St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 51, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 7 July 1894 — Page 3
It Is Not What We Say But what Hood’s Sarsaparilla does that tells the story. The great volume of evidence in the fcrm of unpurchased, voluntary testimonials prove beyond doubt that Mood’s Sarsa - 1 parilla Be Sure to Get Z^ures Hood s Hood's Pills cure habitual constipation. Pilot ILtob Port. “You would be surprised to know, probably, that the old fort at Pilot Knob has not been disturbed since the war,” said a veteran. “The land where the so. t stands is now owned by the Iron Mountain Company. It refuses to allow' the souvenir of the battle of (Pilot Knob to be destroyed. The tenfoct ditch around the fort has not been filled up, and it presents pretty mii’h the same appearance as when Gen. Price made a i attempt to take the fort. It will be remembered that Price and his army were camped on Shepherd’s mount. i.i, t :e fort being- at the base, near a ravine. Price stationed his artillery on top of the mountain and ordered a charge. When the infantry reached the ditch, it was realized that a mistake had been made, and tlie soldiers retreated, as many of them beinir killed by Hrico’s men, who wore keeping up imomnt tiring- from the top of the mountain, as were shot down by the federate within the fort. It was the intention of Gen. Price to capture the fort the next morning, and he had ma’e a hundred ladders to tcalo the ditch, but they were never used, as the federate spiked the cannon and blew up the fort at daylight. The remnants still remain, however, Ind are viewed with interest by hunjtreds from St. Louis who spend the tiimuer season at Arcadia." —St Louis Republic. That “ fellow-Feeling.” 1 He was a commercial traveler of the more flashy type and had just finished telling a startling story to his newly made a-quaintanco in the car. I hat reminds me of one of Munchausen’s yarns,” remarked the victim, for want of tomething better to say. “Munchausen—who is he?" “M hy, don t you know about him? He is the most colossal example of mendacity that civilization has produced.” A brief, painful silence ensued, which was broken by the traveler in a tone that was almost timid. “Excu-e me. my friend,” he said, “if I seem inquisitive, but would you mind telling me what house he travels for." —Washington Star. Cloth. Cotton cloth was first ramie in India, and was in use there as early as 2,34. i years ago. About the year *450 B. C. HeroJotus spoke of this fabric, made from the trees of India which bore, as their fru ts, fleeces surpas-ing in beauty and delicacy those of the sheep. From India cotton cloth was introduced in Greece and LU me. When a Woman Has Constant Backache she cannot walk or stand, her duties are heavy burdens, and she is utterly miserable. The cause is some derangement of the uterus or womb. Backache
{k
womb, The best doctors failed to relieve her, and as a last resort she purchased six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Now she is a well woman. The dreadful pain in her back stopped after taking the second bottle. She wishes she had taken it sooner, and saved both money and years of suffering. It is a sure remedy for female ills. Wm n pili s h n ^£3 Always Reliable. Purely Vegetable. For the cure of .-JI disirtie-e of the Stomach. Bowel-, K.dney*, B.*dder, Nervous Diseases. D.zziues^ 1 Vertigo. Costlvene-s, Piles. SICK HEADACHE, DYSPEPSIA, COMSTSPATiON AND ALL DISORDERS OF THE LIVER. Observe the for.cwing symptoms remitlng from di* eases of |he digestive organs < ..list' pat oi. iuwa-d piles, fullness of blood in the head, icitUy o< the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disrupt of food, fullness or weight in the stomach, sour ernotatio!).-. sinking or flutv.- inn of the i-.art, choking or »uff> : catmg sensations when in a lvi- g postura, dimn-sss of vision, dots or webs beto e ths sight fuse and dull pain in the head, deiiedenoy • ' perspiration, yellowness of the sain and eyes, rain la the side, chert, limbs, and sudden flushes of burning ,a the flesh. A few doses sf RADWAY’H FILLS will free the system of nil the above named disorders. Price 25 cente per box. bold bv all druggists, or 1 sent by mail. Pend to DR. BADWAY & CO. LockBox i>6s. New York, lor Book of Advice. SHOCKING! A mild, conI tinuous current, of electricity cures. Get a catalogue by writing THE OWEN ELECTRIC BgLT CO. 209 State Street, Chicago, Ili- ' jELYS BALM CURES [PRICE SOCEHTS. ALL DRUGCISTS^^^ PATEHTS. TEASE-MARKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentability if In- : Vention. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or How to Get I a Patent. Patbick O’Farrelj., Washington. D. C. i Sure relief ■ n Tmr a Kg CURESWHERE all else fails. W Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ISkI in time. Boid by druggists. <»
MANYLINES TIED UP Greatest Strike Ever Known in Railway Circles. NO TRAINS MOVING. Freight Traffic Suspended on Roads Affected. The Bt. Paul Side-Tracks Its Niue Pullman Sleepers—- Mobile a nd Ohio Will Not Antagonize Organization—Northern Pacific Receivers Look for Help from the United States—United States Marshals Dispatched to Aid the Santa Fe In RunIts Trains—Chicago Police Guard Switches—Strikers Are Jubilant. The American Railway Union boycott of Pullman cars has resulted in the most widespread and complete tieup of railway lines in the Weit in the history of railroad operations. Chicago is the great center of the strike. Operations < n several lines centering
