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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 May 1888, p. 7

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1IB>. Old wlw^MiMwed htap --lew go iwagrmathodiqaHy »l work. Tbej i»j thai to relish hemp one must first ab­ stain bom etimiflsting food and drink for a brief period; for only after a short last can one taste to the full the de­ lights of hashish and render one's eys- tem folly snsoeptible to its influence. So, for several days previous to the *<wgien the experienced hemp-eater •ats no meat, drinks neither wine nor spirit, lives mainly upon vegetable foods, light pastry, and ripe fruits, and •mokes utile. On the day of the de­ bauch ho rises very early and fasts till the afternoon, when the frî nds who are to join him arrive. They prepare for dinner by taking a strongly charged pipe and inhaling the thick white smoke. A light meal is then served, , In which plenty of sweet pastry figures, • and each of the company retires to his ooshion prepared for the evening's in­ dulgence. Musicians are stationed at the end of the apartment, dancing girls are Introduced, or if the host is a very wealthy man he orders his own slaves ' in. Hemp boluses are passed around, a.id the pipes well charged with the , drag. For this purpose tobacco is first laid in the bowl, upon this a small *• charge of pure hashish extract is placed, and the whole is fired by the means of a glowing ember of charcoal I •„ and saltpeter which has been mingled V: with honey and dried. Strong and well sweetened coffee is handed round; and while the dancing and music are going on the smokers begin. Loung­ ing back they suck the smoke into the lungs and air passages, sending it forth ?again through the widely distended nostrils; and, gazing upon the forms ? and faces posturing and revolving be­ fore them, the hashashin swims off in a •- sea of blissful content that verges upon % ecstasy. As soon as the pipe is ex­ hausted, strong coffee without sugar is taken, and rouses the dreamers from their vision of delight But a "bolus" ; of hemp cake and another pipe well charged, stimulates afresh the excited imagination, and sends them off again into their dreamlands. The singers chant their love songs, and the almehs sway in their passionate dances. This goes on for hours, fresh pipes and coffee being passed around at intervals, _ tî e smokers waking fiom one dream only to go off into another. Such an t orgie, indeed, is sometimes protracted < for two or three days. Then lassitude ' and exhaustion ensue, and the hashash . experiences a sort of revulsion against the drug which lasts for Bome weeks, when the longing for it returns. In many parts--among them the :V Bektaches, for example--there are regular gatherings for hemp-smoking, just as the Nsairie of Syria meet on ̂certain days to drink hemp tea. The poorer closes find opportunities for in­ dulging in the drug in the so-ealled 5 "meshash" or hemp-houses. These are forbidden in moBt moslem countries. But though the law may prohibit, it r oannot suppress these places. Scenes In India. From Calcutta to Beneras is, by rail, nearly 556 miles. We made nearly ,< half the distance by night, writes Car- • ter H. Harrison, in one of his letters from India. This was with less regret because we had been informed that the country along this portion of the road ; was in general appearance and produc­ tion practically the same as that we had seen going to Deerjeerling. Before 6 in the morning I was looking out over a dead flat in every direction, exeept one short range of tall hills, which, when reached, was soon passed. The level plain has no appearance of rich­ ness. The 3oil is a very light gray, and in the short-cut rice paddies looks as if it would produce but little. The country then took a greener ap­ pearance in wheat, gram (I think it is vetch), castor oil, dahl or split-pea, and poppy. Some of the fields of the lat­ ter at a distance, in full flower looked like snow fields, so white and pure was the bloom. On the road we traversed great coal fields, said to be rich both in quantity and quality of the yield. For the last hundred mile3 much of the country was very pretty. The mango and other orchards are abundant, and every plain has its many scattered trees. Barley was added as a growth, and was well headed and green. Fencee, where there were any, were of cactus or prickly-pear. The spider webs well clouded with dust looked like great gossamer veils spread over the spiky hedges. Bows of aloes, or century plants lined the road. Now and then vision would penetrate as far as the eve could reach, through openings in the trees, and the prospect jlie was that of a perfect flat plain, relieved only by trees and villages. In eighteen and a half hours we reached Benares, the Holy City of India; a city already old three centuries before Christ, and now con­ secrated by eight centuries of Budd­ histic sway and sanctity, and of seven­ teen known centuries of Brahminism. Here annually come pilgrims,probably a million or more, from all parts of India--the rich and the poor, the old and the young, the strong and the de- crepid -- crowded in railway cars, packed like hogs, Or hobbling along dustv roads, suffering every kind of privations, spending the hoarded sav­ ings of years of toil--dirty and weary, for they perform no kind of ablution from the time they leave their for-off homes until they can wash away the filth of the body and the pollution of the soul in the cleansing water of the sacred Ganges. Strange faith. TJnconquered and unconquerable. Blind, abject super­ stition. Slavish, yet sublime, because of its human intensity. For countless ages this thing has been going on year after year. It began before history had learned to engrave imperihsable annals. Its origin is as impenetrable as the Himilayan heights, where their god sits in his frozen home. Millions as ; countless as are the sands reached by the ever-surging swell of old |>cean have believes in and performed these pious duties with sublime earn­ estness. We call these things grovel­ ing idolatry. They call our faith blind superstition. Easter Eggs* The original idea of coloring