Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 20, Decatur, Adams County, 28 February 1895 — Page 9

A A SURGEON’S KNIFE A fd' ** '•« a fee;;u? of horror ant dre®!. ;1 There no loujtr necessity for its use uA in many diseases formerly regarded as incurable without cutting. j»he wj Triumph ot Conservative Surgery I >s well illustrated by the fact that I Rl iPTi I?P <* Breach « nownuf»ts I\ L I 1 tRL . careii the K knife and without pain. Clumsy, chafing trusses can be thrown away ! They never cure but often induce inflauinia* TUMORS 111 removed without the perils of cutting PILE TUMORS, " other diseases of the lower bowel, are [ permanently cured without pain or reI sort to the knife , m'ONF !U Bladder, no matter how large, is crushed pulverized, washed out aud perfectly removed without cutting. STRICTURE * cutting in hundreds of cases. For pa nils- phlet. references and all particulars, Il| send to cents (in stamps) to World s DisStreet. Buffalo N. Y. MOTHERS and those soon to become mothers, -4 should know that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription robs 5* childbirth of its tor tures, terrors and \ dangers to both IMSk mother and child, by yy V aiding nature in pre- fn , " paring the system JQ \\ j iSSJa for parturit ion . MKjLMf/ Thereby “labor f .zr’Tj- ~ and the period ot confinement greatly shortened. It also promotes the secretion of an abundance of nourishment for the child. Mrs. Dora a. Guth? if. of Oakley. Overton Co., Tenn.. writes - When I began taking Dr. Pie’ce’s Favorite Prescription. I was n«>t able to stand on my feet without suffering almost death. Now Ido all my hou work, washing, cooking, •ewiag and everything :->r tnv family of eight T am stouter now than I have been in six* years Your ' Favorite Pre- ription ’ is the best to take before confinement, or at least it proved so with pie I never suffered so little with any of my children as I did with rny last.” Mirror Writing. With left-handed people, a reversed writing is not uncommon when the left hand is 1 Red. it is really the nat ral ray in which writing would be done inder such conditions. It is taken adrantage of by such as can use it freely ind readily in writing, say postal ca -ds, for it is a simp c and easy way of con Tealiiig the meaning, so long as those through whose hands the document passes are ignorant of the simple solution. For this it is only necessary to •old it before a mirror, when the writaij, appears ■. s ordinary left to writing. Hence the name ‘ mirror writing’’ is he one commonly applied to it. Clever Imitation. “Treated” birch becomes mahogany •f rare beau’y. and “soaked ‘ maple joes into all “ebony” pianos now. So •loverly is the “fase” wood ‘weighted” that nothing short of borings will prove the deception. Maple mahoganv is soaked through to 1 depth of four inches, and will polish even better than the genuine wood. ('hari.emange was fond of hunting.

“Female Sufferers, “ Hear me! “ I was discouraged, brokenhearted. I was so ill with female trouble I could not walk or stand, and had to be assisted to my feet

IjK/7 8 ... . £ r- ’

Pinkham s Vegetable Compound ; her faith won mine, and now I am well. Oh! how can I return thanks to Mrs. Pinkham ! “ Every woman troubled with uterus or womb troubles can be cured, for it cured me, and will them.” — Mrs. Kerhaugh, Juniata St., Nicetown, Penn. This great medicine destroys poisonous germs, cleanses the system, strengthens the womb. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. lOkALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula dow n to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundied cases, and never failed except in two cases (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 causes 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 jn water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. I*OVEN WlhEFENftEbOi Why pay 60 to We. * rod y W XX/ fence w hen yon can make the XXXXkKX best WoTta Wire Fence on VWwXxX>( earth .horse high,buli strongjA/X/X/X/X/A/A pic and chicken tight, f■ to 20c. A ROD? r A r-tn and boy can make a ' 7-»cj* froni 40 to 60 Rods * . Over 50 difieren t sty les aiugne Fret* Andres*. ><.XrX-XrKiTBELMAN BROS-, PATENTS. TRADE-IURKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentab sty <_ f Invention. bend for fmentoni’ Guide, or How to Gel a Patent. Patbick OTauiuelu Washington, D. C.

