St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 22, Number 52, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 17 July 1897 — Page 7

WISE WOMEN. Those Who Hoed the First Symptoms of Nervous DerangomentSpecial from Mrs. Pinkham. A dull, aching' pain at the lower part of the back and a sensation of little rills of heat, or chills running - down the spine, are symptoms of general womb derangement. If these symptoms are not accompanied by leucor-

rhoea, they are^S*^'^^ precursors of that . weakness. It is worse than folly jjßK’ I' i to neglect | these symp- I I SB|\li toms. Any wo- MV man of common sense will | J W take steps to Wl cure herself. ' She will realize that I her generative system , is in need of help, and

that a good restorative medicine is a positive necessity. It must be a medicine with specific virtues. As a friend, a woman friend, let me advise the use of Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable N Compound. If your case has progressed so that a troublesome discharge is already established, do not delay, take the Vegetable Compound at once, so as to tone up your whole nervous system; you can get it at any reliable drug store. You ought also to use a local application, or else the corrosive discharge will set up an inflammation and hardening of the parts. Mrs. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash is put up in packets at 25 cents each. To relieve this painful condition this Sanative Wash is worth its weight in gold. Mus. George W. Shepard,Watervliet, N. Y., says : “I am glad to state that I am cured from the worst form of female weakness. I was troubled very much with leucorrhoea, bearing-down pains and backache. Before using Mrs. Pinkham's Remedies it seemed that I had no strength at all. I was in pain all over. I began to feel better after taking the first dose of Vegetable Compound. I have used five bottles, and I feel like a new woman. I know if other suffering women would only try it, it would help them.” Laugh । at the Sun y Drink \RootbQer7lool-Dnni\ tbeer/ / SjQuench^\ ^^ Otbee yyourt/jirst\ . -'k' ' ■ • *. s AS”’ "7- ’ ’ ■ ; [MAIN BVILDINO.] THE UsiVERSITY OF NOTRE DaME. NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. FULL COURSES in Classics. I.etters. Sel- , ii ir cnce,Law,( ivil,Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Courses. Rooms Free to all Student? who have comp eted the studies required fcr admission into the Junior or Senior Year, of any of the Collegiate Coursei. A limited number of Candidates for the Ecclesiastical state will be received at spa lai rates. St. Edward's Hall, f r > oys under 13 years, is un que In completeness of its equipment. The lO7th Term will open September 7,1 807. Catalogues sent Free on arp.kat on t-j KEV. A. MOHKISSEY. C. «. C.. President. STM WTO t ■ ’■ '• ■•- '■ i -- • — - Lb. . . (ONE MILE WEST OF NOTRE DAME I MVEKSITY. The 85th Academic Term Wil! Open Monday, Sept. 6th. The Academy Course Is thorough in the Preparatory, f en’or and Classical Grates. Music Department. »>n tne plan <>t the best Conservatories of Europe. Is un ler the charge of a <omj h‘e corps • f teachers, sud u modi 1 ed on the great Art Schnolsof Europe i rawing ami na n’.lng from Ls- and the antique ilt n gr.ti by and F l yi e-W riVrg taught. Bid dings equip? d with Fir* Estapo. A separate department for children under El Apply lor catalogue to Directress of Academy. ST. MARY’S ACADEMY, Notre Dame P. 0.. St. Joseph Co.. Indiana. S 75 S~SO ■jFasp^y Vmg b/cycle^ 'WesternAwheel Tvorks MAK ER5^4Xj Cf^/CA GO /l l /A/O/S CAT A L9GVE FREE tel CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. |»g Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use time. Sold by druggists. gt

