was poisoned by accidentally swallowing some cholera baccilli. He fell sick, exhibiting all the symptoms of the Asiatic cholera and his life was saved with great difficulty. It appears that after handling cholera baccilli all morning he sat down to his lunch without going through the formality of washing his hands. Three days later the symptoms ap-peared—-chilis, stomach ache, dizziness, etc. The physicians of the laboratory at once took him in charge and barely saved his life. “There is little doubt here.” says a New York correspondent, “that’it is Mr. Cleveland’s purpose to secure for Dan Lamont the nomination for Governor of New York a year from next fall, and that Lamont himself would willlingly leave the Cabinet to hold an office which many regard as second only in influence to that of the Presidency. Tammany would not greatly object to Lamont’s nomination. With that quality which is characteristic of him Lamont has been atye to gain and maintain friendship wiih the Tdmmany leaders, and is in fact believed to be in closer sympathy with them than with the an ti-snapper crowd. W ith Lamont as Governor the machine in that State would be so managed as to serve whatever purposes Mr. Cleveland may have in view for 1896.
The Ladies.
The pleasant elect and perfect safety which ladies may use the California Iqaid laxative Syrup of Figs, mrier all conditions. ma*kc»it their favorite remedy. To get the true and genu.ne article, look for the name of the California Fig Syrup Co , printed iriartho bottom of the package.
Perhaps Both.
Texas Siftings. A New York gentleman, whose son had gone out into the country for recreation, received a letter from him. While the gentleman was reading it his wife asked: ’ „ ( “What does Tom say in his letter?” “I ean?t make it out to save my life. He says he has landed a speckled’ beauty, but whether he means he has been fishing or mar-ried-a* freckle-faced girl I<can't' tell.”
A Forgetful Witness.
Texas SlfUaga. _ 7 ' First New Yorter—l wonder if Corbett, the witness before the Custom House examining committee, does not use tobacco. Second'New Yorker—What makes you- think lie does? First New Yorker—Oh, nothing, except that I read that the excessive use of tobacco destroys the memory. □lt is said that the wife of Marsh, the mining bans President, was passionately fond of playing on the violin. We w< re cena n that the real cause of the man’s misfortune would eventually leak out.
Down in Louisiana.
Arkansaw Traveler. “Is there any good shooting in this part of the country?” a white man asked of an old negro down in Louisiana. “Oh, yes, sah, some o’ de bes’ shootin you eber seed.” “I am glad to hear it.” “Doan know why you wan ter be glad, but de shootin’ is here, all de same.” “Good many birds, I suppose. ’ “I ain’t seed none. ” “Squirrels, then, I suppose.” “I doan’ know.” “What sort of game is there?” “I ain’t seed no game.” “Thought you said there was good shooting.” “Did say so. Some o’ de fines’ shootin’ I eber seed. Er man shot at me las'fall ’way ’cross a ten acre fiel’ an’ broke dis arm. It wuz so fur I didn’t think he could hurt me, but he did; an’ I mus say it wuz erbout de fines’ shootin’ I eber seed.” Miss Braddon has written her fiftytwo novels on a plan very different from “the spur of the moment” practice popularly supposed to indicate true genius. She sits down at her desk every morning at 9 o’clock, and there she stays until her “stint” of about 3,000 words is completed. The cut-worm that is destroying the corn is called agrotididie by the scientists. Farmers call it something else.
A Ruinous Lo[?].
Why Is it that people in general are so prone to disregard loss of strength, clexrly perceptible in bodily shrinkage, failure of appetite, broken rest? Incomprehensible but true. Sheer carelessness, an overweening confidence in the power of nature to recuperate—these are suggestible reasons. One of the most observable signals of danger thrown by distrr ssed nature is waning strength An efficient tonic is the best safeguard against Impending peril. Amon? the invlgorants which modern science hat developed and experience approved Is Hostetter’s btomach Bitters, and it occupies lhe first place. Digestion, renewed by this genial stom achic, compensates for a drain of vital force, and a regular action of the bowels and tranquil condition of the nerves, both insured by Its use, co-operate in the complete restoration of vigor. The Bitters remedies liver and kidney trouble and malaria. Axyoxe would be justified in recommending Beecham’s Pills for all affections of tho liver and other vital organs.
$100 R[?]va[?] $100.
The readers of the this paper will be pleasec to learn that there is at least one dreaded ulsea>« that science hns been able to cure in all lt» stages, and that Is C*t»rrh. Hall’s Catarrh Curs is the only positive cure now known to th* medical fraternitv. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur Lees of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the pat enl strength by building up the constitution andessisting nature in doing its work, lhe proprietor* have so much faith in its 'urativk powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for sny case that it fails to cure. Send for listof cstimonla’s. Address F, J. CaBNEY A Co., Toledo, O. by Druggists, 75 d “While I am not certain as |o the sinfulness of drinking,” said Mr. Lushforth the next morning, ‘T am sure as to the bad taste.”
