Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1894 — Page 3

Hood's Is the Best r»n Medicine, because it purifies, vitalizes enriches the blood, and therefore gives strength to resist bad effects from Cel l.* Catarrh. Rheumatism. Pneumonia. Mainria. the Grip. etc. Take it now and •▼ole the danger of serious illness. It may •ave you many dollars in doctors’ bills. Be sure to get Hood's and only Hoid’& ■-iood’s Sarßa - 1 parilla «I can truly recom- f mend Hood’s Sarsa- ■ par ill a as an excel- y.y lent medicine. I bare tak«n four bottle. and I am bett.r than I hare been for two years past. I was all runtdown. my limbs swelled and my blood was n a very bad c< nditton. Now lam free from neuralgia and better In every way. Mbs. H. OoßLric.a, Hume, N. Y. Hood’S PlUscnreall liver ills, hiliensness, ■Mfodii ■ . indigestion, sink headache. 25c. w Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound CURES ALL k Ailments of Women. Tt will entirely cure the worst forms of Fejr a a Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and (’lceration, Falling and Disi. lacerncnts of the Womb, and consequent Snliial Weakness, and >« peculiarly adapted to the Change of L\fe. It has cured more cases of Leucorrhoea uiar> any remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolve and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency t© cancerous humors. That Bearing-down Feeling -e»Oßir._- pain, weight, and barkacb., i, instantly relieved and permanently cured by its nee. Under all circumstances it acts in ham, iv with the laws that govern the Mata - system, and is as harmless as water. B;. All ArauMi » i! «. AJireu In fonM.nr., l.vm* E Pinkham Mu*. Co., I.ths Mae. < Lydia E Pinkham’s Liver P>|4». 25 cents. SOME 11 " FAMOUS INVENTIONS 1755—The SewinzMachina. 1769—Tne Steam Engine. 1793—Th© Cotton Gin. 1807—Fulton’# Steamboat. 1815 Davy’s Safety Lamp. 1844 Morae’i Telegraph. 1876—8e1l Telephone. 1882—Mason A Hamlin Improved Method of Piano Stringing. By virtue of inYsntisn the M*xor> JeHam a Piano* *-e in >r< aorsble than suv nther {ianv.- •. . . nowirdgTd by experts t be the •greatest improve 'fccni in piano construction in half a century. ffesonSdfininlin ILLUSTRATED L 7 185 CATALOGUE free on Wabash Av. •APPLICATION. JJBniL. CHICAGO. NICKELgATE. W>k.Ctaj«ULouisß.R, SOLID THHOUaiI TRIINS BUFFALO CHICAGO. —AT E S B rHROiGH PALACE BUFFET SLKEPIN’G CARm between Chicago, Buffalo, New Yurk and Beau!. For ’•Rte© oroth-r nformstioa ca'l on nearest Ticket Agent, or ad<!-.w« 1. W JOHNSTON, B F. HORNER. Gen > pennirr.dent Oe?.' F*BS*nger Ag-nt. >.. 4 CLEVELAND 0 WALTER BAKER & CO. - The Largest Manufacturers of (7-5 PURE, H!CH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES ajL ft- Oe this CoDtiacnt, h»v« received. SPECIfIL * NO highest AWARDS fJbeir CtoedsaffA© ■ Klm CALIFORNIA 1 fMI MIDWIMTEH EXPOSITION. I J W : ’ BREMFASfCDGOA, I I Which, unlike the Dutch PrtcMi, 3 > ’ prj ffF i« m.A'ie without the u»e of Alkalte* or other Chemical! or Dyes, ia abaolutely pure axid aoluble, and chU leas than one cent a cup. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WAITER BAKER 4 CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. Cleanses the Nasal -W ? ?W ' Ht£ Passages. Allays Pain fLW'EVgi #f. and Inflammation, Restores the Senses gJL y ’■ of Taste and Smell. Reais the Sores. Apply Bain: into»-ac i no-tril. jHfo-Mv ■ KI.Y 8R05..5S Warren St.. N. Y SKK—— ft-.— EVERY’ ONE WHO WEARS THE Owen Electric Belt Says: “They are the Best.’’ Get a catalogue by writing The Owes Electric Belt Co. 209 State Street, Chicago, 111. Uj| CtSK Wlttitf All Lisi FAILS. isr kJ Best Cough Syrup. Tazie* Good. Use s*! !' ‘ intima. Bold by druggists. IH

BURNED IN A HOTEL. SIXTEEN PERSONS PERISH BY FIRE AT SEATTLE. Shut Cp In M Fire Trap. They Are Suffocated and Cremated Without Hope of Eicape-Women and Children Among the Victim.