MEET IN MILWAUKEE. NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION CONVENES. Twelve Thousand Tresent at the Opening- Session — Warm Welcome Extended to the Delegates by the City’s High Officials. Throngs of Teachers. In the vast auditorium of the gayly decorated exposition building in Milwaukee tie thirty-sixth annual convention of the National Education Association was formally opened Tuesday night. It was the I launching of an event of dual brilliancy. The people of a city and State that have | ever fittingly responded to the demands I made upon their hospitality and their re j sources paid tribute to their guests in cor- j dial love and greeting. The delegates ! whose presence had inspired the maguiti- I cence of the welcome formed an array that was a composite picture of intellect and of merit. It was an inspiring scene. When the great throngs had pressed through the doorways for more than an J hour and when no more could enter, 12,000 persons confronted the stage. From the edge of the platform, buried behind a wealth ot palms and other tropical foliage, to the furthermost galleries there were tiers upon tiers of fat es. Into every cranny of the immense hall, never before so tested, in-re massed members of the mu!- i tittide. In the long rows of chairs that ■ extended the length and breadth of the! place below were the educatiosa! forces,) and all about them and in the galleries ; were the people that had assembled to ' greet them. On the platform were distin- j guished public men, speakers and guests?! 'Teachers from the little red school i houses in the rural districts, school- ' ma’ams from the big cities and educators । of national reputation from the universi- i ties and famous institutions of learning ■ met and mingled with each other. They assembled til listen to suggestions for bet ter educational methods, to tell tvhat thev knew of the working of the present sys terns', to learn and to advise, and, from a

T' 7 - 1 v<\ - *l' ' v -«-> ' ' '"’L ■ ■ - * ''■ 'll mg ws' THE MEETING IN THE ENI’OSUTON IE I!.DING.

vast or limited experience, to add something to the efforts of the b st educators to insinuate rather titan fori e know Sedge into the minds of the young. First General Seisioo. The first general session was opened with prayer by Rabbi S. Hecht, and after the singing of "Amer: a" by life immense male ( horns, composed of over voices from the lending musical societies of tincity, which v. as lustily applauded by the 12.W0 tinchers in attendance at the gadi ering, the addre:-es of weic< me and re spouses theieto were delivered and met with a kind re< option from tin* audience. A numl < r of pleasant things w ere - aid by Gov. Scofield, Mayor Ranschonbergcr. State Superintendent of Public Instrn tion J. Q. Emery and li. O. R. Smfeti, superintendent of public schools in Milwaukee, in welcoming the visiting educa . tors to the fair (.'ream .City. The ad dress of Mayor Rauseheuberger was particularly calculated to tickle the fancy of : the visitors, and called forth a generous round of applause. The responses by A. E. Winship of Poston, J. L. Holloway of ) Arkansas, Aaron Gove of Denver and Al bert G. Pane of Chicago vote also in a happy vein ami calculated to make the ■ Milwaukee people fool good over the great success of this year's convention of the । Educational Association, as well as content with the manner in which (hey ar- I ranged for the reception of the immense i throng es people now being entertained in j the city. After‘tbo'o formalities had been gone । through with Vrecdont Charles It. Shin-; ner delivered his annual address, and NewtoimS. Dougherty of Peoria followed him with a paper on "The Study of His- ; tory in Our Public Schools." Bmh wore masterly < (positions of the t< pies treat- ■ ed, and t< te ed a fitting intellect mil finale to the evening's program. Mayor Rans henberger only oelu.ed the sentiments of every Milwaukeean when! he said ex cry citizen was proud of the fact that his native heath had been se- । looted as the rendezvous of the 20,G00 bright pedagogucs. I he addresses by Gov. Scofield, Principal Siefert ami State Su- i perintondent Emery were brief and ex- I tended to the visitors a hearty welcome to ’ the city and State. In .isspomling to those words of welcome Prof. A'. E. W inship, of the American Institute of Instruction, said it was an honor to extend thanks to the people ’of Milwaukee in the name of the institution he represented, the oldest teachers' association in the world. Deliberations Begun. After another musical selection by the male chorus the deliberations proper of the convention were begun with address-!-es by President Skinner and Newton C. Dougheity. 'The topic dwelt upon by President Skinner was “'Die Best Education for the Masses.” Prof. Skinner referred to the development of educational institutions in this country, until now it is no longer necessary for any person to go abroad for his schooling, lie placed

