Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Jun 1892, p. 7

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.1 mm Hi : '̂ :k:n ; J«1iaa Hering, who tu a e!«*&'6V ; lerar ot mnts And their Mugs, once B»v* a* Mtenmt of a battle royal which Mrwatebad betw««a two of the smallest If the speciea. It took place on the i item of a leaf; the OMN was a scrap of tcod. The contestants fought until one : killed the other. "The victor," says Herlng, "then strut- W to awrfro in view of the other ants, i Nm^oleon oovtd not have been more sure of his own nighty place in creation. "For ne,' he seemed to say, "was this world made.' The mite was actually in* Bated with vanity." Ail observer watching the throng of Iranian beings passing along Broadway, »r any <rf the world s great thorough- lares, would often be reminded of Her- iQg's ant. So many are the men and women wfeo express in their walk, their manner, their voice, a sense of tbetr »wn Importance. Here i8« mkidle-aged tradesman who i hrss just driven a sharp bnrgMn; there is a schoolboy who ran a winning race last week: yonder is a young man »s?fco is puehingins way successfully Into busfc- : a ess or into fashionable Bociety; and here eemes a young girl whose only claim to distinction is a new hat. These ; are not strong proofs of superiority to the -swarming millions of people on the earth. Yet these men and women bear themselves . as it, like the ant. -each or them thought. "This world was made for me!" ' Theodore Hook, viewing a vain mem­ ber of his college strutting along in cop and gown, approached presently and timidly demanded, "If you*please, sir, are you anybody in particular?" ! How many of us, when most secure in our vanity, oould stand that, probing question? A siliy girl who was presented to Prince Bismarck at a levee was asked how he impressed her. EVERYBODY'S QARDBK. ildN^htvgMltii everybody** garden! IMMM and ewt stretching OB» Far it "g«w klm _ t torn bloasouis through tb« It la Qntt own (Uta. prat**, DINRVITBLBMNMA Thar* NoosnlnggmsMtt nod, ial nnflowmnuU and yellow lura vnr faito Utnai; Qatiat dnkr^Mrii are there, intdttiin «M «ad Mr. b«mjbo^t«KdM Mnh flower's tbs ia» tt**tOae! Allahai the wayside la everybody's giMal Come oat wad gather posters; the very air ia Come out with heirts of gladness, ye big and little children, • ; Garden, made lor Mr atlroU- Tie flitting butterfly, " TbeWagrant winds tbatnlRh, ndfayaoadi tiiat hover above nfHt.'tbe The bird's soog high a»d dear, Make Heaven draw mure cetr. a In everybody's gardes the world once ohk* la aew! --ChrfaUaai UaJaa. - . ONLY AN ENGINEER. jfr-*- Wfc* mk, " As a very dull person," she promptly replied. "He ignored me altogether." The men and women who have real work in life as a rule forget themselves, and acquire that total lack 'of self-con­ sciousness which is the basis of the fln- 'estmanners.--Youth's Companion. '«*• Oaljr OaaBw PHaM-^AN Th iHai th* Word? ..There la a 8-Inch display adrertlsement <ln this paper this week which has no two Words alike except one word. The same la true of each new one appearing each week •from Tfca 'I??. Hartar Mcikte- Co. This 4'house pl»i>e« a «C?resc«Dt;" on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you BOOK, BEAUSISBI. UXBOSFUF AS, "tejjlAMPUs rRH. Scattering Babam SMDA. The common balsam has a most singu­ lar method of disseminating its seeds, says a'St. Louis paper. When they are ripe and prepared for germination the seed pod explodes with the slightest toudh, and the seeds are scattered In •every direction with such force as to , earry them a distance of twenty or thirty " feet. Plants have many curious methods of scattering their seeds, but there ie •none stranger than the vegetable artil­ lery represented by the balsam. IF you wish to do the easiest and qulclc- eat week's washing you ever did, try Dob­ bins' Electric Soap next washday. Follow the directions. Ask your grocr for it Been on the market S4 years. Take no other. ? Pftwerlal Armies. In the event of war Russia could show . an army of 1,800,000 men, besides Cos­ sacks; France, on a war footing, an t army of 2,800,000; Germany an army oi 2,301.000 under twelve years' service. BEBCHAH'S PILLS are a painless and effectual remedy fcr all bilious disorders. 25 cents a box. For sale by u.11 druggists* U » : fcv.,- K , fcA . PADDLE YOUB OWH CAHOE. ** Vwagen on life's sea, To yourself be true, v And whnte'er your lot may la Piiddie your own oanoe,**^ .. "To yourself be true," "and thoa canst not then be false to any man." "Self-love is not so vile a sin as aelf- neglectlng." Then " be wise to-day, 'tis madness to defer." Get Dr. Pierce's Golden Medics! Discovery, for all af- ..feedons of the lungs and throat It la likewise a wonderful liver tonic, and Invigorator, Jut the.gear rmind, von may rely upon egood for tbe blood in March, . April and May. The " Discoveryw .