Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 February 1896 — Page 7
Just as Protty.
“That is the prettiest little foot in all the world,” said Baby Ruth’s father one morning, as he stooped to caress a tiny pink and white foot thrust out from a little white nightgown. “There isn’t in all the* world another such a pretty little foot as that.” "Oh, yes, there is, papa,” was the little girl’s reply, and thrusting out the other foot, she added: “Here it is, papa.” Piso'g Cure for Consumption is our only medicine for coughs and colds.—Mrs. C. Beltz, 439 Bth are., Denver, Col., Nov. 8, 1893. “The boarders hare all left Mrs. Neckbeef’s house, haven’t they?” “Yes, every one of them, and the coffee would have, gone also if it hadn't been too weak to crawl away.”—Florida TimesUnion.
Merit f* what gives Hood's Sarsaparilla Its great popularity, increasing sales and wonderful cures. The combination, proportion and process in preparing Hood’s Sarsaparilla are unknown to other medicines, and make it peculiar to Itself. It acts directly and positively upon the blood, and as the blood reaches every nook and comer of the human system, all the nerves, muscles, bones and tissues come under the beneficent Influence of Hood’s Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl. Hnnd’c Pillc cure Liver lUs; easy to i inuu a mis take, easy to operate. 25e. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBUfiY, MASS., Has discovered ih one of our common pasture weeds h remedy that cures every kind tjf Humor, from the worst Scrofula down toa common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred 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 aiways experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the Jungs are affected it causes 6hooting pain*, 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. THE AER!»OTOR CO. floes half the world’s windmill business, because It has reauced the cost o( Wind power to 1/6 what It was. It has many branch f houses, and supplies Us goods and repairs a at your door. It can and does furnish a R bettor article for less money than BjfißSJothers. It makes Pumping and Wrkifa Reared. Steel, Galvantzed-alter-Completion Windmills, Tilting 7 and Fired Steel Towers, Steel Buzz Saw Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed Grinders. On application it win name one of these articles that It will furnish nntll January Ist at 1/3 the usual pricer It also makes Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue. Factory : 12th, Rockwell and Fillmore Streets, Cblcagw Mr. P. T. Barry, who has general charge of the advertising contracts of the Chicago Newspaper Union, is compelled to pass a large portion of his time in journeying to and fro in the interests he represents. Speaking of Ripans Tabules, Mr. Barry .says that he has carried them with him in his satchel on all his trips, since he first became acquainted with their excellent qualities. He uses four or five a week, being always particular to take one after a hearty or, more especially, after a hasty meal. He never requires more than one. Mr. Barry does not remember how he was first, induced to make trial of Ripans Tabules, but now he buys them of the nearest druggist whenever his supply is exhausted. “They are specially convenient,” Mr. Barry says, “and a mighty nice thing—just what a man needs when traveling, if he needs a medicine at all.” Bipaus Tabules are (old by druggists, or by mall It life prlye (CO cents a bor) Is sent to The Bipans ChemU cal Company, No. 10 Spruce Street. New York. Sample wlal. 10 cents. Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use R| ARIIIII Morphine Habit Cured In 10 yPIUM A STT TTQ any iue ttou, enclose Bile, and we will VO mal y. u complete, full fesaistactory answer. The Ans'a m Co.. 300 Clinton St..Brooklyn,N.Y. C. N. C. No, 7-96 ’’ ,!■,,( -. WIDEN WKITIHU TO ADVERTISERS tu thYa'wT er T yOU * aw 0,8 advortUement
rr-.M JV)ii>M,Ofl 8; (. i I ; fL^f& Served j ®|w\ Him r Right ■ Ml ■, “You can take that soap J 1 \ JB right back and change M ! \ \ it for Santa Claus Soap. |J | I would not use any ; Ever y woman who has SANTA CLAUS SOAP i knows it is without an equal. Sold everywhere. Made only by | The N. K. Fairbank Company, - Chicago.
The Modern Invalid
Has tastes medicinally, is 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.
Kinglake.
