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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1893)
CHICAGO'S CHARITIES BRIEF REFERENCE TO MOST NOTED. THOSE Horn the World's Fair City Take Cure of IU four, Ita Vltlou. Iu Incompetent, and It Sick Tha Very Acme of Sjiteui It ObMrted. lBtroMiig Institutions. dhJoaco eorrecpoadencc: The charities of a great city form a theme well worthy of study, uud there fjre Many who find In tho name a tource of even detir intoroit than in Surveying grand monument, artititic parks and tho manifold ordinary wonders of a metropolis. For suoh, Chicago presents a truly repi-ewnta-jatve lino of charitable and cirreo tloaary institutions, cud while Uie.-e Jaite simply prototypes of unj-luuw found la smafter towns, their opportuiutios kaneflts and wtprkuig-t are upon nur.ii u magal&ed Hcalo that novo th vnry acme of system und utlfity may lr o'o erved, and dodiuttions eliminati-d to guide and Instruct. Tho problem of pofertj und tho arreliorutii n of hu man misery wLU never bo nolvud aiis fucUirily to every phot of thinking, but the way in which the Worlds Fair oity takes care of its poor, its vicious, PHKlUtTLHHV IKIKFITAU Us Incompetent and itd nick corlahily approximates excolloncu very ncarty porfoetioa. The no are bo many variud instltuti'ina for charity In Chicugo that oven a lint aioae would occupy pages. Their inin lions are widely diffused: they dot wrery portion of tho city, they afford ibalter for the blind, tho li-af, tlij iumh. tho crippled, the worthy poor, uren tlaj unworthy poor. Every class is Sroridcd for, and these classes are in trn divided up, and in many instances ftpportioaed tu institutions controlled tJV representatives of tho nationalities to which Ihey Ijelong. With a view i f marking out the meet intwetitinjr and easy of acocas of these asylums, a few may bo described, which, insi-eotod by ttia stranger, will afford a vory fair id a of tho general run of local charities. Tho main homo foi' the indigent ,is of course tUe county poorhousti, aad for tho sick the county hospital. The hit tor is o;-y of access, being' locate at the corner of Harrison and Wood streets, and is noted for its prompt, good work. The former, how ever, b wno ten miles from the cil v, being situated at Dunning. The Mil waukee mid St. Paul KailroRd 1ms a branch line running to this institution, which comprises many buildings, and, whilo scarcfdy a motlol of its class, is extomdvo in its snope, and fairly stic oossful iu its efforts to Mystomatisso tiio care and comfort of its inmates." Ah it harbors mainly hopeless and chronic paupers, however, (lark pictures with a bright rldo are moro common atneng asylums within the city's borders, whore lovo and devotion take the place of a nooo-sarUy rigmtius system in dealing with aggiegrato misery ami helplessness. Home for the Frl lien. The Homo for the Frich.lless, at VXH Wabash aveuuo, may lie retailed by any of the South Division cable cars, and isono of the most notable of Chi cago's charitable a-ylums. It. occupies handsomo brick buildings, four stories and an attio in height, well lighted and ventilated, supp ied with shaded porticoes,andsurroundo.l by grass plat-i. The interior is elaborate in its appoint ments, aud sas about 100 rooms. This institution Is an important factor in the social and moral condition of Chi cago, its guidance being in tho very best of hands, its benefits in calculable, and the care of its inniatos conducted on a system that has rescued hundreds from despair and holplossnoss, and placed them on tho roaa to usefulness and right. The waifs taken in here have a home in every sense of the word, motherly at tention, happy amusements, and a school training most thorough, and yet pleasant. A mile and a h a! f farther south HOME Oll THE rHIESI.it.ESS. Is the" Old Pooplo's Homo, and both intl tutions may be visited tho same day. Tho last-namod represents an Invest ment of some $70,000, and at present houses eighty old ladies. It is intend ed tot erect a duplicate structure for tho accommodation of old men. In tho West Division tho most noted charity is the Foundlings' Homo, justoff Madison on Wood street. It comprises two largo connected brick buildings one throo, tho other five btorics high. Its capacity Is for alxmt ono hundred children, but no littlo wayfarer left at its hospitable portals is ever turned adrift. JUdving almost solely on donations from tho benevolent, its success has demonstrated