Sample Package Mailed Free
Address Small Bile Brans, New York. About the best pointer one can give to a swift young man is a period. N. K. Brown’s Essence Jamaica Ginger will cure dysentery. None better. Try it. J® cents. Money talks, but the stiver dollar means little more than half what it says. Is it probable that what a million men say after daily trial is a mistake? They say Dobbins’ Perfect Soap Is the best 5c soap ever made. Have your grocer order of bis wholesaler. Try it Only sc. The “silver- tongned” orator is, no doubt, now thinking of changing his name. Constipation cured by Small Bile Beans. The more successful a teacher of waltzing is the more reverses he has to go through.
Are You Happy?
The man or woman who is profitably employed is generally happy. If you are not happy it may be because you have not found your proper work. We earnestly urge all such persons to write to B. E. Johnson & Co., Richmond. Va„ and they can show you a work in which you can be happy.ana profitably employed. A man received a pension because he had lost his hair. Some very bald facts art coming to light in this department. Cure for Colds. Fevers and General Debility Small Bile Beans. £5 cents per bottle. The time appears to be at hand when a man who is referred to as silver-haired will regard it 1 as ad attempt to depreciatt
Sciatic Rheumatism Mri B. D. Wheeler, the popular deputy, sheriff at Winooski Falla Vt., says: ”1 suffered ter W rlble tortures for 10 yean with sciatic rheumatism, W I began taking Hood’t / SarssparilX Since tak b, WBa/r' !n & 11 1 don t have sn> Pain and can get nrounf right. If Hood’s Sar should continue usinj Mr. B. ». Whe'.ler. it R D WHIKLXR. Winooski Falls. Vermont,” N. B —Be sure to get Hood'* Sarsaparilla., ' Hpoo’a act easily, yet promptly an< efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 25 cents. INU, HE--93 INOPL9
“German Syrup” Regis Leblanc is a French Cana> duns’nns keeper at Notre Dame de Sunbrl'ige, Quebec, Can., who was eared of a aevue attack of Congestion of th* Langs by Boschre’s German Symp tie has sold many a bottle or" German Syrup on his personal recommendation. If you drop bun a fine he’ll give you the full facts o' the cose direct, as he d;d us, and that Bos.hee’s German Syrup brought him through nicely. It always will. It is a good medicine and thorough in its-work.
For the World's Fair.
•p«c: at ( ar'or for >lßdl.t«*po?g paopia sates !J Mon Statloa at 11 ; - r- a.m..<ian7.lor Ckl >-Ko. v;» the big Four W».4’» Fair route. Unding ir«toengero directly at the WorH’»F*tr r.-o inds »t 4A> p. m. lleturr.'xg the car leave* ,hicugo»< v.s& a. u»„ and the World's Fair (rounds nt8:ll st. w.. dally, reach'.nr Indian. ipol'.s at 7:40 p m. This Is in aa.Uiton to the local Indianapolis a Chteagr sleep >r via the same route, whiuli is open to: lassengers at i> p. nt., every day. 1m«V>e Union station at il ’lO p m. reachng the World a Fair grounds at a. m. t and Chicago proper at C.&5 A. I&. Returning, this cat Is located near the Twe.fth-at. depot of the Illinois Iftrtral 1 tail road, is open forstoseagers at 9.D0 p. in. leaves Chicago at 1!:30p. to., anr*. -ho World's Fair grounds at 1i;40p.n., reaching Indianapolis at 8 a. m. In addition to these tee Big Four rente has tarec more, mating Uve la all. vestibule port sei.ger trains with tho ttnest coaches, parlor and recl’i iiig-chulr cars, dining-cars and »u pero standard sud compartment buffet sleeping cars, eacn vay between Indianapolis and Chicago. landing and receiving passengers di--ect at ths grounds. , These traihs run so follows: I.cave lud'anapoiis "11 2n a. m. *11'56 a. m. J p. m. *ll'3* p. m. *19:45 a m. Arrive ChivagoD lap. m. 3:<a s. m.9:50 p. m B.W a. m. 7:30 a. m.
RETURNING.
Lea -c Chicago *H:2S a m. 1:00 p.m. *9: JO n. m *l* 15 p. m. *il.m> p. m. Arrive Indianapolis 3:40 p. m. 7:15 n, m. 9:53 a. tn. 3;40 a. m. 8:00 a. tn. •daily
To the Mountain and Resorts via Pennsylvania Lines.
