Bloomington Courier, Bloomington, Monroe County, 16 April 1895 — Page 2

CRAVENS BROS., Pubs. BLOOMINGTON, - INDIANA. John Bull is evidently mightily tickled with the Ailsa, and his joy seems to be justified Sy" the performances of this water witch.

Civilization applauds the Mikado. He has been great in war. He can afford to be generous in peace. Dr. Buchanan, the wife murderer, has been sentenced to death again, but he Is still serenely confident of liting to a good old age. He seems iack a proper respect for the decisions of the courts.

A French writer states that among recent kleptomania culprits caught in Paris, were a Russian princess, French countess, an English duchess and a daughter of a reigning sovereign. The same writer says that as a rule the more distinguished offenders are let off on the payment of a round sum for the relief of the poor, and. when the shoplifter is known to be rich the sura exacted rises to as much as 10,000 francs.

SAYED FROM NICOTINE.

tittle Charley Fosleman ttecd Tobacco Since Babyhood, aud His Father Smoked and Chewed for the Past Twenty Years Both Sot Free at Asheville, N. C

NAPOLEON LOVED HER

NO MISTAKE ABOUT HIS REGARD FOR JOSEPHINE.

The steadiness of British consols ar.d French rentes furnishes the best indication that Great Britain and Franca Will find a peaceable solution of their African dispute. The acquisition of African territory by these two nations has hitherto been easy and inexpensive. It would be the height of folly for them now to go to the cost and loss of a war over a boundary that neither of them has explored. The wiser plan would be to take a larger slice of Africa and divide it equally.

The British lion , appears to have gained nothing by his recent African experiences except the philosophy of the ostrich. He. fancies that by excluding Americans from his dirty little commission to determine the compensation to be paid : by Nicaragua to banished British subjects he has kept us "out of it" so far as a settlement of the affair is. concerned. Before he has proceeded very far In the enjoyment of this delusion he is likely to find that we are very much "in it," indeed.

The style of robbers who torture their victims in addition to robbing them is becoming too comiron. Lynching is airways, to be deplored and discountenanced, but if a band of citizens should get hold of a robber who had held an old man's feet to a red hot stove to extort money from him and should hang that robber to a tree without prolonged legal formalities it is believed that the public would not feel an indignation that could not be allayed, or mourn as those without hope. President Crespo of Venezuela seems to have made himself disliked Trtrv

-generally in Europe. He has snarled

nimseii up now with Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Belgium. This In itself might be regarded as a bid for the favor of the United States, but the chap lacks discretion. Possibly he could thrash them all In detail, but the difficulty is that they are crowding him all at once. Perhaps he will withdraw from the quarrel at a critical, moment and 'leave them to fight It out among themselves.

Perhaps the most important news

Item of the day is the announcement 'from the New York board of health that the general mortality from diphtheria has been reduced forty per cent from the successful application of antitoxin. The rate will, of course, be reduced still lower as the use of the serum becomes.more eeneral and skillful

One of the most faal diseases has been

practically conquered and the number of lives that will be annuallv savpd as

a consequence will be almost incalculable.

"Is that true?" asked the News man at Pelham's Pharmacy, as he laid down a letter in the presence of a dozen interested customers. "Yes, it is. It was written here on one of our letter heads and signed by J. C. Fogleman." promptly answered the proprietor. "You know him, don't you?" "Certainly. He lives at No. 5 Buxton street. We all know Fogleman is a man of his word." "I am glad to hear It. There are so many misleading statements published nowadays that when this came in this morning's mail I came right over to ask you about it. I read the letter three times, but you read it and you will agree with me that It is almost too good to be true." This is what the letter said: "Office of Pelham's Pharmacy, 24 Patton avenue, Asheville, N. C, Sept. 12, 1894. Gentlemen My little boy, now 8 years, began chewing tobacco when 3 years old by the advice of our family physician in the place of stronger stimulants. Four or five weeks ago I began giving him No-To-Bac, which I bought at Pelham's Pharmacy, and to my great surprise, and, it is needless to say, my delight, No-To-Bac completely cured him. He does not seem to care for tobacco and is very much improved in health, eats heartily, and has a much better color. "Finding such remarkable results fynm tha nco nf 'Mn-Tn-'Rae I beftan

after using

I tobacco in all its various forms for a ' period of twenty years. t nioosiiKs in mnWni? this DlRln

JL tCMXC j"istnwv ... ----cr statement of facts for the benefit o others. (Signed) J. C. FOGLEMAN. "Yes, I know it's a fact, and it's one of the strongest, truthful testimonials

! I ever read and it s true, lor x aum ! him the No-To-Bac." i "What's that?" asked Chief of Police i Hawkins, whose manly form, attired ' in the new police uniform, like Soloi mon in all his glory, came to the door. I "Why, No-To-Bac cures!" ! "Cures? Why, I should say so. I i hia naoj it mvsplf. It cured me."

