St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 37, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 April 1893 — Page 3
A reccbd of uninterrupted cures foi nearly half a century has convinced sensible people that Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup h the best in the market Why try new things when you know that you have what you need? It Is infallible. To-morrow should never come.' all that it does is to prove to a man that he was a fool yesterday. THE WOMAN WHO WORKS,
und is tired, will find a special help in Doctor Fierce’s Favorite Prescription. Perfectly harmless in any condition of the female system. It promotes all tho natural functions, and builds up, strengthens, regulates, and cures. For women approach„ing confinement, nursling mothers, and every | weak, run-down, deh- ' cate women, it is on invigorating, supporting ।
tonic that’s peculiarly adapted to their j But it’s more than that, too. It’s the only I guaranteed remedy for all the functional I disturbances, painful disorders, and chronic weaknesses or womanhood. In “ female complaints ” of every kind, periodical pains, beanng-down sensations, internal inflammation, and kindred ailments, if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. Something else that pays the dealer better, may be offered as “ just as good.” Perhaps iu is, for him, but it can’t be, for you. ’HOfEbfEKPERANCETEABET The Forcible and Brilliant David Frost He Endorses Indian Sagwa. The portrait of David Frost, the noted temperance lecturer, will be recognized far and wide. David Frost, Boston, Mass. In a recent conversation with Mr. Frost, that gentleman said, with the convincing earnestness which characterizes his remarks: “One of the greatest evils with which the friends of temperance have to contend is the cheap whiskey decoctions and miserable rum mixtures by which the inarket is flooded under the guise of ‘ Bitters,’ ‘Sarsaparillas,’ ‘Gingers,’ and other patent medicines. "I do not mean to say,” continued Mr. Frost, “that all proprietary medicines come under this head, and in "fact I know from personal experience of one which is not only a Great Medicine, a Splendid Tonic, and Unrivalled Blood Purifier, but which is innocent of all deteriorating Ingredients and Free from Harmful Effects, no matter how much or how freely it may be used. It is not my wish to appear as the exponent of any public remedy, but in this case I deem it my duty to commend " teat Grand Remedy of tho’ Indian race, •Kickapoo Irslan Sagwa.’ ' “I speak from experience, for it has Stood me in good stead. When half sick, •worn out, and my most rebellious stomach refused to longer act in its normal capacity, • Kickapoo Indian Sagwa' has restored me to a healthy condition when nothing else would. I have taken occasion also to learn something nbout this medicine and Its origin, end know that'Sagwa'is not only an old end tried remedy among the Indians, but that its Vegetable Purity and Harmless Curative Effects are still maintained, and that its manufacture is still carried on by modern methods exactly in accordance With the ways of the noble Red Man. “ Simple Hoots, Barks, Leaves and Flowers from the Forest are all that enter into its composition, and the Strength which is gained from its use is not the false strength of the rum bottle but the Noble Exhilaration of Bounding Health, and the Purified Blood, cleansed of its poison, coursing through every Vein and Artery of the Human Svstemz’ Words fall to convey the earnest force of his remarks as expressed to the writer and the high regard he had for the remedy. Kickapoo Indian Sagwa. Sold by ail Druggists, $1 per bottle. 6 for $5. It Cures Colds,Coughs. Sore Throat,Croup.lnflusnra,Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and • sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles £0 cents and SI.OO. p The Best ] Waterproof ItWW Coat _WORLD! ^faCWbR J / SLICKER is warranted water / / dry In tho hardest storm. The * wMhbCKEU Is a perfect riding coat, and id® r Beware of Imitations. Don't Aj 1 ^®Fish Brand" Is riot on It. IllustraA. j - TOWER, Boston, Maes. ^■^ jF ■PAPER wnw WkniNO TO ADTSHTIKBR*. W relief* ommw J I . : rn irlo'i’r'r.ilulll.'ih W S fUXC.by mail. Stowell ACO. ^4 ».■ MM3, WORLD. KJ i t| ■Eke, and Paints which H ■Bure tho iron, and burn " t^Sun Stovo Polish is Brll- . Dun blo, and tho conno tin or glass package .-cnaso. <UAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS.
