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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1893)
v k i t it. Doubts aa to the sanity as a cleryman , jo warren, ra., are freely impressed.' tin a recent termoo he gravely informed t - jbia panshoners ttat many of them were too generous in their donations. A near r telephone w as lately t6red be-, tweeD Saratoga and Albany, g distance of 38 miles. The speaker at ihe Albany end of the line was distinctly heard in 'Baratogo Fix feet from the it s'.nnnent. Mountain sheep Bra protested by law n Colorado. Ten years in the nenitei.. iary is the penalty for s aymg one. Ruid of I lie t-'leiift. New Vorkers have a plague. The .wicked flea has come to town. The fashionable -district between Eixbth laud Eighteen streets and Third and IFifth avenues has bean invaded by fleas. lney come not as single spies, says the Morning Journal, but in battalions. They have entered every mansion and jhotel in this large district. They meet ,ihe house owner at the door. Thv i . .... - , 'dance llto A,. ..VI. U-1J ... i " uoiu COnier anoes on the sideboard and promenade j concussion, and the cars appeared to in the drawing-room. They take naps crumble awav. The tall man found in the bedrooms, swim in tbe bath and j himself in total darkness, but sud jkrain their muscles in the gymnasium. denly, to his horror, he discovered a mMiwrw ujb House-noiuer nies be finds Jt is rumored that the fleas were, brought to the district by a wind from Ellis island. A zephyr which passed brer some Russian immigrants on Ellis island blew oyer tbe lower part of the foityaod conveyed tbe fleas to Union must and vicinity. The fleas were fo lively that it was thought they came ram Prance. . In fact, chey had tb ivanity of French fleas. Fleas reign throughout the entire dis trict, and their acrobatic feats are the Lmneement and delight of many Spectators. They occupy tbe city bouses of those who have gone to the ounty. They make themselves familiar ith those who are still staying in dwb. They are jolly, lively and irre- preasible. In fact, they are the humor' lata of the insect world. HU Speech. Mr. W. M. Evarts, who has just been ilebrating his golden wedding, is a man lot wit not too often used for telling ef fect. He flashes his steel to good pur pose now and then. The story is said that once at a dinner of tbe New York E "otters, a sort of family reunion, be a heir counsel had been asked to dine (with them alb There was a bishop, and there was a doctor of divinity, Bnd there 'were other distinguished scions of the family tree present, and the after din tier speeches had all been very natural (or suoh an occasion on the fame and Luocess of one another. The history of jlhe Potters since they first came to this! (country was told in all its glorious de- Saila. Then Mr. Evarts was asked to aake a speech, and they say he said hat he felt he really must be excused, n thia reverend presence, however, he night be pardoned for uttering a paraphrase of Scripture which had borne into bis mind during the speeches' (of the rest "Lord, Lord, thou art the pay, and we sre tbe Potters!" Boston Transcript. THAT JOYFUL FEELINQ fith the exhilarating sense of renewed health and strength and internal cleanli- , which follows the use of Syrnp oi Iga, is unknown to the few who have not- progressed beyond tne oiu time medicines land tbe cheap substitutes sometimes loffered but never accepted by the well in formed. Hedges For Shady Places. It is often desirable to have hedges along lines wjiere large tree are already rowing. Evergreens are wholly un fitted for these situations. Only de ciduous shrubs can be employed. Among the best of these are the various varieties of privet. They stand dry (round better than almost anything ilea. It is not so much the shade.whiob Injures the bedges'in these situations as it is the drying of the ground by tbe roots of tbe trees. When we imagine tbe enormous amount of moisture tran piring from thousands of leaves of trees, we can readily see how dry the ground must be which haa to supply this mois ture. But those who have practical ixperienoe understand this without even .. s thought of the philosophy involved. Meehan's Monthly. IT SKEUS TOO SHALL to do any good, when you look at one of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. But just , try it, when you're bilious or constipated, or nave a sour stomach, or a lit of indigestion and you'll own up that they're the best things in the world. That's because they cure i permanently, and do it, oteasonUy. They're tiny, sugar - coawu, hm j take. There s no disturb ance tn the system, diet. r occupation. Satisfaction guaranum, or yrefdbdrf. Br. R. V. Piirce: Dear Sir -I ceuld tell "number of cases where Dr. Plerye s Family taurines have cured. A f rlead of mine. Mr. MtanTwas about used up with liver doub le. Dbeiara that " Pleasant Pellets'' have Cpsd him more than any or all the medicines Hast he ass lever taken. fkatMt He PATERPnOOF com r-JM . tptfcwWwMt A. J. TOwtR. BOSTON. MASS. HAVING A TOOTH PULLED. ohlm iu ia-d the Patient a Heap of Trouble. The dentist assured the tall mail that if he took laujjhinggastheextrac- tion of his tooth would not hurt. and so he settled back in the chair and the der.ti-t administered the anis- tnetic. lne tall man was soon in dreamland. He first imagined that J he was on his wav to the World's Fair, an J when the train was on the down grade and going sixty miles an hour the wheels lelt the track. The air brakes broke, and the ears rushed along at a terrible speed. It was with the greatest difficulty that the dreamer kept in his berth. Tremen dous joltiug was caused by the wheels running over the ties. The suspense was something awful; the wreck of the train was inevitable. The car was filled with the shrieks of the terrified passensers, mingled with the crash of glass and the rattle of tne tram, suddenly there was a "a riKafnninn rxtrl o rH o lum.nrlni.i sireaK oi niria name tnrougn the wreckage, which told him that he would be roasted alive if immediate succor did not reach him. He could hear voices directly over him, but do as he would not a sound could he utter. The flames were making rapid progress toward the place where he was confined, and their hot breath was beginning to singe his whiskers. Then came the crash of an ax di rectly over his head. The first blow struck hirr squarely in the back of the neck, and he felt that his time had surely come. The next one cut off his left ear, and the third opened up a space in his cranium tbe size of a saucer. The tire had now crept up to his feet, and the left one was slowly roasting, when another blow froin the ax, greater than all tbe rest knocked hie head clean from his body. He experienced a singular buzzing in his ear; there was a gleam pt light in the distance, and with a bound he returned to conscious ness. The doctor as standing over him. holding a double tooth in his forceps. "That was an old stager, and no mistake. How be did han: It took all my strength to dislodge him," and the doctor wiped' his dripping forehead with his handkerch ef. "Where a-a-am IV were the first words of the tall man. 'Why. right here in my office," re sponded the doctor. "You would have had a tough time if you naan t taken the ga-. " "Well, if it had been rougher than it actually was I would now be a corpse," and the tall man paid the $l.:iO and went out into the street, feeling as if he had been walKlng in a treadmill for a week. Dein a i ityt Practice. Permitting large and promiscuous overdrafts in the banking business is a pernicious practice and detrimental to the best interests of banking in general. Those banks which require ! notes and securities for every dollar ; loaned need have little fear in times of stringency. Unsecured overdrafts ' ate one of the ugly phases of the Pa cific Bank's report of assets, and a glance at the list covering large 1 amounts, is enough to convince conservative business men of the rottenness of the concern s way of do ing business. For merchants to extend a line of indiscriminate credit on book ac counts is also a practice which should receive the same corrective attention which the San Francisco Clearing House has already given to the draft nuisance. The difficulty with an open account is that no fixed time is evident on its face at which it shall be closed, and room is thus left for frequent disputes, disagreements and itigations. We observe a quite gen jeral movement in some parts of. tbe country to adjust the credit . system to some approach to equity and business-like regulation. If buyers of goods cannot pay cash they ought not to object to giving notes or paper which the jobber or other merchant may use at bank in case of need. Ex perience in the business wor.d has lonir since shown that the man who is required to meet his obligations promptly, can do so often with less discomfort than when he is allowed much more latitude. A habit of i prompt pay begets confidence, and ; extensions may often be obtained by such a man where others unused to ! the business-like ways of banks need ask no favors with any hope of re- j ceiving them. "Pay as you go or don't go" is a very good maxim to ob-! nerve. But credit appears as yet to ' be a necessary part of our commercial system, hence to curtail, regulate, and reform it is a pressing need of the day. A very long stride in the right direction therefore would be the sub stitution of securities for overdrafts at bank, and for book accounts with the merchant Cal. Fruit Grower. The City Editor's Rustic Son. I would fleo from the city's rule and law, from its fashions and forms P.",' .1 "... tiAiA ., t.r.r - CUt lOOSC UUU RU WMi " terry wows on its straw and the ... 1 nrAtva nn it. crnnfiA! Where rJz !v;..i nMmyi hvt.hnmt. IrUV tavDU; -- - - as she clutches for her prey, ineguiie- less and unsuspenting rat on the rat tan busb at plav. 1 will watch at ease the saffron cow arid the cowlet In their glee, 88 they leap in joy from bough to bouffh on top of a eow-sllp tree; and list while tbe partridge drums in tbe wood, and the dog devours the dog rose fruit In primitive solitude. O, let me drink from the most grow n pump that wat hewn from a pumpkin tree! Eat curds snd drink milk from a rural stump, from form fend fashion free --new garnered mush from the- musn room tine,' and mill from the milkweed sweet with lus cious pineapples from the pine! Sucb food as the gods cuitfht eat! And then to the whitewashed dairy I'll turn, wbeie the dairymaid hasten ing hies her ruddy and gold-red but ter to churn from milk of her but terflies; and I'is nse at morn with the earliest bird, to the fragrant farmyard pass, and watch whi:e the farmer tulns his nerd of grasshoppers out to grass. Too Large a Story. Among the Open Letters Or the Century Magazine is one containing1, the following anecdote of Mr. Francis P. Blair, who, though not an officer of the Government, was more emin ent than either of his sons, Mont gomery Blair, a member of President Lincoln's Cabinet, and Frank P. Blair, a Major General in the L'nion Army. His son-in-law was an ad miral in the Navy. During the last years of his life Mr. Blair lived in Montgomery County, Maryland, not very far from Washington. tine day during the Civil War, Mr. and Mrs. Blair were riding about the country on horseback, according to their daily custom. They were about eighty years of age; Mr. Blair wore a green veil about his hat to shade his eyes from the dazzling sunlight, and his wife, for the same reason, had pulled her large bonnet far over her face. They were well known by the country people for miles about Silver Spring, where they lived, but the roads into Washington were guarded by pickets, some of. whom .- were deficient in local knowledge It chanced that one of these men was struck with tbe odd appearance of the couple, comporting so ill with the fine blooded horses they rode, and when they came in sight of him he called. "Halt!" He asked the usual questions, which were all answered satisfactorily, and then added one of his own: "Well, who are you, any way?" Ihe old gentleman looked at his wife with a smile of quiet humor, and asked: "Bettv, who are we?" Smiling in her turn, the old lady, turned .to the picket, and said: "Well, guard, what would you think if I said we had a son who was a Cabinet Minister, apd another son j who was a Major Gene al, and an j other son who " j "And I suppose," interrupted the I guard,' "you will say, another son ' who is an Admiral!4' j "Yes," responded the old lady, "an ! Admiral also"' Well, now, old woman," said the 80idier, 'that's coming it a little too, If you had left out the Ad strong. miral I might have believed you; but as it is 1 think you are both subjects' for headquarters. So come along!" I There was no course open but that of submission, and the three rode along together. At length a group of officers approached, and halted to speak to the captured "rebels." j kv-Why,.'.' sa d one of them to Mr. lir, "what does this mean' One mightsiippose you . were prisoners, and on your way to headquarters." I "Well," said Mr. Blair, ' so we are." j The officer turned upon the crest- ' fallen picket, and demanded what he had been doing. "Why, sir," he explained, in an abashed undertone, ' when I ques tioned the old man, I believed be was all right, but when the old woman i told her story about her having one son in the Cabinet, and one son a Major General, and then on top of that added another son an Admiral, I couldn't believe but they were real spies! So 1 arrested 'em on the spot!" Spanish Yellow as a Uarnitiire. ' Spanish yellow velvet ribbon is a fashionable trimming for cream tinted nun's veilings, claricttes and similar sheer wool fabrics; for young ladies' wear. Some pretty brides maids' dresses worn recently were of cream-white crepon so trimmed and supplemented by empire sashes of liberty silk, soft and flexible in quan tity and uncommonly wide, that were laid in light folds around the waist and knotted at the left side with falling ends like the Orientals. When the waist is slender and the style appropriate this fashion is a graceful one. In adopting yellow garniture, the temptation to multi ply them must be guarded against. Touches of the color arc sufficient for good effect, more tends to vulgarity, slight variations of shade also making all the great difference hetween the becoming and the unbecoming. Only 11 Semit'ol'H). A semicolon incorrectly used is re sponsible for a great deal of trouble to the surface railroads. The act, which relates to railroad crossings, is as follows: "No electric, cable or horse railroad shall hereafter be con structed across the tracks of a steam railroad at grade; nor shall any steam railroad cross any such electric, cable,i or horse railroad at grade, except upon application and approval by the railroad commissioners." ine pre- ! ceding was approea, semicolon uuu ! all. June 11. I WW. and occame a law. 1 The result is that while steam roads . .,, can cross surface lines at .will i Un ruirm cann tt fho fall mart witrf com-! road roan si tuc ueriuiMiuii : mlssioners street and electric I are barred from crossing steam with or without permission. How the Japanese Mark Time. The Japanise divide the day into six day hours, from the rising to the setting of the sun, and six night hours, from sunset to sunrise. Ac cordingly, although the dials of their clocks are figured with twelve numeral-, the movements of tbe hands do not correspond with our own, these movements being regulated by In genious mechanism to' correspond with variations in the length of dan and nights. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. tow ABSQ1LTTELY PVUE In olden times, in Seeder, it who the custom to place a small mirror in tbe coffin of every uomarrieJ female. The object was to enable her, when the last trumpet sounded, to arrange her lre'sje before aruiog to ;oin tbe be..venly caravan. James Clunon, of Hancock, X. Y., while in the delirium of drunkenness, imagined boa-cons' rictor was ceiled abodt bis neck. Ho slashed at it with a knife and cut his throat from ear to aar. Representatives of eastern loan, in vestment and land companies atTopeka Kan., are greatly agitated "ver the plans at Colorado capitalists who contemplate constructing an irrigation canal 100 miles long, from Canon City to Colorado Springs and other points to be fed by the Arkansas river. Information was received that this canal would require all the flow of the Arkansas River, and aa several minion acrs in Kansas are watered by the Arkansas, requiring all (the surplus flow even in favorable sea sons there is fear of the Colorado ditch laying waste several million acres of land along that stream . At the inner-State irrigation convention at Salins, Septem ber 28, an appeal will be made to Cor jgress to protect tbe millions invested along the Arkansas iu Kansas. There's a bit of irocy in the name "a bridle couple." If you follow the tramp you will learn why be rails at fortune. Blab Did you say you bad a ball room in the house? Dab Yes; tbe nursery is our bawl room. Atlanta Constitution: The Sanders. villeProgi ess favors the unconditional repeal of the mosquito bill, Cleveland Plain Dealer: It was mis taken politics for Pugilists Smith to at tempt to ernes Dixon's lice. Chicago Tribune: "I don't mind tbe fine jedge," sniveled the prisoner, "but your remarks about my being a drunk n old vagabond, your honor, is what bnrta. It it rasps my feelin's." ''In that caBe," said miigistrate, glar ing at bim, "you can file an exception." Chicago Inter Ocean: Burglar (rous ing tbe Bleeping bend of the family.) Don't move or I'll shoot! Whar's your money hid? Head of the Family (struck by a bright thought) It',3 in the pocket of my wife's dress. Burglar That's all right. I'll just take the drees. Tbanke. Chicago Record: Tbe Husband (dur ing the spat) You're always making bargains! Was there ever a time when you didn't? The Wife Yes, s-r. On my wedding day. When yon have over-exerted yonrself by running, jumping, or working, tnere is nothing that will relieve the soreness of yonr joints and muscles so oniekly and effectually as Salvation Oil, the greatest ?ure on earth lor pain. 25 cts. A jury in Salem, 111., before agreeing upon a verdict, engaged in u game of sards. This came to ibe ears of the judge, and the verdict was set aside. The best wey .to use 11 toothbrush is tn brush the teeth up and down, to that the bristles can ren.ove the foreign particles that lodge between tbe teeth. Mingle eye-glasses are prohibited in the German Army. Even it a soldier has but one good eye, if he needs glasses he must cover both eyes with them. Musquitoes were uukno hd in Atlanta, Ga., before sleeping cars were run from Saranah into that city. This is evidence that musquitoes travel first- jlass. Salt spray was carried inland ten miles, from Wrightville, N. C, during a severe gale, and tbe trees were so coated with salt that they looked as though they had been in a snow storm. Vt'ANTitn Salesmen; good pay for hon est workers. Beginners tangnt; 900 new onttits just ready cost 4 years' time and thousands of dollars, but worth all the. eoat the finest ever used. We sell direct r.hronnhonr own salesmen. No middle men. No Tree Dealers. Stabk Uro'b Nurseries & Ukchabds Co., Rockford, 111. Henry Jordan, of Salem, Mass., has an abiding faith in the silver dollar. A bullet fired at him struck a silver dojlar in his vest pocket, and that coin is now a family memento. The King of Ital) eats only one meal a day. In a single season a female codfish will lay 45,000,000 eggs. Unvaecinated persons are not per- Lltiul ..... Vap,V Fifty per eent of the bodies cremated in New Tork State last year were those of Germans. William Ragan, of Hutto, Teias, owns a oalf that ohaaas and eats chick ens, feathers and all. , Kansas still baa nearly 'one million acres of unoccupied Government lands open for settlement. Everybody ought te kaaw, if they don't that a disordered BTr, stomach or bowels Is respenaible for a maltttuds of ailments. aUmeayi BUe Basal ftwsll Tailless ate with purele irommoo In Bin. eyes, are A bridegroom of Stirn, Mass was so overcome by the novelty of his position during the marriage (eremony that he fainted. The bride looked so mortified that she seemed to be meditating a severe Cauctte lecture for bis benefit. Mrs. Edward Halter, of Canton, Ohio, received a startling Iright during a thunder-storm. Sue was reading s book, when a lightning bolt passed down a sheet iron chimney, snd with out the leas', ir jury to herself; burnt tbe uook sbe held. Used a Ctirliiip; Iron. A few days ago a party of Utiea !s dies went to the St. Lawrence for a ten days' stay. One night recently two gentlemen relatives hied themselves away to tbe river to stay over Saturday and Sunday. Saturday afternoon tbe gentlemen went tishieg, sad tbeir suc cess was abundant, for they carried back to the little cottage dozens of ex cellent fish. In the morning tbe break fast waa made very inviting by tbe serving up of a fine mess of the fish caught the night before. According to tbe Uiica Herald, ona of '.he yousg ladies in the party had the misfortune, while eating her breakfast, o get a smill fHh bn in her throst. It did not strangle br, but gave her considerable discomfort, end every effort to dislodge it failed. Fears were enter tained that unless the bone waa taken jut it would cause inflammation, and so the sufferer was taken in a rowbo&t and ni visit made to a neighboring island in search of assistance. The bone could be seen just back of the tonsils, but how to get at it wss tbe question. In the search for aid a dentist was found, but he had no instruments with whioh to preform the operation. At length, as a 'rial, a visit was made to a rather pre tentious cottage on one of the islands where some wealthy people :vere staying and though the. -searched they could tind nothing among their household utensils that could be used for the pur pose of fishing for the bone. "Why wouldn't a carling iron dot" suddenly asked one of the young ladies, with a flash of inspiration in her eyes. "Why not, indeed?" was in tbe miud of everybody. And then the wonder as why this had not been thought of oefore. A curling iron was procured, and though a little nervousness was exhib ited on tbe part of the operator the auffsrer's brother he soon succeeded in catching the bone between the jaws of tbe instrument and drawing it out. Then everybody laughed and all were happy. FOR 8ALE FOR $1,000. A Billiard and Pool hall of four tables paying a net profit of over $100 per month. Addr i. H.KNNEDY, XOrK, XeD. Detroit Free Press: Miss Keedick Mr. Gil ley actually offered himself to Miss Dsrley on a postal card. Miss Gaset AV hat did she do? Miss. Kee dick Refused him. She said sbe pre ferred sealed proposals. A GREAT THING. It is a great thing lor a man to get out a little and come in contact with other peo. pie and see how they live. B. F. Johnson & Co.. Richmond, Va.. are giving many young men a chance to do this, and at the same time to put money in Dana - rapidly Try them and see. Chicago Record: Tommy's Mamma So Johnny grabbsd your apple, did be? The naughty boy! Why didn't you grab it from him? Johnny in tears I did. I grabbed it from him first. They act on the bile and Bile Beans have no equal. Newport .News: borne dentists seem to think it necessary to have a showy sign in order to have a strong pull with the public. REV. H. P. CARSON, Scotland, Dak., says: "Two bottles of Hall's Caturrh Cure completely cured my little gin. Sold bv Druggists, 75c. . Washington Post: Mr. Van Alen will be much at home while at court lawn tennis court. Beecham's Pilw stimulate the ptyalin in tne saliva, remove aepression, give ap petite, and make the sick well. Chicago Record: "How do you sup- nose I can get a real spring chicken?" ''Ord r n fesh egg." Neuralgia Cured "Formerly! suffered with neuralgia, but it lins i'n' troubled me since f have taken Hood's S.usi.piiri.ln I gave Hi'oiVb tn my little girl for iliront trouble, and It gave her Immediate re lief. Mr brother hat also taken it and It has cured him of asthma. Pre viously, he could not eat much and got only a HtUe sleep. Now he h otuyA annetitft. can breathe easily and Xn. WaaU sleep soundly, at night. He has regained Mi former strength and weight. We are all in- Hood'sfCures deMeateHeoTs SanasatUla wUl wane other bm town. Fa Wast, Oaa, N.B.Qt only Hood's Hood's PUU are purely vegetable, oarsfully Bienand Irani the taut Inciedlenta. 89c. The largest can jl in the world m lmpe iai Canal of China. It was bagwa in tbe year TOO and completed in 600 yeare. Its leogth is I. (JO miles, and there are i'l cities on its banks. After returning borne 'rom a party, Mr. atd Mrs. Poilor Kiog, of Dijlevao, Wis., were started by a ia at the door.. When it had been openel, three masked meD ruehed in, and forced her to sur render her diamonds to tbe value of $1,009, which she bad worn at tbe party. "German Syrup If Justice of the Peace, George Wil kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co., Minn., makes a deposition concern ing a severe cold. Listen to it. "In the Spring of 1888, through ex posure I contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. This was accompanied by excessive night sweats. One bottle of Boschee's German Syrup broke up the cold; night sweats, and all and left ne in a good, healthy condition. I can give German Syrup my most earnest commendation." 9 Easily Taken Cod Liver Oilas't 'appears in Scott's Emulsion is easily taken up by the system. In no other form can so much fat-food be assimilated with out injury to the organs of digestion. Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos phites has come to be an article of every-day use, a prompt and infallible cure for Colds, Coughs, Throat troubles, and a positive builder of flesh. Prepured bf Scott & Bown. H. Y. All ririirtr- I ALl SO HAPPY I 3 BOTTLES OF MS Relieved me of a severe Blood trouble. It has also caused my hair to grow out again, as it had been falling out by the handful. After trying many physicians in vain, I am so happy to rind a cure n? S. S. S. O. H. ELBliRT, Galveston, Tex. d f I ippc l)y forcinp out perms of i',V. ease and the poison w tl!. s y It is entirely vegetable and hax:r.l?r Treatise on Blood and Skin mai!ci il-y Swift Svecifio Co., Art--- rrrrfiArS) Sheridan County, Wyoming, (only recently opened up for settlement by the completion of an extension of the Turlington rail road), offers greater and more profitable opportun ities to farmers, business The men, investors and prospectors than any other section of the United States. Finest agricultural and stock-raising region under the sun. 270,000acresofmagnincentirrigate4 land, fertile as the valley of the Nile A mOlion acres and more still IJniVfQI vacant waiting IlljWajI the com ing of the 1 w " w w husband man. Brisk, rapidly-growing towns. Rich mineral fields less than a hun dred miles from the county seat. Perfect climate, pure water, cheap fuel coal and wood. Send for free descriptive pamphlet; thirty two pages with illus trations and map. Northwest J. FRANCIS, General Passenger Agent, Burlington Route, Omaha, Nebraska. NU n. ....... rteEDED TO OPEN THIS QLN. ron H06 CHOLERA thi LYE Is a sure care if vted In Ubm. For -nmbinK Soap, Cleaninf Hoiiff s, Softening Water, It hits no equal. The beut- wlte's DestfrlenJ, A alilt wutthln recipes ttk eiu'h jinn. For sale bf all (irorei. Ttwjllaurprlseyo ACENT8 WANTED! We want an enmet e niau, woman, bor or girl la Eery city and t wn in the V. 8. to dmtrtbute olroa ra and samples of our iwrf limes. $1JM) to 93JK) pat day and expenses guaranteed. Address, witu etaaax J. L-AliMKa fe C?0. (Jlilcatfo. Ilk EAIiNTSi Kxamlnatton and Advice aa to Patentability of in. $75.00 to $250.00. n-:, lug lor B. F. JOHNSON A CO., Richmond, Vv s Uluetl. Write for iDTHutur'.n.Li. M. 17 C. Mm. SSS-41 Xerk, Meet Up PJEE'S cfzr ! OauaapttvM aa senate t was have weak lakes er am- I aa.hoMM PlwtOsreferl Ce "woa. u aasjsnS? ".