Eapter eggs was probably "borrowed from na­ ture--that great eouroe of original , thought, for it is during the month of flowering April that the birds fill their tiny nests with tinted treasures. As Easter offerings, eggs beautifully dyed and decorated, are extremely popular, making up the greater part of that im­ mense mass of gifts which each year makes its way from friend to friend. What could be more peculiarly appro­ priate or beautiful in artistic adorn­ ment than these "sermons in shells?" The custom of bestowing gifts at Easter is one fraught with the tender- est feeljng and replete with expression of #ood vmL When thp gifts bestowed lation, rooeived and donated liT this spirit, thai we oelebtftte i&a truese^e this season of unfrersai ifjoiotaf to which the lilies aod the purple passion flowers are consecrated. -- Effie M. Huddleston, in SI Louis Magazine. The Commerce of ChllL Wheat has, for the last seventy-five years, been one of the main staple pro­ ducts ol Chili, and when forty years ago gold was discovered in California, Chilian steam-ground flour was the first consumed in the mines, remaining the staff of life till in 1854; the first steam four mills were started in the new State, and subsequently the latter became even a greater wheat-producer than Chili The only flour which Chili had to compete with during the pioneer times of the Gol4en State was Richmond, Va., flour, the favorite brands of which in the mines, were at the time "Gallego" and "Haxall." Chili, during six or eight years, from 1849 to 1857, became rich through its California traffic; the flour, barley, Chili beans and dried peaches in cakes consigned from Valparaiso to San Francisco left big fortunes to Chilian consignors, the flour separately bring­ ing as much as $20 per bag of 300 pounds, Spanish, on the dock at San Francisco, and other goods in propor­ tion. After the California market was lost, Australia, where gold was discov­ ered in 1853, became a mine for Chilian wheat, eta, growers and millers, nearly as rich,and continued giving spendid re­ turns even longer. Subsequently the Cape of Good Hope was added, and Chilian flour was besides shipped to Peru, Ecuador, the La Plata States and Brazil, even to the Pacific coast of Mexico and Central America. The Chilian wheat is of as good quality as California, and the flour not inferior to Baltimore. The only wonder is that as a wheat producer, Chili has since then not become as important a conn- try as California. Now Chilian wheat finds its way chiefly to Europe, where it commands the top of the market At any rate the productive capaoity of the Republic, in this line is very great, and may bepushed to a greater devel­ opment at any time in the future unless prices should decline so muoh in the world's markets that it oannot stand the freight from Valparaiso to Liver­ pool. Chili is one of the most interesting countries of South America, inasmuch as it is not only a great cereal-produc­ ing country, but turns out some 35,000 tons of copper, now leaving big profits to the mining interests down there, and an almost unlimited amount of nitrate of soda, which is consumed abroad as manure. Chili also possesses tolerably rich silver mines. The Republic is moreover famous for its uninterrupted civil tranquility, being the only Span­ ish-American country where revolu­ tions are a thing unknown. Chili covers an area of 753,216 square kilo­ meters, and has a population of 2,000- 000: the climate is mild and healthy throughout; the only drawback is fre­ quent earthquakes. The indebtedness on April 30, 1887, was $83,491,326. The budget for 1887 fixed the income estimate at $43,000,000, and the outlay at $34,097,323. The only disturbing element in finance is the paper money, of which there is about $20,000,000 cir­ culated, but it is gradually being re­ deemed. The strength of the perma­ nent army is $5,547 men, and there is besides a national guard numbering 48,854 men. The navy consists of eight­ een armored vessels, with together seventy-five guns, 17,080 ton capacity, 4,550 horse power, and manned by 1,988 sailors. The merchant marine consisted in 1886 of 173 vessels, of a joint capacity of 77,285 tons, including 37 steamers, of 18,528 tons.--The Mill­ stone, Edison's First Marriage. He fa an oddity, doing nothing fa fhe common way and setting at naught all the conventionalities. The first Mrs. Edison was an operator in the Newark factory where Edison was making ma­ chines to fill his first order for the stock indicator, which brought him into notice and formed the basis of his fortune. She was a tall, fine-looking girl--ofte of a dozen sitting at a bench winding magnets. One day as Edison was walking down the line, that girl spoke up and bade him good morning without raising her eyes from her work. "Good morning," said the inventor, "How did you know it was I? "Oh,* I can always tell when you're near," was the reply. "See here," said the man of inven­ tions, "I've noticed you a good deal of late. Suppose you and I get married?" "I'm ready." "When shall it be?" "Three weeks from to-night" "All right!" and the inventor went on his rounds while his intended bride merrily wound away upon her bobbin of wire. b On the wedding day the first con­ signment of stock indicators came iijifriiMijityi of iwvEwnoju i KACT BOOK. Ax application haa been filed for a patent on a new gaiter that is in­ geniously constructed so as to show down the seam the buttons desired for effect in uniform, while the actual fastening is by a oord which passes ; around studs under the flap of the > gaiter and exerts its pressure in such a j way that the gaiter is drawn tight• uniformly, cannot wrinkle, and is very easily put on and taken off. Harvey B. Cox, New Haven, Conn., j has invented a device for protecting j vessels in a fog. It consists in attach­ ing to the sheathing of the vessel a copper plate furnished with an induc­ tion coil and connected with an indi­ cator. With similar arrangements at light -houses it is claimed that by means of electric currents transmitted through the water, it will be possible to locate the position of the light-house, and that in the same way the relative posi­ tion of