-works equally well at all times, and in all cases of blood-taints, or humors, no matter what their name or nature. It cares all Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous affections, as Eczema. Tetter, Salt- rheum, Fever-sores, White Swellings, Hip - joint disease and kindred ail­ ments. ^ It's the cheapest blood-purifier, sold through druggists, because you only pay for the good you get. Tour money is returned if it doesn't benefit or cure you. Cau you ask mora t k W - k *•1 am not Well Enough to Work." room for another. This is a daily event in mills, shops, facto­ ries, etc. It is the point where nature can endure no more. Then the poor suf­ ferer, worn with toil and broken in health, stands aside to make Quick Consumption" they call it To this class of women and girls we proffer both sympathy and aid. >* >Vhen those distressing weaknesses and derangements assail \ you, remember that " "Lydia £. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound will relieve them. We have on record thousands of such cases that have been restored to vigo-* rous health. 1 All nrunlatt wll It, or «*nt f mail. In forju of I'illa or osenge*. on rw*iptof®1.00. -irer I'illt, Zlw. Com- y (pondriir* /reply *nnr«cd. f - ~ f" ****&£? Address in <v»ifidenec, -- L.VU1A K. 1'INKIIAM MKU.C0b, nwil. In forju of I'illi »r •l.M. iicST POLISH IN THB WORLD. 1 rr? !'"' >- : St°Ve POLISH BONOTBEDECEnfED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril­ liant, Odorless, Durable, and the con­ sumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS AM AMBML SALE OF SfOO0 TONS. When the &, R & K. railroad was Opened through the^ietuTock wilder­ ness of Northern ami Northwestern Pennsylvania, some years ago, I was engineer of the .first, train that made tliv i uuuu iuu," said Joe Carrol, now on the Erie divisions,, "and it was attended with «uch unusual and peculiarly lively exper­ iences that 1 resigned my place after that first trip. If I had l»een in the menagerie business it 'might have been a big thing for me to lurve rc- luarned on the road for a few trips longer, for I think I'd have had enough material in that time to start a zoological exhibition, liut I was simply wanting a job as an engineer, and not as a collector of natural his­ tory specimens. A job on a railroad where you are ex­ pected to stop every little while to either capture a bear or kill a cata­ mount, and where you are apt to be attacked right in your cab by some fierce denizen of that cheerful region, wasn't just the kind of a job I was looking for, and one trip was enough for me. That trip only covered a dis­ tance of about thirty miles, but we gathered in three bears, one of them alive, two catamounts, and the biggest bald eaele that was ever seen in.that locality. Besides that, we had a race with a catamount, saw two more Wbars, and chased a big buck for more than a mile before it escaped by a tre­ mendous Iqap across a ravine. "That first train over the B., B. & K. wasn't an excursion t;ain, but a train for business. It wuij/a mixed train, and I remember very well that there was a car-load of calves in it on the down trip. We hadn't gone more than three miles into the woods when mv fireman touched me on the. arm and pointed toward a big hemlock tree at one side of the road. Peering out from behind it was a tremendous big bear, with only his head and shoulders visible] 'As tjie train passed by the tree the bear came out from behind it, and looking back, we saw him in the middle of the track, stand­ ing upon his haunches and gazing after us. We had hardly got over the excitement of tbe bear's survey of us when a big catamount came bounding through the trees from somewhere in the woods, and raced along * the train, leaping from tree to tree, and sometimes get­ ting several rods ahead of us, al­ though we were running twenty-flve miles an hour. Whenever the wild­ cat got ahead of us it would stop and crouch on a limb, and glare at us as we came along, as if it intended to spring upon us. It kept along with us for more than a mile ..and then bounded away again and disappeared. Whether it was the same catamount that met us two or three miles further on, in company with a mate, and boldly boarded the train, I can't say, but it is likely that it was. Whether it was or not, when we were going up a very steep grade known as Snow's Mountain, and nec­ essarily running slow, I suddenly .heard a great bleating among the calves in the cattle car, which was only the second