Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 August 1894 — Page 7

ALiLi i A just os thoroughly and as certainly at 1 one time as anf/ V a J other. Dr. Pierce’i t^/f Golden Medical /♦-!■// Discovery purifies 2 the blood - You // • / don’t need it at yWx A any special season. wben any 4 eru P tio “ appears, . or you feel wean- ——_ ness and depression that’s a sign of impure blood, then you need this medicine, and nothing else. The ordinary “Spring medicines” and bloodpurifiers can’t compare with it The “ Discovery ’’ promotes every bodily function, puts on sound, healthy fleshy and cleanses, repairs and invigorates your whole system. In the most stubliorn Skin Diseases, in every form of Scrofula—even in Consumption (or Lung-scrofula) in its earlier stages—and in every blood-taint and disorder, it is the only guaranteed remedy. PIERCE * CURE OR MONEY RETURNED,

@ Lydia E. Vegetable Compound Ailments of Women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. It hae cured more cases of Leucorrhoea Chan any remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. That Bearing-down Feeling causing pain, weight, and backache, is initantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the lawk that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water. » All druMists mH IL Addm* In eonSdene*. Ltuia E. Pinkham Mto, Co., ], TNN , Ma £J Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills, 2S cents. ~

The Greatest Medical Discovery . of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, NASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his j possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for be ok. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes •hooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being •topped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the. label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful.i.n water at bedtime. Sold ' l, l rvr>>o-n.;c*<-5 : Do we not presents smiling countenance? "AVliy should we not? It is true we have been overworked and even will our greatly increased facilities, have had tv work nights, tc supply the demands made upon us for Aer motors, tanks anij towers. This ever increasing, never ceasing demand for out goods, even in times of great business depression, makes t.| tired, but happy, as witness the smiling countenance iq Our glittering Aernfotor. While others cannot get work tq do, we are overwhelmed with it. Why? Because we niakq the best thing that can t J U m»de. of the be I material that is \| / / 7/S. the lowe-| price that ever XAVMn tS ./*?> ®*de, au4 back it all by the best reputation / 5 ever made for TVvknowing whit JaERMOTOR' |o do, how to —f pt.—-j Co do it and in- f L CHICAGO Variably aceom- * —— pushing the re* v suit. All the V 7 J/], l\ W world know, that tho Aermotor Z JJ-Jk A\ > Co. alone know* bow to make Wind- X// 7J v/ mills, steel toweri / and tanks. Orders 1 for them pour in uj> on us from every nook *w*i|l L ft ' and corner < f the earth. A business depression in I I «ny one locality is not felt by us. The world 1 Wll is our field. Is it, therefore, any wonder that // JD U we are busy and ar< doubling our last year's // /|[k \\ output, even in thesi days of depression? ///I||\ \\ Everyone on the Aenno •or premises, from the 1/ \U office boy to the owners, {resents this well sod, 'lf ||| smiling countenance. Il are prosperous, f/' 1,1 1 p’Tl bwy» hanpy—work ii plenty, and prosper!* /f U ty attends the design •ru, makers, managers and sellers of Aermotors. Even th< purchasers of Aermotors are the wide-awake, intelligent, u| -€o-the-times cash buyers in any community. Aermotoi people have no foreltodings of disaster and hard times. Aerniotor employes never strike. They are pros>>erous and contented. Even in the civil commotion and great upheaval recently raging in Chicago, theAermotor people were at work, padiant with smiles and good cheer, and ready to help brtni and welcome back the general prosperity, which must, a| •nre, inevitably return to our land. 4EKMOTOR CO., 12th, Rockwell and Fillmore Sts. Chicago, 11l (Preserve this as No. 8 iu the scries of 13.) W. L. Douglas C*) CUAC IS THE BEST. •' ipO VHvL NO SQUEAKING. « *5. CORDOVAN, ■' FRENCH&ENAMELLEDCALE ■ - 3k $3.59 POLICE, 3 Soles. S2 y.»2.WORKINGME N<J wfc 1 EXIRA FINE. “’S $2 A 7 -5 BoysSchoolShoes. WfIUW- . ‘LADIES* A \ send for catalogue ’ WfeZtllF w-L-DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. ' Yen can aave money by wearing the . W. L. Donclan 83.00 Shoe. 'Bee anae, wo are tho larpost manufactnrem ol thlagnuleof (bix-s lut.owjrld.andguarantee then value by stamping the name and price on th, bottom, which protect you a-alnst high prices and Che middleman’s promts. Our shoes equal custom „ work in stylo, easy fitting and wearing qualities We have them sold everywhere at lower prices foi the value given than any other make. Take no sub stltute. It your dealer cannot supply you, we can. lely's CkEAM BALM cures PRIcinioCENTS, ALL i.N.U 32—04 INDPLS CUKSWHtRE ALL EISE FAILS. |SI I Eg Best Cough Syrup. Tames Good. Vae PR Id time, Sold by drußffUiUL