' ! IM T»E KAILR UD YARDS AT CHICAGO
there are completely paralyzed. On other systems trouble at the terminals has made it impossible to handle outgoing or incoming trains, and lo<-al traffic is suspended. On still other roads trains are arriving and departing from suburban terminal stations and all are more or less delayed by the strike of yard and switching employes. The roads more or less affected by the boycott, acc rding to telegiaphic advices, are the folk wing: Nortbern Pacific. l blcago and Northwestern Chicago, Milwaukee and bi. Taul Illinois Central Santa Fe. Hen ver and Rio Graoiia Rock I -.land Missouri Pacific. Vnlon Pacific. Denver and Gult Wisconsin Central Chicago and West Michigan. Big Four. Chicago Great Western. [Chicago and Western Indiana. Chicago and Grand Trunk. Chicago and Eastern Illinois. Louisville. New Albany and Chicago. Southern Pacific. Baltimore and Ohio Panhandle. Velon Pacific. Mobile and Onia Cincinnati. Hamilton and Dayton. A Chicago dispatch says: The first passenger train due to lea e East on the Baltimore & Ohio Thursday could not leave on account of being unable ito couple on an engine. Forty police were sent to the yards. At the request j of the railway employes in the East, twenty-five men were sent out by the American Railway Uunion to day to aid in organizing in that part of the country. These m m are bound for New York and will begin work am mg the employes of the New York , Central. Engineers and firem.n on all roads centering in Chicago are greatly incensed at the discharge of the four engineers by the Northi western Road, and decisive action o i i their part in aiding the general strike is looked for. E. A. Bancroft, representing the Santa Fo pysf'-m. applied to the United States Mith.Titi s in tho numo vs tne receiver for protection to his r- ad against interference by ! the strikers. Four engineers of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway were arrostecharged with intimidation. The American : Railway Union engaged attorneys io defend them. Owing to the strike of I ; the switchmen on the Panhandle, the ' trains of that roa 1 have boon brought in over the tracks of the Fort Wayne road. Threats to tie up the latter road and even the entire Pennsyl ania system grew largely out of this fact. I Action against the Fort Wayne will also involve the hicago a:.d A t n road, an both come into the city over the same tracks. Everything was blocked after midnight last night at ' the Western avenue ya-ds of the Northwestern, Milwaukee and St Paul and Panhandle roads. Every Pullman caron the line of the i Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Rail- , road, was side-tracked by the manage--1 ment of the road, and President Debs !of the American Railway Union | marked down victory No 1. Soon after the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul had given in, a report was received at headquarters from St. Louis I that the Mobile and Ohio Railroad had given in and would side-track its Pullman cars. The two surrenders coming ( together raised the enthusiasm of the ; strikers to the highest pitch, for the news wa; sent to all. of the strikers’ j I headquarters in the oity and the men ' | became more confident than ever that ; | the boycott instituted against the Pull- ! ! man Company would be entirely sue- i ! cessfuL
is the sure symptom. For years Sarah Holstein, who lives Lt 7 Perry St., ■ in 1.0 well, Mass., suffered with falling of the
The entire day crews on the Milwaukee and St. Paul and Pan Handle roads have quit work, and there is not a wheel turning under any passenger car on either road that is not manned by officials. The ir.en are in an ugly mood and violence is predicted. There are said to be only two Pullman cars on the entire Milwaukee and St, Paul system, but the use of these cars has been lb effectual in tieing up the road, at least at the Chicago end, as though there were hundreds. Strikers are threatening to throw those two cars into the ditch. Eight hundred men employed in the Northwestern shops near West 40th street have struck. The Chicago and Northern Pacific Road sent a written call for more po- । lice protection at the Grand Central depot. The message intimated that i the company feared violence both as ‘ to its men and the patrons at the de- i pot. The extra detail was at once granted. About 10J policemen Were stationed along the tracks of the Illi- , note Central and Rock Island Railroads I in the city. Vice President Howard, of the American Railway Union, said that the situation would vet be more war- ' like. Ho added: “We can tie up every road in the country If necessary to ' boat Pullman. We have shown that i we were able to fulfill everv promise : made, and we can make good our word to involve the entire railway systems ; of the West Every branch of organ-i ized labor is now ba k of this struggle^ President Mcßride, of the Miners 1 Union, hai telegraphed us that he call out miners when coal is suptf^^* to roads that use Pullman cars. This will greatly aid us.”