vessels thus provided can be ascertained when it is possible to see anything at a distance. The young English electrician, to whose ingenuity Mr. Irving owed the clever device by which sparks are made to fly from the blade of Mephisto's sword, is the inventor of a tiny electric lamp for use in examining the passages of the throat It was with this novel apparatus that Dr. Mackenzie examined the throat of the Crown Prinoe. The lamp is appended at the end of what looks like a long, slender penholder, and is actually put down the patient's throat The small battery which sup­ plies the electricity is worn about the examining surgeon's neck. AN electrical process has been pat­ ented whereby very heavy iron may be welded more quickly and" solidly than by any other method. The sheets of iron are bent into shape and the edges heavily charged with electricity, that brings them to a white heat in a very few minutes, when it can be passed through rolls and welded very quickly, leaving hardly a trace of the seam. It is asserted by those interested that a very great dinamo power is not required. It can also be utilized in laying a pipe in a trench for gas or water mains, making one long One of solid pipe if desired. The French Societe d'Enoourage- ment offers prizes for discoveries and inventions of value to Frenoh industries. Prizes of $200 each are offered for (1) the utilization of residue now wasted in factories; (2) the discovery of a new alloy; (3) the useful application of metals not employed in industry; (4) a lieating apparatus for giving high tem­ peratures rapidly and economically. Prizes of $400 each are offered for (1) a small workshop motor; (2) improved grain-mill. Prizes of $600 are offered for (1) the transmission of power over long distances; (2) the manufacture of glass for chemical purposes; (3) a sim­ ple and solid appliance which will in­ dicate the progress of a train at any distance in a reliable and automatic manner. Medals, etQ., must be sent to the secretary of the society, 44 Rue do Rennes, Paris. >KMS. lihtmrilH silk [Kew Ye* Latter] It Overworked;" goes to Stoop*. Chip. III. *HU BlMIMMimtoes to £l Cuap. IV. Hm a xuv with his Doctor. 1 have read t deal of sarcaaui in my di_, but 1 never read anything equal to the sar­casm contained in ihe above four-Chaptered book, written by aome anonymous I • aspect the experience portrayed u a peraooal one; the author intimates aa much ou page 31. Ls* me give yon* synopsis: "Malaria," as it atatss, "is the cloak with which superficial phytaiwana cover up a mul­titude of ill feeling* whtoh they do Dot un.ier* stand, and do not mnch care to investigate. It is also a cover for such disease as they cannot cure. When they adviee their patient to travel or that he has overworked and needs rest and is probably suffering from laria, it is a confession of ignoranc J or of ina­bility." "'1 he patient poes abroad. The chance is a tonic and lor a time he feels batter. Conies home. Fickle appetite, frequent headaches, severe colds, emmps, sleeplessness, irrita­bility, tired feelings, and general unfitness for basinesMkre succeeded m due tuue by alarming attacks of rheumatism which flits about his body rogardlees of all human feel­ing*. *It is muscular--in his back. Articnlar--in his joints. Inflammatory, my! how he ftars it will fly to his heart! "Now off he goes to the springs. The doctor sends him there, of course, to get well; at the same time he does not really want him to'die on his hands! That would hurt his business! "Better for a few days. Returns. After a while neuralgia transfixes him. He bloats; cannot breathe; has pueumonia; can­not walk; cannot sleep on his left side; is fretful; very nervous and irritable; is pale and flabby; has frequent chills and fever*; everything about nim seem* to go wrong; becomes suspicious; musters up courage, and demands to know what is killing him! "Groat Leaven!" he cries, "why have you kept me eo long in ignorance?" "Because," said the doctor, "I read your fat* live years ago, I thought best to keep you ignorant of the facts." He dismisses his doctor, but too late! His fortune has all gone in fees. But him, what becomos of him? The other day a well-known Wall street banker said to me: "It is really astonishing how prevalent Bright's disease is becoming. Two of my personal friends are now dying of it But it is not inourable, I am certain, for my nephew was recently cured when his physicians said recovery was imponsible. The case seems to me to be a wonderful oue." This gentleman formerly represented his government in a foreign country. He knows, appieciates and declares the value of that preparation, bsoause his nephew, who is a son of Danish Vice Consul Schmidt, was pro­nounced inourable when the remedy. Warner's safe cure, was begun. "Yes," said' his father, *1 was very skeptical, but since taking that remedy the boy is welL " I happen to know, what it was that cured the boy, for Gea Christiansen, Of DrexeL Morgan & Co.'e, told me (hat it was that •wonderful remedy. Warner's aafe cure." Well, I suspect the hero of the book cured himself by the same meant*. I cannot close my notice better than by quoting the author's advice: "If, my friend, you have such an experi­ence aa I liavo portrayed, do not put your truat in physicians to the exclusion of other remedial agencies. They have no monopoly over disease, and I personally know that many of them wouid far prefer that their Satients should go to Heaven direct from isir powerless hands than that they should be sav-d to earth by the use of any "unau­thorized means." A tma&landts this la wWeh we live ̂dotted SO thiekty with thrifty cities, towis, an i vil­lages! Amid them all, with ever-in-creaaiag popularity and he'pfulne**, is , £>r. Pierce's Golden Medical Dtscor-« ery, giving hope and cheer where there ! • is disease sad despair. Wherever there j t Is humanity there is suffering; wh o ever there I ' is suffering there is the best field for this j greatest American llemedy. Consumption (which is lnng-scrofnla), yields to it, u em. j ployed in the early Btagos of the di*ea«c; | Chronic Kasal Catarrh yields to it; Ki tuuy ] and liver diseases yield to it! • If you want ! tile beat known remedy for all dheasei of tin j ' blood, ask for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and take no other. • j ! Richabd III. demanded another horse ' because he was tired of the nightmare that had been riding him.