car behind the en­ gine. I leaned out of the cab win­ dow and saw & catamount clinging to the side of the cattle car and trying to push himself into the car between slats, but the opening was too small. I grabbed the long iron poker used by the fireman, and jumping from the engine, ran back and dealt the wild cat a blow that knocked it par­ tially loose from the car. My attack on the ca-tamount turned its atten­ tion from the calves to me, and it sprang from the car at me. Another blow stunned the cat, and another one broke its back. "My fireman had by this time stopped the train, and the conductor, and a brakeman came running to­ ward the cattle car. Before they reached it I made the discovery that a second wildcat, which/being smaller than the one I had killed, had squeezed between the slats of the car, and had already killed a calf, and was making a meal from it in one corner, the other calves being hud- dlea in a trembling, bleating group at the other end of the car. The con­ ductor of the train had a revolver, and he put the weapon through an opening in the car, close to the cata­ mount, and fired. The fierce animal sprang to its feet, and seeing me and the brakeman close to the car, on the opposite side, he leaped, toward us, striking the side of the car with such force that the animal fell back to the floor. The conductor fired a second ball into the cat, and the tough beast got up again and leaped toward the 'conductor, striking the side of the car and clingiug to it this time, and endeavoring to get out at one of the narrow openings. The . conductor shot (the animal in the throat, and it fell back and died. "The conductor carried the two dead wildcats back to the express car, and we started on up the hilL Just at the summit, perched in "the crotch of a big chestnut tree, and not twenty feet from the track, we came in sight of our Recond bear. I gave a sharp toot with my whistle and the bear tumbled out of the tree as if he had teen shot, m m mmmm ' -T *. «• ̂ called the Long Gravel Cut, a narro# pass a mile long, with high, steep banks on either side, out of the bushes at the side of the track, arid perhajpe a hundred feet ahead of my eftgihe, bounded a big buck right on to the side of the track. The deer stopped in frightened uncertainty, gazed for a second or two in big-eyed astonish­ ment at the, approaching train, and then turned and entered the cuU "That settles his hash!" exclaimed my firemen. "Half-mile trestle starts right from the end of this cut, and unless thatdeercan run a half mile of open railroad tiesor jump aforvy-foot gully, he might as well stand still and let us run over him." "The road was down grade through the cut, and I made up my mind to see how much faster a frightened deer could travel than a railroad tfain, so I pulled her opjjn and'let her slide, f 11 bet we weren't a lainute going through that mile cut, hut the deer kept a good ten sards' spate be­ tween himself and the engine with ease. The road takes the long, high trestle at the end of the cut by quite a stiff curve, and at the left is Kane's gulley, forty feet wide at the ton if It is a foot, and eighty feet deep. If th<i buck attempted to cross the trestle he was sure to fall between the ties to the bottom of the ravine, and for him to leap the gulley seemed utterly impossible. The deer knew his-capacity, however, and Quitting the track at the end of the cut he gathered himself oh the edge of the gulley and shot across that forty feet of chasm as lightly as if he were jumping a six foot ditch, clearing it with a foot or more to, spare.and bounded away into the forest. "Whatever happeiis on this road now won't surprise me!" exclaimed my fireman, as he gazed with bulging eyes after the fleeing deer." "I thought the same then, but I changed my mind afterward. The rest of the down trip was quiet enough, but coming back we had plenty to keep us awake. We werq passing through a part of the hemlock vsoed?: where there had been a big slash- rhg made by the tannery bark-peelers, andhappening to glance back over the train I saw one of the brakemen struggling desperately on the top of a freight car with the biggest bird I had ever seen. The brakeman had his stout brake stick and was ham­ mering the bird, which was a bald eagle, wherever be could get a blow, while the eagle was pitching into the brakeman with beak and claws and striking him with its immense wings. The tojj of the freight car, with the train running twenty-five miles an hour, is not a particularly desirable place for one to have a desperate fight on his hands and I was about to stop the train and give some aid to the brakeman wheu the eagle came running and