Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 September 1894 — Page 3
BURNING, S itching, scaly, crusty Skin Diseases, such as defy the ordinary blood medicines, are cured completely by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Disoovery, For Scrofula in all its various forms, the worst Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, great eating Ulcers, and every blood-taint and., vflj disorder, this is a direct It thoroughly purifies and jßSfj enriches your blood. wlwS Alexander, jfc. G. ' /' \\t Dr. R. V. Pierce : Dear Sir i J —Your “Golden Medical Discovery ” has proved a blessing to me. It was recommended to me by Rev. P. A. Kuykendall. I have been a sufferer with old sores on my legs for four years. I used three bottles of it, and my legs are sound and well and my health fs better than it has been for some time. 1 had the best doctors of this country treat my case and they failed to effect a cure. Yours respectfully, ’Yv
WW Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoimd CURES ALL | ! Ailments of Women. j It will entirely cure the worst forms ofl i 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 has cured more cases of Leucorrhoea than any remedy the world has ever known. ■lt 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 in- : stantly relieved and permanently curod by ; its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water. All drugffiju lell it. Addren. in confidence, Lvnu. E. PtNKH.M SIELK CO.. I.YNN, MASA . Lydia E. Plnkham’s Llyer Pills. 2FI r*nt« The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF OOXBURY, MASS., 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 Las now in his possession over two hundred certificates, of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. 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 shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, 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 tabkspoonful in water at bedtime. Sold bv nil Druggists.
WALTER BAKER & GO, v „_ . The largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH GRADE AND CHOCOLATES wSKfe/ this Continent, have received jwpjpPw SPECIAL AND HIGHEST W*m\ awards KB iI VA on alt their Goods at tho || L'fk CALIFORNIA M pi | MIDWINTER EXPOSITION. H j L:U{Th.tr BREAKFAST COCOA, BUS ■ 1 l B Which, unlike the Dutch Process, : V ]-ffj is made without the use of Alkalies or other Chemicals or Dyes, is abgolutely puro and soluble, and costs less than one cent a cup. 80LD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & OO.IORCHESTER, MASS. INDIANAPOLIS BUSINESS UNIVERSITY Business, Short-hand, Penmanship and Preparatory School. Expenses low: graduates assisted to positions: 4Bth year begins Sept. 3. Ask for catalogue and specimens penmanship. Address ' 40 When Dlk. E. J. HEEB, Prest. Uin I Drilling Machines JVJ.LL for any dept, ilss :i DEEP Best Una of Portablo and Bemi-Portable Machines ever made. Drill 3to 18 Inches In diameter, all depths. Mounted and Down Machines. Bteam and Horae Power. Self Pumping Tools foi ■hallow wells. Rope tools for large and dsei wells. State elze and depth you want to drill. LOOMIS & NYMAN. Tiffin. Ohio. [price r>ocents! i BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD, DO NOT BE DECElVED^^***®*®* with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn rod. The Rising Bun Btove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, nnd Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistenod will make several boxes of Paste Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE. OFS.OOOJONSj
THE CAMPAIGN.
The Democratic Failure a Na tional Disgrace. A National nisgraee. Indianapolis Journal. All.-JLhingS- considered there is nothing in our National history more disgraceful to us as a people than the record of the present Congress. The foreign press, in commenting on the recent strike, concluded with almost one accord that it revealed the inherent weakness of popular government. Of course this was not true, but in so far as it expressed the opinion of intelligent foreigners the strike "NatiotmL-disgraae. and no doubt it was a cause of humiliation to the friends of popular government, throughout the world. Butjthe strike was a small disgrace compared with the record which the present Congress has made. This may seem at first blush to be an unwarranted assertion but a little reflection will show it to be true.