The advantages peculiar to the Pennsylvania Lines make them the desir •Me * horougbfares to Bedlord Springs, Alto <*a. Eoensblrg, or any of the delightful summer havens tn the cool Allegheny Mountains. By.no other route can Cresson, the ideal retreat on the crest of that romantic mountain n\nge be reached, as the Pennsylvania is the only line direct to it. and the only one leading past th Pack Saddle and the A’.legrippus, around the famous Horse Shoe Curre and along the Blue Juniata, the trichest of Ameren's scenic gems. For reaching Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean Grove, As bury I’ark, Long Branch. Sea Girt. Elberon, Ocean Beach. Berkeley, Newport Narragan sett Pier, Martha’s vlneysra, Nantucket or any of the numerous watering places that dot the Atlantic seaboard from the Carolinas to Maine, these lines are particularly desirable. For a trip to the Adirondacks. the Catskills apd resorts in Northeastern New York Connecticut, Rhode Island. Massachusetts. Vermont New Hampshire and Maine, exceptional facilities fora delightful journey are offered passengers via this direct route. For detailed information please apply to your nearest Penn sylvania Line ticket agent or address W. F. Brunner, District Passenger Agent, Indianapolis. Ind.
Tourist Tickets to Cool Retreats in the Lake Regions via the Pennsylvania Lines,
Tourist tickets to resorts in Northern Michigan and the Lake Region are now for sale at reduced rates via Pennsylvania Lines from principal tier- stations on this desirable route. The return limit will be valid during the season For details please apply to yonr nearest Pennsylvania Line ticket agent or address W. F. Brunner, District Passenger Agent. Indianapolis. fan.
Reasons Why World’s Fair Visitors Should purchase Their Tickets Over the Pennsylvania Short Line
It is the shortest route and an excellent line In every way. It furnishes the best possible accommodations for passengers. It has a reputation for reliability which is beyond cuesLion. It runs through trains into Chicago Union Passenger Station via GRAND CKO SINS, within view of and only a short distance from the World’s Fair Grounds. and stops them at Grand Crossing for the express purpose of allowing passengers to disembark at that yoint. enabling them to reach the great Columbian Exposition and the hotels and boarding houses adjacent thereto, in a ride of only ten minutes oy train of Illinois Central Railroad or by electric street car line—fare by either only live cents. Tickets to Chicago and return, good until October 31st, are now on sale ata reduction of twenty-live per cent, at all ticket offices ot the Pennsylvania Short Lines. Your nearest Ticket Agent of these lines will promptly answer all inquiries for detailed information.
Excursion Rates to Columbus Ind., via Pennsylvania Line. July 11th to 14th
Excursion tickets at low round-trip ra es win be sold ro F-olumbus; Ind., account from Indianapolis, Louisville. Madison, Cambridge City, and intermediate ticket stations or* the Louisville Division of the Pktsburgn. Cincinnati. Chisago A St Louis Railway. July 11th, 9tb. 13th and 14th. Tickets will be goal :eturn' g vnt’l July iStb, inclusive.
XT, lEWI S’ 98 fr LYE CTF ■* | Ponderedand Perfumed " (ramirrxn) The strongest and purest Lye BlJl ®»de. Unit!" other Lye.lt being WWM/a ‘ noe powder and packed la scan <m with r movable lid, the coatenU are always ready for use. Will make the beat perfumed Hard Soap in 30 minute* without boilUK ing. It la the best for cleaning ■■ Z"' waste pipes, defecting sinks. L’ v closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PKNNA.SALTMTTGC®. Gen. Agts.. Phils., Pa. 1,000,000 4 Dulcth Ratvnoan CottPasr in Minnesota. Seud for Maps and drew Un. They will be sent to yon Addram HOPEWELL CLARKE. Land Commissioner. St. Paul, Minn. - [an ideal family medicine j For ladlcentlen. Btllonsnesn. | Headache, CenMlr.llew, Bad • Cemplexlo., Offrn.lre Kresth, i and all disorders of the Stomach. I Liver aad hovels. /<!? | RIPANS TA BULES • act gently yet prompt 'r. £ digestion follows their use. I May bn ebtalaed by I application to nearest drvnaisf |ULIwSb3 Vtl Wnnhlsmton, JD.C. ■ 3yr»i Q iMt war, 15a4judicaiU*g cUiius. atty •ir" |r y* |#f .u si——— <*7 r~- X? VJt I /nU* 13 Uea tF bra.i»»>. Zrb •X- TlllihwU. Sra4 tc la xleapU 1 I*l J J O. W. P. SNYDER. M. I»„ Mall Dept. B. McVicker’s Theater, Chicago, Xu. $75.00 to $250.00 monthly working for B. F. JOHNSON. Richmoud. Vs. ARliill Aiorphlno Habit Cured in !• ■i /Flu’s Remedy fc» Cwarm is th* QB gpßeet. towlert to D«*. and Gampeet- JM ■ in,r< ~ tic vTViyaXuais or senibywail. j an Bt ESBSUM.VSBNB «b ■
