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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Feb 1892, p. 7

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& & >• * >, ** •* •.. «>• rrrp»; . « i' v *« h\ JtpMHiaMlWtt » .%. T| TI-vwk 2 *>»iSr!fcl £"» H |s ', •' v ̂ pr» * .\ ' •# »•-* j ^ <v*V"W, - 1 -- i j , . v v , < r . « v ^ v ' ts n * * * ^ [/fa/ up, fit's the only way to use some L: but it's a bad condition for a man or woman. It means disease. Take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. 'That means, health. It invig­ orates the liver and kidneys, purifies the blood and cleanses and renews the whole system. JFbr all scrofulous humors and taints, and even con­ sumption (or lung-scrofula), if "taken in time, it's a positive Remedy. It's a guaranteed one. In all diseases of the^ liver, ; blood and lungs, it's warranted , !fo benefit or cure, or the money is refunded. No other r1 medicine of its class is sold, through druggists, on this pe­ culiar plan. You can judge . why. Yoy only pay for the good you get. • ^AlRMER WASHINGTON.' ' ' -- TT--" THE FATHER OP HIS COVENTRY A S A O R A N G E R . ( - . . 1 hiMwtlir ̂ hiiecilotM A boat th» Msn tVho Dlert Nlnetjr-ihrre Yuan Agm-- BU Mkn>g«n>«nl of Slave*--A Provldrr-Car« of His Farms, Ktc. WMhlngton's I'rlvate Affair*. ; ,E t'tiok of *jm%, dent Washington j now, ninety-three i years after his death, as a grand , personage, bit inji j erect uu & line f - horse, or clad in ) ^ Blt of History I'm Yiw r-roamonfc, was In similar parti, and he word a wig. Chancellor Liv­ ingston, who ftdministercd the oath, was in a suit ""of black. The company of grenadiers In attendance, who were the tallest youths in the city, were dressed in blue, with red facings and gold lace ornaments, cocked hats with white feathers, white vests and breeches, black shoes and gaiters, cthe oioth of which extended from the1 shoe to the knee. The German company present wore blue coats, yellow vests and breeches, black gaiters, faced with black bear-sbin. * *r? v D ECi. A R ATI ON OF ENCE. INDEPEND- velvet and nifflefe, j receiving company | 'to the formal man- j ner of the olden : time. But there ! wag another kind 1 of Washington iu ; the President'^ t house at Fhiiadel- j phia. I During the wlio!e ; of his administration, exciting and diffl- j cult as it was, he was obliged t > pay close attention to his estate, and to regulate countless details oi its nwuuige- | mant. He carr.ed it in his miud day i>y ! day, considering carefully, not merely IVORY SOAP THE BEST f01 EVER WWCSt " I Hate to Ask My Doctor." Oh, Woman] Fal*« modestf and procrastina­ tion are responsi­ ble 'for much of yotnir -suffering, we <can excuse the "delicacy of the yonng, -tout there is no excuse for a woman who neglects the freely offered assistance of a -woman. Lydia E. Pink!Hint's Vegetablt Gqfnpound is the product of a life's practice of a and failing woman among women, cure for woman's ills. It removes at once those pains, aches, and weaknesses, brightens the spirits, and invigo­ rates tbe entire system. An cm ex celled remedy for Kidney Troubles. # All Dninitt* -tell ft,'Or wnt i » ma.il, in form of Till« or £nenge«, on receipt ofSt .Otfr. )«tver Pills, Corre- ^ - Hdenc« freely fln«wer*d. _? reae in confidence, w IA E. TLNKHAM MBD.'GO., LYNN, MASS. j*™** ill veTOI Titos Damte Cnred. VIII SAW ANDiic.M, Gal„,F«b. 8,1889. Itf BttUe boy, 13 yeaw old, Vas taken -sick With what lis called St. Vitua Dance. He had •ot seaaabie'to go to school for.two years. A« •wi as I *oa<i your book, I sent for two bottles . K«rne Tonic and two bottles Iron.Pilla, and; b® Caretibe Beoond bottle and pills were used up the boy was restored to his natural health, and Is attending achool. AR.IIRW A.C,T <VIR.'<INKRT<.T.T. I faa*te been I last May WALNUT, JTLL., Oct. 7,1890. «afl«cing for year« with headacbe 1 had it continuously for two days, and the third day 1 fell into a fit (apoplec­ tic fit, the doctor called it;. I sent for & bottle of Pastor Kosnig's Nervo Tonic, and it did me mot® goad than I can tell, and 1 felt very thank- fal to God, the giver of all good, and to that t<dldiaot have another fit since. iULb. 8AKAH UONXOAN. A Tahiabie B<Mk en Nervous lM*eases sent free to any address, and poor patients can also obtain thie «imOieiiie free «f -cltarge. even.' f field, bull&ing, ftn -e, htnlge tuid f«»rest. He regulated the rotation of tbe cioys, and lixed the time , of piowiu^. He thought of all nnd governed all if he had ueen at home. The ojiief reason of this was thai lie was serve I by slaves, nearly. 