Decatur Democrat, Volume 37, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 7 April 1893 — Page 3
. Halvalion Oil has the enviable distinction ’ Os being a synonym for cure of rheumatism, neuralgia, gout, and' kindred afflictions, I each aa Hclnticn, tlodouloureux. etc. It la! growing more popular dally. Tho people . will have 11 25 eta. Wk never knew a man who could not * tell others how to got rich. ’ Hood’s Cures It* I Son of John L. MoMwrray Os Ravenswood, W. Va. A Father's Gratitude Impels Him to Teli How His Son Was Saved “I write this simply beoanse 1 feel it a duty to humanity, so that others affected as my son was may know how to be cured. When he ■was 7 years old a white swelling came on his right leg below the knee, drawing his leg up at right angles, and causing him intense suffer* Ing. He could not walk and I considered him A Confirmed Cripple. The swelling was lanced and discharged freely. At length we decided to take him to Cincinnati for a surgical operation. He was so weak and poor we gave him Hood’s Sarsaparilla to build up his strength. To our great surprise. Hood’s Sarsaparilla not only gave strength,but caused the sore,after discharging several pieces of bone, to entirely heal up. His leg straightened out, and he now runs everywhere, as lively as any boy. 5 J. L. McMurray, Notary Pnbllc.RaveuswoodlW.Va. Hood's Pills are the best after-dinner Pills, assist digestion, cure headache. Try a box ■> KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with leas expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the'needs of physical being, will attest * the value to health of the pure, liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from t every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed,"you will not accept any substitute if offered. St Corea Oolfi*,Oongh*,Bore Throat,Cronp,lnfi««a. aa, Whooping Cough, Bronohiti* and Aithma. A certain em for Consumption in flrrt atagoa, and • auro relief in advanced atagoa. Um at once. Ton will aoo the excellent effect after taking the o trat doae. Sold by dealera everywhere. Large bottle* 50 centaand 81.00. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies Mtn Other Chemicals wafey .ffsQte are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO.’S f WreakfastCocoa UH ' I'H which it absolutely Hl WWO purv and soluble. ft 11 I aWwll H has more than three timet ■1 Ar iI It the strength of Cocoa mixed oQILL UWpfii with Starch, Arrowroot or wQMNN* Sugar, and is far more economical, costing leu than one oent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and KAIU.X DIGKSIKD. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Maw. Ely’s Cream Balm iJHMB WILL CUKK KSATARwTq! GATARRHfag | Price SO Cents. | Apply Balm into each no.tr 11. J ELY BBQS. SO Wagon 8U N. t. | BEST POLISH IN THE with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn rod. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and tho consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. IAS AM ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOMS. 1 ,bsßMMMMaM>aMMUuMMa*maMsaaMm*
!COUNTED BY MILLIONS.! ” -—l—.—l EXPENSES OP CARRYING ON THE GOVERNMENT. One Hundred Million Dollars Will Be Paid Yearly to the New Democratic Officer* — Comparative Htatemrnt of Wealth In the United State*. Where the Money Ooe*. Washington oorreHpondenoe: After all it is not4o remarkable that there le something of a demand for the offices. The salaries paid to Govern- ■ ment employee amount In round numbers to $100,000,000 a year, and In the four years* term which le ahead of tho Democracy, will foot up the handsome total of M00,000,<100, or thereabouts. ' Possibly tho figure may not reach quite this amount at the present, but the , chances are that It will overrun It be- ; fore the four years’ term ends, for with the growth of tho country there is no getting away from the growth in the! number of offices and the amount that | must be paid In salaries. The talk of a reduction In offices and tho salaries of those who occupy them is “moonshine.'’ It can not be done without i neglecting tho business of the Govern- ' ment, and ns there are 66,000,0(10 people . to pay for having it done, and well done, ■ there Is no occasion for a niggardly j economy which would prove disastrous ; in a business way. Probably few of the i people who are scrambling for places realize that the total amount of salaries paid to Government employes loots j up so largo a sum as a hundred million dollars a year. Yet this Is only a dollar and a half apiece all around, now that our population is 66,000,000 people. And this only makes the average salary of I the 200,000 people who hold office under i the Government about five hundred dol- | lars per annum each. Something of the details of where : this money goes may be of Interest, i The diplomatic service is not so expens- I ive a luxury as would be supposed probable. The salary of Ministers amounts to only per annum; Secretaries of Legation $40,000 per annum, and Consuls $500,000, while there Is also an additional allowance of about SIOO,OOO for clerks and consulates. The salaries in the offices of the Secretary of the Treasury amount to about a half i million dollars a year, but this does not include the various divisions in which : the salaries run from a few thousand up ! to more than a half million dollars per annum. The salaries for the office of Secretary of War amount to over one ' hundred thousand dollars, and those of | the Record and Pension divisions of the War Department foot up over one I million dollars per annum. The pay of . the officers of the line in the army is : $2,800,000, and there is added to that I $90,000 for pay of officers for length of service. The pay of the enlisted men of the army is $4,100,000; officers on the retired list. $1,122,090. The pay table ot the navy is about half as much as that of the War Department, and the ■ total salaries of the Treasury Department, including oveir two millions in the Internal Revenue Service alone, is about twelve millions of dollars. The Interior Department spends about five million dollars a year for salaries, the Agricultural Department a little over a million, and the Department of Justice about the same. The Postoffice Department, however, is the one which piles up the total of salaries, Even in the Postoffice Department In Washington the salaries amount to nearly a million dollars a year, and when you branch out into the postal service all over the country It becomes appalling. The appropriations for the fiscal year just about to end allotted $15,250,000 for postmasters and $10,764,000 for the free delivery service. There should be added to this $5,000,00|F for carrying the mails by star routes, most of which is for salaries; mail-mes-senger service over a million dollars, and railway postoffice clerks $6,631,000. Even Congress is a somewhat expensive luxury. The pay of Senators amounts tdSbout half a million dollars a year and that of ’Representatives about $2,000,000 a year, to say nothing of the amounts paid for the employes, clerks, stenographers, and messengers who assist them in their duties. Nothing better and more happily illustrates the growth of this country and prosperity of the people than a comparison of the conditions at this time with those which existed when Mr. Cleveland came Into office eight years ago. That the country has been prosperous under the two administrations which are represented in those eight years is evident. Then there were 7,750 banks, now there are 10,000. Their capital stock then was $750,000,000, now it is over a billion. The people then had $2,700,000,000 laid away in the banks “for a rainy day,” now they have $4,700,000,000 so deposited in the banks. Our national wealth, which then was $48,000,000,000, is now $69,000,000,0( 0. The average per capita ot wealth'in the United States, including property and money, tnen was SBSO for each individual, while to-day it is in round numbers SI,OOO. LIKE RATS IN A TRAP. Ten Live* Go Out In the Bowel* of the Earth. One of the most distressing disasters that ever occurred in the anthracite region followed the explosion of a i lamp in the hands of a Hungarian ' employed in the Nelson colliery near Shamokin, Pa. The colliery, which is operated by J. Langdon & Co., is one of the largest and best known in the region, paying superior wages and furnishing work to its thousand employes the year around. Fire followed the explosion, and the smoke which rushed through the air shafts caught ten men who had gone to work in a vein above the scene of the explosion and smothered them to death. Tho day being a 'holiday there were not so many men at work as usual. Others for the same reason were late in reaching the mine, and it is owing to these fortunate facts that the death list Is not very much larger. The fire started about twenty feet from the bottom of the slope, where