--Texas Sifltvgs. j j The Longest Word In the Dictionary | Is incompetent to communicate the inexpress- i ! ible satafaction aud incomprehensible conse- j | quences resulting from a judicious admiuis* ! tratloa of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, j a preparation designed especially for the i* speedy relief and i<evmanent cure of all Fe-! male Weaknesses, Nervousness, and diseases j pemliar to the female ae;x The only remedy ! for woman'* peculiar ills, sold by itruutfiHW, ' under a positive guarantee, to give satisfac-ton. .-M guarantee on wrapper of bottle. This guarantee has been faitUlu.ly carried out lor many yeara by the proprietors. An important process has been pat- : ented within a few months past that bids fair to revolutionize the bond whisky trade of the country. Its pur­ pose is to "age" whisky speedily, some- i thing that has often been tried, but not accomplished without impairing the ' taste or quality to such an extent as to render the process of no value. The : newly patented method is simple and | inexpensive, consisting only in the in-1 jection of pure spirits. Henry Glass, j a chemist of Christian County, Ken- i tucky, is the inventor. For a year past . some of the best whiskv-makers in the oountry have beeu experimenting with ; the process in a small way, and they con­ cur in opinion that with three months' treatment new whisky, in odor and color, becomes equal to the best three to five-years-old goods, and without loss in proof and quantity. The method is now being tested in a large way at the distillery of M. P. Mattingly, of Owens- boro, Ky. Its success in all particu­ lars would work a radical change in the price of this staple. Facts About the Bible. A prisoner, condemned to solitary confinement, obtained a copy of the Bible, and by three years' careful stndv, obtained the following facts: Tlie Bible contains 3,586,489 letters, 773,692 words, 31,173 verses, 1,189 chapters, and 66 books. The word "end" occurs 46,277 times. The word "Lord" occurs 1,855 times. The word "reverend" occurs but once, which is in the 9th verse of the 11th Psalm. The middle verse is the 8th verse of the 118th Psalm. The 21st verse of the 7th chapter of Ezra contains all the letters in the alphabet except the letter J. The finest chapter to read is the 26th chapter, of the Acts of the Apostles. The 19th chapter of IL' Kings and the 37th chapter of Isiah are alike. The longest verse is the 9th verse of the 8th chapter of Esther. The shortest 37th ' Cay^nn? Pepper for Scandalmongers, i I am immensely strong on facts this . week, and I have* by great study found i out tiiat in Morocco women who talk ! scandal have their lips rubbed with : cayenne pepper. What do you suppose i would happen if that much to be com- i mended practice were adopted not only I for women but in the clubs ? I grant you there is a deal of gossip at the i sewing society, but it is not half as bad as that which is considered enter­ taining at the clubs of the men. Baby Bibs for Dluing-Roont<*. Why don't the owners of dining sa­ loons provide their patrons with bibs, as we see so many people ̂as soon as they sit down at a table, take a napkin and tuck it under their chin. I think baby bibs would answer the purple well.-- Letter in Ne:v York World. verse is the 37th verse of the 11th back from the purchaser, inoperative. ! chapter of St. John. The 8th, 15th, When Mr. Batchelor, who has always 21st, and 31st verses of the 107th been Mr. Edison's right-hand man, went down to the shop after supper he found the inventor there in his dirtiest shop clothes tinkering away at the machines. Didn't he remember that it was his wedding night? No, he'd forgotten all about it. Batchelor dragged the lagging groom to the near- ! to sea from a comfortable English Psalm are alike. All the verses o€ the 136tli Psalm are alike. There are no words or names ot more than six sylla- bles. _________ Saved by a Tolcausw At 10 years of age he had run away est clothing store, gat him into a new suit, then to a barber shop, and finally put him on a car and shipped him off to the house of the bride. Then he went back to the shop to work, sup­ posing that was the last of Edison for that night In an hour or two, how­ ever, Edison rushed in again, threw his new coat down on a greasy lathe, hung his waistcoat upon the gas pipe, kioked his shoes under the bench, seized a file and went at the defective stock indicator as if there were no such thing as marriage and giving in marriage, and there he staid with his faithful lieutenant till the morning sun looked in on two weary toilers and an electrical stock indicator that worked like a charm. When wealth came to them, Mrs. Edison No. 1 betrayed a tendency to branch out in the social world, but it had no effect on the inventor's habits. One of the largest entertainments New­ ark ever saw was given at her house. All the leading men of the Edison works were there, but he was nowhere to be seen. His subordinates grew a little uneasy. A committee of them went over to his laboratory about mid­ night and there was the inventor, tiped back in a rickety old chair, in his shirt­ sleeves, his shoeless feet high up on the workbench, singing away into his phonograph at the top of his* voice, happy as a clam at high-tide. The present Mrs. Edison sticks to her husband like a shadow. She is always at his elbow in working hours, with book and pencil, taking down his > ideas and experiments. She is, in fact. home, and had ever since been an exile and a rover. One year ago he was captured by pirates, and was sold into slavery to a native merchant of Sama- rinda, who had sent him on a trading ex- Sedition up the Mahakkam River, where e was captured by the Tring Dyaks. These amiable people immediately made preparations for a grand banquet, at which he was to have the honor of being the piece de resistance. Just as the head cook was leading him forth for culinary purposes, tho sky bocame suddenly darkened, the earth groaned and trembled, and a shower of ashes fell upon the terrified natives, who thereupon took to their heels, and left him to his own reflcctiona lie shortly followed their example by scampering off, though it is needless to s'av, in the opposite direction.