HUSTLING HOOSIERS.; *TEMS GATHERED FROM OVER THE STATEAn Interesting Summary ot the More Important Doing, of Our Neighbors—Wed. ’ ding, and Deaths—Crimes. Casualties, and General Indiana News Notes. Minor state Items, Delphi will have a telephone exchange. : s Black diphtheria has broken out near i Chesteron. At Oakland City 18 pairs of twins have been born in the last few months. Robert Kerns, age 19, committed suicide in New Albany. He was a rejected •lover. Mvncie will pave forty blocks this year, making about four miles of asphalt in the city altogether. Ora Thorntown Frankfort, got fifteen days in jail and a fine of $lO for stealing 75 cents worth of corn. Wille Gobbler. Connersville, while coasting, ran into a horse and buggy and was severely injured. Geoge G. Teague, age sixty-seven, was struck by a freight engine and instantly killed, at Greenfield. Winfield Richards is putting in quatz crushing machinery in Brown county. Hu intends to manufacture glassware. Greenfield grocers are at war and, as a result, granulated sweetness sells for 2 cents a pound aud flour at 25 cents a sack. Jesse Hailey, well know fanner near Bedford, fell from the loft of his barn and struck a cutting box. He’s seriously hurt. A tree which he was cutting down, fell on William Matthews, at Harvey's Corner, breaking both his legs and injuring him internally, so that he will probably die. While working at the box factory at Decatur, George Gilbert fell into a large vat of boiling water and wjs scalded to death. He was married and leaves a family. Willie, the 15-year-old son of Thomas Kavanaugh, of the Wabash road, while on his way to school was run down by a locomotive in the Wabash yards and killed at Fort Wayne. Mrs. Eleanor Debolt,of Indianapolis, was given a verdict of $8,500 against the Citizens’ Street Railway Company, of Indianapolis, for injuries received by her at the hands of the company. There is to be an exodus from Carroll and adjoining counties to North Dakota in the early spring. From one township in Carroll County thirty-five families have arranged to leave in a few weeks. A 250-povnd weight dropped from the top of a gas well shaft near Arcadia, and grazing the shoulder of J. K. Johnson, buried itself in the ground. All the muscles were torn from Johnson's shoulder. Three brothers named Pass, in different parts of the state, are a little taller than the average. Martin Pass measures tt feet SV 4 inches. Frank Pass is 6 feet 6 inches and Sam Pass, the ‘'runt”, of the family, measures 6 feet 1 inch, W. Darker Hendricks. an old citizen of Madison, and son of William Hendricks, once Governor of Indiana, was knocked down by a team and severely injured. In addition to other injuries his left hip was badly crushed and broken. In Washington County a married womand and her married daughter each gave birth to a baby the same day. Both were boys, same complexion, size, and weight. When the neighbors came in they, of course, took the babies and in some way got them mixed. Now neither mother can tell which baby lielongs to her. Chicago lightning-rod swindlers have taken Shelby County by storm. The sharpers appeared at Samuel P. Fendlers and offered to rod his house for st>. He singed a contract, and the next day his note showed up duly signed by himself for JBOO. Several other farmers are looking for what my turn out to be notes for large sums. By order of Mayor Suman of Valparaiso, all saloon keepers were compelled Sunday to remove all furniture and screens in front of their saloons so a full view could be obtained from the streets. The order was issued on account of a request of the Citizens' League. Now some of the saloon keepers say they will put in stained glass windows. At Farmland, during the banquet at the Pocahontas Council, given in honor of about two hundred visiting members from Muncie. Winchester, and Ridgeville, the small son of Samuel McGuire was severely injured by being struck on the head by falling plaster. One large table filled with eatable was mashed, besides every dish being broken. Mrs. A. J. Flake was accidentally shot by her 17-year-old son at their home in Green Township, Morgan County. Mrs. Flake was sewing with her machine when the boy, who was handling a loaded shotgun, dropped it on the floor and it. was discharged. Almost the entire load took effect in Mrs. Flake’s head and body, aud she is dangerously hurt. The contest sot the position of Department Commander of the G. A. R., for the Department of Indiana, is waxing warm. There are four candidates for the office, which will be filled at the State Encampment, which meets at Muncie, March 27 and 28, as follows: Judge H. B. Shively, Wabash: Henry Caylor, Noblesville: J. W. Fike, New Albany, and G. W. Elam, Valparaiso. Patents htivg been awarded to resideutts of Indiana as follows: Charles F. Bettmann, jr.. New Albany, vehicle bolster; Allen A. Bowser. Fort ayne, extension step-lad-dar; Sylvanus F. Bowser, Fort Wayne, selfmeasuring pump: John Clark, assignor of one-half to S. B. Rude, Liberty, tuyere iron for forges: George W. Demaree, H. O. Smith and J. W. Ditmars, Whiteland, tire tightener: W. H. Duncan, Rock Lane, v> ire stretcher; Joseph Leach, Indianapolis, barrel hoop fastener; John F. Miller, Lafayette, burner for crude oils and steam; Edmund Morris, assignor to Ford, Johnson & Co., Michigan City, crossing needle for cane weaving; Edmund Morris, assignor to Ford. Johnson & Co., Michigan City, machine for inserting threads into woven febrics; Edmund Morris, assignor to Ford, Johnson & Co.. Michigan City, machine for inserting threads into woven fabrics; Francis W. Robinson, assignor to Robinson & Co., Richmond, straw stacker. “Nick” and “Joe” Slaughterback, against whom suspicion had rested from the first, were arreste 1 at the home of their brother, John Slaughterback. in Lawrence county, 111., on a charge of being the men who shot John Niblack, at Wheatland, Friday night, in an attempt to rob his father's store. The prisoners were taken into the presence of young Niblack, who identified them both as the men that entered the store. The prisoners were hurried into a carrage, taken to Vincennes and placed in jail just in time to escaiie the vengeance of a .nob which was gathering. Had the prisoners been left there until night they w oqld have been mobbed.