EXHIBITS BY THE TON. DISPLAYS ARE DAILY INCREASING IN VOLUME. ' Installation Outclasses tn Importance All Other Work Remaining to lie Done at the World’s Fair Grounds —Big Job of House Cleaning. " - Ready for the Big Rush. Chicago correspondenceInstallation of exhibits outclasses in Importance all other work remaining to be done at the World’s Fair grounds. The great rush has commenced^ and the displays are arriving in daily increasing volume. Bush orders have been sent out to all intending exhibitors. The department of transportation is thoroughly equipped and ready to handle ten times the daily bulk that has yet been received ou the grounds. Preliminary estimates give 30,C00 ear loads as the probable amount of exhibits that must bo received, unpacked, and installed before May 1. Up to date only 2,400 car loads have been received. If. from now on, 500 car loads of exhibits should be received each day tho last exhibit would not bo installed by
aMm * THE GOLDEN ENTRANCE TO TRANSPORTATION BUILDING.
May 1. It is highly Important that the ! transportation department should not be overcrowded at the last moment, and that is why exhibitors have been asked to come early and avoid the rush. Chief Holcomb’s department has it - i। f r< v Slspv/' UNLOADING EXHIBITS IN THE TRANSPORT NTION BUILDING already handled some unique exhibits. It has taken the trunk of one of California’s mammoth trees into the grounds ’ on ordinary flat cars, removed it with skids and i oilers inside the United ) States government building, where it is I now erected in tho tall dome. The de- I
- Il« w. I 111— UNLOADING IN THE MINES BUILDING.
partment has landed a United States ! postal car on the track inside the government building and swung it to its allotted place with special cranes and jacks. In the mines and mining building an exhibit of the Pottstown Iron company, consisting of a steel plate 150 ' feet long. 20 inches wide, and half an | inch thick, has been putin place, in the same building the department has landed two pieces of red sandstone from Wisconsin each about twenty-two feet long and about three and one-halt' feet square, also six more cubes of the same material, measuring fiva feet on each side. Methods of Installation. The methods of installation are sim- ! pie and yet so flexible as to be able to cope with any emergency. All exhibits arriving by train come in over the Baltimore and Ohio or Illinois Central tracks. From the railroad entrance to the grounds the installation department has laid tracks to all the i ™P°i r i t ' l I -i buildings nZand the Ultron MxTbMngs it is not possible to run these tracks directly into the buildings. Special push cars and transfer tracks are provided. There are no full-sized tracks in any of the buildings except machinery hall, where the exhibits are carried directly into the building without transfer. In Machinery Hall the immense traveling cranes span the center of the tracks, and are capable of handling twenty tons each. In the other buildings heavy exhibits are,han- j died by lifting them from the ordinary j cars to the push cars, when they are I ■ lun inside the building to the allotted j : space. In th s work tho department j uses two self-propellina io ©motive ; trains with a capacity of twelve tons i ! each. These trains can be moved around the grounds by means of turntables or massed in any ono department if required. Special methods are employed for installing exhibits in the Transportation | Building. An ordinary transfer table, ; such as is used in railroad car shops, is ■ employed to get the train exhibits into place. This table is so cons’rueted that eighty-foot cars can be placed on it and shunted to tl^e track for which they are designed. This transfer table sustains a weight of 200,000 pounds,
and Its lateral movement Is directed by electric power. The Krupp gun exhibit is nearly au in Jackson Park. There is one monster gun yet to arrive. The installation of the Krupp exhibit is one of the interesting sights at the park. The exhibitors do their own unloading, and have a track laid right up to the site on the lake front. They have some derricks which will lift 260,000 pounds as if tho load were a feather. Btir Job of House Cleaning. The buildings and grounds are scattered with debris and all of It must be removed before the gates are opened, about ten weeks hence. Director General Davis climbed into a wagon the other day and rode all over tho grounds. He went through the buildings, tramped over the grounds, sized up great mounds of wrecked staff material and molds, and pried around among piles of building material. When he camo back ho said: “It will take 5,000 men a month to clear away this rubbish. We have the biggest job of house cleaning on han 1 that has ever been undertaken. “ Comparatively 1 ttle cleaning, up was done last fall for the dedication exercises. The loulevards hading from several < ntrances to Manufactures Hall, where tho speeches were made.
