Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Sep 1891, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

mmm « . <• - frightful inroads of Scrofula and all blood-taints. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery purifies •nd enriches the blood, cleanses the aystem of all impurities, and restores health and Btrength. It cures all diseases arising from impure blood. Consumption is one of them. It's •imply lung-scrofula. In all its ear­ lier stages, the " Discovery " effects a cure. It's easy to see why. The medicine that masters scrofula in one part, is the best remedy for it in another. It is the best. It's war- nnted. It's the only blood and lung remedy that's guaranteed to benefit or cure, or the money will be re­ funded. No other medicine of its class does it How many would be left if they did ? It's the cheapest blood-purifier, •old through druggists, ( no matter bow many doses are offered for a dollar,) because you only pay for the good you get. Your money is returned if St n't benefit or cure yon. Pan you ask more ? • LITTLE FLO'S LETTE*^'* Sweet little baby brother ad come to liv« with Flo, she wanted It brought to the tibto That it- might, out and grow-- It must wait- for a whiiw,' i&id grandnuk III answer to her plea. ' ' •For «little thing that h(isn't to®fc%i Can't eat like yoti and me." "Wby hMB't it got tteth grandmaP Asked Flo in great surprise: •Oh nay ! tout ain't it funny? * - No teeth, but no -<> and eyes? I piesB" latter t hiuking gravsly) ' « : J, •They mnit have been fordot. s®" K .1 Can't we bay hiin tone like graadWk I'd like to know why not?". t n»t afternoon to the corner • , •J' 6 With paper, pen and ink, , > ?*" wr W«Pt Flo, saving 'Don't •» V tnnA If you do. it'll stop my t hink I I'm writiny a letter, gnu»d«%^".'. To send away to-night ; And 'cause it's verv'portuaf* I want to get it right." \ At last, the letter wa« finished, A wonderful thing to see-- Aad directed to "Oi*l in Heaven," "Please r*ad it over to me," Said little Flo to her grandma, "To see if tt'R right, you know," And here i- the letter written To God from litt.le Flo: »ri >"; - "bear God--The baby yon broogtat^M 1 Is awful nice and sweet. A purpose to let you know, Please come and tinisU the babv. That's alL fcrom Lmui C •-Boston Globe. CATS SCRATCH. <k \ ^HveTOKJG Br. •' FREE IWr The Beat Remedy HI £• this world, says J. Hofheit of SyraeaM, N. T. la Pastor Koenig's Nar?e Tonic, because my ton who VH piitially paralyzed three years ago *ND attacked by flta, has not bad any symptom of tbem since he took one bottle ot the ramedy. I sno«t heartily thank for it, Mr. Bknoat Oastleman, Kfflngham, ID., in- formed us that beluul been a sufferer trom in- mib and rushing of blood to the head for weak* He procured & bottle of Koeflif• Nerve Ifonic, took it aooording to directions, and ««"~1 mBaf after baring taken only about U doses: IM •peaks vary highly of it. Ounmm, Livingston Co., III., May, W. I admit that I atn well satisfied with the affect • «f Pastor Koenlg's Nerve Toole, beoanse It cored m* entirely of the severe nerrou troubles. B. BOROMANN. A Valuabl* Book ma N«rvmn Diseases sent free to any address, and poor patients can also obtain tliis medicine free of charge. Ibis remedy ha® been prepared by the Reverend Coitor Koeni* of Fort Wayne, lad, since lS&aM now prepared under his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, III. IriibjDniHlttisttlpsrBotaa OferlBi lMWHIss.SMfc 6 Bottlae tor >9. CREAM MlJCATARf,H when applied into thi aoatrils will be ab­ sorbed effectually, deutlni the head ol catarrhal virus, cans- lag healthy secretions. it allays inflammation. protects the membrane Cram additional colds, complete IT heals the sores, aod restore* •ens® of taste and amell. TR* THE CURE. A particle is applied into each nostril and lsasra t4 Drnwists or by mail, HA BROTHERS. S6 WarreuStroet. New York. Tutt's Pills & m HAYFEV >le the dyspeptic to eat whatever 1M tes. Tlify cauM the food toswlmllate nonriah she body, give appetite, and DEVELOP FLESH. 