Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Sep 1898, p. 11

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•CV-; i vTVf *«.-» ON sue Looks St.- >\ ' *!?> C~ ; K»- w 'V-.v.:^ Poor clothes cannot make you look old. Even pale cheeks won't do it. Your household cares may be heavy and disappoint­ ments may be deep, but they cannot make you look old. One tLfng doe* % and never fails. It la impossible to look young with the color of seventy years in your hair. Auers vigor permanently postpones the |« tell-tale signs of age. Used according to directions it gradually brings back the color of youth. At fifty your hair may look as it did et fifteen. It thickens the hair also; stops it from falling |, out; and clcanses the scalp from dandruff. Shall we send you our book on the Hair and its Diseases? Tim Bmmt Advtom Ft If you do cot obtain all the bene­ fits TOU expected from the use of the Vigor, write the doctor about it. Probably there Is some difficulty with your general system whica may be a»»ily r»morM. Address UQEt. . C. AYER. Lowell. Hut. r I E Established 1780. Baker's Chocolate, celebrated for more ^ than a century as a ^ delicious, nutritious, a n d i flesh-forming ^ beverage, has our iff well-known ^ Yellow Label "3 on the front of every package, and our trade-mark,"La Belle Chocolatiere,"on the back. NONE OTHER GENUINE. MADE ONLY BY WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. „ CONSTIPATION "I aavo rouo 14 day* at a time without • ••rw«nt of the bowels. Dot being able to move them except by using hot water Injections. Chronic constipation for seven years placed me ill ibis terrible condition; during that time I did ev­ erything 1 heard of but never found any relief; euob fras my case until I began using CASCARET8. I Sow have from one to three passages a day, and if I Was rich I would give $100.00 for each movement; it to such a relief.' aylmer L. Hunt, 1KB Knssell St.. INtroU, MlOb. CANDY ^ CATHARTIC ^ TRADB MA. ' ftMWTIIKD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Do Qood, Never Sicken, Weaken, or iis lpe, iOc, 10c, SOo. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... UllMag a»BMdf Company, Cfcieaga, nostras), £•> M JM DRIVEN MAD BY tOBTURE. SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU DRY. Don t be fooled with a mackintosh or rjbber coat. If you wantacoat tha', will keep you dry in the hard­ est storm buy the Fish Brand Slicker. If not for sale in your to rn, write for catalogue to A. J. TOWER. Boston, Mass. 01 ENSIONS, PATENTS. CLAIMS. JOHN W MORRIS. WflSHtMBTOT.P.*, Late Principal Kts»I--r V. B. Pension Bma« S yrs. in last war, 15 syndicating claims, atty. mam U No 3tt -ua VHghtf«|ynEticM la iMhsllen, S«r •ki*» Venal 9ettlc»ient The presence of a batch of convicts In Odessa, Russia, for deportation to Saghalien has occasioned the publica­ tion of various accounts of the treat­ ment received by the prisoners in that Island, and if the numerous stories are -true Saghalien must be a veritable in­ ferno. Eye-witnesses relate that a common sight is that of shackled hu­ man beings yoked to a huge cart whose weight tries the strength of their un­ derfed bodies to the uttermost. These men are demoralized by the brutality of their surroundings and the cruelty of the officials, who are ever ready to have recourse to the knout to enforce submission. An attempt to es­ cape is jninished with ten years' extra, imprisonment, and it needs only one or two failijrcs to break away to bring abbut an unfortunate prisoner's resi­ dence in this "slough of despond." One form of treatment is the coupling of the shacklcs which ensheath a prison­ er's ankles to a wlieelbarrow.\ This the victim must drag night and day for months perhaps till the iron in­ flames the flesh and the legs mortify. His comrades may mercifully soak the feet and forcibly pull off the bands--a process which is attended with the most excruciating agony, but which is eagerly borne The knoutiug of a man is a scene of incredible barbarity. The victim is mounted on a specially constructed wooden horse, and his back is bared. The scourge is applied with such vio­ lence that at eiach stroke pieces of flesh are torn away aud the blood from the founds bespatters the face of the exe­ cutioner. Such is the horror of Saghalien that men and women go mad and lunatics