Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 April 1896 — Page 7

Fair and Fruitful

A* the West to, It to often malarious. But It to pleasant to know that a competent safeguard In the shape of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters exists, which absolutely nullifies the poison of miasma. Western-bound emigrants should be«.r this In mind. Nor should It be forgotten, the Bitters Is a sterling remedy for dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation, kidney and nervous complaints and rheumatism.

Shooting Wild Horses.

Wild horses have increased to such an extent in Queensland that the animals are being shot with a view to reduce the numbers. Buffaloes are hlso being slain for the same reason.

$100 Reward, $100.

The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces or the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient 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 ofitr One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of Testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0 HTSold by Druggists, 75c. Windsor Castle has been used as a royal residence for 784 years.

Nervous People find just the help they so much need, in Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It furnishes the desired strength by purifying, vitalizing and enriching the blood, and thus builds up the nerves, tones the stomach and regulates the whole system. Read this : “I want to praise Hood’s Sarsaparilla. My health run down, and I had the grip. After that, my heart and nervous system were badly affected, so that I could not do my own work. Our physician gave me some help, but did not cure. I decided to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Soon I coujd do all my own housework. I have taken Cured Hood’s Pills with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and they have done me much good. I will not be without them. I have taken 13 bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and through the blessing of God, it has cured me. I worked as hard as ever the past summer, and I am thankful to say I am well. Hood’s Pills when taken with Hood’s Sarsaparilla help very much.” Mrs. M. M. Messenger, Freehold, Penn. This and many other cures prove that Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood’s Pills The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY.

DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MISS., Has discovered in one of our 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 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 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. Cx&tact Checks Bleeding, Reduces Inflammation,Quiets Pain, Is the Necessity. Sores, tncO Burns, Piles, UUnCO Colds, Rheumatism, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Chilblains, Catarrh, Inflamed Eyes, Wounds, Bruises, Sprains, Headache, Toothache, etc. Use POND S EXTRACT after Shaving—No Irritation, after Exercising—No Lameness. POND’S EXTRACT OINTMENT is a specific for Piles. 50 cts. POND’S EXTRACT ~0.-76 Sth Av., N.Y. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. Douglas »3. SHOE “Uolilo™ 6 If you pay 84 to 86 for shoes, ex Amine the W. L. Douglas Shoe, au4 ■ee what a good shoe you can buy s ot ■ OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS. CONGRESS, BUTTON, LACE, made in all kind, of the be.t selected leather by skilled work■E .js\ I men. We make and J 8 sell more $3 Shoes than any - other «EgSr A manufacturer In the world. None genuine unless name and price fs stamped on the bottom. £3 Ask your dealer for our SB, z3?i •4, 53.80, 82.50, 82.2 S Shoes- Z*R AT 82.50,82 and 81.75 for boys. ’ 1 TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer f > cannot, .supply you, send to factory, enclosing price and 36 cents to pay carriage. State kind, style f of toe (cap ar plain), size and I width. Our Custom Dept, will fill your order. Send for new lUustrated Catalogue to Box B. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton. Mass.

BIG ROW AT THE END.

SECRETARY CARLISLE SPEAKS IN CHICAGO. Free-Silver Advocates Create a Beene at the Meeting—They Fire a Volley of Questions at the Speaker—Police Take a Hand in Affairs. Carlisle at Chicago. Secretary of the Treasury John G. Carlisle addressed an audience in the Chicago Auditorium for nearly twp . hours Wednesday night on the financial question. , , Gold was down on the program, and had the platform. Silver was down on gold and had the fun. Altogether, says a correspondent, the address of the gold advocate was as near a Harvey-Horr debate as the friends of the white metal could make it. And itj-anly wanted a little more warm blood and a little less police to end in a row. Mr. Carlisle had held his long and august form in the vision of the people for two hours when the silver men began. Then the lights went out and that ended the incipient debate. They began this way. Mr. Carlisle had just thanked the people for listening to him. Col. J. C. Roberts, a prominent member of the People’s party and one of thg editors of the National Bimetallist, who had stumped the South for Mr. Carlisle in the days when the Secretary talked not of gold but of silver, arose in his seat, and, in a voice that was heard above the din of