I were cleared of rubbish to allow carriages to roll along without jolting their occupants out, but that was all. Other parts of the grounds were strewn with rubbish. All of it must be carted away and the parks swept as clean as a lady’s boudoir before the gates are opened. Tho park will probably be swept a dozen times before opening day. There are nearly 700 acres to put in shape, more than 150 of which are under roof. After th : bull lings have been thoroughly cleaned exhibitors will scatter rubbish from one «nd to the other in unpacking their exhibits and putting them in j luce in the pavilions. Then the army of scavengi rs will have the v.ork to do over again. “They will bo sweeping rubbish out of evciy building on the grounds an hour before President Cleveland starts the machinery," said Colonel Massey. “The exhibitors w.ll take all tho time ; possible to arrange their displays, and wo must prepare for a general cleaning up of the buildings the night and morning before the fair opens to the public." Several of tho big buildings, notably mines, machinery and electricity, have been the cause of considerable complaint lately on the part of exhibitors. Tho floors were too weak to stand the i enormous strains of heavy machinery : and n a<ses of ore and stone heaped i upon them. Exhibitors had to go te the •
; expense of tearing out the floors and pu ting foundations of stone and brick , under their exhibits. Some of them, ! especially foreign governments and . State bpards with scant appropriations, i protested against the expense, but they ; were act allowed to bring their displays ~~ ~~~~ ~~ V—y rtrf _ f DETAIL OF THE IOWA BUILDING. in until the foundations had been strengthened. Trio Go to Prl'on. j The second of the series of Panama ■ Canal trials camo to an end Tuesday, j Charles de Lesseps, accused of corrupting ex-Minister of Public Works j Balhut to support the Panama lottery bonus bill, was found euilty. Baihut, who confessed his guilt in open court, was also found guilty, and Blondin, who acted as go-batween-<u the bribery of I aihut, was also fouu ’ .guilty. All the other defendants area -Atted. Mrs. Langtry will inherit $200,000 by the will of “Squire Abingdon” Baird, beside all his racing property, includ ng horses. She was yaohtl g in the Mediterranean when told of his death. She at once started for London I to attend the funeral. i
J I^oyal Baking Powder Is Absolutely Pure While there are so many alum baking powders in the market, the use of which all aysicians decide render the food unwholesome « Qd liable' to produce dyspepsia and other i dments, housekeepers should exercise the ut- : Jost care to prevent any powder but the Royal . om being brought into their kitchens. In the use of Royal there is an absolute J-Ttainty of pure and wholesome food. [ The official State Chemists report: The jOyal Baking Powder does not contain ammonia, alum, lime, nor any injurious ingreJents. It is absolutely pure and wffiolesome. The Government reports show all other ^king powders to contain impurities. In the use of any baking powder but Royal ^re is uncertainty if not actual danger. It is unwise to take chances in matters of fe and health.
