The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, October 30, 1890, Image 3
1; wi i I aw. Sir UlTTLEsc- 1car (aw omlelon I rum rhaple, D1ot..Ar aid KallinrBcM. Car crerr faIU f Hradachc. An Kzccilcnt After Dlanar Pill. EARLY Ttseaw Utile 11 1 U lias a the bimI ptr- feet artJuii and pleaaaait effW-t fan ptUeTcraudc Mold by Drawls .x. 01 eat fcy mall for ii renu. .trRISERSP.Ksfe, Earth. " w " w Hal. K.C. DE WITT CO., I leab, 111. N. N. U No. y i York. Neb. The Heroines of Young WriUr. A woman with a turn for literary work who notices that slie is distanced, as far as success and admiration goes, by rivals inferior in mental capacity to herself, fliea eagerly to the society of her own fancies and makes her jen her greatest friend. 1 1 is the lot of many girls to pass their childhood or youth in a somewhat monotonous round of do mestic duties, and frequently in a narrow domestic circle with which Ihey may have no great intellectual sympathy. Jt is a delightful consort ium for the shortcomings of the social life around them to build up an Imagin ary picture of social life as it might be - full of romantic adventures and picas tut conquests. In manufacturing her Woine the young recluse puts on paper a hat she would herself like to he. and itbat she thinks she might be if only the had golden hair and n wider sphere f action, or if men were wiser and more discerning. In the slights offered to her favorite deal she paints the slights that might je or have been offered to herself, and the glories in imagining the triumphant 'ay in which (under more auspicious tiicumstances) she would turn upon her tuemics and trample them under foot. The vexations and annoyances she is lsually able to describe with spirit and accuracy. The triumph, being the rep vsentation of her own delicious dreams, n apt t) be little too spectacular; it is "9 flOmplet; rivals and enemies arc too .fi'octnally crushed; the world looks on Hid applauds with rather unnecessary fehemenee; the underrated martyr of ;hc, first portion of the book has some what too miignillccnt an up fiexis at .1 ' CC3&r-Illutrated Amnnmn.' Hat Killing, i.oaeoe Franklin of Hrocktan, Mass. wii a bay horse known by the name of ihiloh that is posjesKsd of a peculiar ac ! tmptishment. Mr. Fran'.un's stable, a .nther old building, 1s infesteJ by rats ihat give the horses much trouble, steal ng their food and making thumstdves nets generally. 1 1 began to be observed a short time since that in Shiloh's stall .here were to bfl foun 1 every morning one or more of the rodents dead, the ;rnslr.id bfxlies of which indicated that '.hey died violent deaths. Hut what .hat d-tftth was remained a mystery until One of the stablemen discovered that the big bay was himself the executioner. He was w.ttc'jed at his work, and the itratesry aril cunning of the aniuvil are Mid to bs re:narktlla Mo will stand over a rat hole for any length of time without stirring, his e:ir elert and his yes fixed on the hole. Then, as the rat break i s cover abruptly and hurriedly, as they always do, Shiloh brings down the sh:irp hoof of his upliftad foot upon his littlJ but harassing foa, crushing the life out of him, and if ha fails to itrike the wily creature, will overtake him with outstretched neck, and, seiz ing him with his powerful teeth, throw him against the side of the still, thus breaking his back. It is but seldom that this curious ratter fails to kill his prey. The horsa actually sesmi to en joy the sport, for ho will repeat the trick again and again, and if ani' one stands and watches him at it he will, without ceasing to be on the qui vive for the rat for an instant, occasionally ,turn his intelligent eye on the spectator as I' to say. "I'll catch him yet." Knnpsaevmf Scliool Wirls. The tendency of young girls carrying their school books under their arms, or In bags or portfoli. hang from the arm, is wild to m l" U,B man doctors are exnbring parents to provide young girls between the ages of 11 and 14 with knapsacks for carrying their school book. In many part of Germany this equipment is already in use, and to the unaccustomed eye of tke stranger nothing is more comical than suddenly to come upon a crowd of little girls trooping out of school, each nmvMwil with knatxMRk for !m m jmm. a. . Krslgii. .0f4)Ucl.. tor n. wo. A 11 bUl ot viHNMiat.afUM Ilacentown, Mil., April 31, 1W. "I.tmlothcn of mf tomllr,bvut4(it. Jacobs Oil nou relglt and found It a ipeeif, eCtrtlTt Uti aobbs Krucv. 