BILLETIXM ON THE STRIKE. Where tho Railway Boycote la Being rii«hr<l br the Vnlon. Minneapolis, Minn. Th.» 1 em . ployos of the Northern UacUic quit work according to agreement. 1 St Paul, Minn. The entire Hue of 1 the Northern Pac tie, wita the exception of the Pacific division, is nowcom- । pletely tied up. Detroit, Mich.—The Grand Trunk, C. <.V W. M. and D., L. A N. are the only roads using Pullman cars, and they are running as usual. Emporia, Kam Three hundred men here, employes of the Sant i Fe, have oleyed tne A. R U. order to strike. Nothing bit mail trains are leaving hero. Omaha—At 11:20 a. m. all was quiet in Omaha and throughout the State, no Pullman ears having boon interfered with. Trouble, however, is antic: pat ><l. Nashville Neither the Lord ville i Nashville nor the Nashi illc, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway ha o experienced any tr. üble in connection with the b ycott on Pullman cars. Helena, Mont—At 9 o’clock last night, all A. R. U. men < n the Northern Pacific Roml went out on an order from President Debs. The entire line in this State, branches and ail, are | tied up. Pueblo, Colo.—Pueblo’s two lodges of the A. IL U. bave voted to carry out the boycott on Pullman sleepers, making it apply to all roads entering here. Employes refuse to couple the sleepers. Tne sheriff was applied to for assistance. Denver—An injunction granted by Judge Hallett against the Santa Fe employes restrains them from interfering with the operators of trains ani enjoins them to obey the orders of the representative; of the receivers in moving, handling, switching and operating all cars and trains of the Santa Fe or under its control. Topeka Ths Santa Fe system is u 'W in the lum ls vs tlio L'nitvd oluto > Court in fact. Gn .the application of the receivers, Judge C. G. Foster of the United States Court this morning signed an order directing United States Marshal Neeley to protect a l property and trains of the Santa Fe in । Kansas. Marshal Neeley is ordere ito ■ arrest all persons in‘erfering with the tra'ns or property of the company. Indianapolis—The Monon train that left this city at milnight has not yet reached ChLago. It is mala up of five Pullman sleepers, and these are held ■ near Hammond. The train that left Chicago Thursday night for this city is still at Hammond, and there is no pro - pect of it getting away. Both the trains held at Hammond are Un'ted States mail trains, and General Counsel Fields telegraphed to know if Judge Baker is in the city, as the company proposes to proceed against the strikers for interfering with the mails. Kan as City, Mo.—No through trains have left here in any directi n on the 1 Santa Fe road to dav. Their train due here at 9 a in. from New Mexico ico and the West has been abandoned. The California and Mexico train from Chicago, is tied up. This train carrie i two coaches from the East and take; ©n a third coach her\ The switchmen refused to handle the third Pullman car anl it was coupled to the switch engine by Supt I ! Roraback. Then the engineer in ; charge of the switch engine declined t<y haul the car. By order of the Geni eral Manager, the train is to bo held ; indefinitely unless the third coach 13 , attached.