are to be found hiding in quiet places. All the women are more or less de­ mented. Their lot is peculiarly un­ happy. They are given to the bache­ lor convicts--men whom for the most part they have never seen before. Even those who are not convicts lose their reason, as witness the story of Mile. Naumofa. This lady had devoted her life to the rescue of children in this un­ happy spot, and for years had spread a light and comfort around her, but in a paroxysm of inaduess induced by the soul-torturing surroundings, shot her­ self. Her work was taken up by three older ladies; one of these, shot herself,' the second went raving mad and the third married a warder.--London News. Both Sides. An unmarried lady in Holland al­ ways takes the right arm of her escort, while the married one selects the left side of her husband. So deeply has this custom entered into the life of Hollanders that at a church wedding the bride enters the edifice on the right side of the groom, the young wife re­ turning on the left side of her husband when the cerefhony has been perform­ ed. v WOMAN'S HEROISM. From the Register-Gazette, Rockford, 111, . During the Civil War nearly as much heroism was shown by the women of our nation as by the brave soldiers. Many a woman, weeping for her dead son, bound up the wounds of his suffering comrades, r e j oi cing i n t h e i r ** --,r e n e w e d < s t r e ngth, even while sorrow in g thp one fKtW h o w a s gone. At that time, w a s l a i d "" cry the foun- „ , ' , dation for On the Battlefield, the world- famed organization known as the Woman's Relief Corps. One of the most earnest members of the corps at Byron, 111., is Mrs. James House- weart, but illness once put a stop to her active work. A year or so ago, when she was nearly fifty years of age, the time when women must be more careful of their strength, Mrs. Houseweart was taken seriously ill. The family physician told her that she had reached a critical petiod of her life, and must be very care­ ful. His prescriptions and treatment did not benefit her, and other treatment proved unavailing. At last Dr. Williams* Pink Pills for Pale People were brought to her notice, with indisputable evidence that they were helpful in cases such as hers, and with renewed hope she tried the remedy. Last March she took the first box of the pills, which gave much relief. She was deter­ mined to be cured, and kept on with the toedicine, until now eight boxes have been consumed, "and" she feels like a new woman. Mrs. Houseweart said: "I have taken only eight boxes, but I have been improv­ ing since I took the first dose. I do not believe I could have lived without the pills. They certainly have done me more Rood than any physician or any medicine I have ever tried." Pr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose bulk) at 50 cents a l»ox or six boxes for $2.50. and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Or. Williams' Medicine Co., Schnec- tady, N. Y. Wine forms 48 pet cent, of -Spain's general exports. Lane's Family Medicine Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acta gently on the liver and kidneys. Onras sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. A carrier pigeon service was estab­ lished by the Turks A. D. 1S67. Hall's Catarrh Cor*. Is a cnmUhitional cure. Price 75 oeot GRANDARMY REUNION NAT L ENCAMPME AT CINCINMATF*" ̂ Number of People Present la Urger tfcatt Kver-- Klkborate Decoration of the City-All Thins* Conducive Comfort of the Veteran®. The thirty-second annual encampment of the G. A. R. at Cincinnati was a suc­ cess so far as attendance wal concerned, even for those national events, which are phenomenal for crowds. TJie opening day surpassed expectations. The posts arriv­ ed in bodies and were escorted to their quarters by local posts. The special trains arrived faster than they could be handled at the terminals in the early hours, and the crush continued so that later trains were stopped at Camp Sherman and other suburban points, where street cars and other transportation hud been provided. There were over 1200,000 strangers in the city, and in the evening the sidewalks were almost impassable, while the streets were crowded with bauds, drum corps and marching delegations. There was a capacity of 15.000 in the tents of Cahip Sherman, and it was well