Kinglake, the author of “Eotheu,” was afflicted with gout, and he had a fancy to try a lady doctor, and wrote to one to ask if gout was beyond her scope. She replied: “Dear sir, gout is not beyond my scope, but men are.” It was Kinglake who uttered one of the neatest of mots on the peculiar character of the Times. lie had little fondness for that journal, in spite of personal friendships whieli might have been expected to soften bis view of the question. The paper was still to him a sort of juggernaut, irresistible and fateful. On seeing an announcement of the new editor’s marriage, he exclaimed: “Heavens! that brings the Times into relations with humanity.”
Florida Facts.
February and March are two of the l*st months of the year to visit Florida. The climate is fine and the social Matures at their height of interest. When you have made up your mind to go, you naturally want to get there as soon as possible and in the most comfortable manner. No matter whether you live in St. Louis, Chicago, Peoria, Indianapolis, Columbus, Cleveland, Buffalo, New York or Boston, you can take one of-the magnificent trains of the “Big Four Route” from any one of these cities to Cincinnati, and with only one change of cars continue your journey to Jacksonville. Direct connections made in Central Union Station, Cincinnati, with through trains of all lhibs Tld Florida. Call on or address any agent “Big Four Route,” or address E. O. McCormick, Passenger Traffic Manager, or D. B. Martin, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Webster’s Ready Mind,
Once, when Daniel Webster was addressing a political meeting in Faneuil Hall, the standing multitude w’ithin the hall, pressed by those who were endeavoring to enter from without, began to sway to and fro, a solid mass of human bodies, as helpless to counteract the movement as if Faneuil Hall were being rocked by an earthquake. The orator was in the midst of a stirring appeal, urging the necessity of individual exertion and unflinching patriotism to avert the dangers that threatened the political party whose principles he espoused, when lie perceived the terrible swaying of the packed assembly an,d the imminent danger that might ensue. Webster stopped short in the middle of a sentence, advanced to the edge of the platform, extended his arm in an authoritative attitude, and, in a stentorian voice of command, crle^out: “Let each man stand firm!” The effect was instantaneous. Each man stood firm; the great heaving mass of humanity regained its equilibrium, and, save the long breath of relief that filled the air, perfect stillness ensued. “That,” exclaimed the great orator, “is what we call self-government!” Try to count your mercies, and your troubles w’ill soon be forgotten.
THE TURN OF LIFE "WOMAN’S CRITICAL PERIOD Contemplated with Less Fear than of Old. [SPECIAL TO OUB LADT HEADERS.] There is no period in woman’s earthly career which she approaches with so miv:h anxiety as the “ change of life.” Yet during the past twenty years women have learned much from a woman. It is safe to say that women who prepare themselves for the eventful period pass through it much easier than in the past. There is but one course to pursue. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound should be used in time to subdue the nervous complications, and prepare the system for the change. JSSgSL It is well for those yffiSSEBL approaching the time to write Mrs. .'.TOUT I ! Iffilil PiHkham, at Lynn, Mass., and v , /V <v. k' . get her / ( ree ad--1 " S 'fj 9^ s Such f Jiaß- ♦\' l, mSSt-:--.' testimony • : i as thefol--r -i ffii lowing should be . r V ‘fjt"^*convir.-- " ir 7V y Vegetahie Com l, sfc 1 ' ■ ' ifTMMMr l ,olllul lia; ' been a V * ''>* M Cod-send to mo: >' saved mj || life wliei 1 awMajBSWK.* ’f9»PA all else I would have been In my grave ten ygars ago but for it. My womb had fallen and rested on the bladder. The doctor could not relieve me: my mind was deranged. Your Compound cured me. It helped me through the change of life all right: am now in good health. It has also cured my husband of kidney trouble: made him like a new man. Please state my words in the strongest terms. I am glad to send you my picture. I travelled twelve miles to have it taken for you. Mbs. \V. L. Day. Bettsvilie. -O
RUIN IN ITS WAKE.