TROOPS CALLED OUT. STRIKERS MUST CONFRONT THE UNITED STATES ARMY. Trains Will Be Moved If It Requires All of Uncle Sam’s Forces to Do It—Roads Under Federal Protection—Sweeping lujunction Issued. Fear of Bloody War. A call for troops! That, was a summary of the strike situation Monday , aftci noon. In \\ ashington the affair was ' turned over to General Schofie’d, and it was admitted that the whole trouble । had become a matter for the United , States troops to attend to. The President, the Attorney General, and the । Secretary of War held a consultation and decided that if necessary the entire military force of the United States would be use I to enforce the running of trains. Troops, natkna' and State, says a Chicago dispatch, are the feature of the situation everywhere. The riotous demonstrations have made it Uncle Sam’s fight f. ora now on. His troops have taken the field in California and Cqjprt^°, and they have been asked for o Application was made to Jwponal and State governments for t l ueU Ih e libero at Blue at the : amc true, but the ab eto a-1 with the greater p orißnessinthe mat or, and theSec,,na lfe£iinent wa* immediately ordered cut. Meanwhile the Fifte mth In'a itry at Fort Sheridan wi s placed under arms, an I a special train held in waiting to . transport it to I hi ago the moment instructions were received from Wa-h- --■ ington. There was rioting at Blue Island all Monday morning. Revolvers were frequently drawn, but there was no serious clash until the strikers had gathered in suite i nt numtevrs to drive back both the Unite I stateMii.d Cook County deputies. Toon about 2,<hm) of them charged and the deputies were driven away. Marshal Arnold. who was on the ground in pers m. at onee telegraphe 1 District Attorney Milchrist to take steps to ha e the Fifteenth sent to his as-tetanc , and the Sheriff's force applied to Governor A!tgeld for troops. Anxlou* for Federal Troops The assis ance of the United States troops is what the railroad men have evideatlv been aiming to secure for several day-. Nearly everv move made has been in that direction, :nd they have planned well. Tuesday morning they secured an ironclad injuncti< n in the Federal court that throws the burden of enforc?ing the law and protecting their property upon the national government. The United States Marshal was directed to see to the movement of trains, and un er the in unction he can lie backed up by the entire military forceof the Government. It is a sweeping document that practically includ -s a l trail s, whether they carry mails or not Under it the Um cd States will have Ao act, while the State troops may “‘“'’Jl^callo I up, as they could before. It alt th» power of te>th Fede: al an<PiVMU> Gvve: nm.-nt < t > te>ar upon the riiKjrs. an 1 it i~ b. lieve i will effectu&Uy |ut a stop to :il violence and interference with the running of trains. LAID IN THE TOMB. KcinHlnn of the Murdered President Carnot Now Ke«t In the Pantheon of France. The remains of the late Pres’dent Sadi Carnot, the murdered chief magistrate of France, we e depo ited in the Pantl eon Sunday bv the side of the remains of his grandfather, I^izaro Carnot, the “< rgani er of Viet ry.” The funeral was made the < ccasion tor one of the most remarkable civic and military displays in the history of France. Crowds began to gather along the Champs Elysees. the Hue do BivoF, and about the streets on the He do la C.te from early Saturday evering. People canpel all night, quiet and mnirnful, discussing the tragedy and cursing the assassin. By 3 o'ckck in the morning the streets along the route were < rowded, and by 6 o'clock the Place de la Concorde was 1 lack with people. All classes of )e - ple, young and ol 1. rich and poor, crowded to the funeral rom all farts of Paris and from every department of France. Line-of troops, infantry, cavalry, and artilk ry, were to bj seen on a 1 sides, and mounted orderlies dashed here and the.e bearing messages to and from the t-taffofGen. Saussier, the military govern* r of Pari*. The mourning era lems di-p’ayed on all sides gave a m urnful tone to everything and h Iped to increase the gloom which spicad over the vast assemblage. The crowds about the j alaco and the Place de la Concorde watched wit™u r ^ a t interest the arrival of ti e Carr®! 0 containing the repro-em.. tiv.Jbtthe foreign nations and the : officials of the gove nment, who weteßescorted by d tachments of draj goons. Then came the cabinet ministers, who were respectfully saluted on all sides and who seemed deeply impressed with the solemnity of the occasion. The procession reached the Cathed al of Notre Dame at noon and at 2 o'clock the religious ceremony was concluded, when the procession reformed and proceeded across the river ; to the Pantheon. The funeral car and its escort arrived at. the Pantheon at ; 2:50 p. m. amid the booming of a salute ■ of 101 guns fired by a park of artillery { stationed in the Ja-din du Luxetn- j bourg. At the Pantheon the casket ! was removed amid a trumpet talute and the roll of mull ed drums. In Washington, solemn requiem high mass for the late President Carnot was ce’ebrated in St. Mathew's ch ireh in the prete ce of President Cleveland, the diplomatic corps, and representatives of all branches of the government. Brleil ets. A BROOKLYN family was poisoned by ( ating canned salmon. The Tammany Police Commissioners of New York voted to investigate charges made against officers to the Lexo'w Committee. Herman Levine, a Brooklyn tailor, committed suicide, by throwing himself under a train, because his wife would not kiss him. A franchise has been granted a New York syndicate to build a bridge across the Ohio River at East Liverpool, Ohio, to cost $200,100.