—hut of the Dead. Caused by a Lamp Explosion. Sixteen persons -ten men, three women, and three child en-were burned to death in the Wert Street bote at Seattle, Wash , early Saturday morning. The Killed, w.th names bo far a known, are F, Bel man, M. McZooley, Agnes Mixon C. Wilson, Anaorson, Andrew Ot’.erson. Mrs, Ctterson and hei mother, Mrs. Huffman and little son and daughter, four men, one woman, an i one child, unidentified: recognition imp ssible. The West t-tr. et Hotel occupied the upper floor of a two-story corrugated iron building that covered a quarter of a block of ground at Columbia and West streets, one bio k from the Northern Pacific Depot, an 1 near the business center of tho city. The building was a me e shell of wood, co', ered with iron There were several exits to the street, but they wer narrow. Tho halls were narrow' and the ro ms small. \\ holesaie business ho.is s occupied the ground floor. The hotel, bei g near the railroad depot and a cheap but eputab’.e house, was much patronized bj country people. The fire was undoubtedly caused by the explosion of a amp in the kitchen in tne rear of the house. The propriety yr's son was aroused by the noise of the explosion about 1 o’clock but before he could Investigate the fiames spread all through the h use. The corrugated iron sheeting kept the flames hidden until nearly th’ l whole interior was a furnace. The thin partitions were of resinous pine, covered with cheese cloth and bur.ied furiously. It was not until the flames were seen burning in the windows by people in the streets that an alarm was turned in. When tho fireman ar ived the tire did not present an alarming aspect The people at the windows were rescued with ladders and boards, some escaping with hardly any clothing. Shocking Discoveries by rhe Fireni« , n. The firemen discovered co pse after corpse, until, at 4 o’clock, they had co mted fifteen. Sub-e ,uently another was di-covered. Most of the bodies we e left where they lay until day ight in the hope the pr> p ietor might identify them by locating the rooms on tlie register, for all ex opt two were charred beyond possibility o recogniti n. The bodies were taken to the morgue in boxes or canvas sacks. The arrangem uts of the halls o’ the hotel made such a la* yr.nth that in the da, time o .e unfamiliar with the place would hav, had difficulty in finding his way about w.thout several attem ts, and as the halls were tilled with smoke there was little chance for any of them to make their way out before suffocating. Sme of the lodgy rs were asleep and were overta en in bed. while others rushei into the halls and were suffocated and burned. BLOW AT UNCLE SAM. German Government Excludes American Live Cattle and Fresh Beef. The Germ in government has published a decree prohibiting the importati >n of American live cattle and fresh te:-f in the ground that two c irgoes whii h have just arrived contained ievera anima s suffering from Texas fever. This action, a Washington dispatch sa s, w is not e itl ely unexpected by the agricultural department, al.h iugh ti e officials had h pe l up to the ii t moment that the Ge mans would prove open to reason The matter wil not be allowed to rest where it now stands, bit our government will cause a thorough investiga tion t' ba made of the eases of the alleged Texas fever on which the German governmt nt has seen fit to act in s.c i a summary fashion. No doubt is felt here that these alleged eases will turn out to be founded on a mis taken diagnosis, for if there is any cattle dis ase that the German veterinarians know little < r nothing about, that disease is T xas fever, a purely climatic, non-inf. cti< us fever pccu iar to America. That is the opinion of the Aci icultural lea tment experts who ha .e studied the disease for years and a e aware of the stat ■ of knowl- < dge on the stibje -t in Europe, if the departm n al eAamination.as expected, resul.s in disprovi g the exist nee of the eases complained of. o. r Go\e npient will enter a very vigorous protest . gainst ths action of Germany and seek to make it cle.ir that t e reas n assigned for the destruction of our meat trade is disingenuously stated. SHORN OF ITS TERROR. French Claim that Diphtheria Is to Be Cnred 17- Inoculation Hereafter. The new treatment by inoculation for diphtheria and croup, a- practiced in France, is the sub.ect of a special report to the State Department by t nited Sta es Consul C. \t‘. Chancel or, at Havre. The Consul gives in detail a history of the development of the treatment by Dr. 1 asleur and his assistant, Dr. Roux, who have been exiieriii.entliig with for five years,keeping it secret until they had satisfied themselves of Its efficiency and had subjected the animal the horse best adapted to transform diphtheritic poison into an an i-toxine. A trial of the new treatment at one of the largest children's hi spitals of Haris resulted in reducing the death rate from diphtheria from >1.70 per cent to .4.33 per cent. In addition it is state 1 that children v iccinated with the serum were protected from the di-e >se even while living inclose contact with diphtheritic patients. As the Pasteur Institute cannot meet the great demand for the erum movements are on foot in different localities to establish auxiliary stations. In slight c se- one in.ectiou of the serum is sufficient. Our Population. O ’ the emigration movement of the wb >le wor d. two third were iverted to the United States, th remainder to South America and Australia. For the United States as a whole there were in IS 0 ICO.i'UO males to >‘s,2 0 females, so that s m -of the males will bi unable to get wives if they really n ed th m. T. E pers- ns of African descent are cla sified :co rding to iho d. grees of colored blood into t : ,337,98b blacks, 956.989 mulattoes, quadroons, and 69,936 octoroons.