39 * 4! Park Place. New Yort. DETECTIVES Wealed is fwt C.aaty to let to the Secret Service tinker ftaMr.etiom from C..t. Qriiinu, ex-Chief «T Detcetim of C<Miaii>li. Kiperlm« aot rKemrr. PvticaUraflrM. ildrtu Oraaaaa Detective Bareaa Ce. <« Arculc, Ciaeitmatl, o. ANAKKsis«lveB instant reliet. and is an INFALLI­ BLE (UKE for P1LK8. Price. $1; at dn by mail. Sam; Address "ANA! Box SM16. New YOBK Cm. xor riuta. drufaista or NA^CKSIS." f> m FflT FOLKS REDUCED LYm w ' * • « . » . , •« IS A POSITIVE CURS Wm iU these Palafsl Cemi^alsts aad WeakaesaM 9 1 t l M Ladies of the World. SVv"4 r y " -? '• /* ^HERE were mo­ ments now when Shoddy son found her odious--she whom, years ago. he had thought the most charm­ ing woman he had ever met.; But with the last <leo- ade Mrs. Winch's Sharp features had become sharper, her smile more metallic, and her hair •a more startling red, while her little .youthful petulences had developed -into unvarnished bad temper. And jto-night, as they sat at dinner in a ^private room at Yoisins', Lawrence Shoddyson was visibly perturbed by the announcement which he must ^presently make. It was for this, to be sure, that he jhad run over to Paris, leaving town Lin the first verdure of spring and his fbetrothed in the first tremors of her (engagement. Not that Lady Sarah could truthfully be said to have in­ dulged in tremors on any occasion. jLady Sarah Ifardman was, as any one may see in the peerage, exactly 30 years of age, and she was, in addition, •ft handsome, self-satisfied, and self­ -opinionated young woman. When the years had fled away and left her fitill single, she had linally resolved, as a last resource, to captivate this successful stock-broker, whom the fates had thrown across her path in a country-house the previous winter, for ducats were few and daughters were many in the noble house*of Hardman. Mr. Lawrence Shoddyson had a bilious eye and sallow skin, and his thick, black mustache covered a coarse mouth. But he was always well dressed, and he was not bad-looking-- an men-about-town look. But as yet the engagement was un­ announced, and Shoddyson, as he fur­ tively surveyed the haird-lined face of Theodora Winch, was at a loss how to break the news. There was some­ thing uncompromising evpn in the way the lady's narrow velvet bonnet- strings were tightly fastened under her chin with a dianWid scorpion (he had given her that scorpion, by the bye, in the years), in her stiff, high-shouldec^d gown, and in the immaculate gray gloves which she had not removed when they began to eat their dinner. There was an of proprietorship, too, in the Theodora smilingly warned him from certain dishes which the drab-faced waiters produced, whilesheadvocated clarot and forbade him the cham­ pagne. To be sure, the two were old allies. She had been one of his first clients when he had started on the stock exchange; and, any time the last fifteen years, he had been accus­ tomed to run over to Paris when she wished to consult him about some in­ vestment. Shoddyson & Co. did a large Easiness with French clients, sip that profit, as well as pleasure, often brought him to the French capital. He had always been flattered and petted in Mrs. Winch's pretty apparte- ment in the Avenue Kleber, he had gone with her to the play, to the milliner's, to the tiig;tis, to the races. Theodora had nicknamed the young xi ' Bogey" in the days gone by, nd while she was young and fairly pretty the thing had been weil enough; but it was preposterous, Shoddyson told himself with a groan, for a man to be called "Bogey" by a woman who can no longer conceal her . wrinkles, and when he is 43 years of age and about to contract an alli­ ance with the daughter of an English peer. Mrs. Winch was one of a large class who affect the Champs-Elyses quarter. American by birth, she had been edu­ cated in Europe, and, after a brief experience of matrimony in the United States, she had left both hus­ band and country and taken up her aiKide in an American colony in Paris: and Winch, like other transatlantic husbands, had been, it would seem, by no means averse to the arrange­ ment. There had been talk of di­ vorce at first, and then difficulties had cropped up, and so the thing had gone on. But one day, atxmt a year ago. the husband had fallen down dead in Wall Street, after which the wife wore elegant black and enter- i tained serious thoughts of marrying again. And the person she meant to marry was Lawrence Shoddyson. Dinner was over. The waiters had withdrawn, leaving coffee and liquors at their elbow. The May night was warm, and presently Lawrence rose and flung open the window of the tiny room--a room fusty with a hun­ dred departed revelers, with the fumes of fifty by-gone feasts. He leaned his arm upon the iron balcony and gazed down into the street. The rush and swirl of nocturnal Paris lay below him, and he fervently wished himself anywhere but here. In all his Stnug, prosperous, and self- satisfied existence, he had never known such an uncomfortable moment as this. It was awk­ ward--very awkward---to tell the wo­ man who has been devoted to you for fifteen years that you are about to marry some one else. "Bogey," murmured Theodora, in her soft, babyish voice--for, though ail astute and long-headed business woman, the lady affected childish manners--4'don't hang out of the window like that. Come and sit here. What's the