there le an oil-house, which is used by ■ the men to change their working clothes ' for others before leaving tho mines. About 6:50 in the morning a Hungarian was filling his lamp and it exploded, Igniting the oil about h<m. He rushed from the oil-house and the flames spread with rapidity. Attempts were made to fight tho Are, but those who started to do so were compelled to flee for their Ilves. They succeeded in reaching the bottom of the shaft and were hauled to tho surface along with some belated miners who owe their Ilves to the fact that they did not go to work at their usual time. The ten mon who lost their lives wore at work in the red ash vein, located nearly 10 > feet above where the fire broke cut Through an airway from the lower vein to the red ash vein tho smoke poured, suffocating the unfortunates like rats in a trap. Almost the entire I town gathered In the vicinity of the I burning mine, from the air passages of I which great volumes of smoke were isBuihg. The scenes were most distress- I Ing. The wives and children of the Im-, | prisoned men uttered agonizing orfes and implored the men in the crowd to rescue their loved ones. Although the hardest kind ot work was done, it was impossible for the vol- i unteer fores to extinguish the flames. | i Later orders were given to turn Cartion Run Creek Into the mine. This w.ll . -i- ■. " .■
I take a month, and many more months i will follow before tho mine will be Id ! condition to resume operations, j — — FIVE BURNED TO DEATH. Fatal Fire in a Hotel nt Bradford, Pa.— ••Crow’* Ne*t" Dmtroyed. Five lives were lost and twenty-two £eople injured by the burning of tho iiggins House, Sunday morning, at Bradford, Ps. The dead are: Miss Georgia Bond, Bradford; Thomas Cullen, Bradford; F. Havelin, Sanberry; George Parks, Bradford; Baby Tucker, aged 3, drowned in the creek. The preI vlous night 125 persons went to sleep in the Higgins Hotel, a frame structure three stories high on the bank of the Tuna, a small creek. At 4:30 a vigorous ringing of the big bell on the ! hill aroused the whole town. A brisk wind was blowing at the time, and it i fanned the flames in the hotel and gave them strength and vigor. . When tho firemen leached the scene the Whole hotel was enveloped In fire. It was of wood and burned like a vast heap of | straw. There was an awful panic in i the hotel when tho guests were aroused. The men and women rushed from their ’ rooms Into the hallways, filled already I with smoke and flame. and jumped from ' the windows. The jump was a bad one Ito take. From the upper story it was thirty feet on the west side,, with a ) plank bottom so strike on. On'the east | side was the creek and the distance was ! forty feet, but several persons made the leap for life into the stream and were ! rescued. At Buzzard's Bay, Maes,, Joe Jefferson’s beautiful villa, Crow's Nest, was : destroyed by fire which started in the ! cellar, caused by a gas explosion. So rapidly did the flames progress that it was with much difficulty that Mrs. Jefi ferson and the family made their escape. ! Several of tho servants were severely I burned, and the cook, Helen McGrath, ; lost her life, being suffocated in the i basement The house cost $30,000, and I the pictures, furniture and bric-a-brac represent ’d au outlay of over SIOO,OOO, though priced far more for their associations. WOMEN CRUSADERS INJURED. They Forced Their Way Into a Saloon and Received Rough Treatment. i Six of the leading ladles of Bella, N. D.. are lying wounded and bruised in their beds as the result of a remarkable fight Sunday afternoon with saloon . men. A crusade was made against the ! blind pigs of Rolla under the auspices I of the Woman’s Christian Temperance i Union. andlJunday wai the day set for the securing of evidence upon which to base prosecutions. A committee was appointed to make the circuit of lhe ■ Joints, and it marched bravely I up the street followed by two-thirds of the female population of the town. The first pig they came to was presided over by Lin Bush. He attempted to prevent the entrance of the females, but they were not to be stopped by trifles. Bush was tossed to one side, and for the first time women stood within the precincts of a North Dakota prohibition dive. An inventory of stock was begun, and several bottles of "hop tea” and several of “XXX porter” were seized. While in the midst of their explorations Landlord Bush returned with assistance and soon the