Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 January 1891 — Page 7

If Yon Had a Friend

About to visit some section of country whet* malarial disease, either in the form of chills and fever or bilious remittent was particularly rife, -what would be about the best advice yon could give him? We will tell you—to carry along, or procure on arriving, that potent medicinal safeguard, Hostetler's Stomach Bitters, known throughout malaria-plagued regions, here and in other countries, as the surest means of disarming the miasmatic scourge, and robbing it of its fell destructive influence. Not only does it fortify the system by increasing its stamina, but overcomes irregularity of digestion, the liver and the bowels, and counteracts the unfavorable effects of over-exertion, bodily and mental exposure in rough weather, or occupation too sedentary or laborious, loss of appetite, and oxcessive nervousness. The functions of alimentation, bilious secretion, and sleep have in it a most powerful and reliable auxiliary. v .

The Original Three-Card Monte Man.

I found a man in my Bounds recently, says a correspondent, who was well acquainted with “Canada Bill, ” the original three-card monte man, now dead. “The three-card monte game,” he said, “was first worked by ‘Canada Bill * in 1869. Bill was a Canadian, as his name Indicated, and he was as stupid a looking man as one could easily find. Bill worked his game on the trains usually, passing himself off as a cattleman from Texas. In 1873, after making a vast sum of money at his trick, ‘Canada Bill-< conceived the idea of organizing all. the men inclined to be 4 crooked ’ in the various points about which he plied his vocation. He called it, as all men of his calling now do, ‘squaring the head’—that is, * fixing ’ the head officials of a town if possible, establishing a fence, having a •fixed’ lawyer, and ready ‘straw-bail property holders. ’ At one time he had working for him 1,600 men on the trains and in towns and cities.” We quoted a current item about the experience of Dr. Alanus with a vegetarian diet, and his attributing disease of the blood vessels to his use of that diet. We expressed doubt of any relation of cause and effect between euch diet and softening arteries. Now Dr. Holbrook writes that probably it is a “fake” item, since the German vegetarians never heard of Dr. Alanus, and no such name appears in their medical directories. Dr. Foote’s Health Monthly. An ancient statuette of Diana, said to be by Praxiteles and valued at $50,000, is on exhibition In New York.

svtgsfm Rheumatism. Neuralgia. N. Ogden, Mich., Hagerstown, Md., May 17,1890. Aprn 21> 18M _ yo'ur i h nta b luabl°e f ."handlers of my medicine, St. Jacobs family, have used St. Oil, cured me of rheu- Jacobs Oil for neumatism and rheu- <» matic swelling of the g a !* a I0 " n “ I 11 knee. It is the best in a speedy, eflective the universe.” cure.” J. SI. L. Porter. . ’Mrs. Agnes Kelley. IT HAS WO EQUAL. SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Drqggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price io ct*., 50 cts. and SI.OO. If your Lungs are sore or Pack lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 23 cts. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY, BEECHAM’S PILLS For Moos ai Soma Disorient. “Worth a Guinea a Box" but sold for 25 Cents, BY ALL DRUGGISTS. - To You, GENTLE READER. If yon ham Dyspepsia, yon have heartburn with pain in the stomach after eating, yon have headache, are billons at times, yonr bowels an constipated, yonr skin is yellow, yonr tongue is coated, ypn have dark circles around yonr eyes, yon can not cat what yon like, yon do not sleep well, yon are USED UP GENERALLY. Get a bottle of DR. WHITE’S OANDELION ALTERATIVE It will care yon. Yon can eat wkat yon like, yon will sleep like a child, yonr skin will get clear, yonr eyes will get bright, yon will get FLESH OM YOUR BONKS and will feel vigor* ous enongh to take anytklng yon can lay yonr hands on. Very large bottle hr SI, and every bottle warranted.

scon’s EMULSION DOES CURE CDNSUMPTIOH In its First Stages. He sure you get the genuine.

