Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 February 1894 — Page 7
Mothers need a powerful nourishment in food when nursing babies or they are apt to suffer from Emaciation. Scott’s Emulsion af Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and soda, nourishes mothers speedily back to health and makes their babies fat and chubby. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. Babies are never healthy when thin. They ought to ho fat Babies cry for SCOTT’S EMULSION. It is palatable and easy to assimilate.
Prepared by Scott & Bowne, N. Y. Druggists sell it.
TH«* Mo*t Sensible* mm\ ig sight Is a pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly fitted is at Iff} ^ast Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Greencastlc. Don’t trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and jewelers. G. W. BENCE, M, 0.
Terre Haute. Peoria. Decatur.
It AIL If'A V TIME- TABLEBIO FOUR. EAST. +No. 2, I.ocal 8:45 a. m. * " 18, S. W. Limited 1:52 p. m. * “ Mail 5:15 p. m . *■ 10, Might Express 2:33 a. nr ; No, 9, Mail 8:45 a. m. “ “ IT 8. W. Limited 12:44 p.m. T 3.. Mattoon Local 8:34 p.m. “ Night Express 12:40 a.m. Daily. tDaily except Sunday. No. 2 connects through to Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton and Benton Harbor. No. 18, coaches to Buffalo ami sleepers to New York and Washington, D. C. No. 8 connects through to Wabash and Cincinnati. No. lu, coaches for Cleveland and Cincinnati and sleepers to Cincinnati iad New York. F. P. HUESTIS, Agt. MONON ROUTE. Going North—1:27 a. m., 12:05 p. m.; local. 12:05 p. m. Going South—2:17 a. ra., 2:38 p. m.; local, 1:45 p. m. VANDALTA LINE. In effect Nov. 5, 1893. Trains leave Greencastie, Ind., FOB THE WEST. No. 21, Daily 1:52 p. m., for St. Louis. “ 1, Daily 12:53 p. m., “ “ “ 7, Daily 12:25 a. in., “ “ “ 5, Ex. Sun 8:56 a. m., “ “ “ 8, Ex. Sun 5:28 p. m., 1 Trains leave Terre Haute, No. 75, Ex. Sun 7:05 a. m., ' “ 77, Ex. Sun.. 3:25 p. m., ' FOB THE EAST. No. 20, Daily 1:52 p. m., for Indianapolis. “ 8, Daily 3:35 p m., “ •• “ 6, Daily 3:52 a. m., “ “ “ 12, Daily 2:23 a. m., “ “ “ 2, Ex. Sun 6:20 p. m., “ “ “ 4, Ex. Sun 8:34 a.m., “ “ For complete Time Card, giving all trains anti stations, and for full information as to rates, through cars, etc., address J. 8. DOWLING, Agent, Greencastle, Ind. Or J. M. Cherbbocoh, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
THE BEST GROCERIES and Provisions, I* i«eacl, 1* i C’i Tub ace o.» EXC.. ETC.. A T LO WEST PRICES, At Finest Lunch Counter in the City. Come and See. Kic fee’s.
If you want a flue RoastorSteak Or boiling piece call at S\owev '{nX.owvv y* MEAT MARKET. Fresh beef, veal, pork, mutton always on hand. Also a lull line of cured meats, at lowest prices. 3m27 Iisiins, BREEDER OF VliOKOl/GiliiKKit Poland China
MICROBES CARRIED BY BULLETS Taken from Infected Flannel Through. Which the Projectile Was Fired. Some interesting experiments were lately made by Dr. Mesmer, says the London News, by way of solving the question whether or not rifle bullets are liable to carry infection with them in their course of entry into the body. He made his trial with bullets which had been infected with germs of a particular kind, and the infected bullets were shot into tin boxes from distances varying from two hundred and twenty-live to two hundred and lifty meters—a meter being nearly three feet three and three-quarter inches. Inside the boxes was placed gelatine peptone in a sterilized or gormless condition, so that whatever germ developments were found in the peptone (which is a great growing medium for microbes) would be presumed to have come from the bullets. The tracks of the bullets through the gelatine were I duly scrutinized, with the result that in eacli case germ growth took place corresponding to the particular microbes with which the bullets had been respectively infected. In another series of investigations the bullets were made to pass through infected flannel before penetrating the gelatine, the bullets being of the ordinary kind. Here, again, microbic growths appeared in the gelatine, showing that the flannel had yielded up its microbes to the bullets as they traversed it. If noninfectcd an 1 onlinary bullets were used the gelatine developed only the ordinary germ life, such as the air contains. The bullet Is, therefore, a germ carrier of a very decided kind, and it is also clear that if clothing is penetrated by a bullet prior to its entrance into the tissues the missile will be liable to carry into the wound it makes the bacteria resident on the clothes.
