St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 9, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 September 1891 — Page 7
L BrrS.—AH Fits stopped free by Dr.Kllne's Great Herve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s use. Marvellous cures. Treatise and *2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Phlla., Pa. (J X W r^Jr J I 1 X L\»I 17 fl ( । \ (I toexAU&i m» z ; A feeble woman is restored to health and strength, by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. If you’re overworked, “ rundown,” or debilitated, you need it. It’s an invigorating, restorative tonic, and a soothing and strengthening nervine, imparting tone and vigor to the whole system. It’s a legitimate medicine, too—carefully compounded by an experienced physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate organization. For all the chronic weaknesses, functional derangements, and painful disorders peculiar to the sox, it is an unfailing * remedy. It’s because it is unfailing that it can be sold under a positive guarantee. If it fails to givo satisfaction, in any case for which it’s recommended, the money paid for it will be promptly returned. It is a legitimate medicine —not a beverage. Contains no alcohol to inebriate ; no syrup or sugar to sour or ferment in the stomach and cause distress. As peculiar in its marvelous, remedial results aa in its composition.
The Soap that Cleans Most is Lenox. Erf? is E® Price, *1; at druggists or fH I o U B£3 KJ _Box24t£ New Yokk City. ELY’S CREAM BALM - 1 1 urn FW/j catarkh^L^^ Annly Balm ln‘o each nosW. ELY BROa„ 56 Warren St., N.Y. 50c Toffs Pis’ The dyspeptie, the debilitated, whether from excess of work of mind or body, drink or exposure in ^iAIaARIAI. REGIONS, Will find Tutt’s Pills the most genial rcetorative ever offered the suffering invalid. life Ei A NATURAL REL_bY FOTt" ’ Epileptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Hysterics, St. Vitus Banco, Nervousness, Hypochondria, Melancholia, Inebrity, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Brain and Spinal Weakness. •
This medicine has direct action upon the nerve centers, allaying all irritabilities, and increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. A Valuable Book en Nervous V L Diseases sent free to any address, I Hl I ana P°° r patients can also obtain ■ 11 Li Cm this medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Beverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayue, Ind., since 1376, and isnow prepared unde?his direction by the KOENIG MEO. CO., Chicago, Ilf. Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. 6 for 85, taree Size. 51.75. G Bottles lor S 9. JgK wW i < 7 \ XX A WOMAN BEST UNDERSTANDS A WOMAN'S ILLS. The experiments of Lydia E. Pinkham that years ago gave to the world the Vegetable Compound, were made through a feeling of sympathy for the afflicted of her sex. She discovered that nearly all the diseases of woman have a common origin, and may have a common cure. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S is a sure cure for all those painful complaints and weaknesses of women. Sold by all Druggists as a standard article, or sent bv mail, in form of Fills or Lozenges, on receipt of SI.OO. Pinkham's hook,“Guide to Health and Etlgnette," PT-V beautifully Illustrated, sent on reeelpt of two 2c. stamps. Lydia E. FinA'bam Med. Co., Lynn, Masa. I
SPIRIT OF THE NIGHT. Speak to me, spirit of the night! Thou art an angel in my sght; To whom I come when driven from sleep That 1 may on thy bosom weep ! Thou foldest me —-thou boldest me So lovingly—and now, Thy fingers stray and drive away The fever from my brow. Speak to me, spirit of the night I ' With mourning robes and fuco so white; Mourn ye the son-god gone away With tby sweet sister, dazzling day ? What magic balm makes thee so calm, And silent in thy woo ; I reo from unrest, that every breast Forsaken e’er must know? Speak to me, spirit of the night! And dost thy culm prophetic sight, View thou, thyself, turned into day? With sable robes all put away, To meet the sun, supernal ouo, Who'll fold thee to his breast, And say, “through pain, my chosen gain This haven of the blest.” “Arkansaw Traveler. ONE OF HIS LITTLE ONES. BY MANDA I- CROCKER. The music of the orchestra in the big tent sounded far away; the voices of those about her in the dressing room grew confused and indistinct, and a picture came up before her yearning vision. The picture was that of a quiet street, where the children met to play marbles; it was a familiar picture; it had come up a thousand times for consideration. The twilight always came down over the houses in this memory scone, and settled in odd corners, and a voice came out of the gloaming, “Come home, now, Hermia, dear.” Then the picture shifted and a cozy, sitting-room with a shelf of Inioks in the corner and a tall clock on the mantel, which buzzed so when it struck the hour, took its place. This was all that ever came to her of the home nest, excepting, at times, a sweet mother face whose tender brown eyes looked lovingly into hers, hovered near.