5(H) in num­ ber, of whjm lie wio.e taot be luiew ecArcely one qn his estate fit 4J be trusted. He was obliged to run a mUL, -as spell for his neighbors' use as hit, owm, writes James Parton in the Youth's <C«inpa/aioii, •aid he had on the shone of the P«t-o>ma« * fishing station that inquired careful Attention. A little neglect «*f has fisher­ men in the spring, when the fish wer^ ascending the river, might deprive him of a hundred barrels of lish, on wh>e!i 'he depended for varytag tibe food of the six> hundred persons directly dependen-t upon him ft>r the «.-opply .tjf ail Iheir wants and the gratilioa i m eif all their desires, food, clothes, shelter, medicine, instruction, discipline and recreation. Much that they wore., und nearly all that they ate, was raised upon the es­ tate, but several ^articles of prime ne­ cessity had to be procured in London. Occasionally during his Presidency his knowledge >of European polities and of the probability <of war enabled him to provide in time tor the clothing of his numerous and helpless family. We fcavo a whole volume, and a large volume, too, of his tetters to his manager, in which we ^sec liim buying thousands of yards of "material .for summer clothes months before it oould be wanted; and nearly every .garment worn upon the estate had to 'be <out and made by his own negroes. , . He frequently «ays that no one could manage negsoes unlei-s he had had much experience witluthem, and he gives his manager a good deal of instruction how to teli whether a negro was shamming sick. There wits a certain Betty Davis, whom he (frequently suspected of sham­ ming. He reminds his manager that nobody can be very sick without having a fever, and that, nobody can have a fever long without reducing his strength and flesh. Home of his people, he said, would lie Idle for a month without losing an ounce of flesh, and drawing their allowance of provisions as if nothing were the mat­ ter. Several of those he mentioned by name, "Doll at the Ferry," "Ditcher Charles," "Mulatto Will" and "Carter Ben." At the same time he cautioned his manager to take the best possible care of the negroes when they wore really I unfit for work. What made this all the more aggra­ vating was that lie was himself the most I orderly, punctual, exact and faithful of I .men. IThere was nothing that gave him I 6uch pleasure, as he himself ^remarked, ! as "to. see his farms in good order and I everything trim, handsome and thriving about them." To this he added: "Nothing hurts me more than to find thom otherwise, and the tools and im- <pl6ments lying wherever they were last used, exposed to injuries from rain and bUll." He would gladly have had his whole estate i*i as perfect order as an estate in England, and we may say that lie spent the chief energies o hi-! life in a cease- M»a* I* Jtirt Mow Ap­ propriate. In Philadelphia, in Chestnut street, stands ttie famous building now known as Independence Hall, which used to be called the State House. This edifice is one of the shrines of American patriot­ ism, for it was in one of its low-roofed, (juaiqt old rooms that the Declaration of Independence, which made of the United States a nation, was debated and decided. In the month of May, 1775, the Second Continental Congress, which had the authority of a general government over the colonies, met in Philadelphia. Lex­ ington and Concord had been fought the previous April. In June Congress chose ami every slave, but every j *s Commander-in-chief of the American army George Washington, who ' was present a,s a delegate frsm Virginia. Set­ ting out for in the latter part of that month, foe heard of the battle of Bunker Hill <wi his way. Thus there was war. But though the «ok»nies were in arms, they were so not for separation from the British Govern- wont, but for their rights, under that States. By this solemn act the Englirh colonies had ceased to exist and a new nation was born. The Declaration was signed on the day of its adoption by every member present who voted for it. John Hancock, whose name headed all the others, said: "We must be unanimous; thsre must be no pulling different ways; we must all hang together." "Yes," said Franklin, "we must all hang together, or we shall all hang sep­ arately." Everywhere the Declaration was hailed with joy. It was read to the nifcy amid exulting shouts. It gave them the in­ spiration of a great cause, and sus­ tained them in the dark davs of that long, revolutionary struggle, until that W4icli Was declared in Independence Hall in 1776 was gloriously achieved by Washington in 17«3--the liberty of our THE TRIUMPH OF TfiA. AIL KIUOM Drink tlie cWerfufc Herb, but In IMA'erent wkjrt. At the present day the manner of the world's tea-drinking may be rapidly sur­ veyed and briefly summarized.. The Chinese and Japanese enjoy the decoc­ tion of the herb just as their forefathers have done for numbered generations. The Anglo-Indians have their early cup of tea with a thin slice of bread and butter, the snack being known as the "chota hazri," at five or six in the morn­ ing, ,a