Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Jun 1901, p. 3

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af-'r' •J7".' •%VV ; 1* & Wk .* ilte S>«4nt «f Hot Into ran. *' • '". furs there are two practical and effective methods. One is by rub­ bing into the fur mahogany sawdust that has been first wet in beosine or gasolene; the other is by rubbing with It* «**«.. By means of either fur may be perfectly cleaned, drplains the Woman's Home Companion. The saw­ dust used by furriers is what is called "•tirteriflyg sawdust"; that is. it is from cutting across the-grain, and is abort and sand-like. This sawdust will not stick to fur like the long particles from cutting wood with the gniln. It can be procured at bard-lumber saw­ mills or from tarrfem. Hie sand used is that clean yellow kind, free from dost, as sea or lake shore sand, or such as is Sometimes taken from sand hills. It should be made hot in a stove-oven to the degree that it can be borne by the hand--greater heat than that en­ dangering the fur. After cleaning, furs should, of course?" be beaten (with rat­ tan beater) and aired--not kttttned, for fear of fading. As for wool garments they should be carefully looked over first, and all that need cleaning be cleaned by a professional cleaner or by home measures. It is a mistake to put things away "to be cleaned in the fall"; it is simply an invitation to moths. Before cleaning wool gar­ ments should be well beaten, aired and •unned. \ , f K Conldn't Wear fhoai. 111.. June 10th.--Mrs. Flanigan, of this place, had suffered with dropsy for fifteen years. She wafe so very bad that for the last three years she has not been able to wear her shoes. She had doctored all the time, but was gradually getting worse. Last winter Mr. Flanigan, who was •ery much discouraged, called for some medicine at Mr. J. J. Dale's drug store in Carml. Mr. Dale persuaded him to' have his wife try Oodd's Kidney Pills, and he bought six boxes. His wife used five out of the six, before she was en­ tirely cured. She is now as sound and as well as ever she was. completely re­ stored to health, and free from any symptom whatever of dropsy. To say that Mrs. Flanigan Is pleased at her wonderful deliverance does not half express her feelings, and she and Mr. Flanigan are loud in their praises of Dodd's Kidney Pills, and of Mr. Dale for recommending this wonderful remedy to them. The fact that Dodd's Kidney Pills cured Mrs. Flanigan of such a severe case of dropsy, after the doctors bad given her up. has made them the most talked of remedy ever known in White •WW**., , ..V- , - I ThM* ChHi* * - Truly the Times are changing! The Chicago Times-Herald consolidates with the Chicago Record; the Philadel­ phia Times is purchased by the prin­ cipal owner of the New York Times; the Lorain (Ohio)'Daily Times merges with the Times-Herald; the Evening Times, the new Elizabeth (N. J.) pa­ per, appeared for the first time May 1; and today the Trenton Times enters upon another stage of its history. The Times are propitious.--Trenton J.) Times. Honir a Diverting Pact Homer is the very fountain-head Of pure poetic enjoyment, of all that is spontaneous, simple, native, and dignified in life. He takes us into the ambrosial world of heroes, of human •Igor, of purity of grace. Homer is the easiest, most artless, most divert­ ing of all poets; the fiftieth reading rouses the spirit even more than the first--Frederick Harrison. V'l £/ Try Graln-Ot Try ' Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink {bat takes the place of voffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without dis­ tress. the price of coffee. 15c and 25cts. Sold by <41 grocers. / -IftBtpdtw Bm a MM)** One morning recently the residents Of Montpelier, O., reported that they saw a mirage which was easily recog­ nised as the village, of Bdon, eight miles east. Such a sight has never been beheld In this vicinity.