INDIANS WERE VICTORS

THEY REPULSED THE SOLDIERS OF UNCLE SAM. Another Terrible Battle with the Kedakine Near Pine Kidge _Agency—The Troop# Go Oat to Beet the Indians and Are Driven Back—Six Soldier* Killed. [Pine Ridge (8. D.) dispatch.] The day opened with an attack on the wagon train of the Ninth Cavalry, within a mile and a half of the agency. Col. Henry and four companies of the Ninth arrived at daybreak. An hour after, the Indians fired into the wagons. In a few moments both the Seventh and the Ninth were out and in line of 'battle on the bluffs north of the agency. The firing was seen plainly from here. In one hour the skirmish was over and the soldiers started for breakfast, but were destined to go without. A courier arrived with word that the Catholfc Mission wa9 on fire, and the teachers and pupils being massacred. In twenty minutes the weary, hungry, and exhausted cavalrymen were once more in motion. They found that the fire, the black smoke of which could be plainly seen, was the day. school, one mile this side of the mission. The Indians were found ,to number 1,800 and over. The Seventh formed a line and began the fighting, which was carried on by only 300 or 400 Indians at a time, while the great mass kept concealed. Col. Forsythe suspected an ambush and did not let them draw him on into dangerous ground. Col. Henry started one hour later thaq Forsythe and. owing to the exhaustion of his horses, had to travel slowly. The Seventh became surrounded by Indians, but just as the circle was ready to charge the Ninth broke in upon the rear and they fell back. The weary soldiers slowly retreated, reaching the agency at dark. The infantry had been ordered out, but was stopped by the sight of the head of the column of cavalry. The soldiers, brave and heroic as they are, were overpowered. There are not enough troops at this point to clean out these Indians, who are still camped within seven miles of the

agency. If the infantry had gone out, the chances are that the agency would have been burned to the ground by the 2,500 so-called friendlies, who are still camped near he r e. Every one is exhausted. No sleep, little food, hard riding, and steady fighting have exhausted every one. Owing to the tiring being at long range, the damage done the troops was small. Lieut. Mann, of Company K, Seventh Cavalry, was wounded. He was shot through the side. The First Sergeant of Company K is also wounded. The fights of yesterday and to-day leave Company K without a single officer. either commissioned or non-com-missioned. Clauson, a private in Troop C; Kirkpatrick, of Troop B; R. J. Nolan, of Troop K, and W. Kern, of Troop D, Seventh Cavalry, were wounded. The only man killed was a private of Troop E, Ninth Cavalry, but his name has not been ascertained. A special to the Omaha Bee from Pine Ridge Agency says: “The Seventh and Ninth Cavalry arrived here late this evening and found, the wildest excitement prevailing. Immediately after their arrival a courier brought word that the Catholic mission, occupied by children, sisters, and priests, had been attacked' arid the small buildings and haystacks surrounding the church burned. The Indians were under the command of Little Wound and Two Strike. The cavalrymen immediately remounted on receipt of the news and hastened to the scene of the trouble. A courier just in says that a collision occurred between the troops and the Indians, and that six soldiers were killed. The fight was still in progress when he left. ” The Omaha Bee's special from Rushvllle says: ' Advices from thb seat of war give the news of another encounter between the troops and Indians at a point within four miles of the agency. The Seventh and Ninth Cavalry were just coming in from yesterday’s battlefield, followed at some distance by their provision train. On reaching the point named, a large band of Indians, headed by Chief Two Strike, dashed suddenly upon the train, captured it, and were making off toward the Bad Lands, when the cavalry wheeled and gave pursuit. In the battle which followed over thirty Indians were wounded, but no soldiers were killed. According to the latest reports Two Strike’s Indians had yesterday been considered peaceable and subdued, but their sudden change of mind causes the gravest fears here that perhaps none of the so-called friendlies can be relied on. However, word from Gen. Brooke to the settlers to-day is somewhat reassuring, it being to the effect that a great body of the savages fcave remained loyal aU the while, and that nearly all the rebels are dead. He further says the settlers here are not now in danger. Reliable news is also at hand that Col. Henry Is now approaching the agency with 700 Indians captured in the Bad Lands. This is believed to include all of the rebels on the reservation, and hopes are entertained of a speedy settlement It has cost the lives of about 250 Indians- and twenty-five or thirty soldiers killed and wounded to effect this result, if Indeed it may be said that peace is yet established. The bodies of gallant Capt. Wallace and the other dead soldiers arrived here at noon from the agency, and will be shipped