when arising from a chair. “ My head whirled, and back ached, but worst of all was that crowdingdown feeling in my abdomen. “A friend told me of Lydia E.

INDIANA LEGISLATURE.! The House, Monday, passed the resolu- I tion providing for an amendment to the I constitution requiring that foreigners shall I • esids in the country five years before they shall have the right to vote in the State. A resolution for another amendment to the | constitution providing for the use of the I voting machine was also adopted. The firemen’s pension fund bill as amend- I ed and passed by the Senate, was eonsid- I •red and the amendments were concurred in. The joint resolution for a constitutiona. amendment providing that the General Assembly shall not pass local or special law s reimbusing public officers who have lost public money, was adopted. The bill defining prize fights aud prohibiting such contests in this State, came up on third reading, and i>assed almost unanimously. It provides for the arrest of spectators, as well as principals, seconds, and timekeepers. The bill providing for the teaching of the effect of narcotics and intoxicants on the human system in the public schools was passed. Senator Ellison's oleomargarine bill came up in the Senate on second reading and was advanced to engrossment. The bill as it stands, and as it will probably be passed, is a stringent measure. It provides that oleomargarine shall be stamped and sold as oleomargarine, and that restaurants, hotels, and boarding-houses that sene it shall announce the fact on a playcard, conspicuously p-wted. The Soldiers’ Home bill was before the Senate for some time, and a number oi amendments were offered, relating to perfecting title, Ac. The bill was referred tc a committee of three to make changes suggested bearing on this subject. The majority entered upon its long delayed political legislation Tuesday in th« House, and within an hour committee reports had li—n received upon two measures, the constitutional rule sus]>ended and the bills passed, all discussion being cut off by tint operation of the previous question. The first bill abolishes the Svidlers' and sailors' monument commission, created in 1887 for the erection of a state soldiers’ monument’and establishes in its stead urgency, which is to consist of three persons to be appointed by a board of state officers. Ttie second bill rushed through under the previous question was for a legislative apportionment, being tlie measure introduced early in the session, but permitted to lie dormant in commitee till acted upon by the party caucus. Five republican representatives—Howe, Dinwiddle. Nlelendy, Garriot and Gibson voted with the democrats against the bill. The interest the Nicholson bill has engendered throughout the state was clearly manifested in the House when its consideration was resumed, by the presence ot men and women from different sections ot Indiana, and the discussions were listened to with the most marked attention. The bill was still i Jer discussion when the House adjourned. In the Senate the apportionment bill of Senator Wishard was made a special order for Thursday. The day was spent in discussing the building association question. Senator Newby's bill was up for passage, which was finally referred to the Committee on Corporations, there to die. The House, Wednesday, passed the following bills: Giving the Governor the power to suspend sheriffs and appoint temporary sheriffs and prosecuting attorneys; appointing two free holders by circuit judges to every county board to review taxes; making commercial paper due on holidays payable the preceding day; allowing counties to pay one-third of the purchase price of toll roads out of the general fund; for the division oi estates. There was an immense crowd in the House when the Nicholson bill was resumed, section by section. The bill is being fought inch by inch by its opponents. The following bills passed the Senate: Making it unlawful to operate a saloon w ithing a miles of a State or national soldiers' home; providing for free license to ex-soldiers and ex-sailors for the peddling or handling of goods; requiring township trustees to keep a record of all township orders issued; providing that surety companies may go upon the bonds of officers, administrators, and executors: providing that manufacturers of oleomargarine shall stamp it and sell it as such, and that hotels and restaurants that use it shall placard the fact; requiring that the manufacturers of horse and mule meat shall label the packages in which it is done up: making it incumbent for courts to appoint court reporters where either party in a suit demands it; providing regulations forprivate detectivesand spies; making it unlawful to take fish from lakes, except to stock other lakes and streams, between April 1 and June 15; to prevent the padding of school enumerations. The house, as a committee of the whole, finished the consideration of the Nicholson bill Thursday. After adopting resolations of respect to Minister Gray the house adjourned. There was but little business transacted in the senate Not more than a dozen senators were present when the session was called. The senate adjourned in honor of the late Minister Gray. The Nicholson bill was reported to the House Friday by the committee of the whole, and the report was adopted. The bill was then made the special order for Tuesday morning at 10 o’clock. The Hou.se passed the libel bill. It is the bill that was introduced by Representative Stutesman, but a similar bill having been passed by the Senate, introduced by .•senator Shiveley, the Senate bill was substituted. The bill creating a Superior Court for Madison County also passed. The Senate was without a quorum when it met, but this did not interfere with the presentation of a large number of committee reports. The House. Saturday, adopted a resolution which provides that in future any member who absents himself w ithout permission or good and sufficient reason shall be docked his salary for the day he is absent. The bill providing for free text books, and which is compulsory, passed. It creates two new officers in each county in th< State, and entails an enormous expense, rendering necessary for the purchase ol bookeases alone the sura of $-25,000. The bill making railroad companies liable for fires originating from sparks froni locomotives also passed. The Committee on Corporations reported favorably an amendment to Senator La Follette’s bill concerning voluntary associations, by which the management of th< Big Four Railroad Company may incorporate its hospital pro ject. Senator Wishard introduc'd a bill in the Senate giving to the state Board of Charities power to establish civil service rules io all jienal, benevolent and correctional institutions, and power to enforce the rules.