filled, as well as the smaller camps. The decorations were unusually elaborate, the electric light designs in the public squares and at street intersections sur­ passing even the finest structures of ex­ positions, and the entertainment was 'equally lavish. . , Monday was mainly devoted to the naval veterans, and; in the morning the exercises in connection With the dedica­ tion of their "harbor" in horticultural hall of the exposition buildings were held. Commander in Chief <7obin came from Camp Alger via Canip Meade and had a leave of absence for six days only, so that he was compelled to' get back to Camp Meade by Saturday. Gen. Gobin and staff arrived while the big Labor Day parade I was in progress, and he was most enthu- I siastically received all along the line from I the Pennsylvania depot to the Grand Hotel: j Commander-in-Chief Gobin and staff visited Camp Sherman in the afternoon, when the camp in charge of Captain i Byrne was formally tumedjjver to him. : The official salute was fir(*cTupon the ar- j rival of the commander-in-chief, after which the bands rendered concerts. P^ ay- ; er was offered by Rev. David H. Moore, BARKER FOR PRESIpENT. "Middle of the Hoad" Populists Nom­ inate a Ticket for 1900. Wharton Barker, the Philadelphia financier and editor, is the first presiden­ tial nominee in the field for 1900. In na­ tional convention at Cincinnati the anti- fusion Popnlists selected him as their standard-bearer, and named Ignatius Donnelly of Baconian cryptogram fame as his running mate. The naming of the tickct was preceded by riotous scenes, during which the tumult attained such threatening proportions that the manager of the Lyceum, in which- the convention was held, requested the delegates to leave the hall. Order was restored only when WHARTOX BARKER. First Pres'dentlnl Nominee for 1900. the delegates in the Butler faction, said to be friendly to fusion and openly opposed to the plan of naming a ticket at this early day. withdrew from further participation in the convention's work. The convention adopted the referendum system in its entirety, and the ticket, as a result, must be submitted to popular party vote. • A resolution was adopted providing that hereafter the nominations for all offices, whether national, State, county or city, shall be made through the initiative and referendum or by petition indorsed by popular party vote. Friefftls of Messrs. Barker and Donnelly, however, have no fear of their rejection by the party at large °when the test of popular vote is taken. The bolters were led by Joseph Palmer of Illinois. Included in their ranks were the delegates, either in whole or in part, from Illinois, Otiio, Indiana, Michigan, Ji. PkliADE PASSING GRAND TRIUMPHAL ARCH IN CINCINNATI. editor of the Western Christian Advo­ cate, who was a colonel in the civil war; Major Joseph W. Wilshire, chairman of the committee on camps, made the pre­ sentation speech and Gen. J. P. S. Gobin responded in an eloquent address of ac^ ceptance. The ceremonies attending the raising of the flag were in charge of Cap­ tain J. B. Sampson, after which there was a concert, with other festivities. In the evening the streets were densely packed with people to witness the ill^rmi- nation and dedication of the triumphal arches. These separate ceremonies drew the throngs to different points and thus relieved Government Square and the neighborhood of the general headquarters. The camp fire of the naval veterans known as the dog watch at Music Hall was attended by over eight thousand peo­ ple. Congressman Jacob H. Bromwell presided. The parade of Tuesday was under com­ mand of Grand Marshal M. L. Hawkins, £with Lieut. Col. George M. Finch as chief of staff. The first division was composed of Union naval veterans, then ihe'tiattottal association of ex-prisoners of war, the Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee and Ar­ kansas. They adopted an address declar­ ing the majority had placed themselVes beyond the pale of Populism and formed a new party and appealing to Populists throughout the Country not to join in the movement. The address of the Barker- Donnelly faction, on the other hand, lik­ ens Chairman Butler to Benedict Arnold, champions the greenback as the ideal cur rency. expresses the hope that gold will soon be " relegated to the diseased teeth of