MACAULAY’S PROPHECY.

The Historian’s Prediction as to the Downfall of Depublican Government The following letter was written by the late Lord Macaulay, the English historian, to Mr. Henry S. Randall, of New York, while the latter was engaged in writing a biography of Jefferson: “Holly Lodge, Kensington, 1 London, May 23, 1857. y “ Dear Sir —* * * You are surprised to leat*n that I have not a high opinion of Mr. Jefferson, and I am a little surprised at your surprise. I am certain that I never wrote aline, and that 1 never, in Parliament, in conversation, or even on the hustings—a place where it is the fashion to court the populace—uttered a word indicating an opinion that the supreme authority in a state ought to be intrusted to a majority of citizen’s told by the head; in other words, to the poorest and most ignorant part of society. I have long been convinced that institutions purely democratic must sooner or later destroy liberty. or civilization, or both.

“In Europe, where the population is dense, the effect of such institutions would be almost instantaneous. What happened lately in France is an example. In 1848 a pure democracy was established there. During a short time there was reason to expect a general spoliation, a national bankruptcy, a new partition of the soil, a maximum of prices, a ruinous load of taxation laid on the rich for the purpose of supporting the poor in idleness. Such a system would, in' twenty years, have made France as poor and barbarous as the France of the Carlovingians. Happily, the danger was averted, and now there is a despotism, a silent tribune, an enslaved press. Liberty is gone; but civilization has been saved. I have not the smallest doubt that, if we had a purely Democratic government here, the effect would be the same. Either the poor would plunder the rich and civilization would perish, or order and property would be saved by a strong military government and liberty would perish. “You may think that your country enjoys an exemption from these evils. I will frankly own to you that I am of a very different opinion. Your fate I believe to be certain, although it is deferred by a physical cause. As long as you have a boundles extent of fertile and unoccupied land your laboring population will be far more at ease than the laboring population of the old world, and while that is the ease the Jeffersonian policy may continue to exist without causing any fatal calamity. But the time will come when New England will be as thickly populated as old England. Wages will be as lbw and will fluctuate as much with you as with us. You will have your Manchesters and your Birminghams. and in these Manchesters and Birming hams hundreds of thousands of artisans will assuredly be sometimes out of work. Then your institutions will be fairly brought to the test. Distress everywhere makes the laborer mutinous and discontented, and inclines him to listen with eagerness to agitators who tell him that it is a monstrous iniquity that one man should have a million while another

cannot get a full. meal. > In bad years there is plenty of grumbling here, and sometimes a little rioting; but it matters little, for here the sufferers are not the rulers. The supreme power is in the hands of a class, numerous indeed, but select, of an educated class, Qf a class which is, and knows itself to be, deeply interested in the security of property and the maintenance of order. Accordingly the malcontents are firmly yet gently restrained, The bad time is got over without robbing the wealthy to relieve the indigent. The springs of national prosperity soon beiiin to flow again; work Is plentiful; wages rise, and all is tranquility and cheerfulness. I have seen England pass three or four times through such critical seasons as I have described. Through such seasons the United’ States will have to pass in the course of the next century, if not of this. How will you pass through them? I heartily wish you a good deliverance. But my reason and my wishes are at war, and I can not help foreboding the worst. ,It is plain that your government will never be able to restrain a distressed and discontented majority. For with you the majority is the government, and has the rich, who are always a minority, absolutely at its mercy. The day will come when in the State of New York a multitude cf people, none of whom had more that half a breakfast or expects to have more than half a dinner, will choose a Legisture. Is it possible to doubt what sort of a Legislature will be chosen? On one side is a statesman preaching patience, respect for vested rights, strict observance of public faith. On the other is a demagogue ranting about the tyranny of capitalists and usurers and asxing why anybody should be permitted to drink champagne and ride in a carriage while thousand of honest folks are in want of necessaries. Which of the two candidates is likely to be preferred by a workingman who hears his children cry for more bread? I seriously apprehend that you will, in some such season of adversity as I describe,do things that will prevent prosperity from returning; that you will act like people who should, iu a year of scarcity, devour all the seed corn, and thus make the next year a year not of scarcity but of absolute