USE OF THE KOLA-NUT.
European Nations Adding It to Thoir Army Suppliea
It* Force-Promotinit awl I.lfc-Prc-rvIng-Propertln Have llren Introduced Into tlia ITiitcit .State.—Product of the Dark Confluent.
HORSEPLAY IN ENGLISH SOCIETY
Coarse Joke, and Kinky Dancing Itetng Indulged In hr Smart Girls. Skirt dancing, high nlay and the perpetration of practical jokes seem to be the leading amusements of countryhouse parties in England, according to a recent chronicler quoted by the Nan Francisco Argonaut. He says: “November is preeminently the mouth for big shoots, and the country houses are full to overflowing at that time of the year. In quiet houses moderate hours are kept, gambling for heavy stakes is at a discount and a certain sobriety prevails from sunrise to sundown. In other houses, however, the fun waxes fast and furious. No dancing is considered ‘sport’ unless it be of a nature imported from the Gaiety, sucli as the unforgettable pas de quatre. A few smart girls go so far as to take unto themselves the voluminous skirts of the serpentine frock and try to imitate Miss Lottie Lind’s dexterities.” After explaining that the serpentine skirts are made of “no less than a hundred yards of the very finest Chinese silk .or crepe cut in triangular pieces to give the appearance of an infinity of yards,” our authority resumes: “It is regrettable to add that under some roofs pretty heavy gambling is indulged in, and baccarat and nap with high stakes have as many women as men votaries, to r.ay nothing of piacticul joking of a suspiciously rowdy sort, such as apple-pie bed-making booby-trapping. A certain most distinguished lady amused herself one whole evening by standing in a gallery and throwing pillows on the men’s heads as they passed in and out of the smoking-room.” A tSouri*© of Alt oitoL Wood cellulose can be converted into sugar and used to make alcohol, but the compact V;xture of the wood makes the method expensive. The cellulose of peat moss, 'however, is now reported to have given more favorable results. The cellulose is converted into sugar by boiling the turf four or live hours in dilute sulphuric acid, when the expressed liquor is fermented with yeast and afterward distilled. The dry turf is stated to yield rather more than half as much absolute alcohol as an equal weight of [totatocs containing ‘JO per cent, of starch..