air was full of animated femininity. When the women gathered themselves up out of the street several were bleeding from brutal blows and all were disfigured. They threaten dire vengeance. Brietiets. Forest fires are raging near Millville, N. J. Ex-Postmaster General Wanamaker is In the City of Mexico. ’ Is understood Russia will promote its legation in Washington to an embassy. Grave robbers stole the body of Fraser, the murderer, who was lynched at Hiteman, lowa. George I. Seney, the well-known philanthropist, of New York, is ill and his recovery doubtful. Gas escaping from a furnace nearly asphyxiated Postmaster E. T. Hance and family, of Detroit. A gorge of ice thirty feet high has formed in the Missouri River a few miles north of Chamberlain, S. D. Maj. T. M. Newson, United States Consul-at Malaga, Spain, has died of small-pox. No particulars have been received. Secretary Carlisle has announced that no one who has been discharged from the Treasury Department will be restored. In an encounter between Havana, Cuba, policemen and a gang of burglars, the chief of police was killed and one of the burglars shot. i O. M. Mitchell Post, G. A. R. of Atlanta, Ga., gave a reception to Gen. O. O. Howard, who is on a visit of inspection to Fort McPherson. Hugh O’Donnell, the labor leader of Homestead, Pa., is making an effort to reorganize the Amalgamated Association in the Schuylkill Valley. The bail of Sutton and Beecher, charged with negotiating forged whisky warehouse receipts at Louisville, Ky., has been fixed at sst>,ooo each. The American Press, an organization | for the gathering and dissemination of news, has filed articles of incorporation at Trenton, N. J. The capital stock is $2,500,009. BY a vote of the stockholders of the Edison Electric Illuminating Company of New York the capital stock of the company was increased from i, 6,500,000 to $10,000,000. . President Cleveland will open the WorM’s Fair on the first day of May. He has definitely decided to do this, and will send his acceptance to the Chicago committee in a day or two. Mrs. Adaline Townsend, wife of the wealthy New York importer, R. H. L. Townsend, died from typhus fever. She contracted the contagion, it is believed, during a recent visit to the City of Mexico. It is claimed that many officials con- ; nected with the Behring Sea Commls- ' sion are receiving from $6 to sls per day in addition to their regular salary. The matter is being investigated by Secretaries Gresham and (Carlisle. It is said that three years ago Elliott F. Shepard tried to effect $590,000 insurance op h s life. Throe companies refused the risk, because of alleged evidence of Bright's disease, while a l our th company passed him and issued a policy of $100,009. Tomatoe* Do Not Cause Cancer. In a late issue of the London Times appeared a letter to the editor containing the following: “There is a very ptevalent idea that eating tomatoes is an exciting cause of cancer, and for the last two. years we have been so inundated with letters on this subject that the medical committee of the Cancer Hospital would be greatly obliged by your publishing in the Times their opinion—viz., that tomfitoes neither predispose to nor excite cancer formation,'and that they are not Injurious to those suffering from this disease, but are, on the contrary, a very wholesome article of diet, |f properly cooked. We shall also be greatly obliged by other papers making this generally known." I _ •' 1
If You Want The Best 1 ALTHOUGH you may have had good luck with but few failures in making cake and biscuit in the old-fashioned way with soda and sour milk, or soda and cream of tartar, you will have better luck and (following directions) no failures with the Royal Baking Powder. The truth of this must be evident when you remember that in the leading hotels and restaurants, and in the homes of our city cousins, where the latest and best methods are invariably employed, and where the most beautiful and dainty food is always set out for the guests, the Royal Baking Powder is exclusively used fbr all quickly risen food. Royal Baking Powder never disappoints; never makes sour, soggy or husky food; never spoils good materials; never leaves lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake; while all these things do happen with the best of cooks who cling to the old-fashioned methods, or who use other Baking Powders. If you want the best food, Royal Baking Powder is indispensable.
