Bloomington Courier, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 May 1895 — Page 2
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CRAVENS BBO&, Pub. BbOOMIXGTON, - INDIANA. In the country the boys will wear the Trilby bathing suits this summer altogether. A Boston paper calls Japan the "Ireland of the orient." Not guilty; there is nothing green about Japan. The long-distance telephone between Paris and London has over 200 calls a day. At the rate of ?2 for each call it pays. The teacher of a cooking class in Chicago eats what her pupils cook. There is an example of sublime faith and confidence. Of course a mere earthly jail will not hold Schweinfurth, but he seems to have an extraordinary objection to it, just the same. II the north pole ever is discovered by a Chicagoan we will wager that it will have a trolley wire strung upon it within a week. has sent the price of oil skyward "to stimulate the production of crude oil." But too much stimulation is always followed by katzenjammer. Uncle Sam has just paid an old war claim, but then it was not quite so nearly outlawed by the limitation as' the French spoilation claims. Now that the cruel war is ended we suspect that an investigation will prove that the Chinese have been doing all their fighting with gunpowder tea. ; Cornelius Vanderbilt will pay $75,000 for the fire place in his new Fifth avenue palace. Cornelius is the only one who should get hot about it. though. There is no money available to run the Nebraska penitentiary, and it may have to be closed. There may be times when a criminal can really enjoy poverty. George Pye, of Chicago, tried twice in one day to kill himself. If tenacious resistance to annihilation is significant he must be a near relative of Restaurant Pie. . Emperor William has invented a new. tipple which he calls "'violet champagne." It probably produces the same old pink tinge, however, when used for painting purposes. Aspiration is nine-tenths inspiration, for without earnest thought there will be no inflow of ideas that will leave their mark on the pages of time or make us better or nobler beings. Thieves got $35,000 from a bank at FifHintown, Pa., last week. They were smart enough not to tackle a New York bank. In all probability the cashier would have been too quick for them. A Boston paper says: "Slaughtered cattle are -beef, slaughtered sheep are mutton, slaughtered hogs are pork; but what are slaughtered horses?" In the cheap restaurants they are 10 cents a cut. A Washington paper says that Senator Blackburn is extremely popular in Kentucky "because he is a splendid mixer." We would sooner believe he was popular there because he didn't mix at all. A Washington correspondent says that President Cleveland has been photographed oftener than any other chief executive. It must be admitted that Grover has earned a great reputation for dealing out negatives. Abraham Rimes, of Fulton County, Ind., who has been married and divorced ten times and has just married his eleventh wife, is, if we are not misinformed, still in the prime of life and ha3 a great future, if not a perplexing hereafter, ahead of him. We never know what we are capable of doing. Our latent capabilities lie fallow until aroused by the needs of the hour. There are.no great leaders until the necessity for them arises. Without wars we can have no great generals. But when the crisis arrives there will always be someone to arise superior to the situation to lead his fellow men or unravel the skein in which they have become entangled. The Mexican cotton-boll weevil has already begun its depredations on Texas cotton. It seems likely to do more than anything else to reduce the cotton acreage in this largest cotton-producing State. Last year 15 per cent of the cotton crop of Texas was destroyed by this weevil. It works on the bolls while the crop is growing, and poisons have little effect on it. The damage to the Texas crop is estimated this year at 25 per cent. Measures will be taken by adjoining States to keep this destructive enemy out of them. Special reports to the manufacturer's Record show a decided increase in the southward trend of population, illustrated by large purchases of land in Georgia, Arkansas and other southern 3tates for western and southwestern colonists. Oskaloosa, Kas., has a town ordinance prohibiting chickens from running at large. If it can stop its roosters from crowing at unearthly hours in the morning by passing a stringent ordinance it will have solved a problem that has vexed the world for ages.