ATLANTIC COAST SWEPT BY WIND AND RAIN. Railing Elements Nearly Wipe Oni Many Villa gee— Eleven Bridge Repairers Die Near Bristol, Conn.— Peril in the Barsting of a Dam. Fire Adds to Horrors. Cyclonic winds and drenching rain swept the entire North Atlantic coast Thursday. Ruin and death w r ere left in the wake of the storm. Frequently a velocity of seventy-five miles an hour was reached by the wind. Shipping suffered severely, though the warnings to sailing masters, given in ample time, kept nearly all the vessels in port. To the horrors of cyclone and flood that of tiro was added at the village of Bound Brook, N. J., which was almost wiped out. It is said that fully forty houses were destroyed by fire. Many of them, as they blazed, were swept from their foundations into the rushing waters of the flftod, communicating the conflagration to others, and in this way the fire spread more rapidly than it otherwise would. The dam at Pocahontas Lake, N. J., broke and all the lower part of the city was inundated. All day the melting snow swelled the streams and poured into the lake, which is a mile and a half long by three-fourths of a mile wide. It was cov* ered by eight inches of ice, and the whole was held in cheek by the frailest and flimsiest of wooden dams. The water rose to the top. Meanwhile the water rushing through the flume and from all the sewers had filled the Whippany river, which flows through Morristown, to the brim, and the water ran over. Crowds of people flocked down to view the spreading waters. Suddenly with a groat crash a section of the dam eighteen feet wide went down and a wall of water six feet high swept into the valley, quickly followed by thousands of tons of ice. In ten minutes the water rose ten feet in the streams. The embankment of the Delaware and Lackawanna Railroad runs, through the town. The Whippany river flows under this embankment through a sixteen-foot culvert. The immense volume of water rushed against the embankment and, not being able to escape, backed up through the town, rising in the houses and flooding all the first floors. People fled in terror to the second stories. Many heroic rescues were made. Barns were carried away and a large number of horses and cows wero drowned. A large part of the Whippany Railroad was washed away. Thousands of tons of ice in large cakes were carried down the stream, and these did most of the damage to buildings, carrying them away. Nearly the whole State of New Jersey is under water. From all sections came reports of impeded traffic, damaged houses and barns and washed out railways. Along the Delaware river the damage was extensive, the water rising within a few hours to the point marked ns dangerous. Three culverts and a half mile of track were washed away at Mahunkachunk, where the Pennsylvania and Lackawanna Railroads meet. The Lehigh and Hudson River Railroad was washed out and all passenger aud freight traffic stopped. The railroads’ losses will be many thousands of dollars. Death in Icy Waters. Eleven of a gang of forty bridge repairers, working on the railroad span over the Pequobuck river, a mile east of Bristol, Conn., met a terrible death by drowning at 9 o’clock Thursday night, when the structure collapsed because of the flood. The old New Haven bridge was to have been replaced by a stone structure. Trains have had orders to run slow over it since work was commenced, aud in the afternoon it sagged dangerously, when the 4 o’clock train passed over it. A work train with forty bridge repairers was sent to repair it, and while engaged in this work the structure collapsed, precipitating the workmen into the icy water below. The unfortunate men in the water attempted to seize sticks and. portions of the abutments which had broken loose, but. they were carried down stream and were quickly lost to sight in the darkness. Elevcb were drowned.
W. H. ENGLISH DEAD.
Indiana Politician and Statesman Passes Away at Indianapolis. Wm. IT. English, Indiana politician and statesman and former candidate tor Vice President on the Democratic ticket with Gen. Hancock, is dead. Mr. English had been ill for two weeks, at his home in Indianapolis, and all hope of his recovery was given up two days before his heart began to trouble him. Froin that time he sank rapidly until the end. Mr. English was .born in Lexington, Scott County, lnd„ Aug. 27, 1822. His; father, Elisha G. English, was a pioneer of the Hoosier State, and, like his son, was also honored with public trusts for
WILLIAM H. ENGLISH.
almost half -century, \yhen.ttoe Indiana Legislature met in IS4rM Mr. English wks elected chief clerk of the House of Representatives, and in that way he came to make Indianapolis his home. He waa active in the convention of 1850, which met to frame a State Constitution, and in the following Legislature, under the new Constitution, Mr. English was elected Speaker of the lower.faouse. He afterward secured a clerkship in the United States Senate, a position which he gave up to take a clerkship in th&.Trcasury Department, offered by President Polk. He was an ardent Democrat, even that long ago, and the people of his district sent him to represent them in Congress. He served nine years. He was the author of n compromise measure In relation to the admission of Kansas as a State. The measure became a law known as “the English bill,” and it was the theme of many a controversy'*!! that day of heated political contests. At Cincinnati in 1880 he was nominated for Vice President on the Democratic ticket. When victory was admitted to the Republican nominees, James A. Gasfield and Chester A. Arthur, Mr. English philosophically accepted defeat. In spite of their political variances of opinion, Mr. English and ex-President Harrison were always warm friends.
