St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 37, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 31 March 1894 — Page 3

THE TRUST AFTER NO-TO-BAC. Estimated That Half a million Tobacco Users Will Be Cured in ’94 by the Use of No-To-Bac, Causing a Loss of Many Millions of Dollars to Tobacco Manufacturers. Chicago, March 24.—[Special.]—It was reported to-day that a large sum of money had been offered the proprietors of the cure fertile tobacco hab.t called “no-to-bac,” which is famous all over the country for its wonderful effect. This offer, it was said, was made b,parties who desire to take it off the market and stop its sale, because of its injury to the tobacco business. Mr. H. L. Kramer, general manager of the no-to-bac business, was interviewed at his office, 45 Randolph street, and when questioned, promptly said: “No, sir; no-to-bac is not for sale to the tobacco trust. We just refused a half million from other parties for our business: Certainly no-to-bac affects the tobacco business. It will cure over a half million people in 1894, at an average saving of SSO wnich each would otherwise expend for tobacco, amounting in round figures to $25,000,000. Os course tobaao manufacturers and dealers’ loss is the gain of the party taking no-to-bac. Does no-to-bac benefit physically? Yes, sir. The majority of our patients report an immediate gain in flesh, and their nicotine saturated systems are cleansed and made vigorous. How is no-to-bac sold? Principally through our traveling agents. We employ over a thousand. It is also sold by druggists, wholesale and retail, throughout the United States and Canada. How are patients assured that no-to-bac will effect a cure in their case? We absolutely guarantee three boxes, costing $2.50, to cure any case. Failure to cure means the money back. Os course there are fa : lures, but they are few. and we can better afford to have the geol will of an occasional failure than his money. We publish a little book called ‘Don’t Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life Away,’that tells all about no-to-bac, which will be mailed free to any one desiring it by addressing the Sterling Remedy Co., 45-49 Randolph street, Chicago.” The Animal Wasn't a Coon. “I went coon hunting down in Georgia with two boys,” said George W. Bealock, the other day. “They knew nothing about it, and it was my first experience. The dogs treed a coon; we saw the animal enter a hole in the tree, and we cut the tree down. It did not leap from the branches, as we expected, so one of the boys crawled into the tree and began to poke the coon with a pole. In about a minute we heard a combination of human and animal yells, -which indicated that our friend had found the animal, and that it was not a coon. Soon he emerged from the log, and a half grown wildcat was clinging to him. With two pistol shots and a blow with an ax we succeeded in killing the animal, but the boy who crawled into the log will bear the scars of his encounter with the young wildcat for the rest of his life. I have been coon hunting since, but I am always certain that it L a coon that is treed before I cut down the tree.”— St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A Prisoner in Bed. Mrs. Mary A. Tupper has been released, at Wilton, Me., from the custody of extreme female weakness and nervousness, which kept her a prisoner in bed, unable to

walk. Lydia E. PinkJtam s Vegetable Compound went to the root of her trouble, and gave her the liberty of health, । so that after taking two bottles she was able to

S^^A-TUPP^

go out of doors and surprise her husband and friends by her improvement. She says: “ Women should beware of dizziness, sudden faintness, backache, extreme lassitude, and depression. They arc danger signals of female weakness, or some derangement of the uterus or womb. Take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and be thankful for your life as I am. It only costs a dollar to try it. ^DR.KILMER'S koof KIDNEY LIVER ^4O BLADDER . Dissolves travel Gall stone, brick dust in urine, pain in urethra, straining after urination, pain in the back and hips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. Bright’s Bisease Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Root cures urinary troubles and kidney difficulties. Elver €/Omplaint Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, biliousness, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout. Catarrh of the Bladder Inflammation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, pass blood, mucus or pus. At Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO Size. •‘lnvalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. £>-y’s Catarrh Cleanses the ISasal Passages, HEADfI Allays Pain and Inflammation, K^> Heals the Sores. Restores the ' Senses of Taste and Smell. J TRY THE OURE. HA YFEVER A particle is applied into each nostril and Is B<reeable. Price 60 cents at Druggists, or by mall ELT BROTHERS, 68 Warren St., Kew Tort