SHE CAN NOT DRESS.
bad? Burdett-Coutts I the Richest Woman Jn London, hut Lurks Taste. Although Lady Burdett-Coutts has never been at any time able to lay claim to beauty, yet there is probably no woman in the world who has received during the course of her long life so many offers of marriage from royal princes, such as the duke of Aumale down to cranks. Indeed, suitors of the latter class have been so numerous that on several occasions she has been compelled to appeal for protection to the police. She is probably the wealthiest woman in her own right in the United Kingdom, the basis of her fortune being the celebrated old Coutts bank. Few people have made a more noble use of money, her name having figured at the head cf every charitable and philanthropic enterprise, either as founder or principal subscriber, for more than half a century. It was by way of recognition of this philanthropy that Queen Victoria conferred upon Miss Burdett-Coutts a peerage, since which time she has been known as the baroness. A few years ago she finally decided upon a matrimonial venture, selecting as her husband a young American born in Brooklyn and naturalized as an Englishman, whom she had nursed through an attack of sickness contracted while distributing relief in her hehah' to the sick and wounded at the close of the last Turco-Russian war. Her husband, who is about fifty years her junior, has been permitted to assume her name, though not her title, and received on his wedding day from his aged bride an annuity of $250,000 for the remainder of his life. Since then she seems to have taken a new lease of life, and in spite of her advanced age is more active and youthful in her ways than ; ever light pink, pale rose, and other delicate shades being the colors which she principally affects in her toilets, all of which are quite indescribably ugly, old-fashioned, and unbecoming. These little eccentricities, however, in no wise detract from the fame and popularity which she deservedly enjoys as the most charitable and philanthropic woman of her era. New York Tribune. TRAINS SPARROWS TO FIGHT. Diversion to Which John Chinaman Has Given Himself In Gotham. There is a use for English sparrows which the average American citizen of sporting proclivities has not so far discovered. It remains for the Chinese in the United States to direct attention to a novel purpose to which cock sparrows may be devoted somewhat in compensation for their otherwise useless existence. That John Chinaman somewhere from some source inherited considerable sporting blood, though he may not cut much of a shine himself in a street brawl with urchins and sandlotters, is pretty generally known. That he has a wholesome respect for American justice is also a familiar fact. Cock fighting is prohibited; dog fighting likewise. So, in order to have just as much fun as he would at a cock or a dog fight, John has made experiments with cock sparrows and the result is said completely to fill the measure of his happiness. The fighting sparrows are trained on the same principles as game cocks; their wings are clipped, and their spurs fitted to gaffs as keen as the point of a needle. They can soon be trained to make as good fighters as two Spanish roosters, and those who have witnessed an exhibition of this sort declare that, next to a ratkilling, no Chinaman will admit that anything can surpass in interest a cocking main between two educated sparrows. Commercial Advertiser. SUGAR TRUST IN WEST INDIES. The Production Is Increasing:, but the Consumption Seems to Be Slow. Sir Julian Pauncefote, the British ambassador, has furnished to the department of state a copy of a circular issued by the West India committee of London concerning sugar production. The ambassador explains that it is not to be regarded as an expression of opinion by his government, but only of the committee's views. The circular calls attention to the fact that the sugar industry, beet as well as cane, is passing through a crisis of the most serious description, and expresses the hope that in attempting to provide a remedy the various governments should avoid taking any steps which may aggravate the crises instead of relieving it. It is shown that while the production is increasing at the rate of 1,000,000 tons per annum, the consumption grows slowly at the rate of only 250,000 tons per month. Naturally prices are depressed, and the bounty system is ascribed as the cause of this state of affairs. Therefore it advocates the abolition of the bounty and the stimulation of consumption by the reduction of the duties levied on sugar, which are excessive in Europe and prevent the people as a whole from using sugar. Washington. Star. The .Joy of God. As the flowers follow the sun and silently hold up their petals to be tinted and enlarged by its shining, so must we. if we would know the joy of God, hold our souls, wills, hearts rind minds f-1.il 1 before him whose voice commands, whose love warms, whose truth makes fair our whole being. tJod speaks for most part in silence only: if the souls be full of tumult and jangiing voices, his voice is little likely to be hoard. -Alexawler Meclareu. A i-ale IMseovt-ry. U. Charles Margot, of the physic:!, laboratory of the University of Ge leva, has found that by rubbing glass with an aluminum point clea metallic liaes are obtained, which far. not be removed by vashlr.g, v.o ir.m.t lio.v often repeated.
RACES AT GALESBUEGr.
