Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 10, Decatur, Adams County, 20 December 1894 — Page 3
Intense Headaches •For four ye*r» I have been acon«t»nt »utteiei. My hr »che4 from morning till night. After trying everything 1 could think of, the only thln « thl ’- cave jf, J-A-Al m * iay re!ief W-H to Ji keep ttly hea<l bound J Y? with a cloth to keep I *be air from striking ~ j it- The nasal passages 8 ° f IDy he * <l safi my ijSL throat were very sore xnd B*« me intense '■> I 1 ft ln, expectorating e Jr S^~uZr~i U ! l ftx\s> !aucll corrupt matter. . -.Jtr P j waa [old tba . , he weight of my hair was the cause of my trouble and I had it cut off. but this gave me no relief. Heading about a lady similarly afflicted who w as cured by Hood s Sarsaparilla. 1 began to take it. Before I had taken one bottle I Cures felt greatly improved, an I at the end of three bottles was entirely well. 1 now weigh 240 pounds, which is a gain of ten pounds in the last three months." Mbs. Mabt A. White, Franklin, Indiana Oct only HOOD’S. Hood’s Pills do not weaken, but aid digestion and tone the stomach. Try them. Me. Testing a Horse for Lameness. When examining a horse with a vie w to purchasing, says a contemporary, always have him led down a steep or stony descent at the end of a halter, and with no whip near him. Many horses, when bi ought out of the stable, are excited by the presence of strangers, and become still more so at the light of a whip. A slight lameness may therefore be momentarily overlooked by the hor-e himself, just as a man. under strong excitement, will sometimes forget a .-ore foot. Leading the horse down a slope will show any iefeet in his fore-quarter, and running him back will develop any weakness that may exist in his hind legs. Sixteen tramps in lowa were Held ap by tour banaits and made to yield H"<). The circumstances would seem to indicate that one difference between An lowa tramp and the average citizen who supports him is that the tramp has more money.
** My Sick Sisters, “ Let me tell you something. “ For years I have been almost a constant sufferer from female trouble in all its dreadful forms : — •* Shooting pains all over mv
MRS. HARRIET WAMPLER
many doctors in different parts of the U.S., but Lydia E. Pinkham’s i ’igctablc Compound has done more for me than all the doctors. “ I feel it my duty to tell you these facts that you also may be cured. My heart is full of gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham.”-—Mrs. Harriet Wampler, 507 Kasota Block, Minneapolis, Minn. Mrs. Pinkham’s Compound is our one unfailing remedy. Hie Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. JONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of cur common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundre cases, and never failed except in two case. [both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it caur cs shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful.in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists, DIRECTV ».V' foriuinag BALM. —Apply 1 particle us the Bahn well | ip lid the ni -tril-i. -V (er I^ll tyi'a t*i? > moment draw a strong Mb, treat h through the none. Use three times a day. as- f er meals preferred, ami My.Jjjßl tefore retiring. JU ELY’S CREAM SALM Opens and c’eanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain an i Intiummati n, Heals the S. res, Protects the Membrane tr< ni Colds, Restores the Senses of lastc and smell. The Balm lb quickly absorbed and giv*. relief at once. A particle is applied into each noptril rndie agree ible. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street. New York. ill Wwllß For Durability,Economy and for General blacking is unequalled. Has An annual Sale of 3.00 G tons. W' ALSO MANUFACTURE THE , «» 1| M |HE? ’■" | FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINE,ORTO TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUST. IN S&IOCENTTIN BOXES. THE ONLY PERFECT PASTE. Morse BrosJWs. Canton.Massl
DEBS GOES TO JAIL. I Railway union officers are ; i GUILTY OF CONTEMPT. Leader Sentenced to Six and Hia Asw>- 1 1 elates to Three Months —Judge \\ oiids Says the Defendants Violated the lujunction Issued Last Summer. May Take an Appeal. .Fudge Woods, in the Circuit Court of the United States, at Chicago, found all ' the respondents in the contempt proceed- 1 ings instituted by the Federal Government and the receivers of the Santa Fe 1 Railroad Company against leading officers ‘ of the American Railway Union guilty as charged and entered the following sen- < tences: Eugene V. Debs, president, six months , in the county jail. George W. Howard, vice president, j three months in the county jail. Sylvester Keliher, secretary, three | months in the county jail. At ' x ■ ECOEXE V. DBBS. L. VV. Rogers, editor of official organ and director, three months in the county jail; M. J. Elliott, director, three months in the county jail. James Hogan, director, three months in the county jail. L. M. Goodwin, director, three months in the comity jail. John McVean, member, sentence suspended. By agreement of counsel the court granted the convicted managers of last summer's great strike teu days before the sentences should be executed. In the meantime the attorneys for the respondents will prepare for carrying the ease up to the Supreme Court of the United States, by appeal, if possible, or by habeas corpus. The latter course will probably be pursued. To hear Judge Wood deliver his opinion the court room on the fourth floor of the Monadnock Building was filled with
body, sick headache, spinal weakness, faintness, dizziness, depression, and everything that was horrid. “ I tried
p. J GEO. W. HOWABD.