. THE ALLIGATOR’S USEFULN ESS. ’ An Unknown Friend to the Southern f Planter Recognized too Late. Not till after the wholesale destruction of the alligator has ren- , dered them almost extinct did it r dawn upon man’s intelligence tha* . this uncouth saurian has been of ma- [ terial assistance to him by destroying large numbers of the smaller animals which prey upon field and garden crops. This fact is coming to be recognized in Florida, and also in Louisiana. The following on the subject is from the agricultural columns of the Times-Democrat: “The demand for alligator skins at the North, where they are tanned and made into valises, satchels, pocketbooks, etc., has caused them to be hunted so closely that it has almost resulted in their entire destruction. Before the demand arose for their hides the bays and bayous of Louisiana were full of the saurians, which did no particular damage except in catching a stray pig or cur dog, but otherwise they were not supposed to be of any value at all. “With the disappearance of the alligator it was noticed that there was a marked increase in the number of other mischievous animals, espec-, ially in the rice fields of Plaquemine Parish. The muskrat increased to such an extent that it was almost impossible to keep up the levees which were built for the purpose of keeping the water on the rice during the growing season. The damage caused by the rats burrowing through the embankments necessitated constant watchfulness and entailed much hard labor, either in rebuilding them entire or in digging out the burrows and tilling in with solid earth. The rodents also infect the front levees, honeycombing them in every direction, necessitating constant attention to avert the disastrous consequences resulting from a crevasse. “Truck farmers in the lower part of Plaquemine have also complained that since the extermination of the alligator that the common rabbit, the raccoon and other wild animals have increased largely, and that the rabbit especially has proved very destructive to cauliflower, cabbage and lettuce; in fact, our informant said that if these animals continued to increase he would be compelled to erect a woven-wire fence around his truck farm or abandon the culture of some of his most profitable vegetables. “Several years since the police jury of the parish of Plaquemine passed an ordinance forbidding the killing of the alligator, and with their increase came a corresponding decrease in the number of destructive vermin. We understand that t he law has since been repealed. For what reason we do not know.’’ Bird Butchery. Over five million birds are massacred each year to plume the hats of womankind. Terns from Cape Cod, black partridges, hoopoes, golden orioles and blue jays, pretty kitiwakes from Sunday Island, egrets and herons from our southland and bobolinks and rail birds from our own fields and woods are murdered to feed the female passion for display. The women of the period will hoot at the Tamil and the Sinhalese for slitting their nostrils for the insertion of jewelry, but they will kill and mutilate harmless carolers that plumes may dance from their bonnets. In the case of the kittiwake, the plumage is taken at a season when the birds have hardly learned to fly, and it is usual to tear off the wings while the bird lives. Then there is another side to the question. A great deal of arsenic is used in the preparation of these feathers, and the eyes and nostrils of the wearers are exposed to danger. A more important aspect of the case is that all life depends on vegetable life, and Michelet declares there can be no vegetable life without bird life. — [Washington Star. The Powerof Thought. “Human beings often die from the effects of imagination,” said Dr. E. T. Sinclair. “One case, well known in medical annals, but which has never been given general publicity, is that of a condemned murderer whom the Royal Medical Society obtained the consent of the crown to experiment upon. He was to have been hanged, but the day before the execution he was told that instead of hanging ho was to be bled to death at b o’clock in the morning. At that time physicians entered. Tht*~^-es of the condemned man were banT* aged, his head held over a basin of water. A sharp, quick stroke with a knife, made over his temple, not sufficient, however, to break the skin, and a physician dropped tepid water, a drop at a time, upon the supposed wound and from there into the basin. In twenty minutes the man wfis unconscious, and in an hour and a half he was dead. The cases where men have had a premonition, which they believed, that they would die at a certain time, are explained usually upon t his principle. Premonitions of this • kind are very apt to prove fatal, and then they are considered as occult - and mysterious.”—[St. Louis GlobeI Democrat. A Texas Congressman’s Story. “Major Wintersmith rushed into General Hanson’s room one day in a state of great mental disturbance,” said Col. Kilgore of Texas. “ ‘General,” he exclaimed, ‘a man I out here in the hall stopped me just I now and took me for you.’ I “Tic did?’ said Hanson; ‘l’ll go | out and kill him.’ “ ‘Oh, don’t trouble yourself aboq>* { that,’ replied the Major, ‘l’ve kiPM ’ him already.’ ” —[Washington Past.

I Takeno^ .lZ 1 11" 1 " | I Royal R for I llt is Aft P°wder. I ah «. ^pr^ely Pure. All others | H Z 4^ um or ammonia.