great stress upon the importance of properly educating the children of the masses in the light direction, to the end that they shall become fully equipped for exercising the duties of citizenship'and fulfilling the obligations due their country and society. Newton C. Dougherty of Peoria followed President Skinner in a timely address on "The Study of History in Our Public Schools.” The second day’s session of the National Pouncil of Education, which is recognized as the senate of the Educational Association, attracted a large assemblage of distinguished educators to Temple Emanu-El in the morning and afternoon. "I’niversity Ideals” was the subject of thi co papers read at the morning session. Prof. A. T. Ormond, of Princeton University, read the first paper. President j .lames H. Baker, of the University of I Colorado, presented the second address, j He said that the university represents the ) philosophy of a people at a given epoch । and their political, social and industrial , tendencies. The third of the series of addies; es was delivered by Prof. Joseph I Swain, of the University of Indiana, and formerly of the faculty of Stanford University. At 2:30 in the afternoon the annual meeting of the Board of Directors of the N. E. A. took place. Tieasurer J. C. McNeill ot West Superior reported that the total income of the association forthe year amounted to $20,540.87, and thg total expenditures to SIO,OIHIO, leavini a cash balance of $502.71. During ilia meeting of the Executive Committee o* the Elba a I ionnl Association it was > ported that St.iiOn had been added to tin* treasury during the year, and that the re< • serve fund of the organization uouj ) amounts to over SOO,OOO. | FATAL WRECK IN PITTSBURG. ! Street Cars Collide, with Severe Injuries to PaMsenncrM I’our ptop!e were fatally injured and eighteen or twenty cdhers were hurt in a ! street car wreck Tuesday night on the Forbes street line of the Consolidated Traction Company at Pittsburg. The wreck occurred on the Soho hill. An Atwiod streit car had gone mma halfway down the hill xvhen it jumpe 1 ibe track. Ch sclj following it came an open

summer <ur with .-. t-nibr. both d<msei packed with p«. plc. Beb :e the se mm. train emild be : ' -i it crashed mtn the ! derailed ear. H ;i: d.y had the first - i lision happened bt fore a third ear. hem Uy 'laden, (line down the hill at fu'l speed and forced its way into the wrecs alien' 1 . It was the s<-< "let crftsli that did UK’S’ of GOVERNMENT GRO? REPORT. Favorable Weather Hc'ps Growth it Northern and Western Regions. 'Die following crop bulletin is based on the ’ eports t.f the diiecturs of the cli ■ mate and crop settions: In tile States of the central valleys lake region and N. England the wee? lias b ‘-m very favorable to crops, the ’ h : gh, temperature being especially favor- ; able to corn. In the Southern States the ‘ conditions have been less favorable, tin excessive heat ami absence of rainfall proving mjnrions to most crops. On the Pacific c >ast the week has been very favorable. In the j rineipa! corn States of the central valleys corn has made rapid growth, but in the Southern States it is suffering • for rain, in some sections seriously. Excessive iidns in Missouri have retarded j cultivation and the crop is still backi ward in Minnesota, In Texas, while the I late crop is suffering from drought, t^i , early planted is matured and a gon. ' yield assured. Cotton is needing tn t 1 over the greater portion of the cottr e 1 . It. The bulk of the wheat cri t is now LiviOd south of iho fortieth pq r alicl. T :t t! latui de of the central portions <f Imim —. Indiana and Ohio. Ex . -ive :T. < Imv.- r< tarried harvesting in Mis—uni and caused further damage to timt w shook. Good progress with har-ve-tmg I a~ is ell made in Nebraska and Nor.hern Indiana, and harvesting will ! soon login in Michigan. 'Die crop is nmttirmg m. tin North Pacific coast,’and . in California. where harvesting is progressing rapidly, the grain is shrunken less than w; s anticipated. Spring wheat , has cmitrnm:. to make favorable progress — Told in a Few Li nee. 'Die twentieth annual convention of th American Elint Glass Workers’ Vniori was held at Pittsburg. Richard Adams, a wealthy Moweaqua 111., farmer and an old soldier, died from I injuries leceived in a runaway. ' Mrs. R. F. Willey is dead at the hmm : of her daughter, Mis. Lester F, Bahr of ; South Bend, Iml. She was 97 years’ of ! 'Die wild gas well north of Andersor ! Ind., which caught fire Saturday night is still burning. and a great deal of dam ■ age is being done. David Perkins, a veteran of the Mex. can war ami a member of Company p l Fifty-fourth Illinois Veteran Volunteers’ | during the civil war, is dead, aged 72 j years.