HOOSIER HAPPENINGS NEWS OF THE WEEK CONCISELY CONDENSED. What Our Neighbor® ar© Doing—Matter© of General and Local interest—Marriage© and Deaths—Accidents aud ('rimes—Per* sona! Pointer© About Indianians. Minor State Items. Richmond has already begun to mane arrangements for a grand May music festival. The Crawfordsville Telephone Company has begun putting in its system. Will be in operation by December 1. Oscar Elliott’s sawmill, four miles northeast- of Columbus, was burned, causing a loss of 43,000, with no insurance. Miss Grace Speakman, fatally injured in a natural gas explosion at Marion, died at ner home in New , castle. The Kokomo police called the fire department out the other night and had tbqm drown a man out of a cellar 31 a house of ill fame which they were raiding. Charles E. Weddle aged 24. attempted to get aboard an incoming train on the Pennsylvania road at Tinoco, and fell beneath the wheels. He was instantly killed. While workmen were casing a gas well near Shelbyville. Saturday, some ane struck a match. A fearful explosion followed and three men were probably fatally burned. Capt. J. R. Nation’s barn, near Kokomo, disappeared in a very singular manner. A little whirlwind dipped iown and played havoc with the structure. The timbers were found scattered some distance away. Several Evansville citizens have brought big suits for damages against the Merchants’ Mercantile Agency of Chicago, alleging that it published a ■‘Credit Kxperienc-e Guiue,’ rating them as i nworthy of credit. The report sent out from Laporte that notices had been posted threatening to burn different places about the ?ity has caused considerable trouble. I’he insurance companies are trying to .ancel policies and raise the rates. Edward C. Miller, at the Muncie veneering works, accidentally stepped in a large vat of boiling water and was terribly scalded. He was res ued by another workman. The flesh on his right leg to the knee was fairly cooked. J. M. Terry, one of tho oldest and best-known conductors on the ! ake Shore A Michigan Southern railwav, was killed cast of Elkhart He was working about his train when he was run over by it and instantly killed. He leaves a wife and three children He had been employed on the road nineteen years. Frank Layman met with a peculiar accident at Shelbyville. He and another workman were engaged in driving a well and were using a bar and rhain, twisting the pipe. In some way the chain slipped and struck him on ■he left side of the head, tearing his sar entirely off and rendering him unronseious for hours. J< SEPH Miller, son of a farmer residing- near Yorktown, attempted to card a moving freight tra n in An erson, but lost his hold and fell under the rain. Both legs were crushed and were amputated below the knees by Dr. J. W. Hunt. Miller was taken to St. John's Hospital. His condition is regarded as very critical. While Wilson Lewis was fishing at f afayette his line caught on something heavy. Exerting his strength he was horrified to find that his hook had brought up the bodv of a voung colored woman. The girl had been missing over a week. Her name was Mary Chanil ers. and she was but 17 years old. Disappointment over a love affair is supposed to have caused her to suicide. Edward Nees and Fli Crouse were instantly killed by a train at Keelsville. They were in a wagon and going' to mill. The crossing is right in the village and a view ot the road is obstructed by storerooms. The train was the fast eastbound Indianapolis express on the Vandaiia. It was three hours late and was running at a high rate of speed. The horses had cleared the track, but the wagon was squarely struck and smashed into splinters. Tne men both leave families. The re; ort of the Controller of the Currency regarding the condition of the national banks of Indiana shows that, at the close of business on October 