; court. On the bench with Judge Woods sat Judge Jenkins. Judge Woods read but a small portion of his exhaustive opinion, which covers S 3 pages of typewritten manuscript and contains more than 25,000 words. It 1 required more than two hours for him to read the opinion minus the omissions. In brief the decision finds the defendants guilty of contempt in conspiring to hinder and prevent the transmission of United States mails and interstate commerce. Mr. Debs is regarded as the ringleader and is more heavily punished. The acts of the defendants are characterized as a “willful disobedience of the injunctions issued by the court.” This is the concluding chapter for the time being at least in the history of the great railroad strike of last summer. I It is not likely that Debs and his asso- ’ ciates were either unprepared for the seni tence passed upon them or were inclined to regard it as severe. When an injunction was issued through the United States courts last summer restraining the leadI ers of the strike from interference with > interstate commerce and that injunction I was not obeyed, the subsequent move involving the arrest of the strike leaders for l contempt of court was an outcome easily foreseen both by the public and by the strikers themselves. ! It is in his decision as to certain i weighty points involved that Judge r Woods’ ruling will be most likely to create > discussion. The Judge’s lengthy presen- ( tation of the case revolves upon two central topics—the validity of the injunction arid the actual culpability of the defendants in the violation of the injunction issued against them. As to the validity of the injunction Judge Woods defines the ' interruption of interstate commerce as clearly within the jurisdiction of a Federal Circuit Court. The acts of the de- - fendants he defines as unlawful, and the I opponents of “government by injunction” II will doubtless find herein occasion to in- [ quire why, if the acts were unlawful, the positive statutory remedy for the redress of those acts of lawlessness should not have been employed instead of the instrument of the injunction. The principle that an injunction cannot be brought in restraint of an act already declared crim- ' inal by law is one that appears again in this connection, as it has throughout the : late labor troubles, aud it takes an addi- * ional emphasis from Judge Woods’ careI ful iteration that the same act may-con-stitute both a contempt and a crime, and , that both are punishable separately. The defendants did not appear particularly crushed by the punishment. Debs bowed his tall, gaunt form and whispered a few words to his sister, who sat near, and they both laughed heartily. It is thought that Charles E. Wise, of Delphi. lud., who has been missing since Aug. 29, was at Clarksville. Mo., two days after that for his money. A body found at that time has beeu partly identified as his, and the corpse will be exhumed to make the identification more . complete. I While on a drunken stampede through I the town of Maxey, Ga., Linn and Harry Williams, Riordan and Moncrief fell out ' over some old matter of difference. The Williams boys were pitted against the other two and shot them dead.
