St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 51, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 8 July 1893 — Page 7

N AR it HOT SPRINGS, SOUTH DAKOTA. What Hon. Samuel W. Allerton Thinks of Thein. {Hot Springs (S. D.) Star.] ; The Hon. Samuel . Allerton, the notel capitalist, of Chicago, arrived over the Burlington Route a few days since, and during an interview with a Ftar reporter sald: «You people ¢o not begln to realize what you have here in these waters. I have had the opportunity of traveling some over the United States, and havp visited a great number of health resorts with springs which are claimed to have m2dicinal properties, but in my opinion you have water here that 1s superior to anything in this vhole country, if not in the world, for tLe cure of rheumatic atilictions and diseases of the skin. My attention was first called to these springs by an intimate friend, Mr. Spencer, who owns a large cattle ranch west of here. Ile had a man on his ranch that was so badly afilicted with rheumatism that he was hauled here in a helpless condition. Tle was bathed in the old Indian bath for several weeks, and he went home entirely cured up, and I resolved that if ever I had rheumatism in my fawmlily I would try Hot Springs, 8. D We brought Mrs. Allerton here as socn as she was able to come at ' all, and I have found that all Mr. Spencer sald In reference to the curative properilos of the waters has be:n realized in my wife’s case. She sald she feels as though she had just Leen turned looss from a prison where she had been called upon io endure excruciating torture—every joint and muscle racked with pain so that life was a burden. No, I think Hot Springs’ future is a grand one. Its air 16 pure and wholesome, its scenery lively and lns‘i)irlng; sleep comes without any effort and it is just the place for rest and bullding up a shattered constitution. You do not talk enough about the vafue of your waters for skin troubles. I, myself, received greut‘ benefit from them last year in a short visit ' there. Your climate Iy -fnfinitely PO O eo 80 Inauy thousands are afflicted with rheumatism and other kin= dred allments, if your advantages are made known, there is no question but that you will become the foremost health resort in the United States. We are delighted with our trip here and what yoar waters have done for ys and will make frequent visits to your pleasant litle city. Easy to Find. Not long ago an accident happened“ to little Barbara's doll Gladys, which was thereupon sent to a store where) surgical attention is given to wounded dolls. When the day came for it to be| discharged, cured, Barbara obtained permission to go and get it. Barbara stood on tiptoe before the counter at the store, and asked if her doll was mended. “I guess sO,” said the young womar | behind the counter, fumbling over a| i)ile of dolls on ashelf. “Butl'm afraic | cau't tell which one it is in all this| lot.” 1 *Oh, you can find her easily enough,” | said Barbara, confidently. “Her name's | Gladys!® When Traveling. Whether on pleasure bent, or business, . take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of i Figs, as it acts mwost pleasantly and effectually on the kidneys, liver and| bowels, preventing fevers, headaches ' and ether forms of siekness. FYor sului in 56¢. and $1 bottles by all lvud‘.ngi druggists. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. l e ‘ PEARLS are sometimes found whose | outer I&yfir is discolored. The pearls may be skinned and thus improved. A Little Red Spot x Appeared on my left leg below the knee, snd it gradually spread until I was cov- : %9 ered with blotches and 8 WM patches, ‘which the physi- (@ g § cian calied psoriasis, itch- \ £ %y ing and burning terrbly. e Rev. Father Canteveel urged A me to take Lood's Sarsapa- ; - & srilla. I didr with wonderVR - & ful result, The luge scales ‘* .: kM peeled off, the itching and R \ SR guruinz rubsided, and lam NN N erfectly gured.” Tixo. Mr. Destiche. Bxs'mcm;, Greeu Bay, Wis. i Rttt ——————————————————_ e— e i Hood’'s Pilis are the best after-dinner Pills, as- ‘ si%t digestien. cure headsche. Try a bot. l 6V VIVDVOVVODDVE DI HIGHLY ENDORSED. {| The Profes2or of Physiological Chemistry at Yale College says: I find Aick- | apoo Indian_Sagwa to be an exirat of ’ Rools, Barks and Herbs of Faluable Rem. __,Tz_,_ il oS o BERE M matro eS B edia Actcoy},_t{fltf{l any mineral or cthcré ® harm?ul admixtures. [y sy (] Kickupoo Indian je: & s 'Sagfl is the grand- 'fi d’.‘l #‘a ./ ‘ ®.. Liver, Stomach, ‘;,&; 2 Q Blood and Nerve ’i‘ gor) Ui®ho Remedy Known, f'k;;. ,5-. ’ Cleanses, Purifies, Bl "8 J“ 4 é .nnd Renovates every Baudin/ESe by, 2 part of the human “ “ENEAN ’ » system, ANI Drug- T YN - ’ gists, 81 a bottle— fecrom foal = > s 6 Bottles for $5. o .“.?‘.%%OQ«‘—Q@@G = o E§ Yo ST - 5‘ 9 i ' . lf;' | Aol 5 e i aB : | iB 8 . CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes, NOI ONE HOUR after ro «ding this sdvertiselnent need any ome SUFFER WITH PAIN. Radway’s Ready Relief is a Sure Cure for Every Pain, Sprains, Brulses, Bites of In- | sects, Burns, Pains in the Back, Chest or Limbs, It was the First and is the ONLY PAIN REMEDY Pmt inatantly stops the most excruciating pains,alays inflaimmation, and cures Congertions, whether ggfl:%o Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or | 5. | INTERNALLY. from 8) to 60 drops in half a tum- | bler of water will in & few minutes cure Cramps, lt;pum%. Sour Stomach, I\l’hmu-n, Vomit‘.?iz, )‘h‘urt_ I, Nervousuess, Slee wg, Sick eadache, (:Oufir:‘,,F]flrt‘lflv!tzlw':\'.!l«‘._ L\t:t] i]’:xt"‘r:‘_‘l‘g:up-lk]"”%: S | A CURE FOR ALL i SUMHER COMPLAINTS, i i 3 Dysentery, Diarrhea, ‘ CHOLERA MOREBUS. A half to a teaspoonful of Ready I+lief in a half tumbler of water, repeated as often s the discharges continue, and a flannel saturated with Ready Relief placed over the gtomach snd bowels, will afford {mmediate relief and goon cflcct « cure, There isnotaremedial ngcut inthe world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bilious and other fevers, wided by Radway's Pills, 80 quickly as RALWAY'S READY KELIER, Price, 50 cents « holtle. Soid by Druggists. BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD. » IR AP A 3 T SO A L»"fifl%’ff?’ T b O B g e\l i o 4 R Brur e A T e ) ¢{: /4 a \ '/‘fq;w-;:,: o P N W (1-3"*‘;( a8 E o@l e, Vs AW BB o . "o e e D & :’;".;"'4,l‘ “7‘o ':.," r’f‘i‘{ fl,'.?:“.f.\vz:;f ~4 } ":‘ TR, v ~EIS B & RT e e DO KOT BE DECEIVED — eamummpttsll. with Pastes, Fuamels, and Paints which gtain the hands, injure the iron, and burn yed, The lising Sun Stove Polish is BrilMant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make geveral boxes of Paste Palish, HAS AN AHNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS,