What Do the Children Drink at the Table ? Coffee and tea are injurious; they get tired of milk or water, and then* is but one other thing to give them, that is, Graln-0, a new food drink that takes the place of coffee ami tastes so much like it that even the parents can’t tell the difference. It is the opposite to coffee, for instead of breaking down the nervous system it builds it up, instead of making one bilious it keeps the whole system in a healthy condition. Grain-O is a delicious table beverage made of pure grains, having the rich seal brown color of Mocha or Java. Graln-O is not a medicine, but a food drink that every one likes, ami every one of the family can drink without the least injury. It costs only about onequarter as much as coffee. Sold by all ! grocers, 15c. and 25c. per package. | Two Sides to Their Tale of Woe. Sixteen persons, part of a company of 311 Southern negroes who in ISOG left for Liberia, Africa, to found new homes, have returned to this country. They say the promise made to them, that on their arrival they would be given good farming lands and tools, were not fulfilled. They give a graphic account of their hardships and say that half the colonists who aceouipanied them to Africa, died of fevers. The survivors became so poor that they could not provide coflins for their dead, who were buried in trenches. The Liberian vice consul at New York says that the trouble with most of the colored people who went to Liberia was that they expected to find it a paradise, where one might get along without working. The hardy and in dustrious ones stayed In the country, but usually the others came back. '1 lie nien had a tendency to loaf around Monro? in. the capital of the Black Republic, after landing, ai d contracted fevers there that made them unlit for work in the interior. A Noted Young Ladies' Academy. The forty-third school year of St. Mary's Academy, Notre Dame. Ind., begins September (ith next. But few educational ItisiHutlcns in our land can show so time honored alid sueeessftll a career. Parents w ill tiud in st, Mary's Academy a school in which the bram hes of higher and useful knowledge are : Mp-rt ssfully taught, as well ns a deHghtfully safe .'ind b<.ili!;fid retreat for tin - lm ttiiat:< n of those ennobling vir- i lues w' ■ H g, jo a.iorn Ihe female i iharu-hr. Xi w M tone liii t'nt on Due of <;,<• r< < ent marine inventions is a multikeel v«s m 4. a form of ship ! with a flat bottom, provided with five I or sev, ii kwls. 1 he inventor claims ' great! r < ntrying capacity and im reas i ml floating {tower, with higher speed, i than any oiln r form of ship. The blow am! stern are spoon shaped, the vessel h: •; two stern jests mid two rudders, linked b'-et! i r. so as to move simul taueomdy. and two propi )|. r* it is . also claimed for ibis model that it can Im* turm-d in its own length, and will. In sm<H*th wnt« r. *-t< it equally im well k whetbi i ruimh ~ abend or astern. The Xew Xavi Hill ■. \s tm-V.-a "l .-"lat! mul ' l'. tin* \V. : I . a. s'.T lb I*< : : ■ g \nusC.,. .\,*w Han n. I • ■ ' I >t.. Whrn fired j (MHI i-.umis Io ■H* wpian ueh. T > build j n gun that would withstaml such tromcnil.ms -tr was a gn at un b rtakis '. but , the Wi.i i • -ti l ; - w ith their vast aa I j xar'ixl exi- ritme mid wonderful plant. - islvl in 'm tiu* oat a gun mtirely snbsfa : in en ry way to the navy. I.rki* al! Wm. hi r rill - t’m y s.ioi : t,> i perfef.'m. Work sm *.,tidy am] en ib and j area stung, scrviccnhlo arms. The Win- ; * free upon reques!. H s < ostl v Eil tlc «Jokc. I'i: .1 : a 1w - ■ col 'giuiiig r.-uis on the sidewalk ia front of a (.'ala s । Me.t store, a woman ] i -kt 1 it up ::n l took it to Ilie storcke-qs n He liiinz it In tb.c wmdow ab ve a s ren ting. •'Found l'h:s purs** c..ntaiiii::g a Inigo sum cf mnm y." Win n he can. - ' down !'.. * next umining. the purse w: s g and ihere was a big hole in hi> pin: • glass wiml.iw. Try Gra ii-O! Irv Grain-O! A<k your grocer to-day to show you a pmkage of GRAIN o, the new 'fooddrink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without inj iry ns well as the adult. All who try It. like it. GRAIN-O has that rich sea! brown of Mocha or Java, lut it is mad > fr *tn j ure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. i; the ] rice of coffee. 15e. and 25c. per package. Sold by all grocers. Portugal’s Fifty Papers. Tlcre are fewer than fifty newspapers published in the entire kingdom of Portn-- !. tin - popuh.tic 11 of which is nearly 5.0 n.i.C<i. or about the same as that of Penasylvania. in whivb the total number of newspapers published is 433. To Colorado Springs and Pueblo — Burlington Koute via Denver. A through sleeping car to Colorado Sj.rings and I’u.Ulo, ?m Denver, isattnthed to Burlington Route daily train leaving Chicago 10:30 p. in. Oilice, 211 Clark stieet. During the past week Caribou, Maine, has produced a i>ig with two perfect heads. Bethel, Vt., a calf that looks like a bulldog with a calf's hoofs, and Stonington, a chicken with four legs—but unfortunately for the dime museum men all these freaks are dead. Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Is a constitutional cure. Price 75 cents, A new eraser, adapted to be used on the finger, does sot interfere with the free use of the finger in writing, drawing, etc., and is “always on hand.” Alabaster Is scarcely more Immaculate than the complexion beauti etl with Glenn's sulphur t oap 1 Hill’s Hair and Whisker bye, black o. bnn.n. 50c. Each square inch of the human skin contains no lews than 3,500 perspiration pores. FITS Permant nly Cured. No Ids or nervous* ess after first <lsy’ uc of Or. Kline’s Great Nerve Ke- “ orer. 'end for Fit EE »2.mt trial bottle and treat mc On. Lt. H. KLIXE, Ltd., 931 Atcb bt., Hiuladelpuru, 1 a.