Besides Gordon. Emin Pasha and the Matabele war, the opening of the “Dark Continent” has contributed to th? progress of humanity the kola-nut. Within a few years, says the New York Post, it has passed from the narrow function of delectating barbaric aboriginies into an extensive service of civilized man. Kaiser Wilhelm the Young, ever alert to discover additional means of preserving the peace of Europe, inferred from the exhaustive reports of laborious German chemists, physiologists and therapeuticists that it would prodigiously increase the fighting capacity of his soldiers, and immediately ordered it to be stored in his pacific armament. The French republic, determined that its brother of Germany should not heat it an inch to the goal of peace, promptly placed the kola-nut in the commissariat of its military establishment. Thereupon generous rivalry stimulated Austria and Italy to do likewise; whereupon the contagion of the philanthropic impulse overcame Uussia. Mountain climbers were as quick as peace preservers to recognize the battle-sustaining properties of kola, and nearly all the Alpine clubs in Europe have made it a part of their dietetic equipment. And finally its force promoting and life saving qualities have won for it secure admission to the medical pharmacopoeia both abroad and in this country. It is. however, much less known and used here than there. A marvelous property of endowing its user with power to endure severe | and prolonged physical exertion, withI out taking food and without feeling fatigue, is the particular virtue which has attracted attention to kola. Travelers’ talcs to this effect, at first relegated to the realm of the fabulous, were finally followed and confirmed by scientific investigation. Among the latest European investigators are I’rof. K. Heckel, I’rof. F. Schlagdenhauffen and Dr. Leon Ernst Monnet, and from their authoritative reports the material of the present article is mainly derived. Prof. Heckel tells us that the negroes in tropical Africa easily walk over forty miles u day with nothing to eat but one fresh kola-nut, and that he has accomplished as surprising a feat upon a diet of dry kola, lie relates the experience of two army officers who, while ascending the nearly nine thousand feet of Mount Uanigou, limited their nourishment to a quantity of kola representing about two grains of caffeine. They rested twenty minutes, climbed twelve hours, and found themselves on top with no sense of fatigue and with apparently no diminution of muscular power. Many other officers anil private soldiers. Dr. Heckel says, have tested with like results the potency of kola. Ho cites the experiences of several infantry ofticers who ate an insignificant quantity, and were not tired after walking in the month of July forty miles in fifteen ami a half hours. At his suggestion the French Alpine club adopted kola, and, afterwards, a vote of thanks to the professor, declaring that it had surprisingly kept them ;n breath and strength. But this striking attribute by no moans exhausts the vitality of kola. The investigators, convinced that in such an astonishing product lay beneficent agencies as yet unrevealed, promptly fell to studying its physiological action upon the human system and its therapeutic possibilities. Discoveries were soon announced. Kola was a tonic for the heart, accelerating, strengthening, and at the same time regulating its pulsations. “In the last stages of cardiac affection,” declared Dr. Dujardin-Beametz, “kola sometimes works resurrections." It revived the pulse, increasing its fullness and decreasing its rapidity. It exerted a special action upon the nervous system and for all derangements thereof was an efficacious remedy: and probably through this same action it retarded metamorphosis of the tissue. It was a powerful tonic for employment in ancemia and chronic debility, while in convalescence from severe fevers and other acute disorders it greatly promoted repair of the organism. It assisted digestion and prevented dyspepsia. it had rendered signal service in cases of sporadic cholera. It was a specific for inebriation. This reputation came from Zululand, where the natives found it a godsend after contact with the British chartered companies.
Swine.
However Rolicitous mothers may be about the health and comfort of their little children they cannot prevent them from contracting croup and whooping-congh. But while they cannot prevent their troubles they can readily cure the little ones with Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup.
•e
♦ d
Light llrnlinin. Burred Plymouth
Kock, Black Minorca, Mammoth Brown Turkeys, Touloose Geese, i Pi Liu Ducks and and Guina Fowls. 8m40 i
IXwANbUMjfS. ^ov SivVc
For sale, 20 extra choice Barred Plymouth Rock Cockerels. 11.00 each; 2 yearling Barred cl 5'mouth Rock Cocks, #2.00 each; 5 8. C. rite Leghorn Cockerell, extra fine, #1.00 :h; 2 Silver Spangled Hamburg Cockerels, X) each, if taken at once. Call on or ad-I
;ss Forrest Ellis, Bainbridge, Ind. 25tf
Highest price paid for hides, pi 1 s aad tallow by Vancleave & Son. lltf i For sale, a first-class piano. Call at office of Smiley & Nett. tfJ7
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. WST2 Ae had Children, she gave them Castoria.