President Harrison, in his last annual message to Congress, Dec. 6, 1892, said: “A comparison of the existing conditions with those of the most favored period in the history of the country will, I believe, show that so high a degree of prosperity and so general a diffusion of the comforts of life were never before enjoyed by our people.” These words were well weighed and true. They were fortified by a convincing array of facts and figures, and the conclusion was drawn that the unprecedented prosperity which the country had enjoyed during a long term of years and was then enjoying was due in a large degree to the policy of protection. In referring to a prospect of a change in this policy President Harrison said: “I recommend that the whole subject of tariff revision be left to the incoming Congress. It is a matter of regret that this work must be delayed for at least months; for the threat of great tariff changes introduces so much uncertainty that an amount, not easily estimated, of business inaction and of diminished production will necessarily result. It is possible, also, that this uncertainty result in decreased revenues from customs duties, for our merchants will make cautious orders for foreign goods in view of the prospect of tariff reductions and the uncertainty as to when they will take effect.” At the date of this message com-* ing events were casting their shadows before, and Gen. Harrison already foresaw the disastrous effects of a prolonged tariff legislation. Recognizing that a new tariff bill was iaevitable he expressed 'regret that the work “must be delayed for at least three months.” Mr. Cleveland was to be inaugurated March 4 following, the Democratic Congresselect would come in at the same time, and it would have been possible for the work of tariff revision to have been taken up and completed before midsummer. When Mr. Cleveland came into office the reasons for a prompt disposition of the tariff question were more fully developed than they were at the date of President Harrison’s message. The cloud of apprehension and distrust, at first no larger than a man’s hand, was assuming ominous pro--portions and rapidly covering the whole business sky. There was every indication of an approaching storm and every reason-why the work of tariff reform, if it was to be done, should be done as soon as possible. But month? passed and nothing was done. Meanwhile the stdrm broke with most disastrous results. The Cleveland panic of 1893 was the most memorable and destructive in our history. Congress, called together in extra session on August 7, 1893, spent nearly three months in repealing the Sherman silver act, and adjourned November 3 without doing anything with the tariff question. A month later the regular session began. A year had passed since President Harrison had congratulated Congress on the extraordinary prosperity of the country, and probably no country ever underwent so great a change in so short a time. The conditions that prevailed a year before had been completely reversed. Universal prosperity had been replaced by universal disaster, and an army of busy workmen had been turned into an army of unemployed. When Congress met everybody hoped that whatever it was going to do would be done as soon as possible.". This reasonable expectation had been bit|i terly, cruelly disappointed. Eight months have passed, and yet nothing is done. On the part of the domi--liTanT''pill'Ty^f f,~t^ngiT^"-"t^icT'"hfm-kbeen months of delay, of wrangling, of jobbery, of impotence and imbecility. On the part of the people they have been months of business suffering and financial torture. Twenty-one months have passed since President Harrison said it was to be regretted that the work of tariff revision must be delayed for at least, three months, and a Democratic Congress is still playing football with the tariff question. The public welfare is still subordinate to party policy and the interests of the people are sacrificed to those of the Sugar Trust. Tt is a National disgrace.
Why Not Ben Harrison?
Washington Post. The cartoonists and the paragraphers are enjoying themselves vastly nowadays in poking, what they seem to regard as fun, at the prospect of Mr. Harrison’s nomination in 1890. The paragraphers are outilizing all their most reverend witticisms touching his silence and his intent listening for indications, and the
cartoonists ire rivaling Hermantl himself in the truly wonderful thingd they do with grandfather’s hat. But,, notwithstanding all this hilarity, we make bold to ask. why not? Where would the Republican party make a serious blunder in nominating Mr. Harrison again? We have in the W T hite House at present an illustrious witness of the efficacy of a third attempt, and certainly there is nothing in Mr. Harrison's record which "makes him ineligible to the competition. He was beaten in 1892 by the same influences that, four years previously, had defeated Mr. Cleveland—the apathy of his own party. There was no great popular uprising against him —quite the contrary; for his successful competitor himself received a very light vote, and was elected only because Republicans stayed at home.—Reference to the figures of the election will show that, allowing for the six new States, Mr. Cleveland did not receive as large a popular vote in 1892, when he was elected, as he did in 1888, when he was defeated. Mr. Harrison, therefore, lost the day, not because the country rose up to discredTtfand rebuke him, but because by some unaccountable impulse Republicans every where refrained from voting. Does any intelligent observer of public events imagine that Republicans, after the experience of the past year, will stay at home another time?