good two or three hours before breakfast, at which last-named meal tea may vie with coffee as a beverage; and again, in Anglo-Indian society, the ket­ tledrum, or five o'clock meal, takes a conspicuous place. European Russians of tlie cultured classes drink immoderate quantities of tea in tumblers, without sugar or milk, but with the zest ot a slice of lemon- •' InrtUKtrtal WpniTtTTifcat. _ The Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Bailway Company's 6,150 miles of road traverses a^st territory, rich in all the resources that insure industrial success. The Industrial Department is con­ versant with the Iron, Coal, Lumber and The pleasant effect and perfect safety with which ladies may use the California liquid laxative Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, maizes It their favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine •article, look for, the name of th$ Cali »% . i m*m < This GREAT COUGH CURE, this success- htl CONSUMPTION CURE is sold by drug, gists on a positive guarantee, a test that no other Curt can stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it will cure you promptly. If your child has the CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use it quickly and relief is sure. If you fear CON- SUM PTION, don't wait until your case is hope­ less, but take this Cure at once and receive immediate help. Price 50c and $ixx>. Ask your druggist for SHILOH'S CURE. If your lungs are sore or back kme, use Sfyfloh's Porous Plaster*, WASHINGTON'S INAUGURATION'. FREE1 KOEM1C MEDlOOU Chicago, 1H. SaUbrDnggietsat tliiefBgdifle. £teS5 targe Slza. 2H-7&, G Bottles tar BCL Young iothers ! wjj er J U« m* dnturem Safet# Mfe &£MMKer «uuf CUBUL "MOTHER'S FRIEND" Mobs Confinement«/ tts fain, Horror and It isb. After tufngone bottleof " Hother'i Piical**) •Uttered but little pain,and did uotesperl«uoeth»t W«*knpBs afterward assua! In such COJPJS.--lira. ANRIU GAQIS„ Lamapc Mo.. Jun. 15th, 139L bjr express, ehargea prepaid, on recelatof pilee.gl.50 per bottle. Book to Mothersmelleil Ire*. •BABFlELSBEfiL'LlTOB CO^ ATliAXTA, GA, BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, •TuSt's Tiny Pills1 A«nable the dyspeptic to eat whatever ( : ~ he vklicA, They cause tlie food toiut- • •imllate and nourish the body, give, appetite mid develop Heslu Prior, 85( , cents. Kurt sizi' tilionn in border. PILES AN.4KJ£!>iI8t;iv<:hinitAnt relief, mid is an INFALLI­ BLE CUKE for PILES. Price, $1; at druggists or by mail. Samples fres. Addreos "ANAKESI8, Bo* 2416, Nrw YORK CIT*. A fiTUU A DR- TATl-S A8THMALENH MkO I «|mri|»«er fails; send us you« address, we will mail trial UUIICIVBOTTt.E MM THE 01. TAFT BBSS. M. C0..S0CHESTEB.N.T.P RE E POLISH lese.ondeavot- to iM jiig a little nearer the ooriect standard. "Considering all these things, he was a wonderfully con­ siderate and patient master. He* knew what was to be expected trom ignorant negroes, and governed himself accord- j ingly; imaking fair allowance for their ; weakness, but firmly holding them to 1 their duty,.as well for their sakes as his •own. The care and thought which he be- j b to wed upon his farms during the most S critical period of his administration, ' while Congress was in session, and ; questions involving peace .or"wot were ! pending, were most extraordinary. He ! insisted upon having a detailed report •every week from his manager and from I each erf his overseeie, which he thor- j oughly weighed and punctually an­ swered. Some-of his letters to lii« manager fill I as many as twelve pages -of an octavo I volume. He gives the most minute, di- • rections concerning fences, -sfieds, and •email repairs, as well as to more in>- por.tairt concerns. In one letter he says: "Several of thelarge.st<me jugs, which w-ere seint to th# different farms witli spirits in tliem at liar vest., have never yet been returned. Call UJDCXII the several overseers to give theau in iinnwdiatelv., or they will have to paj for them." Thes«e letters present ito us like picture of A wise and orderly man striving pa­ tiently to get older, J>eau,ty and prosper­ ity from the most discord ajjt and intract­ able elemenfs--slack mad dissolute over­ seers, thoughtless and pleasure-loving negroes, thieving neigh tors, bad .systems of agriculture, a low tone of morals, and the absence for long periods of the mas­ ter's eye. He did the best that was possible *for himself and for his servants, but he hated the system, and lamented all his days that he could npt escape from It, nor let his slaves escape without doing more harm than good. 00 NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure theiron,andbum off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril­ liant, Odorless, Durable, and tlie con­ sumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS AH mmi SALE OF3,000 TUB. His