THIS SEASON'S UNPRECEDENTED RUNNING EVENTS. To Be Inaugurated by the State Bicycle Meet The Great Trottine Meeting In August and September Followed by the Breeders' Events. (Galesburg, 111., Correspondence.) LITTLE MORE than a year ago the Galesburg race track existed only in the imaginations of a few men. Many will recall the lengthy correspondence and the many negotiations which were necessary before C. AV. Williams decided from move to Galesburg Independence, la. On April 3d of last year the track was staked out. In the past year, what was once a pretty pasture land has become a fair grounds of national repute, for it was here on Galesburg' s dead level track that pretty little Alix reduced lie trotling record to 2:03. The first year cannot said to have been more than an ex periment, but the result was so satisfactory that the Williams' race track j is one of the solid institutions of the j beautiful college city of Central Illinois. The outlook at the present time is very j flattering, and it seems as though many records must fall here before the sea- j son closes. j During these spring days the grounds present a lively appearance. If you ask any of the trainers how they like the ; track their invariable answer is that it ! could not be better. Mr. Williams has j that reputation among horsemen of be- i ing able to keep a track in as perfect j condition as anybody can. The track j was heavily manured last fall. About a j month ago the manure was worked in- ; to the soil so that the ground is very springy and elastic. Carpenters will soon begin work on ; additional grand stands, for the crowds j of last year more than taxed the pres- j ene seating capacity and the management expects a much larger attendance this year. It is not yet decided in what ' shape the new stands will be built, but i it is certain that Mr. Williams will make j them conform to the architecture of the . other bindings. The first event which will draw the ; public attention to the Galesburg track this year will be the state bicycle meet ' to be held June 19, 20 and 21. where $2,- ! 500 will be given away in prizes. The ! first day there will be eight races with i premiums worth $600; the second day $1,000 will be divided among ten races, ! and the last day $900 goes to eight i races. Besides several local championship events, the program Includes a quarter, one mile, two mile and five j mile L. A. W., Illinois division, cham- , plonships. Thousands of wheelmen and j many thousands of spectators will be ; present at that time. ' The next attraction will be the Fourth j of July celebration, which, as Mr. Wil- ; liams does things, will be elaborate and j complete in every detail. It will be the ; day to entertain the people from all the j surrounding country. ! Then comes the great trolling and ! pacing meeting. Aug. 26 to Sept. 7. For j this meeting thirty-eight of the $2,000 ! stakes filled, showing the enti les of over j six hundred trotters and nearly four j hundred pacers. These animals repre- j sent about all the leading stables hi the j country. Monroe Salisbury, the owner : of pretty Allx and other fast ones, has ; about thirty-eight entries here. A few i of the entries in the fast slakes will j give an idea of the quality of the horses ! to be gathered here at this meeting. In j the 2:10 pace there are such individuals as Vera Chapel. 2:1014: Belle Mahone. ! 2:10; Colonel Thornton. 2:11; Coleridge, 2:09; Albert E.. 2:10: Fidol. 2:10; ; Frank Egan, 2:104; Ethel A, 2:10V4: Ga- : zette, 2:09; Ella T, 2:12; and Fleetwood, I 2:12. In the 2:12 trot we find such names : as Cicerone, 2:12; Senator A, 2;13&; ; B. B. P.. 2:13'; Kentucky Union, 2:11; William Penn. 2:12Vs; Senator Conkling, i 2:12; Miss Nelson, 2:12',i; Klamath, ; 2:12; Mambrino Queen, 2U3V4: Beuzet- ; ta, 2:12; Jack, 2:12; Aunt Delilah, 2:t2't i and Nina Medium, 2:14',i. Besides the : advertised stakes numerous specials will be arranged later, which will in- i elude many of the record breakers of ; the season. The fact that the Williams track Is going to be the speediest in the country will draw such horses here for time races. Immediately following this meeting : will come the Breeders" meeting, which will run from Sept. 9 to Nov. 2. The program contains 13S races with $300 ; purses. Entries close Aug. -6. The trainers are just beginning to let the horses step along a little, and some good speed has been seen. The Allerton family are doing line work, and if they hold up through the ; season, several of them will gain enviable records. As Mr. Williams goes : down the track with some one of this ; string hitched to a "bike," the boys all want to stop their work to see him go by, for he has some fine steppers. Allerton, who holds the stallion record to a high wheeler, so far has worked well and shows great promise of lowering his record of 2:iy,i. Ferron and Falfa also do fine work. There is a 2-year-old sorrel pacer, Rob Ililiiard, a full brother to Falfa, by Allerton, who is moving about as nice as any horse at the track. . Ab. Fullagar of Omaha is here with ' n promising string of eight or nine. The leader is Nina Medium, 2:11, who is : entered in the ;15 classes. He has a green pacer. Attempt, which is showing 1 great promise. The others also are well ' worth watching. Ab has this string entered in about $8,000 worth of stakes. Within a few days W. A. Boggs of Lebanon, Ky., has located here with ! Major Cleland, 2:30V.; Norvadine, 2:25; Col. Thornton, 2:11, and four or live green ones. i W. A. Hogan lifts a 4-year-oUl bay ' mare, Bell Pilot, who can speed a :mJ0 clip, ouartered at the track. j George lU-citiclil will shortly put his j famous pacing dog Spoil, who holds the j world's record on the eighth, the quar- j ler, the half and the mile, to regular work at the track. i Frank Lawrence is quartered at Hie J track with Star Jjawk, -:1V, Jessiona, 2:2l',4; B re t wood . , 2 : 34 V4 , and a promising black stallion with a mark 2:2i,.4. Chas. Shank has Frank Htickney's horses this year. Several strings have applied for quarters at the Williams track and will be here in a few days.