4.W.I. wsa. 17 HAS CO CCUAL. FASHION NOTES. Coin bracelets have been followed by ! eoin chatelaines for the fan or the scent bottle. ; Some of the new bonnets are a bunch of autumn leaves, red and yellow be' ing the hue. '. Thera is a fad for monogramand tuid crest r.ngs. Any one can have the former, but m ucli humbug goes with the latUir. . Heports of the elegance and magnifi-1 cence of new carpets are rife. The de- j sign and coloring are so met .ing entire new. Skirts become fuller and wider. It seems a question of not very long time the hoops of old time will be revived. Chinese and Japnese articles and ma- I terials for house decoration are to be more extensively used next season than ever. Painted, powdered, enameled, chalked and otherwise '"made-up" women mul tiply, and who shall deny they are a sorry lot to see ' Some of the newly imported' sleeve less oriental jackets, embroidered in silver, are handsome enough for ugly girls to wear. . llelt buckles of silver now assume the form of crescents and where the points meet they are finished off with little silver knol3. A novelty just produced is a scarf pin top formed of losse gold wires care lesaly arranged, in the center of which rests an oval pearl. Jt is designed to represent a nest Mrs. l'ollard, wife of the historian of the Lost Cause, is now a resident of New York. She is a Creole by bith, and is a fine looking woman of the middle nge, with dark, expressive eyes and brown hair. A pretty "matinee to be worn in place of a lea dress is made with a Spanish jacket of dull red silk net woven in large diamond squares and fastened at each crossing with ruby crystals and small silk balls. Breton vests are a good deal taking the place of shirts with open jackets. Needless, perhaps, to say, no tie must accompany a Ureton vest, whether it is plain or of full silk, gathered under the rows of braid, as is a white one, worn with a navy serge, by the princess of Wales. Miss Caldwell, the American lady a lio has a job lot of crested underwear on hand, is in New York under the vigilant care of a maid chaperon. ' She Is about thirty years of age, imposing In appearance, rather severe in man ner, and her feet are her vanity. They are not much larger than a ten-year old girl's and faultlessly shod. Mrs. Cornelius Yanderbilt is prepar ing to break the hearts of all the society women in ew 1 ork tins winter. She has purchased at I'aris for 812,000 a pair or I'ercnerons wiucn are pro--nounced the most beautifully matched pair of horses ever seen. She has also secured (iuillot, the favorite postilion of Napoleon J 11., for her coachman. The entire outfit, it b said, will excel in beauty and style anything ever seen In New York. The nails of the fashionable woman nre often to put it strongly a posi tive abomination. They are vulgar, just as anything that is overdone and pronounced is vulgar1 And they are altogether "agin natur" quite as much as if they were stained with henna like those of her East Indian sister. To Conform to nature the nail should be (rimmed round, to follow the line of finger tip, instead of being slanted up In n long, sharp point, which is sup rosed to add a tapering look to the inger, but which really suggests the daws of a bird. Krenlna llunnet. This bonnet is made of a drapery of Hue crape and has no foundation .ex cept a strip of stiffened net. At each side are three fillets of jet. Just in front is knot of the crape, and above it, is if anouncing its supremacy, is a fine ly cut jet crescent The ties nre of black velvet ribbon, and come from the back, These bonnets are shown in yel. fjw, old-rose, black, mauve, bright red, mazarine, serpent, blue