--Arthur F. Mundy, in The American Magazine. Smiles Returned for Coppers fn Italy. While the horse and the driver were getting their drink I stood in the road­ way and watched some dark-eyed con- tadinas deftly balancing baskets full of olives on their pretty heads. I gave each of them some coppers and got in return more grazzias and sweet smiles than I could buy for as many dollars in Canal Street or in Broadway. The driver mounts to his seat; Milord, as he will call me, mounts to his, the young peasants courtesy almost to earth without toppling over a single basket, the tavern-keeper waves hia hand, we dash on, and by aud by fe enter Ventimi' la --Italian letter. The desire of more and more The "Pale Faces." This Is the generic designation of the white wee bestowed by our copj>er-colof«sd brother, tho "noblo savage." This Caucasian, thouch many shades lighter, is net necessarily pallid. But when his cntlcle has the parchijiOut- colored tint, and his cheeks the hollowuess indicative of a want of bodily stahiino, he well deserves the appellation of "pale face." TbtfSo facial indications should suggest a course of Hostetter 3 Stomach Hitters, an Acknowledged rehabilitate!- of a failing strength and re-newer of bodily substance. It is derived ex­clusively from botanic tourcea-is pure and efficient. Its invigorating action is prompt, thorough and speedily felt. Can the like be •aid of most tonics? Scarcely. Appet.te, as well as the ability to catitfy jt without sub­sequent discomfort, is renewed by it, and it effectually tones the livor and bowel?. It for-titles the Hyetem against malaria and rheuma­tism, and remedies nervousness and kidney complaints. Thb old "Powder-horn, "• an his­ torical building at Williamsburg, Va., is in danger of falling in from neglect and decay. It was built by Sir Alexander Bpotswood, Governor of the colony, in the first quarter of the eighteenth cen­ tury, to store supplies in. But its greatest interest arises from the fact that it was the building in which the colonial ammunition was stored in 1775. Lord Dunmore seized the am­ munition and moved it on board a man- of-war, the result being "the first gathering of an armed force in the col­ ony in opposition to royal authority." In later years it was used as a, market, church and stable. . aa, - •. Popular Preparation! Pure, Potent̂ Powerful! Pallid People Praise, Progressive People Pnrchase! Posi­tively Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, Properly Partaken, Preserve Physical Pow­ers, Prodnos Permanent Physical Perfection. Purchase, Provel "My husband, I know, will never jump over the Brooklyn Bridge." "Why?" "Therq are no saloons to stop at on the way." Something in the fisherman's line -- Snarls.--Detroit Free Prtax. VERDICT OF THE JUDKE. Great Excitement tn and A bo at a Ju itloa's Office at Cl»re, Mich. For {lyree year* I have been trouble 1 wit'i rheumttism'and a blo>J disorder, aid c.tuld get no relief permanently until now. A*n n jw using tho tiur.l bjttlj of HibbirA'd Kuu-mittc Syrup, and hivs nsvjr inal a m (di-cine winch h*» givdti so muoh re.ief. It giVM me a good appetite and greatly strongtasni my whole system. For a diseased Bt >m\c!i or a bilious or constipated per <01, I ituuk there is no remedy equal to it It is a groat family medicine. A. W. MCIxttb? Justioe ot the Peace, Clare, Mich. Thxke were wrestlers in the old oh vairlc days, else how oould a knight throw down the gauntlet?--Texas Sifting*. ••Consumption Can Be Cured." Dr. J. 8. Combs, Owensville, Ohio, says: *1 have given Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphitea to four patieuts with better results than seemed possible with any remedy. All were hereditary cases of Lung disease, and advanced to that stage when Coughs, pain in the chest; frequent breath­ing, frequent pulse, fever and Emaciation Alt these cases navo increased in weight from 10 to 28 lbs., and are not now needing any medioine." Getting his work in--A country doctor acting as undertaker.--Texas Sifttngs. ÎHOSE^ches -Q down your limbs flEAH RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA OB KINDLED ILLS.f* m hotfever KMivi*, iu limb, the desire 01 more ana more rises r ̂ I by a natural gradation to meat, «*& sad abilities. --York 2nbuM I «fiM that to csl) WILU' HAIB BALSAM. If gray .gradually restores ce'.or; elegant ttmfc dressing. 60c., H .00, Dru f̂istfl, or 91.0J sizfl j're-- Sa :d by Express for fl. E. S.Wells, Jersey City. OUGH ON PILES. Quick, complete cure. 4Cc. " Look younoj Leaurelle Oil prevents tendency to Wrinkles or seeing of Skin. Preserves a youthful plamp, fresn condition of leatures. If you desire » transparent, clear, freuh Complexion, free from blemish, or roughness, use Leaurelle Oil, it cures and prevents cracking, chapping, rough­ness or coarseness of skin. Keeps face, neck and hands soft, plutnp. Preserves tne tone, life and transparent glow of the skin a* in youth. This is a remarkable article ; tbdngh caUed an oil is more the nature of an expressed juice, and is a superb tonic and elegant for th» Hair and Whi»ktr.<. which it stimulates and tones without grease; yet keeps ttu httir and whiskers sott, glossv, luxurious and vigor­ous. f l at Druggists or by Express, free of Ex­press charge. E.S. Wills,Chemist, Jersey City. Catarrh Cored. A clergyman, after yeara of suffering front that loathsome dissase. Catarrh, and vainly trying every known remedy, at last fonnd a prescription which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dreadful disease sending a eelf-addreSHe<l stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence. 212 Bast Ninth street, New York, will receive the TCOipe free of chargei Consumption Surrty Cured. To the Editor:--Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above-named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glkd to send two bottles of my remedy pbke to any of your readers who have consump­tion if tney will send me their Expresa and P. O. address. UespectfnUv. ̂ T. A. 8I/OCUM, M. C.. 181 Peaxl 8t. N. Y. r year in boots "imcs; oost CREAMYBALMpATAR I wo* mrpritftl\ nfltr nrtng Eh/t Cream Balm two month« to find the\ right nostril, »rhich «0<u cloted for & p*ars, teas open and] free ax the other. I feel wry thankful. 