--'UtU* Globe. The largest loaves of bread baked in the world are those of France and Italy. The "pipe" bread of Italy is baked in loaves two feet or three feet long, while in France the loaves are made In the shape of very Ion# rolls, tour or five feet in length and in many cases six feet Bovines^ A Herd of 50.000 l/nowned Cattle Oxit West w v Bovines^ A Herd of 50.000 l/nowned Cattle Oxit West w v Bovines^ A Herd of 50.000 l/nowned Cattle Oxit West w v In the northwestern corner of thi» state there awaits a tidy fortune for th§ mast Of set of men who can devise and assents some scheme to corral It, says a Denver writer. Here, in what may be truly called "Unknown Colorado," is a country •till in that interesting border condi­ tion between the passing of the In­ dians, the trapper and: the hunter and the advent of the settler. This region Is so recently vacated by the Indians that the legends and the scent of them are Mill fresh. There are cattle on a thousand hills, free of brand, and not a bill of sale for them held by any man. They are to be had for the catching. With a wagon load of food, a few cow ponies, and plenty of grit you may secure over 2,000 fat and fine beef cattle. The old time cowboys of Routt and Rio Blanco counties know of their existence, and more than one has tried by some means to become their owner. Several years ago an eastern speculator, who had learned the story while passing through the country, formed a small company, but his capital and patience gave out while following elusive trails and the cattle still roam un branded. Joe Burgett, the game warden, whose arrest of some Indians precipitated a row with the Utes some years ago. made a de­ termined effort to capture these mav­ ericks, but he came off with nothing better than a broken leg. A fall from his horse put him out of the race just when success seemed near at hand, when he had surpassed all previous attempts by actually riding among the wily brutes. In the folk-lore of the country two stories are told. When the Mormons, or Latter Day Saints, of Utah, were traveling the desert in search of their Zion, they struck por­ tions of what is now Colorado. In or­ der to better spy out the land their forces were divided into several par­ ties. One took a route through Fort Collins and crossed North Park from corner to corner. Continuing it went through Egerla and Twenty Mile Parks into what is now Routt county. It camped one night In a large bottom, after its usual fashion. A terrible mountain storm blew up at midnight, and the cattle, which were browsing near by, became stupefied. The cus­ tomary plan of circling about them failed to check the runaway, and soon 1,000 head or more were coursing mad­ ly down the gulch. The roughness of the country, the blackness of the night and the absolute madness of the cattle made it Impossible for the men to head them off-. When the storm ceased and the morning broke 1,000' mangled beeves were found piled one on the other at the foot of a tremendous cliff. The pilgrims passed on and today there still remains a huge pile of blanched bones to mark the site of the catastrophe. A few of the cattle, how> erer. the last to go over the bank, and wfciiio tell was broken by the mass be­ neath, managed to crawl out, maimed and braised, to wander forth and propagate and multiply into the herd that now inhabits the valleys of the Sxu&e and Bear rivers. The other solution is credited to the Indian de­ partment. Cattle furnished to the va­ rious Indian agencies were all branded with Uncle Sam's special "I. D." It is told that when the Indians were trans­ ferred from the range of the White river to their present reservations in Utah, the department cattle were hastily and carelessly rounded up and sent with them. Later round-ups de­ veloped the fact that a large number of cattle had been overlooked. It Is supposed that the present cattle are the offspring of others who escaped the second and third of* those haphas- a'rd round-ups. Complaint Against PwtaUUw Foath-class postmasters and post­ mistresses have their troubles as well as those of higher rank, and are made at times to realise that the pathway of the public official is not always strewn •with primroses. The following com­ plaint, which was recently filed against a western Pennsylvania postmistress, is but a sample of the vexations which beset official life in the country dis­ tricts: "I wan tell ye how old sogers' widows are treted by our redheded postmistress. She are only forth-class anyhow, and keeps a store, tedlnge all the postal cards and letters to which we can't get our papers tel she hare the same red herself. She repoarts to the Petition Buru that my husben dlde of devilment, wich are a blame lye. He dide of army, an' he was more piusser than old old, redheded postmistres."