and magenta, but are in almost all cases trimmed in let. One or two have been noted to have gold on upon them, but these do not seem to have caugut the fancy of Ihe ladies who set the fashion for all the world. It will not be long before l l,n ..roitnttt ami ihn fillets will I in sold at(jly ftm, then yo(, an(, economical thoughts intent-can make Our own evening bonnet, and feci our selves free and enlightened citizens. The heavy-jeweled passementerie is considered in better form for matrons than for young ladies. A very smart one is the capote of mauve velvet, with a band of gold passementerie in which are set sapphires and topazes about the edge and extending all about the crown; just in front are three fluffy mauve feathers; the arrangement seems rather BtifT, but it is well adapted to the elabo rate trimming and the, matronly face It surmounts. Another, thai Is a little niore subdued in effect, is a capote of Mack velvet on the side of which is iMUsementerie of jet set with tiny llhinestones that glitter like diamonds. in front the tins are silver gray and black, and the ties arc of the conven tional and becoming black velvet Do not under aud auy circumstances Wear broad ties if yoa have a round, plump face, as tbey certainly will not become yon; wear, instead, onei that kre in reality the fashion. How to Kdueate Women. J Once to give full scope to the expert sion of woman's powers, in any and every form of activity that may corres pond to thosr powers; relieve alike from fear of poverty and dependency, and from the tyrauny of enforced in- a;tuity, and womanhood wil blossom into beauty and strength and lovliness of character hitherto undreamed of, writes Mrs. Helen E. Starret in the Forum. Espsuallyin the home rela tions of women will this bs apparent. As an earnest thinker upon the subject has said, "It is inevitable that the re moval of any external pressure of necessity to nnrry have a tendency to elevate the standard of m irria je, first a nong wom?n and then amonj men." On a of the great ist foes to happy mar riages is the existanceof the mercenary spirit on the part of parents and daugh ters. Nothing will S3 effectively re move it as the possession by young girls and women of satisfactory, hon orable remunerative occupations, and the countenance and approbation of society in the pursuit of them Mar garet Fuller said: "No woman can give her haul with dignity until she has learned to stand alone." The day is near at hand when t ie thorougldy educated worjui will be the one ad mirably described by Goethe as "able if njc'ssary, to be both father and. mother to her children." Here will be found the true conditions for forming love-inspired marriages, as a conse quence, the ceasing to be of any other kind. .And while w. open to them the door of freedom to find the highest heaven of earthly happiness the home tuildedupon love and a happy mar riage, we at the same tims furnish them with a key of escapa from the bastile, that hell a marriag3 from which love and respect have departed. Depreciation In the Trice of Onyx Among the art treasures which used to adoru the drawing room in his mar bit palaoe, now occupied by the Man liattttD dob, A. T. Stewart cherished n block of Mexican onyx twelve inche. square and about seven-eights of an inch thick. He gave 8700 dollars for il and it was considered an unusually big, rare piece of what was then a preciout stone. So rapidly have the onyx depoo its of Mexico been developed since t!. day of the merchant prince, however, that a piece of onyx the sa'.ne she a t the one ihe great traler valued so high ly can now be purchased hi New York for about 5, or for a good deal less than one-hundredth part of the price ho paid. Blocks of onyx of eight feet are now shipped here, cut up t rom mercial size in Brooklyn and sent to ti.: New England factories to be polished For interior decoration onyx black African marble! so long used almost ex- clusievly, has been Almost superceded by the mottled stons now found in such abundance on our own continent. A Clever Trick