matter? Why, you've hardly spoken six words to-night. Are you" --with an unpleasant little laugh--" are you in love?" The man flushed up to the mots of his hair. She had given him his op­ portunity, and he took it, brutally, coarsely, like the half-bred creature he was. "I don't know about being in love," he said, with a conscious snigger: "but hang it all--well--I'm thinking --of getting married." For a while the room was so silent that you could hear the people talking in the Rue St. Honore below. Some one was putting aladyintoa carriage, and you could hear the click of the door shutting to and the direction to the coachman: "Au Cirque d'lllver. "To whom?" This time Mrs. Winch's voice was no longer soft and lisping. "Well, the fact is, Theo, that I thought it about time to pull up a bit--and--well, it's a daughter of the Martinis of Bloomsbury--Lady Sarah." "Lady Sarah!" said Mrs. Winch; "the girl who comes to Paris to get her shoes made! I wish--well, I wish }ou joy!*' There wsis an awkward pause, during which Mrs. Winch played nervously with her tea-spoon, and Lawrence," with an affectation of ease, struck a match and lit a cigarette. •'You see, Theo, it's a tremendous leg-up for me. No end of business to lie done with all those swells. And, after all, a fellow must sefile down some time or other--eh?" She looked at him hard through her narrow eyes, and the look made him feel extremely uncomfortable. "By the bye," she said, presently, rising and reaching for her wrap, "are you sure you must go to-morrow?" "Quite sure; by the first train*. But you're not going? Why, it's quite early--we can still do the third act of a I#HV." "Thanks? it's impossible. You forget that I, too, am a woman of business; I have lots to do to-night. You must tell me when I may send your wedding present. Good-bye, good-bye." A few moments more and Mrs. Winch, pale with rage and mortifi­ cation, was being rapidly driven home alone. Not for worlds would she have let him know that she was suf­ fering; but for every pang that Theodora Winch endured that night, she swore he should pay a hundred­ fold. Why, she could prevent this marriage altogether! There were half-a-dozen ways in which she could ruin him; and Lady Sarah, she knew perfectly, was not the woman to tolerate a penniless lover * * * Late into the night Mrs. Winch was at work in her study, with complicated calculations and stock exchange lists. Before dawn, she had completed her- plan. Two days later the smart young clerk who represented the firm of Shoddyson & Co. on the stock ex­ change (tjie Co., by the bye, was purely fictitious,) was discussing the, odds on tl)e Derby with a confrere, when he was handed a Paris telegram. The firm had many wires from th^ French capital, but this one was somewhat startling: "Sell one hundred thousand El Dorados six per cent, carefully;" while the signature was that of a great financial house in Paris, the brothers Sidonia, with whom Shoddyson occasionally did business. Running as fast as he could, the smart young clerk made airlhjAway to the restaurant close by, wa^f wEere Lawrence Shoddyson, with a party of friends, was celebrating his engagement, which had that very morning been announced in the daily papers. The stock-broker instantly rose, made his excuses to the lunch- party, and hastened into the market to execute his large order. There was soon a sensation in the house. Shoddyson & Co. were selling El Dorados like wild-fire, and a huge crowd gathered in the El Dorado market, while Lady Sarah's fiance continued to offer the stock. For two hours El Dorados vMit on dropping by points; and it was not until the whole transaction was nearly comr. pleted that he was able to wire to the Brothers Sidonia the execution of their order. Half an hour later the smart young clerk was handed a still more startling telegram: "We don't understand your wtro. Have passed 110 order for selUng £1 Dorados. You must be the victim ot a fraud. •"SIDONIA PBKBES." The news got out at once, for sev­ eral London stock-brokers had been warned during the lavt hour by their Paris agents that a fraud had been perpetrated on a London firm, with the result that El Dorados, which had fallen 10 per cent, during the day, recovered their original price at a bound. At the end of the day, Shoddyson was tiable for some twenty thousand pounds sterling. A large firm could have withstood the shock or borrowed the money: but to him the thing was ruin. To-morrow was account-day, and, at such short notice, he was quite unable to meet the large difference. So Shoddyson & Co. were duly declared defaulters and under­ went the process of being "ham­ mered" in the house. The morning after there appeared an authoriatativc