famine. There will be, I fear, spoliation. The spoliation will increase the distress. The distress will produce fr'esh spoliation. There is nothing to stop you. Your Constitution, is all sail and no anchor. As I said before, when a society has entered on this downward progress either civilization or liberty must perish. Either some Caesar or Napoleon will seize the reins of government with astronghand or your republic wiH be fearfully plundered and laid waste by barbarians in the twentieth century as the Roman empire was in the fifth, with this difference, that the Huns and Vandals who ravaged the Roman empire came from without, while your Huns and Vandals will have been engendered in your own country by your own institutions.”

MISCELLANEOUS NOTES.

The South expects to make $325,000,000 from its cotton crop this year. Bola is the name of a new discovery made in the forests of Surinam. It is a substitute for the rapidly disappearing indian rubber and guttapercha. Washington is to have a museum for all sorts of curious lil'e-saving appliances, including the earliest kinds of life boats, rockets and life preservers. j The Year Book of the Y. M. C. A. for 1894, recently published, shows that there are 1,439 associations in existence, with an aggregate membership of 232,653. The number of reindeer owned by a Laplander in Sweden varies to a considerable degree. The poor may have from 300 to 700, and the rich Laplanders will keep 1,000 and even 5,000.

What is claimed to have been the fastest long-distance freight run ever made in this country was made from Memphis to Kansas City by a special train loaded with bananas, on June 13, the speed averaging 40.4 miles an hour for 384 miles, and reaching a maximum of sixty-four miles an hour, which was kept up for -six miles.

“Twenty or thirty years or so ago,” said an observer, “I think the majority of men carried the pocket handkerchief with a liberal corner of it sticking out of the upper outside coat pocket. Comparatively few men do so now. We are certainly not less jaunty than we were, but we don’t seem to display our jauntiness in that particular manner.”—New York Sun.

In a list of forty-seven colleges and universities reported the aggregate number of honorary degrees conferred this year is 157. Brown University leads these educational institutions with seventeen degrees awarded. Sixty-three degrees were conferred upon clergymen, nine upon college presidents and twentytwo were captured'by professors in the several colleges of the country. Only ten degrees went to foreign countries.

The Japanese smoke in a peculiar manner. The pipes have very small metal bowls, with bamboo stems and metal mouthpieces, and only hold enough tobacco for three or four whiffs. They use a tobacco which is cut extremely fine, and looks more like light blonde hair than anything else. It is a very good quality.however. The Japs take a whiff of smoke and inhale it, letting it pass out through the nostrils. They rarely smoke more than one pipeful at a time.

General Ogle, a member of the Pennsylvania Assembly, had beeq deputed to compose an address to the newly elected President, An-drew-Jackson. When the bluff old warrior submitted his document to the House, a fellow member, a dapper little fellow from Philadelphia, observed: “Pardon me, General, I hesitate about making any suggestion to so distinguished an individual, but I can not refrain from saying that it is customary with cultured letter writers to write the first personal pronoun with a capital ‘l.’ instead of a small ‘i.’” General Ogle returned a look of scorn. “Sir,” said he, “when I write to so great a man as Gen. Andrew Jackson, Democratic President of the United States, I abase myself. I abase myself, sir. I use as small an ‘i’ as I can put upon paper.' But. sir, if ever I should have to write to a little snipe like you, I would use an ‘l,’ sir, that would fill two pages of foolscap!”—Munsey’s Magazine.

Crushed ail the Hats.