2, the average reserve was 41.2; per cent., as against 30.19 per cent, on July 18. Loans and discounts increased from 130,999,079 to $31,607,456; stocks and securities, from $2,357,830 to $3,314.017; gold coin from 83,562,209 to $3,524,676; lawful money reserve from *6,1 4,524 to $6,223,787: indivi ual deposits from $29,065,148 to $32,009,204. Fire destroyed the large livery barn on the west side of tne square at Knightstown, occupied by John T. Girty & Son. Seven horses, eight tons 3f hay, a half do en fine buggies and carriages were burned. Loss, $1,500; insurance SI,OOO. Loss on barn S9OO. The fire was supposed to be of incendiary origin. Tt was the first, opportunity since the completion of the water works plant that has been given to thoroughly test it. Four streams were thrown on the flames until the tire was extinguished with satisfactory result. AS George W. Jones, a highly respected larmer- living southwest of Rome, was crossing the railroad on Main street, a special containing the officials of the Missouri Pacific going at a speed of forty miles an hour, struck his carriage, injuring him so badly that he died in an hour. The man was carried fifty feet and was landed under the carriage, which was a complete wreck, and the horses were carried a greater distance and landed on the other side of the track. Mr. Jones leaves a wife and five children. A COSTLY mishap has occurred at Thomp on’s green glass bottle works, Gas City. The molten glass in the tank was allowed to get too hot and began leaking through the bottom of the tank into the air tunnel. The alarm was given and etlorts were made to chill the hot glass with cold water. Before it could be checked however, about forly tons of glass had run out, filling and ruining the tunnel under the tank and badly d;,m -ging the tank Itself. The loss will aggregate more than SI,OOO and it will re uired the closing of the factory for two weeks while repairs are being made.

Stone Th»t !• Flexible. It may be safely said that no specimen in a geological collection is more curious than the oar of flexible sandstone, which can be bent with less p easure than that required to bend a piece of wet leather of the same size. In an article upon the subject in the Mineral Collector we are told that ‘■when a thin sib e of the stone ia looked at under a lens by transmitted light the fragments are seen to be locked together lige the parts of a sectional nuz !e toy. fixed, but only loosely. The simplest way of explaining how this stone was formed is to say that grains of sand were once cemented firmly together by another material, I which has been partly dissolved, leav- ! ing countless natural ball-and-socket joints of jagged shape behind.” A Temple of Health Where vigor, good digestion, appetite, and sound repose minister to physical comfort is ' the bodily structure which, however much it« foundations have been sapped by ill-health, has been restored—rebuilt, as it were—by the great renovating tonic, Hostetter’s Stomach | Bitters. Nothing infuses strength into a debili- I tated frame like this saving medicine, which, f in the vigor and regularity it imparts to the system, endows it with the surest defense against disease, and the best guaranty of a long life and hale old age. Worn-out men of business, tired mechanics overworked mill hands, miners broken down by hardship and exrsure to n.alaria. mariners and tourists all clare that it is ihe heat safeguard against the influences of fatigue, bodily or mental, an t of animate and temper itnre. Incomparable fur billsuß, rheumatic, kidney, and nervous troubles. ______________ Real and Ideal. “I love all that is beautiful in art and nature.” she was saying to her esthetic ! admirer. “I revel in the green fields, the babbling brooks and the little wayside flowers. I least on the beauties of earth and sky and air. They are my daily life and food and ” "Maudie!” cried out the mother from the kitchen, not knowing that her daughter’s beau was in the parlor, “Maudie, whatever made you go and eat that big dish of potatoes that was left over from dinner? I told you we wanted them warmed for supper. I declare if your appetite isn't enough to bankrupt pa?”- Tit-Bits. On Their Native Heath. Six States of the Union are represented in the present Congress en- I tirely by native sons. They are Maine, Rhode Island. Delaware, Maryland. ' South Carolina, and Loui Sana. Alli the others have borrowed their dele-1 gat ons in part or wholly from their sister States or foreign countries.