denial in the morning papers that any marriage had been arranged between ' Lady Sarah Hardman and Mr. Lawrence Shoddyson, which, to be sure, was only what people expected. That un­ fortunate financier, who, it would seem, was born to be the sport of the less amiable members of the fe­ male sex, more than half suspects the hand that dealt him this blow. But he has never been able to prove it; nor have the Parisian police, though they have made every inquiry, been able to discover the perpetrator of the great telegraphic fraud. Mrs. Winch is becoming more pinched, more copper-haired, and more acidulous day by day. You may see her, on any fine afternoon, driving alone toward the Allee des Acacias. She has had her revenge. Is she satisfied? Who knows?---[St. James'Gazette. > "MY first love toad red hair and, light blue eyes. It jarred upon me terribly at first, but after awhile I forgot all about it." "What did she do?--dye?" * 'No; my affections did." WIPE OF A WORKWOMAN. ffk|rt Bka Brought to Her Uqiband i^, MM Brief Spsea of the Keen Keoeea. One doesn't nee< the velvety side >t life for the setting of every picture., the other day when the noon whistles slew a crowd of workmen left their, tasks at the Womam's Temple, now Duilding at the corner of Monroe and LaSalle streets, and disjtosed ffiem- jelves in convenient nooks for the sating of their frugal dinners." After the slender luncheon four or five of them gathered under the staging on the Monroe street side, ami were chatting quietly, fleckin* the bits of mortar from their clothes, nursing a bruised place. on the rugged hands, balking of the dismal little things which go to make up a hard day's work, when a woman walking along 3n the opposite side of the street at­ tracted the attention of one of the men. . . He rose instantly, his whole face losing the dreary look which labor had left there, his movement light­ ened and quickened by the magic of love, his figure dignified in the bless­ ing of paternity. Fdr the woman who had come to See him bore in her irms the child that bound them to­ gether in a union as strong as that, which holds the world in order. He joined her on the farther pavement, took the little one in his arms, pushed back its humble bonnet, kissed the willing lips, and walked with h^r away from tSie scene of his crucial toil. The roar of a busy city, the sunlight prisoned between stern brick walls, the greed, the selfishness, the lepravity of life, were all forgotten in the moment's contact with those who were bone of his bone and flesh ^f his flesh. •When they had reached the farther corner and crossed over he saw that movement among the men at the temple which told that work had be­ gun again, and he lifted the child for a parting kiss, looked love and good- by into the woman's eyes, and hurried back to" his station, better and stronger for a touch of the tender side of life. Just as he turned into the littered entrance a carriage rolled past on the rough pavement of LaSalle street. A woman sat back in the cushions, ad- Justed her sunshade with a movement of impatience and frowned at the cumbered curb which slacked the speed of her horses. She had been to her husband's office, and now car­ ried in the little bag at her wrist a check that would have made a home for the workingman. Yet the woman who carried away the babe in the little white sunbonnet was happier than she; and the man who stood on a scaffold up there above her was blest above the husband whose mill­ ions could not purchase one glimpse of the high noon of love.--[Chicago Herald. Didn't Tak* Iw Itis not often that one can see from without the actual workings of con­ science. When it is possible, how­ ever, he must rejoice greatly if right prevails. The New York Tribune gives the following instance of such moral warfare: One dayHa man on a railway train picked up from the car seat a pack­ age that the former occupant of the sect, who had left the train at the last station "had forgtrtten. He looked at the package critically, and then glanced at the conductor, who was at the other end of the train. He evi­ dently thought himself unobserved, for after a few moments of reflection, he put the package, which was a small one, into his pocket, and then resumed the reading of his paper. But his mind was not at rest. He tried several times to read, and each time removed the paper from his eyes and gazed into vacancy, lost in meditation. The conductor passed him, and It made him uneasy. He moved about nervously in his seat. Presently he folded up his paper, put it in his pocket, leaned his elbow on the window-sill, and allowed his head to r«8t in the palm of his hand. He was having a hard struggle. It would have been interesting to know the drift of his thoughts. Perhaps the quest ion of the value of the pack­ age entered them, but it is to be hoped that it did not. At any rate, his sense of justice triumphfed. He raised his head from his hand, in a determined way, and took the package from his pocket. - It was easy to see that he was happier now. The next time the conductor passed, he handed him the package with the remark: "Here is something the lady who left't he train at the last station for- • ; rp."