-- Chicago Journal. ^Cbatsmastar for BO Tmh. Heary Long has been choirmaster of St. Matthew's Lutheran church, Hanover, Pa., for fifty^nlne years. He is now 81 years old, but his voice is still strong and he sings with an earnestness that Is remarkable. His choir consists of a dosen members who sing in the German language exclu­ sively. FEZ V C- = Perfect Liquid Dentifrice tj and Sozodont utifrice far the Brsatfc 25c . Sozodont Powder -JBMh forma of Sozodont at the Stores or by Mifi; prim,fie. each; LargeSises, together, 78c MALI A RUCKEL, New fork B A B Y W A L K E R t* a wonderful help to mothers. Hriugs bealtb, strength and develop iiieut to baby. Keeps baby quiet lung­ er at « lime tban unyttiag Invented Can't full <1111 or overturn It. Our booklet Is free. Tells all about it. 1 our address on a postal card will bring a booklet, prices and recom­ mendations from mothers and Fouud- ssettAaiKa P A T E N T MECMN e - ENCVCLOPE i KEVST'ONE LAW--- PATENT i BUT TZ BLOC PH'L ire MIT YOU TO WU FM M We pay our agents from es.es to W.Ma 4u tocan­ vas for onr popular ami f»ust selling Buatu Udmu EXOBUfOKBQOK AUKNCY,StoffelBUk/ Hantlngtoo, indlsaa. "Whenever I see a tasseied Turkish Ces," says a confederate veteran, "I am reminded of a curious and grewsome Incident of my campaigning days. It was on the morning after the second battle of Manassas," he continued, "and several of us from my company had gone over to the field in the hope of picking up a few thlngB tftat we badly needed and for which the dead had no further use--waterproofs, for Instance, and sound canteens. During the previous day's engagement,youmay remember that a regiment of freshly recruited New York xouaves held the crest of a hill and were charged and almost annihilated by Hood's brigade. They were mowed down like ripened grain, and fell so thickly that the corpses literally carpeted the earth. Well, we. hadn't gone very far when we came to this hill, and began to get among the dead men. The poor fellows had been mustered into service less than a week before, and they were said to be the most gorgeously uniformed military troop ever organized. They wore scarlet Turkish trousers, blue jackets, embroidered with gold bul­ lion braid, and purple fezes with long pendent tassels. "I had picked up a fes to carry away as a relic, and was about to leave the spot, when I happened to notice a much handsomer specimen on the head of a little zouave stretched out a few yards away, with a handkerchief over his face. I stepped up to make a 'swap,' but had scarcely touched the tassel when a low, sweet-voice under the handkerchief said, 'Please don't!' "For a moment," continued the vet­ eran, "that unpleasant protest, coming from what I had supposed to be a corpse, made my hair bristle on my head. Then I lifted the handkerchief, and was shocked to see the delicate. Touching and Tragic Incident of & Civil War Battlefield. W refined features of a boy not over 15. He was pale as death, and evidently desperately wounded, but he looked at me calmly. 'My God!' I exclaimed, 'what a lad you are to be here?* 'I'm afraid I am dying unless I have help,' he replied. 'Do you think the surgeons will be around pretty soon?' 'The Lord knows,' I groaned, for the boy's courage touched me to the heart. 'Your surgeons have all run away, and we only have a few.' 'Then I guess all I can do Is to lie here quietly and die,1 he said in the same gentle voice. 'Can you get me a little water before you go?' "I filled his canteen and gave him a drink and he thanked me. 'Is there nothing else I can do?' I asked , be­ cause I knew our company was under early marching orders that morning, and that it would be impossible for me to linger much longer. 'Nothing at all, thank you,' he replied. 'No message to anybody?' 'No--nothing, thanks.' "I turned away most reluctantly, and had gone only a few yards when I heard his thin voice calling me back. 'Excuse me,' he said, 'but I want you to accept this as a present,' and he handed me his fine purple fez. 'No! no!' I exclaimed greatly embarrassed; 'I couldn't think of accepting it When I started to, a little while ago, I thought you--you--' "You thought I was dead, of course,' he interrupted. 