Jasper County Democrat, Volume 5, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 February 1903 — Page 6

Opportunities . hi (tie South. No portion of the United States has made greater progress the past year or two than the South. Northern and foreign capital is rapidly invading that section, finding profitable investment in the various industries and factories that are being rapidly developed and built. The great influx of settlers is creating an increased demand for lands of ail kinds, and prices are gradually advancing, as they will for years to come. Work is plentiful and poverty practically unknown. Alabama is supplying coal and iron to all the world. More moheyfccan be made and with less labor in the raising of small fruits and berries and in truck patching along the Gulf Coast than in any other state in the Union. Strawberries from Alabama reach Northerfijfeiarkets before those from the states in the southeast. Cattle can be raised with great profit, there being millions of acres of cheap - range lands. If you are interested in the south and its resources and desire information on any subject, address G. A. PARK, General Industrial and Immigration Agent, LOUISVILLE X NASHVILLE RAILROAD, LOUISVILLE, KY.

«Haaia MWStmbuß«m||«aair((a * ■ ■ » Chicago to the Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the South, Louisville, and French Lick Springs. Rensselaer Time-Table, In Effect June 29, 1902. South Bound. No. S— Louisville Mail, (daily) 10:55 a. m No. 33 -Indianapolis Mall, (daily).. 2:01 p. nr No. 39-Milk umiinin.. (daily) 8:15 p, mNo. 3—Louisville Express. (daily).. 11:25 p. m •No. 45—Local freight 2:40 p. m No. 31—Fust Mail 4:19 a. in North Bound. No. 4—Mail, (daily) 4:30 a.m. No. 40 Milk uocomm., (daily) 1:31a.m. No. 32 Fast Mall, (daily) 0:55 a.m. No. 0 Mail and Express. (duily). .. 3:30 p. m. •No. 30 —<lln. to Chicago Vex. Mail.. 8:32 p.m. ttto.33—Cln. to Chicago 2:51 p. m. •No. 46-f.ocal freight 0:5,5 a.m. •Ilally except Sunday. tSiiuuay only, Hammond has beeu made a regular stop for No. 30. No. 32 and 33 now stop at Cedar Lake. Frank J. Kkkd, G. I*. A.. W. H. McDoei., President and Gen. M'g'r, Chab. H. Rockwki.l, Traffic M'g’r. CMICAOO. W. H. Beam. Agent. Rensselaer.

CITY. WHIP AND COUNTY DIRECTORY. CITY OFFICERS. Mayor J.H. S. Ellis Marshal Mel Abbott Clerk . Charles Morlan Treasurer James H. Chapman Attorney Geo. A. William* Civil Engineer J.C. Threw Is Fire Chief C. B. Steward COUNCILMEN. Ist ward Henry Wood, Fred Phillips 2d ward W. S. Parks, H. K. Ferguson 3d ward. J.(. McColly, Peter Wasson COUNTY OFFICERS. Clerk .John F. Major Sheriff Ahrnm G. Hardy Auditor . .. W.C, Babcock Treasurer R. A. Purkison. Recorder Robert 11. Porter Surveyor Myrt 11. Price Coroner Jointing* Wright Supt. Public Schools Louis H. Hamilton Assessor John R. Phillips COM MIBB ion Kits. l»t. District Abraham Halle, k 2nd District Frialertck Waymire Sr,l District .Chat les T. Denlmin Commissioners’ court First Monday of each month. COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. TMttHTKRS. ToWNHHIpH. Joseph Stewart Hanging Grove John Ryan Gillum Lewis Shrier Walker Ulias Arnold Barkley Charles M. Blue Marion John Bill ... .Jordan (sou. M. Wilcox ... Newton S. L. Luce Keener Thomas F. Maloney Kankakee Stephen D. Clark Whenttield Albert J. Bellows .Carpenter William T Smith .Milroy Ha nun D.Coiner. _ Union Louis H. Hamilton Co. Supt Kemurleer fi. K Hollingsworth Rensselaer George Hesse .. Remington Geo. 0. Stemhel Wheat field JUDICIAL. Circuit Judge ....Charles W. Hanley Prosecuting attorney John I). Sink Term* of Court. Second Monday In February, April, September and November. REVIVO £*| RESTORES VITALITY 1 Made * mmxroßc rumodt pradatM the above remits In 30 day*. It act* powerfully and quickly Cures whon all other* fall. Youngmau will ra**ln their lost manhood, and old MO will recover thnlr youthful vt*or by using MEVI VO. It quickly and surely restores NervousMas, Lost Vitality. Impoteocy. Nightly Erulestoua. Lost Powar, Falling Memory. Wasting Diseasao. and SO effects Of self-abuse or excess and Indiscretion Wkioh unfits one for at tady. buakneea or marriage. It •otonly cures by atarting at the asst of dtaaass.but Isa great nerve toalo sod blood builder, bringing back the pink plow to pale cheeks and re atertag Iks Ore of yoattb. ft wanla off Insanity •kd Consumption Insist on having REVIVO, no other. It can be carried la vast i«okrt By mall, •Ixoo par package, or six for 00.00, with e poel k»« writ tea guarantee to cure or rifnal Ike eeaer. Advice and circular fraa. Address BOYAL MEDICINE For unde In Renaselaer by J, A. Latah drug girt. An armful of old papers for • nickel at The Democrat office.