T!ie Wing Area of Flying Animals. A French naturalist has shown that the wing area of flying animals varies from about forty-nine square feet per pound of weight in the gnat and five square feet in the swallow to half a square foot per pound of weight in the Australian crane, which weighs twen-ty-one pounds and yet flies well. If wo were to adopt the last or smallest proportion, a man weighing one hundred and sixty-eight pounds would require a pair of wings each of them fourteen feet long by three teet broad, or double the area of an ordinary room door, to •carry him, without taking into account the weight of the wings themselves. To pick out other aerial instances, it | may not be generally known that a : frigate bird can travel at the rate of a hundred miles an hour by chronograph and live in the air a week at a time, I Jay and night, without touching a ' roost; that large and heavy birds can remain almost motionless in air for hours without flapping their wings; that birds can exert continuously about, three times the horse power per pound of weight that man can and about the same amount more than a horse can. The energy given out by birds is, in fact, weight for weight, unparalleled in nature.
OYSTERS GROWING IN ALASKA.
STAMPEDED BUFFALOES.
Expert. Frononncu Tham of Superior quality ami Like Tlio.e of the Ea.t. For some time past, says the San Francisco Examiner, it has been rumored in California that large beds of oysters had softie months since been discovered in certain waters in Alaska. The location lias not been stated, but it has been understood that the oysters were entirely different from any found hitherto on this coast, being much larger and as lino, or almost as fine, as the best eastern oysters. News is now received from Washington that these oysters are in the vicinity'of Killisnoo. This special information under a Washington date was received recently, and is as follows: ‘finite] ffi-ite,. I'; Ij Commissioner McDonald has obtained the consent of the treasury department to avail himself of the services of Special Agent Max Pracht, having in view the investigation of certain oyster beds said to exist in the vicinity of Killisnoo, Alaska. Specimen shells from this locality, obtained from natives, were submitted to the ichthyologist of the commission during the recent visit of tiie special agent to this city, and were pronounced by the ichthyologist to be of a superior variety. Proper appliances have been forwarded to Special Agent Pracht at Sitka with instructions to secure and pack some oysters for transhipment to the commissioner. If the report of the ichthyologist is favorable, steps will be taken to secure spat and young oysters for the purpose of transplanting to the waters of Chesapeake bay.” Hitherto it lias been supposed that the waters of Alaska were too cold for oysters, but old residents of Alaska now here point out that this is an error. They say that the Japan current strikes and influences greatly a portion of the waters of that great country, and that oysters can live and thrive there the same as anywhere else in the country.
TOO COSTLY FOR WINTER.
Ocean Grejhoumla to lie U.ert Only in Summer Traffic. The recent announcement that the Lucania and ( ampania were to be laid up for the winter marks another step in the differentiation of the Atlantic traffic that lias been going on for some years. The record breakers of the ocean, of which the two ships named are at present the chief, are, according to the New York Times, too costly to run except at the height of the season of pleasure traveling, when a great number of people are making the voyage to whom time is much more an object than money, and who can afford to pay for the highest attainable degree of speed and luxury. The steamers which minister to this desire are far more costly to operate than slower ships that are equally safe and almost equally comfortable, and it is proper that the passengers who prefer them should pay for their preference. They are the limited trains of marine travel. Next to them come the slower ships that can be kept in service all the year round, including those which were record breakers in their time, and after these the freight boats, in which the accommodation of passengers is incidental to their main business, and which may be either liners or tramps. The summer service, that is to say, is becoming a special service like the summer trains for pleasure travel on shore. Evidently a steamer which is not meant to make winter passages may advantageously bo differently fitted and equipped in many respects from one that is. We may look to see the summer ships made capable not only of a higher speed but a greater comfort than can be afforded in a vessel thatenust be ready to encounter the Atlantic in midwinter. The luxuries the summer ships provide may become costlier than ever, while it vs likely that the cost of a voyage on steamers of tiie second class will be coitsiderably reduced as the differentiation goes on. riausiflriitlon of llatfi. Most curious in origin of all nocturnal insect hunters are the leatherwinged bats, which may be regarded, practically speaking, as very tiny monkeys, highly specialized for the task of catching nocturnal files and midges. Few people know how nearly they are related to us. They belong to the self-same division of the higher mammals as man and the apes; their skeleton answers to ours, bone for bone and joint for joint, in an ordinary manner; only the unessential fact that they have very long fitigers with a web between as an organ of flight prevents us from instantly and instinctively recognizing them as remote cousins, once removed from the gorilla. The female bat in particular is absurdly human. Most of them feed off insects alone, but a few, like the famous vampire bats of South America, take a mean advantage of sleeping animals and suck their blood after the fashion of mosquitoes, as they lie defenseless in the forest or on the open pampas. Others, like the flying foxes of the Malay archipelago, make a frugal meal of fruits and vegetables; but even these are persistent night, flyers. They liantr head downward from the boughs of trees during the hot tropical daytime, but sally forth at night to rob the banana patches and invade the plantain grounds of the industrious native. The bat is lemur, compelled by dire necessity to become a flying night bird. A Different Plant. The rubber plant that has become so common a piece of domestic decoration is not the plant that yield... the rubber of commerce. That is derived principally from two varieties of rubber tn i that grow in Brazil and attain a large size. The rubber plant of our American parlors and greenhouses, with its long, glossy leaves, would not pay for tapping. It is a species of fig, and India is its habitat. A gum can be obtained from nearly every plant that exudes a milky sap, even from the common milkweed, and the number of rubber yielding plants is estimated ut about five hundred.