SENATE AND HOUSE. WORK OF OUR NATIONAL LAWMAKERS. Proceedings of the Senate and House of ‘ Representatives — Important Treasures i Discussed and Acted I'pon—Gist of the , Business. The National Solons. The House on Tuesday, after a spirited debate, passed the bill legalizing the pooling of railroads, by a vote of 166 to 110. Mr. Breckinridge of Kentucky reported the urgent deficiency bill. Mr. Dingley of Maine asked unanimous consent for the consideration of a resolution calling on the Secretary of the Treasury for information first as to whether the articles of the Behring Sea tribunal had resulted last season in saving the fur seal herds from that destruction they were intended to prevent; second, information as to the number and sex of seals killed by pelagic sealers; third, the protection of fur seal herds on the Pribyloff Islands; and fourth, the revenue derived by the Government from the seals during the past and the expenditure of the Government for the protection during the same period. The business of the Senate was confined to confirming nominations. By a vote of 24 to 34 the Senate refused Wednesday to take up Mr. Vest’s resolution for an amendment of the rules. An unsuccessful attempt was made to secure consideration of the bill to strike out the differential duty on sugar. Consideration of the urgency deficiency bill was begun by the House. A motion to strike out the appropriation for the collection of the income tax was defeated. A majority of the House' Banking and Currency Committee is said to be opposed to the administration plan for currency reform. Ina letter to the committee, Lyman J. Gage, of Chicago, recommended the issue of $250,000,000 in 2 1 ** per cent, bonds and the retirement of legal tender notes. The Senate adjourned Thursbay until Monday. Practically all the time of the session was consumed in the discussion of the bill to establish a national university at Washington and the Nicaragua canal’bill. The House passed three appropriation bills the urgent deficiency, fortifications and military academy—and made fair progress on the pension bill. Mr. Cockran secured a record-making vote on the appropriation for the collection of the income tax by moving to recommit the bill with instructions to strike it out, but his motion was defeated by 120 majority, the vote standing 49 to 169, The fortifications bill as passed carried $1,879,057, $5,473,646 less than the estimates, and the military academy bill $457,678, $127,312 less than the estimates. The pension bill carries sl4l,381.570, $2(>0,000 less than the estimates, and $10,200,000 less than the appre-pria tion for the current fiscal year. The time of the House was consumed Friday with debate on the pension appropriation bill, and although it abounded in charges and counter charges it lacked interesting detail. The bill carries sl4l,381.570. and was passed without amendment. The Hitt resolution of inquiry calling on the Secretary of State for the correspondence relating to the payment of $425,000 in connection with the fur seal controversy was adopted. A resolution authorizing Commander Dennis Mullen, of the United States navy, to accept a medal from the Chilean Government was adopted. The Senate was not in session. In the Senate Monday a communication from Secretary Gresham relative to the continuation of the bureau of American republics was referred to the Committee on appropriations. Mr. Blanchard, of Louisiana, presented petitions praying for the passage by the Senate of a land forfeiture bill. Nir. Hill, of New York, presented a resolution calling upon Secretary Carlisle for a copy of the income tax regulations, which was passed. The bill for a national university was placed on the calendar. The Senate resumed consideration of the Nicaraguan (’anal bill. In the House Mr. Herman, of Oregon, presented a preamble and resolution declaring that the Clayton-Bulwer treaty was an obstacle to the construction of an interoceanic canal and that it should be abrogated. Fifteen of the sixir u pension bills favorably reported from the Friday night session were then passed without objection in exactly four minutes. Mr. Mcßae, chairman of the Committee on Public Lands, moved to pass, under a suspension of the rules, the bill to protect public forest reservations. Mr. Wells, of Wisconsin, charged that rascality was behind the bill and predicted that those who were pushing it through with whip and spur would live to regret their action. The vote resulted 159 to 53 and the bill was passed. The army appropriation bill carried $23,299.808—-$168,616 less than the estimates. The bill was passed without amendment. Hrieflets. Gold is beginning to go out again,sl,551.123 having been withdrawn from the National Treasury in a day. Logan Clendenuing, the first patient treated by Kansas City physicians with anti-toxine, has entirely recovered. Consul Gilford at Basle, Switzerland, warns Swiss not lo return to their native country expecting to get work, for the field of labor is overcrowded. Henry Whilt, J. D. Bester, and George Adams wore arrested at Huntington, W. Va., on the charge of robbing George B. Sanford, a farmer, of $1,500. Remnants of the commonweal army in the State of Washington will march to Olympia and demand an appropriation for public highway improvements. Emperor William has presented gold w atches, with his portrait and monogram, to two Bedouin sheiks, in recognition of their services to several German archaeologists. Herman Shafer has been expelled from the Southern Indiana M. E. conference and the church at Columbus, Ind., for renting a store-room to a man who will sell liquor under a government license and is a druggist. George D. Sherwin, a well-known attorney of Kansas City. Mo„ died from the effects of a self-administered dose of morphine, taken to alleviate suffering due to asthma. J. W. Wheeler, of Elizabeth. N. J., has been appointed receiver of the J. W. Fowler Car Company of Elizabethport. The assets are about $128,000; liabilities, $130,000. Morris Loenshal, one of the best known pension agents in Northern Ohio, was indicted by the United States grand jury at Toledo for using fraudulent affidavits to secure pensions.