72. II. Cre*aenghum 3Til-18fft St., Jfroofr- lyn. A particle ts Price Y* <ts.8 KiiV BROS, Cures ano Prevents Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Stiff Neck, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Asthma, Bruises, 8pralns, .luicker than snr known remedy. It w»s the first «nd is the only Pa!n remeay that ln.«t*i tly stops tlx moat excruciating pains, allays inflammation, and cures Cougeprious. wtiftJier or the I v.u^e, stomach, Bowels, or other g aids or onrans. No matter how violent or excriu-iatin? the pain the Rheumatic, iie«lri<Hen, infirm, Cripi>k*d. Neivou*, Neuralgic, or prostrated with <M*e «< h may RUWAY'S RUDY RELIEF Will AlTonl Instant Ease. Internally a half tn a le wnoonlul in half a tumbler of water will In a f w minute-i cure J'rumps, Spiwms, hour Stomaih. Vomiting, Heartburn, Ner̂ voumiesH BliH-plesi-nesK. 8iek Headache, Diarrhea, *1 V ""tulemy, bikI sit interns) puns. in itH various toi in* cureil aiul prevented. There is not a remedial agent in the world thst will cure lever mid mnie *ml all other Overs i'."Med by Badway's Tills) «o <iniokly as Karlwuv'n Heady Itelief. _ , ACHKH AND ror ncadaehe (wlietiifr sick or n< rvouiil, toothache, nenraltna, nervoumes.i unit Kleei lesMiesti. rheuma­tism, lumbago, i>Hinx mid wenl nes* in the buck, •Wi«, or kidneys, piiin* around tlit Jiver. pleurisy, swellirK ot the jointM, and pains of all kiuiln, the ap­plies'ion of Uadvra.v'H Uea y Keliet wflj ad'ortl im­mediate ease, *nd its continued use for a ieiv days effect a permanent cure, Piles. 50 cents. Bold by all druKKists.. Five dollars can be saved eve HIBBARDS RHEUMATIC SYRUP PLASTERS. No remedies known, so highly endorsed bv its home people, fn the treatment ot Rheumatism and all Blood dis­eases. Our Medi­cal Pamphlet sent free on ap plication. KacniATio Braur Con war, Jackson, Mich. 8ICK OR WELL YOU WILL BE INTERESTED in rendinc this formula. It is not a peculiar remedy put up to soil 'or a cent a dose. We challenge the world to produce a Medicine equal to it in merit as a family remedy. Tho combination makes it the greatest BLOOD MEDICINE IN THE WORLD. Pnopopn (fnnrniln As acatbirtic it will rest-ire Udot'"'! - J*>!J! nUfl, tho bowels to their n ruial condition witnout pain or giipint; and has re-nu rknble virtue in the treatment of habitual constipat.on. indigent on, r.nd as a ton e for the stomach it baa no rival, as used i'i this syrup. UldOlf Pnhnrh a powerful and use'ul rem-Dlnlift. UUllUuy* edv. acting primarily on the nervous system, kidneys and uterine organs. ITniwimi Dnnt 1" "It diseases of Wiimm it UuiuUlU nUUI. atnnds first and foremost as a tonic and regulator. Pnlror'e Unnt 18 powerfully chola:ogue, work-uUliul u tlUuii ing with gront rnerj;y on the liver. It is also an excellent ton e as well as eathartic and alterative, acting upon the secre­tive and absorb 'lit elands of tlm body. Ifonrtpalro powerful in its a-tion, working muliUl UaU< with great energy m»on the liTer and small intestines, and is invariably used for habitual constipation. iPnmniMnlr Is tonic, diuretic, alterative nnd IdJlldi dlL laxative „ ̂DnnrinnV 1* excellent for Rheumatism, Syph-DUrUUbl. ilis, Kidney and Iiiver d isuses, and tar all skin diseases it has no rival. P0|g Is eathartic aud anti-scrofulous. IN ADDITION TO THE ABOVE, which are ever*- ! where recognized by the MEDICAL FACULTY as being the best-known Blood Tonics, our medi­cine contains KAKK DRUGS, rendering HIBBARD'8 RHEUMATIC SYRUP A BLOOD MEDICINE, UNRIVALED IN MERIT. It is a sale FAMILY MEDI­CINE, because It contains no opiates or soitsa. Children, invalids and delicate persons will find It the best tozlc <£'•/ can use. No borne should be without it. Always in season, Bpring, flewmff, Autumn and Winter. It yon cannot procure it of yonr druggist* send liMtton Pries tLOO; e bottles t&Wl Is experienced by almost everyone at this season. | and many people resort to Hood's S irssparilla to drive away the languor and exhanntson. The blood, la ten with impurities which have bee > aecvmnt tin? for months, moves sluggishly through the veins, the mind Wis to think quickly, and the body is still s!ower to respond. Hood's Sareapirilla is lust what is needed. It pnrifiea, vitalizes and enriches the llood, makes the head clear, creates an appetite, orsrenmes thst tired feeling, tones the nervous *y>t'm» end imparts new strength and vigor" to «jta» Whole body. Hood's ftarsaparilla Is proven to be so vastly superior to any other sarxs-psrilla, or blood purifier, that one has well sa'd: "Its health-siring effects upon the blood and entire human orcaniam are as much more positive than the reme­dies ol a quarter of a century ago as the steam power of to-day is in advance of the (low and laborionn drudgery of years ago." Xesrtv everybody needs a geed ageing like Hoed's 8arsapsriBa tosapsk ItovMM accumulate in the blood dati g ffcs wtSfeSilNî ti *t en :th as warm we itber eomaa sn. C*Mtll Ws|j| tl̂ e sn.i promote healthy digesOsn. ®TH6e#liaar-sapsrill* and you will be conrinesd at Jta getoHsv me its. It is the ideal spring --dlrtea ist sMa. benefits!, pleasant to take, and gives fuO vain* far the money. 