TWO STRIKE'S BAND ATTACK A SUPPLY TRAIN.

to Fort Robinson, the nearest military post. Rushvllle is crowded with settlers. The churches and all public rooms are thrown open, and no effort Is being spared to make the refugees comfortable. They are here, as previously reported, on the advice of Gen. Brooke They are not only ready to defend their jomes, but many are anxious to enlist with the if further fighting should occur. , / - J “ \ SOT AN INDIAN W^JS'LEFT. Hew tbe Kcdi'Went Down Before the Fire of the-fioldleri. The Omaha Bee’s correspondent at the camp on Wounded Knee telegraphs as follows concerning the battle there: In the mornlttg, as soon as the ordinary military work of the early day was done, Maj. Whitesides determined upon disarming the Indians at once, and at 6 o’clock the camp of Big Foot was surrounded by the Seventh and Taylor’s scouts. The Indians were sitting in a ha'f circle. Four Hotchkiss guns were placed upon a hill about 200 yards distant: preparation was made, not especially to fight but to show the Indians the futility of resistance. They seemed to recognize this fact, and when Maj. Whitshles ordered them to come up twenty at a tithe and give up their arms, they came, but not with their guns in sight. Of the first twenty but two or three displayed arms. These they gave up sullenly, and observing the futility of that method of procedure, Maj. Whitsldes ordered a detachment of K and A troops on foot to enter the tepees and search them. This work had hardly been entered upon when the 120 desperate Indians turned upon the soldiers, who were gathered closely about the tepees, and immediately a storm firing was poured upon the military. It was as though the order to search had been a signal. The soldiers, not anticipating any such action, had been gathered in closely,and the first firing was terribly disastrous to them. The reply was immediate, however, and in an instant it seemed that the draw in which the Indian camp was set was a sunken Vesuvius. The soldiers, maddened at the sight of their falling comrades, hardly awaited the command, and in a moment the whole front was a sheet

of fire, above which the smoke rolled, obscuring the central scene from view. Through this horrible curtain single Indians could be seen at times flying before the fire, but after the first discharge from the carbines of the troopers there were few of them left. They fell on all sides like grain in the course of a scythe. Indians and soldiers lay together, and the wounded fought ou the ground. ’ Off through the draw toward the bluffs the few remaining warriors fled, turning occasionally to fire, but now evidently caring more for escape than to fight. Only the wounded Indians seemed possessed of the courage of devils. From the ground where they had fallen they continued to fire until their ammnnitioa was gone or until killed by the soldiers. Both sides forgot everything exceptingonly the loading and discharging of guns. It was only In the early part of the affray that hand-to-hand fighting was seen. The carbines were clubbed, sabers gleamed, and war clubs circled in the air and came down like thunderbolts. But this was only for a short time. The Indians could not stand that storm from the soldiers. They had not hoped to. It was only a stroke of life before death. The remnant fled, and the battle became a hunt It was now that the artillery was called into requisition. Before, the fighting was so close that the guns coaid not be ti aiiied without danger of death to the soldiers. Now, with the Indians flying where they might, ft was easier to reach them. The Gattling and Hotchkiss guns were trained, and then began a heavy firing, which lasted half an hour, with frequent volleys of musketry and cannon. It was a war of extermination now with the troopers. It was difficult to restrain the troops. Tactics were almost abandoned. The only tactics was to kill while it could be done. Wherever an Indian could be seen, down to the creek and upon the bare hills, they were followed by artillery and musketry fire, and for several minutes the engagement went on until not a live Indian was in sight.

