St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 48, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 17 June 1893 — Page 3
Settled It. A well-dresseu man and woman eat Bide by side on the deck of a steamer talking earnestly. When the boat was about to touch at a pier the man said, in a loud voice: “I ^aid it was, and that settles i*." well, it does not,” said his companion. rising from her seat and bringing her umbrella down on his head with a bang; “but that does." Evidently it did not, for the man jumped from his seat and quickly put the length of the boat between the umbrella and his head, which, by the way was bald on top and bled a little from the blow. To a few men who gathered round him with inquiring faces, as he mopped his cranium, he said: It’s all right, gentlemen—all right. She s my wise. We bad a little diseuss:on about some music we heard. I thought I knew more about it than she did, but I find out that I didn’t" The pair left the beat arm-in-arm ten mmutes later. The North I’ole and Equator Are not more widely distinct th in the stand- j ard tonic, stimulant and alterative, Hostct- ; ter s Stomach Bitters, and the cheap and fiery local bitters which unscrupulous venders foist upon the unwary as medicated preparations with remedial properties. The latter are usin the nialn of half rect i>Bed
wlth so ’ ne " retched drug ^"ec^/c d^gulse theu real flavor, and are y oU3 to the coats of tlie stomach. ** Bitters, on the contrary, hi* for - its basis choice spirits of absolute purity, and this is modified and combined with medicinal extracts of rare excellence and botanic origin, which both invigorate and regulate the bowels, stomach and liver. They effect a radical change in the disordered physical economy, which is manifested by a speedy improvement m the general health. Bananas. The banana seeds only in one small spot on earth, tho Andaman Islands. Everywhere else it must be raised from suckers. Get SimU Bile Beans. 40 for 25c. The first paper-makers were tho wasps. N. K. Brown's Essence Jamaica Ginger will cure dyspepsia. None better. Try it. 25 cents. DO^'T BE FOOLED
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. ’ J have your money back, No other medicine of its kind is so. certain and effective that it can be sold so. Is any other likely to be “just as good”? Ar a blood-cleanser, flesh-builder, and strength-restorer, nothing can equal the “Discovery.” It’s not like the sarsaparilla?, or ordinary “spring medicines.” At all seasons, and in all cases, it purifies, invigorates, and builds up the whole system. For every blood-taint and disorder, from a common blotch or eruption, to the worst scrofula, it is a perfect, permanent, guaranteed remedy. J® gp S A sensible Cook Book S Os I $ XQE t KW'^rA , ! .W?^’<f, ■ ■fi fin SB ■ the best Meat Stews, the best-liked Fish or Meat Hash, Plain Cake, Apple Pie, Baked Beans, Doughnuts, Delicious j Puddings from odds and ends. Tells how to economize and still set a good table, and also tells bow to always have a good appetite and keep strong and well by the use of the grand remedy of the Indians, Kickapoo Indian Sagwa. This valuable and Practical Cook Book should be in every kitchen; and we will send it free to any address upon receipt of a two-cent stamp to pay postage. Address, Healy & Bigelow, New Haven, Conn. 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 more 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 I in the form most acceptable and pleas- j ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ; ana 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. Morphine Habit Cured in IO ES It Sa hills to 20 days. No pay till cured. DR. J.STEPHENS. Lebancn.Ohio. BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD. Kb with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS©
, BITS OF CHICAGO LIFE, r POINTS OF INTEREST TO THE 1 WORLD’S FAIR VISITOR. I | Strangers Can Spend Several Days Sightseeing in the Center of the city—The 1 Board of Trade, Water System, Police I and Fire Departments, Etc. 1 t Few Historic Points. Chicago correspondence:
’•^3 1 I mJ \ 1
evators, the safety-deposit banks, the new Art Institute on tho lake front, the lookout tower of the Masonic Temple, the press-rooms of the great dailies,
• —- ' A MW ilßifSwW® iSS * wS' S sww w a" Jm Ji, I^' ii ~* — ■ - ^^^***=~a* 1 ■■■ 11 Z" • I ~—=*“■; «■-_ - I CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE BITLDING. 1 I„ , 1
by the dealer who brings out something else, that pays him better, and says that it is . “just as good.” & Doctor Pierce’s / Golden Medical I Discovery is guar- » anteed. If it don’t —benefit or cure, in ~ every case, you
| turning out over 60,0, 0 papers an hour, . are novelty of more detailed attention. I ; young as yet to boast of many statues. | but the site of old Fort Dearborn, n»nr ! Rush street bridge, marked by a tablet, j i the bust of the railway postal service • pioneer, Armstrong, at the postoffice, j the Douglas monument at Kenwood, i the Drake Columbian public drinking fountain at the City Hall, and the ! monument at Haymarket Square indieating the scene of the famous Anarchist ! massacre, are all assoc ated with interesting reminiscences, ami pave the i way for comparison when the sojourner later inspects the statues in Lincoln Park. . The stranger seeking ; leasure ne. d only consult the amusement । olumn ■ Ito And every knd ami class of ; theater, a variety of museums and “magic maze" shows, cycloramas, ■ panoramas and historical curiosities, . such as Libby prison. If a day on the water is scheduled, thete are steamers leaving many river do ks so- points I across the lake, such n- an ex umon ■ to Michigan City in e ght hours at only I 60 cents for the round trip, while land j journeys n ay be made swiftly and with protit to the won ler us Industrial town 1 of Pullman or to the military ; ost at ' Fort Sheridan. So ne of the best ob- ; tainable musical and dramatic ta'ent will be found on the boards of iho various theaters during the World’s ' 1 air. The It.- M<l nt T tote. Ona great central point of Interest is the Board of Trade: as famous as the Rialto or the Bouts*' of the old world. The headquarters of th s aggregation of grain and produce spe> ulators is found in the Chamber of Commerce, one of the truly palatial edifices of the world. Occupying half a square, its tower and entrance portal stand exactly in front of LaSalle street, where that thoroughfare ends at Jack-on - i j’ i ; THE CHIB IN LIKE Ml HIOAN street, with an environment forcibly suggestive of Wall street. New York. The building is in two I sections, the one facing north being u-ed for trading, the rear ono for 1 offices. Emblematic figures mark the handsome doorways and projections, and the tower that caps the massive structure tapers in a pinnacle over 300 I feet above the pavement The main hail has two capacious galleries, and to these visitors are admitted at all , times. The view from iho same, w’hen , trading is going on below on the main floor, is something never to be forgotten by the inexperienced spectator, little suggesting to him that 1 the uproar and bustle, the
fl F the visitor starts w out “to see the town and all its sights.” he w.ll find in the immediate center of Chicago sufficient to occupy his ( time and Interest for several days. The skyscraping office structures, the retail stores of State street, the wholesale district, the produce quarter, tho lumber market — all these may be taken in at a cursory glance; but the great grain el-