1 take Hood's BsreaparfBa aa a spring ton!c. i I recommend it to all who have that tired feeling." C. Piamtl, SV Bridge Brooklyn. N.T. Make the Weak SVron# "My appetite was poor, I oould not alasB, kallusl-ache a great deal, pains in my back, i not move regularly. Hood's time did me so much good that 1 feal n;an. My pains and aclies are relieved, a improved. I say to others, try Hood's 6. F. Jackson, Boxbury Station, ftin Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by a'l druRirists. $1: »ix for «5. Prepared only i Sold by all druggists. «i: six for $3. PFEpaie l̂'MMfr'̂ by f. I. HOOD k CO . Apothecaries, Lowell. Mass. I byC.1. HOOD k CO- Apothecaries, Lowell. (OO Doses One Dollar I (OO Doses One Dollar Silk and Satin Ribbons FREE! l̂ Bixa^Tun as for tocLI™"* for rhe iariirt. gnra Rtrtnej and teenrs "HI l>Mt! Kvrry lady kaow*««4 appreciates, thm prm!eg« of "a f«w munant* of bwt, ttantfv for t he tibovaard «u<! ons tHtysnd useful pttlpoftea for hirfc Mchgoods • r • «aed, and wfcirfe tfctv, UUita, tu h advnn-To Wfeat iiwiited at the uauat pricaa •oth iouiJI are •Old for, wo aid estate * targe bill of «tpf>nae, and UnriOi-e iirbar« a fre*t mattrfrom indulging (heir tefttea in thi« Rnlii* lay that ther® w*r« thousand* upon ibMunads of rvaiiumta of rib* bo»ta«a| tha Ur|« teportlaf wffilftf todbpoMofla balk, fbtaMaall IVartlMi of their coat, to any tm* oatwhii of pai ukarif kifty, wo Uatltuted a Marc" toaalttef ta oar okwaiaf Hm taiin atoek of Mlk ai Satin JUkkoa Kemaaat* of several of tfctlanesc thaai ho--i, who Imported the Caeat rood a. Three r\-oda mi Mlk anj roods. Three p\odi may be depended spoaaaeaportorto •RTlmBp ta bo fouml, except In tbe vety beet atorea of America. Tat ikfv are fWea away uvfeaixve LIVER 9#Kov\«\s pills. BXtrAKJS OF IMITATIONS. %£ITiIf ABK rvs DE. WMCPS rEIABTt, OK XtXTTLE SVGAli-COATrj> FILZS. Belnar entirely vegetable, tbrT op­erate without disturbance to the svitem, AM, or occupation. Put up in class viais, hncrnetl<-eally sealed. Always fresh and reiMda. Am a laxative, alterative* or rarnettvk these little Telleta slve the most perfia satisfaction. SICK HEIBICHE. Billon* Headache, Dlzzineee, Constipa­tion, liidlaeatloii* Billons Attack a, and all derangements of the stom­ach and bowels, are prompt­ly relieved and permanently cured by the use of Dr. lire Pellet*, poworof tbea» UpOB may truthfully be said that tbelr icUooupi the system is universal, not a gland or pli - ' "• - ~ fre l̂ aolkiecUkett eeor known. A gvead bcaeftt for all tbs tediee; beaatllQ» ilegaat, choke aooda abeolutely fWe* Wa hare expended tboaaaada of doliara la tWe dbactloa.ead can oflerea Immeuaely, reried, and meet complete aieorfment of rib­bons, ta e>-err oonceivable riiade end wtdih, and all of excellent ^aalllj, adapted for neck-wear, bonnet atriafe, bat trimmings, •owi, ecarfh, droaa trlmmtafa, dlk^ailt work, etc., etc. Soma af tbeee reanaanta vnnca three Tarda aad np^arda la lengtlL TVmfb raaaaaata,e)ltbo patterns are new aad late etylee, aad Mr be depoadod oa 'aa beaaliM. refaed. fiaehlouable andela* gant. Haw to feft a box ceatalalata Coaial«ta Ataartatcbt of (km eleiaat riebeai Free* Tke PrMtleal Moaaekerptr aad Flrealde Oaaapaalan, pablleboi monthly by ma, laao* laowledfM, by tkoee competent to jndfe, to be tbe beat peri* Sdtral of the kind in the w«r!d. Ven large aud haadeomely il> lafttreted: ragalar price 75 ct*. prryeer; eead SA cents and wa will send it to yoa for a trial yparv ami will aleoaead fl*f a boxoftlm ribbons; M eahwripUr-naand 2 boxes, OA de.;4r •nbnrriptioiiie and 4 I. Onr-ornt poetefeatempe amy beeent for lean tUnn $1. <iot 3 l« jein y«ui thereby get-Uns 4anbsoH|»iiotts RtiU 4 boxes for i •rfnittPt. The above ofter ta baaed < fee periodlool to. fnr one year, waut It therrattrr, and K. us the flill |>rH"e f »r tt; it in in alter yrp.rp, and not now, t we make moner. >>> mak" tbi* frreM ofter In order to id on» e secure net\- auhacHhera, who. not new, but next year, and hi year* tUereafi«>r, tdiall reward with a profit,bo* aause the maioritr of them Mill to renew tb<ireubeclt̂ » (ton*. and w*!i do»o. l*he lmmev required in butaemallftnctloM a( ike price yon would have to )iav nt any store lor a mock •nailer assortment of far Inferior ribbon*. Beat bargain evaV known; yoa will not folly appreciate it nntll after yoa eee all. Aafe dettvar>* gnareateed. Money remtided toanv onoaot poaa Irtlj aatleAed. Bettor cut this out. or send At once,forprob-ahiv It woa t appearajraia* Addrees, LEH A <*V, V* "i r̂ ^T.ABD.MAiva. • said tl ifSsaLi _ _ escaping their sanative Influenoe. 8oM Iqr drug '̂sts, 35 cents a vial. Manufactured at tto Chemical Laboratory of World's Dnmuir lfKDioa.1. A8SOCIATIOM, Buffalo, M. T. Is offered b en of Dr . UA1XE Chronic KiUOi they cannot cure. svnnrons or gatarbh.-heavy headache, obstruction of the passages, discharges falling from the into tho throat, sometimes profuse, witmxj* and acrid, at others, thiclc, tenadoua, mocooa. purulent, bloody and putrid: the eyas pa weak, watery, and inflamed; there ia itagfia tn tlie ears, deafness, hackimr or couchtna dear the throat, expectoration of olcmlsa matter, together wltn scabs from uloecs; voice is chanced and has a nasal twanff; breath to offensive; smell and *--L" --* paired; there to a sensation of mental depression, a hacking oouah i debility. Only a few of the abov eral < CANCER; Treated and enred without the knife. Hook on treatment went free. Aridreea . JL, POND. M. i>. Aurora, Kaae Co.. 111. TCV1C I A y n S.eeo.ooo aereî beM k»«rieui I (ARO Ulllll tural nnd rraalnr land formula Addresa.CJODIjE V & PORTEIt.Oallaa.Tex. OTD la worth t*00 Per pound, PeHlt'» Eye Salre $ 1,00u, but in sold at 25 cenU a box by dealer*. MENTION THIS PA PICK mmmn mmmmm ra oiutuu. Bj-inptoms are likely to be present ia case.. Thoussnds of cases annually. G PIS O S CURE FOR CONSU MPT! 0 N RM1I UnMlwMnlinktwmnniyimtkfarnNm VyiiVl at•nTthtugelM in the world. Klth«r 9**. Onllyouia vault. Tenai rm. AUna, Tarn t C«,ii|am,uiM. H ASIC CTIinV Bookkeenlna.BnranemForm*, USE 91 Ulll »lV«Qi»nHliip.Arithmetio.Short­hand, etc., tborouglily tuu^ht hytnail. Circulars free. liny a NT's Bvoikkmh Collcok. Uuffalo, S.Y. Vftliaft aaCH Î arn Teleeraphy h-re we • wwni IwImV) wi!I help vo". to good po*j Hima. Adrtrpn* American krh(io! of T l»irra(ihv,M'i i«<ui.Wis MENTION THIS PAPEH mm waniK* to inmiMU. wtnIS* dar. Sample* wortli Fit EE. (.inea not nnder the lioree'g feet. Write Bre water 8 < fety Bein Holder Co, llolb', Mich UL.N'l'lON UliS FAPUt WkiTlHfl tu ibrtuia .̂ \ • ur N.'Wsiltviler (or THE CUIOA<iO J,KI>i.Kl!, the Kkht Stout l'Arca i' : V- r' .ii fry. Head it. ASK Bare relief isim Pricou^cts. msxB PAgmins. nymail. Stovi**»li<feCgfc AGENTS WANTED tu . PVIKTWIM. SATISFACTION <;i \UANTKUO CONStoN your Ktuek to tl.o Cin<-A<it> Ljvk Srors Commission Co., Union Stnok Vnr<tH. Chicago 11'. Incot'i>otated with a caiiihil ntock of $i'i, ()0. Live St ck Market lleyorts furnished free. Write us. tV• K.'ir.N«VICI.TV ltllG MACHLNKS nnd KUU PATTERNS, lor making Ru.'k, Tidies, Caps. Mittcna, < to. Ma ohini; xent »y initil for $1. Send for late rednred prlee-list. E. KOSS * CO.. Toledo. Ohio. OSK PIjAWTS.