Personal Brevities.

Miss Julia Mablowk has entirely recovered from her recent severe illness, and her general health is now better than it has been for several years Gen. Cassius M. Clay, who has been seriously ill for some time, at his home at White Hail, Ky., is convalescing. This is his first sickness in forty years. Miss Gwendolin " Caldwell, who gave the Catholic University in Washington $250,000 and failed to marry Prince Murat, is reported to be about to enter a convent. Mbs. Chandler, the widow of Zachariah Chandler, is erecting a beautiful house in Washing.on. Its walls are of pinkish-yellow brick with trimmings of grayish-yellow stone. ■ Vincent Scully, who was Parnell’s candidate in Kilkenny, is not the Scnlly who owns land in Kansas, neither is that landowner a “Lord.” He resides in London, and for years has owned large tracts of land ih Illinois as well as in Kansas. Mbs. Belle Wooster Higgins, of Sullivan, Ate., has had nineteen years of sea life and has sailed to every part of the globe. She is an expert in navigation and could take a ship to any port, foreign or domestic, should it ever become necessary.

Btatx or Ohio, Crrr or Torsno, ] Lucas County, ( “■ Prank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chenky A Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each aud every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in nay presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1888. , —a— A. W. GLEASON, - real. >■ Kotary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. ga-Sold by druggists, 75c.

Difficult.

One of the secrets of legible handwriting is a proper spacing of the words. A school teacher says: I put a list of nouns on the board and wrote under them, “Form the plural of these nouns by adding to them sor es. ” One of the boys looked somewhat bewildered and did not begin writing. “What is the matter, William?” I inquired. “Why," said he, “I don’t see how you can make plural/out of those nouns by adding sores to them.”— Youih's Companion.

Husband and Wife

Have more than ‘ once been saved by the timely use of Kemp’s Bnisatu for the throat and lungs, after all other remedies have been tried in vain. The Balsam stops decay of the lungs and cures influenza and acute and chronic coughs. There Is no other medicine in the world that acts so promptly, certainly nono that does Its work so thoroughly as Balsam. All druggists sell It. Large bottles 50c and sl.

A Gain—Not a Loss.

Col. Yergcr—Why do you Took so downcast. Lose anything? Judge Peterby—Not exactly. In fact,, when I think of it, it is a relative gain. You see, there’s a new kid in the house. —Texas Siftings. Mediocrity always copies superiority. Dobbins’ Electric Soap has be.en imitated more than any soap. Ask your, grocer for bobbins' Electric Soap; all other Electrios, Electricity. Magnetics, etc., are imitations. We are indebted to Egypt for onions, peas and garden cress, and. appropriately enough, to “ancient Romans” for chestnuts! Miss Ellen Terry!} has-become the President of the Ladies’ Cycling Club in London. If you want to please! a woman, praise her baby. If, you want to please a Kentuckian, speakfwell of his hopse.

Rheumatism Is of two kinds, acute and chronic. The former Is accompanied by hiuh feyer, and In the swollen joints there Is intense twin, which often suddenly changes from one pait of the body, to another. Chronic rheumatism is without fever aud not so severe, but more continuous, and liable to come on at every storm or after alight exposure. Itheumatlsm is known tp be a disease of tbe blood and Hood’s Sarsaparilla has bad great success in curing it. This medicine possesses Qualities which neutralize acidity, and purify, enrich, and vitalize the blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. H; six for *5. Prepared only by C. 1. HOOD k CO., Apothecaries, LoweU. Maas. 100 Doses One Dollar DADWAY’S II READY RELIEF. THE fiREAT CONQUEROR OF RUIN. For Sprains, Braises, Backache, Pain In the Chest or Sides, Headache, Toothache, or any other external pain, a few applications rubbed on by hand act like magic, causing the pain to instantly stop. •* ... For Congestions, Colds, Bronehitis, Pneu. nAnia, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neural, gia, Lumbago, Sciatica, more thorough and repeated applications are necessary. AU Internal Pains, Diarrhea, Colic, Spasms, Nausea, Fainting Spells, Nervousness, Sleeplessness are relieved instantly, and quickly cured by taking inwardly 20 to 60 drops in half a tumbler of water. 50c. a bottle. All Druggists. DADWAY’S n PILLS, An excellent and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. The Safest and best Medlciut in the world for the Cure of all Disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according to directions they will restore health and renew vitality. Price 25 eta. a Bax. Sold by all Druggists.