'Well, I soon will be, and that other fes will do me just as well. Please put It on my head and take mine.' I saw that he would be hurt unless I did as he desired, so I took the fez and went away. In less than half an hour our company was on the march, and, need­ less to say I never beard anything more of the little child souave. He was badly wounded and undoubtedly died where I left him." Snowslides In Rockies. One of the most common questions asked by tourists on the railroad trains which labor through the can­ yons and over thc^ passes of the Great Divide is the cause of the bare streaks on the mountainsides, where spaces of varying width have been cleared of timber, bowlders, everything which protruded above the surrounding sur­ face, T"n|ftng a path as distinct and cleanly cut on the sides as if some Titan of the hills had drawn a mam­ moth rake from peak to base. The explanation that it was caused by a snowslide answers the question, and no doubt, commonplace enough to the tourist. Those wlfo leave the rails and flare over the mountain roads and trails during the summer months grow to have a certain respect for the Btighty forces that can strip the side Of a mountain and pile up timber and •tone in the valley below sufficient to warm a city's houses and to pave a city's streets; but the man who really appreciates the strength and destruct- ivenees of a snowslide is he who from choice or circumstances remains in the aattiintning through the cycle of the Masons--the man who sees Nature's wheels go round. She in her strenu­ ous moods takes to the mountains to work off her superfluous energy; she reaches the extreme in everything; her rains are cloud-bursts; her heat makes the seething air visible; her now aod winds blind and overwhelm. taMltsst Pony on Eirtb, A pony, from Iceland, is exhibited at Paris that stands only thirty inches high and it is regarded as a wonder. But he is a freak of nature. In Corea the ponies are all freaks apparently. Clive Bigham in a book of travel in China and Korea, says that no de­ scription can ever summarize all the remarkable characteristics of the Ko­ rean home, or rather pony. He is, to begin with, only the size of a large Newfoundland dog. He is a past mas­ ter at buck-jumping. He never frMIs to kick or bite any human being or other animal that he can reach. This is so much the case that at night he has to be slung up by the girths un­ der his body, his hoofs just off the ground, while he spends his ttrne squealing and trying to savage his stable companions, when not drinking the hot, mashed-up bean gruel that forms his only subsistence. In the daytime, however, he is a good beast of burden; but no amount of coaxing ever appears to change his disposition, and he is always equally delighted to punish the leg that mounts or the hand that feeds him. Variety may be the spice of life, bat most men seem to prefer cloves. paselble te Dflrs Sstwsm These. To the Editor: A gentleman from Duluth made a trip through a portion of Western Canada last summer and writing of what he saw, says: "Wheat, tor instance, will average twenty-five or thirty bushels to the acre. I saw Shocks so thick in the field that it would be almost impossi­ ble to drive between them. Winters, it la said are longer than near Du­ luth, but the Japan current, warm chinook winds and dry atmosphere make the winters comparatively jnild." Thousands of such testimonials are to be had from settlers who have taken advantage of the low-priced lands of Western Canada, During the present year new districts will be opened up in the Saskatchewan valley and ad­ vantage should be taken of this at once. Information can be had from any agent of the government, whose advertisement appears elsewhere in your columns. Yours truly, OLD READER. PAST TRAIN TO COLORADO Via •tsaonrt FmIDc Rail wa jr. The Missouri Pacific Railway Is now operating double daily service from St. Louis and Kansas City to points in Colorado, Utah and the Pacific coast. Trains leave St Louis 9 a. m., and 10:10 p. m., Kansas City 6 p. m. and 10 a. m., carrying through sleeping cars between St Louis and San Francisco without change. Excursion tickets now on sale. For further information address Company's agents. H. C. TOWNSEND, •:%/P. * T. Agent, St Louis, Ma