St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 50, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 July 1893 — Page 4
Map of the United States. A large, handsome Map of the United States, mounted and suitable for office or home use. h Issued by the Burlington Route. Copier will be mailed to any address on receipt of fifteen cents in postage by P. 8. Eustis, Gen'l Pass. Agent, C., B. & B R. It, Chicago, UL The Manure. No farmer can arrive at a correct knowledge of his profit from the stock unless ho knows something of the value of the manure obtained, and his estimate of the worth of the manure must be largely governed by the quality of the food provided the animals, as well as by the condition of the manure and the manner in which it has been managed. Put up In neat watch-shaped bottles, sugar-coated, Small Bile Beaps. Thebe are 156,000 churches, 100,000 clergymen, and 22,000,000 communicants. N. K. Brown’s Essence Jamaica Ginger will cure indigestion. None better. Try it. 25 cents. IT'S RATHER TOO MUCH FOR YOU
— tho ordinary, bulky pill. Too big to take, and too much disturbance for your poor sye- , tern. The smallest, : easiest to take, and best are Dr. Pierce's Pleas- । ant Pellets. They leave out all the disturbance, but yet dp you more good. Their help lasts. Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Sick or Bilious Head- I ’aches, and all derange- ; ments of the liver, i
J
stomach, end bowels are prevented, relieved, ■ and permanently cured. They’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. ...a, eurrvrmg from "^K^A^^"Catarrh, the proprietors of Doctor Sage’s Catarrh ■k Remedy ask you to try BSr M their medicine. Then, if you can’t be cured, they’ll ft -A pay you SSOO in cash. M A sensible Cook Book £W M H W for practical people. W® fc 3 tJ S3 s Tells how to make BWH D jo the best Brown Bread, ■ IHEQUS ri the best Meat Stows, the best-liked Fish or* Meat Hash, Plain Cake, Appl« Pi®, j Baked Beads, Doughnuts, Delicious Puddings from odds and ends. Tells how to economize and still set a good table, and also tells how to always have a good appetite and keep strong and well by the use of the grand remedy of the Indians, Kickapoo Indian Bagwa. This valuable and Practical Cook Book should be in every kitchen; and ws 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 in ore promptly adapting the world’s best products to ' the’necds 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 ami 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. MBEM KZB® lam seventy-seven years old Ag if and have had my age renewec ft- S at least twenty years by the us< « n of Swift’s Specific. My fool S 3 [J and leg to my knee was a running sore for two years, and physicians saic itcouid not be cured. After taking fifteen smal 1 bottles S. S. S. there is not a sore on my limbs, and 1 S YEARS 010 of your wonderful remedy. Ira F. Stilus, Palmer, Kansas City. , ■P L JU .| IS A WONDERFUL REMEDY—especially foi ‘ , 3 old people. It builds up ‘ 1 jaar-p. the general health. Treat { Be on the blood mailed free. SWIFT SPCLFIC COMPANY, j Atlanta, Ga. j PUPTUHE aste® ' HUI 3 UjVLi solute comfort night unnll nr n V 0 H. ^ll , andwifi Send for Cafaloqve Free. and speedy cure. ImproveU Elastic Truss Co.. 5.2 Buoadway, N. Y (by ~r“ M sZ 1 tw..« p b p H.nV * v Thousands cured. Send n<. in st-m \ tXI J J <>. w. r. SNVDEK, M. lOlnil Dep*. 3 v rain last war, 15 adjudicating clauuß, atty stuca. MENTION THIS PAPER whbw tw amibtiima BEST POLISH THE WORLD. DO NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints winch stain the hands, injure tho 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 Pasto Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS.