|THE FERRIS WHEEL. IT IS THE LANDMARK AND NOVELTY OF THE FAIR, Visitors Ask Their First Question When They See It from Afar—How It Is Made and What It Cost — Arrangements for Carrying Passengers. Away Up in the Ailr. World’s Fair correspondence: “What on earth is that?” This is the astonished inquiry that every passenger on the Illinois Central, the “L,” and the steamboat lines on the lake makes as soon as he gets his first si%{ht of the Ferris Wheel. And he asks it afar off, for the wheel is the landmark of the Fair. : His inquiry should be, “What in the air is that?” for if there s anything on or near the Exposition groum’ls besides the captive balloon that is not on earth it is the Ferris Wheel. At first it looks as the great trusses of the Manufactures Bufiding used to look before the roof was on. But, as it towers shigher and is seen to be circular instead of semi-circular, the spectator can form no idea what it is until he is told. It is beyond all question the | crowning novelty of the Exposition as the Eifi§ tower was of the Paris Exposition. To that it is superior in some respects, for it has the element of motion instead of being an inert mass, ingering difficulties Tw Mioh man nover before grappied, When was made the first wheel sfmilm‘ to this in construction, in a general way, and for amusement purposes, no one knows. The idea is an old one. But the gigantic toy on the Midway Plaisance was born two years ago in the mind of George W. G. Ferris, a 36-year-old Pittsburg engineer. The wheel is composed of two whoeels of the same size connected and held to- . gether with rods and struts, which, | however, do not appreach closer than | twenty feet to the periphery. Each - wheel has for its outline a curved, hollow, square iron beam 253x19 inches.