screeching over the tops of the cars, jumping from one to the other, toward the engine. One wing was dragging, showing that it was broken. The eagle came right on to­ ward the engine, and the first thing my fireman and myself knew it had jumped • into the tender and dashed into the cab, where, being unable to get any further, it con­ tinued with us the fight it had begun with the brakeman. The eagle fought so desperately with the terri­ ble weapons at its command that in a very short time my greasy engine clothes were hanging in strips about me. My fireman retreated through the cab window to the guard-rail at the side of the boiler, and but for the arrival on the scene of the brakeman and the flagman I would have either had to desert my post or been roundly whipped by the eagle. The two men succeeded in overpowering t^e .fierce bird, and we tied him down. The brakeman said the eagle had swooped down on him from somewhere in the bark slashing and almost knocked him from the car at the first assault. It was his lucky blow in breaking the eagle's wing with his brake stick that turned the fight in his favor, for the eagle beat a retreat, and being unable to fly had endeavored to escape by running, which brought it In close quarters in the cab." "It's good this road isn't any longer." I said to my fireman, after we had got over the effects of the eagle fight. "If it had much more of such a country to run through they would have to send a company of soldiers with each train to protect it." "We were within five miles of the end of the trip, and had just rounded Balcom's curve, when we came in sight of three bears, one a very large one and the other two smaller ones, standing right in the.middle of the track, not five rods ahead. We were running fast and I sounded the whistle, thinking to scare the bears off the track, but the sound had no effect on them, except to fetch the big bear to his haunches, where he stood with open jaws and fore paws raised, awaiting what she supposed was an attack, a small bear on each side of her. The engine swept into the foolish bear family at the rate of twenty-flve miles an hour, and when the train was stopped the old bear was found lodged against the fore part of the boiler, dead, and one of the small bears lay twenty feet up in the woods, also dead, while the other was on the cow-catcher, uninjured, but holding on to the bars like grim death. "I never said a word about that bear episode until we got in. I jumped off my engine and gagged as 1 was from the eagle's claws, went .straight to the Superintendent'soffice and told him my place on that rail­ road was at his disposal. " 'The road I learned to be an en­ gineer on,' I said, 'somehow neglected to include bear fighting, catamount killing, deer chasing, and the like in its instructions, and I can't fill the bill on the B., B. K." "And so I quit."--New York Sun. 'S.-e&l'ailft* $© lw a 'Stodtsnstc^ A practical mechanic, who can write as well as work, furnishes the following hints, among others, in re­ gard to learning to be a mechanic: The skill necessary to draw a file straight Is not easily acquired. Many a weary half-hour at noonings and early mornings I have spent in prac­ tice with a block of cast iron and a testing straight edge; but the trained muscles at last responded to the de­ sire for straight lines and perfect levels, both in draw filing and cross filing. , Pertinacious practice gradually taught how to hit the head of a cold chisel when swinginga hammer from the end of an eighteen-mch handle. The Issson was thorough, adds the writer in the Mechanical World, and was not forgotten after the black and blue bruises on the left hand had disappeared. Indeed, nothing that a man learns by this method of in­ struction --experience -- ever leaves him; it is a part of himself. That is one reason why old mechanics, even after they have their physical ability impaired by age, are valuable in the •shop.- * My apprenticeship in a machine chnn TJipr?or ^ jjooc! v,*"or!