1 I Accept None of the g || Pretended Substitutes for I Royal “fa I l?' ?W_bECAUSE inferior and cheaper made baking preparations are bought at wholesale at a price ff so much lower than Royal, some grocers are £ 4a urging consumers to use them in place of the Royal at the same retail price. a If you desire to try any ot the pretended substitutes wr for Royal Baking Powde bear in mind that they are all made from cheaper and inferior ingredients, and are g 4H not so great in leavening strength nor of equal money value. Pay the price of the Royal Baking Powder Jg’ for the Royal only. «« It is still more important, however, that Royal Baking Is Powder is purer and more wholesome, and makes better, finer, and more healthful food than any other baking k’-> ? powder or preparation. KOVAL BAKING POW»tR CO., IS6 WALL ST., NEW-VOKK. -

Stupendous Stupidity. All th • stupidity in the world is not confined to employes of American hotels,” remarked a traveling salesman, who has had a vast Gealof ex; erience. "They have it in the hotbls o f Canada as well. I was in Toronto not long ago, anti when I went to my room I tol 1 the clerk I was expecting a telegram. and wanted it sent up as soon as it came. Half an hour later, when 1 was not ready to receive visitors, a knock came at the door. “Who is it ” I called. “ A telegram for you, sir,' replied a bell boy “ ‘All right; shove is under the door.' "I went over to the door, but tho telegram didn't slip under. '• ‘Shove it under the door? I called to him peremptorily. " 1 can't sir.' he an wered in a helpless tone: ‘it's on the tray, sir.’ "You see.''added the traveling man. “that the wooden-headed fellow had the telegram on a tray, and it never occurred to him to deliver it in any ither way."’ Unequal Punishment. In some states there is no capital punishment for murder: in others, the death penalty is inflicted for what in comparison are minor crimes. Nearly all the Southern States punish arson with death, and in some burglary is a capital crime. In Missouri the d nishmtnt for perjury is death, while in New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Kentucky the maximum sentence for per ury is five years, in Maine, Mississip i, and I6wa, however, the ; erjirermaybe sent to prison for lie, while in Delaware the offence is punishable by fine. It is clear that when the punishment for a given crime varies from the exa tion of a small fine to hanging, great injustice is done somewhere. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that is bycen’tltutioiial remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflated condition of the mucous jiumg ol the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is uinanieti you have a rumbling sound er Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed. Deafness is tlie result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and Uilp tube restored to its normal connitmn, hearing will b» destroyed forever, nine eases out or ten are caused by catarrh, which Is potlilng but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafnass (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars; free F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. ttZ“Sold by Druggists, 75c. One Sermon. It is said that the Pope of Rome is -he only priest in Christendom who never preaches a sermon. Only once during three hundred years has this rule, if rule it be, been departed from. This was in 1847, when Pius the Ninth was Pope. Father Ventura, a famous orator, was to have preached at a church in Rome. A great crowd assembled to hero him, but at the appointed hour there was no priest. Presently the Pope arrived; probably he. too, had come to listen to Ventura. Taking in the situation at a glance, Pio None was equal to the occasion, fur he preached the sermon from the text that the o her had selected. 1,000 Bn. Potatoes Per Acre. Wonderful yields in potatoes, oats, corn, farm and vegetable seeds. Cut thia out aud send 5c postage ta the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse. Wis.. for their great seed book and sample of Giant Spurry. CNU Seneca, when tired writing his treatises on morals, found amusement in going over his accounts and caluculating how much interest was due him.