AR S S | g e R | LI \7\\ AL ; ‘g‘y_llgl.!" N N p _‘-\*;‘”__ (I LS e \ i ! 2T UK R | | ‘(/".:“TE '”4.’6;'\ \l"\\ i\ i '."?i;?:#?,fi;‘",'f (i /Q\ ? 2 AN W W N e | '\*37@' NN AR | 4 NS R WS 'g‘ Vil N, ““- ! ~ TG «\\'z' AN ",‘\;h-.'/"‘flli' /) Y 2 oo | BN\ A ) IR N\l 777 S | S SN ey 2N B | AT sL\ SRR AAN (g A, S| | \ Se =N : = v gl -} Y U NN SRS : \ /,,?” NRN ~g..rm;--;, zfi? A7 _,~_/;€£(,}"s}L.‘3/ g\‘? v‘:\\\ e M~-!'fl' i iy a2 AN SO S | (L] 2 \/,’;;V /ROTR R R 2N NTION) | \fi S >d -'f’; / !'“:)"&T Y \ ’\."3 -;"“\/fff{qm;" i V= NTZNF ~g\ ‘;r‘&i}; @S\ / ,/&“/ 5 T i NSO, | “.'/ %’,. y ‘\v ;‘ ! by ‘ *"xlg\\&f* 7’% o// ~‘ L T Ry "N 7/ N ”.“ \S | “ A > :\'.JJW"{‘;V e R ;‘%:7 USRS | S — _ TeiAtal e\ ¥ % m’ g i;.;;;x;.! Trid | R : W, , ST\ V< 77 f/ffi.f-f?\'“it?? il ‘{%‘ f \42 /' /'//i‘ @-5/"” il /’( W 8 = A VA 7! | AIR (7 G | 3 /} WA 7 s \fi,"" BN \/j A a =N NNANAIREAY )< d 005 & ko ~ e | f Ls"“ o ;l M( w oy - SRRV Kl 4l T e —— YN i L e YHE GREAT FERRIS WHEEL, ‘

e et SR e et et et b et At a distance of forty sect within this circle is another of a lighter beam. These beams are called crowns and are ccnnected and held together by an elaborate trusswork. Within this smaller circle there are no begms, and at a distance there appears to be nothing. But at the center of the great wheel is an immense iron axle 32 inches | thick and 45 sect in length. FEach of the twin wheels, where the axle passes through it, is provided with a large iron hub 16 feet in diameter. Between these hubs and the inner “crowns” there are no connections except gpoke-rdds 2% inches in diameter, arranged in pairs, 13 feet apart at the crown ccnnection. At a distance they look like mere spider webs, and the wheel seems to be dangerously devoid of substantial support. | The explanation of this is that the Ferris wheel—at least inside the smaller crowns-—is constituted on the Frinciplc of a bicycle wheel. The ower half is suspenged from the axle i eeet e e et et = WS | ‘ :—l“' -.1-'—_ T ".."" :.rf".'v.:’:\ i - L OTTRET | TR P o -M'."‘H'V eT L e Tey l’v‘ et S 8 1 .__ij' LA(, PT T «IM eL e s T R T TR - T | T |’€@ \.}‘ "[ ‘v'.,”‘c"lrll/'};'» ]bl { L 'y é" 2 e RS it 1T = | TR s N T | G ‘ i ' EGYPTIANS BOWING BEFORE THE TOMB OF \ THE §ACRED OX. by the spoke-rods running downward, and the upper half of the wheol is supported by the lower half. The only difference is that the Ferris wheel hangs by its axle, while a bicycle wheel rests on the ground, and "the weight is applied downward on tho axel. The great wheel has thirty-six carriages for passencers hung on its poriphery at equa! intervals. Each car is twenty-seven feet long, thirteen feet wide, and nine ‘feet high. It has a heavy frame of iron, but is covered externally with wood. It has a door, and five broad plate-glass windows on each side. It contains forty revolving chairs, made of wire and screwed to the floor ' It weighs thirteen tons, and with its ' forty passengers will weigh three tons more. It is suspended to the periphery of the wheel by an iron axle six and one-half inches in diameter, which I runs through the roof. 1t is provided " with a conductor to open the doors,