"Would you object to making a statement of the fact for publication?" "Certainly not," and the Chief wrote as follows: "Asheville, N. C, Sept. 25, 1S94. Pelham Pharmacy I bought one box of No-To-Bac from you some time since. After using No-To-Bac I found I had lost the desire for tobacco. I wa3 cured. "I have used tobacco chiefly chewingfor eight (8) or ten (10) years. "H. S. HAWKINS." Everybody looked astonished and wondered what would next turn up. "Suppose it don't cure?" some one asked. "Then they do the right thing when No-To-Bac won't cure." "What's that?" asked the News man. "Every druggist in America is authorized to sell No-To-Bac under an absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. No-To-Bac is made by the Sterling Remedy Co., general offices in Chicago, Montreal, and New York, and their laboratory is at Indiana Mineral Springs, Indiana, a big health resort they own; its the place where they give Mud Baths for rheumatism and skin diseases. You ought to know the president, Mr. A. L. Thomas, of Lord & Thomas, of Chicago." "Yes, of course I do. We get business from them right along, and they an as good as gold. Well, give me their advertising books and I will make a statement in the paper about what you have told me, for I know there are thousands of good North Carolina people who are tobacco spitting and smoking their lives away, and No-To-Bac is an easy guaranteed cure, and they ought to know it." Bookkeeping in a taw School. Th faculty have decided to establish ft course of bookkeeping in the Yale law fcchool, land have engaged an expert accountant as instructor. This is an entirely new feature in law instruction.

6he, However, Was at First IudifTerent and Probably Malrled Him for Adventure Her Letter Describing the First Sentiments.

.' There , is general alarm all around the great lakes lest the effect of the .Chicago drainage canal, which is being so rapidly pushed, shall be to lower the general level of the lakes and thus seriously injure most of the harbors. The Cleveland chamber of commerce has adopted resolutions requesting the secretary of war to appoint an engineering commission to investigate and report upon the probable effect of the Chicago enterprise. It is certain that that the canal, if it effects the desired drainage and purification of Chicago sewage, will take an immense volume o" water out of the lakes.

' A well-known European engineer who has been exploring the Panama Isthmus for many years reports that he has ' discovered a route along the Toto, . Javiesa and Tuyra river by which the two oceans can be connected by a ship canal at a total cost of not more than $48,000,000. The most important work on the route would be a tunnel under the Cordilleras two miles Ions, which could be built for $11,000,000. Only two tidal locks, one on each side of the "i mountain, would be required. The line is the shortest yet proposed, and the Engineering News thinks it deserves investigation.

A Cuban paper has an article glorifying the Spanish navy, and lauding ft as invincible and unconquerable, and adds: "lt It be known that our navy is the same today as that of Lepanto, Trafalgar and Callao." At Trafalgar, the Spanish fleet, combined with that . of France, greatly outnumbered the English fleet in ships and guns, but was nevertheless completely routed, nineteen of its thirty-four ships being captured by the English. Then there was the "invincible" Spanish Armada, in the time of Queen Elizabeth, which was completely destroyed by an inferior English force. If the Spanish navy Is the same today as it has always been . . in history, it would give Uncle Sam's navy very little trouble.

New Zealand has invented a unique method for the prevention of intemperance. It proposes to pass a law to the effect that any person convicted of being an habitual drunkard shall be photographed at his own expense and a copy be supplied to every saloonkeeper in the district. The dealer sujp;-'iag liquor to such person if. :o be fined.

Since 1890 Turkey has bought 700.00C improved rifles and 200,000,000 cartridges made of smokeless powder are stored in different parts of the country. The Turks are saying "little, but watching every move of Russia with renewed suspicion.