^ni«n a poor Instructor. During the tem­ porary absence of the oroprietor the chart for the only screw-cuttang lathe was lost It was on a paper, tacked to a shingle or thin board, and one breezy sunamer day was blown out of the window and into the river, on the bank of^fhich the shop stood. It was required to cut some screws in the lathe, eight threads to the Inch; the pitch of the leading screw was six threads. Reasoning and thought Anally brought about the result that the leading screw should be retarded in its revolutions so that it would travel on its bearing only six-eighths as fast as the blank screws on their centers. Six-eighths is three-fourths; so if a wheel can be put on the spindle of the lathe--the blank screw --that is, three-fourths the power ol that on the leading screw, the thing is done. It was ahc-adj known that an intermediate gear, which was re­ quired to drive tbe blank screw and the leading screw in the same direc­ tion, gave only "tooth for tooth," and therefore did not count An overhaul of the gears was made to find two that bore the relation of six to eight or three to four, (iears rel­ atively with the 45 teeth and 60 teeth would do, these numbers being multiples of 15 by three and four; 60 and 80, multiples of 20 by three and four, would fill the bill, so would the multiples of 30 as»90 and 120. One of these pairs was selected and the screws cut. Never after did the writer care for a lathe chart? given the pitch of the leading screw, and that can be counted by a pocket rule and a collection of gears, and the combination can readily be made. There is one other item in learning to be a mechanic that the apprentice should know and remember, and that is that the end of his apprenticeship is only the end of his apprenticeship; he has not "learned his trade," as many claim. The mechanic who "knows it all" is n6t generally worth shop-room. The practice of mechan­ ics, or science, applied to the useful arts, cannot be fully comprehended and appropriated by any man in the period of his mortal life. He is the best mechanic who has never fully learned his trade. --Mechanical News. How Antra*!* SLIRD MAIN . There is a curious difference be- tween the way a horse or cow sheds hair and the way shedding is done by the deer, says an observant writer. Horse hair, or the hair of the com­ mon cow comes out by the roots, and may be curried off without much difficulty, but the coat comes off by degrees. The hair of the deer, on the contrary, breaks off above the root, and sometimes large patches of to­ tally bare skin will be seen upon the animal's body. It sheds its whole coat almost at once, and at the proper season by taking hold of the long hair underneath the throat, the entire raiment of the beast mav be stripped off. leaving the animal quite bare. and went snufflng away at race-horse speed, nevi ing back at the obj frightened him. I was think that this was a li liest railroading that I h and I hadn't gone a when I was still more fact. Just before we en rife?. 'fef ftrarm It Ttioroozhljr. A Columbia College student searched for a leac in the gas-pipe with a lighted match. He will never do it again. There is this to say in favor of a collegiate education; When a man learns anything he Teams it so thoroughly that*he never forgets it. "*•* ' AK Eastern editor announces the arrival of a twelfth responsibility at his house, and makes the following appeal thereafter: "More subscribers wanted immediately at this office." A VMHltirnl Ho*k. The most wonderful-book in the world is one which is neither written nor printed. Every letter is cut into the leaf, and, as the alternate leaves are of blue paper, it is as easily read as the best printing. The labor re­ quired and the patience necessary to cut each letter may be imagined. The work is so perfect that it seems as though done by machinery, yet every character was made by hand. The book is entitled "The Passion o! Christ" It was a very old volume and was a curiosity as long ago as 1640. It belongs to the family of the prince de Ligneand is now in France. Rudolph II. of Germany offered for it 11,000 ducats. Forcm of L giitniuic. Lightning has been proved, in one instance, to have struck a church with a force equal to 12,220 horse power. A single horse power, in me­ chanical calculations, is equivalent to raising a weight of 33,000 pounds one foot high in a minute. The force of lightning, therefore, has been proved to be equal to the raising of 403,260,000 pounds one foot high in a minute. This is about equal to the united power of twelve steamships, having collectively twenty-four en­ gines of 500 horse power each. The velocity of lightning is so great that it would travel round tbe world eight times in a minute. Agmim. " Mr. Francis H. Grundy wae a civil engineer in England at a time when traveling by rail a comnatantiveiy new thing, and many persons had exag­ gerated ideas as to the danger of it. He was upon an engine whleh hfd just run into a station on the Midland' road, and with the driver and vtoker was leaning over tlw hand-rail, watching for the sig­ nal to start again, which signal seemed long In roming. They were already be­ hind time and somewhat impatient. A middle-aged lady stood "trembling on the brink," evidently afraid to enter the train. She looked on as her various belongings were bundled into the lug­ gage