HOTHERS an< t those about to become mothers, jSSB’ should know that \ x Di- Pierce’s FajAlfcriglteo vorite Prescription * ffrNlj ro^s ol'ildbirtli of a ’ ts ' or tu r<> > terrors and dangers to toth mother and child, by aiding Nature in preparing the system for parturition. Thereby “labor” and also the period of confinement are greatly shortened. It also promotes an abundant secretion of nourishment for the child. During pregnancy, it prevents “morning sickness” and those distressing nervous symptoms from which so many suffer. Tanks, Cottle Co., Texas. , Dr. R. V. Pif.rce, Buffalo. N. Y. : Dear Sir —I took your “Favorite Prescription” previous to confinement and never did so well in kt life. It is only two weeks since my confinement and I am able to do my work. I feel stronger than I ever did in six weeks before. Yours truly, A MOTHER’S EXPERIENCE. South Bend, Pacific Co., Wash. Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir—t began taking your “Favorite Prescription” the first month of pregnancy, and have continued taking it since confinement. I did not experience the nausea "sf or any of the ailments V7, tt due to pregnancy, after \-e~ fi I began taking your “Prescription.” I was only in labor a short time, and the physician ' ft; 'A said I got along un- * WfA ' usually well. We think it saved tne Mrs ' Bakera great deal of suffering. I was troubled a great deal with leucorrhca also, .and it has done a world of good for me. Yours trulv, MrS.'W. c, baker.

TheYOUTH'S (JmHKffl Comes Every Week. For all the Family. Finely Illustrated. $1.75 a Year. The Full Prospectus for 1595 (sent free to every applicant) gives abundant evidence of the variety, interest and value of the contents of the sixty-ninth volume of The South’s Companion. Th? following titles of articles and names of Contributors suggest a few of its many attractions. Contributors for 1895. Fir. Gladstone has written a striking paper of reminiscences ot his lifelong friend and physician. Sir Andrew Clark. Two Daughters of Queen Victoria, | The Princess Christian, of Schleswig-Holstein. I The Princess Louise (Maichioness of Lorne). The Story of My First Voyage, W. Clark Russell. A School Revisited, James Matthew Barrie. The Bold ’Prentice. The Story of » Locomotive Engineer, Rudyard Kipling. How to Tell a Story, Mark Twain. An Editor’s Relations with Young Authors, William Dean Howells. And Articles and Stories by more than a hundred other well-known writers. Serial Stories. Health and Home Articles. The Lottery Ticket, J. T. Trowbridge. Self-Cure of Wakefulness, Dr. W. A. Hammond. The Young Boss, Edward W. Thomson. The Cellar, Dr. W. C. Eraislin. A Girl of the Revolution, Dorothy Nelson. Dresses for Children, Lou’se Manville-Fenn. By Harold Frederic, C. A. Stephens, W. J. Long, Put the Children on Record, Pres. Stanley Fall. C. M. Thompson, Warren L. Wattis, and others. Kelp for Consumptives, Dr. Harold Ernst. Favorite Features for 1895. Short Stories; Adventure Stories; Travellers’ Tales; Anecdotes of Noted People; Life in Foreign Schools; Papers on Art and Artists; Articles on Science, Natural History and Hygiene; Papers by American Admirals; Opportunities for Boys; Football, F. g and Camping; Editorials; Poems; Selections; Children’s Page; Fine Illustrations; Most Wholesome Reading for all the Family. TN ® C FREE TO JANUARY 1. 111 £ aZx \> w 'iiibsrrihrrK whe wil) rut <»’’♦ ®H|» wnc! <«*nA it n‘»Tp* vvl■ ii s _ — . and m Hri rfa* and SI .75 at on* «. wi’l i»b • ’ •• < onipan ; --n FF F!' __ — T f f t<» Jannw 1. 1895, ’ud for a full r«*ar from (tint date. T is ftp* i-ial F .I I 8 utler tnc!n**M rhe Thnnkaiclvins, Christmas. New Year's and Easter /\J 1 Double Holiday Numbers. <3 Address THE YOUTH’S COMPANION. Boston. Mass.