-- fin receipt of we will aend t to any part of tlie tin t d St-iti s. swi'urelv packed, one each of the followiivj ri HPCTUAl. lU,0()\fIM«i ROHEJ'LASTS: Ainericiin lVaut.v, Bride, 8'inset, Pierre (Juillot, ('htheriue Meruit t. La Fram*, l̂ ar.a dea Jardina, Bennet, liai:*eline, Iaalielle Mprunt, Ne-phetna, and Pa»a Unut̂ er. (tarfikld Paku Rosh Company, 168S West Madison street, Chicago, 111. DETECTIVES WanM la iwr Cwnty. men te Mi aa4ar laMr«all«aa to Mr Saerct fltfflei. lxpcri«W« u«t oecetitry, Partlevlnra Sraaaaa Dstscttrs Barsaa Cu.HArai».Claeluati.l I CURE FITS! When 1 aay cure I do not mean merely to Rtopt'iera for a time and then have them return again. 1 mean a radic al cure. I have made the disease of 1'iTS, KI'I-LEl'SV or FALLING KICKNEtig a lite lcn^? ftudy. I warrant my remedy to cure the worst canes. Beeausd others have failed is no reason for aot now reo ivini; % cure. Send at once f ir a treatixc :tnd a l'ree Bottle ol my infallible remedy, (iive Eiprews aud Po»t Offi o. II. G. ltOOTt M. C., FtuarlSt., New York. JOJUES PAy8thfFREICHT S Ton Waco* 8cales« Imn U>vra, Strcl HaArlnfa, Bran Tan Beta ud Bnm Bti mr Ktctt ft1*# prtc* 1M Mention thlt paper nnd nddreac JINCS «f IINtltANTMs BINUHIDXTON. N. fa Oar New lllu«tnited FURNITURE CATAL08UE Will be mailed to any out-of-town addrea" on re­ceipt of 15 cents for postace. itcon«ixt«ol 103 pages with 449 illustrations, and is the moel complete ever issued. SPIECEL & CO., The Cheapent Furniture Honne in A merle*. 240 and 201 State St., Chicago, III. Mention this Paper. manifesting- half of the above symptoms.: suit in consumption, aad end m the crave. No disease Is so common, more deuepU»e aw oobr ph heafinti By its mild, soothii Dr. Sage's Catarrh „ oases of Catarrh* M col Coryza, and Catarrh Sold by druggists "Untold Agony (ran1 Prof. w. Hauskkr, tho famoHs ot Ithaca. N. F- writes: "Borne tea jwai I stiffered untold agony from tknslo catarrh. My family physician « Incurable, and said I must die. such a bad one, that every day. set, my voice would become so unaal barely speak abore a whisper. In tbe OK my coughing and clearing of my threat almost strangle me. >^y the uasof Dr. PH*jg!y.f SHOT GUN •f ilj Catarrh Remedy, lB nvee months, I was a 1 nan, and the oars has lism imilianstll "Constantly Hawking M THOMAS J. Roranra, Esq., S St. Louie, Mo., writes: "I was a g from catarrh for three years. At I hardly breathe, and was 00nets and spitting1, and for the last could not oreathe through the 1 thought nothing could be done tori lly, 1 was advised to try Dr. Sage's . Remedy, and I am now a well man. 11 it to be the only mire remedy for catarrh no# manufactured, and one has only to give It a fair trial to experience astounding results *"* a permanent cure." Three Bottles Cure CataRfeu ELI Robbins, Itunj/an P. O., OoivniMa Ox, Pa., says: " My daughter had catarrh whoa she was flare yean old, very badly. 1 mm Dr. Sape's Catarrh Remedy aavertised, and no* cured a bottle for her, and aoon saw that )a helped her; a third bottle effected a pernsa* nent cure. She Is now eighteen yean old and sound and hearty." Dr. WiUiama' Indlaa Pfla Otetmenfc iaaxure cure tor hUnd.Meeaing or I1SMFQ. (X)MamMoT uailedur W SOLDIERS w relieved; wfww or ao fee. Lm ilees, ttM4tas» leers; travel pay, lected;neaertersi LawtwUilM. • LV. McCarmiek a to. Wi>iaaf«i». a. c. a li»fciaa a' "OSGOOD11 V. 8.Studui h!a Sent on trial. Freight paid. FuUyWamntad*. 3 TON $39. Other sizts |>iu|iuHtoa' ately low. Agents well pnld. Illustrated CaUlopiS free. Mention this Paper. OSGOOD k THOMPSON, Bisfibaatoa, V.TL. Well Drills FOR EVCRV PURPOSK SOLD ON TRIAL. hmUuwl sasll, pyN|» its lari large trated Cat»- logna with particulars. Hanv.!actmrsd hy - GOULDS & AUSTIN* 167 & 189 LAKE. CHICAGO. MASON SCHML ORGANS. • "i ̂ Insist upon mttlRS ll>« " ('haataka " i if SMler tiasii t il, send to u*. Krnd 6c. fn Maait --10S-I*af» fatalaaav of Guns. Kid?*, lit \O)vers. Pulicc Uooda a*. JOh* r. LOTKLL AKHS CO . SaaaTra. HoaWtt, ltaaa. THIS IS THE GREAT "OHIO TUBULAR WELL HMD PROSPECTING MACHINE faaooos lor aoeeaedias whan othaia han failed. SELF CLEANINQ. Mil Inn II ti N ilm a •teak. Catalaaat FREE. LOOMISAHYMAI T FFIN, OHIO. v...» The liiau wlm has invtatetl tromtaiea to ttve iK'llare in a Itubber Coat, and at his tir>t lia'f 1'our's csperienee in a storm ttnds to liix »oirow that it is hardly a better prutection than a mos­quito nettir.g, nut onlv feels chagrined at being so biidly taken in, but alio feels If he does not look exactly lite Aili tor tha " FISH UKAKCOuciU does not have tbe risn aaa»», acndfor< fl Ml RMSJtlf HM UI Wall BtckiaeCta-im la tka ttalt«4 Statu. Hlxfcert Honors at a.! Una; Wt rM'a MJMtlm stoea iaa;. »±t I, *MV. for eaah, Uqrrmw*t%. arRaated. Citaloc .c, 40 pp., «re, irre. - ». PIANOS. .V.sf' If anon A Hawiiiu <lo mt fcevtrate to ary oUin; that th-ir I'msh! art !o all othm. This they ultribate fM,il»iv tu the t̂n r̂o ̂eaMaa introduced by tliem in now ;i.e •• V. aiJIS A HAMLIN l'l AN-.k bTBlfKlEH." Fall fMrtKuteiiiS mail. WET KVWCfBODr, r oftne Beat and Oa EBEÊ P- •V. t. lilkA. ' 'iS '.' i " ' V-'.:Vt • 'fi- r4> asm BOSTON, Tremi.nl St. CHIOAOO, M» Wabaah. Avau. KKM Y >EK *6 Ea« 1«U>St. a/riw. sjjaawl I iraertkt aad fUlyea» dene Bty U aa the oaty sdscWc (ertaeeartaiacam We have anld Big: d far many yearaT aad ft han .ilm the asst at WiUa • faction. B.K.DYCHE4 00. Chieag*. uL tLN. Bold by Prismas J l I I I M« Wa ufler the nan who wants nrtita (uot atyle) a garment that will kMR. *• bin dry to tb« hardest atarm. It Si' & called TOWEL'S FISH BRAJfl>.#. f " SLICK.EK," a name (kmiliar le e*a»y ,• $ Cow-boy aU over the land. Wlthttaan the mily perfect Wind and WaSiraressf, ... ,*= : Coat ia '̂Towers ftoh Brand SllJiac.* . and take a« other. lfywrilMaie* JL J. TOWKSJR Steaaaoas St, Maa IMKt, I-M-a-I I l 111 u w c.». p. <*»• HTHKN WRITING TO ADTUnCOnflb WWMMW »••• *ipw»-«RR Hv f*i K>? 1

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