First Cans, When City Attorney James Butler was first admitted to practice, says the Houisville Courier-Journal, the first ea-e he gt t was in a Justice's court, and un­ expectedly the young attorney found his father, the Hon. Edward Butler, sum­ moned as a witness by the other side. The case proceeded, and the father was c a l l e d t o t h e s t a n d . H i s p a l p i t a t i n g f o i took him for examination. "What's j oar name?" "Edward Butler." "Live in St. Louis?" "Yes." "Axe you mair.ed?" "Well, if I wasn't, you'd be in a great fix." That lost tho boy his case. How They Dregxed at the Inauguration. When Gen. Washington was inaug­ urated at Federal Hall, standing in the balcony, he wore a suit of brown cloth, coat, waistcoa^ and breeches, white silk stockings, and buckles, in his shoes, and every artiele he wore was of American manufacture. His head was uncovered *9d his hair powdered. John Adam*, government, . To, a larpe portion of the American people the idea, of a final sep­ aration from England was at this time distasteful. Even after months of iight- 'ing they clung to the hqpe of a friendly settlement of differences. Franklin was an ardent advocate <^f reconciliation, and so was W'ashiiy^nrwho at a later period wrote; ~ W^fen I took command of the army I abhorred the idea of in­ dependence. " In revolutions things move rapidly, and all this fine feeling .of loyalty was soon to be swept away. When the Amer­ icans saw their respectful petitions to the British Govern meet treated with | disdain, and fleets and Armies sent to compel them to submit tt«>unjust laws, their eyes were opened to 'the fact that submission was slavery.. Washington, who, in July, 1775, had "abhorred inde­ pendence," wrote less than a year after­ ward, "Reconciliation with Great Britain is now impossible, and I .am fully-Scon- vineed that nothing tat independence will save us." Of course this feeling among the peo­ ple soon found voice in Congress. On the 7th of June Richard Henry Lee, ono of the delegates from Virginia, offered a resolution "that these united colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states. Thi« resolution was at once seconded by John AdA'ms of Mas­ sachusetts-- 'glorious old J-ohn Adams," as he was afterward called. When, however, a vote w;as taken it was seen that Congress w*« jiat.yet pre­ pared for a measure so decisive. Seven of the thirteen colonies voted for the ! resolution and six voted against it. As I greater unanimity than this was .neces­ sary, it was agreed that the matter should 6tand over for two -or three weeks. In the meanwhile it was thought .the people of the colonies would show whether they were ready for Xndep«to- dence or not. And show it very dearly they did. Before the end of u month the people of ievery colony but one had either held meetings and voted that they wished for independence or else had instructed their delegates to v<o&e for it. During the time cf delay Congress had appointed a committee to draw jjp a (declaration of ind pcndence, for it was thought very important that Lee's reso­ lution should be prefaced by a prta nbie setting torth th^ reason* that led Con- jgneas to adopt the inensure. The com- nuttee .consisted of 1 h >inas Jefferson of Virginia, John Adams of Massachusetts, lienjainain Franklin of Pennsylvania, lloger Shenman of Connecticut, and Robert R. Livingston of*New York. Jef­ ferson, though a young man--then 33 years of age--was known as a very able man, and, as J<ohn Adams tells us, "had the reputation of a masterly pfn." Ac­ cordingly he wac requested by the com­ mittee, after discussing the topics, to make a draft of a declaration of inde- pend» n -e. In a few days Jefferson was able to lay before the committee a docu­ ment which proved that he had indeed a "masterly pen." This was the immortal Declaration of Independence, the most famous political paper ever written. With the exception of two or three ver­ bal changes suggested by Franklin and Adams (which may be seen in their handwriting on the original document), the Declaration was adopted by the committee just as Jefferson had written it, and on the 28th of June it was pre­ sented to Congress. On the 2d of July the resolution to declare the colonies independent, which had been introduced by Richard Henry Lee, the life-long friend of Washington, was adopted by Congress. The discussion was long and animated, some being timid or opposed, and the debate continued until July 4, when news «ame that a large British force under Gen. Howe had arrived at the en­ trance of New York harbor, which turned the scale, and at 2 o'clock on that after­ noon the final vote was taken with the result of the unanimous voice of thirteen peel, at all hours ot the day. Among the peasantry and the artisans the coarser kind of black tea is extensively