cheering and other noises, demanded the attention of the chairman, M. J. Carroll, who had called upon Secretary Grady to read a resolution thanking Mr. Carlisle for having accepted the invitation of trade unionists to address them. “I desire to ask Mr. Carlisle,” said Col. Roberts, “to answer one question.” “Sh-h-h-h-h,” said the people, and Mr. Carlisle did not turn his retreating form. M. J. Carroll, who had not called for short words of testimony in closing, jumped up with the resolutions in his hand. “Whereas-—he began. “Why don’t you let the speaker answer the question,” shouted another man, rising in an excited little group, “Whereas ” “Mr. Chairman, why don’t you ” The “whereas” seemed to have it and the resolution, which advised all the workingmen to read Mr. Carlisle’s speech and voted him unlimited thanks, was read, although for the rising din it might as well have been Weyler’s proclamation. The groups of silver men, who were intent upon asking the question, were noisy anfl belligerent. But two policemen had <sol. Roberts in their eyes, and found him and conducted the Populist to the rear. Chairman Carroll finally managed to put the resolution of thanks to a vote. There were thunderouk “yeas,” but the “noes” would have carried any ordinary caucus. Little whirlpools of turmoil were forming in different parts of the house, and the policemen were kept busy. The crowd, too, was moving homeward. “Hurrah for Eugene V. Debs, anyway,” yelled a silver man. This called forth a vigorous response. “Hurrah for John G. Carlisle,” shouted a gold man in the gallery. The “house” was plainly “gold.” By this time the police had circulated their rotund forms quite thoroughly and the belligerents were quieted. The question which they wanted to ask. and for which Col. Roberts rose, related to Carlisle’s speech in 1878,-when he pronounced the demonetization of silver “the most gigantic crime of this or any other age,” which would “ultimately entail more misery upon the human race than all the wars, pestilence and famine that ever occurred in the history of the world.” The silverites had fun earlier in the evening by distributing the following tribute to Mr. Carlisle, until the police stopped them: “John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky, after a lifetime devoted to the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1, was suddenly converted in 1893 to the gold standard in order to secure a seat in Cleveland’s cabinet. “He now comes here, fresh from the banquet tables of the Wall street gold bugs, to tell the idle and starving workingmen of Chicago how they may be successfully robbed by the gold bugs fbr the next four years.”

CLEVELAND AND CUBA

President Complies with the Request Made by the Senate. The President has transmitted to Congress without comment the correspondence called for by the Senate at the instance of Senator Hoar relative to the attempt at mediation made by the United States Government during the course of the preceding rebellion in Cuba. The correspondence covers the period from November 5,1875, to August, 1876, and comprises about 400 typewritten pages. A great part of it has already been made public, some of it in Wharton’s digest of international law and some in correspondence formerly supplied to Congress. The leading feature is the letter of Secretary Fish to United States Minister Caleb Cushing at Madrid in 1875 setting out at great length the evils of the situation as it then existed in Cuba and suggesting reforms that the Spanish Government should put into operation in Cuba to correct these abuses. Copies of this note were submitted to all of the courts of Europe, apparently to pave the way for the intervention that was hinted at in case Spain failed to profit by the suggestions of Mr. Fish, but the concluding shatters of the correspond-

ence slow, as is well known now, that the efforts to intervene came to nffnght and that the recognition of the ency of the insurgents was held up by our Government

Grand Kush for Homes to Take Place on May 15. In ap irregular rectangle in northwestern Minnesota, with a length of 112 miles and a breadth of 100, with a frontier of about 500, and containing 900,000 acres ready for settlement, is the great Red Lake reservation, the last of the large northwestern Indian reservations. It is to be opened to the settler on May 15. The entire reserve consists of about 4,000,000 acres, but much of it contains pine and will not be allowed for settlement, while more is to be reserved for the 1,500 Indians of the Red Lake Chippewas, and will not come into the market until the band is wiped out or has become sufficiently civilized to take and improve allotments and cease to be the ward of the nation. The reservation is virgin territory, of meadow, oak openings, reclaimable bog, prairie and brush lands, an unbroken wilderness of pine and hardwood forest, of tamarack, cedar and spruce swamp, of muskeg and of lake, brook and river. Save the freighters’ roads to and from the trading post at the agency at the south shore of the lake, in the center of the lands, and the marks of the surveyor’s ax and scribe on section lines and corners, there are no signs of the intrusion of the white man on this the greatest hunting and fishing ground held for the northW’estern Indians. Were it not for the prevalent industrial and financial depression there would be a