Mr. Harrison made mistakes, of course. He was only human, and error is the twin brother of humanity- He made a mistake in Wanamaker, he made another in the force bill; he made several, in fact. But nobody ever questioned his integrity, his high courage, his personal purity of character, his profound and passionate patriotism. We were never afraid of National humiliation as the result of any foreign complications while he stood on the bridge. We were never apprehensive of domestic catastrophe with his clear head to guide and his dauntless hand to interpose. Mr. Harrison, as we know, was not picturesque and sensational enough to please a certain class. His simple wavs, his quiet tastes, his love of home and family —these aspects of the man were all too commonplace for the spirited and impatient among his fellow-citi-zens. But sensible and thoughtful people gave him their respect and confidence, and it was a significant fact that those nearest to him were those who loved him best. There is nothing in Mr. Harrison’s public record or private character of which any one can make light. He does not commend himself to Democrats, of course, because he is the most stalwart and uncompromising of Republicans. He is abhorred of mugwumps naturally, because he is virile and positive in his methods and convictions, and because with him the love of his country and his flag is a dominating passion. But not all the cartoons and all the paragraphs in the world can make the American people think of him as a small" man, a weak man, a timid, futile or unreliable man. The country knows that he is the antithesis of such a man. Why not Harrison, then, for 1890? Why, indeed?
Gresham as a Judge.
Cincinnati Tribune. It is well understood by a groat many lawyers that Secretary Gresham was not a strong man on the bench, and that his decisions have been overruled with humiliating frequency. It was chiefly on account of his meager ability as a judge that President Harrison declined to put Mr. Gresham on the Supreme Bench. He did not think him a fit man for the place. The lawyers in Congress are laughing over the predicament Secretary Gresham finds himself in. A Washington dispatch says: “In a very short time the Supreme Court has overruled nine of the decisions rendered when the Secretary of State was a Circuit Court judge in the Seventh judicial district. “Each term of the Court held during the last year has resulted in decisions overruling eases brought up on appeal from decisions of Judge Alresham. The first term of the Supreme Court last fall Had before it four appeals from decisions of the Seventh Circuit Court made when Judge Gresham presided. Every one of thpse decisions was reversed by the Supreme Court. The cases were those of the Lake Shore Railway Company vs. Prentiss, Humphreys vs. Perry, Wade vs. The Springfield & Chicago Railroad Company; and the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad Company vs. Hoyt. At the second term of the court there was only one case '•+Trfrrnr"-kr--OH— -appeal- ~f min—ludgo Gresham’s decision, and that was reversed. The last term of the court, which closed on Saturday, had another case before it, being an appeal from Judge Gresham’s decision, and this was the most important case of all’ and it was also overruled. “Henee the record is clear. Every case brought to the Supreme Court in the last throe terms on appeal from the decisions of Judge Gresham has been overruled. There is no doubt whatever that when people get aajbpportunitv to pass on the decisions of Secretary Gresham they will be reversed with still greater unanimity. It is doubtful if the Secretary’s decision in the Hawaiian matter and his decision in the Samoan matter would be sustained bv one voter in a hundred thousand in the United States. I( Mr. Gresham is not a grea judge, nor a great diplomats, nor i great statesman, nor a great Demo crat. nor a great Republican. wherein does his greatness as a public man ! lie?
DON'T KILL THE DOG.