. .—, 30 Washing the Hands. Washing the hands in wab'E which ammonia has been added o'”* 0 '”* common recommendation. This ilk a be well enough, perhaps, if the suSuld mentary process were correctly gKgbut the direction is simply for put«| a little of this substance into in which the hands are was k Y r ‘' bod? follows thee dH' 3 ?™??”’

finds the hands rough 5 able almost beyond enduraece. day the victim' of tMI 5 makos up her ini’id that monia doesn't agree with heYjiljY forthwith discontinues its fact ii that ammonia is absolutely for the toilet unless its effects are cyl: fully removed by some suitable It is strongly alkaline and destroys tB natural oil on and near the surface $ the skin, leaving it lough, crackly an with a decided tendency to chap an wrinkle. After the use of soap of an sort or any alkaline preparation ti hands should be thoroughly washed ; clean water and rubbed with son ‘ soothing compound, such as glycerii and rose water, a bit of diluted hone} almond oil or some like substance This restores the softness of the skis and prevents chapping. The Longest Days. At Spitsbergen the longest day k three and one-half mouths. At Wardoe, Norway, the longest day lasts from May 21 to July 22, without interruption.

At Tornea, Finland, June 21 brings a day nearly twenty-two hours long, r and Christmas, one less than three 1 hours in length. ! At St. Petersburg and Tobolsk the! longest day is nineteen hours, and the shortest five hours. At Stockholm the longest day is eighteen and one-half hours. At Hamburg and Dantzig the longest ■ da.v has seventeen hours. At London and Bremen the longest day has sixteen and one-half hours. At New York the longest day is about fifteen hours, and at Montreal it has sixteen hours. Crossing the Atlantic Usually involves seasickness. When the waves play pitch and toss with you. strong indeed must be the stomach that can stand it without revolting. Tourists, commercial travelers, yachtsmen, mariners, all testify that Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is the best remedy for the nausea experienced in rough weather on the water. Nervous and weakly travelers by land often suffer from something akin to this, and find in the Bitters its surest remedy. No disorder of the stomach, liver or bowels is so obstinate that the prompt and thorimgl^^meay^^^’^t^tag efficacious is it for chills and fever, , 1 rheumatic trouble and nervousness. F J

grants to the frontier should provide tljL / selves with this tine medicinal / against the effects of vicissitudes of ell/ ' / . hardship, exposure and fatigue. fl '' A Mint Mystery. , According to a late report of the dU rector of the mint, 19,570 silverdollarys with the date 1801. were coined durim^ that year. To-day less than a dozen them are known to be in existence, each of them is worth a small fertui ; There were 150.000 half dollars coiJ-, in the same year: at present but onlL ' known. Whatever became of the®ver coinage of that year is one oUi , ' unsolved governmental mysteßZ Z Thirty-two years later there weraF ’ 1.000 of the 1856 dollar pieces cdF . yet any one who has $5 to inveflß^st get one of them for a pocket pie.*' cool SI,OOO would not buy an 180 g Louis Republic. a A Hous - in a Fret. ftk and let the mother become si*. 1 helpless, and the hou e is all w 1 ie , d ?r. When both father an 1 ' down, you ma .as well close ta‘\ oi n n f ters. Order is brought out of cla ‘ J . ' , very eas ly, and Mr-. John South Butte, Mont ^.l7^^^ an easy way out of her din*; she writes thus: “My h’asban^ ld very ba 1 rheumatism from s< on< e and my arms were so lame^ andbeforo raise tnem to help myself. I 4*’ T , a n for a bottle of St. Jacobs OF*? | the bottle was half empWp^. h. v >iy J™ lame he could n-t get ou«l 1 laeobsOil, and a half bottles eon® st ” t ’ him. I will always praisdy ou 1