patron­ ized. South of Moscow, "brick tea"--that is to say, the inferior leaves of the plant, mixed with sheep's blood, and pressed into the form of cubes--is the ordinary drink of the common peoole, and holds its own with vodka and qvas. The Tartars swill a horrible gruel, thick and slab, of "brick tea," suet, salt, peoper, and sugjpf5 boiled in a caul­ dron. The Turks and Greeks, nationally speaking, know nothing of tea. Nor is it a very recognizable quantity in the dietary of the Latin races, the Spaniards preferring chocolate and the Italians black coffee. The Germans are moderately fond of tea, but they like coffee better, and beer best. In Paris the use of tea is generally confined to polite society, and scarcely enters enters into the economy of "la vie bourgeoise." It is among the Anglo- Saxon peoples that"the consumption of tea is most systematic and most exten­ sive. The Australians .are essentially a tea- drinking people. There cannot, indeed, be the slightest 'doubt that the cause of temperance both in Australia and the Lnited States has been materially ad­ vanced by .the prevalence of tea-drink­ ing, and if our kinsman beyond the At­ lantic or .on the shores of the Pacific really suffer from dyspepsia, it is pos­ sible that 'their tendeucy to indigestion springs much less from their custom of tea-imbibing than from their habit of eating beefsteaks and mutton-chops for breakfast. As regards Eaigland and America, It is hard to see that the consumption of tea is immoderate, that it has Injured the health of the community, or that it has •diminished the native grat'e and diyiittv of English womefl. Envy, maliee, and all unchacitablene&s are much more oon- d>ucive indigestion than five ©"-dock tea. Strength In Union. A St. Bernard dog became involved in a quarrel with two curs at 8th and Ship­ ley streets, Wilmington, Del., the other day. The eurs snapped and growled at. the canine bully, which turned and made the little fellows "ki-vi." Another dog, which was watching the row, saw that the curs were getting the worst of the fight, and immediately- started for help. At Whitemau's lj-Vert* stable he found three collies aud another large dog to whom the situation was quickly ex­ plained by barks. The four stable dogs made a dash for the corner. When the St. Bernard saw the re-enforcements coming he found that'he had important business in the direction of Market street. The curs thanked the collies for the timely aid by wagging their tails, and the collies went back to the stable. KuMian Brutality. The London Times is authority for a story pt Russian brutality. The nurse of a little daughter of Gen. Pouzereff, of Warsaw, was punishing a 10-year-old boy named Winter for a trivial misde­ meanor, when he applied a number of unpleasant Polish names to her. Gen. Gourko was informed of the matter, when he ordered tb« boy to receive twenty-five lashes. The boy fainted at the seventh blow, and his tutor, who was required to execute the sentence, refused to continue the barbarous pun­ ishment. In this dilemma the police telegraphed to Gen. Gourko for instruc­ tions, and received peremptory orders to complete the execution of the sen­ tence. The flogging was finished by the police, and the boy was sent back to his mother insensible, bleeding and in con­ vulsions. Tan bark, the Water Powei? (both river ! fornia Fig Syrup Co., printed near the and artesian) for factory and electric bottom of the package. power purposes, the markets, the trans- WATCHES nr.» set in rw^ir^K^iro portation and financial facilities, and are setjn pocketbooks now. other interests on the line pertaining to industrial development, and dissem­ inates information concerning san/e?x • A number of new factories have been induced to^locate'--largely through the instrumentality of this Company--at enterprising towns on its linps. As the interest of the Company is to secure the location o£> industries at places where the surroundings will in­ sure their permanent success, the infor­ mation furnished a particular industry is pertinent and reliable. In the Eastern States and in other parts of the world factories are so con­ gested and distant from-the actual mar­ ket as to result in fierce and destructive competition. That the West is taking a place as one of the great manufacturing territories of the world is forcibly im­ pressing itself upon discerning and en­ terprising manufacturers. Steps should be taken by such while the field is as yet not fully covered, and while induce­ ments are still being offered, to locate in the West. Individuals or companies wishing to embark capital in Western industry can fiftd a profitable field. For particulars relative to industrial advantages on the line, address Luis Jack6<»n, Industrial Commissioner, C., M. & St. P, By., 160 Adams 6treet, Chicago, 111. A