The Narrow F.rape of Two llnnten from Heine Trampled to Death. Animals that go in herds are liable to panics. On the great plains of the west “stampeded" droves of horses and cattle are dangers against which cowboys have to bo constantly on their guard. Formerly there was a still worse peril—a stampede of buffaloes. Mr. Roosevelt, in his “Wilderness Hunter," describes a narrow escape of his brother and his cousin from such a horde. The two men were mounting one of tiie long, low swells into which the prairie is broken when they heart! % low, rumbling noise like distant funder. It grew louder and louder hod they hurried up the slope. At the top they stopped short in terror and amazement. The whole prairie before them was black with madly-rushing bu ff aloes. The hunters wore far from any broken ground or other place of refuge, while the vast henl of huge, plunging, maddened beasts wascharging straight down on them not a quarter of a mile distant. Down they came!—thousands upon thousands, their front extending a mile in breadth, while the earth shook under their thunderous gallop, and as they came closer their shaggy frontlets loomed dimly through the columns of dust thrown up from the dry soil. The two hunters knew that their only hope was to split the herd, which, thougli it had so broad a front, was not very deep. If they failed they would be trampled to death. Waiting till the beasts were in close range, they opened a rapid fire with their heavy breech-loading rifles, and yelled at the top of their voices. For a moment the result seemed doubtful. The line thundered steadily down on them; then it swayed violently, as two or three of the brutes immediately in front fell beneath the bullets, while their neighbors made violent efforts to press off sidewise. Then u narrow wedge-shaped rift appeared in the line, and widened as it came closer, and the buffaloes, shrinking from their foes in front, strove desperately to edge away from the dangerous neighborhood. The shouts and shots were redoubled. The hunters were almost choked by the cloud of dust, through which they could see the stream of dark bodies passing within rifle length on either side; and in a moment the peril was over and the two men were left alone on the plain, unharmed, though with nerves terribly shaken. The herd careered on toward the horizon, save five individuals which had been killed or disabled by the shots.—Y’outh’s Companion. FOOD FOR THE GODS. The Moon Is Devoured by the Immortals Once a Month. Certain it is that a belief in the moon as the abode of the fathers was widely spread among the people speaking the Aryan language, says the Quarterly Review. To the present day the peasants in Swabia are heard to say: “May I go to the moon if I did it,” instead of “May I die if I did it;” nay, people who work on the Sabbath day are threatened oven now that they will go to the moon; that is, that they will die and be punished by the moon. A more startling idea—peculiar, it would seem, to India—was that of the moon serving as the food of the gods. And yet, though it sounds strange to us, it was not so very unnatural an idea after all. The gods, though invisible, had been located in the sky. In tiie same sky the golden moon, often compared to a round of golden butter, was seen regularly to decrease. And if it was being consumed by anybody, by whom could it be consumed if not by the gods? Hence the ready conclusion that it was so, and that it was, in fact, this food which secured to the gods their immortal life. If so much had once aeon granted, then came the question, how the moon was gradually increased and restored to its fullness? And here the old superstition came in that the souls of the departed entered the moon, so that the waxing of the moon might readily be accounted for by this more ancient article of faith. Hence the systematized belief that the moon wanes while it is being-caUm by the gods, ami lliul it waxes while it is being filled In’ the departed souls entering it. A Hist conclusion was that the gods when feeding on the moon were really feeding on the souls of the de-
parted.