' hoarse outcries and frantic gestures • i are an accompaniment of transactions during which millions of dollars change g hands in a single day. The building cost nearly $ -.m 0,000, and it requires often a? high as SIO,OOO to secure the privilege of trading in the _ wheat or corn pit. The clearings of a B year have aggregated over $104,000,000. B Trading is permitted in not less than 1.000 bushels of gra n or £SO barrels of pork—all on paper—and fortunes are made and lost every day In the year, often nearly every hour in the day. <’ ty W l twoik . i A visit to tho city waterworks is well i worth a mile ride or walk over into the । North Division. The system of which it is the foundation has grown to a remarkable magnitude. The main works are located at Chicago avenue and Pine street, and comprise a series of structures embracing a tower, free to visitors, affording a fine view of the city, and a < astellated gothic stone building, from which a tunnel three miles long extends beneath the lake, ending In the grea supply-well known as “the crib," which is islted doily by excursion boats. The new engine at the works has a capacity of 2,750 gallons at one stroke of the cylinders. The West Division of the city has also a water wcVks at Ashland and Blue Island avenues, with a tunnel six miles long running to th# supply crib. Its er.gineshave a car”
ty of 70,i uo/ io* > galls, no, i through 13,411 fire hydrant*. The coat i of the entire system was *l7/00,0 *O. i No person visiting Chicago for the i fir-t time sho Id neglect nt least a casual inspection of the Are and police i 1 y —-f ? Lad A k .- .e i i k ■<.«-■ _ . i HIVMARKETMONVMCNT departments. Th« former has now some thirte*n battalion-*, embracing 0 ’0 men. 72 steam Are engines, 22 chem--1 al engines, three lire tugs ami general apparatus or reaching lot’y buildings ami rescuing people, stu b as life-saving guns and nets, lad iera, and the like. Callers are ger.orally welcome at any of the fire-engine stations scattered al out the city, at the central alarm office at the citv hall, and at the fire insurance patrol louses, where everything is done by electricity, from the sounding of the alarm to the starting of the horses. 1 he ; ol.ee stations, are also open for inspe. t.on, aud tiX patrol-wagon system will gom-rally 'L courteously explained b u.e officer charge when not on u di' •* luty. Fol!*A~ courts are connected with i any of ta" stations, ami an lu i • m in one bf these will give the stranm i a very fair i<b a of "the seamy side" of life in a great city. Ob ervatlon Parties. “Observatu n ] ai t are the latest thing in society. Au observation party affords a great deal of amusement. and in addition displays the fact that few persons aie either good observers or have good memories. The members of the observation pai tv are aske 1 by the host to observe the furnishings of the dinner-table, for instance. Then they are given Ave minutes to write down a list of the articles that are on the table. Th« person whose memory is test, and l who can write down within the j rei scribed time—live minutes, say—the largest number of articles on the • table is awarded some sort of a prize. I At one observation party, the other > evening, one young lady was able to , remember and write the names of ■ but seven articles that were on a dinI nor-table. Tlie “observation party" i as a form of social entertainment is 1 novel, and may be useful in assisting ; i persons to form the valuable habit of । ; correct observation.
1 ■ Do You Wish the Finest Bread and Cake? | i s conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is ? * c purest and strongest of all the baking powders. I U *he purest baking powder makes the finest, sweetI est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow- | der makes the lightest food. I I hat baking powder which is both purest and ^strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome Ifood. I Why should not every housekeeper avail herself pf-the baking powder which will give her the best with the least trouble ? X. Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift pnze, or at a lower price than the Royal, in van ably contain alum, lime or sulacid, and render the food unwholesome. .^^^Certain protection from alum baking powders can Fbe had by declining to accept any substitute for the JKoyal, which is absolutely pure. I