An Orator Editor. Among the retiring members of Congress perhaps one of the most remarkable is Mr. W. J. Bryan of Nebraska. During the four years of his career he has proved himself a natural leader of men. In the fight for a lower tariff, and particularly for free silver coinage, his eloquence com-

HON. W. J. BRYAN, Editor World-Herald, manded the closest attention of the generally boisterous House of Representatives and won applause from millions of people in all parts of the country. He declined to run for re-election as Congressman, but over 80,000 voters of Nebraska declared their preference for him as United States senator in the election of 1894. As the legislature was, however, overwhelmingly republican, the big vote was only an empty honor. He does not, however, entirely retire from public life in leaving office, as he ha 3 become editor-in-chief of the Omaha WorldHerald, which is one of the largest and most progressive of western newspapers.

OCEAN ODDITIES. The gulf stream is 110 miles wide and from 400 to 600 fathoms deep. Dr. Young estimates the mean depth of the Atlantic at about 16,000 feet. The first author to attempt an explanation of ocean currents was Kepler. The sea cucumber is nothing but a thin skin and a very capacious stomach. Sea water Is" said to contain all the soluble substances that exist on the earth.

The meeting of Napolaon and Josephine was an event of the first importance. His own account twice relates that a beautiful and tearful boy presented himself, soon after the disarmament of the sections, to the commander of the city, and asked for the sword of his father. The request was granted, and next day the boy's mother, Mme. Beauharnais came to thank the general for his kindly act of restitution. Captivated by her grace Bonaparte was thenceforward her slave. A cold critic must remember that in the first place there was no disarmament of anybody after the events of Oct. 5, the only action of the convention which might even be construed into hostility being a decree making emigrants ineligible for election to the legislature under the new constitution; that in the second place this story attributes to destiny what was really due to the friendship of Barras, a fact which his beneficiary would like to have forgotten or concealed; and finally, that the

j beneficiary left another account in j which he confessed that he first met j his wife at Barras' house, this being j confirmed by Lucien in his memoirs, i There are hints, too, in various eonj temporary documents and in the cir- ! cumstances themselves that Barras was j an adroit match-maker. In a letter attributed to Josephine, but without j address, a bright light seems to be j thrown on the facts. She asks a female

friend for advice on the question of the match. After a jocular introduction of her suitor as anxious to become a father to the children of Alexandre de Beauharnais and the husband of his widow, she gives a sportive but merciless dissection of her own character, and declares that while she does not love him, she feels no repugnance. But can she meet his wishes or fulfill his desires? "I admire the general's ccairage; the extent of his infornvttion about all manner of things, concerning which he talks equally well; the quickness of his intelligence, which makes him catch the thought of another even before it is expressed; but I confess I am afraid of the power he seems anxious to wield over all about him. His piercing scrutiny has in it something strange and inexplicable that awes even our directors; think, then, how it frightens a woman." The

j writer is also terrified by tne very j ardor of her suitor's passion. Past her

first youth, how can she hope to keep for herself that "violent tenderness" which is almost a frenzy? Would he not soon cease to love her, and regret the marriage? If so, her only resource would be tears a sorry one, indeed, but still the only one. "Barras declares that if I marry the general he will secure for him the chief command of the army of Italy. Yesterday Bonaparte, speaking of this favor, which, although not yet granted, already h;.s let his colleagues in arms to murmyring, said: 'Do they think I need prote.don to succeed? Some day they will be only too happy if I give them mine. My sword is at my side, and with it I shall go far.' What do you think of this assurance of success? Is it not a proof of confidence arising from excessive self-esteem? A brigadier-general protecting the heads of the government! I don't know; but sometimes this ridiculous self-reliance leads me to the point of believing everything possible which this strange man would have me do; and with his imagination, who can reckon what he would undertake?" This letter, though often quoted, is so remarkable that, as some think, it may be a later invention. If actually written later, it was probably the Invention of Josephine herself. What motives may have combined to overcome her scruples we can not tell; perhaps a love of adventure, probably an awakened ambition for a success in other domains that the one which advancing years would soon compel her to abanuon. She knew that Bonaparte had no fortune whatever; she must have known likewise, cn the highest authority, that both favor and fortune would by her assistance soon be his. At all events, his suit made swift advance, and by the end of January he was secure of his prize. On Feb. 9, 1796, their bans were proclaimed; on March 2 the bridegroom received his bride's dowry in his own appointment, on Carnot's motion, not on that of Barras, as chief of the army of Italy, still under the name of Bonaparte; on the 7th ho was handed his commission; on the 9th the marriage ceremony was performed by the civil magistrate; and on the 11th the husband started for bis post. In the marriage certificate at Paris the groom gives his age as 28, but in reality he was 27; the bride, who was 33, gives hers as not quite 29. Her name is spelled Detascher, his Bonaparte. A new birth, a new baptism, a new career, a new start in a new sphere, Corsica forgotten, Jacobinism renounced, Gen. and Mme. Bonaparte made their bow to the world. The ceremony attracted no public attention, and was most "unceremonious, no member of the family from either side being present. Madame Mere, in fact, was very angry, and foretold that with such a difference in age the union would be barren.