- ; taoBomj la Wealth. JBMN. There is a story of a young' man employed on one of the YanderVilt roads who, after fruitless endeavors to get his salary raised, finally went to William H. Vanderbllt himself. He„was kindly received, but when it cauie to the question of an increase 'of salary "Mf. Vanderbilt said: "Young man. the trouble In these days is not that men do not get sal­ aries enough, but that they are ex­ travagant and do not keep what they get." ' . With admirable composure the young man took a note book and pencil from his pocket, and after a little figuring said: "Mr. Vanderbilt, as I figure it, if God had given Adam a salary of $25,000 a year, and then he had lived till the present day and hoarded every cent of It during these 6,000 years,be would still be $5,000,000 poorer than you are. Are there not possibly other ways of getting ahead besides saving one's salary?" Mr. Vanderbilt quickly closed the interview, but is said to have ordered the young man's salary raised in rec­ ognition of his coolness and keen­ ness. The story is naturally recalled as one reads, from time to time, of Chauncey M. Depew addressing thfe young men on the virtues of economy and frugality. The advice is always good, but the man who knows most about how the Vanderbilts acquired control over $640,000,000 worth of railroads ought to enlighten the young men on a few other points now and then.-^[Boston Globe. A DECEASED Vienna car driver turns out to have been the Baron Erwin Schonstein, formerly a millionaire and the last member of a distinguished family. : ' > COTTON ANO WHEAT TRUSTS. the Chaneei of Isecsil are Kxeecdingty HI ton in tba Jfr«a«nt Schemes. • report from Columbia, S. C., in­ dicates the formation ota resolve to control if not to corner the cotton crop of the United States. In its present shape the proposal is simply to hold off the market air the cotton produced this year in excess of 6,500,- 000 bales, and by thus shortening the supply to send up the market to 10 or 11 cents per pound from the 8 cents which has been the rule for several weeks past. The excess above the quantity named is what l^s depressed the market so much from the average pnice of recent years and actually made a large crop worth less in sell­ ing value than a much smaller one would have been. This undisputed fact lends interest to the inquiry of what chance there is likely to be for success in the effort to control the holding of the surplus. The average yield of cotton in the States is about 7,000,000 bales of 440 pounds each, and that of all other countries combined scarcely exceeds 3,500,000. Hence our cotton growers produce nearly three-fourths of the entire supply of cotton in average years, and perhaps have exceeded that proportion on the latest Crop. In ad­ dition to that fact the quality of the American cotton is superior to that grown in any other country, much of which is of comparatively little value, and used only in admixture with the American product. Hence it would seem to be an easy matter for suf­ ficient capital and adequate brains to,control the supply up to the point of making the manufacturer pay at least a fair price for the article* but it is open to serious question if this could be done through an alliance of producers, each of whom was pledged to work on a plan laid down by of­ ficials and sell only at such times and prices as those officials might direct. There is a great difference between getting several hundred thousand men scattered through six or eight States to vote unanimously for a measure and inducing them to act it out, if such action occupy some months and at times threaten to be a losing one. Whatever the quantity determined to be held over, it would . have to be apportioned among many, and unless they had some guarantee against loss some would always be found ready to sell out In advance of the rest. Probably therefore, the de­ sired reserve or holding back would have to be performed by a small num­ ber of capitalists, able to buy and re­ tain, if at all. The difficulty would be vastly greater in the case of wheat. Our crop of that cereal averages barely a quarter of the whole supply, and this year will not exceed a third part, while