’ ► If It’s a Sprain, Strain, or Bruise ’ :: St. Jacobs Oil :: O Will Cure It . ' o Bear in Mind that “The Gods Help Those Who Help Themselves.'’ Self Help Should Teach You to Use SAPOLIO

Samaritans Among the Birds. Once upon a time a pair of rot bins built their nest upon a fence, and a pair of catbirds (thrushes that are so called because their cry is like the mewing of a cat in a bush close by. Baby birds appeared in each nest a! o t the same time, and all went well tora few days, when one morning the parent catbirds were both misting, probably slain. Their young would have starved but for the ronins. Whenever the robins lit on the rail with a worm or other food, the catbirds set up a hungry s ueak, and so the kind birds of the red-brerst determined to feed the stranger fledgelings as well as their own. Both families were successfully reared, the catbirds being so strong and lively that they looked as if they had been brought up by their own parents. The County Line. The line dividing the counties of Hancock and Henderson in Illinois, writes a contributor, runs thro, gh the dining-room of the principal hote. in Dallas City, and a man sitting at the table in Hancock County frequently has to reach over into Henderson County for the b. tter. if a couple ure married in the hotel they must be careful how they lo ate themselves, or they will be married in Henderson County unde- Hancock license. A man wiip has committed an oflense against the law can sit on the Henderson Co .nty side of the ta! le and make faces at the Sheriff of Hancock County and vice versa. A person can sit at the end of the table and be in both counties at once, and not get tangled up in the county line when he leaves the table. Next to money Rembrandt loved nothing so well as his monkey. He shed tears when the ape died and painted a portrait of his pet from memory. THE MODERN INVALID Has tastes medicinally, in keeping with other luxuries. A remedy must be pleasantly acceptable in form, purely wholesome in composition, truly beneficial in effect and entirely free from every objectionable quality. If really ill he consults a physician: if constipated he uses the gentle family laxative Syrup of Figs. A Constant Cough with Failing Strength, and Wasting of Flesh, are symptoms denoting Pulmonary organs more or less seriously affected. You will find a safe remedy for all Lung or Throat-ails in Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant. Julius C.esar was ashamed of his bald head and when it became shiny he constant y wore a laurel wreath in the hope of concealing the deformity. Which Man Wins? The one with steady nerves and a clear brain. That means, in nine cases out of ten, the man with a good digestion. A Kipaus Tabule after dinner may save tomorrow's business. Buffon’s only amusement was walking. I use Piso’s Cure for Consumption bo’h in my family and practice,—Dr. G. W. Patterson, Inkster. Midi., Nov. 5,1894. Tamerlane was an expert chess player. Attend the Fort Wayne Business College. Vtrott,, during the summer season, filled his house with butterflies. Reduced Rates Authorized on the Nickel Plate Road, tc the West and Southwest, Feb. 12th. .March sth and April 2nd, account Ilomeseekers' Excursions. Bach’s favorite pastime was garden- • ing.