preserve order, and giye inw : | All the cars ti)gether will carry 1,400 Fe‘ople. To avoid accidents from m cs, and to prevent insane %fin : .| Jumping out, the windows will D& cov ered with an iron grating. It i 8 probable that one car in six will be reserved for smokers. ‘ The wheel, with {ts cars and passen- ' | gers, weighs about 1,200 tons, and | therefore needs something substantial ,| to hold it up. Its axis %s supported therefore on two skeleton iron towers, Fymmidul in form, one at each end of t. They are 40x50 feet at the bottom, | and 6 feet square at the top, and about | 140 feet hig(%], the sides next to the | wheel being 40 feet and perpendicular, ! and the other sides slanting. Each ‘ | » i —./_/'\7:// i » j = oo | /. . . L ‘A. || RS lfli .R= A R | B R A | N —-\_m‘ $ A -v * & Y { JAVANESE “MISSIGIT” OR CRURCH. | tower has four great feet, and h | | foot rests en an underground concgete , | foundation 20x20x20 feet. COr T 8 | | of steel are laid at the bettom of ghe | | conerete, and the feet of the tower { connectod with and bolted to them } iron rods. i Tae wheel is never left to tself, but is always directly and constantly cpne ' trolled by a steam engine. The wheel points east and west, and the engine, | which is a 1,000 horse-power reversible ! Blooming train engine, is located under { the east half of it, and sunk four feet |in the ground. The machinery is very | similar to that used in the power-houses | of the cable car companies, and runs | with the rame hoarse roar that they | do. It operates a north-and-south iron shaft, twelve inches in diameter, with | great cog wheels at cach end, by means

* e e et e ot eet ettt of which the power is applied st each side of the wheel. § How to Get on hoard. { ' It is arranged to empty and reflll six | l cars with passengers at a time, so that there will L‘ six stops in every revolu-’ ' ticn. Accordingly six railed platformg of varying heights have been Prm‘ided : icn the north side ¢f the wheel and six more, corresponding with these, on the south side of it. When the whee! stops each of the. six lowest cars has a plate form at each of its doors. The passengers step cut «f the south doors and other pasrengers step in at the north | doors. Then the next six cars are | served the same way, and the next and | | next all day. g ] FEATURES OF TIHE FAIR. : Miscellaneus Notes Picked Upat the World’s Greatest Show, In the Cape Colony exhibit are 40,000 rough diamonds. : The erown laces of Italy contain some specimens 1,800 years old. i The air brake is applied to 100 cars, Ten complete trains and a model defut are features of the Transportation Building. | It takes $12.75 to pay the bare cost of admission to attractions on the Midway Plaigance, the side show of the Fair.-« In the Woman's Building a model} kindergarten occupies aroom 80 feet | long by 60 feet wide. ; Thirteen enormous logs from Canada ' contain 1,500 feet of lumoer. | In the French collection there is a cabinet of bronze and ebony, with - | enamel of Limoges and Grecian figures. It has a secret spring and a ! lebyrinth of drawers, The valuation ! is $20,000. ! | The valuation of £30,060 is given to | two vases which the Spanish Commis- ! | sioners keep under lock and key. | | These vases are of iron, four feet high; | 1 one Ktruscan, the other Greeian, orna- | { mented with gold hamrered into the | ' iron o 0 as to show vines, cupids and fig-! | ures of woraen in flowing drapery. A | Bpanish woman did this highly prized | work., A few years ago she was g poor , | working girl. i | Venice sends laces ranging in value | from 2 cents to S4OO a yard. Twenty ' | years ago the famous old industry hag ; {about died out. There were only five | | women in Venice who preserved the | secrets of making Venetian point lace, i | To-day 4,000 women in Venice make | lace for one firm at 15 and 16 cents a ‘| day. In the Venetian lace house at ! | the Fair is $40,000 worth of lace, with ‘ | the veil patterned after that of Queen | Maria Louisa at the head of the ex- | hibit,