Maryland farmer picked a speci­ men of fruit which looked like an ap­ ple, but contained not apple seeds but a peach kernel. Right or Wrong. Which will ye have? It doe* leem m If «om* •Wlks prefer to have the last condition ol the Wver rafnei than the flrit. They perpetually dose themselves with purgatives totally with­ out virtue an alterative of liver trouble. Hob- totter s «<mach Bittere is the successful can­ didate for the people's choice, aud yet. popular and well krownasit is, ihe:t> are uufortunates who ka*p on trying the drastic remedies of for­ mer days. It is to the intelligent portion of the I public tha; the well known aud long tried Drop- ' •rtiea of th« h.jt.trAr« Pos.son sbculc* guided bv experience in the matter "of niediioa- tion. "1 he best guide to our feet is the lamp of experience," said a great patriot of th' early revolut onary period, and the esclamation is •pregnant with truth, tor over •& third of & century the bitters daily has met with the in­ dorsement of pjople Buffeting lrom liver com-elaint, malaria, constipation, rheumatism, de-ility and troubles accompanied by dyspepsia. Latterty it has declared itse'.f and been thor- ougbiy upproved as a remedy for "la grippe," Ax Arkansas pig has a peeat equal to, a dog's. His wonderful instinct saved his owner's child from drowning one day not long ago. Beware of Otntm-nta for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the senie of amell and oomplet i ly derange the whole system wheu entering it through the mucous surfaces. finch articles should never be used except, on prescrip.icns from reputable physicians, as the dama>j.« they will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Chet.ev & Co., To­ ledo. O., contains no mercury, and is taken in­ ternally, and acts directly upon the blood and tnucons surfaces of the sysiem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, »ud made in Toledo. Ohio. by F. .J. Cheney & Co. «*"Sold by Druggist®, price 75c per bottle. THE greatest pleasure known is to do a good action by stealth, and have it found out by accident. I "ANT 'book in "Surprise Buries." (best au­ thors). cent novels, about 200 pages esch. sent free, post paid, by Cragln & Co.. of Phila­ delphia. Pa..on receipt of 20 wrappers of Dob­ bins' Electric Soap.Send 1 cant for catalogue. In all Spain there are only 3,231 chil­ dren in the Sunday sehools. PoffT IKRITATE rovR LI'NOS with a Stub­ born O.uigh. when a remedy safe and cer­ tain as l»r. P. Jayne's Expectorant can be so easily procured. Sore Throats and Lungs are speedily helped by it. A NT7MBEK of ride the bicycle. Flower" My wife suffered with indigestion! mnd dyspepsia for years. Life be­ came a burden to her. Physicians failed to give relief. After reading * one of your books, I purchased a' bottle of August Flower. It worked' like a charm. My wife received im­ mediate relief after taking the first dose. She was completely cured-- now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat anything she desires without any- deleterious results as was formerly the case. C. H. Dear, Prop'r Wash­ ington House, Washington, Va. #' Beauty often depends on plumpness; so does comfort; so does health. If you get thin, there is somethine wrong, though you may feel no sign of it. Thinness itseK<i§f a sign; sometimes the first sign; sometimes not. The way to get back plumpness is by CAREFUL LIVING, which sometimes in­ cludes the use ^>f Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil. Let us send you--free--a little book which throws much light on all these subjects. SCOTT & Bow NR. Chemists 13a South jth Avenue, Mew York. Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-lhw Otl--all druggists everywhere do. ft. PLEASANT NEXT MORNiNG S FEEL BRIGHT AND HEW AND WiV COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My'factor Rays It acts jrentlv on th<* stomach, liver «od kidney*, and IRS pleasant laxative. This drink it made from horbs, and is prepared for use as easily MteA. It is called LAKE'S MEDICINE All druggists aell It at 50c. and »1.00 per package. Bay on* to day. Lane'a Family Mrdirlnr ntovr* the bowels each day. la order to be healthy, this I* necessary. It Cnres Coldt, CortghB. Sore Tliraat, CrdfttJL InniieiizH, W hoopinit Coujth, Hrofrchltia aaa Ahtlimx. A i-crtsin pure for Consumption in flint t»ktni Large 1 and a MIF>; relief in advanced (torn. traEetaltw You will see the exretleut 1 fhe Sold by dealers >tt e». r>:> (-cuts and 11.00. >. i iit-ti c N ¥ mmWm LIVER , PILLS •'$ WO HOT GRIPE HOR glCKK. Sure eur« {or SICK HKAI^ ACHE, irrpairctl digesttoa,eoiMll» pstlon, torpid gland*. TheyanwMa «(t»S i\-!sio?e waona, sinew. effect oa KM» eji and bladder. Conqaar bilious nervous di»> orders. Establish nafr> ural Diat ACTION. SF5 Beautify complexion blood. rrisKir ViarciBLt. paritriag m l» ease, u