INDEPENDENCE DAY. I MEMORIES OF THE GLORIOUS PAST RECALLED. I I The Famous Document Which Made a | Nation FreA-How, When and Where It 1 Was Promulgated—Story of the Declaration of Independence. The Day We Celebrate. Tho Fourth of July is a good day to look back into tho days so long gone by, tho days when Washington led tho armies of the true and the brave to tho greatest victory tho world has. over I seen. What a magnificent page in tho ' world’s history I Tho Grec ks, tho Rus- । sians, and tho Saxons gained their inI dependence only to be fettered by other chains and so they fell, eno after another. After over a hundred years of I life tho republic whose bi rth wo oele--1 brate, stands a colossal monument among nations, to government by tho people. In a single century wo have ; made moro progress in science, art, and manufacture than did Greece and Romo in any five hundred years of their I ascendency. Tho light that was flamed ! in the Declaration of Independence a r—- , ■ ^—i X:;—---—-——l / 13 < ANNOUNCING THE NEWS hundred years ago has over continued to give forth a largo blaze, until now tho American republic is lighting the peoples of tho earth on to a higher civilization. Despotic governments have fallen before its majestic glare. Tho nations of tho whole earth tremble before its researches. When the Congress of 1776 convened in Independence Hall war with the mother country was in active progress; !ho colonies hud licon proscribed as rebels; further submission and hesitation were useless. The issue was squarely met in Congress Juno 7, when Richard Henry Leo, of Virginia, introduced those resolutions; Resolved, That these United States Colonies are, and ought be, free and indent ndent States; that they aie absolved from i ll allegiance to the British Crown, and that nil politioal connection between them and the State of Great Britain is. and ought to be. totally dtaaolved.
* ; jl I - INDEPENDENCE HALL, PHILADELPHIA.
Resolved. That It is expedient forthwith to take the most effectual measures for forming foreign alliances. Resolved. That a plan of confederation be prepared and transmitted to the respective colonies for their consideration and approbation. There was no uncertainty about these resolutions; they went straight to tho mark. The most conservative delegates hesitated at voting for so revolutionary a measure; to favor its passage meant to array one’s self in open and individual rebellion against the Crown. In fact, so well was this fact known, that the names of the mover and seconder of the resolution were omitted from the journal of Congress. The leaders who had only admittdtl the necessity for a separation, after careful deliberation, eloquently defended Mr. Lee's declaration. It was finally re- . solved to defer action until July, but, that no time might be lost in case or their adoption, it was decided to appoint a committee to frame a declaration of independence on tho basis of the first resolution. On. tho 11th this , committee was appointed, its members I being Thomas Jefferson, of Virginia; Jolin Adams, of Massachusetts; Benjamin Franklin, of Pennsylvania; Roger Sherman, of Connecticut; and Robert R. Livingston, of New York. Just how, when and where the committee prepared its draft of the Declaration will probably never bo known. The honor of being tho birthplace of the charter of American liberty has boon assigned at least to three or four houses in Philadelphia, and authorities have never fully determined which was the proper claimant. For many years it was supposed that Jefferson prepared the draft in the fourstory brick house at the southwest corner of Market and Seventh streets, where he boarded with a Mrs. GlymoOn the other hand, good authorities I relate that Jefferson told Danh 1 Webster and George Ticki or, while they were visiting him at 1 b ntieello, in 1824, that ho drew up the i Declaration in a house on tho north ! side of Chestnut street, between Tnii d and Fourth streets. This would exclude Mrs. Clymer’s house, as well as the Indian Queen Inn, on tho corner of South Fourth and Market streets, ' often pointed out as tho place. Heiskell’s Tavern was for a time supposed to have been the right house, but that, । too, has been since excluded. And so