Churcli Discipline in M«>f.a. The old custom of u-Insr the tithing rod on unruly church members should be revived. A tithing man seems needed in a certain ehurch in Woolwich to relieve the pa-tor of the duty of chastising the unruly members of his flock. On acer ain Sabbath eve the bad boys in the back row were more than us lally irritating to the pastor. He is but human: he bounded from the pulpit, seized the astonished youth t»v the coat collar, administered nis punishment, then calmly retraced his steps and picke 1 up the threads of Ins discourse —Bath Enterprise. Delicate Texas Siftings reports a new form of nervous prostration. •‘Bring me a beefsteak,” said a customer at a rectauranl, “and a good .one.” “Yes, sir.’’ “And I say. bring me a big one. Every little thing annoys me and makes me nervous.” How’s This? We off©r One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ease of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Ca'arrh Cure. F. J. CHINEY A CO.. Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have knuwn F. J. Cheuoy for th© last ftfte©n years, aud be lie vs him t*-. f©ctly honorable in all business transactions, and fl Hanoi ally able to carryout any obligations male by thefr firm. eat A Tri ax. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Welding. Kinnaii & Alarvin, Wholesale Druggis'e. To Wo, Ohio. Hall s Oatat rh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood aud mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c per bottle, bold by ail Druggists. A <soor appetite does not have to hire a French cook. Lack of consideration leads to lonely old age. FDR A CHRISTMAS PHESEMT Alt is Peculiarly Adaoted to Members ot Young ' Peosle's Societies, and | c , Church Workers in PulM and p **’ G Helds W W E S ■ ■ I * 1 bp Christ and the Bi bio ' U Ca J from thf Layman s Omi Standpoint Alone, with £ Not a Line from a Cler* gyman or a Theologian. Witnesses! | A Liberal Percentage Allowed. Agents. The Best Selling Book ever offered. It Sell* in English Cloth Binding for SB.ee; Hull* Russia, 54.00; Full Russia, 85.98. By reintttiuz direct to the i'ol> lowing address, we will prepay the book by express Special terms to Agents. Address lock Bo.r 219. Fort Wayne, Tint, Raphael, Aagelo, Rubens, Tasso i The -LINKNE REVERsiHLE"arsttae Best and Most | Fcgu mi a, Co la h and C ifl'b wo. l u; the'sr m d of I fin- l ioth.butb sides ni».ahed al ke, and. toeing r-- i verible.on collar is equal to two of uy o her kind. I Thty lit uear well and look well. A box of ton Col a h or Five Fairs < f Curts for Tw n tv-nvs Cents. A SJinj»:o C Lar aud Pair of Cuffrb. mail f©r Bix Ceuta, \aiue et'le aud Mize. Address REVERSIKLE COLLAR COMPANY. ; 77 FRANKLIN ST. REW VflfK. 27 KILIY ST.. IOSTIR. ’ DTRARLK-EAMLY API’I.I ED. jgr,' r ... a This rooflug is manu- ’ /■.’ ’V ■_from natural Trimuad aat>haJt nute B ■ * b “ a rials. au<i will uvt dry C, MFTfjPM up 4D«i become brittle under exposure to tbe w-a.'ber ae coal-tar d roortnic do. Kg^’isr**y*y*< j fur Fr*e Sam-P-V-h p’“-‘ tnd Cirrulart to « WARDEN CH E MICAL 4 mfg. CO. J ns Fl I. I O\ ST., I New York, I'. S. A. nALIFORHIA Weekly Overland Parties—Personally Con- 1 ducted—in New Pullman Upholstered'fourist ’ Sleeping Cars, without change, leave Chicago ’ every Tnursday for all points on the Pacific ('oast For particulars address Tr ’-'-rw CO.. I9S South Clark St., Chicago. 1 CANCER iffi 8-nd for circular. FREE, containing n-nus* aud ad- • dre.-ses of over I persoßM ir d b Baofieler’s FamousPl st*r Ir atment. J. U EACr.ELER M D„ . Cancer Si ecialiKt.2B uonroest.,(irand Rapid- M h Mv ELECTRIC BELT senton TRIAL TTQ Dr. Judd Slb trot, Mich. Want agent-- XXV C* I

1® For Durability,Economy and for General Blacking is unequalleo. HasAn annual Sale of 3UOOton& we ALSO MAHUFACTURETHa _ FORANAFTERDINNERSH! NE?OR Tff TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUST, IN 5410 CENT TIN BOXES. THE ONLY PERFECT PASTE. /Aorse Bros,PßoFs. Canton. Mass AN EXAGGERATED CASE. r.ii For that full feeling That comes after eating There is a remedy. Simple but effective —and immediate. A • Ripans • Tabule. Take one! at the time, Swallow it &ud there you are. One who gets just as full lu any other wav Is not so uncomfortable at the tim*. That sensation, to him, Cornea later. To prevent it Take a tabule Before going to bed. lu __ . T ~fEXAcT VIA ,®bash]m3 Do you know that the farmer has more opportunities for making money in '•JC XX than almost any State in this great country? Interest yourself in the subject and see Low true this is. REMEMBER, THF VMBASH 18 the Great Steel Rail Highway to all points • a I ’;•!•• I r I tea. rout ©a, maps, and general informatio n. < all upon or address tbe nearest of the un erm ntioned Pat t-eiigsf Agents of the Wabash Syatem. R. G. BUTLER. D. P. A., 1 etroit, Mich. F. H. TRIS!HAM. C. P. A. Pittsburg, Pa. P. E. DG .43AUGH, P. &T. A 'loledo. Olaio. R. G. THOMPSON. P. A 1 A . Fort Wayne, Ind J. HALDERMAN, M. P. A., . )1 Clark St.. Chicago, HL j. m. McConnell p i. a . ind. G. 0. MAXFIELD. D. P A., 1 lift o iis Ind C. S. CRANE. G. P. AT A, t-t Louis. Mo. W. L. Douclas ’STHEBEST. bfli NO SQUEAKING. *5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH&E’vAMZLLEDCALE X *4.‘3.SOF;,.£CALF&ia»ISA®I ' $ 3.-1? -*I.!"E, 3 Soles. X? X- - i -LADIESpo NG °l4 SEND I - J CATALOGUE W.L-DCUGLAS© W- - snOCKTON. MASX You can save money bv wearing tho W. L. Douglas 53.00 Shoe. Because, we are Vie manufacturers of thlsgradeof shoes in t eWorld,ar. 1 guarantee their value by s’amping t..e nae and price on th© bottom, which protect you a’ainst hijh prices and the middleman's pro": < Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting 1 wearing qualities. We have them sold everywhere at lower pricesfor the value giv»-n than an •• other i. • •. Takenosub■litute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can. SURE MOREY SffiE w Ark St.K k .Market d avi g them intellint y worked bv \ >. i;-. r 60 and 62 Broad av, New Yo’k d io” Fr >*pe< tuß. F. W. N. U. .... j^ o , When Writing to Advertisers. sayyousaW tb© Advertisement in this paper.