Hl* Courtroom Thun.ler stolen. A member of the Massachusetts bar used to get verdicts bv touching appeals to tender feelings of jurymen, especially if bis client was poor and the defendant was a rich corporation. He became famous for getting verdicts in such cases. One day he met his match. The counsel for a corporation which he had sued undertook to bead him off. He had an opportunity tostudy.his opponent’s methods. and gave special attention to his style in the delivery of pathetic passages. Having the right to make the opening plea he told the jury what to expect, described the attitude,tones, and manner of his brother lawyer, and did it so thoroughly and taithfully that he not only discounted the effects of his plea, but so embarrassed him that he could not do justice to himself or his client, who lost his case.—Boston Globe. The Bate of Chist’s Birth. The consensus of critical opinion of the last century is that Christ was born at some time daring the year of Rome 750, or about four years before the beginning ot the Christian era. The date of the month is not known, nor can it be fixed. Christmas day was fixed simply because the Romans bad a heathen festival |in December, the Saturnalia, which the Christians merely adapted to their own beliefs. The date of the year is fixed with a good deal of certainty, because we knew that Herod the Great died before the Passover in April, 750, aad Mary came up to the Passover, and to the registration enforced byQuiriuius, Legate of Syria in the same year. A recent book oa the subject is Zumpt’s “Geburtsjahr Christi.” in German, published some twenty-four years ago. TkwwgptaiUiwg Tr«e*. Any ttee may be transplanted if proper precautions are observed. When it becomes desirable to transplant a large tree a trench should be dug round it early in the autumn, but before the ground is frozen, and the leading roots should be severed at a distance of six to ten feet from the trunk, according to the size of the tree. When the ground is frozen the tree with its roots can be raised in one solid mass, placed in a wagon such as is commonly used for transporting large blocks of stone, and moved to its destination. Very early in the spring, before the sap begins to run, the tree should be topped, and if the roots have not teen cut too closely the tree will grow just as if nothing had happened to it Make Haste to Defend Tonrself If you live in a locality where malaria le prevalent, with a preventive that experience indicates as* the most reliable ot medical sate-' guards—Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. Entirely free from the objections—and they are valid ones—which attach to the mineral alkaloid quinine, it is far more effective, and its effects are not evanescent, bnt lasting, unlike those of the drug. There are portions of oar land—and none more beautiful and mere fertile—which at no season of the year are entirely exempt from the malarial sconrge. In such regions Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters has undergone a continuous test for the past forty years, with results which have established its reputation beyond all cavil as a special defense against every foam of malarial disease. For biliousness, also, it is an acknowledged specific, and It is a potent remedy for constipation. dyspepsia, rheumatism and au impoverished condition of the blood. Excuse Accepted. “It’s a pity, uncle, you visited us today when we’ve only got pork for dinner. Now if you were here to-morrow I could give vou a fine dish of hare or venison.’’ “All right, my dear; I’ll prolong my visit until day after to-morrow.” —Fliegende Blatter. His Slang. Mrs. Brown —I asked you to shake the furnace this morning, John, and you didn’t touch it. Mr. B.—That’s right I shook it altogether. Thought that was what you meant—Boston Transcript ✓ NO QUARTER / will do you as much / good as the one that J buys Doctor Pierce's * Pleasant Pellets. This is what you get with them: An absolute and permanent cure for Constipation. InAB" digestion. Bilious Attacks, Sick and ■ ■ W Bilious Headaches, > and all derangements JI /of the liver, stomach, and bowels. Not just temporary relief, and then a worse condition afterward—but help that lasts. Pleasant heln, too. ’"These sugarcoated little pellets are the smallest, the easiest to take, and the easiest in the way they act. No griping, no violence, no disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. They come in sealed vials, which keeps tnem always fresh and reliable; a convenient and perfect vest-pocket remedy. They’re the cheapest pills you can buy. SrSHILOHSg Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat. Sold by all Drugguts on a Guarante*. Fora Lame Side, Back or Chut Shiloh's Porous I Plaster will give great Mtiafaction.— *3 ceuta.