BIDS FOR THE BONDS.
TOTAL AMOUNT OF ISSUE SUBSCRIBED MANY TIMES. Five Hundred and Fifty Millions Are Offered in Exchange-Public Gets About a Third—Remainder Will Be Awarded to the Morgan Syndicate. Bidders Number 4,640. Four thousand six hundred and forty bi.ds for $338,2119,830 worth of bonds was the tremendous total of the subscriptions opened at the Treasury Department in accordance, with the terms of the call issued a month ago inviting proposals for $100,000,000 of United States 4 per cent bonds to run for thirty years from Feb. 1, 1893. These figures do not include about $120,000.0l4) of bids rejected as bogus. The immense offerings astounded experts. The bids literally swamped the Treasury Department. At 0 o'clock it was impossible to tell with definiteness how many bids and for what aggregate had been received al figures in advance of the price of 110.0577, at which a syndicate com* posed of J. P. Morgan & Co., Harvey Fisk & Co. and the Deutsche Bank of Berlin offered to take the whole loan. The bids ranged from par up to a single SSO bid at 130. The public gets from $30,000,000 to $40,000,000 of the $100,000,000 popular loan, and the Piorpont Morgan syndicate secures the remainder on a bid of 110.0877 for $100,000,000. Treasury officials regard the loan as a complete success, both as to the popular subscription feature nnd the prices obtained. Bids came from several thousand individuals and from hundreds of national banks and other banking institutions. Nearly all of the leading New York
JOHN G. CARLISLE. (Secretary of the Treasury.)
bankers nnd big insurance companies were represented in the list of bidders, but with a few exceptions they were outmaneuvered by the Morgan syndicate. The opening and scheduling of the bids was conducted under the direction of Assistant Secretary Curtis by a committee consisting of Mr. Morgan, United States treasurer; Mr. Eckels, Comptroller of the Currency, and Mr. Huntington, chief of the division of loans and currency. of tlie Circular. The bonds are redeemable in coin, and will be issued in denominations of SSO or multiples of that sum as may be desired by the bidders. Only United States gold coin or gold certificates will be received in payment. Under the terms of the Secretary’s circular the first payment of 20 per cent and accrued interest .must be made upon receipt of notice of the acceptance of the bid. The remainder of the amounts bid may be paid in installments of 10 per cent each aud accrued interest at the end of each fifteen days thereafter. Accepted bidders, however, are allowed to pay the whole amount of their bids at the time of- the first installment, or at any time previous to the maturity of the last installment, provided that all previous installments have been paid. The bonds will be dated Feb. 1, 1895, to run thirty years from that time, aud will therefore mature Feb. 1, 1923. According to the calculations of the nctunry of the treasury a bidder, in order to realize 2% per cent interest on his investment, should have offered $130.8749 for each SIOO in bonds bid for. ■ Bids for. Previous Loans. For the 5 per cent loan of Feb. 1, 1894, there were in all 238 bids, representing $52,292,150. Of ftiis amount $42,996,850 was bid for at the upset price of $117,223, and $9,295,300 at a price in excess o, that figure. The amount awarded was $50,000,000, upon which the Government realized a premium of $8,633,295. ’ For the 5 tier cent loan of’Nov. 13,1894, for which there was no upset price, the Government received 394 bids, amounting to $178,341,150. The amount of the bids received at $116.8898 was $50,000,000; amount below that rate, $61,776,100; at rates between $110.8898 and $117,077, $5,629,800;at $117,077, $50,000,000, made by the Morgan-Belmont syndicate, 'the amount bid at rates above $117,077 was $10,935,250. The syndicate bid was accepted, the Government realising a premium of $8,538,500. The gold purchase of Feb. 8, 1895, was for 3,500,000 ouilces, payable in United States 4 per cent bonds. The bid of the Morgan syndicate to furnish the gold was accepted. The Government, under the terms of this agreement, issued bonds amounting to $62,315,400, for which the syndicate paid at the rate of $104.4946 per SIOO, the Government thus realizing a premium of $2,800,844.