Mel ■xf Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. 181 C 3 teste 8 <Chjld Pleasant and agreeable to tho Kjfl "Ts TV Chichester'B English, red Cross Diamond Brand A PEHHNROm * YUriiS A thc osteissi.SMß oesuiin. fji. o «!jr»Bfe,s«e,,B4,..Kainmtoraiito \W =7 yjp aak I>ru*jri»l tor Chichtttori DnjUtk Diamond Bratid in Red an<l Gold metal Ha \y / W *“*?—V I*® 1 *® **•* bl “* T«ke no .tier kind. Rtfuta Subuitutioiu and Imitations. V •K—r CM,CHr,Tt " CMtKic f- L mLki>Eii , t?L! < ¥r evert wa TEJffPROOF COLLAR or CUFF "" 11 " ■' A * THAT CAN BB RELIED ON •'“ p Not To Split! THE MARK Not tO DISOOIOJi ———J BEARS THIS MARK. # trade ELLU LOID markNEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN TME MARKET. . • ■ > _\

Tourists,

Whether on pleasure bent or business, should take on every bottle of Syrup of Fitts, as it acts most ph>asant!y and effectually on the kidneys, liver, and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches, and other forms of sickness. Far sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading druggists.

Healthful and Pleasant.

If you want a lovely odor in your rooms break off branches of the Norway spruce and arrange 'them in a largo jug well filled with water. In a few days tender, pale green branches feather out, soft and cool to the touch, and giving the delightful health-giving odor.— Scientific American. It is cruel to neglect symptoms of worms .n a child. Many cases of epileptic fits ean be traced te this source. You do your duty when you give it Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyers. It will save the child.

Still Waters.

Miss Greyneck—Mr. Saynaught must love me to distraction. Mrs. Greyneck—What makes you think so? Miss Greyneck—Because he comes to see me so much and never says so. A COUGH, COLD OR SORE THROAT should not be neglected. Brown’s Bronchial Troches are a simple remedy, and give prompt relief. 25 cts. a box. , A 6uoah-cttred “ham”—Poor actor made well by homeopathic pills. Beecham's Tills act like magic on a Weak Stomach. Some men will work harder to get a divorce than they ever did to support a family.— Ham's Horn. “When slovens got tidy they polish the bottoms or the pans." When servants are given SAPOLIO they are never tired of cleaning up! No Opium In Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Curos where other remedies fall. 25c.