Snakes in India. Probably not fewer than 50.000 people are killed by snakes in India every year. They are one of the chief causes of mortality in that country. . Great efforts have been made by the British Government to destroy them, but with very little success. Unfortunately, the natives regard them as sacred. They consider the cobra in particular as embodying some sort of divinity, and it iscustomery for them to keep these frightful creatures as pets on their premises. Offers of bountiet for serpents’ heads have ’ been discouraged by the discovery of the practice pursued by many iow-caste , Hindoos of breeding snakes artificially to supply the official demand. CouKha.lloarsenesH.Sore Throat, etc., quickly relieved by Brown's Bronchial Troches. They surpass all other preparations in removing hoarseness and as a cough, remedy are pre-eminently the best. I 11 1 Death *• Newspaper*. , ‘'Dear, dear! The Kazoo is dead.” “What’s the trouble?” “Defective circulation.” —Exchange. Beecham’s Pins cost only 25 cents a box. They are proverbially known throughout the world to be “worth a guinea a box.’ No False Modesty. •'Harold, papa calls you a fortunehunter. I’m sorry I’m rich.” “So am I. Everybody will say that you bought me.”— Fob weak and inflamed eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye-water. It is a carefully 1 prepared physician’s prescription. Am Impossibility. Toung Mr. Gurley—My foot’s asleep. Gazzam—Nonsense! Not while you ’ are wearing those loud trousers. —Exi change. i FITS—AH Fits stopped tree by Dr. Kline’s Gres t ' Nerve Restorer. No Fits »fter first day’s use. Mari velous cures. Treatise and gi no trial bottle tree to Fit casts. Send to Dr. Kline. Ml Arch St.. Phils. Pa The honest thing is always the wisest This Trade Marti 1* on the be«t WATERPROOF COAT in the World I irec - A. J. TOWER, BOSTON. MASS._~ @ K ULCERS ra z! SCROFULA S “ RHEUMATISM rs g BLOOD POISON And every kindred disease arising from impure blood cured by that never-failing and best ot all medicines, Book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA. GA. (■fin - Illustrated Publications, IfliliWlTH MAPS, drarnbing ■ J ~ Minn««ota,North Dakota. Montana, | ■■ Idaho, Washington and Oregon, the FREE GOVERNMENT ■ ano LOW price! a BIMRI LANDS O“Tbn beat Agricnltnral, Graiing and Timber Lands d«w open to nettlen. Mailed FREE. Address ULAri. AL LAMBOIUI'LaBd P.B. Paal, Minna UUP All you have guessed about ” - life insurance may be wrong. PAY y ou w ‘ sti to the nnn*r send for “How and POST- M'hv.” issued bv the PENN snr MUITAL UFE, 921-3-? ChestAbt. nut Street, Philadelphia. iTHHATESTSENJATiOO Worki’e Fair Souvenir Playing Cards, consisting of a Deck of 53 Cards, viz. *. King, Queen, Jack, and Spot Cards. On fact ttf each Card is in acven i'olarx, <>sm the 43 diferetit yaiumal, f oreign, and of the WorUfe Fair, making the most beautiful and unique Deck of Playing Cards ever put on the market—the best-selling novelty yet produced. Agents wanted. Sample Deck. 50 cents, specialty Pubi’ng Co., 191 8. Halsted St., Chicago, 111. How did Mrs. E. M Jones Make Her Money ? It's all tbld in her famous New Book “DAIRYING FOR PROFIT.” Thirty cents by mall. Send and get it ROBERT JL BROWN, Agent. Box 334, Brookville, Ont„ Canada. Z* eOFn>m 1A to 25 lb« XrnU^***** menth. Harm VA F ’g/C f?& W trvatment (by yrao Jk# Vj? I Udngrbvvk’hnX M Thousand’ cured. Send in >tamp4 \ Yj-1 LJ O. W. F. SNYDER, M. D*. Mall DeptTl* McVicker’s Tlicdatei', €?ltlcaaro, ILK JOHN w.moßßis, ■ itLniOlwnl Washington, D.C. I Jyr* la feat war, 15 adjudicating datum, aUy*too*. mi •"rt —Pannol««'»PileSuppoaltorle*— ■ 111 L V Quwk Roliet and Positive Cure Kuarati |“|| f *1 teed. Easy to use. Sold by Draiwiat* I IL La Wor sent by mail. ;K'Stpai<i, foe. a box. Parmelee Med. Co, Panavilla. N. X. AnillSa M ° r P hin « Habit Cured in 10