AN NANNAN N A ie st T S >ot | oo IN EVERY Re. 1§ % ,-}-Q{,sgi 97 ceipt that calls & - oS 8% rah - 8 | B ' for baking powder % | & use the “Royal.” It will make the | \ . ) @ food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, r' - - A N % more digestible and S 8 4 - .. 8 g wholesome. ‘-su & I 5 “We recommend the Royal ' ‘ E | ¢ Baking Powder as superior to g e = y ” TR 2 8 | .%€ . all others."—United Cooks . \‘s ‘-*‘ . i S and Pastry Cooks Associ- { 04 “ By, ! ation of the United States. » LT ‘ '\ Pa | :'."'» e BN AN, . s 2 ” e, pom M s NS e 3 o 3 “- | ;*' A A ‘,.}.. > N ~."" ..:.._“. ,T.'-.l"”: 5 :."“A!xf ;

[; 'E!a CF LONDON SURGEONS. Bome Light Thrown on the Cost of Attendb ance in a Recent Trial. was given In a suit which was tried in the London High Court a few days ago. ' Chi hsxeetleg, the senior surgeon of the West London Hospital, sueg Prot. Banister Fletcher for $2,000 for attendance upon the latter’s son, who was badly hurt in the terrible railway dis‘aster at Bursos some time ago. Prof, \ Fletcher paid £SOO into court, declaring that to bo an adequate payment for the _sorvices rendered. Dr. Keetloy is quoted by the New York Evening Post a8 testifying in his own behalf that he thought $l5O & day was o fair remuneration for his undivided attention, I and that he would charge no less for a dag"s work in London. He received l 870 & day whenever he attended court | éfor an insurance company with which ] he was coannected professionally. ‘Alfred Cooper, F. R. C. 8., consulting surgoon of the West London Hospital, said that in his opinion Mr. Keetley's charges were moderate in the extreme, ' | For himself, he should charge 22,000 i 1 ‘ g 0 Sy i for a trip to Paris, and $l5O or S2OO a | tda{ while he remained there. For ic) ng to Burgos he should charge , 85,000, For brfinging a patient home from Bm'gm and taking care of him during a three-days’ journey he should | ' charge $2,500. For devoting his whole | ' time to ndpmic'nt in London he should ! ' not consider S4O an hour an excessive | charge. Other surgeons gave similar | ' testimony, and finally the jury decided | | that Mr. Keetloy was entitled 1o $1,750, a verdict that gave him a substantial victory. ; Wauve Tosaed, ~ Bea sick voyagers suffer unspeakable tortures. | . Then it Hostetter's Stomach Bittera is resorted | tothe tortures cease. Yachting parties, ocean | . fishermen, nervous, sickly people, whom the | § Jarring of a railWay train affects much in the i § #ame way as the tossing of the surges do one | . who crosses the Atlantic for the first time, | s should be mindful of this and be provided with au adequate supply of the Bitters. This : ; stomuchic will promptly seottle ! & stomach outrageonsly disturbed, is a capital | llttfi‘hw malaris snd ervous complaints, | ' remedies constipation and biliousness, mdl oouateracts s tendency to rheumatism. Ue- ! sides this, it compensates for a loss of energy | consequoent upon undue exertion or norvors | anxioty, and averts the effects of exposure in z inclement weather and the wearing of damp ;clothmg. Both sppetite and sleep are pro- I moted by it, and general health rapidiy improves through its use. t The Cruel Check Reln, ' It does not require an expert to read | 8 horse's character in hLis face. The ’ | klckin‘f horse can nearly always be ‘ lslng'le out by the vicious gleam in his s ¥ s ;ge, which staanps him & born kicker. f all horses, though, the miserable i looking horse attracts most attention. This is the horse persecuted by the check rein. Like won®n and men who wear shoes a size too small, he shows the outward evidence of his misery. | Many good-natured "horses have been - made fictful and vicious by being enslaved by the infamous and eruel check rein, There are horses broken down by long and continual service for man which show facial expression. These may be found hitched to drays around town, to rickety wagons of peddlers and ragpickers, and occasionally to wagons of contractors and teamsters. Once, perhaps, they were full of the bu(":.‘an('_\’ of youth, but constant drudgery has made them mere tools, barely animate. ' | THE largest slide in the world ia at | Alprach, in Switzerland, from Mount ‘Pilatus to Lake Lucerne, eight miles. Il I 8 made of the trunks of 25,000 trees, | lald at an angle of ten to eighteen degrees, and logs placed in it descend to the lake in Bix minutes, | - HALL’S CATARRH CURE isa liquid and is | taken internally, and acts directly upon tho | Flood and mucous surfaces of the system. Sond | for testitnoninls, free. Sold by Druggists, 73¢. | ; ¥, J. CHENEY & CO., Propsa., Toledo, O. . | The sapphire which adorns the sum- | t of the English crown is the same %gt Bdward the Confessor wore in his ' A'ap progress of science in medicine has ' yroduced nothing better for human ilis | than the celebrated Beecham's Pills. ' Tne smallest bird is the West India hummingbird. Its body is less than an | Inch long, and weighs only 20 grains. E