the people" and points to the postal service and the public Bchool system as "exemplifications of a beneficent State so­ cialism." , DREYFUS TO BE RETRIED. New Minister of War and Cabinet Aarree to Revision, It is a generally accepted fact in Paris that Captain Alfred Dreyfus will have a new trial. The Matin says that Col. Pic quart has signed a demand for the pro­ visional liberation of Dreyfus. Gen. Zu- iinden, the new minister of war, is in bar- _ mony with the remainder of the cabinet Union Veteran Legion, Sons of Veterans, i and favors revision. Neither camels nor elephants emn jump. i <£> $ & HOMESEEKERS' EXCURSIONS *> SEPT. 6 SEPT. 20 OCT. 4 OCT. 18 ticket read dver the Burlington Route illustrated pamphlet describing Nebraska, and another all about the Exposition (both free), by writing to P. S. EUSTiS, General Passenger Agent, C. B. A Q. R. R., Chicago, 111, These are the days on which you can buy very low-rate round>trip Excursion Tickets to NEBRASKA and other points in the West„ Northwest and Southwest, good for 21 days. Stop on your Way and see the GREAT TRANS- MiSSISSIPPI EXPOSITION AT OMAHA. Ask your nearest railroad agent to make your You can get a handsome Go and look for a New Home in Nebraska, a prosperous country, where a farm can be bought for one years' rent of an eastern farm. regimental organizations and survivors ef the Lopez expedition to free Cuba. It was commanded by: Maj. Joseph W. Moore. Following this came the second division commanded by Maj. Joseph'L. Gaiiland, consisting' of tht» Kighth riJgi-1 ment United States VdlonteiT Infantry brigades, mostly bearing arms. The pa­ rade required an hour or more to pass a given point and was everywhere watched by crowds of deeply interested spectators. The afternoon was given over to river ex cursioris and the evening was filled with receptions--at the Scottish Rite Cathedral to visiting ladies; at the Lincoln Club by the Ohio commandery of the Loyal Legion to visiting veterans without regard to the organization to which they belong; at the Grand Hotel by the Woman's Relief Corps and the Ladies of the G. A. R. These variou^'social functions Were pat­ ronized by uncounted thousands. Tues­ day evening Music Hall was packed dens­ er than ever for a political meeting, the occasion being the second of the camp fires, where addresses were made by many. A letter was received during the day from President McKinley. stating that public business would prevent him and Mrs. McKinley from attending the encampment. ' The National Association of Ex-Prison- ers of War elected the following officers: Commander--James Atwell, Pittsburg. Vice-Commander--John Kissane, Cin­ cinnati. National Chaplain--The Rev. John S. Ferguson, Keokuk, Iowa. Historian--Louis R. Fortescue, Phila­ delphia. Adjutant General and Quartermaster General--Stephen ST. Long, East Orange, N.J. Crowds 8ee the Parade* Thd annual parade of the veterans, which took place Wednesday, strung out for miles, and when the first division had finished the march the last was still wait­ ing to get in line. Enthusiasm was never greater. The events of the past year have intensified the love in the American heart for the defenders of the nation. Strains of martial music filled the air, and from the beginning to the end of the march the streets were densely packed with people. The enthusiastic ripple of applause which started at Central avenue swelled into a roar of patriotic cheers be­ fore the head of the column had gone half a dozen squares. Thence, to the end of the march, past the reviewing stands, through lines of windows filled with pat­ riotic women and sidewalks crowded to the curbs, it was one grand ovation for the nation's old fighting men. It was a typical American scrne. It was at the same time a welcome to the old soldiers and a peace celebration. The cabinet has discussed the conditions nnder which the new trial shall take place. The prisoner will be conveyed to France on an unknown vessel, and shall he dis­ embarked at an unexpected port and talc f CQL. UEJiBV, TUK FORGER. en to Paris with absolute secrecy. Drey­ fus will be confined in the military prison of Chfrehe Midi, aud there he will be re­ tried when nobody suspects his presence There is®a demand for a public trial, but international complications are feared. Walking Kxerclse. While people residing In the country ean always obtain ample exercise by ( Indulging in pleasant pastimes, it is ] different for the numerous dwellers "in ' busy city pent" to get away, and, says medical contemporary, they conse­ quently suffer oftentimes from dys­ pepsia and indigestion, and t.