Exposed. I have noticed in the windows of a certain ready made clothing establish ment that advertises liberally and well, and works the bargain sale racket iipo:. a scale of fairness well our of the beat -en rut, upon several occassions one or more overcoats or suit of clothes madr. up in distinctly custom made material, and finished with all the laborious care that is bestowed upon the high clasr made to order garment 1 have out ot curiosity frequently gone into this store on rush days to note the quality of the goods offered for the money, and it must be said that the prices quoted were generally away down below th rock bo'.tom cost of manufacture. Inside the store 1 encounter seven'.' more of these handsomely made suits, I even went so far upon one occasion as to try on one of the coats thereof, but it did not fit, and his obliging clerk' informed me that they were all sold out of my siz3. The price quoted was 912, and as a matter of fact such a suit could not have been manufactured for double that sum. The size was a small one 34 chest, and while I lingered for further information a small and slender man came along looking over the coun ters. He picked up the flue suit aiul I awaited developments. He asked the price, felt the cloth aud tried it on. The man was of a peculiar shape, and to the horror of the clerk it fitted him exactly. "Let me show you some thing else." "No," was the decisive answer; "I will take this," and the twelve dollars was counted out AVhcu he left the store witli his prize there was wailing and gnashing of teeth." "Could you not see -he was . a bad shape and it might fit him?" queried the manager. "Well, I thought they were . made," answered the clerk, "so that they wouldn't fit anybody." The secret was out And a clever catch trade device it is. I remember distinctly the seraphic smile of the lit tle lop sided man as he strode out of the door in that, on him, perfect fitting gray cassimere teu strike. They decoy suit that will not lit anybody Is the lat est trick of the trade, and its pnijectot certainly a genius iu his way. Cloth let and Furnislicr. Everything ii after the manner of Joan of Arc gowns ure made thai cloeely. imitate armor, jackets that art decorated twltlt kret-platea, aud It aeems most )ntablelhat a lielmet will i n a rat dined form, crown the bead a many a.nlneteenih century Jcumi LINCOLN'S MELANCHOLY. Ilia t.viupiihMlr Nalure aud HI Kir 1 7 MiafoHatia. Those -ho saw uiucii ot Abraham Lin coln during the later years of bis life( were greatly impressed with theexprea ion o' profound ui;!auhu!y his face always wore in repose. Mr. Lincoln was of a peculiarly sympathetic and kindly nature. Thewe strong characteristics influenced, very happily, as it proved, his toUre political career. They would not seem, at first glance, to be efficient aids to political auccesF; but in lbs peculiar emergency which Lincoln, in the providence of (ioc1, was culled to meet, no vf sel of common clay could pocsibly have becoine the "chosen of the Lord." Tho3s acqusinteJ with him f -om boy hood knew that early griefs tingrd his whole life with sad net?. His partner in the grocery business at Salem, III., wus "Uncle" Billy Geen of Ta!lula, 111., who used at right, when the customers were few, to hold the grammar while Lincoln recited his leesona. It was 10 his sympathetic ear Lincoln told the story of his love for teet Ann Hutlidge; and he in return, offered what cod. fort he could when poor Ann died, and Lincoln's great heart nearly lirokt . "AfUtr Aon died" says "Uncle" Billy, "on stormy nights, when the wind blew the rain against the roof, Abe would set tliar in the grocery, his elbow on his knees, his face in his hand?, an j the tears runnin' through his (inhere. I hated to see huu feel bad, an' I'd eny, 'Abe don't cry'; an' he' look up rr say I can't help it, Bill, the rain's a falliu' on her."' There are many who cap sympathize with this overpowering grief, as Ihey think of a lost loved one, when "the rain' a fall in' on her." What adds poignancy to the grief some times is the