A Physician’s Advice to Persona Who May Be Bitten. Pittsburg Dispatch. It will surprise many people to know that hardly one dog in fifty or seven ty-five of the dogs reported to be mad is mad, and yet that is what a well-known Pittsburg physician said, last night. He went further and said there had been but one genuine case, of hydrophobia in Pittsburg in several years. “Impress this upon people who have been bitten by a supposed mad dog—don’t kill the dog. It is”about the worst thing that can be done, lor it gives no chance to the victim bitten to know whether.he has been bitten by a mad dog or not. The dog should be carefully penned up, and after a time killed. Then let a section of his spinal cord be submitted to a competent person, and he will soon see whether the dog had rabies or not. “When a person is bitten by a dog the first thing to do is to suck the blood out of the wound and with it the virus if the dog has rabies. But rare must be iaiceg-fEgt ,tß6re".t>.<£ttfrr ;uts on the lips or in the mouth. Where the dog’s teeth have had to iro through clothing before reaching the flesh the chances are better, for the poisonous saliva would likely be taken off in penetrating the cloth. After the blood has been sucked out i physician should be consulted and ;auterization "'resorted to. If no physician be near the wound should je cauterized anyway, well and deep, ivith a hot iron if. less severe means :annot be obtained. Under the old Pethods of curing hydrophobia, when the virus once got into the system there could really be no cure. The ease was fatal. Pasteur's ‘attenuated virus’ plan, from the remits set forth, seems to be a great benefit. But dont kill the dog.” A recent article in a medical review says that Tizonni and Centanni say they can not only confer immulity from the bites of a dog afflicted with rabies, but can cure hydrophojia after the disease has developed.
INDIANAPOLIS’ GREAT SHOW.
The Gorgeous Spectacle “Last Days of Pompeii” To Be Seen There. Pain’s “Last Days of Pompeii,” the treat historic spectacle which is to be ;een for the first time in Indianapolis this, nonth, is the most elaborate and beauti:ul thing of the kind ever produced in this :ountry. It has been given in the principal cities of both Europe and this country with great success, and the presentation ;here will be the same, in every respect, as ;hoseseen in New York, Chicago, Cincinaati, Boston and Philadelphia. The spectacle gives a vivid and realistic representation of scenes and life in Pompeii, in which three hundred people are imployed in the tableaux, groupings and itirring scenes, followed by the representations of the destruction of the city by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. This icene is one that is not likely to be forgotten in along time, for its realism is somewhat startling. Following the historical spectacle each night will be given i great display of fireworks, the contract railing for Pain& Co. to furnish one thousand dollars’ worth for each night. The fireworks will be an especial design, appropriate to the various special observances,“such as “Indiana Night,” “Indianapolis Night,” “Militia Night.” “K. of P. Night,” “Odd Fellows Night,” etc. The “Last Days of Pompeii” will be riven at Lincoln Park, cornet of Sixteenth street and for ten nights, begTniring Labor-Day. SepL 3, theinaugnral performance being a particularly imposing one. There will be two more that week (t.he week of the fall trotting meeting), three the next, and four the third week (State Fair week). The great amphitheater at the south end of the park, which is already up, will scat 10,000 people, and has 1,500 reserved seats and sixty-five boxes each for four persons. In front of it is the grand plaza, twenty-five feet wide, extending the full length of the building, and on this is the grand pavilion. The great lake, 75 by 250 feet, on which there will be boats, flotilla and barges, is immediately in front of the building and just back’of it is the great stage, fifty feet deep by 100 wide, on which will occur the dramatic part of the representation, the dancing, tableaux and unique specialties. Pack of tnis is the mound, sixty-fivo feet high, representing Mount Vesuvius, and in its rear are the dressing rooms, workshops and other necessary buildings. Half fare rates on all railroads will be given during the three weeks of the spectacle from all Indiana points. Whatever one’s lot in life, he should haye good deeds to show for it. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing SYKtTP for children teething, softens the gum. reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. At a banquet it is generally the lion of the hour who sets the table in a roar. There Is only one way to live without work, and that is to prey without ceasing. Birds and flowers delight us, but we are enchanted when we behold the complexion of a young lady made beautiful by the use of Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Jagson says the proprietor of the merry-go-round has a business whirled of his own. *
Market Gardeners and Farmers.