and yon may u e this as Bwr M^dliTp^Bch comes from / The tough paper wh/» de m ? n \" i China and Japan is mf'F 6 -? 1 fiber is not j fiber. The new or f^nsive: but after used, it being too exyijS?f’’buse l .‘T' ‘ ' it served its it is carecordage, and has , ma ?^ ’. nt .° a rnS^ieked to pij^annfactured into 1 111 >' - Th when rolled ,>nT n esß#itute ^wF vt i° n T' 1 ’ is a very good ^^Woth. is solely due to hag twine. Its rt^Bwhich is one of the that of the manillflßflown to the manustrongest libers. tacturer. Deafness Saa they cannot reach the By local appllcatioi^^bne ear. There is on.y one diseased portion of and that is by constituvay to cure deafy caused by an intional remedies. tKH the mucous lining or me flamed condition i When this tube is - Eustachian TuHKi 5 rumbling sound or imp - flauied. you bavf3Bai when it is entirely feet hearing, al fl^fllult. and unless the ni..amim - Deafness is the ™ut and this tube restore. 1 to tion can be takagjL^on hearing will be desUoyeU its normal cou<mK|b out of ten are caused by caforever ; nine cj I^7 thing but au inflamed conmtarrb, which issurfaces. tion of the mu V a One Hundred Dollars for o We vill gtwjß^SMnaused by catarrh) J‘'‘'jy case of Oeaftaß^fy taking Halls Catanh O not be cured KMk^iis, free. „„ „ , o bend for cl^dEaigJ. CHENEY & CO., loledo, O. EKsK^Bgista, 75c. SS- Sold by T T -■l&etl valuation of New HampTHEjjjjHßwrfsen from $216,123,044 111 shire h.&0Mf^16,342 in 1893, an increase 1884 toSJaF wper cent. of over / —— - - Vfypk Ccnsumi TION Ct’RE is sold on a 11 cures Incipient c u" s ““ p " 1 RJ^aßrjF . fS the best Cough Cure. .5 cent., Pt-mn, JE^nd 81.00. 660 centi"4® ! ^iJ ' ——■ —■ ; ' ~ ISEIw ten waltzes of ordinary a dancer tiavels about seten a haf ‘

$4 to California. ii Th « ls our s l® e P ln g car rate on the Phil-lips-Kock Island Tourist Excursions from olncago to Los Angeles or San Francisco, i via the scenic route and Ogden. You can Ro with Phillips, the best of all excursion managers, for he has each party accomIvaUnled by a special agent who goes the entftUe trip win, putrona These personally y,^*^.4pcto l excursions leave Chicago twice ! a Tuesday and Thursday.

»- * t Asa .« 11 U I nil Ik jr • - W 6 hav® a claliy tourist car service, our Mulhern route, through the beauoywil Indian Territory aad Fort Worth to Angelei and Ban Francisca 'ihetourj^t car rate via this route, the sama Apimly at Kock Island ticket office, 104 Clark Istraet. John Sebastian, O. P. A., Q, IL 1 & f. By., Chicago. -Expenses at the Vatican. phe Pepo is allowed for his personal wants about $100,00) annually. A regular allowance is also made for the other dignitaries of the Vatican. The Cardinals receive $14.\000. Other expenses are: For poor dioceses, $80,000; Secretary of State, $2 0,000: employes and ablegates, $300,000; support of t-chools and the poor, $240,009; administration of the Vatican, $360,000. The I total expenditures for all purposes amount yearly to mere than $1.40 ',OOO. The income is received from many sources. Strange t o say Italy contributes the smallest part of the revenue. The United Statu send among the largest amounts of money. The Pope receives from time to time rich presents from the crowned heads. The last jubilee of Pope Leo XIII. brought

to the Vatican $600,0 )0. Chicago’s Unemployed. Throughout the winter there have been I thousands of men in Chicago who found themselves out. of work and money at the close of the World's Fair. (Among them were farmers, mechanic-, bookkeepers, clerks aud laborers of every description.) A large portion of these are reputable, well-meaning men, who have simply been left stranded by the industrial stagnation. IThey accepted the humble work on the (streets cheerfully and thankfully, rather (than live as tramps and mendicants. Tho (association can supply, free of charge, help of every description. Employers will kindly address bv mall, the Central Relief Association. 1015 “The Rookery.” * > Icebergs. [[ln the Antarctic Ocean the icebergs ipathave bee i noticed from time to feime rose 480, 70'. ai d even 1,0 >0 filet above the water, and were from |Gre e to five miles long. Their enorD Ns bulk ma.v bo inferred from the f that the part under water is about s times as large as that above. •Xt^^sh firm claims that with its n NpakW machines a cask ■ v a *vfrom beginning to end "-r

— -is ' 7 *-■ HL HL 2 wlEm ojm.. . '■'• sW^i N" wBS^HmT Vtir/i^if/^ss!^.^ i \. r i