MAP OF THE RESERVATION.

rush to this promised land as great as was that at the opening of the Oklahoma country, and as it is there is the greatest movement of people that the Northwest has ever seen. German and Scandinavian farmers are in the majority of incomers. The States of lowa, Minnesota and Dakota have furmshed the largest quota. Southern Michigan, the Dunkard colonies of Indiana, Nebraska, and even the New England States are looked on to be represented later by hundreds of colonists. The. Red Lake lands are beautiful for situation, well watered by streams whose sources are in never-failing springs, while ten to fifteen feet will tap the underground v V ns J" any part of the lands to be opened. There is no danger of drouth. There are no prettier locations for homes in all the VV est than on the streams that the Red Lake Indians have so zealously guarded for these many years, and are now about to give up. Around the streams and bordering the lakes is the timber growth, which, next to the meadow grass, will yield to the fortunate possessor the most ample'returns until the cleared land may produce crops. This timbered growth comprises all the woods common to the North, poplar predominating, and all in a thrifty condition. The timber is interspersed with hazel bushes, an unfailing sign of excellent soil. Several railroads are preparing to cross the lands in the near future, most of them running to the Lake Superior entrepot of Duluth, which will give the finest market in the Northwest to the grain and produce raised. Among these roads is the Farmers’ Railroad of the North Dakota agriculturists, under the lead of D. W. Hines. The opening of this reservation will have widespread results. It will push the frontier into Canada; it will settle the vacant lands in northern Minnesota and make them tributary to the wholesalers of Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth; it will double the population of the surrounding towns in a month; it will add 25,000 people to the census of Minnesota in the first year; it will infuse new blood and new life into the farming communities of the Northwest.

Rev. Dr. John Lanahan sprung a sensation in the Methodist preachers’ meeting at Baltimore when he announced that in a few days he would publish in a permanent form a document entitled “The Era of Frauds in the Methodist Book Concern at New York,” where he was at one time an agent. A magnificent banquet was given at the City of Mexico by foreign resident manufacturers, merchants and bankers in honor of President Diaz. The station house of the Vera Cruz Railway was converted into a banquet hall and 500 people sat down to the table.

Heads of the Triple Alliance, Who Held an Important Conference at Naples Last Week.

RED LAKE RESERVATION.

THREE KINGS IN COUNCIL.

GEN. FITZHUGH LEE.

Something of the -vewly Appointed Consul General to Cuba. Gep. Fitzhugh Lee, the newly appointed consul general to Cuba, is a nephew of Gen. Robert E. Lee and served under the

GEN. FITZHUGH LEE.

great Confederate leader during the was of the rebellion. He was born in 1835 at Clermont, Fairfax County, Virginia, and was graduated from the military academy in 1856. Commissioned as lieutenant in the Second cavalry, he went to the frontier, was severely wounded by the Indians and was recalled to be instructor of cavalry at West Point. When the war came Lieut. Lee resigned his commission and joined the Confederate cause. At first he did staff duty and was adjutant general of Ewell’s brigade. In September, 1861, he was made lieutenant colonel of the First Virginia cavalry and soon afterward was promoted to be colonel. He served in all the campaigns of the army of northern Virginia. In 1862 Lee was made a brigadier general and a major general in 1863. At Winchester, in 1864, he was disabled by a severe wound, which kept him from duty for several months. In 1865 he was placed in command of the whole cavalry corps of the army of northern Virginia, and a monUi later surrendered to Gen. Meade at Farmville and retired to his Virginia home. In 1865 he was elected Governor of Virginia. Gen. Lee goes to Cuba with absolute liberty to travel about wherever he pleases unobstructed and unrestricted by the Spaniards. Should the President desire any information concerning the state of affairs in Cuba the new consul general will be in a position to gather it. It is known that Gen. Lee, while being a fair man, warmly sympathizes with the insurgents.

FARM WORK PROGRESSING.