But there was another scene which made her shudder to remember. An ugly old woman, with a heavy black cloth in her hands, bends over her in the quiet street. The other children are gone now, and the cloth is thrown quickly over her curly head and a rough hand stops her scream of terror as it closes over her mouth. And that is all of the picture memory brings up. It must be years, she thinks, since this life of existing among strangers beghn; they were cruel and unkind i sometimes, too, especially Jenkinson. | The rays of the setting sun glowed against the dirty canvas until it became beautifully tinted with creamy rose and gray. A single beam slanted through a hole in the tent ano touched the short-tinselled suit before her, but she hated the sight of it. ■ “I shall fail to-night, I know I shall; I am sick.” The hot lips quivered and tears fell fast on the old blanket which served her for a couch. . Ik WWATT Kill her, maybe. “O. I wish that I might die!” came iin a little moan from her lips, lint softly through the hubbub of her । surroundings came again the sweet. , tender tone, “Comehmne, now. dear.” “O, that 1 knew the way!” burst from the hot lips. A strange impulsive, intense sensation came over her. She sat up I resolutely and lifted the bottom of । the canvas a mite and peeped out. | TV hat il Jenkinson saw her: he might I think she meant to run away? she . caught her breath in a dazed fright- ' ened way. Why hadn’t she ever thought of that before? I Running away. Strangely sweet the thought flitted through herbrain; j it was an entirely new idea. Could she—doit? again she peeped . out. No one was in sight, ju>t now. I and it was growing shadowy. Over there was a cottage. She could see it dimly out-lined against i | the trees beyond. Up came the can- j i vas a mite higher: in thirty minutes ' Jenkinson would come for her: if they ; couldn't find her. what then? | “Please, Jesus, help me to get away!”
The prayer slipped its cable and the set teetii closed tighter; out into ; God’s free air'erept “M'lle'Gertrude.” Inch by inch through the tall grass she worked her way from the hated place. After a few minutes of painfully impeded progress, she rose with ,an excited bound and ran in the direction of the cottage. The pain in , her head was terrible, but the dread (of capture nerved her on. Reaching the fence which shut in the cottage she struggled through a narrow opening and found herself within a few feet of an tmtside cellar-wav; the door was invitingly ajar. Everything was quiet aUmt the house; it seemed deserted. Wouldn't it be safe enough to slip in the gloom of the cellar. The strains of the distant orchestra fell on her ear as falls the sound of a curse. Obeying a sudden impulse she darted down the shadowy steps. Crouching down in a corner/ trembling with fear, she murmured, ‘-O 1 guess I’m safe.” In tlie stillness of her hiding-place there seemed security, and the exhausted child sank down in a little heap on the stone floor for rest. As the “queen of the trapeze” ci aw led away from the circus grounds, | “Heavy-Weight Ben’^was busily en-' gaged in dressing for his feat and saw her from his corner. He divined her purpose instantly, and his sympathetic heart swelled with emotion at sight of the tangled curls bobbing through the grass. Looking about him. furtively, he said under his breath: “She’s goin’ ter give ’em the slip, by Jove! Let her do it. 1 say; and 1 11 be boiled in oil afore I’ll give her away.” Wher Jenkinson went in search
of the little trapeze performer, of course she was missing. Plainly now that illness of hers was but a feint; somebody was at the bottom of this; she could never have gotten away without assistance. And so the confusion increased as the possibility of finding the child decreased. “Hold your tongues!” shouted Ben, wrathfully. “The proprietor took her to sec a physician, likely. She was sick.” Jenkinson felt better; the rest didn't care and the crowd in the big tent was told that “the queen of the trapeze was ill.” But by and Uy the portly proprietor came back—his absence gave coloring to Ben’s story—and then it was ascertained that Mr. Sayles had not seen Mlle. Gertrude during the evening. “Well, I’m blowed,” said Ben, adjusting his weights, “if I didn't think that was the proprietor leading Gertie away just at dark; I could have sworn it was Sayles.” Then some one in the crowd said they saw “a gentleman resembling” the aforesaid Sayles going toward the village with Mlle. Gertrude accompanying him. , No one, however, except “heavy^| weight” Ben understood that in thaw “some one's” palm burned a gold^ piece, the price of having seen the child in the custody of the mysterious stranger. Crouching in the darksome cellar the child waited and listened, every moment expecting some one in pursuit. Doubtless they were searching for her now. There the clock upstairs it the room above her struck ten; the performance was about over, and .Jenkinson was swearing awfully, no doubt. But theciock upstairs struck like the one didin her memory hall; how nearly alike they