IP YOU HAVE Malaria or Piles, Sick Headache, Costive Bowels, Dumb Ague, Sour Stomach and lieldiing; if your food does not assimilate and you have no appetite, Tuff’s Pills will core these troubles. Price, 25 cents* TNflflUA *><"> to SI,OOO C*r*falty lit.i-.1.S h.r, mn.fi. I AwUmAhrinc ASNVALLV from TWENTY lolUUo Tut ill. TACOMA INVESTMENT CO., TACOMA, WASH. PATENTS WSM MENTION THIS FAFE& mas virml TO Asrutnuss. 1111 UTCn-M EN TO TRAVEL. Wo psy *SO lAfAnlkU to *IOO A month and expenses. Ad- *| dross Stone to Wkllikuton, Madison, Wls. PATENTS©! PATRICE O’FARRELL, Att’y st Law, Veiling t’n J)JO. CAT Cfll rU 1 | 111 It ■ 1 remedies. No starving, no B fa I I Vaala wlncouvunlenoo. Confluents IsL Send 4c. for circulars and testimonials. Address. SB. 0, W. V. SNYDER, I4S SUte SI., Utag^lU, Same this paper when you write. METRIC lAAIJOHN W.MORHIS, ntnolUN Waal, lag t 0.., p.C. ■ 3 yre in last war, U adjudicating claims, atty since. STEREOPTICONS mJJTwI «* eH, ,£ eo ' MUSIC LANTERNS. PEDINE Ss-S* FEET. Cmtller Shoes msv be worn with comfort, Price. «o cts., St Drug Stores, or by mail. Trial Package and illu.lr.itea pamphlet for a dime. THE I'EDINE CO.. Wouo BviLuno, NEW Yore. DETECTIVES W*uWd in titty Ooftßiy to *et In th« Storci Benia* voder instructions from o*pt. Gr«on*n, ei-Chi«f of Dneciive* of Cincinnati, Kxpcrlcncc nor necessary. Particular* free. Aidrrss &ruAM Ifctcctlv# llurmu Co. 44 Arcade, CMbdiU, 0. II HAVE NOT KEEN ENTITLED. Address ■ * for forms for application and full information VM. W. DUDLEY, UTB COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS. Attorney at L*w, Washington, D. G» (Mention this Paper.) Memory Mind wandering enred. Books learned in one reading. Testimonials from all parts of the globe. Prospectus post trek, sent on application to Prof. A. Loisette, 237 Fifth Are. New York. Tkt Oldest Medicine in the World it iroltUly * DR. IBAAC THOMPSON’S scrlption, and baa been in constant use for nearly a century. There are few diseases to which mankind are subject more distressing than sore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been tried without suooeee. For all external inflammation of the eyee it is an Infallible remetly. If the directions are followed it will never fall. We particularly invite the attention of physicians to lta merits. For sale by all druggists- JOHN L. THOMPSON, SONS k CO., Troy, ICY. Established 1787.

TOUR MONET, OR TOUR LIFE! This question is a “pert” one, but ire mean it. Will you sacrifice a few paltry and save your life? or will you allow your blood to become tainted, and your system run-down, until, finally, you are laid away in the grave? Better be in timer aud “hold up” your hands for Pr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, a guaranteed remedy for all scrofulous and other blood-taiuts, from whatever cause arising. It cures all Skin .and Scalp Diseases, Ulcers, Sores, Swellings and kindred ailments. It is powerfully tonic as well as alterative, or' blood-cleansing, |nJJ» effects, hence it strengthens the system aud restores' vitality, thereby dispelling all those languid, “tired feelings” experienced by the debilitated. Especially has it manifested its potency in curing Tetter, Salt-rheum, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Makers, No. 603 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. ■ ■I ■ nTfll We want reilab'e men in all part* 111 fin I r II of the country who are already tr»vllfl nil I LU cHng Bale.turn to curry our lubrl- ■ ■ eating oil rumples as a side line -.name territory and references.MANUFAOTUßEtts Oil Co.,Cleveland,o matant Relief. lIIIVIC Large trial aite.lOa Ao 111mA All £7n l r/A r ftr u uAI AHnrl h OTd%l. POWDER L ~c^&a PENSIONS! Sie Disability Bill la a law. Soldiers disabled since e war are enUtlad. Dependent widowannd parent* now dependent whose soiib died from effect* of army Late Commissioner of Pensions, WASIIICTON. 0. C.