Weekly Reports of the Weather Bureau Covering Crop Prospects. The Weather Bureau, in summing up the situation in weather and crop circles, says that in the Southern States the week has been generally favorable for farm work, which has made good progress. In the more Northern districts, owing to the lateness of the season, farming operations are much delayed, but are being pushed forward as rapidly as possible. Cotton planting is now quite general in the nbrthern portion of the cotton belt, is well advanced in the southern portion, and the early planted is coming up. In Florida, it is nearly finished. Winter wheat is reported in excellent condition in Nebraska and eastern Kansas, and much improved and looking well in lowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee and northern Illinois. Less favorable reports are received from Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and New York, in some of which States it has been winter killed and is in poor condition. No corn has yet been planted north of the Ohio river, but some planting has been done ns fur north as Kentucky and Virginia. West of the Mississippi some corn hns been planted ns far north as southern Nebraska. Planting is nearly completed in Oklahoma, and is in progress in Missouri. In Illinois and Indiana plowing for corn is general. In the Southern States corn planting is practically completed.

START A BLAND BOOM.

Missouri Democrats Declare for Free Silver Coinage. R. P. Bland’s boom for the presidential nomination, on a free coinage of silver platform, was launched with great enthu-

siasm by the Missou r i Democratic State convention at Sedalia. It was the largest gathering of the party ever held in the State, for, in aiidition to the 535 delegates, over 2,000 visitors were present. Chairman Moffitt of the State Cen-

R. P. BLAND.

tral Committee called the convention to order in Wood's Opera House at 12:30 o’clock. After prayer by Rev. J. S. Meyer, ex-Congressman William M. Hatch was announced as temporary chairman, and Jeff Pollard of St. Louis as temporary secretary. Mr. Hatch made a spirited address, and throughout its delivery was cheered long and loud. The mention of Mr. Bland’s name as one of the most valuable and faithful of Democrats brought forth a flood of applause and cheers. Mr. Hatch hoped the Chicago convention would adopt an unequivocal silver platform.

DEBS BARRED OUT.

Faculty of Chicago University Refuses to Let Him Address Students. Division of opinion and not a little feeling has been aroused among the students of the Chicago University by the decision of the faculty in barring E. V. Debs from speaking to the students some time during the next quarter. At a meeting of the local oratorical association it was agreed to invite the labor leader. When the members of the faculty were apprised of the intended invitation they immediately sent out for the representatives of the association and firmly demanded that no such invitation should be issued.

ARMY HARDSHIPS.

No Om but a Veteran Can Realize the Sufferings from Army Life. It Often Makes Our Able-Bodied Men Helpless Invalids-The Story of One Who Suffered for Twenty Years. From tAe Farmere' Voice, Chicago. 11l Edson A. Wood, who now lives at 990 Washington boulevard, Chicago, 111., was born on a farm in Wyoming County, N. Y., fifty years ago. As a young man he suffered two sun strokes in the fields. When the war broke out, he joined the 57th Illinois Volunteers, with which he served two years, when sickness forced his discharge. The effects of the sun strokes and his army life undermined his health and he seen found his brain, heart and kidneys were affected. For eight years he was with the West Chicago Street Car Company; but was forced to seek lighter work, as the exposure increased his bronchial and asthmatic troubles. His constitution gradually but surely breaking down, strange dizzy spells becoming more frequent, he finally sought relief in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. He said to a reporter: “It was korne time about a year ago when I wks' very poorly, that my head was giving me a great deal of trouble, dizzy spells, aches qud queer feelings, and then I also had a strange feeling of uncertainty in the use of my lower limbs when walking. “Physicians examined my condition c osely and were of the opinion that I had a j t . ? B yn>Ptoms of locomotor ataxia, and I believe they were right, alho last summer 1 had a very hard time with an attack of tonsilitis and neuralgia, from which I did not Recover for some time. It was then that 1 commenced to take these Pink Pills, and had only taken a few boxes when I discovered a remarkable change for the better in every way. The pills seemed to relieve me of aches and P a * ns t the .symptoms of locomotor ataxia have left me entirely, and thev have made me strong and feel like myself "I am going to continue with the use of the pills for the reason that having relieved me of the ailments I thought had come to stay, having been caused thirty years ago from hardships in the army, I am practically rid of them and will lose no efforts when I have the remedy at hand to keep them rid. lam only too glad to tdll all my friends what experience I have had with Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, and when they see the good physical condition I am in now, although near sixty years of nge, they will come to the same conclusion as myself. “The above is a correct statement of facts concerning myself. (Signed) A. WOOD.” Subscribed and sworn to before me this 22d day of January, 1896. ROBERT ANSLEY, Notary Public. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.