DO YOU LIKE TO TRAVEL! READ THIS ABOUT CALIFORNIA I The WABASH RAILROAD has placed on sale low rata single and round trip tickets to all principal Pacific coast points, giving a wide choice of routes both going and returning, with an extreme return limit of Nine Months. Stop-overs are granted at pleasure on round trip tickets west of St. Louis and tho Missouri River, and by taking the WABASH but one change of cars Is necessary to reach Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Sacramento and Portland, Ore. Remember the WABASH is the peoples favorite route and is the only line running magnificent free Reclining Chair Cars and Palace Sleepers In ail through fast trains to St Louis, Kansas City and Omaha. For Rates, routes, maps, and general Information, call upon or ad< ress any of the undermentioned Passenger Agents of the Wabash System. R. G. BUTLER, D. P A., Detroit, Mfch. F. H. TRISTRAM, C. P. A.. Pitt-burg. P». P. E. DOMBAUGH. P * T. A., Toledo, Ohio. R. G. THOMPSON P. * T. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. J. HALOERMAN. M. P. A. Ml Clark St., Chicago. 111. G 0 MAXFIELD. D. P. A., Indiauapolia, Ind F. CHANDLER. G. P. & T. A., St. Louie, Mo. Mm™i M ‘POLISH For Ladies’and ounce « Children's MULO H rerp i vp d tto highest I RWMr<l“ <.f n.crit ever gr.en I V H Q ’ M-(iasat n. 1P,84 and B 18r!7. H iw h«*t A n an la. N cw WhmiJ )r.<’;iii U"'. I't.tY.tb-. 18.%; MfWkWM 1 '• 1 r p ' ! ’• H Ijoi.eh who llS’’ it <’!'« \ ‘ ■ wui n’-ver are ai.y'-lher. Manufactured by M. S. CAHILL A CO,, 04 Lincoln St For safe by *ll Shoe Dealera. Boston, Mas*. AT THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS SETTER. My doctor «aye It act* gently on the stomach, liver and kidney*, •nd la a pleasant laxative. This drink la made from herbs, and Is prepared for use as easily as tea. It Is called LAKE’S MEDICINE All dnurrteU Bell it at soc and |1 p«r r aek« r . If yon c»ni«i frt tt, ««ad your addreaa for a frw aample. Une’B Faallj MeiWa* tiie b«wol» day. In order to be healthy, this ta aecaaury. Addroee ORATOR P. WOODWARD, Lbßot, N. Y. P Sore relief a 0 ffUTW I KIDDER'S Maas
Rev. H. P. Carson, Scotland, Dak., says: “Two bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure completely cured my little girl.” W. H. Griffin, Jackson, Michigan, writes: “Si Catarrh for fifteen years, Hall’s Catarrh Cure cured me.” ’ ’ Albert Burch, West Toledo, Ohio, says: “Hall’s Catarrh Cure saved my life 7 Conductor E. D. Loomis, Detroit, Mich., says: “The effect of Hall’s Catarrh Cure is wonderful.” E. A. Rood, Toledo, Ohio, says: “Hall’s Catarrh Cure cured my wife of catarrh fifteen years ago and she has had no return of it. It’s a sure chre.” E. B. Walthall & Co., Druggists, Horse Cave, Ky., say: “Hall’s Catarrh Cure cures every one that takes it.” J.” A. Johnson, Medina, N. ¥., says: “Hall’s Catarrh Cure cured me.” MANUFACTURED BY F. J. CHENEY & CO., TOLEDO. O. Testimonials sent free. Sold by Druggists. 75 cents per bottle. . J '. Al know* 'A • I that wall paper, with ,ts Tc s e table paste nu ~ p- 1 c an< ’ ' ts wj /a 4p- 'Z } 1 / * V animal glue, Is unsanitary, ®' mI /44 II I andttlat ,0 °P p 'f re P**t®d SsggJFyW | a layers of such Is a very “nasty practice,” as well ” - Wi as dangerous. Kalsomine ffl Is temporary, rots, rubs off ziy" ZZ///ZZ iiJ Z'/ It IM i and scales » paint stop* , ap'’ ZZZZZZ/ ZIZS' i** J “wall respiration” needed V z /--dF to purify walls. Send to nt ” for a paper from Michigan A ■ ■ State Board of Health rw The Docto*.