Admitted to be ® i ^ nest p re P" | 1 ® J aration of the J BAKING kind in the marI ket . Makes the I best and most wholesome bread, cake, and biscuit. A hundred thousand unsolicited testimo- H <> nials to this effect are received annually by its manufacturers. Its sale is greater than that of all other baking powders | combined. | ABSOLUTELY PURE. I 5 ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. »< n — o » _ * » ■ -
Picturesque Cornlshmen. Perhaps the earliest experiment In introducing Cornish miners into the southwest mining region was that made in the ’i(>s by the English owners of mines on the Maxwell grant, in Colfax County, northern New Mexico. The cowboys and Mexicans looked in amazement at the immen e, dark, muscular fellows from Cornwall, who were so handy at sparring and wrestling, and who knew absolutely nothing about a f” run.” The cowboys and miners got on£ together with reasonable amity, a nd in later years, with the general mining development in New Mexico, other West of England men have been brought by mining compan'es, or have drifted on their own account, into the mountain region * of that territory. Thus a Briton traveling in southwest New Mexico, on approach ng a litt e hamlet by night, was surprised and pleased to hear the heartiest and jolliest of old English ditties, sung with the breaiest West of England "burr,” and accompanied in the proper places by vigorous stamping and a chorus of manly voices in the same brogue. He had stumbled upon a little settlement of Cornishmen, established a short distance west of Pinos Altos, end known as “Jacktown.” Savage Pacific Islanders. In the effort to prevent the supplying of firearms to natives of the Pacific Islands regulations have just been made by the British high commissioner foi the Western Pacific prohibiting British vessels from carrying more than one rifle and one pistol for each member of the crew and each bona fide passenger not a native. It has also been made an o^ense, punishable by fine and imprisonment, for any pers n to supply firearms, ammunition, explosives, or intoxicating liquors to the natives * f any of the Pacific islands under Eritish control or protection. Unscrupulous traders have have recently supplied the natives of several of these islands with Winchester rifles and ammunition, with the result that the natives so armed have made raids on neighboring islands and slaughtered the inhabitants. A BritLh war vessel on a recent tour of the islands found that a party* of these armed marauders, notorious cannibals, had visited a near-by island and butchered the inhabitants of a large village, leaving every evidence of subsequent canuil alistic practices. Fair and Beautiful Lands Across the Sea Give promise to the ocean voyager of health and pleasure, but there Is a broad expanse of waters to be passed that rise mountain high In rough weather, and grievously disturb the unaccustomed stomach, more particularly if it la that of an Invalid. Moreover, the vib ition of the vessel's hull caused by the me un of the screw of a steamer, a change of w ,er and latitude, and abrupt transitions of temperature, cannot, without a medicinal safeguard, be encountered with Impunity, For sea sickness, and prejudicial influences of air and water, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is a standard safeguard. Tourists, yachtsmen, mariners, commercial travelers, and people bound on a sea voyage or Inland jaunt, should always be provided with it. Incomparable for malaria, rheumatism, neuralgia, sleeplessness, loss of appetite, sick headache, biliousness, and conatipation. Old Enough lor the Rag Bag. A cotton vest made from a piece of cloth woven 113 years ago is owned by John B. Perry, of Dawson, Ga The cotton was woven by Mr. Perry’s greatgrandmother. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally. Price 75 cents IF liberty with law is fire on the hearth, liberty without law is fire on the Loor. —Hill ard. What is morn fascinating than a complexion tinted like the rarest sea-shell and purified by the use of Glenn’s Sulphur Soap? The foolish American in Paris saith in his heart, “It is proper to eat snails.” 14EXP SQ OFFERED every nervous, exhausted, woman suffering from “ female complaint ”or weakness. All pains, bearing-down sensations, and inflammations are relieved and cured by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. Hayd^ntown, Pa. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.Y.:
Gentlemen —Wo cannot sufficiently thank you for the great amount of ben--1 efft my wife received from I the use of your medicine. kMy wife had a bad case of eleucorrhca. and she used T Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- j scription for it. I cannot J f raise It above its value. : have a daughter who : has been poorly over a -.year; she is taking the I ’• Favorite Prescription,” ' and is already feeling bet- ' ter, after taking two bot- j ties. Yours. GEO. W. SWEENEY.