BLUE EYES AND BULLETS. Men with Orlw of That Shatlo Are th« Deni Nittrksiiicn. The annual report of Lieut. C. L. Collins, inspector of small arms practice of the department of Colorado, shows some interesting facts, 7,ays the Denver Republican. Nationally, the result of one year's competition shows the following result, with a possible score of 100: Norway, 08.18; Austria. 91; Switzerland, 88.8-J; Ireland, 87.41; France, 84; Denmark, 8:1.91; Scotland. 80; Germany, 70.80; Canada, 70.80; Belgium, 74; I'nited States, 72.78; England. 08.79; Mexico, 05; East Indies, 05; Sweden, 00.58; West Indies, 58; Russia, 58.78; Italy, 55; Holland, 45; Wales, 35; Australia, 10. There were but one Australian and two Welshmen In the competition. Of the 2,200 officers and enlisted men classified as practicing in the department, 05.77 per cent, were born in the United States; of these 82.7:! per cent, arc white and 17.27 colored. Compared as to their merit at the target, the whites scored 80.42, and the colored men 50.58. In his table showing the merits of the troops and their height, men 0 feet tall and over rank. 83.00 per cent, and 5.5 men Oil .Ml. It is almost i» steady plane down hill from 0 feet to 5 foet*5
inches.
There is but one troop of Indians in Gen. McCook's command, being L of the Second cavalry. This troop not only stands at the head of its regiment for revolver firing, but is at the head of the entire department. This, however, is far troop work. Whites beat them individually.
15 YEARS A SPECIALIST. Four Years of Continual Success Through Indiana.
I>lt. WALTER Has vi.ited Greencastle for over four years every four weeks and has cured more patients ofihronic discuthan all other specialists combined.
—-
WILL BE AT
Conimoreiul Hot*"!,
Saturday Feb. 10, AND EVERY POUR WEEKS DU RING TU E YEAH. SOME FACTS about the most successful physician in America, who has spent many months in the laboratories of the kreat scientists of Europe, will visit our city every four weeks to treat the patients who will call on him. Dr Walter is well known in this State and section, as he has treated a great many alHicted people during his visits in this vicinity and they all speak volumes for him. HE TREATS SUCCESSFULLY Acute and chronic catarrh, chronic diarrhoea, painful or suppressed menstruation, imdummation of the womb, inflammation of the bladder, diabetes, dyspepsia, constipation, kidney, urinary and bladder troubles, Bright’s disease. tape worm, crooked ami enlarged joints, clubfoot, white swelling, nervousness and general debility, ini potency, leucorrhea, pimples, blotches, cancer, dropsy, gravel, gleet, gonorrhoea, hydrocele, heart disease,hysteria, St. Vitus dunce, paralysis, rheumatism, asthma, female weakness, etc. All surgical operations performed. Epilepsy or fits positively cured. Files cured without pain, knife or caustic. Blood and skin diseases cured by improved and never failing remedies. EYE, EAR AND NOSE—In diseases of the eye, Dr. Walter is an expert. Crossed eyes are straightened in one moment of time and without pain. He easily remedies weak and watery eyes, dropping of the lids, granulations, sore eyes of any form, wild hairs, cataract. false pupils, spots, scums and turning of the lids. Roaring noises in the ear, partial deafness, ulcerations, discharges, earache, etc., are also cured. Nasal catarrh, that curse of this climate, w ith all of its abhorent featuers, yields at once to the system of treatment pursued by Dr. Walter. He can show a greater record of cures than any physician ,: ivng. FEMALE. TROUBLES—Ladies who are afflicted