—'• One layer port on thia subject, reo ‘ \jr -Ji cfpaper Is bad enough, you ommending Church’s AlaJF\ have three here. Baby ’ “It WOn’t ////Z T&ZI V- lna? ' I^ cover but c * nnot bastino and plastlco only ////ZZ/ i shrive.” for walls of dwellings. Tub Off.’’ /l///i// /\ i Alabastlne form, pure, permanent and porous coatH////A \ ' \\r Ings, * ad d°® B n ° l re’ialvo to bo taken off to renew ' \\l from time to time; is a dry powder, ready for use by — \wS<j adding water (the latest make Is used In COLD (/©SB Ift y ft \t’ £42 water and is never sold In bulk); can be easily r T» s\\ fl tW * brushed on by any one: made In white and twelve • \ v «7 fashionable tints, and in throb shades, from which //tyv \,\ J’'key? decorators make the balance of forty shades shows I J jf. B,_ft | 5 BO t claimed that all who live with. Send for Alabastlne Rock for *" psiwred WBn ‘ dle m,,< ' h b ’ fore th,,lT “■*’ bBI c . c 1 , X they will enjoy better health with wall coatings Souvenir, Free; also Tint Card. (PPVP) krmanent, Porous and Pretty. Meadoa IMb psp«. For Sale by Paint dealers everywhere. Alabastine Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.
JL I Consumptive* and people M who have weak lungs or Asth- M ma should use Piso’sCure for K Consumption. It has cured ■ thousands; jit has not injur- ■ ed one. It Is hot had to take. ■ It is the h>est cough syrup. Sold everywhere. Ssc. ■ ♦* . ' 4. * L . rx.'tSk - U . ' '
“August Flower” " I am happy to state to you and to suffering humanity, that my wife has used your wonderful remedy. August Flower, for sick headache and palpitation of the heart, with satisfactory results. For several years she has been a great sufferer, has been under the treatment of eminent I physicians in this city and Boston, I and found little relief. She was in* I duced to try August Flower, which 1 gave immedaite relief. We cannot say to much for it.” L. C. Frost, Springfield, Mass. • I BXIO 1 1 I I \ JUMBO. The Alexandra Improved Cream arator icapaitty 2.500 to 4,000 pounds per hour; twM horse power will run it. Also new model HANS SEPARATOR (or the sale of which AGENTS ara WANTED in every section. Manufacturers of everything in line of machinery aud supplies fog butter and cheese factories. Send for catalogue. Davis & Kankin Bldg, and Mfg. Co., 240 to 254 West Lake Street, Chicago, 111. REVERSIBLE COLLARS &tCUFFS.— — j The be*t and most economical Collars and Cuffl r worn. Try them. You will like them. Look well. Fit well. Wear well. r Sold for '25 cents for a box of Ten collars or Five • pairs of cuffs. A sample collar aud pair of cuffs sent r by mail for Six Centti. Address, giving size and r style wanted. “Ask the dealers for them.” I Reversible Collar Co., 27 Kilby St. Bogtoiu Garfield Teas; Cores Constipation, Restores Complexion, Saves Doctors’ Bills Sample free. GAjanxu>TXACo.,3l»W.4sthSt.,M.T. Cures S»ck Headache
fiDflDQV®®® UKU TUI »,-£-i‘*sa cases pronounced hopeless. From first dose nymp toms rapidly disappear. and iu ten days _ least two thirds ot all sMuptoiua are removed. BOOK od testimonials of miraculous cures j-ent FKf.'E, Ten Days Trea'ment Furnished Free by Mail. OR If R. CHEEK I SCSI. SPECIALISTS RTIRRTL CEOttll F. W. Ji. U.. .7. No. 14—93 When Writing to Advertisers. »a/ jruu •aw tho Advertisement In this paper. -J . . I