Shake Into Your Shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain ) cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mail for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. New Metho I of Color Printing. A new way of printing colored pictures upon porcelain has recently been tried with much success in Northern Bohemia. By tihe new process one stone or die only is required for print- ) ing, no matter how many colors are j to be used. A number of stencils, however, are cut to fit over the die, and through these stencils the respective colors are rubbed over the die by means of ordinary rollers. In this way the di - * is discovered with two, three or more colors necessary to produce the colonsl print, and when all the colors are applh*.! to the die the picture is printed up< n a piece of silk pajHT, over which a d r y roller is passed. 'l'he silk paper is then plneed on the article to be decorated, which is jiLhssl into the kiln, where the paper is burned away, the picture remaining on the porecJatn article. This process will make it possible to sell decorated china at a very much lower price than formerly. My doctor said ! would die, but I’iso’s Pure for Uonsuniption cured me.—Amos Reiner. Cherry Valley, HL, Nov. 23, 'l)s. ('orrupt ion of HIOI7I Is in tlie mass of the cultivators of the earth is a phenomenon of which no age or nation has •*ver fttnU-hed an example. Wr«. Winslow'* Soothino Stuff for Children h ut; i ng . suitvDA t!ie gums, reauceg inflammation, aliayN । am, curea wind colic. 25 cents a Ima tie.

AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WF. ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THS EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “ CASTORIA,” AND “PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK, I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, cas the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same fit at has borne anti docs now ““ ° 7l, every '■'tr the fae-si mile si ^r> a tare of wrapper. Tkisis the original PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” which has been it etl in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty y- trs. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is Air kind you, have always bought 071 and has the si gnat tt re o f wrappr r . Ao one has authority from t*ie to use my name except I'he. Centaur Company of which Chas. 11. Fletcher is President. - . March 8, 1597; Do Not Be Deceived. D > not cn .a: ■ r the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute whi* 11 some d: .-t may oiler you (because he makes a few more pennies on it i, the inco'dients of which even ho does not know. “The Kind You Have Always Bought’^ —- BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF Insist on Having Ihe Kind That Never Failed You. iMI C'NIAUR COM RA NV. 7T Mu^AAY STREET. NEW YORK CITV. .... ....... imi» : SISK HEADACHE! "‘V.«». I Poisonous matter, instead oi being; thrown out, is reabsorbed into f the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue, it | £ causes congestion and that awful, dull, throbbing, sickening pain. | I STIMULATIHS THE LIVER, I f Making the poison move on and out, and purifying the blood. ’ | The effect is ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS. i ii cse sensitive organism is especially pi one to sick headaches, DO » I | fioW&welfet'D NOT SUFFER, for you can, by the use of CASCARETS, be i Relieved Like Magic, ™ I ‘ Use the Means and Heaven Wil! Give You the Blessing.” Never Neglect A Useful Article Like _ S APOLIO