to
ABOUT PATENTED ARTICLES.
The aii.-itake of Charging I'micy Trices Tlir NMV lllCHK. A new article of domestic hardware has been put on the market whi-h is a staple in all families and competes wUh a similar utensil which is sold for 15 unci 20 cents, says the Engineer. The price of the new article is $1. Before it can be in demand and generally adopted to the displacement of the old utensil, a great deal of work will have to be done, which is very much hampered by the prohibitory price put upon the new goods. The number of persons who will be willing to pay the price of four or live of the old style goods for one of the new style will not be large, we i think, and a wiser policy would -iave fixed a lower price. This leads us to say that every year there are large numbers of similar articles put mi the mar- : ket, which would have a larger sale if t they were sold at mercantile prices. By this we' mean a consideration of the ' first cost of the goods when ready for delivery to jobbers, the jobbers' profit ; and the retailers' as well added, for these things are considered by buyers, ! both wholesale and retail, before there I week we went into a store where a Ml- j ! ter was for sale, l.'pon asking the price ! I of one of half a gallon capacity, we were i informed that it was $20. It was a plain : easting with no fittings or fixtures and i with some porus material inside of it of no particular money value. The castings may have cost f.O cents, and an outside figure for the cost of the utensil would be $1, yet. $20 was the price to the buyer. We demurred at the price and gave the same reasons for so doing that are given above, but the seller's argument in favor of the high price was that It would filter some fabulous number of gallons of water per day. This had no connection whatever with the cost of the goods; a frying-pan will turn out r00 pounds of cooked material a day and a 23-cent faucet will permit thousands of gallons of Mater to pass through it daily. These are the functions of the articles sold; they are expected to be efficient, but there is no reason in this fact for adding 2.000 per cent to the cost of them. The fact that articles are patented leads many persons to feel that the public expect to pay stiff prices for such things, but we believe this to be erroneous. Nowadays those who have money to spend consider prices very carefully, and If they are unreasonable they simply go without the goods. REMEMBERED IT IN TIME. If l'eter Daly Had Shot He Would Have lieeu Oath-Hound to Kilt Snakes. Peter Daley. St. Bernard's "own" councilman, tells the snake story of the ' - season. Here it. is, in Peter's own pleasing style, according to the Pittsburg Chronicle. "Well, you know Mike Scott and I started out yesterday to shoot ducks. There were several more of the boys with us, but we had the guns. Say, Scotty's no slouch of a shot, I tell you. He can give Billy Case cards and spades. Well, we didn't see a blamed thing to shoot, although we went all around the ice ponds. It .began to grow monotonous, and I swore that I would eat the first thing that I shot. Not live minutes later, as we were walking along Bloody run, one of the fellows called to me and said: 'Come here, Pete, and see the bunch of snakes.' I hurried over to where he was, and there, sure enough, was a round mass of wriggling, squirming snakes. At different points around the ball a head and a forked tongue could be seen sticking out. One of the boys said: 'Shoot into them, Pete,' and I raised my gun and was just pressing the trigger when I happened to think about by oath. "Well, I couldn't eat snakes, and I had to put down my gun. The boys all gave me the laugh, and then Scotty pulled up and let both barrels go right into the bunch; Well, you ought to have seen the sight. He killed every blamed one of them, and there must have been at least twenty-five. Most of them were shot to pie-es. but we counted seven that had been left whole. Tiny would measure about two feet and u half each. Well, good night, fellows; I'm going out alter ducks again in the morning and want to get to bed early. So long." And the genial Peter took his departure, leaving his hearers to cogitate upon the tale he had unfolded. IS BILL COOK COMMONPLACE? j Stuilv of a Fumou Outlaw ly :i Prison ; i SiiiM'riiitciulfnt, Sui'dinti-mlf-nt Moliityrc cf tlio Al- j liany County vAMiitf ntiary has lx-on ob- ! perviiitf Kill t'ouk. the yntiiifr and mueh-:idv-rtise(l iuuImw I'imiti tin- west, and is not much imiin.