Tha Beat Way. If yon are going to take advantage of the Cheap Rate to California in , July, account of the Epworth League Convention to be held at San Francis­ co, remember that the Southern Pa­ cific Company can offer more attrac­ tions in the way of diverse routes to and from and through California than Any other line. Send to the under­ signed for a map of California, which will show how you can reach all points of interest via the Southern Pacific Lines and how you can have your ticket to San Francisco reading over one line and returning another. These cheap rate Round-Trip Tickets will be on sale July 6th to 13th in­ clusive and will be good tor return ins­ til August 31st. W. G. Neimyer, Gen­ eral Western Agent, 238 Clark street, Chicago, 111. Sans Soucl Park, Chicago's finest open air amusement park, is open for the season of 1901 with more attrac­ tions than ever before. This nark during the past two seasons has be­ come one of the big sights of Chicago and visitors to the city have not seen the sights until after they have visited this popular place of amusement Lo­ cated adjacent to beautiful Washing­ ton park and opposite the famous Mid­ way Plaisance, Sans Souci is in an Ideal spot. The park company spent $1,000,000 on Sans Soucl, buildtng the largest electric fountain in the world, palatial building and myriads of lawn decorations. During this season high- class vaudeville, high diving and open air attractions will be given. In addi­ tion daily concerts by De Baugh's fa­ mous band will be given. The second week of "Uncle Ton's Cabin" in Chicago was ushered in with much eclat on Monday at the Audi­ torium. William A. Brady's monster production has attracted throngs of people since its opening, and the line In front of the box-office has not been broken during a fortnight. The critics have commented enthusiastically on this rendering of Harriet Beecher Stowe^jmelodrama, none of them dis sentlng^rrom the opinion that not even in its palmy days at the Boston Mu­ seum or when Louis James and Marie Waiawright offered it has the piece been so magnificently staged and So intelligently acted. The Burlington, Cedar Rapids * Northern Railway has got out a neat booklet descriptive of the beautiful summer resorts at Spirit and OkobojP Lakes In Northwestern Iowa. Free copies will be mailed upon application to Jno. Q. Farmer, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Cedar Rapids, la. The City of Mexico is now In the hands of the contractors who are put­ ting in the new system of sewers, which precedes the paving of tbe streets with asphalt Many good physicians and nurses use Wizard Oil for obstinate rheumatism and neuralgia. It's the right thing to do. There are in California nearly 45,000 Italians. Their property is estimated at 160,000,000. HOt FOB OKLAHOMAt _ Maw landa »oo> to open. Seraady! Morgan's Maaaal. wKb supplement containing proclamation.mapahowtng allotments. County seats, etc.. S X. Supplement A Man, BOc Agents Wanted. DICK T. MORUAN, Perrjr, O. T. but lack the - Philadelphia Some men aim high, necessary ammunition. - Record. I am suze PIbo's Cure for Consumption sar«4 •y life three years ago.--Mrs. THOS. ROBBISS, Maple Street, Norwich. N. V.. Feb. 17.1000. A man sometimes loses his head, but a woman seldom loses her tongue. FITSTVl•laiimillyCored. NofltsornerrouseeasaiNes first day's nse of Dr. Kilne'e Great Kerve Restorer. 9ead for PUKE HS3.00 trial bottle and treatise. Dm. B. 8. Kum. Ltd.. Ml Arch St.. l'hlla<»«dphla. Pa. The population of Japan is increas­ ing at the rate of 400,000 a year. KKZP SOCK LIVER LITR.T By using DR. CRANE'S QUAKER TON­ IC? TABLETS. A wonderful remedy. The breath of scandal is an ill wind that blows nobody good. « » Ball's Catarrh Cin '̂ >4 ; baeoastltntionalcure. Price. 