I -- ' NEW PRICES Columbia Bicycles The Standard of the World. ; j COLUMBIAN REDUCED TO I Best Bicycles made. a V 1896 COLUMBIAS reduced to RG Second only to 1397 models, vV 1897 HARTFORDS reduced to RR ! Equal to most Bicycles, V *» ' HARTFORDS reduced to i Pattern 2, “ V HARTFORDS reduced to Afi Pattern i, AV HARTFORDS reduced to QA Patterns 5 and 6, v V Nothing in the market approached the value ! of these Bicycles at the former prices; what are they now? POPE MFC. CO., Hartford, Conn. Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer; by mai! from us for one 2-cent stamp.

Found Reasons for Approval. There are several cogent reasons why ths medical profession recommend and the public prefer Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters abovs the ordinary cathartics. It does not drench and weaken the bowels, but assists rather, than forces nature to act: it is botanic and? safe; its action is never preceded by an inI ternal earthquake like that produced by a* drastic purgative. For forty-five years past it has been a household remedy for livery stomach and kidney trouble. American Cheese Abroad. American cheese was known in Europe before 18G1, but the product was not so highly esteemed as the European article because, being made by] th? wives and daughters of Americam farmers, the quality was variable. Neglect of the hair often destroys its vitality and natural hue, and causes it ton fall out. Before it is too late, apply Hall’s Hair Renewer, a sure remedy. The true life is the life we live within, ourselves. BOILS, BOILS, BOILS They Came Thick and Fast-Till Cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. ! “My brother had terrible boils on the ( back of his neck. As fast as one would 1 get better another would come. He be- > came very much emaciated, and begaai * taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. One bottl* tnsTte h 4 yclmn ho i had tai* V»1 V MXZC •It O •» UO ».’7*l^ . cured.” Carrie D. Ervin, Mound City,; Illinois. Be sure to ge^ Sarsaparilla Hood’s Pills '"ir** sck headache. 25 cents. “yS’BICYOLE Vou can earn a HIGH GRADE BICYCLE by ; writ nn adv, rtlsrincnts at h im?. Fi r the best advert semont salted to stimulate ourbusiness, wc will give a High Grado Bicycle. i Address for part culars. with 5 cts. to cover postage, LOUISS ItAISTJET’-J-Elt dt SON, FVorf Wayne, Inelitina. 1

«CURE YOURSELF! l «e Big G for unnatural discharges, inflammations, irritations or ulcerations of mucous membranes. Painless, and not artrinlO. gent or poisonous. "] field by “* or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid.' for ?I 00, or 3 bottles, f 2.75. . , _ _ Circular sent on reriuoat. CT^EAR^ A BICYCLE GOO B>ccn<! Hand heels. AH /ll Good as new. $5 t* I $ ZaV / JOFX SIS. I! ^h Grade '*.♦ I [* ,b ■’ *' fully pu.iraDtred. €ll ' /•' 1 //A V Jf\ \' nt > #C3. Special Clear* I t?- JgZ J jLtB V A n * t, (l Shipped anyI . 3 whe re on approval. eX z ; j t n We will give a responsible ap 4 . W/ / i4r3L /A a in each town free uaeof sample wheel to introduce theai. Our ■ j '***'• reputation is well known threurh- . t ther untry.Write at once for our special fiTer i 1.. S. MEAD CYCLE CO.. Wabash A Teana. Chicana, DI. ~j7 ii. OSTRANDER, ...OPTICIAN... Office with Spaulding & Co., Jewelers and Silversmiths, I CORNER STATE STREET AND JACKSON BLD. nn< n fi M H. H. WILLSON & CO., Wa* f § Si kw H DC. Nochargetill patent li a « S U obtained. 00. page book free. | C. J*. U. No. 29 -J. VVTHEN wbitins to advertisers v ’ pleas® say you law the advertisec3tt£) j in this paper.