Tremerufous monev Ts manS'Tsy"gTf? : " ting your vegetables into market 1C days ijjieail of your neighbors. Saizer’s Northern Grown Seeds have this reputation. Send to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.,' for their wholesale catalogue, inclosing a 2-cct t *,v»uui>. C N U
RATES TO PITTSBURG
Will Re Reasonable vis Pennsylvania Lines for G. A. R. National Encamp meat. For six days—from September sth to 10th In. elusive—excursion tickets to Pittsburg account the G. A. K. National Encampment will be sold at low rates from every ticket station on the Pennsylvania Lines. Tickets will be good returning until September -Jsth, inclusive, and one stop-over will be allowed on the return portion. These lines connect the principal cities and towns of western Pennsylvania. Ohio and Indiana with Pittsburg, und are the only ones over which through trains from all portions of those Stales arrive at the union station, convenient to-headquarters! hotels and boarding-houses. They are the maiq avenues of travel to Pittsburg from the Great Lakes on the north: the Mississippi River on the west, and the Ohio river on the south. Connecting jines will sell excursion tickets over these direct routes. Any desired Information as to rates and time of trains over the Pennsylvania Lines will tie cheerfully furnLshed by ,W. F. IlHtwsicit, District Passenger Agent, IndlanapIlis. Ind.
ASIDE from the fact that the I cheap baking powders contain alum, which causes indigestion and other serious ailments, their use is extravagant. It takes three pounds of the best of them to go as far as one pound of the Royal Baking Powder, cause they are deficient in leavening ~ gas. There is both health and economy in the use of the Royal Baking Powder. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL BT., NEW-YORK.
Reversible.
Ulk, Berlin. “Sir,” said a Heidelberg student to a night watchman, in the wee sma’ hours of the morning, “sir, 1 would like to ask a question^*' “Go ahead, young man,” answered the dignitary, “that is what I am here for.” “Well, sir, does the law permit me to call a a policeman an ass?” “You had better be gone immediately,” replied the watchman, “or I will lock you up.” The votary of alma mater walked a few steps on his way home, but returned and asked humbly: “But, sir, is it permitted to call an ass a policeman?” “The law doesn’t say anything about that.” “It doesn’t, eh? Well, good morning, Mr. Policeman.”
Stray Thoughts.
Castles in the air are seldom furnished. You are undoubtedly a superior man, but do you practice it? If good advice were legal tender it would not be given so freely. If some people were wiser, other people wouldn’t make so good a living.
The True Laxative Principle
Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Syrup of Figs, has a permanently beneficial effect on the human "system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral solutions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Being well-informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co.
There is a New York State Library school at Albany for the purpose of training young meri and women for librarians. At its recent commencement there were four graduates, three of whom were young women.
Catarrh Cannot be Cured
With LOCAL APPLICATIO S, ss they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you have to take inttrnsl remedies. Hall's catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is no quack medicine, It was described by one of the best physicians in the Country for years, and is a regular prescriptK n It is composed of the best tonics known combined with ihe best blood pur Tiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials free. F J. CHENEY A CO., Props. Toledo, O. Sold by drugg sts, price 7. c Illustrious ancestrv is a glorious thing to have, but it won’t bo taken as security for a hot stew.
HEADACHE, DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION are caused by bad blood, and by a run down, worn out condition of the body. Remember Hood’s Sarsa--1 Imm parilla Be sure to get r’ures Hood’s >%/%/%/%%> Hood's Pills are gentle, mild and effective. my——mnec cannot see how too do H'lwainirc IT AND pat freight. SW. L'SISJNV4.r T |fl flu | ■ ©or 3 dr.wer w.1n.l or o»k I» MR /flB 'frTp r „ w l High Ira Sl»f.r,»oior michia, HwYf KH fln.ly ©mailed, nkkel pleleJ , .denied to li.hl iAM .nd beery work; for 10 leer,; with I Ur 7H Wl»il» r ,Srlf.Tkr«i4l.| c flli. *“ n-JUk.. Shuttle, Self.Hrl 11. f K».dl. »od a complete O (T® ’ Lid of bier I AU.ebln.nt, I .kipped »»y where OS • • SO Day’. Trial. .No money required I. .dr,oca. IS OOQoow la nr. World’. F. ir Medal .warded machine and attachmis rnrr Cat TblaOtit and **nd to-day for roach In* or bfrriwi f Kfcfc eatal*ro*. w*tlroonK!t and Glimn**aof thr Horld’aFair. OXFORD MFO. CO. 312 Wituk An. CHICAGO,ILL.