were, to be sure. O, well, there were clocks and clocks exactly alike of course, and her head pained so now that to th.ink was agony. Then somebody came into the room overhead; but 'they did not sit (town. No; they just walked up and down. Were they in trou”e? Something told her that they w re; she listened with bated breath. A curious impulse moved her to go up tiie rude stairway against which she had stumbled in her endeavor to move about a lit tie. Ascending the steps she found herself at the door of the room where the uneasy jiereon was moving to and fro. Sitting down on the narrow landing the child wearily measured the march over the uncarpeted beyond: instinctively she knew it was that of a tired woman. Tlw^n she fell asleep. How long she slept she knew not: but she was suddenly awakened with a deep moan. Tiie restless feet ceased their fatiguing vigil and growing brave, the listening child pushed open the door as softly as dw-aUJ*; by the r,,.i 1 .h .-Aw. hy a low- : tne opposite side of the room, a.- it in prajer. “She prays.” whispered our litth heroine to her own weary soul. ••<), God, Bm ju>t hungry fora prayer.” I So saying, she glided to the side of • tiie bowed figure ami stood still. । The dirty ear uix. (he blearing i.n-hcstra. and even tiie crud Jenkinson were forgotten. In that dimly lighted room a sweet, I “long ago" catn- lack thrilling i her soul with a new delicious feeling; ■ a taste of intoxicating joy. i There in tin- corner was the slu ls: •on it were the books o f memory's j picture. On the low mantel near it । stood a tall old-fashioned clock: she i recalled how hs strokes had thrilled her so strangely . o. i'ould it be pos ; stop! the woman whose face was still buried in the pillow sobbed out an articulate petition: the wait stooped to catch tiie words. ; O. God! bless my darling child to-night it she still lives to need her mother's prayers,” came in pitiful sobs. “Thou knowest blessed Father, where my child is to-night; keep her' my Hermia!'' Like a cadence of heavenly music came that name to the fistening chihll There was now no doubt, above and around float ing like echoes from glorv, the sweet intonations, •‘Come home’ Hermia. come now, dear!”
One frail white arm slipped around the neck of the praying mother, and the child murmured rapturously, “Mamma, dear. I've come*” With a startled cry the woman । sprang to her feet. A wild, frightened • look quickly supplanted by a rdad, joyful recognition swept her I pale countenance. The iloubt cleared from the care- I . worn face. and. with a “I thank thee ; t blessed God! ' the waiting child was ‘ gathered to the long bereaved heart - I harm, mother kisses drove the hectic । from the daughter's brow, and tender soothing lingers wandered over the tangled curls with sacred touch. ' A blissful half-hour went by and the long absent daughter fell asleen I on,the warm, maternal bosom. And the overjoyed mother murmured again and again. “Hermia my darling. Sod p as i ndeed j ’ you back to me.” Before the circus left town al thorough search of hotels, railway ' , depots, etc., was made; but no । i ace of Mlle Gertrude could be found. i Doubtless her abductor had taken! 1 the evening train and she was f ir ! enough away, was the conclusion ar- i ' rived at as the little one slumbered । on m the sheltering arms of its ! ] mother, and the troupe left the vil- i f lage minus the “queen of the tra- ‘ peze.” I i _ ! i A dead sure thing-Man’s mor- 1 1 tduiy. । i
WAITERS AND TIPS. The PlillKdeiph-a I’iess Work, Off a Littre Temper on the Subject. The Boston hotel and restaurant waiters have formed themselves into an alliance for the purpose of redressing their alleged grievances. They , htti’e drawn up a schedule of wages i that waiters of different classes are f toTeceive, the hours they are to work, I the rules they will submit to, and the I pay they must get for overwork. Regular waiters are to receive S3O a inonth, be on duty not more than ten hours out of the twenty-four, and be allowed three meals a day. These terms appear reasonable, as waiting in the dining-room of a large hotel is trying work and deserves a fair compensation and not too long hours. But while the waiters arc taking these measures to protect themselves they ought not to forget to protect a long-suffering public as well. If, while demanding fair wages for themselves they were to decide to abolish the tipping system, they would have the sympathy of the public in attaining their own object. Tipping has grown to be such an abuse that it threatens to cure itself by its very ^magnitude. From being a gratuity it Jhas come to be considered an obligation, find there are few travelers, es■jecially in the summer, regardful of Jheir own comfort, who have the courage to resist the imposit ion. It begins Aheday a man leaves his home for his vacation tour, and neverstopsuntil tiie door of his own house closes behind him again. The chief annoyance in connection with the matter is that the tipper knows he is paying twice for Hie same service—is. in fact, being robbed—and is only getting indifferent service in the bargain. There is some excuse for the practice in the old countries, where wages are extremely low and ‘ the gifts from guests are often the j only income hotel waiters have. Then