one pill «aa :-,:sin»ti«c-ric5:.v.s8a. pocket, like lcs,d pencil. llusineM man's |iM convenience. Takers easier than tu/ar. Sold aatljy* where. All genuine goods bear "Creeeeat." Send 2-eent stamp, You get S3 page book wtthMunglfc 0B. HARTIR MCOtCINE CO.. St. LMIS. *B * 1 THE OWEN ELECTRIC BELT * AND APPLIANCES ' FOR HEN AND WOMEN New York Chinamen LIEECHAM'S PILLS HAVE been In popular use In Europe for 50 years, and are a safe, sure and gentle remedy. .25 cents a box. THERE are 300,00(1 blind people in Eu­ rope. Ttaa Only One Ever Printltd-CsH You Find the Word? There Is a 3*-lneli display adv«rtl?ement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new<one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Mcdi^tlie Oo. This house places a "Crescent"" on everything they make and publish. Look for It, send them tlie name of the word, and they will return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITUOGKAPHS, or SAMPLES FKES. "I hav-e been occasionally troubled with sCoughs. and in each cu«e have used BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TRytJlES, which have never failed, ajjd I must say they are hecond to none lii 1 he world.n--Felix A. May, Caxhicr, St. Paul, Minn. UP THE DISEASES OTHER REMEDIES SET OWE. (T*A1>K HARK) DR. A. OWEN. WHARTHfi MATTER?1 FARM COVERED WITH STUM w%m* Warkai oa either «ai4li( Tlaiker «r L an ardlaarjr (trah la aaeaad a halfaUaatca. Makaaa clean imp of t*o son at a sittia«. A aat. a b*T aad atam C*u op«rai« It. No he&Tf or ro4s to TIimo OD ft acres the first year will pay for tbe Mtchiat. Tm Dot longer afford to pay taxes oa uoprodattlvc U«bcv faMU Clear It, raise a bouotiful crop with leaa labor and rwiiwmi rour old worn oat land by pasturing. It vfll oaty eott ;«• % pontal card to eeod for an illustrated Caudofv*. glvtag pftMh term* and testimonial*. Address the XaBateetvroro. JAMES MILNE & SON, SCITCH SISVt, tSV*. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187& * * GENUINE CURRENT OF ELECTRICITY It, and Tho h generated In a battery on the belt, and can b6 " J * iurnnt DANGER AHEAD SIGNALLED BT A COTTOH is averted with HALE'S HONEY OF HO&EHOUND AND TAR. PIKL K TOCTBACBE DROPS Cure in one Minnte, ir afflicted with Bare Eyes, nee Dr. Isaia Thompson's Water. Druggists sell it 2 'xi FEVER ELRS CATARRH CBEAM BALM IS UUBTH 8500 TO AXY MAN, W«m«n or Child •utUTiu^ from C A T A R R H txv™"' hay-fever A partirlp is applied inui eaun n^striLuua is anicc- al>l«. l*run 50 at l)rugKiH»« or b^hiaii ELY BKOTHEIW. 56 Warren Street™'ew York. DADWAY'S n PILLS, The 6reat Uyer and Stomach Rsmedg, For«iernreof all <l<sorcJerB of the Siomach. Liver. Bowf»]g. K 61 ad tier. Ne r VOUH Xiisea^ L086 of Ai)pe\K©, H' auuctie. Cone ipaiion. CohtiveiieRH, in- gi^Ktip j. Fevnr, lurta 1. mat ion ot tbe B welBaPile*. and ail d^ranjrement^ ot tlie nteruai \ibcerC Purely ve<r» tab-H, <»ontaiuiLg mereurv. miDeruIb. or deleteiiout drills PERFECT DIGESTION Will be accomplinhed wa\'.- Piii dinner pill. by taki g one ot Rad- try njoriniuj, about ten o'cioct, as • By so dviDK Work of Austrian Wooden. In Austria women are employed M hod carriers and are paid at the rate «f 25 0tints a day. SICK HEADACHE, Dyspepsia. Foul Stomach. BOlousneaa. will b« avoided, »r,d the food that Is eaten ontribme its noiirithirg properties for the support ot the na ural *»»'» ot ttiw boay. MSTOL-ht-rve _the following symptoms ret-ultiiig from Ulsease of the DjeestiveOreau-: Conniip tiou, Iuward UleK. tuiluew, of tlie B <>od iu the Head, Acidity ot the tvomac •. Nausea. Heaitburn, Divicubt ot lood, Fu liifs- or We'Kht iu tlie stomach, t-our Enictaiiouh. Mjikir g or iMiterit jr «f the Heait. Choking or huffociU"* (-ens .tlous « lieu in a lying posture. Diuireh* ot Vision, liots or Webt* beiort tlio Hiaht, Fever at.i Du'l Pain in the Head, Deficiency ot Fergpiraiion. Ve))owuenK of tie ffcin anrt Even. Pai>»iu .he Side ct:es .Limbs, and SuduenF.uebe« ot Heat Burimpln H e F e-h. A few dot-es < t RAD WAV'S 1'ILI.S w.ll free th« •y-tem of ai> tbe ». ove-naiui-d diMud r«. Piice 35 cts. per box. S»!<1 bv ail drugget* v/end a l.tter si amp to I>I{. HAIIH AY Jt' CO.. »°. 