thought that the lost one might have been saved. Fortunate, indeed, is William John son, of Corona, L. I., a builder, who writes June 28, 1890: "List February, on returning from ohur h one night, my daughter coniplsineduf having a pain in her ankle. The pain gradually ex tended until her entire limb was swol len and very painful to the touch. We called a physician, who after careful ex animation, pronounced it disease of the kidneys of long standing. All we could do, did not seem to benefit her until we tried Warner's Safe Cure; from the first she commenced to improve. When she commenced taking it she could not turn over in bed, and could just move her hands a little, but today she is as wel! as she ever wss. I believe I owe the re-' covery of my daughter to its use." sue was iteaay Y?sierday morning at exactly 10 o'clock a well-dressed young man en tered a gate on Congress street east and pulled the door-bell of a house. No response. -' Then he turned to the front of the house and pulled the bell again. After waiting and watching for a couple of minutes he went to the side door. Get ting no response to his repeated knocks lie pulled a paper from his pocket and w.is making a "mem" when t second' story window was carefully raised, a pail of water balanced for an instant on the sill, then souse it went over the young man blow. He uttered a yell siid leaped into a lilac bush and from there be reached the fence and gained the street Just then a officer cam up and asked: "Anything the matter?" ''" 1 'Oh, only a trifle. , "AVhat are you doing in there ?" 1 "Trying to collect interest on a chat tie mortgage that's all. Lady told me to call at 10, and I called. She was ady for me. Good day." Detroit Free Press. Winning n Bride. Ilich banker-So you have no real.es tate; yon are neither a plumber nor at iceman, and yet you dare ask meforthi hand of my only chila. Whence comet you presumption? I'oor but proud suitor I have beet elected representative for Seaquash "Well, what of that?" "There are six teen elected railroa bills for Boston before the legislature and" t "Take her, my soon, take her, anc w'hen you buy out Vanderbilt don'i look down uion your poor father " V.iutunT.n. . Cainfa ard Ui Munlcr. Boston, Mass.. Oct., 22. A few rights oefore Thanksgiving day, 18fi2j Abel Hnwkina, a cabinet maker of Dorcnea ter, was found in his shop with his skull crushed and he died soon cft?r George Hall his fellow workmen, woe suspected of being his murderer, but on the coroner's 'nquest he proved an alibi. Thursday a rumor reached Dorchester thst a man who had recently died in Canada, had confessed that he had killed Hawkins. The alleged confessor ia aaid to have hoen in Dorchester at the tirre of the murder and was supposed to have enlUted, since which time nothing has been heard of h'.m until now. five Days Imprisonment. Nkw Yon, Oct. 22. Mayor Patrick Jerome Qleaaon ot Long Idaod City, who waa convicted of assault in he third degree for pounding and kicking a re porter, George B- Rowley, in Miller' hotel a few eeke ago, waa yesterday morula atntenoetl by Judge Cu'len to five days Imprison ment in the Long Island oaaaty jail sod to pay a fine ot 200. poeSBaEdnS OK) 8 . i. k rumr-H, rv-i wt. i. A. HI l !C! I! Bl O U ! aeknawladnd imllna raasadr tor all tba aanatural Slactaanaa mat I r for thr drblll- Uuc waaaaeaa pecuua u74.r . ipwacr.baitaadtaelMfa .j KrmiFR. M n .Oceiri:n.ltu fcoM ay nracs-ia. I'SIW ei.vv Tto a. eotnplete I:o of Draaa Rabrm Juud is iM north-want. Ino.odiua Hi -bratml Ugaipoiaa anJ DeUu-t wsiata, Jnna(a Millor (wiul tiea and Jenx'j Knit Un-I"i mr. Hooii etamptor free illmtniie 1 cataJoini'fl . MRS. U W. 11 KK. 14 Mailiarm at.. Uiirai; . FOn LIE. Oi'lLY! rjIerM ill 'I Wcjuu illllkf Brm . .muOBfal rar KXT ntLVUHa KAUr.0OD duimvoua cum vxi af BodT aad Kind. IS eel Errors or ffmiiii in Old or Tounf. QBfttllr kMUr4. UMI.Mliirrii a mrt'rti . i'aTtoW)oni.'