prominent citizens, lawyers, friends of the defendants, and two women, one of them a sister of Mr. Debs. All of the counsel iu the case, save Mr. Miller for the Santa Fe receivers, and Mr. Irvin for the respondents, were present. All the defendants, except Director Goodwin, were in
I V I g- TN all receipts for cooking 1 requiring a leavening agent | the ROYAL BAKING | POWDER, because it is an L absolutely pure cream of tartar # powder and of 33 per cent, greater leavening strength than other powders, will give the best results. It will make the & food lighter, sweeter, of finer $ « flavor and more wholesome. (4 A I 2? ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Gentlemanly Burglars in Japan. Even the most gentlemanly of our burglars have much to learn from Japan in the wav of politeness if one may judge by a description of the manners of rob era in that country given in the Atlantic. Three men broke into a dyer’s house while he was away an t I gently asked his wife hue much money there was in the house. She answered that there were just 27 yen and -4 sen The robber laughed and said: "You are a good old woman and we believe you. If you were poor we would not rob you at all. Now we only want a couple of kimono and this.’' laying his ( hand on a line silk overdress. The old woman replied: "All my son s kimono 1 can give you. but I beg you will not take that, for it does not belong to my son and was confided to us only for dyeing. What is ours I can give, but I cannot give what belongs toanother. ” I "That is quite right,” approved the ‘ robber, "and we shall not tuko it.” lied Ills Cow to a BYelgbt Car. esterday morning a little son of I .ffl’hn Bethune was lead:ng a cow to ! pasture, and when he reached the j woolen mills he tied the cow to the | coupling pin ol a freight ear while he I went inside to speak to his father. Un- j fortunately for the cow the Lebanon j engine backed upon the switch while , .the boy was inside, and, not seeing the j cow, coupled on to the car and started I up the track. The bovine was not! noted as a sprinter, but she was forced I up the track at a 2:17- gait. A farmer who was passing saw the predicament and managed to signal the engineer to stop, otherwise there must have been a spurt of speed on the part of the cow unheard of liefcre by an bovine, or a broken neck, for the boy had tied her securely with a stout, rope. As it is, she is alive and well, and holds the record of the town for that sort of a race. —Albany Herald. A Thunder Storm Countenance. Labia he had the extraordinary talent of representing a thunder storm, simply by facial expression. First, gloom gradually overspread his countenance: it appeared to deepen into actual darkness and a terrific frown indicated the angry lowering of the tempest. The lightning commenced by winks of the eves and twisting and twitching of the muscles of the face, succeeded by rapid sidelong movements of the mouth which wonderfully recalled the forked flashes that seem to rend the sky, the notion of the thunder bemg conveyed by the shaking of the head. By degrees the lightning became less vivid, the frown relaxed, the gloom departed and a broad smile illuminating his expansive face, gave the impression that the sun had broken through clouds and the storm was over. Hope Sprint-* Eternal In the human breast. Despite repeated disappointments. the divine spark rekindles after each. Though there may not be a silver lining to every cloud, the vapors which obscure the sky oft waft aside and disclose the full splendor of the noonday sun. Thus is hope justified. Invalids who seek the aid from Hostetter's Stomach Bitters in the nope of something better than a mere modification of the evils from which they suffer, will find that it justifies their expectation. Chills and fever, rheumatism. dyspepsia, liver and kidney trouble, nervousness and deoiiity are thoroughly, not partly, remedied by the Bitters. Loss of flesh, appetite, and sleep is counteracted by this helpful tonic as by no other medicinal agent, and to the old. infirm, and convalescent it affords speedily appreciable benefit. A wineglassful three times a day. Bells ns Wolf Protectors. N. Roller, a cattleman, was in town purchasing supplies. Among other thing Mr, Roller took out two dozen cow bells, which he says is the most effective way to keep the wolves away from his bunch and that by their aid he hopes to lose very little stock this winter. He says that there is a den of mountain lions near his ranch that have been a source of considerable annoyance to cattlemen for some time past. He found their den on the way in this trip, and noticed that they had just killed two tine white tail deer. Mr. Roller reports plenty of water and excellent grass on the Slim Butte range.- Whitewood (S. D., Plaindealer. Turtles. It is said that one of the West India Islands is inhabited exclusively by turtles, some of which grow loan enormous size. Attempts to establish human hal itation on the island have always Jailed. The turtles undermine the foundations oi the houses aud nut infrequently attack the inmates.
e A , - Fa n ONLY A BfellßES PAN TO YOU I nGif WELL AGAIN OF PAINS RHEUMATIC, NEURALGIC, LUMSAGIC AND SCIATIC.