HANG A JURY IN EFFIGY.
Indignant North Dakota Citizens Seek to Avenge a Murder Trial Verdict. The people of Medora, N. D., who became indignant at the action of a Burleigh County Jury in acquitting the alleged murderer of a ranchman who lived near Medora, in Billings County, hung the jury in effigy to a large cottonwood tree which grew close to the Billings County jail, and gave expression to their feelings in a large placard nailed to the
aide of the jail. The whole scene was in plain view from the passenger trains on the Northern Pacific Railroad, and excited much comment. Medora is hemmed in by the fantastically shaped and desolate Bad Land scoria buttes, which added to the weird spectacle as the effigies swayed and turned in the breezes. After remaining hung there for a week some Bismarckians came down on the scene at night and cut down the efligies and tore off the banner. I
A WOMAN PIONEER.
THE EXTRAORDINARY CAREER OF MRS. J. P. HADLEY. Owner und Manager of a Splendid Prairie Farm—Wonderful Grit and Kndurance. /Yoni the Free Pretx, Strea.'nr, 111. On a splendid farm at Blarkstone, in the very heart of tne great, rieh nnd prosperous prairies of Northern Illinois, lives Mrs. .1. V. Hadley. She owns and personally directs the affairs of her farm, which is as rich and productive as the most ambitious could desire. She is now 05 years old and was afflicted with Weeding at the lungs for fortyfive years. During thut time she was a great sufferer, she was weak, tired and run down, and in consequence existence, even, was £i burden. There was no pleasure in life for her. “During ail these years," she said to the writer, “I had received treatment from many very successful and emiueut physicians. They could do nothing for me. I continued to grow worse, year by year, until last spring, when I was so bad that I could not even walk aeross my room, and when I coughed the blood often gushed from my nose and mouth. At this time I was receiving treatment from the local physicians, and while they are men of more than ordinary skill, 1 was constantly growing weaker anti worse. Under these circumstances I became thoroughly discouraged and disheartened. "My physicians told me frankly thnt they could do no more for me, that 1 could live but a short time'ut the best, and that I should arrange my affairs with that fact in view, that my death was only a question of n very short time. Under these wry trying and discouraging vieeumstanees my attention was called to' the advertisement of Pink Pills for Pule People. I decided to try them. I could not see that I had anything to lose and everything was to be gained. My physicians were doing me no good, so there was nothing to lose by dropping their treatment, so without saying nnythiug to them aboqt it, I began on March 22, ISJKJ, to take Pink Pills for Tale People, and 1 have continued their use up to the present time,' In all 1 have taken eleven boxes. I begun to ifuprove almost as soon as I began to take them nnd I have gained constantly until I ant now remarkably well for one of my years., It has been more than forty-five year?.since 1 was as lam now. I now fully realize that I have not known what it was to he really well. That weak, tired, languid feeling which lws been the burden of my existence for so many years and which has made any labor or even life itself a thing to be dreaded is gone. I can now work about the house and assist in the duties which fall to women on farms' and even enjoy the labor while thus employed. I cannot help wondering how I ever endured my years of torture. I consider myself fully as strong and healthy now as women \>f my age usually are. “When I began taking the pills my skin was 1 dry, harsh and dead. It has since peeled off and is fresh, soft and healthy now. My hair, which was almost white, crisp and dead, has regained its vigor aud much of its color and i» soft und pliable. It is in better condition than it has been for years. My feet wore badly swollen, tln> skin on them was dry and cracked. They gnve me great trouble. Now that is all changed. The swelling has entirely disappeared nnd they are in u perfectly healthy condition. “Taking it all in all,” she said, “I think my cure a most remarkable one, nnd I um more than willing that the world shall know whnt Pink Pills for Pale People have done for me, for it may prove n blessing to other sufferers. Yes, you may make any use you like of my experience." An analysis of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills shows that they contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life nnd richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. Pink Pills lire sold by atl druggists, or will be sent post paid'on receipt of price, 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50-rfthey are never sold in hulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady,N.Y.