BIiITHPLACE OF DECATUR. Rulaa of the Hmm- l n Which the Great Navul Hero H m it > r n. Near Berlin, M<l , N still standing the house vh *re Stephen Decatur, the naval hero, was botn. Berlin la "!\ or seven mi es from the Atlantic coa ’ of W orcester Countv mid the seaside resort known as ocean ( i:y. Neither the town of Berlin nor the resort was in existence when De<atur first t-aw the H.ht. and the house wh<c he was born was removed from the original site about thirty years ago, and it now stands some three hundred yards to the southwest of the former location. It Is the tradition that De. atur’s mother was In Maryland only a short while, but whether a few months or a ’ew years ia not known. Tie Decatur house |s an old-fash!< n« d Iran® structure, one story hi^h, 21 feet longby 17 feet wide. The frame Is for the Qoet part very fre.> from de. av. it is of white oak. hexed o :t with the ax. and afterward dressed by tho ni e The^ is no evidence of lath and plaster irbido. Tho so ngle< on the outsi Io are o| cypress. The lower floor was cvideEtw d,vide I Into two rooms, one 10 feet by 17 f< ot, the Other 15 feet by 17 feet. The hou-c has been use 1 ns a i stable for a long time, ami none of the floors remain and the partitions have i been torn away. The wml ws were very email. The roof .s a curiosity an ! I s ent I r >of of the an lh<> rater» are and well |»pp»4 'aPrs»«^ni at firs’ ahe 1 the water readily. Vu r H-d s?,’*#’’’!*! t of tiftie th® via; onrd roof mv», .. become leaky, for lo:.g heart cypress ( shingles weto nniled ujon tho lap-' boards This pnd.aldv . ■ ;rre i n hundred years ago, a« th” shingle* have he< n so much worn by Hm that they readily crumble between th” fingers. Th” nails in the w d"'>rk a e of wrought Iron. The i nrl.lsn < st.bic.. In Faria there are more than r»5,0e0 ; cal« and carriages for hire, and a person can ride all ov« r tho City of l ight for a song. Each driver is required to furnish a card t > strnnge s l y which they can sec the reg l.ition rates and In the event of a d sagreement he m ist drive to tho nearest । > ic.i : an and aliow a compla nt to bo <n!ered ngau-t himself. Thore is one ।<■ übarity about the Parisian cabman he seldom attempts to < heat his fare. W ben tr üble arises it Is generally duo to n mlsunderaianding. The Faris ar s are fond of strangers, not that they can flee-o them, but that they n ay show them the beauties of their wonderful city. New York Tribun Bilious Attack- •ties cause wwere Coils. BJ e Bean* Sm.io »i . gi»e relief i. a few hours Tur. most intricate piece of ch> kwork in the wo’ld is the great astronomical elock at Strasburg.
Kood'sXC ■ z i r i hsd M * wW ^■R’-.. ' 1 < V'' ' V MHeX' ' . kmmwß ■fcwt “I eTdially reccnimend Hood » Sarsaparilla to ail who mar be sntl - ing wit i indixesto -i. impute blood. humors, lose oX appetite. or run down, or out Os ■ rdet «en< rally. It will surely help you if ♦K i. e.. ..... , . .. A . „ . . .. T I .... •. .« i . .1 • t «i »• •,
there iw any help ! >r you. I have found it a very g tibm kiln- v complaint and catarrh. even whei I considered myself incurable.” Hemiy i ster. S’^rb^ough, N.Y. ND. Be sure to get IL cd’s. ll<»o<Vs fills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 25c. s I I Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asth- KD ma, should use PisosCure for Consumption. It has cured MB thousands. It has not injurcd one. It Is not bad to take. SB It is the best cough syrup. MM Sold everywhere. 25c. H| ^^SS!EQiQ^^a