-pscd with him, writes an Albany ciiTC.i)iiii!ent f the Xftv i York Sun. Me Hays that he has just I jut Cook on n shirt machine and h is j busy cutting out wristbands. He finds ; Cook to bo nervously eager to conform ! to a:! the rules and earn as much com- j mutation as possible by ffootl behavior, j As for any latent wickedness, the sup- f erintetideiit says it is not in him. He i is merely a very ordinary youth, stolid I even to the verv,e of stupidity, whose achievements have been largely in the imajnimiUons Mf the Indian Territory marshals and western newspaper writers, who lnive pictured him in places he never visited doing: deeds he had no nei ve to perform. Superintendent Mclntyre says there is nothins of the hero or the villain about Bill Cook. He is a very eonimonphiee erimin.-tl. There are others in the batch of western Hoarders whom he will watch closer. A Haiiil.v Koiim. In a pretty country house 1 nished for a bride one of tn tely fur-slet-phijj rooms is all in white and violet with touches of Koid. The wall paper has it v. hite ground strewn with hunches of pltrph' violets collle-ctcd hy delicate ;dlt festoons. The rutr is of a mossy preen with a purplish shadow. The woodwork is enameled wiiilp, the furniture is .f while enamel with brass ornaments, ihe bedstead is of brass, and the window curtains, bed cov-r, bolst'-r, and little spreads and covers of while orpamly covered with purple violets and Kieeii leaves. Yet the orainly washes withoei fading, as everything in so dainty a room always should unlet s the owner is a millionaire, and even then on would probably take more pleasure in living; in it if sure that It could renew its beauty by contact with sun and soup water, which always seems no n ueh cleaner a way of beiujf lie an than dry ecourina.
ONLY ONE AND THAT IN JULY. Excursion to Colorado. The Croat Korli Island Route will soil tickets cheap for this excursion to Denver in July, anil you should post yourself ui once as to rates ami routes. Send by postal card or letter to .Tno. Sebastian, O. 1. A.. Chicago, lor a beautiful souvenir issued by the Chicago, Hock Island & Pacific 11 y, called the TouriM '1 eacher," that tells all about the trip. It will be sent Iree. It Is a gem, and you should not delay in asking for it. Jno. Sehastjan, G. P. A, Chicago. Intended' for the Church. Mr. Dolman in the Ladies' Home Journal states a fact that may not be generally known regarding Mr. Thos. Hardy namely : That the author of "Tess" was intended by his fond parents to enter the church, and that he compromised with them by becoming an ecclesiastical architect.
Good Way to Help. That is a very charming expression used by Lady Harris, speaking of Sir Augustus to a representative of the Princess. "The way I help my husband most," she says, "is by keeping, as far as possible, worries out of his life." How much they suffer when nervous, j weak and tired. Nervous prostration is a lingering, i racking, living death to those afllicted, I though wholly imcomprehensible to j others. The cause of this condition is 1 impure and insutiicient Blood. J Make the blood pure, give it vitality j and it will properly feed the nerves and
women
make them strong. Hood's Sarsaparilla j becomes natural and refreshing, the cures nervousness because it acts di- j hands and limbs become steady, and rectly upon the blood, making it rich j soon " life seems to go on without efand pure and endowing it with vitality fort," and perfect health is restored. Such and strength-giving power. No other j is the work which Hood's Sarsaparilla medicine has such a record of cures, j is doing for hundreds of women today. Hood's Sarsaparilla Makes Pure Blood.