Figure It Out.
If you could got cent for the first day’s work from your new employer, and have tlmt amount doubled every day (2 cents for tlie second day, 4 for the third, etc.), you would bo receiving $5,000,(XX) per day at the end of the first month!—St. Louis Republic.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering It through the mucous surfaces.. Such articles should never he used except on prescriptions from reiuitahle physicians, as tlie damage they will do Is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by V. J. Cheney Si Co., Toledo. 0., oontalns no mercury, and Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood nnd mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It la taken Internally, and made ln Toledo, Ohio, by l'\ J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. |arSold by Druggists, 76c. per bottle. Foggs colls the regulation dessert at his boarding house “pneumatic pie,” in reference to the elasticity of the Integument and the unsubstantiallty of the filling.—Boston Transcript.
GOLD AT CRIPPLE CREEK.
And the Beat Way to Get There la Over the Bants Fe Boute. The fabulously rich gold-mining district of Cripple Creek, Colo., is attracting hundreds of people. By spring the rush bids fair to be enormous, That there is an abundance of gold there is demonstrated beyond doubt. To reach Cripple Creek take the Santa Fe Route from Chicago or Kansas City. The only standard gauge line direct to the camp. Through Pullman sleepers and free chair cars. The Santa Fe lands you right in the heart of Cripple Creek. Inquire of nearest ticket agent, or address G. T. Nicholson, G. P. A., A., T. & St’ F. R. R., Monadnock Block, Chicago. Old Boarder—Wlmt’s for breakfast? Hope not ham and eggs again. Waiter Girl—No, sir; not ham and eggs this morning. “Thank the stars. What Is It?” “Only ham.”—New York Dispatch. If in need of a remedy for a Sore Throat or a Bad Cough or Cold, use promptly Dr. Jayne’s Expectorant, a useful medicine to keep in the house, because of its great helpfulness in ail Lung and Throat troubles. The covetous mind wants not only what It hath not, but also what It hath. He that speaks me fair and loves me not, I’ll speak him fair and trust blip not ■ _ •», "”** * Tm' tftsh speedily reunites when obstinate sores are cleansed with Glenn'k Sulphur Soap. “Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c. The best society and conversation Is that in which the heart has greater share than the head. To make the hair grow a natural color, prevent baldness and keep the scalp healthy, Hall’s Hair Iteuewer was invented, and has proved itself successful. Chances of War. In battle-only one ball out of eightyfive takes effect. Bronchitis. Sudden changes of the weather cause hronch iat troubles. “Bi own’s Bronchial Troches” will give effective relief. “None of your sauce,” as the boarder said when he refused the Worcestershire.—Florida Tlmes-Union. People who blow their own horns make poor music for other folks.
We Are Poisoned by Air lad Water When they contain the germe of malaria. To annihilate these and avoid or conquer chills and fever, bilious remittent or dumb ague, use*perslateutly and regularly Hoatetter's Stomach Bitters, which also remedies dyspepsia. liver trouble, constipation, losa of strength, nervousness, rheumatism and kidney complaint. Appetite and sleep are Improved by this thorough medicinal agent, and the inflrm'itles of age mitigated by It. A wineglassful three times a day. Tlie shoemaker of Brockton, Mass., who started out to make a pair of shoes for each Governor in the United States, has l>een obliged to stop work on account of illness. Ten autograph letters hare already been received from (Joveruors who have been the recipients of bis unique gift.
Low Rates South.