The World’s Graveyards. Considerable disputes have been 1 heard relative to the space required to contain the people of the earth from ! » Adam to the end of 6,0(>0 years. i Ihe space re p. irod is comparatively insign flcant when the almost im ompre- I • hensible number oi people are taken I into consideration. The basis of caku- ■ lation is j resumably over-estimated. ' Ihe present ,o: ulation of the earth is reputed to be 1,100,0 people. v e have 110 years yet to complete l G.otm years, but if we take 700.00\000 I I as the average number dying every . generation, we find that in the 6,000 ' years, allowing :::t$ years to a genera- I tion, D<» generations wdl haxe । assed ! ' r lOO.m o.th.n multiplied by 1N0—126 - O'O.um.oOo people will haveexisted at । the completion of t.OOo years. M'.owing one square yard to each, they w uld occupy a space of 37,418 ; s p.a-e miles. Allowing three feet bv ' six f. et for interment, a piece of land the«i-eof Foxas would afford burial for three times the number, or on tho -am” 1 asie, would contain all the people of the earth for is.o bi vears. Allow .ng two feet to staml on, for each I per-on, at th” and of e,ol 0 years they ‘ Would make a belt around the earth 2 >,* 't' 1 miles . 477 deep, or from tho earth to th” moon 200,00 > miles), 59 । deep, while it would take eight times th.’ number to extend from here to tho I sun in a single line. Orn’iiP,. < nnnot Ho Cured Bv ! •*! »p;m<.'*ttot-.,. t, they cannot r-ach ths . . »««• ■1 p, rtSon of :h» r*t Thrrs ts only one ' •■'••b.Ms. and that Is by oonsUtu--T. ! * **ura4U»*. Iwafi re* j* cau**d by an in* i fe. °f the w.ueons lining ot tho Deafne** is til . i.' "‘hen this tutw I, fn. ' t! :> ran 1* taken oat aiui tm> fme I or tm|wr I’- • n. C co., lltlon h«arW sriU Wontluyl f.>:r..-r :: ne out of ton are caused by ,-it- I tarrhi which is nothing tint an itifiaiucd ooudl- I tt n of th* mucous surface* W, «!1 go* One Humlrr.l !>■ lln<« for any : rw»e . f I‘rat- •>»* » ~xl I y catarrli that caui not be curxl by taking Ball * Catarrh Cure. } bcnJ for cirrulare free f J. ( til NEY A CO . Toledo, O. »grrold t v lTMg..ti. 7^.-. Melilite Tin on < loth. A new process, Inv. nted in Germany, i allows a brilliant and flexible stratum! of tin to be deposited upon cotton fiber. A j aste Is first mad” of the powdered nn of commerce ami whit” of egg and spread on the material by means of u brush. Ihis is then coagulated after drying by a current of superh'-ated steam and th” tl-su” is then introduced into a bath of perchloride of tin. 1h” metal precipitates on th.” zin ■ in a finely divided state, and after rinsing anddrying thecloth, it is passed through cylinders or calen lers, whi h give brilliance to the coat of tin. Beautiful i metallic designs may be obtained in this way. It is stat” l that the process nay I e substituted entirely for tho ordinary method of ot n imentmg doth with tinfolL XI ip of the I nlted States. A large, hands ere Map of the I nl'od States, mounted and suitable kr office or Inunc use. 1< issued by the Burlingt m R itw Copies will b” mailed to any ad-dre-s on receipt . f fifteen cents n postage by P. s. Er sits. Gi n 1 Pa-s Agent, C, B. & Q. IL K.. Cid age. IIL Tn South Russia a drink resembling brandy is obtained by distilling the juice of the watermelon. Is making Dobbins’ Electric Soap (ten ; C”i; -a bar f r t»e: ty-six years, dis .v---1 erles have been made out of which has grown Dobbins' new perfect Soap. 5c a bar. worth double any 5c soap muda Try It. The largest church in the world is St. Peter s in Home: the smallest, a i chur. h ten feet square, in the Isle of Man Beecham’s Pills will cure con-tipati n. keep the blood cool and the liver iu good working order, price 25 cents a box. The first book stereotyped in this 1 country was a catechism, in New York, I 1813. Economical, thorough, jure, safe and ; everything eke that Is goisl are the words for Bile Beans Sijmif. Daxu l WEissTEi: was the son of a : , farmer in humble circumstances.
THE COST iS THE SAME MteiS#wgil fi-, ‘ * t- AFTER 20 Y£ARS.rt!«^Qio AFTER 2 YEARS, The Hartman Steel Picket Fence Costs no more than an ordinary clumsy wood picket aflkir that obstructs the view and will rot or full apart in a short time. The Hartman Fence is artistic in design, protects the grounds without concealing them and is practically EVERLASTING. Illustrated Catalogue with Prices and Testimonials Mailed Free. Branch^: HARTMAN MFG. COMPANY, BEAVER FALLS, PA. 102 Chambers St., New Yorkj 508 State St., Chicagcj 51 and 53 S. Forsyth St., AtlantaxGa.