its power is still further re­ duced by the fact that large quanti­ ties of rye should be added to the total, since that grain is also used for bread, and many people will eat qne or the other according as it is the cheaper for the nonce. Then our wheat is a good article, but is not in­ dispensable on account of quality. The world might jiot be able to get along without it, but the quantity to be sold by others in competition with it and which American growers could not hope to control except inferen- tially and is so large that any at­ tempt to unduly advance prices here would stand a good chance of failure, as in times past. In fact the chances w-iuld be strongly against it, probably in the ratio of more than three to one, and this ought to be duly con sidered by those who are listening to the siren voice of the charmers who tell the farmers of the wonderful re­ sults to be attained in the matter of prices ir they will only consent to "hold the wheat." They, and not the rest of the world, would be losers by the foolish resolve, the higher prices realized on a small quantity being far more than compensated by the loss Incurred on the selling at ab­ normally low figures of the greater portion of the surplus after the in­ evitable decline liad set in. The theory that wheat growers could make their own prices would be found un­ supported by the facts.--[Chicago Tribune. TksrspesHe Value «f Liquid Soa|v Herr Saldemann has recently called attention in a paper addressed to pharmaceutists and the medical pro­ fession to the therapeutic value of liquid soaps, for which he claims vari­ ous advantages, such as their being more suitable for inunction, favoring admixture of medical substances, and being always producible from vegeta­ ble oils, thus avoiding the use of ani­ mal fats. The formula recommended |by him for liquid soap is to mix one |part of caustic potash, dissolved in an equal weight of water, with four parts of olive oil and one-fourth part of alcohol, followed by vigorous shak­ ing for some ten minutes; the mix­ ture is to be repeatedly stirred during the succeeding hour, then mixed with an equal quantity of water, and, after standing several days, filtered. Herr Saidemann states that carbolic acid incorporated with a potash soap has its caustic and poisonous properties paralyzed, whileitsdisinfectant action appears to be increased. It is also stated that the Berlin district san­ itary commission has found a solution of potash soap in 10,000 parts of water to completely prevent the splenic fever bacillus. Queen Marguerite's Romansa Few people know of a little ro­ mance connected with the early life of Emperor Frederick, in which Italy's lovely queen, Marguerite, figured as the heroine. 'Tis said that in his youth Frederick formed a deep attachment for this magnificent woman, then Princess of Savoy, and, she being at the time engaged to Umberto, it was never known whether or not the love was recipro­ cated; but in later years, and a short while after the Emperor's sad death, among his private effects was found carefully ptut away a crumpled piece of lace, said to have been a fragment Df the wedding gown of Marguerite torn from her robes while dancing on her wedding night. (lad Mo *altl» In Han In. A peddler arrested in Shenandoah, Pa., for not having a license, said that he had no faith in banks and therefore carried all his money In his slothes. His pockets were searched before he was sent to a cell, and ex­ actly $4,646.40 in cash was fonnd in them. A Dream or HanptWMa Mar b* followed by a morning of "La Orfppa.* Eaifly, and why? Beeause the displacement? of oorering in bed, a neglected draught from a> partly closed window, an open transom con* nected with a windy entry in * hotel, may con-* Try to your nostrils and lnngs the death-dfaliiifg, blast. Terrible and swift are the inroads mad<» by this new destroyer. The medicated aiooholid principle in Hostetter's Stomach Bitters will chock the dire complaint. A persistence in this I.roventive of its further development will ab­ solutely checkmate the dangerous malady. Un- mtdlcated alcoholic siimnlaati are ot little or no value. The jnst medium is the Bitters? Not less efficacious is it in cases-of malaria bilious- j nesf, constipation, rheumatism, dyspepsia aud kidney trouble. The weak are usually tboss upon whom disease fastens fiast. Invitorata With the Bitters. # Far Western Engliih. The Boeis of Fouth Africa are not very numerous, bnt they *re fighters from where the creek forks. They now threaten to tie a few more bow knots in the caudal appendage of the British lion if he persists in switching it in their faces. And the king of beasts, having "been ther^" betore> is wondering how he can back out of the situation without leaving lurge chunks of his reputat'on as a holy terror scattered about promis­ cuously.