van, and was then conducted to a first-class carriage, where an obsequious porter stood with open door. "Will you please get in?" said the sta­ tion agent, but she got not in. Then up bustled the guard. "Now, ma'am, time's mope .than np; take your seat, please." Stqi she Shrank away. The engine! whistled impatiently; the lad^ started back. "Well, ma"am," said the guard, *w« can't wait all day." He held up his hand, and off started the train. Then did the lady beg that her lug­ gage might be restored to her; but the pace quickened. My last glimpse of her ™rsts as she was yet upon the platform, gesticulating with a parasol. Whether -CI knew; but I might have kfio^pfi. Five or six years afterward I W38 go­ ing to London from Yorkshire, and the only other passenger in the compart­ ment was a lady. "With loud whistles we approached the Box Tunnel. The lady started nervously, and won­ dered whether there was any daftger. I assured her--just as we dashed into the darkness--that tunnels were perhaps the safest places on the line, as extra pre cautions were always taken in them. 1 . quoted a few statistics as to the com-^ parative risks by coach and rMl, ridi­ culed the excessive fears of some fool- ish people, and then proceeded to relate, as "perhaps the most ridioulous instanoe" I had ever known, the funny; scene just described. We emerged from the Bo* Tunnel; a curious smile, by no w earns benevolent, sat upon my fellow-passenger's face. We slackened up at the n6xt fetation, and she said, "I Was that lady,' air.* I" took another car, and lost the story of the missing luggage. tar mn lOMW ̂vfc&t i I B WW. niricM MU*th«y newer BUT mo i*ers • cam. • back ;and anna vera covered bf th« humor. I tu usable It lie down in bed, eontd nft w*lk without crntcbaa, Mr. u. (j_ Hanj. «4 kad to have my urnja. back and tagstMUidaced twice a d*v. I began to ta)» Hood's Sarsaparlila and »oon I ooold aee a chance. The flesh became more healthy, the Bore* MOO healed, the ecalea tell off. I was awn able to give up bandages %md cratchea, aad a happy man I was. S. O. Dmi, 43 Bradford St., Providence, R. I. HOOD'S FII.L.S cure Uver 111a, constipation, biUmtsneM, jaundice. cicfertx>«da<stfB. Try them. il' Oatmeal Bag" for thoB^th. An authority tells how to. make the oatmeal bags, which, used in the bath, give a velvety softness and whiteness to the skin. Take Ave pounds of oat­ meal, ground Hue, a half pound of pure castile soap reduced to powder, and a pound of powdered Italian orris root. Cut a yard of thin cheese cloth into bags about four inches square, sewing them on the machine, and taking care not to leave any untied threads Where a break may let the contents ooze out. Mix the soap, oatmeal, and orris root thoroughly and fill the bags loosely. Sew up the opening in each and lay them away to use as required. They are used as a sponge, dipped in warm water, making a thick, velvety lather and wonderfully softening the skin, while the orris im­ parts a lasting fragrance. It wili be remembered that all soap applications, even thn purest, should be entirely rinsed from the skin. ^Hospital nurses are trained to wash patients first in soap and water, then in clear, very hot water to take off the soap. It Is recognized that boiling water is one of the excellent mild disinfectants. Way Off Color. Th* huaof health! « ho oan mlstak* itr Tt» white brow, the deepened tbt of th* dM*k, tfaete assoo'ated with brightness and animation of tits •;•, a chef y wpMMton of tfasooante. nanee, are infallible ladfoia that th* liver In farming Its functions aotlvelv, aad that eon8e« digestion and the bowels are undis­ turbed. It, however, the complexion and eye- b&Us have e. saffron tint, or the face la drawn and rol<l of sprigbtlines* aad animation, the ONE I5WJOY® ;•< Both tu® Suctbod Suu rcSUiti wa4ll Sjrup of Figs is taken; it u pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidney^ Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sy* tem effectually, dispels colds, head­ aches and fevers cures habitual constipation. Svrup of Figs Is th® only remedjr of its kind ever pro­ duced, pleasing to the taste and ao* ceptable to the stomach, prompt In its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agseeable substances, its to all aad have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Fin is for tale In 50e and $1 bottles by all leading drug* gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on band will pro* cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. cAUFonm no map ca S A M F R A N C I S C O , C A U UHfMttJLi, AX HEW tOKK. M.T. nuSi^N>0Qq> ISbkt *wiveTOHI& Bather lte Wlthrat Bread. XI BISHOP'S BWDUCB, Mioh« |; 11M Bev. J. Koasbiel, of