.ts t runner ml z. mmmiull alulba UOB tllbTiUII-talu I. . WMWtNaMMilMM4riMliCMMrii. Wril lltraw SiMili" aMkjf ilHMia Mmipm wlW (wtled) t'rra. Modern MiraeTea. k ainicer for breatli wiu ilistretwed. And Uie doctors all said she must mat. I'utelietonk 0. M. It. For her wenkJuuKa yon pen, And now she can sing with the hewt. An sth'ete save out, on a run. And he fenred hi career was quite dune; O. M. D., pray ol.eerve, Uuve back hi lost nervo. And now he can lift half a ton. A writer, who wrote for a prize. Had headaches and pain in the e. (I. M. D. wan the epell That, made him quite ei. And glory befor him now lies. These are only examples ot u.c daily triumphs of Dr. Tierce s tiolden Medical Discovery, in restoring health ami re viving wasted vitality. Sold ly all druggists. I was surprised, amusod, yet not par ticularly pleased, the other day when a iittle errand took me to the board of health. It was to obtain not a favor but a right, that would have been in stantly granted in any other city. The clerk, who was about to tali's my state ment, tossed his pen carelessly on the f.esk before I had finished and said. 'Oh, we can't bother wilh that" Then I went to the health inspector for my district and stated my case. His ai. (.wer was as folio'": "Have you aiij political pull ?" 1 did not admit it. for if I have one I certain'y never attempt to exercise it. He looked doubtful and thought for 1 while. ' Xo acquaintance down at the city "k.ir "None that would be of any assist .nee to me. ilm! If you had d, little influence boweverleave it to ine and ' I'll see wh.-t can be done." 1 left it to him, and a few iUi after wards received word from the jeretary of the board that, if I wanted redress from a nuisance, it would 'oe necessary to go to law. The moivl is obvious. If your fs merely that of 111 American eitizen don't ask the authorities to anything for you; put a nicklo in n pol itician's pocket and tve board ot. health will work. Brooklyn Eagle. All the year round, you may rely upon Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery to purify the blood and invigorate the system. It's not like the sarsaparillas, that are said to be good for the blood in March, April and May. The "Golden Medical Discovery" works equally well at all times, and in all cases of blood - taints, or humors, no matter what their name or nature. It's the clieapest blood -purifier, sold through druggists, because you only pay for the good you get. Your money is returned if it doesn't benefit or cure you. Can you ask more? ' " Golden Medical Discov ery" contains no alcohol to inebriate, ana no syrup or sugar to derange digestion It's a concentrated vegeta ble extract; put up in large bottles; pleasant to the taste, and equally good for adults 01 children. The "Discovery" cures" all Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous affections, as Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum, Fever-sores, White Swellings, Hip - joint disease and kindred ailments. EialaXl lanwl " 1 f mam auwan. ITwl oacinatiIo J 11wafeat frees made. Ioc D. injnra atoe. V ai'iJe at a ajeat dittance. Thooaanda of Je-O. muninlu. 8eud fi rriicttlara and pri(a. Baatt) li-Hi Wire. Ailr-a Spur Wire Fence Co., (II Kit A . III.? (III.IIING, HIICAU . Kp rcli.ry. W. IIOMiENWtii'K, Twaaoror. Opium Or Morphine Habit Ur. S. O. l I.: ,!, Or't-i.j.1 IOcovrer ; !'..MiruOilui A hi Id ii b. W ill rnrf yon at h jn t with-:;-; any iutr-r-aptvti of oidiuarr lns;ni. Hook -lit f U u) m i 1 drM. Iiunirrd of original lertimoniala j nliyBiciaiiA i-iid others ft r incr li a almr-'f-j face, tiuom 'il Ami r ca hpr a l.niMinn. Mon roe 8t.. I luof no. IU., r. J. I. raw r ovi (lortnarif Lai forte, loci ) mm if IS THE BEST MEDICINE for t'.ii- Onc-rul Alliiienu of lloisrs, t'altle. Hoes and Sin'i'O. Thev pin ny the Mixxl, prevent aud riire il soase. Iliinext xnd reliant-, iu honest lK-k.i'eH: i npI and warranted for over iweni leai H KveryiMio ow nini! H hoiM-orcallle jhouM tiveitalnaf Mdel Km M Kill I'ROl'oiKTAar T."1 , Clnciito Hold hv ll ilriiceisls FAT FOLKS REDUCED MTaUTS TSaUTCO BV aVUL. ASTA E'PILATORI A val of mtprtluuuii hair fivin Mm mir.Hi.luii; anil uemiajient-aTW I lliol tor ine iBinovai la. and .ran mil lr In tlvi nilnutM. Hanniri.il nnt will nut Infur tj.i 4mn. M-rni lurrlmilsn. or. WHITING. Chemist, Suite 43-49. 