Chicago Herald. “Durin jj the strike,’’said a Chicago man, “my man on'the door jrot up and left me. I had a reception on hand and I had to get a man at once. I had no time to spare. The new man, Hibernian, by the way, told me he had had long experience. But I had no time to lose. I should have hired him for the occasion anyway. It so happened that the first two gueats wore crushed opera hats. I don’t know why, but they did. As they handed their hats to my net? man they pressed their crushes to their bosoms and handed over the hats with their coats. Later on other gentlemen came and handed their outer belongings to the new man. When the reception was over some of the guests last referred to came to me, good-naturedly, I must say, and showed me the condition ol their hats. They had worn silk hats, and my new man had crushed them as he had seen the first two gents crush theirs. It cost me a round sum to get new silk hats, but I never laughed as much over anything in my life as I did oyer the verdancy of my new man.” '

Xjf . ri All other powders are cheaper made B V » and inferior, and leave either acid or alkali in the food. ROYAL BAKING PQV/DER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.

ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE.

Pathetic Deootioh of a Bit .Lack Horse ‘‘Talk about animals not knowing lothing,” said the old darkey, who vas pretending to cut the grass; ‘why, I tells yo*, a horse know lots nor’n some dese ’ere niggers loafin’ round. Foh de war I wuz owned by Hass’ Wright in Tennessee, and his ;on Mass’ Tom was my massa. When Hass’ Tom was bohn I was a little cid playin’ on de big lawn lore de louse, and ole massa come out wid le baby in his ahms and called me in’ said ‘Joe, dis is yo’ massa now ind yo’ mus’ look after him.’ Jen he laid Mass’ Tom in my ahms, io h’s mighty little den. and I pronises him to alius look after the ittleTnassa. Well, Mass’ Tom grew up ind bimeby he married and brought t little wife home. Butrhe’s mighty wild and didn’t stay at home much, le had a big black horse he called star, and everv night he was home le’d play de fiddle. As soon as he’d start you’d hear Star a-comin’ up the ield on a run. He wouldn’t wait for 10 one to let down de bars, but’d ump over dem and come right up to ie window and stick his head into de ■oom and neigh. Or if massa was on ie porch he’d come up to de steps do leys mighty little den, and I pronises play. Hit tickled massa nighty and he’d ruther play to Star lan to fine company. “Well, den Mass’ Tom he kept ?ettin‘ wilder and wilder, till finally lis little wife she go home to her oks to stay and he don’t come home zery much. He ride Star off and stays for days when he comeshome he lurse everyone. One night he rode tome in a terrible storm and flung limself on the bed all wet, and de lex’ morning he breath hard and when de doctor come he say it was ammonia.’ The first thing we know Mass’ Tom he die. After the funer11 Star come up to de house and isten for de fiddle; den he seem leart-broken and everyone say he nournin’ for Massa’. One night he jumped over de bars and went tar’n n up de road and we look for him iverywhere; but no one thought of join’ to de cemetery till ’about a week. Little miss had come back, ind when she went out dere, dat lorse lay on Mass’ Tom’s grave dead, lust died of grief—killed hisself, Yo ?an’t tell me horses ain’t got feelin’s ind sense.”

Pare and Wholesome Quality

Commends to public approval the California liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs. It is pleasant to the taste, and by acting gently on the lidneys, liver and bowels to cleanse jhe system effectually, it promotes the health and comfort of all who jse it, and with millions it is the jest and only remedy.

Quite Unsynipathetis.

Texas Siftings. Birdie McHennepin and her brother were at the seashore. “Oh, see that!” exclaimed Birdie. “See what,” inquired the stoical John. “Whv, see that little cloudlet just above the wavelet like a tiny leaflet dancing o’er the scene.” “Oh, come, you had better go out to the pumplet in the yardlet and soak your little headlet.”

Iced Tea.

Mrs. Borer says: “Iced tea may be palatable, but it is certainly not wholesome. The better way to make it is to fill the glasses partly full of cracked ice; then make the tea double strength and pour it boiling hot over the ice. Then if you like, add your lemon and You get less tannic acid m this way than when the tea is allowed to stand and cool before using.”

Hotel Levity.

Texas Siftings. Aged Humorist —You say this hotel is kept on the American plan? Hotel Clerk—Yes. me lord, Aged Humorist—Not on the European plan. Hotel Clerk —No. not on the European plan. Aged Humorist —But you rope in lots of strangers, I suppose? Clerk(to porter) —John, turn the bull dog loose. The Supreme Court of Alabama lias recently set aside a verdict because after the jury retired to deliberate the judge, who was somewhat sick, directed the sheriff to bring the jury to his hotel if they reached a conclusion before morning, and the verdict was received at the hotel in the presence of the defendants, instead of in court.