/ After reading the following letters can any I ©no longer doubt that a trustworthy remedy i for that terriblv fatal malady, consumption, j has at last been found? If these letters had ■ been written by your best known and most esteemed neighbors they could be no more ■worthy of your confidence than they now are, coming, as they do, from well known, intelligent and trustworthy citizens, who, in their several neighborhoods, enjoy the fullest confidence and respect of all who know them. _ . C. McLin, Esq., of Kampsville, Princess whose portrait heads this article^Writes “ When I commenced takg Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery I wm very low with a cough and at times ZStun much blood. 1 was not able to do tuo least work, but most of tho time wasi in bed I was all run-down, very we^c, head was dizzy and I was.extreme!ydesp dent. Tho first bottle I took did not s.em to do me much good, but I had {a \ th and continued using it until I had taken fifteen bottles and now I do not look nor feel like tho same man I was one year ago. People are astonished and say, well, last year this timo I would not have thought that you would be living now.’ I can thankfully say 1 am entirely cured of a disease which, but for your wonderful ‘Discovery would have resulted in my death.” Kven when the predisposition to consumption is inherited, it may bo cured, as verified by the following from a most truthful ana much respected Canadian lady, Mrs. Ihomas Vansicklin, of Brighton, Ont. Sho writes : “ I have long felt it my duty to acknow.edgo to you what Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and his ‘Pleasant Pellets’ have done for me. They almost raised me from the grave. I had three brothers and one Eister die of consumption and I was eoeediiy following after them. I had severe cough, pain, copious expectoration and other alarming symptoms and my friends all thought I had but a few months to hva At that timo I was persuaded to try the Medical Discovery’ and the first bottle T acted like magic. Os course, I co^nved cn 1 with the medicine and as a result I g al ^ed rapidly in strength. My friends were aston-

EARLY CORN OVER 1 FOOT LONG. Salzer illustrates in a colored plate a new early corn, a giant of its kind, and offers S3OO in gold for the largest ear in 1894 In addition to this early Giant corn, which yielded in 1893 110 bushels per acre, he has over twenty other prolific field corns. He has the best fodder corn in the world. He is the largest grower of farm seeds, such as oats, barley, wheat, millet, potatoes, etc., in America. Fifty kinds of grasses and clovers. If You Will Cut This Ont and Send It With 15c to the John A. Salzer Seel Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will receive a large package of above Giant corn and his mammoth catalogue. C Farm Renters May Become Farm Owners If they move to Nebraska before the price of land climbs out o' sight Write to J Francis, G. P. and T. A., Burlington Route, Omaha, Neb., for free pamphlet It tells all about everything you need to know. Ebb “Colchester” Spading Boot ad. in other »jlumn.

| Eruptions g and similar annoyances are caused by impure blood, it which will result, in a more dreaded disease. Unless W removed, slight impurities will develop into serious to g maladies. SCROFULA, ECZEMA, SALT RHEUM g I hare for some time been a sufferer from a severe ARE THE RESULTS OF SIC blood trouble. lor which I toe's many remedies that M XX did mo uo good. I have now taken fbur bottles of K QQ ssg' with the most wonderful results. Am g Nk P. £ w QQ la enjoying the best health I ever knew, a OO ^3 have K a,ned twenty pounds and my SA K sz friends say they never saw me as welL ____ - lam feeling quite like a new man. h B w XA XX JOHN S. EDELIN, SX gs Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. g H w XX @9 Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free to any address. gg SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. gg (i 1 r MlHßrr, Especially for Farmers, Miners, R. R. Hands and others. extending down to the heM. EXTRA WEARING QUALITY. Thousands of R ibber Boot wearers testify this is the best they ever had. don't be persuaded into an inferior article.

ished. When I commenced the use of your medicines, six years ago, I pounds and was sinking rapidly. i. n ?^ weigh 135, and my health continues perfect. “Golden Medical Discovery” sumption (which is scrotula of the lungs), by its wonderful blood-purifying, invigor-.-ing and nutritive properties. For weak lungs, spitting of blood, shortness of breath, nasal catarrh, bronchitis, severe coughs, asthma, and kindred affections, it is a soxweiffn remedy. While it promptly cures the severest coughs, it strengthens the system more corpulent, but for thin, pale.