Sudden Storm. An i>iglish clergyman's wife, Mrs. Georges utler, describes a storm on the Lake of Bienne, one of those sudden outbursts which make the navigation of the Swiss lakes dangerous to all but the most experienced of boatmen. She and her husband, with two other travelers, had gone across the lake to visit tho island of St. Pierre, celebrated as the residence of Rousseau. A peasant and his wife rowed them over. The weather was beautiful. In the evening we walked back to the landing-place to take ou ■ boat, and all seemed serene except a very small black streak to tho southwest. We rowed through tho cairn lake, admiring the evening glow. It was about a quarter to six. The black streak came nearer and nearer, followed by a whistling sound in the air. • We had still more than a mile to row. Wo were not so far as that from land, to be sure; but tho shore rocky and offered no landing-place. The two ladles who were with us begged that we should wake S'raight for the rocks, but the boatman said there was no danger I and bade us be calm. He had hardly spoken the words when ■ his wife, a much taller and more muscu- ; lar person than he, gave a wild shriek, i and called to her husband in her loud, rough Bernois: “To the shore! To the shore! There’s not a moment to lose!” Her husband obeyed, and they strained themselves to the utmost. The ; perspiration rolled down her weather- ! beaten fa e, and her hair was flowing e had not reached the shore when j there swept over us a horrid darkness, i and we were in a cloud, in the midst of a howling wind so strong that no boat could have stood it. Lightning hissed into tho lake like sticks and bars of fire, an 1 the water, which had been so calm a minute before, was torn into furious waves with foaming crests. I never saw anything so sudden. Everything was blotted from sight except a piece of the wet rock jut ing out where i we wished to laud. The boatwoman was the first to jump , into the foaming water, and with her i strong arms to seize the chain and haul ; the prow.of the boat to a little point of j the rock. We all jumped out and ■ scrambled up to the top of the rock as j best we could, but even when we landed j we could scarcely stand. The rain was falling in bucketfuls, or rather in waterspouts. V, e reached the railway, and walked along it to the nearest station, thankful to be alive. Birds of Passage Between this and the other side of the broad Atlantic, In the shape of tourists, commercial travelers, and mariners, agents “on the road,” steamboat captains, ship’s surgeons, and "all sorts and conditions” of travelers, emigrant and new settlers ^appreciate and testify to the preventive and remedial properties of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters in sea sickness, nausea, malarial and rheumatic ; trouble, and all disorders of the stomach, s liver, and bowem. Against the prejudicial influences of climate, crudely cooked or unaccustomed diet, and Impure water, it is a sovereign safeguard, and has been bo regarded by the traveling public for over a third cf a century. No form of malarial fever, from the calentura of the Pacific, and the broken bone fever of tho Mississippi, to its milder types, can resist the curative action of this benignant preserver and restorer of health, a veritable boon to persons in feeble health or liable to incur diseate. One of the tesS methods of improving the inomory begin by treating it as ir it > “ “ n °tner person, and then charging it, upon penalty of a severe upbraiding, to keep t ntil wanted the information, date name, or whatever is to be remembered. l n this course you unconsciously do two things— you sort out things worth while to know and you impress them upon the memory in such away as to cause it to grasp and keep them The latter is a most important thing to do. Hal Ol one’g forgetfulness comes from one’s failure to properlv grasp v hat it is you are to remember. Beware of Olntm nts for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the rouha smell and completely derange the who^svstem when entering it through the mucous surface? Such articles should never bo used except oii proscriptions from reputable physicians at th> damage they will do Is tenfold £o the good vou can possibly derive from them. Hall's Cata-ih Cure, manufactured by F. J. Chonoy &Co Toledo,.Q., contains no mercury, a!K I fa takon in terna'ly, and acta directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buvln" Hall’s Catarrh Cure bo sure you get the genuine It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio" by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.' ' £^*Eold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. The Pennant Too Big. Captains of United States mail-car-rying steamship companies are expressing dissatisfaction as to the new United States mail pennant. They say it’s too big. Joseph Schiesser. of Oakland, Cal., thinks he has solved the problem of arctic travel by means of a device which puts a petroleum engine on a sled and -makes the engine drive a series of i spurs which take hold of the ice and I i to.ee the sled forward. I