dislocation of the shoulder or wrencaing of the arm to ,et hold of the dress too far back. It is round that it is just as effective and much more comfortable to keep the arm perfectly straight. This dress clutch is especially adapted to jthe stout. If the arm goes too far around it is not only tiring, but it tends to change the centre of gravity, and the woman wabbles along somewhat like the soft-shell crab scooting for two places at once that arc at opposite ends of tho earth. It is the same principle that causes a boat with two oars on one side and one on the other to deviate from a straight course. Then there is the pose with the left arm akimbo same attitude as your cook assumes when she says she won't stand it any longer, but will leave at once, except that she does it with both arms at once In this pose the left hand with a little bit of the dress rests on the hip, pressing closely against the side. The elbow sticks out into the middle of the street, sweeping all comers befjre it. Long steps often accompany this pose and the poser walks very fast. It is sometimes thought that the pressure upon the hip will relieve the agony of tight lacjng.

ENGLISH RAILROAD CARS.

EviSedaoDtn)

Or, in oilier words, Hood's Sarsaparilla, is a universal need. If good health is to be expected during the corning season the blood must be purified now. All the gerrns of disease, must , be destroyed and the bodily health built, up. Hood's Sarsaparilla, is the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye to-day. Therefore Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best medicine to take in the spn'Dg. It will help wonderfully in cases of weakness, nervousness and all diseases caused by impure blood. Remember

"My little girl has always had a poor appetite. I have given her Hood's Sarsaparilla, and since I have given it to her she has had a good appetite and she looks well. I have been a great sufferer with headache and rheumatism. I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla. I am now well and have gained in strength. Sly husband was very sick and all run down. 1 decided "o give him Hood's Sarsaparilla and he began to gain, and now he has got so he works every day." Mrs. Annie Dunlap, 385 E. 4th St., S. Boston,' Mass. Get only flood's, because

Hood's Ds

Sarsaparilla the Only

True Blood Purifier

TO HOLD UP YOUR SKIRT. The Most Graceful Way of Accompllshins; This Nernssary Action. The prettiest dress clutch, many think, is the plain, everyday "perpendicular grip." The v.vm is allowed to hang straight down by the side and the dress soized. In this grir, there is no

American Ideas Are liclnji Adopted in Their Construction. As much as twenty years ago Pullman cars were introduced into England and have been run on a fewtrains on one or two roads ever since, but they have never been popular, and have been used mainly by Americans and other foreigners. The English people prefer the. single compartment, and will pay much more to have one compartment reserved for two or three persons than for seats in a parlor car with all its comforts of freedom of movement and privileges of smoking and reading rooms. The new corridor car retains the sechrsive feature of tho compartment. Pullman dining and sleeping cars have also been tried, but with indifferent success, so far as the English travelers are concerned. The "wholesale herding together" is the objection. One company had a number of third-class cars built on the American model, but even the third class passengers wouldn't ride in them, and they had to be reconstructed. The eorridor coaches differ slightly in construction cn different railways. They are oniy used yet on the principal through trains between the chief cities of the kingdom, as between London and Glasgow or Edinburgh, or on the southern routes for the continent. The two classes, first and third, are still retained, and are likely to remain. The second class has been abolished in recent years. The new coaches look almost exactly like ordinary American cars from the outside. They average sixty feet in length, run on two bogie trucks, and are connected at the ends by vestibuled platforms, but, instead of being entirely open inside, with a gangway down the middle, they are divided into compartments, and a passageway runs alongside one side of the car. All the compartments open into this corridor, and thus communication is obtained from each compartment through the length of the train. Each first-class compartment seats four persons, two on a side, and each third-class compartment is made to seat six persons. There are in each car one compartment for smoking, one reserved for women and children, a lavatory for men and one for women. There is a small compartment in the middle of some cars intended for storing the hand baggage of passengers. The compartments are accessible from the exterior of the car by single doors, as well as through the corridor, which itself has doors along its length to permit of speedy ingress and egress. The windows of the corridor are extra large and afford excellent facilities for seeing the scenery. Cars of similar design are on use on some continental railways, but the English newspapers give full credit to the "American idea" of their cars. They say that these compartment corridor carriages give all the safety and convenience of the American car, with many added comforts and conveniences. All the cars of both classes are handsomely finished and upholstered.