Fn flesh from any cause, it is the greatest flesh builder known to medical. s«e^ Ne^ty cod liver oil and its emulsions, are Lbo compared with it m etncacy. It rapidly builds up tho system, and increases tho solid flesh and weight of those reduced below tho usual standard of heaKh by Th’hrace^ the entire system after the grip, pneumonia, fevers, and other PO^af ina acute diseases ; to build up needed flesh nnd strength, and to restore health and v Igor , the best thing in the world is Di. tierces Golden Medical Discovery. It promotes all the bodily functions, rouses every organ into healthful action, purifies and enriches the blood, and through it cleanses, repairs, and invigorates the entire systeni. , ; A Treatise on Consumption, giving numer- , OUS testimonials with phototype, or half-tone, , portraits of those cured, uumerous vefer- • encee, also containing successful Home Ti eat--1 ment for chronic nasal catarrh, bronchitis, t asthma, and kindred diseases, will be mailed I by the iVorld’s Dispensary Medical Assocaa- } tion of Buffalo, N. V on receipt o - I 800 ulu^traUo^, sailed for 81,00.

DADWAY’S n PILLS, Always Reliable. Purely Vegetable. Possess properties the most extraordinary in restoring health. They stimulate to healthy action the various organs, the natural conditions of which are so necessary for health, grapple with and neutralize the impurities, driving them completely out of tha system. RADWAY’S PILLS Have long been acknowledged as the best cure for Sick H&auu w L, v ’•'digestion. Female Complaints, dyspepsia, ■ Biliousness, Constipation, And ALL DISORDERS OF THE LIVKBJ Cents a. Box. Sold l>y all 1 >r\i 15glsuu

• s Ai f 4 S f S Pure, Soft, White Skin. | Have you freckles, moth, black-heads, a •) blotches, ugly or muddy skin, eczema, A (e tetter or any other cutaneous b.etni-h ' e) e) Do vou want a quick, Permanent^ml abi® solute'.y infallible cure, FREE Oi COST ») e) to introduce it? Something new, pure, (• ri mild and so harmless a child can use or A drink it with perfect safety. If so, send » (o your full Post-office address to « « MISS MAGGIE E. MILETTE. I® 134 Vine Street, Cincinnati. Ohio. V AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. ® ®-®®^®<g w. L. DOUGLAS S 3 SHOE M equals custom work, costing from VrUl-uLir $4 to $6, best value for the money \ Q£HUINU~a in the world. Name and price I ■ujtTT stamped on the bottom. Every I V it pair warranted. Take no subsh- / ?2GeaiileSS tute. See local papers for foU _ I I b." description of our complete

for ladies and gen- [ tiemen or send for 11^ I W LDougiTTV^'— lustrated Catalogue snSs7^~ h° w to or - der bv mail. Postage free. You the beSt bargains of dealers who push our s|T OAKHOT T hllsrzrrr‘ WItX IT AK' .-REIGHT. ZtM Bors cur ? duct cr o»k Imvrrpro^d nigh a.- «, ors J '"', u ^?„ , iGCt SmVT tinel y inisbed, r.kkel p.»«d, t-» "^TI he»vy work; guaranteed for 10 I Antomatle Bobbin Hinder, Self-Threading CyUnL Shuttle, Self-Setting *" d ? hT£^!2 ot steel AtUehment. shipped any 2*4 30 Dav’a Trial. No money requfred in Advance. T 5 000 now in use. World’a Fair Medal awarded inachlne and »«*<*• ml-tl Bur°f?oi factory and save dealer’s and agent s profit, rnrr Cot Thia Out and send to-day f-r machine or 'AWef FREE catalogue, testimonials and Glimpses of the OXFORD MFG. GO. 2^2 Watiib Avs. GHICAGO,!LL

' v 60, SE.VJ -'AU^U

IWALLPAPEfeI I ^ S, I-75 WxlSfCr*loO d H L t m" h frVSv to 40. extra Send Sc for Sam- S • S pies and fnC Hired!.,m o.r Hanging. A SCOVILLE WADE FAI’EK MTO. CO- £ V 250 to 251 S. Clinton St.. < hKJAgo- j I - c . n. v. 22ZZZH£E/ TV IIFN M KITING TO A OVE KT I SERS. / I W please say Jou saw the advertineuimZ/ I In this payer. j