b 70 STOP THE PROGRESS !

of Consumption, | you will find but ono guaranteed remed y— Doctor Pierce’s Golden 3 Medical Discovery. ?In advanced cases, / it brings comford and relief ; if you kaven’t delayed too long, it will

' ; Lo ) 4 3 A > G BRI 77 - Bt e S e, R, A : i { ~t | O | AL | D WOy, kel | N o

certajnl"y cure. Tt doesn’t claim too much. It won't make new lungs—nothing can; ' but it will make (’.iu;wse(i ones sound and ! healthy, when everyiking else has failed. i The gcrofulous affection of the lungs that’s caused Consumption, like every other form of Berofule, ang every blood-taint and dis- | order, vislds to the ‘‘Discovery.” It is the | most effective blood - cleanser, strength-re-storer, and flesh-builder that’s known to medI jcal science. In all Bronchial, Throat, and . Lung Affections, if it ever fails to benefit | OF cure, you have your money back. I e T~ e— = | A perfect and permanent cure for your Catarrh—or £SOO }I)lc cesh. This is promised bg the proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh y.

I B e T TR PP e ———————————————————————————————————————— A Delightful Way to Be Entertained. l Realizixg the fact that lighs literature is an almost necessary traveling companton, to those ooute::ght_ln; a “Summer Outlog,” | or those who are desirous of visitiug some otm -:l:.y'm and fishing grounds the line of the i&m | Central Lines, we take pleasure in advising our friends that we will send any one or all of the following valuable and interosting books to any address by mail “FREE" on recelpt of 12 cents each, in stamps, to cover postage and packing. These books are printed on good paper, well bound. the covers being illuminated fv color. The entire list of ton books will be se..t. prepald, for €1.20 in stamps or otherwisa. The amount asked is to cover charges and eost of packing. 2—~J¢l>hnk Halifar, Gentleman. By Miss Muock. 6—The Last Days of Pompeii. By Bulwer Lytton 6 —Scarlet Letter, By Nathaniel Hawthorne. 10—Tom Brown's School Days. By Thomas Hughes 15—Dora Thorne. By Bertha M. Clay. 16 —Very Hard Cash. By Charles Reade. 21 —Tour of the World in 8 Daya By Jules Verna 23—A Dream of Love, By Emile Zola. 25—~Reyond Pardon. By Bertha M. Clay. { &T—A4 Mad Lovee. By Bertlha M. Clay. ! Preserve this card, meetion the paper | cut from, mark the books you wish, in- | olosing 12 cents for each book, or $1.20 for | the entire list, and send with your address o Jar. C Poxp, ’ Gen'l Pasa and Tkt. Agent, | Wis Cent. Livnes, Chicago, IIL Mark your envelope “Advertising Depart- | ' ment.” e o i A Curious Injector Failure. | ! Seraps from an engineer's experi- ‘ cence are always of mere or less imer-i est. The following account of a curi- | | ous injector failure on a locomotive is a | | case in point. It shows very strikingly | { bow simply sometimes apparent mys- | | teries may be cleared up. The in-| { jector in question, thung}l examined | { thoroughly, failed to show any defect, | { and yet would not work on trial. After | every conceivable expedient had been | | tried without success, it was finally | idisvu\'m-«-d that the delivery pipe had | { & soldered joint in the mi&'fidL. This | | had become loose inside, and turned up | toward the center enough to break the | force of the water when forced at high | speed by the injector, but not sufficient- & | ly to prevent the water from passing | | freely enough when it was merely § I{u)un-d into the pipe. As there was a | bend at each end of the pipe, the üb~' % struction could not be seen. | I Visitors to the World's Fair ! Will find the I.ancastor Hotel, 61st ! t street and Lexington avenue, cool and i | comfortable. Only two stories high, | t all outside rooms, European plan, $1 | ’ per day each person and upwards. Take i ‘ the elevated railroad to Lexington avenue station, directly south of Ferris wheel. As the hotgl is indorsed by | Armour & Co., packers, and the Continental National Bank, patrons may be | assured of the bast of treatment. | sl i iy | Indiseriminating Thiel, | Some time ago a thief entered the Newark, N. J., small-pox hospital and stole a quantity of muriatic acid and a complete rubber suit used by attendants. It is believed that the thief was a tramp and did not know the character of the place he robbed. Playing Cards. You can obtain a pack of best quality playing cards by sending fifteen cents in postage to P. 8 EusTtis, Gen'l Pass. Agent, a, B &Q R R, Chicago, 11L Sticks to Custom. ' For 200 years the paper from which | Bank of Enland notes are made has been manufactured at Laver-troke in | Hampshire. ; G ! I» you will try Dobbins’ Perfect Soap, which retails at 5¢ per bar, you will save money and clothes. Itis by far the Dbest | and purest soap ever made. Have your | grocer get it ‘ ,‘ THE most curious animal in the world | | i 3 the ornithorhynchus paradoxus, of | Australia. Itis shaped like an otter, | has fur like a beaver, is web-footed like i a swan, has a bill like a duck, a tail like a fox, is amphibious and lays eggs. For weak and inflamed eyes use Dm Isaac Thompson’s Eye-water. Itis a carefully prepared physician's prescription. THE will-o'-the-wisp is caused by the decay of vegetable matter. N. K. Brown’s Essence Jamaica Ginger will ! cure diarrheea. None better. Try it. 25 cents. |