f BEST POLISH IN THE WORLO. ’ DO KOT BE DECEIVED | with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stave Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Ourable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will j make several boxes of Paste Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS. S c.;'y For that full feeling That comes after eating There is a remedy. Simple but effective —and immediate. A • Ripans • Tabule. Tak<> one! at the time, bwallow it and there you are. One who gets juH as full In any other way Is not so uncomfortable at the timt. That sensation, to Lira, Comes later. To prevent it Take a tabule Before to bed. •... ..3 Z TEXAS, KEKICO and _ VIA I ®tehliiQ Tn connection with the St TzioJe. Iron MotsnI tain s< utle n Ra.lway, 'le\«-a a Pacific Kail. I wav, JntprnHtinnn.l Northern Kailroftdj I and Southern Pacific Railway, fnown as the OMA TKLESOI Tlll.lt> KOliTi’. basvlaiel m service a Through First-Class Sleeping ( as and Tourist Sleej ing Car. leav.ng Chicago daily at 10:50 A- M., via St. Louis to Little Kock. Malvern Hot Sittings), Austin, San Ant- nio, Laredo (where a airvct connection hmadewitb through aleeping car for t he City of Nesi- o , El Paso, Los Ang~les and San Francisco. This is the i nly Hue from Ch cago which can osier thia excellent service. <'ail «»rwrii« to any ticket agent of the Wsbaah <> •-■ I : : e for printed matter showing time, route, rates, description of cars, etc., or R. C. BUTLER. D. P. A., Detroit. Mich. F. H. TRISTRAM. C. P. A.. Pittsburg, Pa. P. E. DOMBAUGH, P. &T. A Toledo. Onio. R. G THOMPSON. I’. & T A , Fort Wayne, Ind J. HALDERMAN, M. P. A., 201 Clark St., Chicago, ill. J. M. McCONNELL P. AT. a .Lafayette, Ind. G. 0. MAXFIELD. I>. P A., Indianapolis. Ind C. S. CRANE. G. P. & T A., set. Louis, Mo Catarrh caused hoar>' - ’id na*s end dificuUy in sj eT. - ’ ing I alto to a great extent lost hmrino. Bu the use of Fj*FEVEa©£ j/W Ely's Cream Balm dr ppina Kk of mucus has ceased, v-jice K and hearing hare yre itly 3 impr. ■ ts-J. TU. I .vr AtCuatLaw.Monnuiuthll Y 3 CATARRH FLY’S CREAM BALM Oj'i s and c pans?- tbe Nasal Passaix-s. Allas s Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane trem (’old Keslores the Seur.es of I a.'to and Miieh. ztw balm is quickly absorbed and <nes let at once. A particle is applied into <a. nostril and i- agreeable. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street, New York. W. L. Douglas Q*? ISTHEBEST. VW WFI WE® FIT FOB A KIN®. CORDOVAN, X FRENCH 4 ENAMELLED CALF. *3.50 POLICE,3 SOLES. WE >\. 1 $2 6 - NjlL jhja I’*' -EXTRA FINE$2 $l ' 7 - BOYS'SCHOOLSHOEa. LADIESBesTP° - BROCKTON. -MASS. Over One Million People wear tho W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best, value for the money. I’hey equal custom khoes in style and fit* Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed;. The prices are uniform,—-stamped on sola. From $i to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. S' The Rocker Washer sJL _ I han proved the most saticfaftory any Wisher ever placed upon the H •* w * rr|nl *‘ *'* wash an ordinary family washing I '* 1 <»«» !’■ **< S 8 IW ON E noVH. as cleat: M can washed on the wuhhoud Wt.tS foi prices and full description. Y pnr.KER WASHER CO. FT WAYNI, INI> Liberal inducotuenti to live afentK CUTLER'S ® Pocket Inhaler Important to lingers; Cures La Grippe. <’aJ raHr tarrb, Bronchi tint _’o 1 J X tiiv in Head, and Cough. 'WrT,/ Handy a* a knife. This INHALER is approved by Physician* and Medical Journals. By Druggists for fl 00; by mail forfl.lo. Microbe Kilter. W. H. SMITH & CO., Proprietors. No. 410 Michigan Street, liuffalo. New York-TAPE-WORM ‘ Sure < ure within i hours. Nn incmweuieucea. Otte dost* (price S 2 guaranteed sufficient. GUARANI REMEDY CO., Dolgeville, N. Y. ■ BOOK AGENTS both sexes, meaning I IW P business please send address to SLLZ ESTIIL & COm MANSFIELD, OHIO. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Sybtp for Children teething: eott ns the gums, reances Inflammation, allays pain, cures wiu<l colic. 25 cents a bottle. F. W. N. U. - - - - No. U— 95 V hen Writing to Advertisers, say you saw the Advertisement in this paper. Tfi GURtS WMtilt ALL ELSE f AILS. GJ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use E3 in tUuOk Sold bv druggists.