Dr. J. H. McLean’s | (Liver and Kidney Balm) § The Peerless Remedy for Brights Disease, Diabetes, Biliousness, Torpid Liver, Etc. | Sold by Druggists Everywhere. One Dollar a Bottle. | Manufactured by THE DR. J. H. McLEAN MEDICINE CO., St. Louis, Mo.-j AFTER HARVEST Invest your hard-earned dollars in a good j4fr?\ : j 7%\ 7We give you a better Bicycle for lesi money than any bouse in America, a ~ «'ti cßn Get our P rico9> A K en ts wanted. , HAY &WI t L.L ,ts ,i 70 N. Penn. Bt.. . INDIANAPOLIS.!
Waked Up In Time
To the fact that a want of tone In the system is the herald of approaching disease, hosts of Invalids have adopted that certain means of self rescue from impending danger, Hoetetter'a Stomach Bitters. This benignant tonic promotes, In no ordinary degree, digestion and assimilation, through wbleh the blood is fertilized and made scrength-y.leldlng. Besides this, inactivity of the liver, bowels and kidneys, which impede a gain of vigor. Is overcome. Appetite, as well as the ability to gratify it without discomfort, is stimulated by this thorough medicinal cordial, which also has a tranquilizing effect upon nerves weak and unquiet. Food, It should be remembered, only haif Invigorates the dyspeptic. By the use of the Bitters. Its nourishing properties are made available. For malaria, rheumatism and the infirmities of age, use the Bitters. Many a mistress would like to command her servant to do this and that, but tinda it difficult to rise to the point of order.
Free to Our Readers. Bloomingdale Bros., Third avenue and Fifty-ninth street, New York, offer a big bankrupt stock of dry goods at half price. They have kindly promised to send 64-page illustrated price list to our readers free of charge. Write for one. One is sometimes surprised at having bought goods so cheap—until after tho peddler is gone. ..
W. L Douclas CS CUAP IS THE BEST. *•> Ollwt NO SQUEAKING*S. CORDOVAN, FkENCH&ENAMELLED CALF Jap: X $ 4. 5 3. 5 - O FINECALf&KAN6AHDCL tafcag; Jm 4 3.5 P POLICE, 3 solesIff! Mam *2.*i. 7 jboysschooishqes. SEND FOR CATALOGUE DOUGLAS. BROCKTON, MASS. Yon can lave money by wearing tho 9 TV. L. Douclas 83.00 Shoo. Because, wo are the largest manufacturers cl this gradeof shoes la the world, nnd guarantee tbeii value by stamping the name sad price on tbs liottom, vvhlch protect you against high prices and the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custotr work In stylo, easy fitting and weartog qualities We have them sold everywhere at lower pries# foi the value given than any other make. Take no sub jtltute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can.
- TRAVEL VIA THE THE SHORT LINE TO CHICAGO Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Omaha, Denver, San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Tacomo, Los Angeles,Spokane Falls, Helena, and All Points in the West anJ NartM The only line running Solid Pullman Perfected Safety Vestibuled Trains. The only lint running Dining Cars between Indianapolis ant Chicago. Magnificent Pullman Sleeping ant Parlor Cars. For rates, maps, time tables, etc. apply to I. D. DALDWIN, D. P. A, No. U West Washington St., Indianapolis, Ind Fbank J. Heed. G. P. A., Chicago, 111. liupilC I AU-I°HN W.JIOBBH, nhnlalilll Washington, B.cl 13yrsi u last war, 15 adjudlcatiug claims, sttjr silica My ELECTRIC BELT sent on TRIAL TJTJYrB lir.Judd,e.Ld-troit.Mich. Wsntsgents A lVJ.ilsr Per 1,000 to distribute Circulars in your town. 5 J bend «c stamp. Pioneeb Meg. Co., Chicago LN.U 36—04 INDPL.S