^e girl from pale and blotched skins and gen­ eral languor. They neglect the one form of exercise open to them, without either expense or trouble--a good sharp walk. Not a slow, aimless ambling, looking into shop windows, but a real determined three or four mile walk, in which eveiry muscle of the body is brought into play--limbs, chest, neck and chin. Let the pale, languid, anaemic girl who feels too inert to perform the simpliest datly task with pleasure or Interest, beigin to try it. She will find herself transformed into a healthy girl, able to sleep soundly, to rise early, Und to perform tasks she would never have dreamed before of undertaking. In fact, walking is such a simple reme­ dy for so many of the ills that flesh is heir to, and a cure so certain to be crowned with success, that the habit of daily exercise, once established, will become a delight and a necessity. DROP TO THEIR DEATH. Forty Bridge Workmen Are finrled Into the Rt, Lawrence, More than eighty workmen employecftn building a bridge were hurled into the St. Lawrence river by the collapse of tSe structure, and it is believed at least forjy v^ere drowped or crushed to death by the falling beams. Thirty-three men were taken out of the water and placed in the Cornwall" hospital and eighteen of these afterward died. The others, it is feared, were swept away by ihe swift current and the bodies will probably never be recover­ ed. It was about noon when the two south spans of. the international bridge of the New York and Ottawa Jiiilroatl, which is now under construction across the St. Lawrence river, about three miles ab^ve St. Regis Indian v llage, fell without warning. All th< men at work v ere pre­ cipitated into the water sixty reet belo.v. The bridge e< n;;ists of three ; pans, of which two wove completed and the third, was nearly completed vhen the sohth pier gave way at its foundation, causing both , spans to fall sixty feet into the water, taking their human freight with theaL HANDSOME PICTURES. ------r"\ Fonr Plaque* of American Game "With­ in the Reach of All. Probably at no time in the world's his­ tory hals as much attention been paid to the interior decoration of homes as at present. No home, no matter how hum-', ble, is without its handiwork that helps to beautify the apartments and make the •urrouudings more cheerful. The taste of the American people has kept pace with the age, and almost every day brings forth something new in the way of a pic­ ture, a draping, a piece of furniture or other form of mural decoration. One of the latest of these has been given to the world by the celebrated artist, Muville, in a series of four handsome porcelain game plaques. Not for years has any­ thing as handsome in this line been seen. The subjects represented by these plaques are American wild ducks, American pheasahts, American quail and English snipe. They are handsome paintings and are especially designed for hanging on din­ ing room walls, though their richness and beauty entitles them to a place in the parlor of any home. These original plaques have been purchased at a cost of f50,000 by J. C. Hubinger Bros. Co., man­ ufacturers of the celebrated Elastic Starch, and in order to enable their num­ erous customers to become possess$f« bf these handsome works of art they tiave had them reproduced by a ai*ecial process, in all the rich colors and beauty of the ^original. They are finished on heavy cardboard, pressed and embossed in the shape of a plaque and trimmed with a heavy band of gold. They measure forty inches in circumference and contain no reading matter or advertisement what­ ever. Until Oct. 1 Messrs. J. C. Hubinger Bros. Co. propose to distribute these plaques free to their customers. Every purchaser of three ten-cent packages of Elastic Starch, flatiron brand, manufac­ tured by J. C. Hubinger Bros. Co., is en­ titled to receive one of ..these handsome plaques free from their grocer. Old aud new customers alike ore entitled to the benefits of this offer. These plaques will -not be sent through the