7S&' •* V ... An expressman says that old maids are uncalled-for packages. Mi's. Winn low's Sooth In jj Syrup. For cbtldreu teething, softens tbe gums, reaueas In* flsmmstion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2&c a bottle. Kaffirs own nine-tenths of ths 12,- 000,000 acres of Natal. OmI Cough Balaam b the oldest and best. It wilt break tip acoldqmiehar ttao aaything els*. It u always reliable. TQlt Troubles are like babies--they grow larger by nursing. All tha Hmmmib «f Aalaat «ad TsgstaU* Growth. Why and how is the deer so pecu­ liarly unlike any other of the bovine race, the horn differing so materially from all the horned cattle in its com­ position, growth, maturity and de­ cline? It presents all the phenomena of animal and vegetable growth. It sprouts from the brain without any prolongation of the frontal bone. It rises and breaks through the sinews and takes root on the bone, growing the same as a vegetable. It is nour­ ished by and secretes albumen upon the surface and disposes of the flbrine the same as an animal. It is clothed with a skin and hairy coat very differ­ ent from that on the rest of the body. This covering and hair possesses a property unknown in other animal bodies--that of being 1 a styptic to stanch its own blood when wounded. It carries marks of the age on the buck by puting out an extra branch each year, which shows an additional power each year to produce them. And this power does not exist in the female. So this difference is more distinctly marked than in any other class of an­ imals. Again, the horn passes prop­ erties unknown in any other animal matter. It is entirely inodorous, capa­ ble of resisting putrefaction of the at­ mosphere. And still water at 300 de­ grees F. will dissolve these horns read­ ily, even though they are not soluble in alcohol and resist the action of acids and alkalies. It is the only vegeto animal substance that we know of that does not perpetuate itself by procrea­ tion. The male and the female are sustained by the same nutrition and elements, and the male only produces horns. This phenomenon Is quite as much of a curiosity as the absence of the horn in the buck after shed­ ding. Mew Star In Prraraa The new star In Perseus is now M faint as to be barely visible without a telescope. The Star was first seen on the 22d of February. On Saturday evening, the 23d, it reached the first magnitude. |N 3 OR 4 YEARS M INDEPENDENCE ASSURED If you take up your home in Western Can­ ada,the land of plenty. Illustrated pamphlets, riving experiences of farmers who have be­ come wealthy in grow­ ing wheat, reports of delegates, etc..and full ed rail* wMunVe • wtFWTBWI VI .1%: i«NJ CLEM. Cm Clem G. Moore, Editor of the Advocate-Democrat of writes the Peruna Medicine Company as follows: OenClemen--"After toar years of latease suffering, caused by catarrh, which I contracted while ed/ting, and traveting for my pmp* beeo greatly relieved by the ose of Peraoa. I gave up work during tbeae, of torture, tried various remedies mad many doctors, but all the relief came from the use of Peruoa. My trouble was called lodigestioa, was catarrh all through my system, mad a tew bottles of Peruoa made am like another person, noting the Improvement after I had used the tint Peruoa Is undoubtedly the best catarrh remedy ever compounded.--Clem O. Moore. information as to reduced railway m«>s can be had on application to the Superintendent of Immigration, Department of Interior. Ottawa, Canada, or to C. J. Brouuhton. 1233 Monadnock Big Block, t hicago. or K. T. Holmes, Room 6, Four" BkUr, Indianapolis, Ind- R E W A R D!rHi ̂ p*14 for a case of backache, nervousness, sleepless­ ness. weakliest, loss of vttaHty, In­ cipient kidney .biadaar ana urinary disorders that can not be cured bv 50 KID-NE-OIDS tht great kidney, liver and blood medicine. At all Druggists. Write for free sample. Add KIP-ME-Q1Q8. St. loula, I ARE YOU L00KIH6 ZZSZ&Tl Captain Percy W. Moss, Paragould, Ark., says: "I think Peruna is undoubt­ edly the finest and surest catarrh cure ever prepared, and it has taken but two bottles to convince me of this fact" Judge Wm. T. Zenor, of Washington, D. C., writes from 213 N. Capital Street, Washington. D. C.: "I take pleasure in saying that I can cheerfully recommend the use of Pe­ runa as a remedy for catarrhal trouble and a most excellent tonic for general conditions."--Wm. T. Zenor. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the runa. write at once to Dr. Hfcii|l|jH. giving a full statement of and he will be pleased to give you hfes valuable advice gratia* Address Dr. Hartmaa, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, < W.L.DOUCLAS S3. & $3.50 SHOES K leal worth •»«' W. 1.. DssslssS I as4 •U.Stt «h«»r» ta to W>5. OUt Ed(e I.ine cunnut be r|H>illr< at any price. It ts not atone the best 1 rather that makes a tint . class shoe tt ts the bteins, Uhnt have planned the V**»t Mvle, lartaa perfi et nodes of the foot, and the eotistnirtum of Hie shoe. It is t'»ei*hanl« al skill aad knowrledtre thai liare made W. I., honjrlas sIiwr Hip hest n IN' w orld for men. T ike !»