Sirica'S to the Herd. Some cowboys and cattlemen laughingly assured mo that they only s.ng on watch to keep themsel r es awake; others say tht y s:ng, talk loud or make a noise just to let the cattle know they are approaching, so as not to frighten and stampede them, but the greater number hold—as I myself had read and been led to believe—that the sound of tho human voice, singing, talking or calling out cheerfully, quiets and reassures the animals. However it maj be, they all sing and talk or whistle to | thorn, and among my most vivid and | picture-like recollections is one of a i certain night when an aching head and heavy heart held me awake, ! and, slipping from the house in the little hours, I went aimlessly across the level plain towards where a big herd was camped. When within throe or four hundred | yards of tho bunch I could see, under I the white Texas moonlight, the dark i mass of cattle and occasional!}’ a sil- i houette, between me and the sky, of one of the guards on his pony, and in i j tho intense loneliness of the plain’s j ; night the singing of the one boyish ' | voice holding his untaught, unconscious way through “A Fountain Filled ■with Blood,” and the whistling of his companion on a little harmonicum, “Home, Sweet Home,” as they came round past me in turn, wore as lovely and touching sounds as I ever heard. —Kansas ; City Times. The uso of Ely's Cream Balm, a sure cura ■ for Catarrh and Cold in head, is attended with no i aln, inconvenience or dread, which can be said of no other remedy. I feel it my duty to say a few words in regard to Ely’s Cream Balm, and I do so entirely without solicitation. I have used it half a year, and have found it to be must admirable. 1 have suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since I was a little boy and I never hoped for cure, but Cream Balm seems to do even that. Many of my acquaintances have used It with excellent results.—Oscar Ostrum, 45 Warren Avenue, Chicago, 111. ! Apply Balm into each nostril. It is ' Quickly Absorbed. Gives Relief at once, i Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. , ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren St., New York. An O ld Fancy. A female lunatic In England is of the = opinion that she is au envelope contain- ! ing a letter, and with this idea she fixes I a stamp on her forehead and imaadnes that she goes through the post to visit her relatives. The following day she sticks another stamp on for the return journey. TESTED BY TIME. For Bronchial affections, Coughs, etc., Brown’s Bronchial Troches have proved their efficacy by a test of many years. Price 25 cts. The head-dresses of the latter part of the seventeenth century were o ten five feet high, so that a lady’s face appeared to be in the middle of her body. If you are constipated, bilious or troubled with sick headache, Beecham’s Pills afford immediate relief. Os druggists. 25 cents. Mississippi reports a 312-pound cat- ! fish. FITS.—AH Fitsstqppedfree by Dr. Kline’s Ge it Nerve e;. Fits after first day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 00 trial bottle tree to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, t3l Arch St. Phila, Fa
ST. JACOBS OIL CURES a .<
LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, SPRAINS, BRUISES, BURNS, SWELLINGS, I^THITT^.A.TjG-T.A-- * A copy of the “ Official Portfolio of the World's Columbian Exposition, descriptive of Buildings and ' Grounds, beautifully illustrated, in water color effects, will r be sent to any address upon receipt of 10c. in postage ' stamps by THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore, Md.
THE COST IS THESAME' Hlllw t mmllißw £i4.44BM^^ Jww&Ol® > ^ET^jmuiMYEA^pJi^ xr.^ £l&g-RX§.&'?.-,/,• J -yyt-c^ ’ The Hartman Steel Picket Fence Costs no n^Pth^ ^teTt^h^ BLASTING. ^° su VAf^ beaver falls, pa. 102 Chambers St,. New Yorkj 508 State St, Chicago; 51 and 53 S. Forsyth vt„ AtU.ta.Ga.
Morphine Habit Cured in IO 06 10 Dfb J*. STEPHeW,’LebanonJJhiol Piso’s Remedy foi Catarrh Is the EH Best. Kasiest to Use. and Cheapest, Sold by druggists oi sent by mail. |gg3 50c. E. T. Hazeitine, Warreu Pa.
“German Syrup” William McKeekan, Druggist at Bloomingdale, Mich. "Ihave had the Asthma badly ever since I came out of the army and though I have been in the drug business for fifteen years, and have tried nearly everything on the market, nothing has given me the slightest relief until a few months ago, when I used Boschee s German Syrup. lam now glad to acknowledge the great good it has done me. lam greatly relieved during the day and at nigh<. go to sleep without the least trouble. ’ ’ @ REVERS I p L E ——COLLARS &CUFFS.The best and most economical Collars and Cuffs worn. Try them. You will like them. Look well. Fit well. Wear well. Sold tor ‘25 cents forn box of Ten collars or Five pairs of-cuffs. A sample collar and pair of cuffs sent ny mail for Six Cents. Address, glvine size rnd Style wanted. "Auk the dealers for them." Reversible <lollnr ('o.. 27 Kilby St. H *ston.
Ke by return mall, jail ■ tT’&, Ci Ea scriptlve circulars ot MOODY‘SNEW and MOODT'3 IMPROVED TAILOR SYSTEMS OF DRES3 CUTTINS. Revised to date. These, only, are th. I genuine TAILOR SYSTEMS Invented and I copyrighted by F2OP. D.W. lIfIODY. BeI ware o? imitations. Any lady cf ordinary intelligence can easily and quickly learn to cutand make any garment, in any style, to any measure, for ladies, men and children. Garments guaranteed to fit perfectly without trying on. Addreo EOODY 41 CO. CINCINNATI. Q.
MENTION THIS PAPER wbsn «krrf<.« m AT SKI < I THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT ANO NEW AND th! COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says It acts pently on the stomach, liver and kidneys, and 1= a pleasant laxative. This drink is made from herbs, and Is prepared for use as easily as tea. It Is called L&WS HIEBIGINE All druggirts sell it at 50c and |1 per package. If yon cannot get ft, send vour ad<lrtM for a free simple. Ijine’s Fnmily Medlelu* moiM the bowels rr.eh da». In order tn be heiCthv, this is nicsaaarv. Address ORAT »R k WOODWARD, Lkßcy, N. Y. P MENTION THIS PAPER whkn warrimg to AuvaanstßS.
tnt c.rc whir wurrino to autiktUul. Ri PAHS TABULES regulateX the stomach, liver and bowels, puri- X k fv the blood, are safe and effectual .> i the best medicine known for bilious- • / ness, constipation, dyspepsia, foule breath.headache.mental depression,• painful digestion, bad complexion.* and all diseases caused by fauure of • the stomach, liver or bowels to per- *
• [Q? £& s,;
♦ form their proper functions. Person® given to over-* • eating are benefited by taking one after each neal.J ♦ Price, $2 : sample, 15c At Druggists, or sent b\ mail • O RI PANS CZL24ICAL CO., 10 Spruce St,. New York. X • ©eooeoeeoo3oe• MENTION THIS PAPER whin wtni>9 TO A»T»ana**a. $40,000,000 I Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in 1391. Your Invention may be valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and Intelligent advice,/> e< of charge, W. W. DUDLEY & CO.. Solicitors of Patents, Pacific Bldg., 622 F St. N. W„ Wusuiuston, D. C. Mention this paj er. Fl •t Ft “S' g I y® 'The improved elastic trass ■J HOII IU & is the only truss in existnlsr I IbuTi enc * teat iswem with abEI W 5 B 81 Esa solute comfort night and ■ r n gm, day. and it retains the rupa J la E 3 tare under the hardest exi a g ercise or severest train, 1.5 Li S ? ** » and will effect a permanent fend for Catalogue Free, and speedy cure. i Improved Elastic Trass Co., 822 Bboadway.N.Y. Garfield Teas, Cu^pe Constipation, Restores Complexion, Saves Doctors Blits Sample free. GvnnzL»TiLKCo.,3l9W.4sthSt-N.Y. ; CuresSicKHeadache MENTION THIS PAPER whm > kiting to ) ' -p^Frotr. 15 to 25 Ib» h ticingphvsidin\ » Thousands c«ir«3. Send 6clnftAmp«i \ J_J O. YV. F. SNYDER, M. I)., Mail Dept. McVicker's Theater, Oliicasro* 111. rampn propertyl I rl I I Y° u have any REAL ESTA . B 1 I, J I or MERCHANDISE tor sale, 1 xJ jj write us. We have bnvers for f ell pasts cf the United States. Address M. BEN Manager. Dayton Ohio. : SMCE MOIS’£S marrii.geablc a^e. Do not Ffk us to send express only Fr ce 151. Resist’d 1< tter or P.O.order. * Sieciai.ty Pur Co. Room 10 Timed ^dg..Chicago. 1 paws! FSIimHS! Send for Inventor's Gui de, or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Dig >t of Pension and Ifounty Laws, FATKK K O’F.UChELi., Washington. IK C. dress JENNESS HILLER, Washiustou. D. tv
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High five or euchre parties should send at once to Johs 2' ‘ : jV cR.I.&P- R- R . Chicago. lEN CES fS. In stanps, ner pack for the slickest cards you ever shuffled. lor ii.y’ybu will receive free by express ten packs. c r Ao. 13-93 SVHEN WRITING TO AD’.'EKTISERS, v f please say you saw the advertisement j in this paper.