Court- Martialirrg an Elephant. It is the business of a court-martail to try soldiers and sailors accused of offence, but sometimes strange prisoners come before It. At the battle of Sabraon, Feb. 10, 1864, the 9th Lancers were required to escort some 24-pound-ers, which were to be dragged by elephants into position. One of them turning obstinate and refusing to draw, the men in charge of the animals had it brought before them, under the guard ol two other elephants, to be tried. The court sentenced it to twenty-five lashes, which were duly inflicted by a fellow-elephant. Taking a big double-chain on its trunk, at the word of command it grave the rebel elephant five-and-twenty tremendous whacks. The culprit was thoroughly cowed, and no longer declined to draw the gun. 36100 Reward. #IOO. The numerous readers of this rnp'-r will bo pleased to learn ihat there is at least one dreaded disease that scionue has been able to cure in all its states, and that is Catarrh. Hall's ( atarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis* ase, requires a onsiitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cur is taken internally, acting directly upon th« blood and mucous surfaces <■* the system, thereby destroying >lie foui.-la h o of the disease and giving the patbut strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any cu -e that ii fails to euro. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. ( HENEY & CO., Toledo. O. 0”Sold by Druggists. 75c. Difficult Railway Ilulldlng, The Siberian railway has now been opened to Omsk, 2.200 miles from St. Petersburg, and it is possible to go from one place to the otherin four and a half days. In building part of the line the men had often to carry their food with them, and sometime had to be lowered in baskets in order to prepare the track. In draining a bog sixty miles wide, both engineers and men had for some time to live in huts built on piles, which could be approached only in boats. Mosquitoes were so plentiful that the workmen ha ! to wear masks, of which 1.0 Owero bought for the purpose. —Literary Digest. . Drop I s a Line If you are thinking of spending the winter in i'alifomiaorthe South. Write any agent of the Nickel Plate road and he will I pleased to quote you rates and forward maps of the different routes. Winter tourist rates are now in effect. At the fancy grocer's: “Are those raisins imported'- 1 ” Clerk —No, butthe labels are, -ra DO VOV EXPECT To Become a Mother? N so ’ then permit us to A 1 say that Dr. Pierce's k.; ■! Favorite Prescrip-WL-Jv ** on * 6 indeed, ,'i WA “ Mother’s Friend.” < FOR 17 >,AKES Easy »‘iS by preparing the JJ 'systcm for parturition, thus assisting Nature and shortening “Labor.” The painful ordeal of childbirth is robbed of its terrors, and the dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both mother and child. The period of confinement is also greatly shortened, the mother strengthened and built up, and an abundant secretion of nourishment for the child promoted. Send io cents for a large Book (168 pages), giving all particulars. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N. V. PAINLESS CHILDBIRTH. Mrs. Fred Hunt, of Glenville, N. K, says: "I read about Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription being so good for a wo-
man with child, so I go: two bottles last September, and December 13th I had a twelve pound baby girl. When I was confined I was not sick in any way. I did not suffer any pain, and when the child was bom I walked into another room and went to bed. 11 keep your Extract of 1 Smart-We cd on hand all the time. It was very cold weather and our room was
• / : TO Mas. Hunt.
very cold but I did not take any cold, and never had any after-pain or any other pain. It was all due to God and Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and Compound Extract of Smart-Weed, This is the eighth living child and the largest of them all. I suffered everything that flesh could suffer with the other babies. I always had a doctor and then he could not help me very much, but this time my mother and my husband were alone with me. My baby was only seven days old when I got up and dressed and left my room and stayed up all day.”