A Dynamo Invention.

Fort Wayne Press. The largest arc lighting dynamo in the world was completed and tested at the Fort Wayne Electric Company’s works yesterday. It is the latest invention of Superintend ent Woods. This dynamo is an entirely newclepartu re bn all apparatus heretofore constructed for a like purpose. It produces 150 arc lights at the exceedingly low speed of 500 revolutions per minute, and is absolutely automatic in its operations, as any number of lights down to nothing, can be turned on or off at will, the power consumed being only in proportion to the number of lamps burning. This dynamo was designed to meet the requirements of the Detroit Lighting Commissioner’s specifications, but it exceeds their requirements in all important features, and, as Mr. Woods puts it, it is arc light machine several years in advance of the times.

The Utility of a Head.

London Answers. The master of one of our village schools was examining some boys on a piece of poetry which he had given them to prepare the night before. They all said it excellently except a small boy at the bottom of the class. On being asked to say his lesson, he said, “I can’t remember it, sir." Master(in rage)—Why, what’s your head for? Boy—To keep my collar on, sir. In China the rolling of tea leaves is done by hand, but in India and Ceylon the European planters pre fer to employ machinery for the pur pose.

Oh, What a Surprise!

What an agreeable one, too, is experienced by the hitherto misguided individual who has been ceaselessly but vainly dosing for years past in the futile hope of curing constipation, when drastic pills and potions are abandoned for Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, a faithful auxiliary of nature, which does its work without griping or weakening, but always effectually. "Throw physic to the dogs!” and use this benign and thorough laxative, which achieves results which astonish as well as gratify those who use it. Not only a regular habit of body, but complete digestion and assimilation are restored by its use. It regulates the liver and kidneys, and counteracts a tendency to rheumatism. In no case where it is possible to procure it should its use be delayed. Fortify with it against malaria. True enough, rightly looked into, the clothes don’t make the man, but how about habits.

Harvest Time

With les long hours and hard labor, reduces the human system to a very weak aid debilitated condition, thus opening the door to fever and other distressing diseases. Dr. J. H. McLean s Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier gives strength and vigor to the exhausted system and restores the failing health. If used after a ‘ sick spell” it will enable the patient to regain strength and hasten recovery, and also guard against after effects. •1.00 per bottle. Sold by all druggists. The baggageman has a big contract on his hands when he undertakes to check the cry of a baby on a train.

Were Yon fiver South in Summer?

It is no hotter in Tennessee, Alabama or. Georgia than here, and it is positively delightful on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi and West Florida. I( you are looking for a location in the South go down now and see for yourself. The Louisville & Nashville Railroad and connections will sell tickets to all points South for trains of August 7th at ono fare round trip. Ask your ticket agent about it. and if he can not sell you excursion tickets, w. ite to C. P. Atmore, General Passenger Agent. Louisville, Ky. Jagson says there is nothing elevating about society—it won’t take a man up when he’s down.

Weak All Over, Hot weather always has a weakening, debilitating effect, especially when the blood is thin and impure and the system poorly nourished. By taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla Mood’s Barsa - 1 Parilla strength will be im- Xg g parted and the whole M-l. body 1 nvi g o r a t e d. <%%%>%% People who take Hood’s Sarsaparilla a-e almost always surprised at the wonderful beneficial effects. Hood’s Pills are safe, harmless, sure.-

| Dr. J. H. MoLean’s I LIVER AND KIDNEY DALM ) ONE DOLLAR _ The peerless remedy for diseases of the A BOTTLE. ® liver, kidneys and urinary organs. S Manufactured by THE DR. J. H. McLEAN MEDICINE CO., St Louis, Mo w— A AFTER HARVEST 4r \ Invest your hard-earned dollars in a good \ Bicycle. " e tl v ® you a better Bicycle for Jest money than any house In America, tz ll—Get our prices. Agents wanted. HAYA WILLITS, CYCLISTS. 70 N. Penn. St,. . INDIANA POUS

E. A. ROOD. Toledo, Ohio, says: ’'Hairs Catarrh Cure cured my wife of catarrh fifteen years ago and she has had no return of IL It's a sure cure." Sold by Druggists. 75c. It doesn’t take much of a hunter to bag his trousers. - AHtirnf Miwy- whlteneast neck pure M alabaster: complexion like the blush of a rose. She patronized Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. In his moments of abstraction even the pickpocket thinks time is money.