the service a moderate gratuity will bring in England or on Hie continent
is far greater than a much larger one will command in this country. A waiter in one of the be>t restaurants in London co'nsidershimself fortunate if he receives a gift of a sixiience—equal to 12 cents in our money—for serving a dinner, and a hotel porter will carry two large satchels and a I wrap up several flights of stairsand feel fully compensated if he gets thriIM'nce. A gift of less than twice or i three times that sum might be accepted by a waiter or porter here, but ! in such a manner as to tell the giver plainly that he Is receiving and not i conferring a favor. The evil could be cured if the traveling public would unitedly oj>]>o<e it. but there are always enough willing to submit to the exaction to Comped ot hers to follow t heir« xampie. A few years ago a leading hotel in Chicago sought to break up the tipping system by publicly forbidding ' it and ordering the return of all the (' i|M to the proprietor. ’ v.ts unsuccessfulA h.<s so well otablisl,.-,]^ i some- summer resort hotels that a wel’-underst<HHl tariff of tipsis in use and no waibt will deign to receixe anything hss. The man who G unwilling to be mul'-ted must | la y C c Oi;r . age enough to withstand a bath rv o' contemptuous looks from all tin wait ers in the vicinity, who seem to na.e entered into a league to bulldoze reluctant tippers. If the system is to continue it should i- regulated ami made public. 1 ropneh.rs .should | M > asked to display a card giving the tariff for the tips in ’ their hotels, ami reading something . like tliis: “For conducting a guest up the mam aisle of a diuing-r.H.m, ?1 to the head waiter; for sen ice at । tiie table, 2 > cents to the waiter: for handing a hat or shall. 10 cents to the hat rack; for brushing. 5 cents to the hall boy three times a day: for '.he postage stamp seller, double prices fm- stamps, etc." The public ^ould then know what exactions it must submit to and could make itcalculations accordingly.
r ol h Good Laugh. f There is not the remotest corner or little inlet of the minute blood vessels of the human body that does not feel some wavelet from th.- convulsions occasioned by good heart v laughter. The life principle, or the central man is shaken to the innerliost depths, sending new tides of life and strength to the surface, thus materially tending to insure good health to the persons who indulge therein. The blood moves more rapidly, ami conveys a different impression to all tlie organs of the body as it visits them on that particular journey when tlje man is laughing, from what it d-^ at other times. For this reason good, hearty laugh in which a mi indulges lengthens his life, I conveying as it does, new and distinct .timulus to the vital forces. DoubtA'ss the time will come when physi- . Jms, conceding more importance than they do now to the influence of the mind upon the vital forces of the : N’Oy, will make up their prescript ions more with reference to the mind and S drugs, and will, in so doing. ! J, d h ’ I>est and wost effective । »“thod of producing the effect upon , the patient. ; A gentleman was boasting that his parrot would repeat anything he told ; Je^rnl CXam P le > he told him § ■ c I V lll6B before some friends to ? not bUt t,IC "ouM I Xp I ’f 31 1L 1,1 his a "k r cr he seized 5 Ski h^’Lvisting his neck, t threw Li ‘ unclp ’’ M»u beggar!” and I * I "Ptize fowls. Shortly after- | JXot V king he had killcd the - srm ’o the pen. To his j L. •; ke Ba w nine of the fowls irnL?” 1 .’ e floor with their necks renth^ t* 11 ' T bc parrot standing on the I gtb, twisting his neck an(l । Xcle”^ y y ° U beggar ’ sa - v niuue. — Spare ^ omcnts ^
Shakers of All Crootls and Kinds Are to bo found in every locality visited by chills and fever. Tho very animals exhibit in such I)lague-festerod regions symptoms of the diro infection. If experience has proved, in the domain of medicine, anything conclusively, it ; is that Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will not | only eradicate from the system every vestige ot 1 the miasma-born complaint but effectually do- , fend residents and temporary sojourners in ■ malaria-scourged localities against it. Thore is I a general consensus of opinion among metrical men, no less than in tho minds of tho public, on I this point. Not only on t^is continent but in ) tho tropics, where malarial complaints assume | their most virulent type, this incomparable
i medicinal safeguard is universally used and esteemed. Dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation, debility and kidney trouble aro all thoroughly remediable by the Bitters. A curious disease has appeared among the oysters in tho neighborhood of tho ! Thames estuary. The shells become so rotten that they will not bear the presi sure necessary to open them, tho cause । appearing to be the borings in the I rounded portion of the shells of some ‘ minute worm living in tho mud.