Tiir. MODERN SIOTIH.fi I Has found that her little one* are improved r .reby tl •• plea-ant la .. rive, S . rupof | Figs, wla-ii in need of the laxative cltcet of age;’|. : :acdv than I-. an v<a htr.a nd that : n a r-HH C- .-' .: q> 1 , Fi.,-. 1. C a:: ;ia< lured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. A DiJNVF.rt woman put to rout three burglars wh m she dlseo ered in her room. She probably sat up in bed and be_an . le ti Peering for her favorite ! candidate. The Average Mau who *uffers from b adaches and iriliousnesa . - his stomach and liver n go a wi rkieg ordea ler each people Rlpaus Tabules till ire bilk One tabula ! gives relief. CONGHi -s.'ian S >rg of Ohio was the only Buckeye Democrat re-elected. Ila I makes plug tobacco and his constituents always vote as they- chews to. Attend the Fort Wayne Business College, When heaters arc Cred they ara I only put to work. The Nickel Plate Road Offer holiday rates Dec. 21th, 25tli, and3lst, and Jan. Ist, good returning Jan. 2nd. A LEADER of men is often a follow her. A rEAHt.-i.iKE purity of color, closely resembling the < tof early twilight: thu* was her complexion made radiant by Glenn’s Sulphur Soap, California dried prunes are ripe, i STRENGTHENING - CORDIAL AND BLOOD PURIFIER, T v A ("■ ; n c e for weal . - . st P n ' f ' - solid THROuan mm BUFFALIMHIMfifI. THDOI GH PALACE 151 I IET SLEEPING CARS between Chicago. Buffalo, New Y- rk aud Beaton. r< r r*tea or oth r information, call on nearest Tickal Agent, «»r RridrcHS \ W. JOHNSTON, B. F. HORNER, rien’i .> .)<«•! itr.endt-nt IkHi’l Ban eiigcr Agent. Cl .EVELAND O '■ • ' frl t ■ • - - NORA.—I wonder what Ripans«Tabules •re ? I see them advertised everywhere. DORA.—WeII, I can tell you. They *«ri a household necessity. ’ m Al TEXAS, and GAUFORim. litoshliiy® In connection with the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & S uthe n Railway, Texes & Pacific Rbllwa.. International & Great Northern Railroad, and Southern Pacific Railway, known as the ONIA TIH I sol THEKN K<H Ti bust a ed inservice a Through First-Class Sleej-i; g < id* and Tourist Sleeping Car. leaving Chicago daily at I<s. A' A M., via St. J.ouis to Little Rock, ■ ■ Austin, Ban , • ectio 'h through Bleeping car for the City of Me.xi o . El Paso, I<os Angdlea and San Francisco. Thi- is. the nly line from Ch cage \ hich can osier this excellent service. Call or write to any ticket agent of the Vi abash or connecting line for printed matter showing time, route, rates, de« scri} tion of cars, etc., or R. G. BUTLER. D. P. A., Detroit, Mich. F. H. IRISTRAM, C. P. A., Pittsburg, Pa. P. E. DOM BAUGH, P. &, T. A.. Toledo. Ohio. R. G. THOMPSON. P. & T. A., Fort Wayne, Ind J. HALDERMAN. M. E. A., ylI C 1 '.rk St., Clue Pl, J. M. McCONNELL P.&T. a., T.afavette, ind. G. D. MAXFIELD. D. I‘ A., In liunui rlis. Ind C. S. CRANE. G. P &T A., St. Louis, Mo. . I'.VEh’ V... Home-Seeker XLIOTnL*I> REA.O The pamphlet recsuily published by the Passenger Departnn r.t of the Illinois O nt ral Railroad.entitltd 1 ••'mhii hern Honse**Beekers* Guide for isp-i.” i It contains over 50 excellent letters from Northern. I farmers now located in the South and other auth ntic and valuable information. For a FREE COPY | address the undersigned at Manchester, lowa J. F. MERRY. Assistant General Passenger Agent. I PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination aud Advice as to Paten: b itj f Invent: • Send for Inventors' Guide, or How to Get & Patent Bstmick OTxBBBbU D. Q» JUiU.'arerelief i rrnua : KIDDER'S PABTLLLEB.^SS o e Mag* Mrs. W’nslow’s S ' tutvc Children L ti’Riung. s tns the rcau -es inflammation, j alla\ a pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. I V*. V I . - - - * >O. 81 94 When Writing to Advertisers, say yon saw the Advertisement m this paper. J IfU tjR-S WfliHß All ELSE FAILS. QT Best Cough Syrup* Taetes G*-od. Use hi time. Sold by druggiet a*