with headache, langour and the weakness common to the sex, find a wonderful friend in Dr. Walter. He is skilled in the treat xn ‘lit of the troubles, especially i n bloating, nervous prostration, general debility, sleeplersness, depression, indigestion, ovarian trouble. inflammation ini ulceration, falling and displacements, si inal weakness, kidney complaints and cl a ige of life. OROANAL WEAKNESS. Immediately cured and full vigor restored. This distressing affliction, which renders life a burden and marriage impossible, is the penalty paid by the victim ror improper indulgence. The most chaste must acknowlege that the passions are the great magnet by which the whole world is attracted. Destroy them and what have we? Man is no longer interested in the opposite sex, the interheauge of that blissful repose which now attracts and interests the whole world exists no longer; man ceases to be what God made him; the w orld is no longer interesting to him, and remorse and disappointment are his constant companions. Consult Dr. Walter at once, and you will find the sympathy and relief that you positively require to oe happy. Those wishing treatment should bring from one to four ounces of urine for chemical analysis. Dr. Walter will return every four weeks during the year 1893. Dr. Walter will correspond with those who desire to submit their symptoms. In writing all letters are held in strict confidence. The permanent address is LYMAN P. WALTER, M. D,, 213 State Street, Chicago, Illinois.
HUMPHREYS’ Dr. ITtimphreys' are scientifically and carefully prepared Remedies, used for years In private practice and for over thirty yean by the people with entire success. Every single Specific a ■pedal cure for the disease named. They cure without drugging, purging or reducing the system and are In fact and deed the Hovcreiun Kemcdics of the \\ orld.
ho. CURKB. PRICK*. 1 -P ever*. Congestions, Inflammations.. Si—Worina, Worm Fever, Worm Colic 25 3— Teethings Colic. Crying, Wakefulness ,25 4- Dinrrbcii. of Children or Adults 25 7— Coughs# Colds, Bronchitis >25 8— Neuralgia# Toothache, Faceache 25 9 Headache*# hick Headache, Vertigo.. ,25 1 O-Dynpeptiiii# Biliousness, Constipation. ,25 1 1—Huppresaed or Painful Periods .. ,25 1*2—Whites# Too Pi of use Periods ,25 13 -Croup. Furyii u itHoarseness 25 1 If Rheum, F!ry*!j>ci^» k Fn»pt.!on*» 1 5—ItheuinuiiNiu. Rheumatic Pains 25 IB—Mnlarla, Chills, Fever and Ague 25 19—Cninrrh, Influenza, Cold In the Head. ,25 ‘^9 —Whooping Cough .*45 • 7—Kidney DinenMe* 25 28—Nervous Debility 1.00 30—Urinary WothknOM* Wetting Bed.. *25 HUMPHKBYW WITCH HAZUi Oil* “The Pile Olii(tnent.”-Trlal Size,2ftCU. Sold by D»*ng:jrl8tn, or *fiit post-}**Id on receipt of prlco. Dr. lli'Yt’HHKYB Manual (H4 ptucoa. mailed prick. ut ttrugkitrdAD.uu., 111 a i i:i wihi.ui sl, kew yuidu Spec if i c s .
CAUTION.— If a dealer offei-a W. U. Douglas >boes at a reduced price, or say* he haa them without name stamped on Bottom.put him down a fraud.
S3 SHOE
W. L. DOUGLAS Shoes are styiLh, c::. y tin^. and give better satisfaction at the pi iLLuiiJ. vertised than anv "ther m'tke. Try one pair and be convinced. The stamping of W. L. Dougliit.' name and price on the bottom, which guarantees their value, saves thousands of dolbrs annually to those who wear them. Dealers who push tl e '' • I-' Douglas Shoes gain customers, which helps to increase the sales on their full lino of goods. They can afford to sell at ;\ |«.. S s profit, and we believe you can save money by buvim c'i your footwear of the dealer advertised Im Imv w: i h , DiiuiS P. It. CHRISTIE