On Feb. 4 and March 3. the Monon itooto will sell tickets from Chicago to all points in the South at exceedingly low rates: Abbeville, Ga., $15.30; Decatur, Ala., $10.05: Chattanooga. Tenn., $10.75; Jacksonville, Fla., $18.10; Memphis, Tenn., $11.10; New Orleans, Ln., $17.05; St. Augustine, Fin., $18.05; Tampa, Fla., s2l; Mobile, Ala., $10.05; and all otln-r points at proportionately low rates. For further information address D. K. Sessions, Trav. Pass. Agt., Minn on noli s. Minn,, or City Ticket Office, 232 Claik street, Chicago, 111. Self-righteousness is ns hard to cure as cancer. Itobblm' KlnaPiir-Borax Seep in too ram. i>nr,Made at Hnrnx. it ii.-it*. Cusu rim -Hull' a- pi I, uvr touting Huap. Worm iu ira it u I tlii.<, tu irui-you iiot'ii It order otic turn- «t >«,ur tMonr. .mu’ll uam - lion tout _ FITS.--AH JUUstoppi dfn-t-hy Hr. Kline’* (Cant Narra tteato ar. No r'itt, attar firat duy-it uaa Mae valoua curan. Ttvattae and giOti trial bottle free to *lt cue* send to Hr. Hhuo.uai Aivh si. Phil*. p, * litre. Winslow'* Soothing hyih-I' for i Inldion teething: aoitena tlie gum*, reumva iuUammatiou, allays pain. cure* wlndoollc. tie ceuta a bottle.
fccocoocccooooccccccocoo* HNever Out of Work. Srs™stg yj most from I*A.IIVS and cannot work. ST. JACOBS 0180 Q ' vlll curo nr ‘d flfc thorn for work when the chance comes. rj PLUG W The largest piece of iSood tobacco ever sold for io cents _ .and me 5 cent piece is nearly as 1 ]a.r,ge as you .get of other hif*h trades for 10 cents “A Fair Face Cannot Atone for An Untidy House.” Use
SAPOLIO rajjH* M ■ BtH Universally and recomm/JBf HB ES HI SI M * mewled for Out*, Dunn, Brulsca, WSfW H g Sore* TUroat, all ■ ■ BE JB ■JB Pain, ruea laflammaUona. » Genuine In our bottle* P" fl| ■ 1 only. See our fIH H name, Pond'a Extract Co., ■■ ■ tA i imu i sf-'\ 1 Distasteful j i|y to every woman house*, u /*< JjA'W • cleaning time with l&Hjilfc grim attend- - V ants; “aching V// yv. “tired to death,” “tforn out,” “out of > sorts.” Why don’t you get Wr* S! V\ S \ rid of these things? use 7 v\ ' Pearline. There are directions jjv ' \ y/\\ on each package that will x jr show you the latest, safest, quickest /f\ / est ways of washing. | / The wonderful success of I*earline \ (used and talked of by millions of women) —that alone ought to move you to try it And then a trial means continued use. 47a l '
BEST IB THE WO BAD. MmsigszA /g wrpyjßftUßLff l\ ft\\% -\ 17 \ iA\\or\ Vt\i\\j \H\TwaWt4^y @THE RISING BUY STOVE POLISH ta cakes for gvatrmll blacking of a itoso.! THE SUN PASTE POUSH for a outcßi after-dinner ahlae, applied and peF, isbed with a doth. Mono Brea., Provo., Canton, Mama-, tl. s. A^ ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas *3. SHOE “Wclilo™* if you pay Mto M for shoes, ex gg amine the \V. 1., Dough* Shoe, *3 4 sea what a good shoe you cin buy lot w a OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS. CONGRESS, BUTTON, Mr \ and LACE, made In all % kinds of the best aelocled leather by skilled work* Wf men. Wo manufacturer In (he world. CjmJ—^ None grnninc unless name and nBpW price is stamped on the bottom. I/ I Ask your dealer foß*our SB, aSK EM 84.83.3 ti, n.-.ntl, *t„*.2B shoes-- Ks B-.SO, 8 J and 81. To (or boys. /sSK/ i TAKE NO SUISTITUTE. Ifyourdealer / M cannot supply you, send to sac- fee tory,enclosing ptico ;mil 3Ugents to pay c image. Mate kina.’Style I ol toe (cap or plain), sire and I width. Our Custom Ilcpt. will till : your order, Send for new lllustrued Catalogue to Box It. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Man,