78 Stat Street. Ch cago, 10. The larfrcst stock of ArSh -ci il Kyrs in Die West. Aa as sortment ol eyes seat to sr. r ndurvsss, allowing purchaser o select one or more at4 re turn the balance thus assunav a perfect lit. Olnce, 163 State St., Chicago, 111. lilt. II! A. VAMFIKLU, r,nvjliin! and operiitin surgeon to the China Eye ir.H liar College, fu'.ients at a distsnce trusted with I..,;- -allelcd success and when visiting the ciif sreuruviucd honrd and lodging t reasonable rates. Free Trade Prices No PntU'Ciion l An Aloiionollmf tC SfWiHK KOWtf C P4DMncI inekmi) J 0 Vvrum now telling our Wertrn Imrn.vH Bicrr lS-winfr MHohint? earn m i nt t-ompl. te with all ar ' ftrhinentft and warrap(l or 5 jfnr for only $10. t-Du c r n mi in e lu 1. encrint k o ot thit nd tit r -tjlfH to ft A. Scull i u C. 762 V(. nkoHl. ('hirw. Ill CHILES' 1 Cactus p.rfwi Cures Chapped Hands, Face aa I.ips, Tan, Sunburn, Pirn lea. Makes roir'ii sum vn without be ng sticky or greasy. Dcliciitelvp rfnmcd. Renders act pnwder invisible and mai.es it ad here I" (Le skin, im parting at once a brilliant complexion. I'rice J$c. Mailed to anv address on receipi of price. Sen postal note, sllTO or !.t:inii!. Address pli-inly, CHII.KSftCO., 9iSChanilerof Coiuincrcc, v hicago. photography OSTITIS 4 SWTLIXS , PRICK LIT FRKBV SWEET, WALLACH L Wabaita Av. Chloaat. POP'S OEKMAN i srotaacii i-owtici Has no Equal or (he ( nre ot Dyaiepsia anJ lodlgution . I'rice 73 centa I'er Box, Bnffioient for 0 dy treatment. Mailed to an? ad dress noon receipt of trine. Write for leati moniala. POP'S GERM AN STOMACH POWDER Co. W. Polk tit . Chicago, IU DR. J. A. DAN IS, SSSJSa, 166 W, Madison g AH disenBwi of Catarrh, Throat, Lunga, HEART, Brain, Nrvwi, in their vari ns forms. I injCC Hy treatment a pure lovely complexion LAUIlO freff from b:iilowiK-ss, freckles black 1-eatU cruptinns, etc., brilliant eye and perfect h altb enn be Imd That 'tired" feeling and all Fe male Weakness promptly cr.rcd. Nervous Prostra tion, Ge eril IXbilitv, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion, (H-arian troubles, Intlainrr.atln and Ulceration, Falling aixl Displaceinents, Spinal Weakness, Kidney Complaints, aud Change ol Life. Coimsult the old Doctor, rV " lin CID Acute or Chwilc nflamma tlf AIIJ tAH t'onof theEv-lids or Globe, and Far antT Near Siifhtednrss, inversion of the Lids. Scrofulous Eyes, Ulceration. Inai.muttona, Absccses, Dimness of Vision of one or both uvea and Tumors of Kid, Inflammation of the Ear. Ul ceration or Catarrh, Internal or External; Detjlnef r Paralysis, Kinging or K oaring Noises, Thio - eneo urum, etc. nCDII ITV Loss of Vital Power, U EDI LI I I Sleeplessness. Dc- Kpund-ncv .oss oTMeinor;-. Confusion of Ideas, War hcforetlie r.vcs.linjruor.oioonu.WRS, repres sion of. Spirits, A verson to Society. Ktisily l)icour aseil, I-ilck of confidence. Dull, Listless. Unnt for titmly or Business, nnil hnUs life a hurucn, asfely snil iiermunentlv eurull. DflTIl CCVCC Oonsnlt Conndcrtia'lv. If In DU I II JLAC0 "ny Irou'u.'e call c; write. le- luvs ir- danperims. Semi J.' cei t. stiiinps, for Mcttictl Guide or Laws of Health. Office iiours, 0 a. in. to S p. rn aannniJIIIC and Opium hahit cum! far MUnrlllrlt ine.ly. l'urtic.ili.i. I'UKK. Acts radically but (rently; docs not emaoal be fore building up; requires hut a short lime; suc ceeds when other treatments full; relieves Imnn I lately wilhott Suffering- or Semi-Urvation; Strictly ft Home Cure; reusoiuhlc in cost; worst casts solicited. Address, MARION SEARS, HO A, Chicago, 111. Send for Dr. Gregg s Book How to Cure Tourselt: At Home Dy fciecinciWa ' 1M.t wn-a 101, Wnkaseli A CMca, III , FREETBIfiUi onbrNKltVITA. Il.oopa, Thoneande or cases ol Harwma Iteblllljr. boat lannooa.ew., eared bj i EUV 1 1 A. fl-M pnekafe; a lor $.V0n. TRIAL SENT FKEE far I eoni VMU" DK. A. O. OLIIN CO., nox . Cblnurn. ill.. HATISOS and BYNOftUB rmaioa hocrtt lawa. XrXK2s: iVi.,. j n ak M. H. Ufl. mm mmm m r i