Borrowed Coat of Honor.

When Wordsworth was made poet laureate he had to borrow Samuel Rogers’ dress coat to go to court In, and, strangely enough, when laureate honors fell on Tennyson, he, too, borrowed Rogers’ coat for the same purpose.

A Cat Worth Having.

One of the greatest successes in the history of this country Is that achieved by Boston’s unique 5-cent magazine, The Black Cat. In seven months it has reached a sal? of one quarter of a million copies per issue. The chief reason for this is that each number contains hitlf a dozen of the most original and fascinating stories that brains and genius can produce and money can buy. The Philadelphia Cull aptly says: Its phenomenal success has already earned for it the title, “The Marvel of the Magazine World,” and it would certainly be impossible to find in a single number of any other publication such captivating tales as are published monthly in The Black Cat. And the Boston Post pronounces it the most fascinating 5 cents' worth on earth.—Rochester Post Express. This most fascinating of all the modern periodicals is issued by The Story Publishing Company, Boston, Mass., at 5 cents a copy, or 50 cents a year.

All About Western Fann Lands.

The “Corn Belt” in'the name of an illustrated monthly newspaper published by the Chicago, Burlington mid Quincy R. R. It aims to give information in an interesting way about the farm lands of the West. Send 25c in postage stamps to the Corn Belt, 209 Adams street, Chicago, and the paper will be sent to your address for one year; Improper and deficient care of the scalp will cause graybess of the hair and baldness. Escape both by the use of that reliable specific, Hall’s Hair Rcnewer. Pico’s Cure for Consumptibh is the best of all cough cures.-Grebfge W. Lots, Fabaeher. La., Aug. 20, 1895. There is something higher than looking on all sides of a question. It is to have the charity to believe that there Is another side. Freckles, tan and all beauty-marring blemishes vanish from the face when Glenn’s Sulphur Soap is used. Everyone who onoe trlee Dobbin*’ Floatlngßorax Soap continue* to use It, for It la really superior to *? e " o, , ot £ er Boating soaps, and costs you no more. Had* of Borax, floats, lob per cent. pure.

ioueerNames^l^i^^ 0 ? “Blue Spots’’—” Dead Aches”— 3k are all well known of flesh, bone, Qf Tomhc Ail W Vr and m tiscle, and easily co red by Uli* \ How it looks, \ to the women who wash with Pearline, when \ they see a woman washing in the old-fashioned wa y w j tb soap-rubbing the clothes to pieces, rubbing away her strength, wearing herself 1 ° Ver the washboard! To these Pearl- \ | * ne women, fresh from easy washing, she seems to “wear a fool’s cap unawares.” Everything’s in favor of Pearline—eas‘er wor k> quicker work, bettei // 7 “I \ \ work » safety, economy. There’s L\ll u I 1 nOt ° ne tb ’ n & a g a * nst it. What’s ML Vx /I jP’’ k tbe use of washing in the hardest %. ' I way, when it costs more money ? is# H i Bear in Mind that “The Gods Help Those Who Help Themselves.” Self Help Should Teach You to Use SAPOLIO

The Ape Mutinied.

W. C. Coup, the circus man, has had many remarkable experiences, and a reporter asked him If the dreaded cry of “Hey, RubeF’ had ever sounded In his tent. “No,” said he, “but it came near it once in a small Kansas town, when, fortunately, there were no newspapers to spread the affair publicly. I had among the attractions of the show a man-eating ape, the largest ever In captivity. He was chained to the dead trunk of a tree and looked very ferocious. “Early in the day I speak of a countryman handed him a piece of tobacco, which the ape chewed with great pleasure. The word was passed around that the ape would chew tobacco, and several gave him plugs. Finally one gave him a piece that was filled with cayenne pepper. The ape bit it, then, smarting with indignation, snapped the fastenlng-ef his chain and yelled: ’Let me at 'lm, the murtherin’ ijit. Oi'll hev the lolfe av him or me name ain’t Mahoney.’ Then ho started through the crowd with a handspike ready to strike, but the culprit escaped. I docked the ape a week’s salary, and it was the last time I had any trouble with him.”—Philadelphia Times.

Lions Guard the Women.

The Sultan of Morocco keeps a large number of live lions about his premise es, nnd in the evening these animals are set loose in the courtyards of the palace to act as guards of the royal harems.