mail, the ouly way to obtain them being from your gro­ cer. Every grocery store in the country has Elastic Starch for sale. It is the old­ est and best laundry starch on the market and is the most perfect cold process starch ever invented. It is the ouly starch made by men who thoroughly understand the laundry business, and the only starch that will not injure the finest fabric. It has been the standard for a quarter of a cen­ tury and as an evidence of how good it is twenty-two million packages were sold last year. Ask your dealer to show you the plaques and tell you about Elastic Starch, Accept no substitute. Bear in mind that thiB offer holds good a short time only and should be taken advantage of without delay. The Coward. The word "Poltroon," a term of con­ tempt applied to cowards, is derived from the Latin "pollex truncatus,' from the fact that It used to be com­ mon for men who were anxious to avoid being Bent into the army to cut off their thumbs. Improvements in Flying Machines. Inventors are plenty who can make a machine that will rise and float in air, but none has'succeeded, in making an appar­ atus that will guide it through the many currents of air. In this respect Hostet- ter's Stomach Bitters acts as a safe guide by curing stomach, liver and blood dis­ eases, giving a good appetite and a strong constitution. A musket ball may be fired through a pane of glass, making a hole the size of the ball, without cracking the glass. If the glass be suspended by a thread it will make no difference, and the thread will not even vibrate. "A Home in Texas." No part of the United States oBfers advant­ ages thut are to be found iu the gulf coast country of Texas. Everything grows, lots of it, the year around. For stock raising yot cannot find its equal under the sun. Write to Southern Texas Colonisation Company, John Linderholiu, Mgr., No. 110 Ulalto build­ ing, Chicago, 111., tor new, illustrated pam­ phlet, "A Home in Texas." Cheap excursion rates twice a month. Just before Danton had his head cut off he declared that it was better to be a poor fisherman than to undertake to govern men. Congblag L«sda to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays ars daa- t-erous. Every night. In every ship in her majesty's navy, the queen's health is drunk by the officers of the vessel. Piso's Cure for Consumption is our only medicine for coughs and colds.--Mrs. C. Beltz, 439 8th ave., Denver, Col., Nov. 8, 1895. The average duration of marriages In England is 28 years; in France and Germany, 26; Norway, 24; Russia. 30. Champion Talk tag Parrots. Jacob, a talking paroot, owned by Grant Ridley, oj Solloway Road, Lon­ don, England, brings In to his master £300 every yeair. Mr. RMiey has been offered £1,500 for him, but he is worth more than that, ' • This wonderful bird has perfect com­ mand over 4,000 words, and never puts a sentence together incorrectly; hp can also talk three languages, aj^l ten dia­ lects. Whatever language* or dialect yon address him in he will' reply to in the same tongue. Eighty pounds was paid by the Archduchess Stephanie, widow of the Austrian Crown Prince, for a parrot which could recite the Pa­ ternoster in six different languages. When the Archduchess, got the wonder- bird home It could not utter m iirorS, the merchant who «oiA it <«B» ary rested for fraud. It turfedmit tfcag^ bo- was a ventriloquist, an&'-b£ the bin? to open his motith aSfl appear to be talking while his ventrfloQilism lasted. The Sultan of Turkey ^Bfd £50 for a gray parrot that coiiid vpeak SSO words. . % A s^fe narcotic has been sought in, the hospitals for Insane women in tho City of Mexico. A simple product from, the seeds of the white zapote has' proved more satisfactory than any­ thing previously tried, as it produces a tranquil sleep, while deaths from cere­ bral congestion have ceased since Its use was begun. , * r# ' MANY FEMALE ILLS RESULT FB0M NEGLECT, Mrs. l'etos Sow Ordinary Tasks May Produce Tx°pln"iniiftlltii - v ' That Threaten Women's Health. V'3-k- •c$i Apparently trifling incidents in women's daily life frequently pro- ducedisplacementsof the womb. A slip on thestairsjiftingduring men­ struation, standing at a counter, running a sewing machine, or-at­ tending to the most ordinary tasks, may result in displacement, and a train of serious evils is