--St Joseph Gazette. • Artistic Advertising. Undoubtedly the Ivory Soap peopte.de- IWTS credit for the best grade of Illustra­ tions now being used for advertising pur­ poses. The series of full-page drawings which hjtve been appearing on the last page of the Century represent some of the most capable book aitd mugazino artists In the country. The series must have cost no small figura As yet the "way up" artists do not sign the work they do for advertis­ ers, bat I apprehend that it will not be long ere we shall see in < the advertising columns such names as George Wharton Edwards. E. W. Kemble, etc. Such men as these bring to their work, besides mere mechanical skill, a trained Imagination and an artistic conception of things. These qualities when used in connection with advertisement*, command scarcely leas Interest than when use d In the ordinary literary way.--Printer'* Ink. Aug. 19, IMI. 11 Y'sj&" '-'J ' . '? "I We have selected two of Crbup. three lines from letters freshly received from pa­ rents who have given German Syrup to their children in the emergencies of Croup. You will credit these, because they come from good, sub­ stantial people, happy in finding what so many families lack--a med­ icine containing no evil drug, which mother can administer with "cn- fidence to the little ones in their most critical hours, safe and sure that it will carry them through. ED. L. WILLITS, of Mrs. JAS.W. KIKK, Alma, Neb. I give it Daughters' College-, to my children when Harrodsbuft, Ky. I troubled with Croup' »have depended upon and never saw any "it in attacks of Cro«p preparation act like with my little dangb- jt It is simply mi- ter, anu find it an in> raculous. valuable remedy. Fully one-half of our customers are mothers who use Boschee's Ger­ man Syrup among tlyir children. A medicine to be successful with the . h little folks must be a treatment for the sudden and terrible foes of child­ hood. whooping cough, croup, diph­ theria and the dangerous inflamma­ tions of delicate throats and lungs. • A Sunday Maxim. It is true that the rain falls upon the just and the unjust, but the sinner who leaves ehurdh on a rainy Sunday before the sermon is mt>ro likely to find an am- bretla In the vestibule than n the saint who stays until the last. thsOalfOas Bver Printed--CM ts« Vtad the Word? There Is a 8-lnch display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent"' on everything they make and publish. Look for It, Mend them the name of the wqrd, and they will retuen you BOOK, RKAtrnrcL. LI raoouraH. or 8AKTLK8 rKU. The attention ol ADVKKTISKKS. MAIFO- FACTCKKR8 and PRIKTKRS called to MV superior lacilities 1or turning Out FIR8T» r' V . CLASS mCTROTlPINO or 8TE1WO- ' guarantee satisfactory aa£ •' ; TYPING. We prompt service in these lines. A D V E R T I S E R S « A OOOD recipe for ifiaking waterproof cement, to be used in constructing aquariums, is to take 25 parts gutta pcrcha in shreds and melt it carefully. Add 7f> parts ground pumice stone, and tljen mix in 150 parts Burgundy pitch an{l melt well together. One Fare tor the Round Trip to An MM* South. Sept, 15 und 20, the Chicago & Eastern Illfhols Railroad Company will sell harvest excursion t ickets to all points South at one fare for the round trip. Tickets good thirty days from date of sale. MANUFACTURERS number of EI«ctrot »p-- of an advertisement should get our prices lw> fore placing their orders. We make a specialty o) DESIGNING and ENGRAVING ADV^KTIS»» MKNTS for all classes ol trade. who wish PIRSV» CLASS Electro­ type? of Cuts for Catalogue Illustrations wM •'> find >! to their interest to communicate with oa. DDIHTIM having long runs of press- ' lllin I Ll\u work, which can be leueneA: ' by duplicating forms, and thereby save Iks " wear of type, will make money by having pages electrotyped or stereotyped. We e return forms in six hours after receipt at o office, accompanied by plates of the same.. s -OUC LINB Of Ix Italy neither Senators nor Depu­ ties are paid, but they travel free and receive other concessions la taxes and patronage. DR. Ii. L. GORSUCH, Toledo, O., says baTe practiced medicine for forty years; have never seen a pre; ttration that I could prescribe with so much confidents* of success as I oan Hall's Catarrh Sure." Bold by Drugglsta, 76c. ALWAYS hope for the best You will never get It, so thi>re will be no excuse for abandoning hope. BROITCRITTS la cured by frequent small doaes of Plso's Cure for Consumption. THK innocence of the intention abates nothing of the mischief of the example ureae ?. Mar- I fij.M trial bottle free to •'it r**«8. Send to Dr. Kline. Wl Arch St.. Phita., Pa. Vanderbilt's Check is M itroBftr in Wall street than the word ot Mr. H. O. SanndeiM. a prominent carpenter and buiidsr ot Aubnrn, N. Y. is imoof his fellew^itt* sens. Heaars under date of Ang.4, MM: "I Pin My Faith to Heed's Sanaparilla. Whenever 1 see any one 'broken ay' or 'run down,' I say,'Yon just take a bottle of Hood's KarsipailUa and it will bring yoa ent all risfet.' In beavjr work I sometime* get tired ent and stiffened, bnt a day or two of Hood's 8at*a- pari lla makes me feel well, i have been ani»jeet ie sever* attacks of Rheumatism in ay ama tad chest. A very few doses of Hood's 8arsaparflla •and a* ol the lsst one. when suffering intensely.* NEWSPAPER- HEADIII6 TYPE Is the largest to be found in the West, and wm " * make a specialty of furnishing Headings for all * classes of publications. Specimen books, show- • • tag the largest assortment of Newspaper Heac^> tags ever exhibited, will be sent to Printers na-# Publishers upon application. » CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UMQR ii. a. it. U strri itrriini ST.. uicut U. ' "V PILLS BO ROT CB1PE MMt MCKKK- l<n eun for SICK HKAP- ACHK, impaired dip«M»a,«UMti- MUtoa,torpi4 |bUMS.HHyUMM Tltai oiraca, remove Ba«i«%d»- Macteal iMnlUd- andMadmr». ilioas nervous tfUH- orders. E>tabli*& aa*» ural DAILY ACTIO*. complexion rniLT TNRIILI. n« ceiru/in Busineea man's great alNta win than npr. M«m}> ThedOMii iticrly adjusted to rirtt Mwrbttao aiuch. Each ritl eaataini ket. like lead pencil veaienee. Ta All fenuias fooda tear"CuaetuC" Bud Soent stamp. Tea get 38 baek wttk N. HARTCR MCtietNC CO.. H iMis. M* m BNJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys­ tem effectually, dispels colds, head­ aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. 8yrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro­ duced, pleasing to the taste and ac­ ceptable to the stomach, prompt in Its action and truly beneficial in its prepared'only from the most d agreeable suhstances, ite effects, healthy an many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 60c and $1 bottles by all leading drug­ gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro­ cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA Fto SVBUP CO, 8AN ntAMClSCG. CAL iMUmtlLE. KY. MCW rout. 4UFC p ~ THE NEW WEBSTER © WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL, DICTIONARY at'CCKSSOK OF THK UNABRIDGED. Re-edited and Reset from Cover to Corcr. Work of revision occupied <>rer 10 years. More than 100 editorial laborers enipii-yad. Critical examination nivit- <1. Get the Best. Sold by all Bookseller*. Paitipliit t ir« v. CAUTION is needed in purchasing a dic­ tionary, as photographic reprints of an oUwv UHe and comparatively werthk sa edition of Webster are being marketed under various names and often by misrepresentation. The International bears the imprint < t G. & C. MERRIAM & CO.. Publishers, Spriucfleld, Maaa.. 17. S> A. Illinois Staia Medical Institits. 103 State 8t., Chicago. • \ Chartered by DM State. Authorized Capital $150,000. Cantfucted by a Full Staff ef Physietens, ttt-- •f wbom are noted German Specialists. FOR THE EXCLUSIVE TREATMENT OF ALL CHRONIC DISEASES. Mmpfo Faa'liti*a for Room oWIisortf. Each Disease treated by a Physician, wfeo matcec It a specialty; Ave of our staff receiving their ednon* Hon and experience in Bnrope, wbetea Doctor mm* stoar years Insteau of threatsbere. If afflto- ted with Catarrh. ConsttmvMon. AsfJttM or Bat. Par treaa JUtiHty 7Vo«Mts - J 'A: - Dae all SUUtlERll 4 disabled. #2 fee for increase. J6 yearn ex­ perience. Write for Laws. A.W. MCH'URMH K A SONS, WASHINGTON, J>. C. it CIM IN.NATI. O. . are the Oulent, . M O A T K t B c l e n t , NT SOLICITORS stody seeenyeara Insteau owsnwpMsis. AsfJttM _ it our Specialist, O pent of StasMk. ii«r, flsaft and JCidntu •as no eqoal. ftketnaoMm, Goitre, m jw tt'srm and aBSMt2M»» cases treated. w Our German Eye and Eat Speeiaiiet l»a many cases when pronounced Im-urabMk Our treatment for Cptieysy Pmrmbms and Xn Tmublet has met with wonderful snecee*. Deltcata Diseases of Men or Women hav« special proviaton made for their treatment. Strictest pneaef maintained aad alt c ,m i nala> (MM confidential. CONSULTATION FRO. If attcted with sex disaase address In asj laagM^ ILLINOIS STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE. HIS Stele Street. CUsegk WHEN WRITING TO AJ>TSKTt&KML JFT^LEASE say r<M aaw LT« A4*erU*eaaa«T a par*;. KKMKDY FOR CATAJiliH.--«esi Kaatoet to we. 1 cheapest. Belief la ImiMiiisir A ewe is ewwia. For Cold in tile Head it has no equal. C ATA R R H SSlf: I-•j'* -0t „ ' £ • ' 1 .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy