Evening Star Newspaper, January 28, 1898, Page 7

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wae" WILLIAMS’ prices for high- grade new style furniture have never been met. “We call special attention to these four values in stylish, well-built Furniture. You cannot secure them anywhere else but at Wiliams’: 8-piece Oak Chamber Suite. Ork 3-piece Cham- % $13.50 5-drawer Oak Chiffonier. $4.50 Jsome Sold ber Suite. massive and substantial — well, worth Williams” price... Solid Oak 5-drawer CI fonier. Williams’ price: 5-piece Parlor Suites. Overstuffed Corner Chairs. Luxurious erst uffed Brocatelie ner Chatrs, Well worth $8. Williams’, E ke Ali’ Drap#ries ‘cut to cost to close e.-. N. B. the season. Wash. B. Williams,7th & D. | Things to punch with and punchat. “seeming | Be a ———— B osing —Indian Clubs—Dumb_ Bells— Home Exerciser Outfits—Basket | Ban | Outfits, &e. — fh | t lfore es Have Your | Wheel Built To Order! We will build one for you, using the best of everything—every part Perfect. Spreckets up to 50 teeth. TO MOTHERS! TERRALINE. No. 8 I St. N.W., Washington, D.C. The Terraline Co., Washington, D. C. GENTLEMEN: I have twin babies, a boy and a girl, now seventeen months old. From birth the boy was a delicate little baby, and no food that we gave him seemed to nourish him, although he con= sumed as much as the girl. I had him exam- ined by three physicians and finally took him to a Specialist on Children’s Diseases. They all reported the same thing--that he had a wast= ing of the tissues, which could not be cured, and that it was useless to give him any more medicitie--1 saw ‘TERRALINE advertised, and in my anxiety for my baby’s life, I gave it to him regularly. The result has been simply marvelous. He has gained four and a half pounds in two months. ‘In gratitude for his re- covery, I write to thank you for the relief Ter- raline has given my baby and for the happiness his recovery has given me. You may publish this if you care to, that other mothers may know how valuable Terra- line has been for my children. Gratefully yours, ' TIRS. JOSEPH DIERKEN. GET IT AT DRUG STORES. i i $40 to $50 According to specifications. We have a few of those Jacobs Bros.’ Wheels left that we will sell at ‘They cost more 23” than that to build. Iroquois Cycle Co., 810 14th St. N. W. 4 de10-3m,40 bs dadtdadadh dated dndadadrtndatathtadatndn nth datadaded > ed Great Reduction In Hair. Switches, 50, formerly $5.00. Switches, 00, formerly $10.50. Gray Swite! 00, formerly 3: 5 Gray Switch 1.50, formerly 50. First-class attendants in Hairdressing, Shampooing, etc. Imperial Hair Regenerator for restoring gray hair. Never fails, S. HELLER’S, 720 7th Street N. W. Ta THE PILLOW INHALER|SKIRTS-- this Season’s Crowning aa || -50 SN i AY f 150 styles “of 40c. | WOODWORTH'’'S Sores Sete | PERFUMES, where for less than odors as Lily of the | Valley, White Rose, | Boe. Ib. Special 9 | Jockey “Club i | ELE" “VOURSTORE.” 2 i= © | Potties sith, you to | - . turd: 19¢. Ib. | a i Sale of Coats & Skirts. Instead of $3 for Ladies’ Cheviot p) 95 class Jackets—priced previous to Reefers, with the new atyle $@-95 now at $25—-$22.50-$20 and $18. sleeves. Selling at just half of actual value. These are but hints of the many good things awaiting you in this Cloak Department-of ours. The Suits and Furs are especially to the Coats In smocth and rough-facog cloths—at reductions as low at 87% cents on the dollar! $8—$7.50 and $6 Coats for $2.95. Glittering values, unequaled by competitive houses. Stylishly made and elegantly ‘Tailored Coats—previous® to this sold for $12.50—$11—$10 and $9. All colors—and all styles to pick from, as well varlety of cloths to help your selecting. A buge collection of this season's fast sellers in Fashionable Coats— @ representative gathering of high- fore in being reduced for final riddance. Three very interesting lots. . Novelty and Figured Cloth Skirts—were sell- ing at $5—very special at this clear- ance price..... 51.98 Beautiful line of $5 Brocaded Satin Skirts—made up in the very latest fashion—varlety enough to satisfy avy shade of choice, aud at only.. BON MARCHE, 26, Splendid assortment of $5 Cloth = Skirts, in effects—made with that attention to deiall and style such as only the man-tailor- saree $3.25 “$3.69 CURES WHILE YOU SLEEP Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, Grip, Throat And Lung Troubles. You simply put the Pillow Inhaler under your bead when you go to bed and every minute of the night you breathe a thoroughly disinfected and perfectly medicated air. It cures without loss -of time and without dicsomfort. RECOMMENDED BY A PROMINENT BOSTON BUSINESS MAN. SAWYER LEATHER MACHINERY €0., 52 and 54 South st., Boston, Mass, sale. I have used your pillow as directed with the e most gratifying results. No oue troubled with The Suits. The Reefers. | The Overcoats. Bronchial or head catarrh should be without —= — cppeipeiins es: $1.67 for all that were $2.50 1.35 for all that were $2.00 | $1.00 for all that were $1.50 Yours truly, M. C. HIGHT, $2.35 for all that were $2.50 | $1'67 for all that were §2.50 1-67 for all that were $2.50 pees $3.00 for all that were $4.50 35 for all that were $3.50 67 for all that were $4.00 $2.35 for all that were §5.00 85 for all that were $5.00 .00 for all that were $4.50 $4.00 for all that were $6.00 -85 for all that were $6.50 .35 for all that were $5.00 FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGCISTS We sell the Pillow Inhaler. Mertz’s, 11th and F. 100 Doz. Hair Switches, Consigned to 0 for he, parpoee of raising for a New ¥ aT THB Louvre Glove Store, eel8-tf NO. o19 F ST. No Better SAUSAGE int Sitti In the World week asta fai C. RAMMLING, buy nope other ever eae w =" Center market. This is the time for using Burchell’s Spring SOS OS SSSGOSSSHOSOSOSHSHOHO OO SOS DIDS EC SOGHONESSHSOES @6€ 6980860 600806 09208 DSSSESSED GOONS GOS09E0EC 0088 YZ Off Children’s Reefers. For tomorrow only—you may have any Child’s Suit in the house for 1-3 less than its marked price. * The Reeters and Overcoats will be 1-3 off tomorrow, too— but not for the one day only. We shall run the Reefer and Overcoat sale longer, but the suit sale is positively for tomorrow only. J Our regular prices are lower than elsewhere—so you're only paying about half what they’re worth during this 1-3 off GSS88 SSOo | Last Day of the $7.50 Sale. Tomorrow is positively the last day of the $7. sale of $10, $12 and $15 Men’s Suits and Overcoats. => ae You've got this one last chance—are vantage of it? $2.90 Pants Sale. Special sale of High-grade Pants at $2.90. Some very dressy Pin Stripe Worsteds in the lot—the sort you usually pay $4.50 and $5.00 for. _ Better come quick for these—they won't -be here long at this price. : EISEMAN BROS., ' Cor. 7th and E Streets N.W. No Branch Store in Washington. you going to take ad- eeeccenoenesoansoneoeoussese Tea—at a (see! Tus aot ec ‘eptions. N, W. Burchell, 1325 F st. aaee < SEB: CURRENT SPORTING NOTES President Young of the National League has just issued his latest “bulletin,” as fol- lows: Ee The Western Association has accepted the services of the players reserved by the dis- banded Quincy club, for the purpose of supplying the vacancy in its membership. ‘The following organizations have paid for protection, and have qualified under the national agreement of 1898: ‘Western League, class A; Atlantic League, class A; Eastern League, class A; Interstate League, class B; New York State League, class C; International Association, class D; Western Association, class F, with privi- lege of taking B. - Contracts—With Cincinnati, W. E. Hoy, ©. H. Peitz, J. W. Holliday, F. Dwyer, H. W. McFarland, William Dammann, H. Steinfeldt; with Lancaster, G. Leldy, =. Madison, A. Roth, F. Ward, H. Wilhelm, P. Chiles; with Newark, B. Cassidy, ©. Delehanty, C. Jordan, F. Strasburger, T. Gettinger, William Catrick, D. Calhoun, W. H. Gallagher, W. J. Hallman; with Pate: son, W. E. Conroy, R. L. Westlake, 8. H. La Roque, M. J. Haynes, C. Carr, J. Del hanty, J. M. Hughes, J. Weaver, P. Coons, F. W. Fisher, A. H. Noyes; with Allen- town, G. Ulrich, jr., William Osbourne, J. Seagrove, T. Leonard, C. Moss, J. J. O'Hara, P. Miller, A. Moran, C. W. Culver, G. Cleve, W. J. Mackey, C. Boyle, H. New- eli, C. Shaffer, C. Leyh, John Wood; with Richmond, Ed. Conniff; with Dayton, C. D. Saltsmarsh, W. W, Watts, J. Kennedy, C. Lesh, W. Nichols; with Mansfield, Ed. Beecher, Ed. Dalrymple. Released—By Pittsburg to Kansas City, William Merritt; by Washington to Omaha, ‘T. Tucker; by Mansfield to Milwaukee, Ed. Beecher, Ed. Dalrymple; by Newark to Toronto, Joseph Johnstone, T. J. Sheehan; by Dallas, Dominick Mullaney. Brooklyn has withdrawn their selection of J. J. Toman of Auburn and E. E. Hor- ton of Syracuse. Detroit drafts P. J. Moran of Lyons. N. E. YOUNG, Secretary. Tim Hurst Has Accepted. A special from New York to the Cincin- nati Commercial-Tribune says that it can now be announced with certainty that Tim Hurst will appear in the role of manager at St. Louis next spring. At first the little umpire refused to treat with Von der Ahe or his figurehead. Von der Ahe has a habit of hiring at least three managers a month, and Hurst did not care to take chances of walking home from St. Louis a few weeks after the opening of the season. A few’days ago he was offered a full season's guarantee and a liberal sal- ary, and he will at once sign a St. Louis contract. The New Game of Broom Ball. A new game was given a boom at the ice palace in New York Wednesday night, and it became an’ immediate success as a spectacular attraction. It is known as broom ball, and is exactly the same as hockey, except that brooms are used for hockey sticks, and instead of a flat puck of india rubber a foot ball is used. One thing that pleased the onlookers was that the ball could always be followed with the eye. The Carnival Club made no goals and the Ice Palace Skating Club scored 1. naw “Home Rale” Net Mentioned. Vico. Presiden W.\C? Protzman of the Ariel Rowing Club of Baltimore has re- ceived a letter from Claude R. Zappone of this city, member of the executive board of the National Association of Amateur Oarsmen, concerning the work of the board at its recent meeting in New York. Mr. Zappone says that the Ariels gave hin no official protest or proposed amend- ment on the subject of “home rule,” as re- ported in the daily papers, and that the matter ha@ not been mentioned. SS PETRIFIED ARTICLES, A Huge Tree Slowly Sinking Into the Earth, From the Galveston News. Warda and tne surrounding country are noted for petrified articles of various kinds. I have on exhibition a petrified rock about two feet lorg and one foot and a half wide. It weighs forty-five pounds, and is without a doubt a shoulder blade of a mastodon. It plainly shows the socket in which the bone of the ‘eg revalves. It was found several years ego by a party while seining in the bed of the Colorado river. Within three-quarters of a mile from Warda there is a petrified tree, supposed to have been a post oak. It is about twenty feet long and at the thick end of the trunk it is about two feet in diameter, while at the top it is over w foot in diameter. When first obsérved, about eighteen years ago, about half of its diameter was ground, but, owing to its great weight, is slowly but constantly sinking. All around in this part of the country a per- son can find specimenes of petrified wood ef many varieties. The writer has ob- served stumps and parts of stumps plain- ly showing traces where they had ence been burned and now they are solid rock. It seems as though untold quantities of petrified wood could be found under the ground, for if a person will make an ex- amination of the banks of the local creeks, gullies and ravines he can find pieces of petrified wood sticking out of the banks on every side. The writer in examining f£ome specimens in the surrounding creeks found several pieces of petrified wood pro- truding from the banks, which, although petrified, was so brittle that it could be broken to pieces with the hand. The cause of this appears to be a lack of some Kind of acid necessary in the course of petrification to make it solid. One of the most curious and at the same time one of the most perfect specimens that the writer tas obseryed is what is supposed to be a petrified stomach. It plainly shows @ quantity of petrified acorns and other ingredients which can not now be distin- guished. It is supposed to be the stomach of a hog, or some other prehistoric her- bivorous animal, The writer has also no- ticed two other very beautiful specimens, the one being a ‘eric shell, known by the Latin of Nautilus lineatus, and the other a com: pear. 28, 1898-14 PAGES “1 LIFE AT DAWSON CITY. cans Have Carried In. Esther Lyons in Leslie's Weekly. A journey of forty-five miles from Sixty- mile Post brought us to Dawson City, the wonderful city of the new mining district, populated almost in a night. Although real- ly sixty-five miles distant from the Klon- dike, it is a typical mining camp, minus the guns. The laws of the British government ere enforced at Dawson, and those laws prohibit the use of firearms; consequently few men carry guns. In and around Daw- son at the present time there are about 4,000 men and 150 women. Dawson, of course, is very primitive and very dirty, al- though from a recent conversation with Mr. Ladue I understand that every effort is being made to clean it. There are large stocks of provisions in all tie storehouses, and it looks as though there could be no hunger in the Klondike. There will be lit- tle or no lawlessness, and there is a proba- bility of very little sickness. The Alaskan winters are healthful. In September can be seen quantities of black ducks wending their way southward, and even on the streets of Dawson can you see the sparrow and hear its chirping. Here, as every- where in Alaska, nature has stored her treasures in a safe of ice; in fact, one writ- er has called Alaska the nation’s ice box, but to me it represents the future paradise of poet and painter. Nature has done much for Dawson, but the energetic American has done more. He has buiit warehouses in which he has stored acres of food, built comfortable log cabins, erected a theater, established many saloons, billiard rooms and dance halls. The sums of money spent in these billiard saloons and dance halls are simply fabulous; fortunes change hands every night at, the different gambling de- vices. At poker in a single night $100,000 frequently changes hands, it being nothing unusual to sec $10,000 bet on a single hand. Yet do not infer from this that all the miners are gamblers. Many of them never even enter a saloon or dance hall. I have a little friend out there, an old school mate, who is teaching school. She hugely enjoys her winter there. She is at Circle City. She takes a daily ride behind a splendid dog team, and I tell you it’s great fun. You ride a while, and then you get out and run; then you get in and ride again. No» one really knows what a-sleigh vide is until they ride behind a fine dog team. The inhabitants manage to get con- siderable amusement. They have private dances, parties, and in the summer time they even have picnics. The arctic win- ters are most keenly felt by those miners who are obliged all through the long, dark winter to live in tents and dugouts. Dawson City is rectangular in shape. It is laid out in.town lots. Its streets are sixty-six feet wide. It is situated on a stretch of low ground on the northwest bank of the Yukon, just below the mouth of the Klondike. Town lots in Dawson City are selling now at $5,000 each. Up to the present time 55 cents at Dawson is the smallest piece of money used; it is called four bits. Both Protestants and Roman Catholics have already established mission churches in Dawson. Those who visit Daw- son next spring will see a live metropolis. ————_+ e+ ____ OVER TWO HUNDRED OFFSPRING. Georgia Woman Kept Busy Visiting Her Many Descendants. From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Mrs. Sallie Shiver, who lives near Albany, Ga., has 235 living children, grandchildren, &reat-grandchildren and great-great-grand- children. In addition to these, seventy-five of the cld lady’s descendants are dead, making the total number 310. The 235th link in the old lady’s lineage came last week, and is the cause of objection on her part on unique grounds. She asserts that, as she considers it her duty to visit each relative once in two years, the everextend- ing circle draws on her strengtfi more than she can spare. Mrs. Shiver is in her ninetieth year, but enjoys remarkably good health. She can walk several miles without experiencing unusual fatigue. Her mind is clear, and the weight of nearly 100 years has left little impress on her erect carriage. She is a perfect mine regarding local and state his- tory, and is a great favorite as a racon- teur. The remarkable progeny for which Mrs. Shiver is responsible sprang from the seven children born to her and Manning Shiver, who died in 1865 at the age of six- ty years. The oldest child 1s seventy and the youngest forty-three. From this stock has spread out, in fan-like array, the im- mense family, probably unrivaled in num- bers In the south. Each descendant having a family receives a visit from Grandmother Shiver in regular rotation. She completes the circuit once in about two years, and makes but a short stop under each roof. Her coming is always regarded as an event of great importance, and each household takes a vacation on the occasion of her visits. ———__+ e+. APPLE CROP IN STORAGE. In Indianapolis Alone There Are 35,000 Barrels, From the Indianapolis Journal. An Indianapolis commission merchant told a reporter of the Journal that there are now fully 35,000 barrels of apples in the Indianapolis cold storage houses. He says they are being held for higher prices, but in the end will have to be sold at much lower figures than those now prevailing. A Chicago paper-says of the apple crop of 1897: , “A year ago at this time, when a cry of apple famine was first started, there were found to be about 4,000,000 barrels in ordi- nary and cold storage. This was the re- mainder of a crop of about 120,000,000 bar- rels. Choice estimates on the stock now cen hand throughout the country in co!d Storage make it about 2,500,000 barrels, against last year’s supply of 4,000,000, a large proportion of which was then in ccmmon storage. The 116,000,000 barreis of the total crop of 1896 which went into ecnsumption between harvest and storage time were moved through the medium of low prices, the one thing which is act- ing as a bar to disposition of present: stocks. A practical man in the trade fig- ures out that present cold storage stocks are from 85 to 40 per cent larger, relative- ly to the size of the crop, than was the stock in similar storage a year ago, or, in fact, ever before. The 1896 crop was popu- larized by its cheapness. The 1897 crop is belng kept out of the reach of the peo- ple generally by the high prices demanded, prices not justified by ¢ither the size of the available supply or the quality of the fruit. As a whole, the trade has talked up values and now holds apples at prices where the mass of the people cannot af- ford to eat them. Without a change of tactics the result will probably be that apples will rot in sterage and the public be deprived of one of the most popular and healthful fruits and one which, owing to its abundance and the ease and cheapness with which it is marketed, should by rights be the least expensive of the products.” —+e+__ : A Famous Toy Maker. From Tit-Bits. * In plying their trade the toy-makers of Austria confine themselves to the manu- facture of the particular articles in which they excel. For example, one worker—an old woman—carves cats, dogs, wolves, sheep, goats and elephants. She has made these six animals her whole life long, and she has no idea of how to cut anything else. She makes them in two sizes, and il iy i t De coca eae ead Parker, Bridget & Co., Clothiers, 315 7th St. Saturday Is Boys’ Bargain Day ‘We always have something out of the ordinary to offer in the boys’ department on Saturday—but tomor- Saturday values by offering the ac- cumulation of small lots of Boss’ Pants, Suits and Orercoats at prices that do not pay the cust of making. Odd Pants : Reduced! 82c. § blue and ae ae wool cheviots. { ways sold for $1 choice tomorrow One lot of little better quality Boys’ Black, Biue and All-wool’ Mixed Cheviot Short Pants have never less than iain ae OSC, Small Lots Suits Reduced! Small lots of Boys’ Fine Quality Bla Blue and Mixed Cheviot Reefer Suits. nicely braided and elegantly finished, sizes 3 to 5 only. Rave fom coma ered good values at $3 and $3.50. You choice tomorrow Smallslots of Bo ed and Reefer Cheviot Suits. They are si heat, dressy English plaids brown and gray mixtures. Sizes 8 to 8 only in the reefer and sizes & fo 36 only in the double-brensted $3.58 jon of these Suits Double-breast- All-wool va Strictly Pave ‘sold tor 8. and’ $7." Your ‘choite tomorrow Overcoats For a Song. rger sizes only, 14, 15 and 1 in ‘Boys’ Refers, made from fast blue chinchilla in the popular dou- ble-breasted style, and finished with velvet collar and ‘nicely lined. 9 Well worth $5. Your ° choice tomorrow Small lot of Boys’ Fine Quality English and Scotch Cheviot Over- in sizes 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 18, 14, 15 and 16.” In some cases only 1 and 2 of a size. Out regular $6, $7 = $3. 1 5 grades. Your choice tomorrow....... Parker, Bridget & Co., Clothiers, 315 7th St. it The Fascinating Fashions for 1898 are produced in a nunute yy, the Wonderful Little Hair Ornament that REATES | OUNTLESS HARMING OLFFURES Without the use of Pins or Tyings. The Cultured throng the Emporium hourly to witness the as- tonishing demonstrations. PAKISIAN PATENT COMB CO., No. 935 F st. nw. THE NEW DISCOVERY, HYOMEI, = found to be the only rational cure for Catarrh, Bronchitis and Asthma. au ts. Ja3-m,w,f,1y Ja28-2t Im the Heart of a Poplar. From the Louisville Post. Mr. Henry Wise has a freak in his pos- session which tells of what seems to be an inexplicable natural wonder. It is a round oak pin, three inches in diameter and six and one-half inches long. It is driven full of nails, which are rusty from age. “You may think it strange to be- lieve,” said the fire and tornado man, “but I know it to be a fact. Only three days ago, as I was driving along the road in my Luggy over in Webster county, I stopped where some men of my acquaintance’ were chopping down some trees. They had just | cut down a poplar about three feet inj} diameter. In sawing the tree up they struck a hard substance in the heart. The place was immediately cut into and this pin taken out. The tree was closely ex- amined, and not a flaw or blemish of any kind could be found where the pin might have been driven in it. I questioned the parties, and they declared they could as- sign no reason as to how the pin got there. The tree must have been about 100 years old, judging from the slowness of the growth of forest trees. There were no signs of decay in the poplar around the spot where the pin was imbedded. I have worked a good deal in timber myself dur- " sa (A a a NMBA 0 NM eR MRA MRAP EW Oe prerreyverrrecy OUGV FOLGE HEDGE HCOTEES POOOOSCOPOS OOOO SOCOOOOOOS We don’t make one or two 5 cials as “bait,” either. prices on everything—and offer you the largest and finest stock of pure drugs and fresh pre- service and finer goods here than any place we know. PHARMACY, SHEET Ne MERTZ'S. We're the Originators Of Cut Prices On: Drugs. We're believers in bargains. pe- We cut red medicines in Washington. ou can save money, get better Oar Prescription Departmes model one—every —preacr carefully prepared pharmacists, and our check! tem guards against any possibility of mistakes. We bave the agency for the famous Allegrette Chocolate Creains i Rk A SA Cooper's Hair Success... Lanoline and Orange Blossom Mertz's Pectoral Balsam... Paine's Celery Compound Coca, Beef and Celery id Peptoncids = * Kidney ‘and Liver Hyomet Inhaler Beef, Wine and Iron Lmported “Violet Wat mend Cold Cream.. Eucaigptine nde Quinin Chiris Rose W $1.00 Solid-back Imported All-bristle Hair Brushes 5 46 Surgical Hostery. MERTZ’S CERN ES NNN RE a 11th and F 2° NCU RRM AE at Bas aioamnainn Sts. 9OPSVOOCO OSES OSE OBMOOD ing my life, but I frankly confess that 1 never saw such a freak before.” C8 OO CORTESE EOL OE “The Quality Store.” Would you pass a $5 bill lying on the strect, and not stop to pick it up? It is just like finding money to buy the big values in Furniture and Carpets at the paltry prices we are offering them in the “Clearance Sale.” You get the last of these bargains tomorrow and Mon- day—and a better choice to- morrow than Monay. We have made such cuts as erereory PEPE PC eC oETEs Pee eeTOND these— z ° 4 for Moquette Carpets that > will retail in the spring > for $1.35 a yard, > z 4 for Antique Chamber D ¢ Suites that we know > well cannot be duplic 4 for $23. > > for 6-foot Oak Dining 4 Tables that were $7.50. ~q $2. Q 5 » for White Enamel Beds, : any size. > ee > 4 > 9 A > FURNITURE, CARPETS, DRAPERIES, 4 Pa. Ave. and 8th Street. 7 it ° Pt ALOSEC COE Cte tuéeeeeoeoes PER CENT DIVIDEN es D —_—_— Profits Given to Stockholders. People who keep up with the times always have an advantage over the rest of the world, no matter from what standpoint vou look, whether in the conduct of their business or the investment of their money. Don’t be old fogyish. It is not best to pow with a crooked stick because your ancestors did it for hundreds of years. It is not best to take 3 or 4 or 5 per cent for your money because some people are satisfied to take whatever some one else tells them is all they can have. Thousands of people have been receiving only 3 and 4 per cent interest for many years, when a very little investigation would have enabled them to more than double their income. Now, this is to call the attention of investors to a PERF: ECTLY SAFE INVESTMENT PAYING 8 PER CENT. It is admitted by patent medicines, il ScottS and Bownes every one that the financial successes achieved in ¢ those of the Ayres, Woods, Pinkhams, Jaynes, have been very great. But there is now an article upon the market called the Pillow-Inhaler, which does away entirely with the swallowing of medicines, but at the same time appropriates and uses all the known desirable qualities of the whole materia medica for the relief and cure of CATARRH, BRON FEVER AND THROAT AND LUNG CHITIS, ASTHMA, HAY- AFFECTIONS. It is a pro- cess of ALL-NIGHT ‘inhalation; that is, you go to bed as usual and sleep on this pillow, and while sleeping you inhale (breathe in) the fumes of a medicated, curative, healing and soothing air, which goes to all parts of the air-tracts of the nose, throat and lungs, and heals and soothes the diseased and inflamed the Pillow. fa eure to come an sown as the subject is propel advertising » Stock Company has a before ecale, Preferred Stock Parts. The secret of its great success to 8 hours at a time, night after night, ar and supply the demand which the general public thorough and ‘the whole United and

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