above place, wripe*: X haT* suffered a great deal, and whenever X now feel a nervous attack ooming I take a dose of Pastor Koeulf's Nervtf Toole and fs*l re­ lieved. I think a great deal of tt and would rather be without bread than without the Tonto. Slept More in One Monlh Five Yearn PrevitBa.. BPBINO Vtturr, Bureau Go., 11L, DM., *&& I was suffering five yean from nervousastat and nsed to get HUMS about three thnes a week; sinoe I oommeaoed using Pastor Koenjg'a Nerve Tonto 1 had but one. I slept more tbe month anbsequoat to taking the Ibnio than I bad' th® fl TO fmm previous. M»& M« XH7GGA.K, A astral! a Wants Good 8tenograpbers. A gentleman writes from Australia that there is a great chance for short­ hand writers in that country. A while ago an examination was held in Melbourne for shorthand writers in the courts. Out of thirteen only six passed the test of 120 words a minute and fewer still the test of 150. Sir John Thurston, who had tried to en­ gage a stenographer for correspond­ ence, offering $ l, 000 a year and board, complained that most of the appli­ cants were unable to write rapidly or to read their notes afterward. TALKING and eloquence are not the same; to speak and to speak well afe two things. A fool may talk, but a Wiseman speaks.--Ben Jonson. Stomach Bitter*, which promptly remedies only tbe above outward and visible sign sfrvvtuv! aauv r" "1TT1 irT $ > equal promptitude and rompleteoaas, kid- complaint, dyspepsia, rheumatism, aad not signs o( Mifotisneas, bnt also the sick headaches, con­ stipation, vertigo, fur upon the tongue, nausea, sour br«ath, and pains through the right sid* which oharaeterla* it The liver la always seri­ ously Involved In malaria, for whleh the Bitters is a sovereign specific, nils medidne remedies, with " " MJ comp nsrveasness. Italian Fishermen'* Fatth. The blind faith or the Italian fisher­ men in the efficacy of holy relicB is pathetic. "Many of them," says a cor­ respondent, "keep themselves' in a state of utter impoverishment in providing necessary amulets and charms. Not only is the fisherman's person oovered with these, but his boat must also pos­ sess all possible saving power through these religious appliances. Should some great storm arise and genuine danger come, one by one these objects are oast upon the waves with a faith that is posi­ tively sublime. Meanwhile his wife ashore, possessed of the same implicit and pious confidence, gives her most precious relics to the sea that her hus­ band may come safe to land." Nltro-Otycerlno that Care*. It is not generally known that there Is a medicine called nitro-glycerlne; which i^ as powerful in stimulating the organs as the explosive of the same name is in tearing rocks and trees. It is used by doctors only to revive the heart's action. •A WOBD to the wise Is sufficient," but It l» not always wise to say that word tQ one who is suffering the tortures of a head­ ache. However, always risk It and recom­ mend Bradycrotlne. Of all Druggist*. S0c THE Emperor of China does not stir out much in wet weather. This is due in part to the fact that it takes ten men to carry his umbrella, and it ie difficult to get them away from the fan tan table all at once. PHPP-A Valwabl® Book en Nnrew L UL m. Disease* sent free to any addr***, i n L L K i ' s s & s r . i u s s £ g r This remedy haa been prepared by tbe Beujuaj Pastor Koeni*, of ftat Wavne, Ind- since M&MM Is now prepared nnde*hi*dir**Moa by th* KOENIC MED. CO., Ohleago, lit, SoMbrDrantatiatlliwBsMa tmeBiM.sa.7a. ; "So BOOZBB has gone at last?" "Tee." "What took him off?" "Over indulgence in whisky." "H'ml Spirited away, as it were. FEMT A COLD, Tin B*owc*m\ Cheek tbe first with HAM'S HOMXT or HoajtaotiKD Ann TAB, PIKK'S TOOTHACHE DBOM Cure in one Mlnut*. IF your religion is only visible on the Sabbath it will never make your next- door neighbor want to quit his mean­ ness. ' ' No MAN can get very much of an edu­ cation without going to school to his mistakes. * J. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Va., rays: "HfcU'i Caltrrh Cur© cursdmeof ft vwrylNMl of catarrh." Druggists sell ii,3 75c. Kennedy's Medical Discovery Takes hold in this ord^'^ * Bowels, Liver* Kidneys* * Inside Skin. Outside Skin* Driving everything before It that OvgjM, to be out. You know whether you need it or not. Eold by @¥ecy <iruggisC,and manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURV MASS. _ A Sample Cake of'Soap k.