th© question of thephico l s an open one, ! though Watson, in bis Annals, as'serts that tho general ci>lnion was that the Declaration was drawn by Jefferson in tho front room of the second story at tho south end of the Indian Queen Inn. As regards the author of the document, there is no dispute. It is universally admitted that this honor belongs to Jefferson. The desk on which he Is supposed to have done the work is preserved in the State Department building at Washington, as is the original draft with its occasional corrections and interlineations. Ludicrous illustrations representing the committee at work upon the Declaration, with a then unknown American flag at the window of tho room and a crowd about them, are published in some histories. As a matter of fact, writes Edward B. Phelps, tho committee, doubtless, met alone and quietly and deliberately atattended to tho grave task imposed upon them. Though the deliberations of Congress upon the subject hal been secret, the public was well aware of what was going on, and as the day for a vote upon the resolutions Os Mr. Leo approached tho greatest interest in the result was manifested. It was, of course, known jthat a bare majority of the States had instructed their delegates to vote for independence, and tho more passage of the resolutions was assured. But nothing short of .absolute uiunHmity on bo imprH^iiS a measure would suffice. The steM had boon thoroughly cajiy'XX interim between t thc^jOMKcnt o f the committee ; nieli t tion and tho *>”} j^t, ropollßt on June 28. Mr. Hlimsun, or vV.r ^ia, ♦m. $> v«t-grandfather of ox-Prcit^tot Hariuson, occupied the chair. Ad^gand Frank 1 in suggested certain chang^, and the draft was thoroughly diseusJk and somewhat amended by the Congresi. ’On July 1 the vote on Mr. Lee’-, resolutjpn- which was practically the Declaration of Independence — was tb have been taken. The question went over until tho following day. however, and all tho colonies but New York voted for the adoption of the resolutions. At first Pemvylvania and Delaware were divided on the issue, but afterward cast their unanimous votes in its favor. On the 4th of July tho Declaration, having Iwen canvassed section by section and clause by clause, was ratified by Congress as amended. Some say that President Hancock alone signed tho oniginal draft: others, that all the fifty-eight delegates except John Dickinson, of Pennsylvania, aj>pended their names. Jefferson is credited with the statement that, after it had been adopted by the unanimous ’ veto of all the State-. John Hancock, as President, signed it, rthd the following ; mornlng-it was shown to each member | of Congreis as he entered the hall, and then and thus received his signature without formal order of Congress. Bo that as it may, an engrossed copy was prepared, and by August 2 every mom- j oer of Congress, except Dickinson, who had b 'o i retired, hail signed it. Thor i is no Ifttlo conflict among historians regarding tho method of tho
announcement to the people of tho adoption of tho Declaration. Ono ' time-honored old story tolls us that as so m as the draft was adopted the old bell in tho tower of Independence Hall was joyfully rung for some little time and that the bell thus fulfilled tho com- 1 mand of its motto upon its cracked surface: “Proclaim liberty throughout all tho larid, unto all the inhabitants thereof." This story is pronounced a sheer fable, pleasant though it is. I Again, it is said that Colonel John Nixon read the contents of the Declara- ’ tion to the waiting throng in Chestnut street from the window of Indepen--dence Hall. The authenticity of this? assertion is questioned, too. That its contents were widely circulated insiiwo. ^way or other, and that very soon *its adoption, there is no doubt, 1W; widespread rejoicing promptly folio we CT' ' The Declaration was formally pro-^ claimed to the Continental army July’ 9, so that, certainly, no than this its tenor was publiclyg known. The best authorities declare® that it was not printed, though, until) January, 1777. < >n<re s was then ing session at Baltimore, and one MaryKatherine Goddard, who managed her i brother’s business for him. had the enterprise to publish the document. Since then it has probably been republished in more languages and has had a wider reading than any State document in the world’s history. Os tho sixty or more names which were writton on it, not more than ten can now be read, and they have faded to a pale, sickly color. | During recent years the priceless document has been jealously garded in the library of tho Department of State, and precautions taken to prevent any further injury. It is now between two large plates of French glass, inclosed I in l ardwood case, all of which is her- I irally sealed so as to keep sut air ■ a 1 dust. Several persons arriving at Boi- . ton from England attempted in I(H3 to establish Presbyterian government there under the authority of the Assembly of Divines at Westminster. They failed, meeting with strenuous opposition from ministers and magistrates. Y ealth is not hrs that has it, but Ids that enjoys it.—Franklin.
kt 4 Tr H E U. S. Government Chemists * have reported, after an examination of scores of different brands, ^3 that the Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure, of highest leavening capacity, and superior to all others.