Mrs. Sweeney.
PIERCE CURE OR. MONEY RETI RNED.
Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balm Justly celebrated as the Peerless Liver and Kidney Medicine of America
Freak Among Bankers. i Harry I. Brett, paying teller of the 3 , bhoe and Leather National Bank, ol , . s ten. has asl note which bears r neither seal nor number, while in other : । respects it is perfect. The finding of > ' the note has created considerable interest among banking men. When Traveling. Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take on every trip a boride of Syrup of I igs, as it acts n.ost pleasantly and effectually on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale in 50c. and SI lotties by all leading druggists. Manufactured hy-the California i ig Syrup Co. only. Good Timber for Sheol. M hen the skull of a man who has died of delirium tremens is opened the gas which escapes can be ignited and burns with a bluish, alcoholic flame. kool” KIDNEY LIVER Pain in the Baek Joints or hips, sediment in urine like brick-duai frequent calls or retention, rheumatism. Kidney Complaint f Diabetes, dropsy, scanty or high colored urine, Urinary Troubles , Stinging sensations tvhen voiding, distress pressure in the parts, urethral irritation, stricture. Disordered Liver Bloat or dark circles under the eyes, tongue coated, constipation, yellowish eyeballs. At Druggists, 50 cents and SI.OO size. "Invalids’ Guide to Health’’ tree—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. W. L. Douclas is THE BEST. W Fl Vla NO SQUEAKING. , $5. CORDOVAN, r R£NCH&EMAMELIFDCALK - ^^ S ^- 5 -°PNECALf&KW!®I police, 3 sous. 1 BoysSchc3lshqex • LAD IES • SEND FOR CATALCGUS W« !-• DOUGLAS, DROCKT on, MASS. You can save money by wearing the XV. L. Dougins 83.00 Shoe. Because, we are the largest manufacturers ot this grade of shoes In — o world, and guarantee thelf value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold everywhere at lower prices for the value elven than any other make. Take no substitute. It your dealer cannot supply you, we can. MAreyoulooking fora 0% g ps a H Sjood paying ir.vest-|Jn I ^ ■] I AS gment? If so send for | M I | Il IAH M cat’losue of valuable I fa 8 ns I 1 I a H Secured through us and placed in our handsforg S sale. We will sell you entire patents SIOO toM g SSOOO. State and County Rights $25 to $5000.H HREICHELT & OLTSCHj H eouirmaso- vmtidstati s and foreign patents."® H2 l ”3 s - Michigan st. SouHißendJnd.H Bays our 2 drawer walnnt or oak t !■ proved High Ara Sinreraewlag aachioa i iBSI finely finished, nickel plated, adapted to and heavy work; g isranteed for 10 Tears; with [ /\^9 Automatic Bah bls Winder, Self-Threading Cyllwder Shot tie, Self. Setting Needle and a complete n of Steel Attaelmenta; shipped any where oa • 80 Day’s Triau No mouey required in advance. T 5,000 now fn use. Worid’a Fair Medal awarded machine and attach- ' dents. Duy from factory and save dealer’s and agent's profits. 1 r nrr Cut This Out and send to-day for machine or J&rre fret 3K 11 catalogue, testimonials and Glimpses of the World’s Fair. OXFORD MFC. CO. 312 Ats. CHICAGO,ILL, FREE L-XXFABE BLEACH A FP rec * <tln ß the fact that thonaands of ladies of the U. S. have not used my Face Bleach, oa account of price, which is 12 per bottle, sad \f l **** W ^a * a order that all may jive it a fair trial, I _ will send a Sample Bottle, safely packed, all < charros prer-aM. on receipt of 25c. FACE BLEACH removes and cures alaoiuiely all freckles, pimples, moth, blackheads, sallow. ^B/ ness ’ **' ne T ecxema, wrinkles, r r-xighaeas of skin, and beautifies tbeccirplexion. Address a PIJPPFRT. Deot. E. 6 E. 14th St.. N. Y. City. 4 A PAYS FOR &WS3 aBB in 100 higffgrade A „ — B S R papers in Illinois. SIS M fl IU KFoo.^ %0i |! orweraninsfrt.fi E|E|l ; It 3 times in 1,375 country EIS B , papers for ® sw SEND FOR CATALOGUE. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 93 South J c Her son Street, - Chicago, TIL t. A. I. No. 27—94 IX^HEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, v v please say you saw the advertisement In this paper.