Homes Wanted. We want to secure permanent homea for a number of Orphan Babea aud Children. Responsible parties who want 1o adopt a bright, healthy, and well-grown child are invited to correspond with ns. CHILDREN'S AID SOCIETY, 204 Dearborn Street. Chicago, 111. _ _ ■rW ILLUSTRATED PUBLIJL I* CATIONS, WITH MAPS, I— MC I La describing Minnesota, North T ANTIC ■ ernment and Cheap I■ il 111 11 \ NORTHERN PACIFIC R. R. JklftilUlJ Best Agriculture, Grazing and Timber Lands now open to settlers. Maile i FREE. Address CHiB.B. LAMBO2N, Lari Ccm.N. U 1., Bt. Pan!, Minn. YOUR BOY WANTS £Our Illustrated CATALOGUE of Scroll Saws, Designs, Maglo Lanterns. Skate.. lioxiug Glove-, etc. 49~Send stamp for our No. 200 Catalogue. THE JOHN WILKINSON GO., If Vou Want to Know . nei t.hs human system, v > iLvrrrurx77n*rheUtntert. hitalth laved, Alteon Induced, [Hour to avqMMJEjWi “f wmininoe and IndhurretUm, [How to a/tfSifpymepure to all forme of dluaie, I How to eurfSrOtmOld Xyee, Rupture, PMntwii, rte., LHow to maufboipfipv In Marriage and haveprtie bob lei, Und an odjßflW Doctor'* Droll Joke*, profu*ely lUm* TEraCTTcnd ten eenU for new lvtugb Cure Book CftUtd MEDICAL BENBE AND NONSENSE, ML HILL PUB CO.. Ut East 28th Bt„ New York. purchase one of the cele- IwyT. fl* JbNSC brated SMITH ft WESSON I arms. The finest small arms If VW'f \IBK\ ever manufactured and the IV J/ if lla Srst choice of all exports. H lamifactured in calibre* 32,3f1and44-100. Sin- H !:leordouble aotion, Safety Hammorles* and '&B' target models. Constructed entirely of beat cualty wrought atecl. careflilly lnspe.ted for workmanship and stock, they are unrivaled for finish, durability and accuracy. Do not be deceived by cheap malleable caat-lrou Imitation* which are often sold for the genuine article and are not onlv unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH Jc 1 WESSON Revolvers are all stamtied upon the bar-, rela with firm’s name, address and dates of patent* and are guaranteed perfect in every detail. Insist upon having the genuine article, and ITyour dealer cannot supply you an order sent to oddres* below will receive prompt and careful attention. Descriptive catalogue and prices furnished upon application. BMITII & wesson, W Mention this paper. Springfield, Maes. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING, EPPS S COCOA

BREAKFAST. “By a thorough knowledge of the natural law* Which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful appUc atlou of the fine proper-; ties of weli-selected Cocoa, Mr. £m» has provided! our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills.,' It Is by the judicious use of such articles of diet! that a constitution may be gr dually ouilt up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease.; Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wberovar there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood a-d a properly' nourished frame.”—' H OivU Service Oaaette." Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tins. <y Grocers, labelled thus: JAMES BPPS <fe CO., Homaoopathlo Chemists, Loynoa, Ewonaisp. -VASELINEFOR A-ONE-DOIXAR BOX sent ns by maQi we will deliver, free of all charges, to any person in' tbe United Htates, all of the following articles, caretolly packed: One two-ounce bott'e of Pure Vaseline...].... lOctg. One two-ounce bottle ot Vaseline Pomade.... is * One jar of Vaseli' e Cold Cream ..... 13 * One cake of Vaseline Camphor Ice. V) m One cake of Vaseline S >ap, unscented 10 " One cake of VaselineSoap,exquißltely scented 28 * One two-ounce bottle ot White Vaseline 25 * |UO Or, for postage stamps, any single article at the price Homed. On no account be persuaded to accept from your druggist anu Vaseline or preparation therefrom, unlese labeled with our name, because you will certains ly receive an imitation xchlck has little or no value. Chesebrongh Mfg. Co, 24 State St, N. Y. ■ I prescribe and fully dorse Big G as tbe only Darwin -ms specific for tbe certain cure TO 6 of this disease. G" H.INGRAHAM,M. D., OT sasssJMrWarw ” Amsterdam, K. Y. Es Mrs Mly by the We have eold Big G for j wz.w» ~ ....». many years, Mid it ha»! CJlncinajitlJMW faction. ftß - DYC SSKSfW ! Bold by Druggists. 0. N. 0. No. 3—91 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. I Tv please say you saw the adverttaenaeaS ' la this paper. > /