Cruel Neatness. A few weeks ago, says a correspondent, I chanced to meet an old acquaint- 1 anco whom I had not seen for many ] vears. Tho sight of his deformity—ho i Is crippled for life, and hobbles about with difficulty—recalled to my mind i his sad story, and created a resolve to i tell it. It is strictly true, and may i serve as a warning to thoughtless parents. This man was born fair and wellformed, strong, active and healthy. All went well with him until ho was somo nine or ten months old, when he began to try to creep. Now ho should have been put upon tho floor to struggle and roll, squirm and kick, and grow strong in. nature’s own way; but this allowed. Unfortunately, his mother and grandmother were both far more neat than wise. They soon found that creeping rumpled and soiled the baby’s white dresses. A high-chair was obtained, and into it the squirming, active little body was put, and there securely tied to prevent danger of falling. In vain the legs kicked and the arms waved in the air; there was no more creeping or other natural exercise for them. Day after day this treatment waa continued, and in time the child became somewhat reconciled to it, sitting quietly in the chair, neat and prim, a constant delight to the eyes of the cleanly mother; but by and by it was thought that tho baby ought to walk, and an attempt was made to have him do so. Alas! the puny little legs were found to bo almost helpless; they tottered
and bent, and were quite unable to support the weight of the body. Worst of all, they began to ^row crooked and misshapen from hanging so long and so steadily over the edge of the chair-seat. Alarmed at length, the mother called * a surgeon to treat the little sufferer, j But tiie cure oanie too late; the mischief was too thorouglDydono. Various I mechanical devices were applied, and I at last a painful surgical ojieration was I performed, but all in vain. The distortion grew steadily worse, j and though with exercise the child - became stronger and could finally ■ stand and even walk it was in a crippled manner, pitiful to see. The crippled baby is now a man of middle ago, strong and well above the waist, but with legs and feet ho|sdessly j deformed, hobbling through life with ! no hope of relief, an object of pity to i all who see him. and a constant, living 1 reproach to his short-sighted, overneat mother. f A Llxaw. • iur AlaalLh T« r.ffonlcJ thn«" fMt »!nkfn» into n conlltton of hopcleM debility. The mean* are at h.vn<L I.n the form of a genial medtef. al cordial, Hostetier’a Stomach Bitters embodies the cotnblnod qualltlee of a blood fertlllxcr and depnvi.t, a tonic and an alterative. While It ; promote* digestion and asHlmßatlon. and stimulates appetite, has the further effect of purity Ing :he llfi current and strengthening * the nervous sv-tem. As the blood grows richer an I purer by Its use, they who resort to till* sterling medicinal agent acquire not only vigor, but bodily substance. A healthful . change !u the accretions Is effected by ft. and that sure and rapid physical decay, which a j chronic obstruction of the functions of the i •vstemj.roduce. Is arrested. The prime causes i of disease being removed, health is speedily renovated and vigor restored. The I’ewee. j The p’wee belongs to the fly-catch- ! ers, ami is the earliest of those birds to ■ arrive North in the spring. The different species of this family have tbe i characteristic of perehiug on a promi- ! nent jxiiut of a bush or tree, and suddenly darting forth and snapping up an j insect on the wing, when they return to their post of observation to await for the next morsel that comes insight. They are very dexterous in the pursuit and capture. The fly-catchers can ! hardly be called singers, but they have i a variety of single notes moro or less । musical? A Spider’s Web. Some one of a curiously mathematical j turn has calculated that a pound of spider’s webbing unwound would be ■ long enough to reach around the world, j with enough left over to reach from । New York to San Francisco. i Fob weak and Inflamed eyes use Br. \jsaac Thompson's Eye-water. It is a care- . 'iully prepare! physician’s prescription. T In 1750 th« first theater was formally lOpered in New York, with '‘Richard ’ III.” Smnpl ■ Package Mailed Free. Addres, small Bile Beans, New York. Cardinal Antonelli’s father was an Italian bandit. Sws’fcgs in ths Nack Or goitre, made my neck fully twice its natural size. For 3 years all my strength s em d to go into the swell- B lug. I took Ho- <l’S SaisaParilla, which gave me v n , strength, relieved distress / i» my Ktomacb, and. b. sto'. x- iZ tZIC / all cntiieiy remove.l thefAiiiS&vii- A uoilre. I uni now in th<■ j 1" -t <>t in all h and w. igh lit: hound.-.' Un* 11. < swim i ford. Union Countv. Mitibnburg, Pennsylvania. Mrs. Swineford. HgodTs S Geres |jjj| kor and people who have weak lungs or AsthMM n >-‘-should use Piso’sCure for nB W Consumption. It has cured S 3 El thousand*, ft has not injur- HB ed one. It is not bad to take. MM MH It is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 25c. HH J