The Great KIDNEY, LIVER & BLADDER CURE. At TOruccUt, 50c 4: I. Ail vice Pamphlet free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. HIGHEST AWARD WORLD'S FAIR. The BEST PREPARED SOLD EVERYWHERE. JOHN CARLE & SONS, New Yoric. PATENTS JRADE MARKS Kxamiuation and Advice as to Patentability of Invention. Semi for "Inventors' Guide, or How to (Set a Patent. PATRICK CTFaHHKLI., Washington, 1). C. LITTLE 6IANT LAMP HOLDER ! No More Upset Lamp. Pits any lame with a siainlunl. Sent. fre by mail Willi circular for Cents. Agents Wanted. SPECIALTY J1F0. CO.. Skiiueatetes, N-Y. WALL ABOUT THE
Oft KILMER'S aaav
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FINANCIAL SCHOOL Do you -vvant to understand the Science of Money? It is plainly told in
COIN'S FINANCIAL
This is a glorious opportunity to secure one copy or the entire series. SENT POSTPAID
No l of our seric Is Bimetallism and Monomktai.i.ism. lv Archbishop Walsh of Dublin, iieiautl. .Seventy eight pages. Au able Uocu-lKt-ut; -.") cents. No. '.'. Coin's Hand Hook, by W. H. Harvey. Deals with the elementary principles of money uud slut is tics. 1'urly six paes; 10 cen is. No. 3. Coin's Financial School, liy W. 11. Harvey. Illiistruteil 150 paxes and Ct illustrations. It simplifies the financial subject so an orthuarv schoolboy can understand it. It is the icxtbook or tin; ihasse.s. absolutely reliable as to facts and figures, ami the most ititercstiim aiiil enterinininK lool on the subject of money published. Price, best edition, paper, sewed, cover two rotors. 50 cents, t'opular ediliou, .;') ceuis. Cloth. Sl.iKi. No. 4. A TALK OP Two NA1TONS, OV W. K. Harvev. A novel of 302 ikirch. A love story that (lives the hi.-tory of demonetization, and depicts the evil spirit and influences that have worked the destruction of American prosperity. A fascinating and instructive booU. It holds the reader with wonderful interest from beginninu' to end. Popular edition. 'JS cents; extra quality paper. Ml cent: in cloth. 81. 00. No. '5. CHAr-TKUs on Sii.vkk, by Judge Henry G. Miller of iliicajro. Ill) pages. A book suitable Tor all thoughtful readers of the money question. Paper only, ' rents. No C. Up to Date. Coin s Financial School ( ONTiNi t:i). bv W. II. Harvey. Illustrated, 200 panes and Ml illustrations. It is a history of coin, the little llnaucser, since delivering his lectures in Chicago. It is dedi
GE0RGB GURRIBR, General Agent, 94 S. Clinton St., Chicago, 811.
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like Tvioiiuiir with its t.erWt .-liiimte. ! . mire na cool. Us Mum-ran.: mountains. t tr,-tn full of trou . u- .rlmum- M-n.i-i v. Hi grand unit pat .ral. Colorado pml.atily ha- no equal " health resort. Kor Ura man ..i woman !,.. I.ai l.riri: in the Im I ot a l.uV li'e ami who n. eu ami hmps ror a change of air and M-eae, . ' .", i ,,.!,, pure water ana tho he.-l of hotel arcomtmHintSfXte are the I hiw essentials Uia t ,u l e f.'uH. Tl-' e Tn on .-ulv.Ht.lo inb. I8IU. MM ueUnK ot the NATIONAL KDUCAIlOSAl. ASSOCIATION "111 he lieln in DENVER,
. ,,,, t ivit.v l.-nl'TI.' wtiif-h ii i the lest line from Blin uir nu.i.i." ' . . .. i-1 I Hiul'iviii I e miIi! to any "lie applinp for them, not it very i t.i.nimit) to take a n it-1- the mountain. M vcrv io I""1"". i, , i.. i, , I mi. .-or j H i- lime I lurk flow -" iumoii line- in - ...i.- ..v... ,-railo Sfiiiur!-- M.init'1 I he Caiilen oi met, on, i mi; tlti- iet .i! or the e e.u -1 in. rate. n-,i.e. ...... uiK im . ..... ........... ,nui..tt ,. C li. J H " Chici!i In XU.I37
Important Change of Time. The new service on the Nickel Plat road go's into effect on Sunday, May l!Hh. Throe trains will be run in each direction, leaving Chicago going east at 8:05 a. in. daily except Sunday, 1:30 and 9:20 p. m. daily. No change of cars between Chicago and New York in either direction. Also through sleepers between Chicago and Boston. Superb dining cars are a feature of the new service. Rates always the lowest. City, ticket office, 111 Adams street. Telephone main 389.