started. The first indication! of puch trouble should be the signal for quick action. Don't let the condi­ tion become chronic through neg­ lect or a mistaken idea that yon. can overcome , it by exercise or leaving it alone. More than a million women have regained health by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If the si ightest trouble appears which you do not understand, write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., fw.lper advice, and a few timely words ironl^er}will show you the1 right thing to do. Tlifo tuimee costs you nothing, but it may mean life Or happiness or both. Mrs. Milty Bknxett, 314 Annie St., Bay City, Mich., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: "I can hardly find words with which to thank yon for the good your remedies have done me. For nearly four years I snflteredWith weakness of the generative organs, eontixmal backache,4headache, sideache, and all the pains that accomjbtuiy female weakness. A friend told my husband about your Vegetable Com­ pound and he brought me home two bottles. After taking these I felt much better, but thought that I would write to yonjin regard to my case, and you do not know how thankful I am to you for your advice and for the benefit I have received from the use of, your medicine. I Write thte letter for the good of my suffering sisters." The above letter from Mrs. Bennett is the history of many women who hM# been restored to health by Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ^' Ask Mrs. Ptakfe*m*s Advice--A Woman best Understands a Woman's IQs The man who wants •LUC can get it anywhere. It is as pop­ ular as sunshine and almost as universal. It satisfies that dry taste in the mouth better than anything else, and you can buy a larger piece o{ Battle Ax for 10c. than of any other kind of high grade quality. Demember the name 1 v whenyou buy again. ^ I • Do You Know that There Is Sci­ ence in Neatness? Be and Use S A POLIO Scrofula Taints the blood of millions, and sooner or later may break out in hip disease, running sores or some mere complicated form. To cure scrofula or prevent it, thoroughly purify your blood with Hood's Sanaparilla, which has a contin­ ually growing record of wonderful cures. Hood's parilla Is America's Greatest Medioiae. ft; aix for #5. Prepared by C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, MM*. Houeseekers* Excursion*. Oh Sept 20 and Oct. 4 and IS, 1898, the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway will sell round-trip excursion tickets (good for twenty-one days) to a great many points In South and North Dakota and other Western and South­ western States, at practically one fare for the round trip. Take a trip West and see what an amount of good land j can be purchased for very little money. Further information as to rates, routes, prices of farm lands, etc., may be ob­ tained on application to any coupon ticket agent, or by addressing Geo. H. Heafford, General Passenger Agent, Old Colbny Building, Chicago, I1L The Philippines lie wholly within the tropics, reaching at the south to within four and a half degrees of the equator. FITS PMisaac&Jr Ftart. Se Bra or c<TT®nsn«®# after flrst <l*y-- «•« of isr. Sliurt tireat Kerve Re- r#»r. bend lor FKEE irtal buttle aad treatise. DM. 1A. U. itUNE, XML, <441 Arab St.. I'hiiaOtlpiila. Fa A UNITED STATES Will MAP MB •• •• A copy of oat dmmn aa* L U L L 48x31 inches, peti*ed is «XSIM and moontod ot a roller, wttt • 1 n •• fci beMnttoaB7addM«aota,r«eaift of 15 cents in poetagv to pmr for paofclnc ud portatiou. P. S. ECSTIS, Geaaral ] G B. 4 Q. R. R., Chicago. 111. CURE YOURSELF) Cse Big O for unnstwial aikchsrgee, iollanimstiaB^ irritatiuae or uk^raiecai of muctus I t - " „ „ raiuleee, not i.tttim* «THeEy/U»SCMMMCO, TF«ut or poisoner. \oiNcmii»Ti.o^~| *fnt >" Ti Buma o? is plsia wrapMh by prepaid. •# f! .W, <3f J botUee, l_ - Circular seat on re«« No. 38-»8 N »iMi| t* Atfvertktra, pksM 4m Mi *• tiea jrea HI tfce A4verti**aMO< ia ttte pafer. •MChl allay* r*. Winn low's Swtrain i hlnc: aotteaw th« trams, nn palfi. eutwa wimm coMe. •< Hood'* Pills cure Indigestion, blliousneas. j WANTKD.-OawofbKlbeaKn that K'l P*A'N'S«rm |pt beneOt. Seed S eeats to Rij mm York, tor Mi cents to Ripatu Chemtea) OOL cities wad UKB teattmontala

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