Au Important Event. Americans are not tho only people who show an undue reverence for a lordly title. The author of “Around find About South America” tells of his visit to Stanley, Falkland Islands, the | southernmost town on the globe, where i an incident convinced him that a name sometimes equals an event. The decidely English expression of the town is greatly heightened upon going on shore, where I land upon a small jetty, at whose extremity stands a pyramidal brick and stone monu- | meat, bearing on a tablet the rather inexpressive communication: “Alfre^ 24th February, 1874f*K Knowing that many nations had at different times claimed jxissession of these islands, and that several conflicts had resulted, it was sui? pose that this proud pile distinguished the spot whore some British Horatius Cocles had, single-handed, repelled the landing cutters of several French or Spanish men-of-war, and that hie appreciative countrymen had thus made the fact known to such of the great world as might by accident stray thither. The very first citizen I met I begged to tell mo more of this brave, this doughty Alfred, apologizing, of course, for a memory defective in matters of historical detail. And my blood almost congealed within my veins and my heart stood still with awe as I learned that here, hero on this very, spot, a “real live” English prince had once set foot, on coming ashore to pay a visit €o tho governor. My informer stood solemn and serious,*but there is no use in denying that
I w&s profligate enough to laugh. Magnetic Mineral Mud Maths lor Health and Strength. The only place In the world thatyov can enjoy tb<> luxury and benefits of a JfAGni t.c Minkrai. Mun Batu, is at the celebrated Indiana Minkhai. Spiungs, Warren County. Ind. It Is nature's o«n remedy for the treatment of the worst forms of rheumatism, kidney and liver trouble, skin and f lood diseases. A $150,000 hotel and bath-house, steam-heated,electric-lighted, all in<»dern improvements, furnish the very best of accommodations. In point of cost, you will be better and more satisfactorily ' taken care of. with the absolute certainty of deriving greater physical benefit, than you can got elsewhere in this country. Located on the Chicago & Eastern Illinois Babroad. 120 miles south from Chicago, feud to H. U Kramer. P. O. Box A. General Manager, Indiana Mineral Springs, Warren County, Ind . tor beautifully Illustrated printed matter, which will tell you ail ul out It Au Artist’s Fun. Several y«>ars ago a London Hebrew, I Abraham Solomon, painted a stirring | pTeturo, “Waiting for the Verdict.” Its I i \hibition at the- Royal \cndomyexcited great enthusiasm among lovers of art. and was the occasion of a notable pun. Tho artist, rff>t being a Royal Academician, entitled to annex R. A. to his name, had his painting “skied.” c\ll the pictures contributed by that august fraternity were ns usual hung on the line. Thomas Igmdseer was in ecstasies as he behold tho thrilling “scene depicted on the canvas, and exclaimed: “There is Solomon in all his glory, but not R. A.’d like one of these. Cutarrli Cannot He Cured With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and In order to euro it : you must toko int*rnnl remedies. Hall’s «aI tarrli Cure is taken internally, and acts directly ’ on the blood ami mucous surfaces. Hall s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the beet blood purifiers, acting directly on tho mucous surfaces. The perfect combillation of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. 8 -nd for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio. ; Sold by dim gists, price 75c. low Temperatures. A French scientist has been experimenting. and has succeeded in produci ing the extraordinarily low temperature of 491 degrees Fahrenheit below the freezing point, a degree of cold almost incalculable to our senses. These researches are not simply matters of scientific curiosity, but arc of substantial use. since they open new fields of chemical research. American Teachers. There are 363,060 teachers in the United States. The best 5c soap In the world is Dobbins’ Perfect Soap Have your gr< cor get it and | try for yourself. It is sure to revolutionize I the.trade and use of soup. Dobbins' Soap j Mfg. Co.. Philadelphia. Pa. TI?E largest desert is the Sahara; I 3,000 miles from east to west, 1,090 { from north to south; area, 3,000,000 j square miles. Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Headache, LasI sltude. Spring Fever, all debilitation and ; winter irregularities fly before Smith’s I Bile Beans Small. The largest tomb in the world is the Pyramid of Cheops, 461 feet high and covering thirteen acres of ground. The pleasant coating of Beecham’s Pills completely disguises the tas;c without impairing their efficiency. 25 cents a box. There are 2,754 languages and dialects now spoken.