The Modern Way

Commends itself to the well-informed, to do pleasantly and effectually what was formerly done in the crudest manner and disagreeably as well. To cleanse the system and break up colds, headaches and fevers without unpleasant after effects, use the delightful liquid laxative remedy, §yrup of Figs.

Died in Africa.

Out of (150 white soldiers sent to Ashantee 477 were taken down with fever, while the West India regiment of blacks had 200 hospital cases. FITS.-All Fit. Mopped free by Dr. K line's Urn «t Nerve lieatot er. No Fits after Unit rtuv’x use. Mar velouH cures. Treatise and H.OO trial bottle tree Tn Jft cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 981 Aroh st.. JflilU. l*a • ■ . - Mr». Winslow's Sootkino Bvspr for Children teething; sottena the sums, ream™ inflammation, allays pain, cures wind oolio. '« cents a bottle.

other fa BaffleASfc PLUG 5/4 ounces for 10 cents. You may have “money to burn,” but even so, you needn't throw away 2 ounces of good tobacco. For 5 cents you get almost as much “Battle Ax ” as you do of other high grades for 10 cents.

F h TO C i i < -By * Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coapoaad Will cure the worst forms of female complaints, all ovarian troubles, inflammation and ulceration, falling and displacements of the womb, and consequent spinal weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the change of life. Every time it will cure Backache. It has cured more cases of leuearrhoea by removing the cause, than any remedy the world has ever known; it is almost infallible in such cases. IA dissolves and expels tumors from ths uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver PiUs work in unison with the Compound, and are a sure cure for constipation and sick headache. Mt*, j Pinkham’s Sanative Wash is of great value for local application. A farm for Every Kan_ Choice lauds, suitable for stock raising, dairytag er grain producing. Timber and mineral resources uaaurpassed. Within easy reach of railroads. seMete ?hW u e w oWe NORTHERN WISCONSffIfg; consln central Railroad. We will gladly tunhh general Information and promptly answerssla qulrlos concerning them. Address for free Mssplilet, Frederick Abbot, land Cotaeluloasr. Wfcne--ln Ccnfral R. R„ Milwaukee, Wisconsin. WEHAV F NO ACEHTS, ’ VI he II m W bbut sell direct SeWsese--rinir -• 1 — 1 utsyslssei shin anywhere (or ewawi- 1 \ H nation before .ala gHO' '■jU ' tiling warranted. tar IM: Cwft AdaMw "x ■t>i'*a of ('Hi-rlares, Ml Z'IASB'X Burnt'.., dlabW / .'iTflk.jMFTOS't ■ 1 Itldlflc xatldlee. WrSJ r l«r catalogue. ELKHART /“-eLX XJ MS_i2s Carrlaiet Harness Mg. Co. W.B. PaaTT.Saoy Elkkart. tad. dfk J " ill bar fcr a fl-LINK advarMaesasog ('*||| four weeks in 100 high grads tUlasta 'kill newsiiapers lOO.Ort) circulation ser weak OLD

H. J. Martin, of 702 T street; N. W., Washington, D. 0., in a recent Interview had with him by Mr. H. D. Brodie, of the Washington Chronicle, said: “Having suffered for many years with dyspepsia. Indigestion and biliousness, I tried every known remedy, consulted , many physleJaßg vylfh, the hpp? < getting cured or even relief, but nothing seemed to relieve me. After meals I would feet as if a ball of lead was. lodgedAn PW ■ stomach, tired and listless, as h though life was scarry ,worth living. Finally I wag attracted to 4he ad of Ripans Tabu les, and concluded to try them. After taking the first two or three I was surprised to find the relief they gave; and by the time I emptied the first box I felt like a new man. I have , never been without Ripans Tabtitea since, nor have I ever suffered since. I heartily and earnestly recommend them to any one sufferIng as I did.” Hi pans Tabuies are sold by druggists. or hyMßli the price (SO cent* * box) is (ent to Tbe Ripans Cbenf cal Company, No. 10 Spruce Street. New York. Sampto vial. 10 cents. C.N.C. ■■ r 'Kw’HHmT WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISKMI ’ ’ please say you saw the adverthMßMi* In thia paper. ■ 1 , ~ in time, 80K by ■■ ■> "w