*<wi l28p*geBookon Denna- tolegr and Veautr. lllua- trated. Ca Skio, Scalp, Merroo* and Blood Dii- eaaea. Sent staled for I ..also Diafignre- meDtsUk* Birth Marks, MdjM.VVirti, Indialnk •ad Powder marks. Scars r ittinca. Redness el Koa* Superfluous Hair, Hin­ ges, etc. JOHN H. WOODBDRV, B. Hul, Court, Walker count thinks enough of German S3 send us voluntarily a Strom endorsing it When men and education thus use and mend an article, what they worth the attention of the It is above suspicion. " I have u«4E your German Syrop," he says, my Coughs and Colds on the Throat and T.ungs. I can recommend it for them, as a first-class mediciuc." Take no substitute. -fB „ t ItCnrmCoM«,CeaKhi,Sn«Tbi _ Jnfl' •«*•, Whonpiojr Cnach. Bmncbt Aatlnna. A certain cmv for Csnaumption < Ma***, aad a sure relief <n advanced >tac*s. at onre. You will ••• the excellent eftaot | taklns th® tlrnt doe. ^Jdb? dealer*ere TAKING COLD. If you have taken cold dnring.th# last few weeks with its wet weathart steady rains, great floods, accompanied by its sea of mud, you should be mec# than ordinarily careful. A such .a time, is apt to settle on the kM*: neys and produce future trouble the shape of rheumatism, pleutiqfe pneumonia and other diseases. Tlxst all come from disordered kidneys. M cold settles upon them. They tell t# take the uric acid from the blood, aafr the result is the diseases enumerated above, all of which come from tb# kidneys in the first place. BBH GERMAN COUGH AND KIDNEY Cnt will cure all troubles of this sort IS is the most perfect remedy for all mail adies that come from a oold that wat ever given to the public. It contain# no poison, but it will heal any diseas# that affects the excretory organn tlt» lungs, the kidneys or the skin. Asfer j our druggist for it, and do not let bin give you anything else. Small boM> ties 25 cents, large ones 50 cents. SYLVAN REMEDY Ca, Peoria. HI. r' "i LITTLE LIVER PILLS •* * •- J m «B1M HOB 81CCBC& . ' ' Tfcars - tot ACHJt* impair »fiar,,ss»??KS2a Tlw deae U steel? adjai •ever ketoo aaoeh. Each aeckH. like laad pencil. Waw«lin«a Taken easier thai Wkate, All feaala* feed* Mat" •taa>».Toa|etaps(«book •*. NARTIR MDICINK CO.. St. Lm*. Mfc- | YOU &HP L- AMD UfrauMMW, till Wert 4M aireei TO GO EASX. • : WANT YOU TO GO •anoarnliiff Train Service. BEtt. SEVEN WALLS. c. s. wau W eaiera Pau.. CMICXUI - „ reet, H. City. Consultation free, at office or by letteb Tuft's Hair Dye Gray hair or whiskers ehanged to a glossy black t>y a Mingle appllcatiou of this Dye. It imparts a natural color, acta lnstantaneoa ly and contains nothing injurious to th* hair. Sold by druggists, or wrill be sent on receipt of price, Sl.OO. 39 Park Place, N.T. l.«Wt«i'l 3./V/7 Sf*C£ *../MS/O£ CASS HE who cannot command himself should not attempt to command others. THE same refinement which brings us new pleasures exposes us to new pains. K«-ve Hfestoier. jelous cures. Treatise and *>.00 trial bottle free to Send to Br. Kline, 931 Arch St.. Pbila, Pa - •EVEN WAU&i TIE eucm urtMiUMi Antique er !i C* nei*, ^ ttgkttoek. I.unit* affectum* Carriages, Radiator and IkvaBd Desks, Ac., and offorHbuit rttonomif to tht n Kame ffood« de«ir«d and catalogue vill ba ml LUBURC MFC. CO. *•* 821, 3SS A 884 S. 9th St., Mn.tM. sa.i_' r UE HMMUL tfrar or I G!3S£&S5SJSEB£?& gt St.. !(•» *--*sss***s*s*s***s*c <%oeeeee« or neat bv by mall. ssssa __ FAT FOLKS REDUCED lira. Allee Maple, Omen. Mo., anltesi ... J J"HimUit«a<npoaida,u«ltUia aiciustioa of IS Iba^ror circular* addraaa, with It. K O.W.F£NYOEB. MoTiokar**Theatre. Chieam.UC •mueiAU'oin w.noBRn. ntNolvIl WaahlBctoa, ». c! • Syxrlo last war, lSadJodlcatiogolalm*, attrsiaofc tltc MfMTMtf MEN TO TKAVKL. W*PV«M ICU s to 9100 a month and expense*. 8TOJVK tt WKLUKGTON, MadtmTvni, Barlows Indico Blue. The Family Wssh Blue, for sale by Grocers. Nature's EHaNUktd ISA Herbal Reme "(hit «r«oe* M«t br dt*0t*am4 Th* M**Uh0 l>fi»str -ir irtm and " DR. OL 1*. HRUWNM THE prize-light chronicler has neg­ lected to note the fact that Nebuchad­ nezzar was the first man ever sent to grass. DIAMOND CYCLES Por Ladlea and Cents, six styles In PMiumatlc Cushion and Solid Tlm& Diamond Frame, Steel Drop Forging*, Sts*l Tubing, Adjustable Q44! to all running including Pedaia Sstpention Saddle Strictly HIGH GRADE in Every Send 6 eeits la stanpi for oar lOO-asge Ulastrated eata= 1 Berelrers, °»*rtlag flood*, *tc. | log** of Baas, Blflti stsl@«ae k'kUC. OVEIpL ARMS CO., Mfrs 147 WASMN^OI St, BOSTON ̂ HASS i Great External Memstt HERB4L OIITMlKT he* dis^ i*re ciix-H . b*ni(0b« nail. 47 Gi . raw throogh . eolation, heals jtObee pain: Xte. 7 Grand St.. Jauey WHKN WHITIAO TO ADTEKTi so* »w ,h# -- PI SO'S CL'S E CMtaapilTM and peopl* who hare veak iunssor Asth- m^. shoald u»c, s'.so'sCur* tor ConaumpUon It ha* eeure*' tkesaas**. It has aot ijrfar* ed ooe. It Is not had ti»taiM. It lath* beat eoogh Sold ererywhec*-

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