St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 42, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 6 May 1893 — Page 3

ABOVE EVERYTHING ELSE,

Dr. Tierce’s Golden Medical Discovery purifies the blood. By this means, it reaches, builds up, and invigorates every part of the system. For every blood-taint and ’disorder, and for every disease that comes from an inactive liver or impure blood it is the only remedy so sure and effective that it can be pu%ranteed. If it fa Is to benefit or cure, you have your money back. These diseases are many. They’re different in form, but they’re like in treatment. Rouse up the torpid liver into healthful action, thoroughly purify and enrich the blood, and there’s a positive cure. The “Discovery” does this.

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auc UtPVS I UIS, as nothing else can. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness; all Bronchial, Throat, and Lung Affections ; every form of Scrofula, even Consumption (or Lung-scrofula) in its earlier stages; and the most stubborn Skin and Scalp Diseases, are completely cured by it.

Z A 2w < WAI, FITTEY, Prospect, OHIO. Rescued From the Crave. A Startling Story. Prospect, 0., March 20. I had the Grippe and there has never been a waking moment since that I have not suffered with the headache, until I began using Kickapoo Indian Sagwa. Less^than two bottles have completely cured me of headache; and I am satisfied that it I had not got some relief from some source within another year, I would have gone to my grave, or would have been a fit subject for the lunatic asylum. Nothing gave me any relief whatever except what I believe to be the greatest boon to humanity, Kickapoo I ndian Sagwa WILLIAM FITTEY. KICKAPOO INDIAN SAGWA. $1 p:r Bottle, 6 for $5. Sold bt all Dkuggisi’s and Dealers. < »T’rtny.,Tli M> PemMlcs sr? Never Peddled.

—— — J. —t Si I It Cures Colds.Cou^hs.Sore Throat,Crcup.Tnflnen. ta,Whooping Cough. Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at one®, You will see the excellent effect after taking ths I first dose. Sold by dealers everywhera. Largn bottles 50 cents and SI.OO. p THE BEST

W’gpgfSa Is the best Blood Medicine, because it assists nature to throw off the impuritiesof the blood, and at the stunt time tones up the entire organism. This is jusi . contrary to the effect of the various potash, met ' cury. sarsaparilla mixtures, which 1 ottle up tin ; Impurities in the system, thus producing much sickness and suffering. Therefore, for a * BLOOD MEDICINE you cannot do better than take S. S. S. “As a physician, I have prescribed and used E. S. S. in mv practice as a tonic, and for blood troubles, and 1 ave been very successful. I never used a remedy which gave such general satisfaction to myself and patients. ’ “L. B. lUtchy, M. D., Mackey, Ind.” Treatise on blood : nd. kin diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO-, Atlanta, Ga. < X C A ^SH This Trad-’ Mark Is on the best WATERPROOF COAT illustrated in £h e World ! Cata.oguo A. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS.

''"k.Pz-erK?"'” I C&TARBHj | Price 50 Cents. | Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BROS., 56 Warren SL. N.Y. I

-- ' , ■’ ■ 0| Jooses Qj cure3| |25 r 5D c &*j^ Cures Consumption, Conghs,Croup, Sore m.mnt ^rJdbv all Druezists on a Guarantee. Fo^me slide, Back or cfest Shiloh’s Porous Plaster will give great satisfaction. 35 cents. — s»f gaaS Morphine Habit Cured in IO to 20 days. No paj tnl cured. g By sla DR, J. STEPHENS, LebanomOhio. BEST PC-i-SSH IN THE WO3LD.

DONCT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints vinca Btain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Pohsa is Li:lliant. Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened wid make several boxes of Paste I olish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOHS.

AMUSEMENT. It Is the First Necessity of Civilized Man. Many eminent men have agreed with Voltaire that amusement is the first necessity of chilized ma i. “Vive la bagatelle'” was Dean Swift’s favorite motto. He understood the value of trifles. Man grows strong by rest as well as toil. Talleyrand, in the intervals of ministerial work, played whist. Rohault, a Cartesian philosopher of the seventeenth cen- | tury, wandered from shop to shop to observe the mechanics at labor. Goldsmith tells us of a famous painter whose delight,during his confinement in prison for debt, consisted in drawing the faces of Ins creditors in caricature. King Louis XIII. of France spent much of his time in catching small birds or making jets d’eau with quills. It is said of George Herbert that “the one delight of Ins life in the wav of recreati m was nm<ie sot-

luc way m ivcrwii m was music, selling and singing his own hymns and anthems to viol and lute.” Sir Joshua Reynolds used to amuse himself in his la<t days with a tame bird. The favor.to recreations of the late Field-marshal Count Von Moltke were chess and whist, which he rarely j missed playing after dinner. He was । also an author ty on the culture of roses, and possessed one of the finest and most unique collections in Germany. Sir William Temple relaxed his mind from the affairs of state by clipping his apricots or cultivating his tulips. Gardening was an exercise in which he much indulg'd. Other great men have also loved gardening; it was Martin Luther's 1 favorite amusement. Archbishop ■ V> hately was seen to most advantage at Redesdale, his country -eat tear 1 lublin. gardening,tree-cutting,graft-ing, and romping with hi- children and dogs. With him, as with many eminent men. Ri-mar k, sir Walter Scott, Hogarth, Rulens, Henry Irving, and others, dogs were great favorites. We all know how Cowp r cheered Lis melancholy hours with the gambols of his pet hares, “Tiny, Fuss, and Bess. ” While Kepler worked out the secret of the heavenly bodies, “going over his calculai tions sixty times," he now and then tur ed aside to write almanacs for ' his daily bread. So the wear}’ worker i took his re reati m. It used t>be a I pet amusement with Mo.’iere, the I French dramatist, to ensc m -e hiin-

self in the corner of a LarLer's shop j and there silently watch the an, gestures, and gr.maces of the village politicians who in those day-. lief..re coffee houses were introduced into France, used to congregate in this place of resort The fruits d this study may be ea-ily discerned in those original sketches of character, from the middle and lower .'l;i-s s, with । which his piece- everywhere abound, i and winch made las plays -n ; ..puhr among his countrymen. Kant, the ■ celebrated German pliiloMq Ie r, lound I his only iciaxation in da.lv v. alk- d^ in composing works on odd sub,ect-. D >ctor Johns m -oniowhere observes that it seems to have b- en in ail ages I the pride of art G show hew ’ an 1 exalt the i w and amp ify the I To this ambit i ti perhaps w owe tin I frogs >i H ner.lhe bee- of \ irg:i, tlm I butterfly of Spen-e". the quuicunx of j Sir Tho:mi- Biowra* .i.l the "little celandine" if Wi t.l-wirlh.

1 >owfl t ’ie I‘ : ss. An English roident m I mm when hog-hunting one la - was ruling down a toriibly teep lai!, where he had an experience which few wmiM mire tn re; eat. The ] ass down 10 Ihe Units was exceedingly "tees .in 1 dange ous. In fact, it was n othing mme than a foot-path, narrow and precis i ons, and no one had ever ridden down it. My friend proposed that we should make the attempt, and so we started, I on a horse which had but mie eye, and that, unfo:innately, toward the hili. On riding round a "harp turning in a very precipitous part of the pass, we came upon a wh.te stone. My horse shied at it. and as he wheeled lie saw, with his good eye, the gulf below. Uy a great effort he threw himself l a kon the path, with hi." hiud-juarters dangling over the drop. 1 felt him gradually slipping back, but a 1 ranch of a tree overhung u-, and by "landing up 111 my stirrups I managed to reach it. The lb re. relieved of my weight, staggered ba k t> the path, and I, with tic'help of Lbv b dOgU, d d the pimp. r rv,D nil nccurr^rl in loss than a to see how awful it was. but mv tri. nd. who wa< leading, told me it was one 01 me uusi n-uniui ho over beheld.

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lie ever ueiivm. A muter of XV ords. The ready acceptance by lawyers of । fees and "retainers - ’ from bad men, ami es; ecially from those whom the public'teel t) be working again-t their interests, is often the occasion 1 of sarcastic remarAS. A certain prominent lawyer was 1 asked bv an acquaintance if the re--1 port were true that he had gone into ] the service of a corporation which I had been suspecte 1, on pretty ' good evidence, of bribing no mbers of . a legislature. ih ” said the lawver, ’Tve not

'•JU, htUU L A zv gone into their service. 1 have simply agiecd not to oin the other side.”' ••And you have taken a lee lor that.'-'” “Oh, naturally thej' sent me an honorarium. ” “Ah. I am glad to know it was that. I might have got the idea that it was a dishonarium —Youth's 1 Companion. “That’s a very bright baby you have there.” said a man to a lady. "Well,” replied she, "he ought to be bright, he’s a son.”

A Modept Request. If you don’t see what you want, advertise for it. That is the motto governing the actions of men and women in these days of widely circulated newspapers, and it is one conducive to happiness and prosperity. There are very few things which may not be obta ne i by judicious advertising, hut it is doubtful whether the gentleman of sunny France who inserted the following “ad” in the New York Herald a day or two ago will receive the answer he desires: “Is there a man origii a’, enough to giveaway fro ly slJ>. ”L fibo? If so, let him send cheek to Harb it, nour J. A.; rue Savoye 44, Reims, France.” Americans are nothing if i.ot ori.inal, but they do not believe in carrying originality to ex'remes, and a man who would cheerfully give away $1,003,030 would be regarded by his neighbors as sufficiently eccentric to require the services of a guardian. The gentleman at Reims has correct ideas concerning the transaction of I business, but he is too impetuons. and

. he starts out by naming a sum too large, > j had he asked for $5 some original < iti- j I zen might have sent a chock to him, but ■ i there are a great many liberal and original people in the country who could not spare $1,000,000 without being cramped at the first of the month, wh n bills are due. However, the little advertisement illustrates the vast and growing usefulness of newspapers; there may be somebody somewhere with the desired originality, and then the Frenchman will b ■ In luck. Whatever may bo the want of man, the proper course is to make it. known by advert sing in the newspapers. 1 —-Washing: nNcw& Ilic Bolsterour Atlantic Is a terror to timid voyagers, scarcely less on account of the perils of the deep than the al- I most certainty of sea-sickness. The best curative of mi. ;„,■> la Hostetter’s Stomach ■ Hitters, w.dca settles the stomach at once ami prevents its distnr .am— To all travelersand tourists, whether ij>’s a< r land, it presents a happy medium bet ween the nauseous or ineffectual resources .>t tie- medicine chest, and the problematical benefit derivable from an tinmen ite i alcoholic s-imnhm- no matter new pur,.- I !>,» jarring of a railroad car often produces stomachic disorders akin to that cause Ibv the r dlmg Ct a ship, i’or this the Hitter-is a prompt and c-rtain reme iv. The use of a brackish wat r. parti nlarlv on long voyages in the troj - : . ■ i. Orders es the stomach and : owe!-. Hostetter's s’ mach Bitters mix- 1 with imp. ire water auUities it-: ’.pisriti Similarly it counter- j i is mM trial . . 1 m i- • prcjudical mttnenees I jl edmat e or at m-’sphere a- we 1 as the . ffe -t s - of exposure and fatigue. I - it for kuiney । mmpl.imts rm-umatism an i debility. Notwi ! ji.- ' wpiy. th.- fa,-f th -t tho Western I nton Teb-gtaph Company has over "..ijiii-i ~f wire and nearly -L W” nffiee-.it o cns a!1 average of Hh) new offices annually.

x / \ i Mfc- 'Z-- ■ Mr. (.00. H . Ju ist ( ! mu XS.s. All Run Down A Puzzling Case How Health Was Restored Gained frem 135 to 176 Pounds. "A tew .ears ag - - 'm-cl u fail., d me. and I consulted several i-hy-. laris. Not one fould . ch arly diagtms- my im?. an 1 th ,r medicine j failed to give relief. After much persuasion I | commenced to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. Have । taken several bettl- - and am much improved. I ; From an all-run down condition I have been ; ; restored to good health. F< rmerly I weighed I HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES 135 pounds; now i balance the scales at 176 pound-. Hood's Sarsaparilla has been a great benefit to me and I have recommended it to

oenent to me. anti i nave recvmmvuueu a -v friends who realize u ”i results by its use.” GEO. W. Twist, Colonia. Waushara Co.. Win. Hood’s Pills cure liver ills, sick headache, jaundice, indigestion. Try a box. 25c.

J 3^l ■ [ KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by mere promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered.

— ' »u»i |<IWIII ill Why not, indeed? When the Royal Baking Powder makes finer and more wholesome food at a less cost, which every housekeeper familiar with it will affirm, why not discard altogether- the oldfashioned methods of soda and sour milk, or home-made mixture of cream of tartar and soda, or the cheaper and inferior baking powders, and use it exclusively?

Don't Envy Your Neighbors. A lean half-starved cur stood curious- ' ly regarding a sleek whit.- well-fed j ig, 1 cosily curled up in a neat of nice clean straw. । “Some folk get all the good things in thp world, 1 think,” crumbled the cur. "Ifere is that great i< 1 lazy pig, fed on tK<beat of everything—peLa, potatoes, stAet milk, barley-meal, and I know noi what all—while I am kicked and ■©Used, and have to pick up a meal anyNR hat a that fellow chattering about?” grifcte I the pig. “Go aw.iy, and let me । sleep in peace.” And he turned himself over, and was soon snoring sounJly. "Dick!” cried the farmer out of the window, "be up to-morrow at I o’clock, i Me 11 kill the white pig for Saturday's

w .. । pig oaiuruay a market; and a roast leg of pork won’t come amiss lor Sunday a dinner. " Next morning the cur was awakened early by strange sounds. “A—h!” said he. as he shivered in his straw, and sat up to listen; "I see now, they onlj' fattened up poor piggj T for their own sakes. Seeming good* fortune miy not be best lor us after all. It is better to live poorly in security than to have all we want, and be in constant. Hanger. ’’ B >iirul t<. Smoke. It is stated that <>ne n :a n has recently moved from New \ork to Brooklyn for no other reason than that sm iking cars are run on the Fulton street elevated road in the latter city. He says he is too busy to smoko a’ his office and his wife will not let him smoke at homo.

। Bt Maa®. • .in ;.,-rn taken is dropped into the Separator so Write f r lunher ■ afi. .ar . I’.i'.l-X Rankin Bldg, and 51 tg. L 210 to 25 i W. I Ike St.. < bicago. 111 , Manufacture a'.-, kinds t Creamer)’ Machir.erv a - 1 Dairy Su;; lies. (Agents wanted tn every county.) Unlike Un, Butch Process

No Alkalies — OR — Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of V/. BAKER & CO.’S ^BreakfastCocoa •l which if absolutely ; ] pure and soluble. V It lias morethan three times • • the strength of Cocoa mixed as with Starch, Arrowroot or ** Susar, and is far more cco

SI i I i J '^js- — .

Uu^.ll, cLLitA 1., lAI iuOlv V v I nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY | DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mats.

RAIFTMISS THIS CHANCE. ■ ■■■Ml ■ A aimunt Tin nny Ulm I M achanical Cabinet in which ail V »pai»-rs can be so.I extensively at a bic jirotlt bv ,1: 'Piling tin pri ■■ in a si C When placed in Het. Is. Railr. ad State-ns. Publishers’Offices, I ”-;- 1 -t ctic", .tc a i e-iuan< :it business can Pc man-’ it yaui s- c ire the light at once. | ( Urs address <’. A. >«» &: < <>.. Proprietors, Room 2'l. Us XValdington Street. Chn a-'o. 111.

CO 2? by return mail, full der W, R t scrlptive circulars ol MOODT S HEW and MOODY’S IMPROVED TAHOE SYSTEMS OF DRESS CtJTTINS. Jieuised to date. These, only, are the genuine TAILOR SYSTEMS in vented and copyrighted by PROP. D.W. MPODY. Beware of imitations. Any lady of ordinary intelligence can easily and quickly learn to cut and make any garment, in sriv style, to any measure, for ladies,

(Vi

4ffft lATtai airiDHiiUM WoriK Far S ’Uv. nir Playing Cards. consi>ting ox al>ck of s*Cards, viz : Kiiw. Queen. Jack, and Spot Cards. 1 n t/>e of eack Card l^k'^fravk^a, in eeven colore. < nc of the 43 dis erent National, r oreian, and State Building of the World's tair making the most beautiful and unique Deck of Playing Cai ds ever put on the man.’ t the best-selling novelt> yet Produced. Ac nts want. d. Sample Deek..sJ cents. Specialty Publ’i 4 C-. . mi s Ilalbt d st. Chicago, UL -en^ n ' :n 5 b 1 , i;i j iaral nr** f?£ D Me3s treatn.e *■■■ r- - J R ti.-ing physician N. sun '/ /] ■ Thoc«V 'ls C'.:rfd. S'Tl In stan rA V UIJJ O. W. 1 . SXVDEK, M. 1 >., Mail Hept. 2, McViekex-’s Theater, t lii< a«<>. UU (lENSIOM^^^ 2 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, at.y ernva MENTION THIS PAPER was. »itr:,s to .PTlsnos* Masa ' N.7T ————————— — 18 _ 9 3 XVHBN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS TV please say you saw the advertisemen in this paper. Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asth- iSo ma. should use Oiso s Cure for Consumption. It has cured |M thoosands. It has not injur- BB ed one. It is not bad to take. Bra It is the best cough syrup. n Sold everywhere. 25c. |B

T ii< k y St-tt'eC. The Manderaggio, which is one of the ! quarters of Valetta, the capital of the island of Malta, is one of the most crowded spots on earth. In Valetta itself the proportion is 75,000 to the square mile, but in the Manderaggio, 2,544 people dwell on a surface two acres and a .half in gives no less than 030,00 । to the square’’ mile, or 1,017.6 to th » acre. In the most crowded town in Britain, Liverpool, the proportion is only 116.4 to the acre. World's Fair Number. The South’s Companion publishes this week an Extra World’s Fair Number of 36 Pages, with 60 Illustrations, and a cover in Ten Colors. This is the largest and r: ost elaborate

number that has ever been published by The Companion during th > sixty-seven years of its history. Whether you goto the Fair or stay at home you should have this number. It w.U b ■ sent free t ' any new subscriber received in May with $1.75 for a year’s subscription. It can also be obtained of i ewsSealers, or by sending ten cents to The Yotth’s Companion, Boston, Mass. (>oo<l Measure. A bill has been introduced in the Connecticut Legislature providing for the punishment of persons who semi “fake” j news to newspapers. The evil coin-! plainc . of has grown to great propor- j tion. lateiy. 1 hrec or four centers of | humbug Connecticut news send such tales to New York papers and to any ! Connecti -ut papers that will pay for

~k 4 j । . such service. J- F. Smith ,k <o . New York City: Gen- I tie iien I dud Bde Bean- Small to be per- - section. and cannot ge: along withouttbem ! in the house. Pleas- fin 1 inclosed 50c. for . which kindly -end 2 bottes. Nn- A. A Tom xs. t averdalo. Cal. Inc xndescent lamps are ridiculously cheap in Sweden, the price of those with a . voltages up to 12> being about ! 2d cents. IN 18">) -nru-ruS Hr -a, hial Troches" were biti-oduced. and their success as a cure for < cl-. < oughs. A-thnia, and Bronchitis has Deen unparalleled. S »5G T i'.irs a noble failure serves the xvorld as faithfully as a distinguished I success.—Dowden. 1 I 'l ■ । -' I o i !-< 1... d Izz l or s -.1 o, ~, I; Over 20,000,000 hogs are annually j slaughtere 1 in this country.

- r DOUBLE THE STRENGTH of any other fence; will not stretch, A «I It \’PON^ sag, or get out of shape. A Perfect Funn Fence,yet HalMl• II some enough to ornament a Lawn. Write for prices. nuMH n r^APER "ARTMAN nra. co., (JEAruR : Tester;, i. lais, also Cat-3 BEAVER FALLS. PA. • TuQM Dnr>E> WIDZTI' »- u ® of Hartman Steel 3 »Hr 2 Chamber-Ste, New York. 4b y 1 MrkD if iKL ;p. ^et Lawn Fence, Tree : BRANCHES: - job Mate St., Ckira^o. 11 i y vw £ a: ' Fl w *r Guards, Flex- 3 ( 51-j3 Fonyth SU, Atlanta, Ga VIOI BL E : ,ble " e MiU - e - r; iE 5 . 77 3 n<VKje KK T ORNAMENTAL HKRZ^LESSTO STOCK uAi I’o iMM I Lucas Co., S.S S li# w? State of Ohio. ) Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and I ' every 7 case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv the use o* ' HALL’S CATARRH CURE.

I 0 ' n ’ •; No L T L ^l^^ r : A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public. 6 o _ CATARRH C4JRE 0 A T A B 9 U !jH 1 Hp4n upm the Blood and g SB I % 9 < H ■ mucous surfaces. f n WALTHALL & CO., Druggists, Horse KEV H. P. CARSON, Scotland, Dak., says: rove kv sav “HaH’s Catarrh'Cure cures “ Two bottles of Hall s Catarrh Cure completefvJrv one that takes Ht.” U oured Si rl " CONDUCTOR E D LOOMIS, Detroit, Mich J. C- SIMPSON. Marquess, W. Va., says: I Vs? “The effect of Hall’s Catarrh Cure is : "Hall’s Catarrh Cure cured me of a very had , wonderful.’’ Write him about it. , case of catarrh.” Hall's Catanh Cure Is Sold by all Dealers in Patent Medicines. PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE. THE ONLY GENUIN£ HALL s CATARRH CUREIS S‘ f 11 ® II MANUFACTURED BY’ Lil OF F. J. CHENEY & CO., S B TOLEDO, O. Testimonials sent free on application. ★ BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

‘August Flower” "What is August Flower for?” As easily answered as asked. It is for Dyspepsia. It is a special remedy for the Stomach and Liver. — Nothing more than this. We believe August Flower cures Dyspepsia. We know it will. We have reasons for knowing it. To-day it has an honored place in every town and country store, possesses one of the largest manufacturing plants in the country, and sells everywhere. The reason is simple. It does one thing, and does it right. It cures dyspepsia® ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A FIRST-CLASS — OR — i IF YOU ARE, SEND TO THE J. I. CASE T. M. CO., RACINE. WIH., Fortheir Illustrated Catalogue, MAILED FREE. TRADE MARK — M R EVE R S I 3 LE - COLLARS &CUFFS.

The best and mopt economical Collars and Catli worn. Try them. You will like them. Look well. Fit well. Wear well. | Soil for ‘2.5 cents fora box of Ten collars or Fi v« pairs of cuffs. A sample collar and pair if cuffs sent by mall for Six Cents. Address, giving size and style wanted. "Azk the dealers for them." Reversible Collar Co., 27 Kilby St.- Boston.

j EWIS’ 93 °o LYE , Powdered and Ferfumed. ha (PATENTED.! The strongest and purest Lye made. Unlike other Lye, it being a fine (powder and packed in a can with 'removal le lid, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 23 minutes without boiling. It is the best for cleansing waste-pi pies, disinfecting sinks, closets washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SALT M'r’U CO, Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa.

PfiPTISDF Send fc>r CafaloqueFree, and fepe- dy cure. ! Im proved Klastic Truss Co.. SL2 Broadway. N. x