Tho Only One Ever Printed —Can You Find the Word? There is a 3-inch display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week , from Tho Dr. Hurter Medicine Co. This house places a “Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send ' I them the name of the word, and they will f I return you book, beautiful lithographs, . ! OF SAMPLES FREE. i | Throe Harvest Excursions. $ The Burlington Route, C., B. &Q.R- R . will > sell from principal stations on Its lines, on , ! Tuesdays, Aug. 25 and Sept. 15 and 29, Ilarvest Excursion Tickets at Low Hata to I principal cities and points In the Farming 1 Regions of the West, Southwest and Northwest For tickets and further information ‘ I concerning those excursions, call on your 3 । nearest C.. R. & Q. ticket agent, or address P. S. Eustis, Cen’l Pass, and Ticket Agent, „ ' Chicago, 111. e । The greatest bird-cage on the continent is said to bo the Grand Central 1 railroad station i New York. Tho , noisy English spa^ows swarm there by 1 thousands and nest in the great arching ] of roof girders.
Harvest Excursions — Reduced Bates South, Southeast, West and No thwest Aug. 25, Sept. 15 and 29, the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad will sell roundtrip harvest excursion tickets to points in the South, Southeast, West and Northwest at greatly reduced rates. For particulars inquire of ticket agent.
A grain of musk will scent a room for twenty years, and at the end of that time will not sh >w it has diminished in the least HALL’S CATARRH CURE is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly upon the Mood anil mucou" surfaces ot tho system. Send for testimonials. -e. Sold by Dm egist s. 75c. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Toledo, O. A Chinese 'newspaper published in San Francisco lias been sued for libel by an Indian. Best, easiest to use nnd cheapest. Piso a Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 60c. Mexico has no shoe factories, it is said. A Life Saved Mr. Oeo. Rirruond. of Seneca Falls. N. Y., is a mpsetter In the employ ot Ramsay 4 Co., the ri, at that place He is a STyWi r . without doubt, owes her Ufa to HoodN Far-aparl U. A tew years a«o alio was at death’d d ~.r. due t > blood poisoning, or. as physicians say, I' • tula- A ter ev. rythlng else failed Hood's Sar sci'-n:l* brought her out of the crisis all right. Since then che has suffered at tin.es with numbness a: d headache, but < ontinuos taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla ar d Is gradually getting over these troubles. She clingy to Hood's, takes nothing else, and we beHeve it w ill < ffo t a con ple’e cure." cMowllk ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of I 1 iga is taken; it is pleasant end refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its ! effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. • Syrup of Figg is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N.Y. Tho Soft Clow of Tho TEA ROSE !s Acquired by Ladies Who Use I MEDICATED b I I COMPLEXION I POWDER. I: ’every W HERE. I
piSO’S KEMEDY FOB CATARRH.—Best. Easiest to use. EsS Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For ^^9 Cold in the Head it has no equal. PAA It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the Kgß nostrils. Price, 50c. Sold by druggists or sent by mail. Address, E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. SmS
“German Syrup” J. C. Davis, Rector of St. James’ Episcopal Church, Eufaula, Ala.: “ My son has been badly afflicted with a fearful and threatening cough for several months, and after trying . several prescriptions from physicians which failed to relieve him, he has been perfectly restored by the use of two bottles of Bo-
I schee’s German Syrup. I can recommend it without hesitation.” Chronic
An Episcopal Rector.