The Great KIDNEY, LIVER & BLADDER CURE. AtPrurrclsU, 50c A (St. Advico Tumplilct tree.

Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binshamton, N. Y.

OR. Kl LMCR'9 ttzjte.

Ely's Cream Bairn QUICKLY CVKKS

OLDinHEAD

3

c

Price SO Cents.

Apply Balm into each nofitrtl. Ely Bbos., SSWarren St., N. Y.

THE PLOWSHARE : i litems week ly, practical, and with special features of interest Prints Sunday sermons of Myron W. Haynes, D. D. One dollar a year. Sample copies 5 cents. Try it. Address, "THE PLOW SHAKE, a Sixty -third Street, Chicago. The SCALPER 21-pasre?, 2& All about makinpf money In Grain and Stocks liy "scalpinpr the markft" on mxrg-ins of 820 to 11,000. Best method yet. All scalpers make money. LANSING & CO., 112 Qu.ncy St., Chicago.

"COLCHESTER", SPADING BOOT.

BEST IH MARKET. RESTTX FIT. BES T IX WKAJUNO QUALITY. The outer ortap sole extends t lie whole length down to the heel, prelect inx the boot in dijr Kin? aud in other hard work. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR TUEM find dont be put off with inferior goods.

COLCHESTER. RCBtlES CtV

Second-Hand

NERVE FOOD

Ir. J. A.

Send for a package of the

'amous ana Pre-

Iouh Krmedv Free.

aicCUll, 3 and 5 Hubbard court, Chicago.

From World'svFair Buildines. Farm

ers' Complete Barn

Onthts. Dimension B t Btx;fc,Sheet.inB,Boards,Floor1 H Vffl bCS ing. Wooden Trusses. CorraIvillell liT 1 &'atl Iro" Rooting. Statuary JU 111 Kr ft anc Ornamental Figures. All as cood ns new. !Sow is the time for FARMERS TO BUILD AND SAVE MONEY. Write us tor estimate. Columbian Exposition Salvage Company Exclusive Purchasers World's Fair Buildings. Office, Service Bldg. , Jackson Park. Chicag.

Patents, Trade-Marks.

Examination and Adrica as to Patentability of Invention. Send for " Investors' Guide, or How to Get a Patent." PATBICS OTABSSZX, WASHINGTON,. 8. 0. Vk 1 HITIttTinfl Tfcw&ag. P. Simpson, Washington. Vk I I NTK DC- NoJtttVsfee until Patent obi X AlUll M II tained. Write ropte-ventor's Guide,

1 1 A wr- ni i rnr- nn uinnr nnin rr.

nflvc tuu nvc.un munt uuwo r

If so a " Baby " Cream Separator will earn Its cost for you every year. Why continue an inferior system another year at so great a loss? Dairying is now the only profitable feature of Agriculture. Prooerly conducted it always pays well, and must pay you. You need a Separator, and you need the BEST,- the Baby." All styles and capacities. Prices, $75. upward. Send for new 1895 Catalogue.

i

THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO.,

Branch Offices : ELGIN, ILL. -

General Offices: 74 CORTLANDT ST., NEW YORK.

WORD BUILDING CONTEST S PRIKRS.

GRAND PRIZE-FINEST DICKERING PIANO.... $750.00 2d Prize Sidebar buggy 150.00 3d Prize Pneumatic Tire Bicycle. .... 85.00 4th Prize A Diamond Ring. 75.00 5th Prize A Moline Farm Wagon 60.00 5 PRIZES TOTAL VALUE .$1,120.00

CATARRH IN CHILDREN.