<» awhatltat*. Insist on havinar W. I,, liouiilas shoes with name and pricf stamped on bottom. Your dealer should <eep them, if he does i tot catalog giving full iwtrm-Uous how to order hy mail. W. I.. IKIIIUI.AS, Srscktsa, WE USE FAST COL EYELETS woonSuS VISIT THE D A N - A M E R I C A N • EXPOSITION BUFFALO SO« Addrese MO. Onion or for a f so, tt will par you to cummnntoatn with ua.we can tell yoa an Unproved farm on email casti payment, balance long time, or we will locate you on a government homestead. EUCIom Hudson A Brown Enclose two cent stamp for reply. KtU, Tha Dalle*, Oregon, SOLDIERS »ViAin SB • Additional home- stead rights have cash value. We perfect and buy them. HEIRS ENTITLED. The Collins Land Ce., Atlantic Btd>i..Wa*hinston.D.C. AGENTS WANTED For best line of fast selling goods ever offered. Catalogue und confidential price list sent Free upon application. WABASH NoVK1.TY CO. Box £S5 Terra Haute, lad. C0MAICIE LAND OPENINQ 2.300.000 scree. For InformeUoa and map* write looasrr A Moes, Comaitobe, 1. T. Enclose stamp. / L A K E T | M I C H . / iCH/CAl L O W RATE6 V FREQUENT TRAINS t ptED° J=*" CtfVEl LA)cr Lake Shore A Michigan Southern Call parfieslars on application to F. N. BYRON* General HfsiKu, Nature'* Priceless Reffiethr Dlt.O. PHELPS BROWN'S PRECIOUS HERBAL OINTMENT It Cures Throttflh the Peres Address Pr. O. p. Brown, OS B'way. Rheumatism, Netirai fcWeak Back, Ssr it.SsressndsN I ins. Psin. of your K>, SOc. . send as his name, and for your trouble, we will CaaalaltSHQet It of aBfCllrdruOTlst, K irh« does not sell It, as his name, and for trouble, we will Craa Sand Ton a Trial ITM. ,Hewbur*h,N.y. ForVune-Maksr! kS Shirt Bosom Pad. No more laundry bills. Twenty clean Sbirts In one. Sample 86c, silver. R. K. UOl.1, CO., Gothenburg, Mete. 7 oo YOB WNT I® MOW • send stamp toLT. Oaaist, patent atty, g|0 ltth St. S7Washington. P. C.. for Kree Handbook " ' BarpiisiiLail wal •Hen from ths Coaaty I good halidtaga, Asrssuur Sr mtante, SMSpsraera.-"uXHDAlU&STri water, one Btlia in. SfSll. I -- FASK OaMta, Sowtfc OarnMs. Land for Sale. the city of Marceltne, Mo. Owta*f»f*B*»«*r j I will sell i ,s«o or i,SM acres of ssnsjUM tracts to suit p u rcbaaer, t rota M to tee a L. 8. CURRY, " W. N. U. CHICAGO. NO. 24^ Vies Asswerisg AdvertiseswstSK Mestios This rapes. 1 that dreadful fiend that threatens the life of rich and poor, can attack and kill only those whose bowels arefipt kept thoroughly cleaned out, _ and disinfected the year round. whose liver is dead, whose and stomach are full of half decayed food, whose whole body is UNITIKO inside, is a quick and ready victim of appendicitis. If you want to be safe GAINST the scourge, keep in GOOD health all the time, KEEP CLEAN INSIDE! Use the only tonic laxative, that will make your bowels strong and healthy, and keep them pure and dean, tected against appendicitis and ALL EPIDEMIC DISEASES. It'SCAS- CARETS, that will keep and save dyou. Take them regularly and you will find that all diseases are absolutely 10c. 25c. 50c. ALL DRUGGBTS. NEVER SOLD IN BUUC CURE all Iwwl InsUm, mppendlcltla, Ml- lonanaaa, fesA krestk, Ui Hoed, wtai oil tke stosiack, Msstsi towels, foul ••tls, hsadachs. iadtcsstlsa, piHspiea, treskisTsaflew cestpiexlea sea year kswsls dent aseve rm* iarly yon are gsttb^ilek. OeMlipatlea kills s>; •slai after eattaa. liver and dlnlnsss. Wk people than all dlseaasa toftlker. it la GUARANTEED i to |slats . We tsars I araates* ta sllas* »adit las la the wsrtd. *l asrtl.aa< ear r sett cltCASJn This I starter far the ehreale allateaSa sod lane years *r sutkriag that «hm afterwards. Ss natter what alls " " will you. Mart lahlsg CASCAMETS to-4ay, far yes never get wall aa4 ks wall all Iks ttase aatU ret wall as4 ks wall a yen put rsnr kovsb rt«M. Take ear adtrleei Mart wttk CA&CAHBTS te-4ay, ssdsr as afcaolnta gsai* asitee to esura or as--ay wwatrt. I CO., . * a " 3 ... iy?!, J* , , ioT, 'A * \ ^ 2 : 4 . , . < < 1 * * , v " Mi '•iSL \ A&rhiJC *r'

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