‘August Flower” “One of my neighbors, Mr. John Gilbert, has been sick for a long time. All thought him pastrecovery. T e was horribly emaciated from the inaction of his liver and kidneys. It is difficult to describe his appearance and the miserable state of his health at that time. Help from any source seemed impossible. He tried your August Flower and the effect upon him was magical. Irrestored him ‘ > perfect health to the great astonishment of his family and J° lin Quibell, Holt, Ont. a 11 The Davis Hand Cream Separator and Feed Cooker Combined. Completest of outfits for a dairy farmer. This machine has an attachment which, when the bowl has been taken out, is dropped into the Separator so that a belt can run to the churn. Write for further particulars. Davis A: Rankin Bldg, and Mfe. Co., 240 to 2.>4 W. I««ke St., Chicago, IU., Manufacture all kinds of Creamery Machinery and I Dairy Supplies. (Agents wanted in every county.) There is Hope i For every one who has blood trouble, no mattei I in what shape or how long standing, provided ’ none of the vital organs have l>ee:i so far fm- ■ paired as to render a euro impossible. S. S. S. goes to the root of the disease, and removes the cause, by expelling the poison fretn the body, and at the same time is a tonic to the whole system. ' However bad your case may be, there is hope FOR YOU. Cured ineof a most malignant type du"” 1 !!” blood trouble, for which [ ] ia ,j use d various other remedies without effect. My weight increased, and my health Improved in every way. 1 consider S. S. S : the best tonic I ever u*ed. ”S. A. ’ 'bight, Midway, Ga." Treatise on blood, skin and contagious blood poison mailed free. SWEET SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga TKASt MASK M p-J REVER SIB L E — COLLARS £CJJFFS. — Thw best anti molt -ecennmical Collars and Cud worn. Try them. Yon « ill like them. Look well. Fit well. Wear well. Sold for *2,5 cent* for * N’x of Ten collars nr Five pairs of cufta A Rumple collar and pnlrof cuffs sent by mill for Si< < ente. A«l<lre»<; clvtng size and Style wanted A.>k the dealer 9 for them " Revemible ( ollur ( 0., k*7 Kilby St. Costco. * I EWIS’9B °o LYE I Powdcred and Perfumed. Be (r*TEKTEt>.» ’ he sfron.jrst and pi< rest I.ve made. r^K t uHke other Lye, it being a fine A /-powder and packed in a can with wreninr*’ le lid, the contents are n!«ays ready for use. Will make I ■ V ' I ” 1-erfume.l Hard Soap in 20 “‘f-FSNX ' *t I- the C* “Gen. AgO^ Philk, i > k! ipe *’ Won Hole' a*"< omer Sixtv4hird Street-»nd Princeton Avenue • Englew • J . Chicago. First-eUsa beds, good table. Kate- S 2 i-r day. Electric cars to World's Fair Gr-.’inds; n> minutes' ride. F. W. Jones. Proprietor. s nnn non acres of land g.U U V UU U for eale by the Saint Pa vl ’ A Duluth Railboad Company in Minnesota. Scud for Maps and Circa, lars. They will be sent to you iddres. HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn. Fly’s Cream Balm WILL CURE CmßßHlfa^ i 1 3 I Price 50 Cents. I y' I ——— l Apply Balm int • each nostril. js’x'C”'• t 1 LY BK‘JS„ 56 Warren St- N. Y. Kc l WESTERN FARM LANDS! A pamphl”t descriyitive of the farm lands of Net :a~Ka 5 rttive-t Kamas and Eastern Colorado, - with sectional . . be mailcdfreetoanyad■~s. :i apph a’l :i t I'. EI STIs, General Paastiiger Agt. C., B. re y. It. 11, Chicago, 111. RIS RTI S r i HHPf wd elastic trusa i UIBU I IIUL is tkv o-N’ truss in existKII^ I l|K| enee that is worn with abC1 W I I B a fa, solute comtort night and I i K S" s*l day, and it r tains the rupI* I 11J LII tur ' I! ‘der the hardest exI ali 51 ■ II ercise or severest strain. UlaLw U ■ ar ‘d will effe. t a permanent tr .dfGri :■ jue Ei re. and speedy cure. Improved Elastic Truss Co.. -S2 Bsoadwat.N.Y - -.(’vwn <>. w I . SNYDFB. M. !>.. Mail Dept. ?, •Tliontoi’. < litenjro. 111. ^Successfully Prosecutes Cl iUTis. liatePrincipalExaminer U.S. Pension ^ureau> 3yrainlast war, 15 adjudicating claims, &cty eliico* MENTION THIS FAFER wvxh wrjtsk® to adtiituiia KmtmwisTiL^ - j (\ Vl . No. 21-93^ WHEN WHITING TO -.^D’ERTISER V ‘ please say you saw the advertisemen' in this paper. ~t e l