Winter Rye, 80 Bushels Per Acre.

This yield seems enormous, but a good number of farmers believe they can obtain it by sowing the new monster rye. Its hardy, prolific, laughing at all kinds of weather! It simply yields big crops every year, regardless of storms, droughts or the like The World’s Fair winter wiieat is just like it for yields The J< hn A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., will send you their catalogue and tamples of above rye and wheat, upon receipt of 4 ce.its nostaue. C N V Not one man in a dozen will tell the truth if you ask him why he wears a plug hat.

SUNDAY EXCURSIONS

Ou tlia Line of the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Bailroad. The C H. t D. R. R. has placed on sale at ail ticket offices along the line excursion tickets at one fare for the round trip, for the accommodation of its friends on Sundays. These tickets will be good going and returning only on day of sale. Tickets will be sold between all stations where the train service will permit excursionists to make the round trip on Sundays. For tickets and all information call on local ticket agentC. H. & D. R. R., or address, > D. G. Edwabds, Gen. Passenger AgL, Carew Building, Cincinnati. O. I. D. Baldwin, D. P. a., Indianapolis, Ind.

TRAVEL VIA THB ™ B SHORT LINE to CHICAGO Milwaukee, St Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Omaha, Denver, San Fr&ncisco, ' Portland, Seattle, Tacomo. Los Angeles, Spokane Falls, Helena AND ALL POINTS IN WEST and NORTHWEST. The only lino rnnnint Solid Pullman Pnr.’•otod Safety Veatibuled Trains. The only line running Dining Cars between Indiana polls and Chicago. Magnificent Pullman Sleeping and Parlor Oars. For rates, maps, time tables, eto., apply to I. D. BALDWIN, D. P. No.2W Washington St., Indmanapolis, Ind FRANK J. REED. G. P. A., Chicago, 11l U H Uiu I cured many thousand cases pronounced bopeess. From first dose symptoms rayldy dU ippear. and in ten days Fully two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. BOOK of testimonias of miraculous ares sent FREE. len Days Treatment FuraisheJ Free by Mail 08. H. H. GREEN A SONS. BPECIAUSTS, Atlanta. Ga. MY^^WIFF CANMofSEEHOWYOODO Bvyi w Sdrawrrwatart er Mk |» VfeSVJ TIT proved High Arm biagerarwlnr machine WK pUud, AdAMad to ihrtet . iIA-M&yl *o<| heavy work; guar ar X*4 for 10 learex L NT AetemaiießebUa WlatUr, Cylte* JJe?|W<A4 der ShaUle. Helsel ting and Q i’v 1 i*et of steel AtUchmeßUl shipped aay where ea • 30 Day’s Trial. No mowv reqalrad U adraaee. T5,c00 now in «*, World’a Fa ir Medal a wardW maebiae and attachBeata. Boy from factory and ta*e dealer’s m»4 agent’e profit*, r DEE Thia Ont and aend to-day for machine or large free ■ fiCE catalog**' t«rthooniale a»4 Giimrweof the World’aFab. OXFORD MFC. CO. 3U Vriath Am, CMICAGO.ILL B Indianapolis W USiNESS UNIVERSITY iGeodlng College of Business A NborfluuxL Bryant & StraVon. Established IMO. Whan Block. Eio vator day and night. 10X00 former students holding ps> Ing positions. Widely known. Our endorsement pss» port to beat •ituationr. Greet railroad, manufactoriM and commercial center. Cbrsp bourdlnc. Lars* facet ty. Individual fnatrv.tlon byezperte. Ea«y psyniesla. Enter now. Write today for Elecant Deocriptlve Catalogue and Paper free. Addon. HEgw & OSBORN. ■feCNdfUtf -»«hn whobbik, JjELnichE VISI Washington. D.C. Prosecutes Claims. ■ Late Principal Examiner U.S. Penslon Bureau. ■ Syrzlulaal war, limUudlcalluf claims, atty since. Franklin college, New Athens, o Board, room and books, JB per week. Gaus logue free.