| nmm———— eel l arr The improved elastie truss | | E B \ is the only truss in exist- | | : I ence that is worn with ab- | ! ; o solute comfort night and { day, and it retains the rup- | ture under the hardest ex- | ¢ ercige or severest strain, | >/ and will effect @ permanent | Lend for Catalogue ”‘rrn. and speedy cure. | Improved Elastic Trass Co., 82 BROADWAY,N. Y | z 1 = ” DAL iYL i SMITH'S EUROPEAN HOTEL, | 63d St. and ELexington Ave, Chicazo. Three | minutes’ walk trom World's Fzir Grounds. Rooms, | #1 to #1.50 per day. Restaurant in connection. | Meals at reasonab.e rates. Send for pardceulars to | MATHEW SMILid, i'ropricto. | i EDFrom l:‘.t--}'i':';ll.s ;3 >4 & montl, oI - Y 5 RED' Lss treatment (b prac- g OLK ticing physician). Ne starvicg. { . Thousands cured. Send €c in stampsy > = O. W. I. SNYDER, M. D., Mail Dept. ¢ | McVicker's Theater, Chicago, T PATEHTS. TRADE-RARKS S ————————— Examination and Advice as to Patentability of Invention. Bend for Inventors’ Guide, or How to Get a Patent. PaTrick O'FArreLL, Washington, D. O, RS T T Sure relics 4 o 3 KIDGER'S PASTILLES., oo Fia s o .b‘ymlfl. Btowell & Co» ’ CEE .AT Lanc s WA, My Pz ¥ THOMAS P.SIMPSON Washington, " ¥ D. C. XNo atty's fee until Patent obe Lainedl. Write for Inventor’'s Guide,