Proper Hrtmrhing Is Certainly the Uest Safeguard Againat It. Both from obstructions caused by incipient catarrh and from habit, young children breathe through the mouth. If parents would make it an axiom of the nursery and the playground, "Breathe through the nose only," thr cure would be well begun. Let the lesson be repeated, enforced and iusistec upon I'.nvil it becomes second nature with the child. Let it be more familiar with the daily routine cf exercise and as necessary as the meals. Set it as a part of the child's education that he shall walk a certain number of rounds at the playground at a rapid rate with his lips tightly closed. Make the opening of them a demerit and the completion of the task in accordance with the directions a merit. Increase the distance and the speed daily. When a boy or girl can walk at a rapid pace, or better, run three hundred yards breathing only through the nose, and repeat the performance thrice during the day, there need be small fear of chronic nasal catarrh. Even when the disease has become seated in a young person it may be eradicated by persistence in, this exercise, which as everyone knows, iucreases the lung power and benefits the circulatory system at the same time. It is a very simple remedy, but, persevered in, it is a perfect one. In persons of any age a very efllcacious remedy often curative, if used regularly, is salt water snuffed into the nostrils night and morning. A strong solution of sea salt (or even common table salt) in water should be kept in a bottle, and when needed a sufficient quantity diluted with wiu-m water, so that the liquid will have only a slight salt taste. A large glassful :1s sufficient, and the salted water should be used at blood heat. It can be used at any time, though it is best to take it before retiring aud immediately upon rising in the morning; but never before ing out Of doors.

The above prizes are offered to those irtio construct or form the largest number of words out of the letters found la the prize word

R-E-P-TJ-T-A-T-X-O-N

First The first prize will be won by the largest list, the second prize by the next largest list and so on to the fifth. Second The lis of words must be written In ink plainly, must be alphabetic-

: any arranged, uumutim, mbcu uj mo I contestant and sent In before May 20, j when the contest closes, i Third Words used must be English ! and must be found in the dictionary. If two words are spelled alike only one : can be used. Abbreviations, obsolete words and names of persons or places are barred. Lists purposely stuffed not coni sldered. Fourth The same letter must not be j used twice in one word, except the letter i T which may be used twice in any word, ! as it appears twice in the prize word.

UNDER THESE RULES:

Fifth Each contestant must become a subscriber to the Omaha Weekly WorldHerald for one year, and must send his dollar to pay for his subscription wW his list of words. Sixth Every contestant whose list contains as many as thirty words, whether he wins a prize or not, wWl receive a portfolio containing handsome photo engraved copies of sixteen famous paintings size of each picture 10x1:1 inches, with history of the painting. Seventh In case tw: or more prize winning lists contain the same number of words the one that is first received will be given preference. Eighth Prizes will be awarded and shipped to winners within ten days after the contest closes.

! The Omaha Weekly World-Herald is the great free silver coinage family paper of ths northwest Its editor is Hon. W. J. : Bryan the champion of silver, who has just retired from con- ! gress. It is published in two parts, one of eight pages on Tues

day, and. the other or lour pages on .Friday of each week, hence it is almost as good as a daily for news. Its ag-ricultui'al page, edited by G W. Hervey, its literary department, its household articles and its short stories make it a welcome visitor in any household. Subscription price $1 00 per year. Address WORLD-HERALD, Omaha. Neb.

allfnin1a Is scarcely less attractI aillUlIila ive ,han the Winter I " U Slinimer season there You i - . -:niay doubt this. It is i explained and verified in our illustrated : book "To California and Back." For

tree copy, address CJ. X. HIHOLSO, O. P. A., atoitatluoi'li JUXff., Chicago.

1"7E? PER SQUARE I JJ Iron Roofing Wb nro sollinc Golvnnizoil

OorrURfttHl Iron IlooUnK from W orld'n uir HuH linns at nbove pru-o. S o liavt on timid only oUiur Huildiug Material. CHICAGO HOUSE WRECKING CO. 3005 Sb HALSTED ST. (Sii blocis north Oa&sStoek Yards).

LOCAL

AGENT

S

WANTED

JForOur Standard Slaps, Atlas.. Kncyclopprtia, Books Art Production, Ktc, 2Sc. to 815COO. SEXO "R I.XST. On receipt of ?S cents wo will mall ample of ur 1BW Wall Map of U. S. and World, 6 loot long. Beantifully Colored, No Experience Needed. Sells at Big-lit. A 3oKleit tipportantty tor Kurti workers. RAND, McNALLY & CO., 1CO-174 A1AMS ST.. Chlca HI.