severe, deep-seated coughs like this are as severe tests as a remedy can be subjected to. It is for these longstanding cases that Boschee’s German Syrup is made a specialty. Many others afflicted as this lad was, will do well to make a note ot this. J. E. Arnold, Montevideo, Minn., writes: I always use German Syrup for a Cold on the Lungs. I have never found an equal to it—far less a superior. ® G. G. GREEN, Sole Man’fr, Woodbury,N.L
RELIEVES all Stomach Distress. REMOVES Nausea, Sense of Fullnesa, Congestion, Pain. REVIVES Failing ENERGY. RESTORES Normal Circulation, Cid Warms to Toe Tips. DR. HARTES MEDICINE CO.. «t. Lonl*. IFimeis Staig Bledseal Institute. {O3 State St., Chicago. Chattered by the State. Authorized Capital S»50.000< Conducted by a Full Staff of Physicians, threo of whom are noted German Specialists. FOR THE EXCLUSIVE TREATMENT OF ALL CHRONIC DISEASES. Ample Facilities for Room and Board. Each niwaFC treated by a Phypician, who makes it a specialty; five of our staff receiving their education asirt experience in Kurope, where a Doctor mus. study te ven years instead of thret/as acre. If am.ted with ('atarrh. Can umption, Asthma or aaj Luna TrmMe, consult ur Specialist- Our treatUicnt of Stomach. Livrr, - 'rart and Kiancy Tm l eJleYtrenuf 1 ' Goitre ’ Tape Worm and all Skin Dl3Our German Eye and Ear Specialist has cured many cases when pronounced incurable. Our treatment for r. P a.~p Xv . Paralyse and Nenou3 rrcmblft has met with wonderful success. Delicate Diseases of Men or Women have had ■pecis! provision made for their treatment. Strictest privacy maintained and all comm-onic» turns confidential. CONSULTATION FREE. If afflicted with any disease address in any langtiaga ILLINOIS STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE, MONEY-foraliei-slaies-MO^y NEGRO PREACHERS AND TEACHERS READ.
Tell all ex-slaves to send . ord er foragold * V ad K e —' aughan s non book, (containing ietNegro Bishops, > redcriek Doug!:, ss .Bishop Newman. Senator Cuilom, othe.s iw pages, jilustiated . manks. payers, etc., fullv explaining his EXSLAVE FENSI6.V BILL. Clubs are now forming every where and are endorsing “Vaughan’s bill, 'asintroduced in the Fifty-first Congress in their behaif, askingL OOcash and?!sper month for some and different amount^ for others. Mayor Vaughan’s new book, that is the Lest histo~y of the race overwritten. gives cogent reas* ns why the Government should and must grant rhe former negro stave a pension. Write at once and get your names.etc. in his pen-
sion register. No char ge except as above until the bill becomes a law. Add. w n. v>. GUAX.rEx-MayoryWashington. P.C. P. O. I. Box S7J. Free to Printers OUR CA TALOGUE AUD PRICE-LIST OF PAPER STOCK. PRINTING MACHINERY AND PRINTERS' MATERIALS. w ook -lies, weights and qua!ftV of the different varieties of paper u-tiallv re- ??*. . J^ewspapcr and job printing offices, with prices for the same. It also contains a comn’ete description ot the various kinds or furniture And manecessary I n a well-regulated printing office, fullj lUustraied, together with prices of the same. afldltlon tlie above our catalogue bhows careiulv prepared estimates of the amount ot material required lor newspaper and job printing ottices. ranging in price irom S2OO to $2 000. This convenient catalogue will be sent to anv ad- ’ UP ° D rec ® lpt ° J “ rtQuest £or CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, Chicago, ILL stabdit X’ sound methf LBlls ods; cash values, incontestaMIITIIAi ble P° licies » the best IllU I SJ HL extension system; low I irP cosh Address Lbi La 921-3-5 Chestnut St., Philad’a. PTOSES or ^\ rcu Jd rs and tes< imonials address, with stamns Dr. O. W. F. SNYDER, McVicker’s Theatre, Chicago, i'll. T^'For sale by all Druggists. Price SI.OO. |OOIS.BAGGER g CO. in W a *ll i i jirton. DJ J. PATENT SOLICITORS’ PEWSIOATS bue aICSOCniF.KMI zi disabled. »2 fee for increase. 26 years experience. Write for Laws. A.W. McCormick * Sons, Washington, D. C. A Cincinnati. O. WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, vv jileasc sny you saw the advertisement i:i tins paper.