32 orren t>tr< et, Xew Vork. *iT IulorniaUoij wo» tn t ndt» wil l bo Kent to vou. TO 'rat PUfctlC: Be bur < • nd'ask for BADWAVS, •nd tea that tin; name -ICAD'.VAY" ib ou what you tooy. FATFOLKS REDUCED Mrs. Alice Maple, Oregon, Mo., writes • • • "My weight wasHaO [Kiunde,now it is 19S ar^o«ion of 1261 bs." For circulare adilreita, with 60, I)r. O.W.F.SN VllKli. UoVlokw'i Thsaira, Ctucagi>,IU applied to any part of'the body. Tho cut can be made mild or strong as the ca8» may re­ quire, and is absolutely under control of tho wearer at all times. OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE Contains fullest information regarding the cure of Acute, Chronic and Nervous Diseases, Sworn Testimonials with portraits of people who have been cured, Price List and Cuts of Belts and Appliances, and how to order, published in English, German, Swedish and Norwegian Languages. This Catalogue, or a Treatise on Rupture Cured with Electric Truss, will be mailed to any address on receipt of tlx cent! postage. T H E O W E N Electric Belt and Appliance Co. < Main Office, Head Salesrooms and Only Factory, 205, 207, 209,211 STATES!. Cor. Alias, The Owen Electric Belt Building, CHICAGO, Ilil<. New York Office, 826 Broadway, Cor. 12th Si THE LARGEST ELECTRIC BELT ESTABUSHMENl IN THE WORLD. When writing mention this paper. ELECTRICITY VS. STEAM."" In an interview in the New York Herald the other day Chauneey Depew told a reporter that in twenty-five years he expected to see electricity replace steam as a motive power for railroads and steamships. This is probably correct. The old methods are giving way to the new. Many people think, for instance, that there is no connection between the lungs and the kidneys. Modern science has shown that they are both members of the excretory family--that the kid­ neys remove the uric acid from the blood, the lungs remove the carbonic acid from the blood. If the kidneys are affected additional buglen is thrown upon the lungs and they break down from overwork. REID'S GER­ MAN COUGH A>TD KIDNEY CUBE treats both the lungs and the kidneys, and by restoring them both to their normal condition relieves the patient from a cold that settles upon these organs and that if neglected will produce dangerous results. Get this great remedy of any dealer. SYLVAX IVEMF.DY CO.. Peoria, Til. PATENTS! PENSIONS! Send tor Inveutor's Guide,or How to Obtain a Pate;/ . Bend tor Disest of reunion and Itouuty Lan: I'AllilCK O'FAKttELL. Washington, O. € « INSTANT RELIEF. Final lire l'i 10 days. -Never returns : uo purse: , io saive : 110 suppo-itorv. A victim tried in vain everv reiuedr; has discovered a simile cure, which he will mail free to b s fellow MiHerer*. Ad- dress J. H. KKEVES. Bos N. V.City.N.T. W. BAKER & CO.'S Breakfast Cocoa : from which the excess of baa been removed. J.« mbmtutely pnrrn m$t0 it is soluble, ' ? No ChemicalM arc DBod In Its preparation. A has -more than three times ?/»#, • strength of Cocoa mixed wltk Starch, Arrowroot or Soga^ if' and i« therefore far more eco> < 4 I Domical, eotting Us* than on* *•# -• | cen • (i cup. It is delicious, noun. „ ^ lehiEig, strengtheuiDg, EASILY JDIGI;STED, and admirably adapted for invalid* , •*' t&- well as for peraona in health. i_ Sold by Groceri >wiywlw», 'I "" W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, KanC i k FAMOUS OOELL TYPEWRITE! | It is used kar JJvK every KetaB vv !t!s used I •very KctJ Ktore, L&« ser, Mioi^a ter, Divfari ^ everv • School U Kuiiorc aMft all the ^rimicnt Of- i fiat's, of iti [o^ean prist* UimoliortvA-- [man ' copWs Jt» /«• ICiiet-i: IVriuiaiortv r.xirs.j quired. w||| do Txiur work in one hour's practice. Sent to tovr® iuthe L*. S. foril deposit, BNLAM^ C. O• D. 1FT trial. < >rder now and gret tbe Afrvncr. ODC1X TTP®» WKlTKli CO., 358 to 36& L)earbcrn STREET, CIXICA^O, GRATEFUL--COMFORTING. EPPSSCOCOA BREAKFAST . ft thorough kuawied^e of the javift "'- wbich govern the operations of digestion and nutrt- tl >», aud by a careful application of the flue f ties weli-s^lecte.t Mr. Epos has t*rovkt<5l . our breakfast table* with a delicately ttaToured beis erage which may save us many heavy doe&or*' billK' It is oy the judlcioai uso of snoh arUole^ that a constitution may be jyr dually uuiis up unifli strong enough to resist every tendency to Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around uft * ready to attack wherever there is a weak point We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ou^ •elves well fortified with pure blood a"d a properly • nourished frame*"--Service r . Made simply with boiling >vater vr milk. only in half-pound tin^ Grooer*, labelled thus: JAMES KPPS ib CO.. HonueoptUik vbemul%. LOSDOJf. ENOLJ.XIX J, PIUS •iffiiii'ili' ,5 j ' tad t.329 tr. ttttSL, H.T-.MraataMt-f O ««aa*S' •' . malt*' ' . ufiwd euiin((;t «r»« Sick Htadathq:: !TN*CMAPL«XIUBTCBRWCABAIY*IUA.>. - VI.^; llltitlmKHi rublUuttuiit. with' ^ '** •' MAI'S, deoon.x,,* Muiaeww." 3U')!it»Q«. iiiuw, s audurvvoo, tlie ' Hoverinucut wml CHEAt* Northern Pacific R. R. s?S5^ '<?*• .uri.-uitural, Or&ciuii ;unv optfii i«» ;tkr». ( CHS. S. UHBOXR I.JiiU Com. N V imtier FHKK. indniK N.. t»t. Faui.Minr, Piso's Remedy fbi Catarrh Is the Best. Kasiest to t'se. and Cheapest. CATAR R M Sold by druggisu or »eiu by auul. He. KT. HairlUae, Wari^ Fa. AIIHIiiHorphlnf Habit Cured in lO UI*I11Htn days. N«p»> UU« Miwd. wl • Will DR. J. STEPHENS, Ceuanon.OHIO. w la ITHp WKITIKU TO ADV£RT«iKttL u.& ZZS*?'rom •*w tb#

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