tho nbiluty of one good man the lamented Dr. George Shlpman, Its fmtwloi to carry out a great enterprise when based on unfaltoring"faith. as also tho kind ness of heart of a community at largo. A visitor cannot help but bo absorbod in watching the workings of a system ho ro displayed that mothoin infants from ono month to several jBra of ago, ami not a fow World'" Fair visitors may adopt and take homo as a "sunshine" the littlo ones who are only waiting to brighten childless or bereaved homes with tho sunshine of their pre sen ee. The North Division has, at tho cor ner of Market and Hill btreeU, a some what remarkable asyium and reforma tory for women, girls, and female chil dren, know-n as the Houe of the Got d Shepherd, the noble work of which in years past cannot ba ovreit; mated. rt is under charge the Sudors of tho Good Shepherd, an. occupies a large inclosinv. partly take up by the building, and jatrt'v 'by sev ral yards. The institution fs divided into live departments, isolated from each other the penance reformatory for women, the juvenilo reformatory for young girls, tho industrial school, the Magdalen asylum, and "Our Sisters' Community. " There are accommoda tions for 40 inmates, and the institu tion is usually well Ullod. It has been the moans of reclaiming many, and there is no Institution in Chicago more interesting and more deserving of kind words and active support. Charitable llmpltaln. The charitable hospitals of the city are very numerous. Among these a.-'e the Mercy Hospital,' founded in 1848. controlled by the bisters of Mercy, and supported entirely by voluntary con tributions; tho Michael Kcose Hos pital, a Hebrew charity which admits imtionts without a test of religious faith; St. Luke's Hospital, supported by collections takon up oh Kt. Luke's Day iu all the EpisoojKil churches of Chicago; and Kjoies of minor hospitals, all of which perform a noblo and hos pitable work. Tho visitor desiring to thoroughly Inspect a model institu tion of this kind, however, 6hould visit the United Statos Marino Hos pital, tho office of which is in the Government Huilding. Tho institu tion is situated at Lake View, on the lake shore, six miles north of the City Hall, and accossiblo by the North Di vision cablo cars. The grounds com prise ten acres, und tho building is a nanasomo granite structure, lour stories high, with abasement. It is II'WxTj feet, and has accommodations for 15o patients, is tho largest hospital of its kind in tho country, and cobt the government 4u0,000. Over 3,000 pa tients aio treated annually in its dis pensary, it is maintained by a tax n all tounuge. American citizens aro treated free, and foreign ers ut a small chargo. Tho Presbyterian Hospital, corner Wood and Congross stroots, is another large institution, which, whilo providing medical and surgical aid, also aims at tho ministration of the gospel agree ablo to tho doctrine and forms of the Presbyterian Chnroh. The minor charitable institutions of the city are numberless, and tho stronger can find scarcely u neighborhood where mis sions, creches, dispensaries or frea kindorgarteusdo not abound. Thereara likewise orphan asylums, half orphan asylumns. homes for strangers, for working girls, emergency aud deten tion 'hospitals, and industrial schools for boys and girls. An inspection of these liives tho visitor a clanoe at phases of rare human interest, and a conception of the really good work that is Doing fiono qiueiiy ana sysiemaucniiy in the 'great. World's Fair city. The rdrangnr visiting Lincoln Park may discern a practical demonstration of this by inspecting the pior devoted to tho supporters of tho celebrated fi e-h-air fund for children. Here the hivod-up littlo ones of the poorer i!iiu(.a n.r brought remilarlv. and. surrounded by water, fresh air, and open sunshine, enjoy ino comions ana luxuries provided for thorn by kind hearts ana wining nanus, iii is a spou 4... . la i Mat will snnd the visitor home- ,.-n,-l-Vwiimr1 with tho nleasantcst and tendcrest memories the human heart can experience. Currencies C'ondned. TrrrmTie KnwABtR 15 voars old. fell from a tree at Bra ail, Ind., and will probably die. Trl E Cleveland Chamber of Commerce passed a resolution domandirg the re Deal of the Sherman law. A GANti of thieves who ma le a busi ness of robbing 1kx cars has been run to earth at W abasha, Minn. Rev. Lkigii Vernom, who eloped with Mrs. Mario 1'arson, was semoncea to six months in jail at Pittsburg, Kas. Martin Foy, Jr., murderer, was soutcned to bo oloctrccutod at Danna mora (N. Y.) prison in the week of Auff. 27. Anna Wikowkb, a maid at tho Pal mer House in Chicago, and uaron honi borg, an Austrian nobleman, have been united in marriage. Wir.T.uM Ranakh. a dnmented and intoxicated inmato of the Soldiors' Homo at, Leavenworth, Kan., tried to drown himsolf, but was rescued. WilijamJ. KinseIjLA, a Chicago policeman, who murderod Charles Smith last Thanksgiving, was found guilty and sentenced to a term of five yeara. KlX'ENT reports of a popular upris ing among the people of Coroa against foreigners appear to have been with out foundation, acoordlng to ad vices re ceived by the Presbyterian Board of Missions in New York. Harry Baker, agent for the Singer Sowing Machine Company, loft Leba non, Ind.. with a livery rig to mako a seveu mile drive. Nothing has since been heard from him. His accounts with the company are short $12i). The epidemic of typhoid fover at Tronwood, Mich., Is abating somowhat, but It not ondod. A conservative esti mate of tho numlw of casos since the ben-inning of tho epidemic in Juno is 4(h7. About fifty doathu have oc curred. W. L. Oaklky, of Now York, walk ing from San Francisco to Now York on a wager. wa killed by a Union Pa cific train a fow milos west of Omaha. Oakley was identified by papora on hla porscn. Ho was endeavoring to maka tho trip without money. GoBTriK married an jstlmablo "frau who made hira quite content with hi homo. rousnLirms' bomb. At Chicago Royal Leads All, As the result t my tests' I find the ROYAL BAKING PC .VDER superior to all the others in every respect. It is entirely free from all adulteration and unwhole . some impurity, and in baking it gives off a greater volume of leavening gas than any other powder. i's therefore not only the purest, but also tte strongest powder with which I am acquainted. WALTER S. HAINES, M. D., Prof, oj Chtmiitry, Ruih HcJuiil College, Consulting Chemist, Chicago ilaarj of Health. All other baking powders are shown by analysis to contain alum, lime or ammonia. ROYAL BAKlNe POWDER CO., Ad omnibus has been started in Glitsgow furnished with pneumatic tires which are protected from injury by sharp stones or glass by canvas and woven wire netting. Tnere is no jolt ing or jarring, and the noise is reduced to a minimum. The Cockerili works in Belgium boat of a 100 ton hammer, but Krupp's gun works in Gssen, Germany, "goes them one better" with one weighing 100 tons. This last hammer is the largest now in use. A new and important industry is the production of soap from cottonseed oil. The PrattU uf a ilriiht Child. At times it cannot be denied the ques tions of children become irksome, but who would wish a child to ask no ques tions? Julius Sturm lulls in one of hie pretty fairy tales, how a grandfather, driven ido imp'ttienoe by th constant questionings of his Rrandchild, ex claimed, "I wish your tongue were out jf joinil' But when ;uoxpeciedly his wish was fulfilled aod the child became .lumb, how he joyfully exchanged one of two jeiirs which an angel had prophesied he was yet to live for the pr. viU'ce of hearing the little one's prat tie hgain. P.jpu.nr Soinnoe Monthly. One of SnveraU Young Caller "I'd like to get a job as newspaper correspondent at the Worid's Fsir." Great EJitor (name of city omitted jut of consideratioL for some of the more pairio'.io inhabitants) '"Ever have any experience in journalism? "No." 'Kver been in Chicago?" "Nope." "Know anything about the United States outside of this town?" "Nopy." "Care anything about it?" "Nixy." "You'll do." Watch a llornn'M Kurt When lrlvtog. Whether you drive a single horse or a team the principles are the same, but in driving a pair ben to it that each horse does hie 6hare of the work and no more. A pair of horses, moreover, unless well ilriven, are sura to get in the niibit of wand-ring over the road. To drive well you must keep your eye and yur mind on the horse. Watch bis ears. They will be pricked forward when he is about to shy, droop when he is tired, fly back just before he "breaks" (into a gallop) and before he kicks Before kicki g, too, a horse usually tucks in his tail and hunches his back a little. When you observe any of these indications, speak to him sharply and pull up his head. Harper's Young People The Bummer scarfpin seems more prominent than that of winter. Bonbon spoons of silver filigree have the bowls shaped like scallop shells. Others are shovel shaped. Filigree silver, delicate as soap bub bles, has appeared in every form. It is the poetry of silver work. Sword bilts are now aflixed as handles to paper knives and button hooks, and are enjoying another term of popularity. A bounty of three cents a head is paid for every sparrow killed in a village, township or city of .Michigan. A prooess of el minating smoke from the combustion of coal has been die. covered by an ingenious German. Central America has ninety sotive volcanoes. i - My Wife and I Heiieve that an onneo of prevention is worth a pound ot enrc. Wc hud dull heavy Baad achet, a little exertion tired ns grsntly, and r j i rvw i hiv uwnw wan ,w, uCJ !t I Poor. !o wo Iwnan to take HimhI's hnrsapa rilla and the eU'ertwas IIL-a inM.rii. M.i.tm.iiiir ituminU'in' 1 1 to pcrlecr health and A" Toly I prcvcntiiiK swere sick ness and doctor's bill. J, li. Touts, 14ft 12th St., San Kranoisc . OH HOOD'S. Hood'sCufes 00V f&M cure constipMi tun. J I 11 105 WAU. ST., NEW-YORK. h - ' lij ', Hie K.ug t,r bull-tighterp, recoi ). made his last appeiiraiiee iu tl a ring si Mndrid, and entnrtsined an audi ence of H,OJ0 people by fighting ai d slaying six siuMwr- bulls. Thij perforn anos netted him $25,Quo. He is a mi. ioDuire, aod earned all his wealtD i t bull Qhticg. Money was nended by a washerwom r n o Somerville, Mass., and she ssnt a glib ittle sir! to a patron who was in her debt, with this vtrbatm singe: "Mamma says she hopes it won't put you out, but she hasn't a ont in the huse and sbs must have her bun ' "i'. Tha Hecrot . F....:iiiiIIsh. The secret of fascination is one wbieh many a woman would sHcriKos a good deal to learn, to cultivate a charming end an attractive manner ens must be gin at home; and sur?ly a better school could uot be devised, for the training is, in its way, perfeotioo. Hers one is sure to tind each day little rubs which must be soothed with skillful touch: there is a constant mind-friction going on amontf even the m st devoted members of the household. It is a painful fact, though none the less true, that one's family sets a a eons inn t oounterirritant. A steady effort to smooth ever the rough places, mini slur to wounded hearts, aod with deft touches erase un pleasant memories is called for, and the woman who obeys the summons is al most snre to find herself fully able to cope in the most agreeable fashion with the outside world. Few women, how ever, realiz that a fascination of man. ner is uot, brn, but. cultivated. It be gins to bud in the nursery, develops under the skillful training of pains taking instructors, and blossoms forth into complete beauty in the society of well-bred women.- Tim Klo le 1 . I'.ata. Were it not for a decided difference in the color of the water you would never know when the Atl.mtio is left and the Rio de la Piata entered. The high roll ing, white capped billows are the same, and no land is visible, for the great river which Jsmes Diaz de Solis discov ered is 125 miles wide at its mouth, through with an average depth of only 50 feet. Sebastian Cabot, who arrive' ,n the year 1520, soon after the nativ e Had murdered poor Don Solis, dubbe.i it River of Silver not on account of ite color, which might have won for it the more appropriate name of Golden rivet or River of Chocolate, but because he had wrested quantities of silver from the Indians who swarmed its banks, and naturally imagined that an abun dance of precious metal remained in the vicinity. In point of fact, the terms Argentina and Rio de la Plata both meaning th same thing with reference to silver are misnomers, for no metals of any sort, precious or otherwise, are found along the banks ot the mighty stream or any where near it, and the scanty argentifer ous deposits in the hills ot the intern r have never, been worked. The Indiar s ufoVsaid probably obtained the silver whioh so excited Spanish cupidity from Peru and Bolivia by some primitive system of internal commerce known on ly to themselves. Philadelphia Record. v f If . ' I.'. T . : . I is a household necessity. None better try it. 25 cents. Custard. A delicate invalid's custard is made as follows: Beat up 2 eggs, mix in halt s pint of milk, sugar to taste and some vanilla, lemon or nutmeg flavoring. When well stirred, pour tha mixture into a buttered basin, cover with but tered paper and steam in a sauoepan ol boiling water, whioh should oome about half way up the basin, for half an hour. A savory custard is made in the same war, substituting cold beet tea, fret from all fat, for the milk, and uf course leaving out the sugar. One Smalt Bile Bean every night for I week arouses Torpid Livers. 25c pei oouie. A roofing plate is constructed on thi edges with moldings having transverM strengthening ribs adapted to Dgssi vlth sitniUr moldings on the adjoiuinf plats. A Hint Ironing. The pigtailtd lauudrymao, says an nctiai ge, knows a liUle ironing trios: worth trying. Instead ot heating his iron just rwhi for use he heats it scorch ot. Then be plunges it into cold water for an instant, which cools the surface sufficiently to allow him to make onverl effective passes, the heat mean time gradually coming to the surface. It ntcessary he repeats this two or three Limes till the iron is of the right tem .r.uuie to ply its vocation uninterrupt edly. This saves ' he frequent changing of irons of Bridget's method. The King of Slam. The king of Siam bad promised to isil the World's fair and sail around the world and had gone so far as to order a magnificent yacht made in Scotland. But now he cannot came, for be is id troBble with the French, and by the time this is read they may b in Bangkok. The king is 40 years old. has reigned since he was 1&, is ab solute monarch ot about 7,000.000 , eople, has about 60 wives and ean hsve as many more as he likes, has an income of $10,000,010, and his full name is Somditoh Phra Paramiode Maha Kboulalonkorn. And yet ha is not happy. lie is the most progressive ruler Siam has ever had, has already introduced many re forms and adopted many western idea's and is anxious to do more, but there is trouble on both sides of hie kingdom. The British recently annexed Burruai which brings them very close to bun on the west, and the French, having ud nexed Anam and all the rest of the southern part of the peninsula, have got up a quarrel about the boundaries. Thev claim all the territory up to the Me-KoDg river because it formerly be longed to Anam and because it is oc cupied by wild tribes which Siam can not control. Siam claims the moua tains south of the He-Kong, a she droi-e the Anamese out of that valley a contury ago. Bo King Kboulalonkorn I, as he is usually called, and his 7,000,WX) people nave suddenly beoome of great import, ance to Europe, The king is far in ad vauce of his subject. In 1673 he abolished all the slavish ceremonial of the old court. His subjects and minis ters no longer hare to drop on their faces at the door, orawl up and bump their heads on mats, as they are seen ij. the old pictures and comic opera They walk in, bow and shake husds ii English way. The king is the ninth son of M&tia Mongkut, his predecessor, aud wa picked out of 81 chiidren to be made eovtrlgn. He is small in stature, Lu ' has a well shaped head, with olive brown r-omnlextou. liquid black eyt-s and straight black hair. He speaks Eng lish fluently and ha sent two of lo brothers to England to study civil z . tion. Ha has ssdicousiv cultivated ill arts of peace and labored to raise th standing ot bis people. TO CLEANSE THE SYSTEM rjiieufcuatiy vpt pcunj., wwutc wi un ions, or when the blood is impure or slug- patlon. to awaken tfio kidneys nnd liver to a healthy activity, withpnt irritating or weakening them, to disjx'l headaches, colds Thanked th ISurKlar. The concierge of a Paris apartment house lost tho door key a few nights Bgo, and a number of visitors and others who wished to leave were made prison ers. Two gentlemen crawled out of a window and sought a locksmith, but 89 the hour was late none could be sound, They finally fe'l in with a burglar, and at their earuest solicitations he opened the door in the twinkling of on eye amid a chorus ot thanks. The two gentle men wanted to give the burglar a couple of francs, but drawing himself up with dignity he exclaimed, "Sirs, among pals!" .1. C. SIMPSON. Marquess. W. Va., says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very had oasic of catarrh." Uraggifts sou it, jo. How Ui Use PowiWf. A dab of oowder ie often much and suddenly needed. A little flat baa of chamois, punctured und fille:! with pow der in a corso cheesecloth covering, mav be carried in the pockt and very skillfully oono?aled in the handkerchie! during application. Kconomicol, easy to take, Small liiie Beans. Bonbon boxes of silver filigree are formed of fine lines turning and twist ing on themselves ana as delicate as a spider's web. A big bear leisurely stroked into the yard of Mrs. Amos Corey, of Turnwood, N. Y., and upset a couple of bee-hives. The lady brained the animal with an nx, and a few hours later captured two cubs that had come in quest of their mnminx. A SEDENTARY OCCUPATION, plenty oi silling down and not much exercise, ought to have Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets to ro with It They absolutely 'ana permanently curs Constipation. One tiny, sugnr noutcd Pellet is n eorreetira, a regulator, a gentle laxative. They're the smallest, the easiest to take, I v.n Miaf mniivnl romariv nn refla tion afterward. Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, nnd all stomach and bowel derangements are prevented, relieved ana cured. A "COLO n? Tim hxab" is csined by Catarrh. Bo is Ca tarrh itmlf. The proprietors offer loOO for any osss which taty cum cars. M, M. U. No. S44-31 V ark, Mk. mp WRrrtNa to. urfnTitm iiiivr rM siisiiisnsi A severe attack ot the toothache was endured by Simon Kintzer, a wealthy man of Hummelstown, Pa. A traveling tooth doctor chanced to be in the neigh borhood, and applied a "aiajii cure." In a short time the pain eeassd, the doctor received his fee and departed. In a tew hours the man's jaw began to swell, and in three days he was dead from blood poisoning. A UHiehine for breaking pig iron con sists of a reciprocating hammer carry ing dies arranged stepwise so s strike 'he pigs in succession and mechanism for feeding the iron forward. A Much Needed Invention. The man who invents a method of joining the leather of machinery belts so that it will be as strong ut the point of union as elsewhere has an enormous fortune in waiting for him. A machine belt 3.16 of an inch thick will sustain 075 pounds of weight per inch of width. At the Fplices, after the belt has been fastened with rivets, this is reduced to 3S0 pounds. Lacing reduces it still further to 'JX pounds, while a safe working tension is only about GO pounds per inch. If the belt could be made so'.id and. as strong at the joints SB else- wheie. the workir; tension might be lurtrely increased. Detroit Free Press. Xo more old pills for me. Small Bile Bonis, it you please. A monstrosity is carefully guarded on the farm ef W. H. Reynolds, at Gannon, Texas. It is a pig with bead nod ears like those of an elephant, a nose like the trunk ot the beast just named, and a single eye where the mouth ougnt to be. Bfkchau's Pilm act like magic on the vital organs, restore lost complexion and bring back the keen edge of appetite. Mayor Granger, of Fort Dode, Iowa, recently ordered that all drinking sa loons should have their windows free from curtains and screens on Sundays. It had this effect: not a glass of liquor was sold on the first Sabbath the order went into effect. "German Syrup 99 Regis Leblanc is a French Carta diau store keeper at Notre Dame de Stanbridge, Quebec, Can., who was cured of a severe attack of Congest ion of the Lungs by Boschee's Ger man Syrup. lie has sold many a bottle of German Syrup on his per sonal recommendation. If you drop him a line lie'il give you the full facts of the case direct, as he did us, md tha! Boschee's German Syrup irovight him through nicely. It iways will. It is a good medicine 'borough in its work. 9 BEST LINE TO ST. LOUIS AND Young More! Tfa Otfer Teu a Xemttg which Insure Safety t life of Mother aad Child. "MOTHER'S FRIEND " Sob Confinement of its tain, Horror and HUM, AftfrnjlDfnnebotlteof "31 other's Friend" 1 tillered but Mule pain, mm UM uut experlenM ttaM weaknM ufterwurd iumju! la nucli caMfc Mrs. txm Gage, Lamar, Mo.. Jul. ath, lb)h Sent riy expm.4, chlnrea pnpaM, on nealpt ot prlce.ti.Mpcr Iwu.c. Uix.k to Mothers mailed tree. BBADFII''7.n IS l:ts I't. ATOB CO., ATLANTA, CA, sc;.t) uv ii r. uaoumsTS. nu MAiutiti ntcvtv 3 TO OPEN THIS CAN. :;for H06 CHOLERA this LYE is a nare enr if used In time For mitktnirdoitp. Cleaning nimprii, PofteniDK Wair, 11 him no equnl. The botiM wll"n tMt friend. A vtli ablr Yvaahlntf reclp In earn ean. For mla by all PATENTS. TRflDE-UIRKS. Examination and Adrlro aa to Patentability or In- etulon. Send for lnrrntom'OnhKor How toQet a Patent. Panics "'''". Washington, D. C. PATENTS THOMAS P. ?HtfPSON Wn.binirton, i any n is unm rmrni ow- lalutvt. Wiitarorlaveutur'aOuld. x GonaaaBarivca and poop) who bare weak tame or AMk ma. ab on Id o Plao'tOataler Cou'vptloa. It baa aaraa thaaaaaai, llhaa notlajar don. I tie act bad totaaa. It la tha boat aoafh eyre p. SoM oTorywaar. sh, u3 CHICAGO