r DOUBLE THE STRENGTH of any other fence; will not stretch, Mi S* mOM/* sag, °r get out of shape. A Perfect Farm Fence, yet HandSi some enough to Ornament a Lawn. Write for prices. fHEAPER HARTMAN HFG CO., Im r L : Testimonials, also Cata- j BEAVER FALLS, PA. * DODD VvIDF ilogua of Hartman bteel 5 i 102 Chambers Rt-, New York. rjHKU hint sp lc k et Lawn fence, Tr<e = BRANCHES: - 508 State St., Chi< w. 1 f I C* F T w 3 and Hower Guards, Flex- 5 ( 51-53 S. Forsyth St M Atlanta, G» I - HKRATLESS TO STOCK
“August Flower” Miss C. G. McClavE, School* teacher, 753 Park Place, Elmira, N. Y. “This Spring while away from home teaching my first term in a country school I was perfectly wretched with that human agony called dyspepsia. After dieting for two weeks and getting no better, a friend wrote me, suggesting that I take August Flower. The very next day I purchased a bottle. lam delighted to say that August Flower helped me so that I have quite recovered from my indisposition.” 0 Electrouping t. f — -—The attention of ADXKrtisers. mantt- ‘ FACTUHEKS and FHINTKKS is called to our superior facilities for turning out FIRSTCLASS ELECTROTYPING or STEREOTYPING. We guarantee satisfactory and prompt service in these lines. fIUV desiring a large or small MU H Lil I luLFlu number of Electrotypes ' of an advertisement should get our prices before placing their orders. We make a specialty bi Designing and Engraving AdvertisbMENTS for all classes of trade. MANUFACTURERS 2^22 types of Cuts for Catalogue Illustrations will ’ find it to their interest to communicate with us. PPINTFR^ having long runs of pressI nil® I LhU work, which can be lessened ‘ by duplicating forms, and thereby save the wear of type, will make money by having their pages electrotyped or stereotyped. We can return forms in six hours after receipt at our office, accompanied by plates of the same.
OUR link of NEWSPAPER-HEADING TYPE Is the largest to be found in the West, and wo make a specialty of furnishing Headings for all classes of publications. Specimen books, showing the largest assortment of Newspaper Headings ever exhibited, will be sent to Printers and Publishers upon application. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION 17.19. 91. 93 SOUTH JEFFERSON ST . CHICAGO ILL • TMADE MARK M \\vxexYC REVERSIBLE ■ COLLARS &CU FFS. . — RAPHAEL.MURIUO.TASSO.| The best and most economical Collars and Cuffß I worn. Try them. You will like them. Look well. Fit well. Wear well. Sold for 25 cents fora box of Ten collars or Five naira of culTs. A sample collar ami palrof cuffs sent I>v mall for Six Cewrw. Address, givlnk size and style wanted. “Ask the dealers for them'’ Revereible Dollar Go., zrKHbySt. Huston. « j EWIS'9B % LYE H Powdered and Perfumed. p-Lm am (PATENTED.) The strongest and purest I.ye made. Unlike other Lye, it being a fine /A powder and packed in a can with *®remova' le lid, the contents are fStSS always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 xgsar minutes without boiling. It is Ihe gyS best for cleansing waste-pipes, S 0 disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SILT M’r’G CO. «X>tP7*.’st Mß Gen. Apts.. Pbila . Pa. mceMok llS*Corner Sixty-third Street and Princeton Avenue (Englewood), Chicago. First-class beds, good table. Rates S 2 per day. Electric cars to World’s Fair Grounds; 10 minutes’ ride. F. W. Jones. Proprietor. 1,000,000^1^ Duluth Railroad I Company in Minnesota. Rnd for Maps and Circa* lars. They will be sent to you Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn, TRAVELINGI^^un^ rw -w-a •ywva I Fer Traveling Men who vis * Ura L'' RlI T I many towns. No samples to Av L w 4 L^s I I cairy and no sales to make. as w • । ,£l^ work can be don - in a £ ew m j uu t eß while waiting for trains. No expense attached to it—clear < a<n profit. Many traveling men now making their daily expenses with it. all without taking any time from their regular business. Wr.te to-day for part.culars, giving permanent address. j “ItOWlXs," Lock Box SIS. Chicago.lllEly’s Cream Balm WILL CURE I Pri.e .ao Cents. I ST / *——' ’ Apply Balm into each nostril. ■'AW-.% wNi ELY BROS™ 5S Warren St.. N. Y. s&c| WESTERN W MS’ A pamphlet descriptive of the farm lands of Nebraska. Northwest Kansas and Eastern Colorado, with sectional map, will be mailed free to any address on application to P. s. Ei sris. General Passenger Axt.C.,B.Jx y. It. 11 .Chicago, 111. Sure relief • 1 KIDDER’S PA3TILLES.bymaTs’S B3KSI3I«®^S^K2S!SS3'-liarlestown, Ai«4> C. N. U VVHFN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, V” please say you saw the advertisement 1 in this paper.