P T N 5 S SRR ST S 5T e T \‘ & Regis Leblanc is a French Cana--1! Slan stcre keeper at Notre Dame de | Stanbridge, Quebec, Crn., who was .cu.red of a severe attack of Congest--Ical of the Lungs by Boschee’s CGer—- . ®an Syrup. He has sold many a ‘ bottle of German Syrup on his peri sqnal rec‘ommendatx-on. If youdrop | him a line he'll give you the full | facts of the case direct, as he did us, l and that Boschee’'s German Syrup brought him through nicely. It | always will. Itisa good medicine and thorough in its work. 9 e b SN e e o & ‘— TRADE MARK e ? | é—flflflm./ | e——= COLLARS &CUFFS. —— ‘ Rf’ o 3 “mi | ! ‘ !Q..”‘\' 8 i i e v [DANTE, RUBENS. ANGELO. =~ = JAPHAE LMURILLO. TASSO.4 The best and most economieal Collars and Cuffs worn. Try them. You will like them. Look well, Fit well. Wear well. Sold for 23 cents for a box of Ten collars or Five B o Tom . Coptes L e o ools ] l{yle wanted. “Ask the dealers for'tgnn'.“ Reversible Collar Co., 27 Kilby St.. Boston, et e b A T el | DR. KILMER’S | i | CURED ME i | i - § - = l > et ! ¥ N J N A { -+ - | - N SR 4;;:, “’,4,‘ \ o 7 ‘\§ T = - LA i At 2 S AN N I ST e Rt |TR U .'[ ZRRgeeh A\ | AL RS * i 7/ B N .;.."\‘\LN IR R RN ? IR | [ ; : ha:fi; i\ | D. H. BILGER, Esq, { Hulmeville, Pa. WHEN ALL ELSE FAILED! La Grippe Baffled! The After Effects Curad Mr. Bilger writes: “I had a bad attack of the Grippe; after a time caught cold and had a second attack; it settled in my kidneys and liver, and Oh! such pain and misery in my back and legs. The Physicians’ medicine and other things that I used made no impression, and Icontine ually grew worse until I was a physical wreck, and given up to die, Father bought me a bottle of Dr. Kilmer's SWANMP-ROOT, and before I had used all of the second bottle I feit better, and to-day I am just as well as ever. A year haspassed and | nota trace of the Grippe is left. SWAMP» s g ROOT saved my life,” | WAM D. H. BILGER, Hulmeville, Pa. ! s Jan. iCth, 1893. ! \ At Druggis:s, 50¢c, & 81,00 ~, ‘“ Guide to Health » Free. ConS OT sultation Free. Dr. Kilmer & Co, e U iR BINGHAMTON, N. Y, | Dr.Kilmer's PARILLA LIVER PILLS Are the Best, i 42 Pills, 25 cents, — All Druggists, B 1 i . Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Con- | stipation, Sick-Headache, ete. | 25 cents per bottle, at Drug Stores. . Write for sample dose, free. J.F.SMITH & C0.,~-New York- | R RS &l ¥ ounz Liicthers ! ;: @ z | We Ofer Tow a Remedy ! which Insures Safety to | Life of Mother and Child, “ MOTHER'S FRIERD ™ i &g t I Reods Confinenient of its ! Pain, Horyvor and Risk. | Afterusingonecbottleof ¢ Mother’s Friend” 3 | suffered but little pain,and did not experience thas i weakness afterward usual {n such cases.—Mrs3, | AXNKIE GAGE, Lamar, Mo., Jan. 15th, 1391, ! Seat by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of | price, 8150 per bottie, Book to Mothers matled fres, | BRADEFIZNLD REGULATOR CO.y - i ATLANTA, GA, i SCLD BY ALL DRUGGISTI. : 5 | Flv’ : P TR | Ely’s Gream Balm [Patory WILL CURE & CATARRY ) ATARRM BS 1 G H o) o] K /-8 Price 50 Cents. =% P 00 | Apply Balm into each nostril. P < ?)3" | ELY BROS. 56 Warren Bt., N. Y. |8 X -O¢ 50c EESSS——A P R TRAVELING] sioe” Line For Iraveling Men who visis BN bol s woth: an b dodtio for trains. No ¢ :»‘,w‘:r V-l' te ."x. profit. Many traveling m making their daily S IOWINS.,” Lock ilox 818, Chicago, IIL . ' ’ ANPANTNT g‘g 1) £ Corner Six third street ynd Princet Avenue Englewood), Caicag First-class bads. good table, Rates 82 per day. Electric cars to World's Faip Grounds; 10 minutes’ rid ¥F.W.JoxNgs, Proprietsr, C. N 8 Nen, BT - 0:’;"‘ ‘V"-u;-;.\' WRITING TO .-3.:’-‘.'1»:1:2‘!%:1;: please say you saw the advertiscineng in this paper. A Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is the NS i 8 Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. Fd ;;"‘,-" Py -Py 2 SR E,.LA . CATARR H - Ba Sold by druggists or sent by mail, § B 50c. E. T. Hazeltice, Warren, Pa. .