Output or a Naphtha Fount. A new naphtha fount of remarkable yield has been struck near Baku, Theoutput, which is ejected with uncontrollable force, 4s computed at about 15,009 tons per day. AH the available reservoirs have been filled and the oil Is now being run off into the Caspian sea. So far all attempts to batten down the outrush have been fruitless. The thick iron stakes used in these endeavors are shattered like matchwood. The smallest twenty grains. humming-bird weighs Thousands write that they suffered intensely with nervousness and were cured by this great medicine. The buildingup powers of Hood's Sarsaparilla are wonderful. Even a few doses are sufficient to create an appetite, and from that time on its healing, purifying, strengthening effects are plainly felt. The nerves become stronger, the sleep WANTED. ItULIABLB RIKN to sell complete, line of choice Nursery Stock. Big line of special tiea. Salary or commission. Experience not necessary. Special inducements to beginners now. Write at once for terms, stating age. THE R. C. CHASE COMPANY, UKNKITA, N. Y. Second-Hand From World e,Fair uuiioing. fa err Complete Barn stock, She inif. VVooi If fTi lAaa ine. Wooden Tninea. Corra. Bated Iron Roofing. Stataarr and Ornamental Fiaarea. All lim for FARMERS TO BUILD AND SAVE HOHKT. Write us for ettttuiate. Columbian exposition Salvage Company, exclusive Purchasers World's Fair BaiMlnn. Office. Service BWj.. Jackson Park. CblcaZ parker's HAIR BALSAM Clesofei and betntiftM the k Promote, s luxuriant rrovth. never Falls to Bestow Oi Hair to its Tout Clue acalp dl-ae a hair faUfaN acalp dlmiM 1 ttcand l-00at uruaisi WANTED LADY AGENTS In erery town to ell our Safety Medicine; TrM tsa year in physicians' private practice. Address, sta in- experience. Box 134, A. sPMBBIi eft .. TopoKia. Ksssas, PATENTS Thomas P. Simpson. Washinrtaa. D.C. No ally's Tee until Patent ob laiued. Write for IaveaUNrsOuioaa CUKES WHfRF All FISf Fall R. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. in tinio. sold by druirglnw. MolaTlcfliaiAalMJI SILVER 0UESTI0N: cated to tho renders of Coin's Financial School, and should only be read by those h4 have read the -School." Kvery voter In til United states should read it. Popular ediltoa, 2f cents; better paper edition. 50 cents; cloth, Cl .00. After May 1. 1895. all persons ordering "Coin Financial School" or "Up to Date. Coin's USnam tat School Continued, " in cloth, vrill g the two books printed together and bound i cloth forfl 00. sent postpaid. The two book together make the most complete treatise o the subject of money ever printed. Oar Special Offer. We send the following four books postpaW for (I 00: Dfmetallism and Monometallism (tt. cents). Coin's llaud Hook (10 cents). Coin's Ft, nauclal School (50 cent edition), and A Tale of Two Nations (BO cent edition). $1.35 for fl.00. In ordering these, say "Set No. I. of 4 books." We also furnish for 1.00 Bimetallism ana Monometallism C" cents). Coin's Hand Book (10 cents). Com s Finnnctal School (25 cent edi t Ion . A Tale of Two Nations (25 cent edition). Chapters en Silver (25 cent edition), and Up to Date. Coin's Financial School Continued (9 cent edition). 1 85 for J1.00. In ordering tha tiooks contained in this last offer, say "bet No. 2, of 6 books " For any of the foregoing books or offers nunis In stamps posioftlee money order, express 6fV dor, registered letter, bank draft or currency, but no not use personal checks, as tho banks? charge us for collecting them. We are tlte woe . thoriucd asjeuts. Address t)imti vour vacation. There Is do plaice ta ths Chlcapc and St.. t.otilsto that point, ha arranped t 1-,.i. t,. L-,.r ,:il h. ,..,,d hir twuin, nntl! KantMtt. mutely to member 01 the Association. o thai Ut vom. win .-- i.,.r U i. " . all of the famous Co.ol a o rrxot l. surh as Kkca - - , i.ienwm". ihii?k. ctr. nvw hhuiu hi a i-immw ........... .. . . . .. . . . ,.ii. mum l,i tro to (iioraiUa. - , 1895.
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