Words of Washington.

The battlefield should be the last resource, tlie dernier ressort of nations. There is a natural and necessary progression from the extreme of anarchy to the extreme of tyranny, and arbitrary power is most easily established on the ruins of liberty abused (o licentiousness. The baxis of our political systems is tin? right of (lie people to make and to alter their constitutions of government. But the constitution which at any time exists, till changed by an explicit and authentic act of the whole people, is sacredly obligatory upon all. It Is among the evils, and perhaps not the smallest, of demoeratieal governments, (hat the people must feel before they can see. When this happens, they are aroused to action; hence It is that those kiuds of government are so slow. Observe good faith and justice toward all nations, and cultivate peace and harmony with all. Fully apprised of the Influence which sound learning has on religion and manners, on government, liberty, and law, I shall only lament my Want of abilities to make it still more extensive. I.cnity will operate with greater force, in some instances, than rigor; it Is, therefore, my first wish to have my whole conduct distinguished by It. I have already intimated to you the danger of parties iu the State; let me now take a more comprehensive view, and warn you in the most solemn manner against the baneful effects of the spirit of party, generally. In proportion as the structure of a government gives force to public opinion, It is essential that public opinion should be enlightened. Retaliation is certainly just, and sometimes necessary, even where attended with the severest penalties; but when the evils which may be and must result from it exceed those Intended to be redressed, prudence and policy require that it should be avoided. , Of all the dispositions and habits which lend to political prosperity, religion and morality are Indispensable supports. In vain would that man Olnim the tribute of patriotism who should labor to subvert those pillars of human happiness, those firmest props of the duties of men and citizens.

TRIBUTES TO WASHINGTON.

Ksteeiu and Affection Shown the Father of His Country. “Born upou our soil—of parents also born upon it —never for a moment having bad sight of the old world—instructed according to the modes of his time, only iu the spare, plain, but wholesome elementary knowledge which our institutions provide for the children of the people —growing up beneath nnd penetrated by tlie genuine influences of American society—living from infancy to manhood and age amidst our expanding, but not luxurious civilization —partaking iu our great destiny of labor, our Ipng contest with unreclaimed nature and uncivilized man—our agony of glory, the war of independence—our great victory of peace, the formation of the Union, and the establishment of the constitution —he is all, all our own. Washington la ours." The foregoing was written by Daniel Webster in regard to the Father of His Country, tiie anniversary of whose birth is mi occasion that is ever freshly remembered by American hearts, "lie was the first man of the time in which he grew,” wrote Rufus Choate. “His memory is first and most sacred in our love; mid ever, hereafter, till the last drop of blood shall freeze in the last American heart, his name shall lie a spell of power and might. There is one personal, one vast felicity which no man can shore with him. It was the daily beauty and towering and matchless glory of his life which enabled him to create ids country, nnd at the same time secure an undying love and regard from the whole American people. Undoubtedly there were brave and wise and good men before l is day in every colony. But the American nation, ns a nation, I do not reckon to have begun before 1774, and the first love of that young America was Washington. She first word site lisped was his name. er earliest breath spoke it. It Is still her proud ejaculation. It will be the l*st gasp of her expiring life. About and around him we call up no dissentient, discordant nnd dissatisfied elements, no sectional prejudice or bias, no party, no creed, no dogma of politics. None of these shall assail him. Yes, when the storm of battle grows darkest nnd rages highest, tho memory of Washington shall narve every American arm nnd cheer every American heart. It shall reillume that Rromethean fire, that sublime fin me of patriotism, that devoted love of country which his words have commended, which his example has consecrated.” The story of George Washington’s life is sn old one, but the salient facts will bear repeating. He was born at Wakefield, Westmoreland County, Virginia, Feb. 22, 1732, lived from 1735 to 1739 nt what I* now Mount Vernon, nnd when he was 7 years old lie was taken to an estate on the Rappahannock, almost opposite Fredericksburg. The father was one of the prosperous planters of Virginia, able to give Ids children what •ducation the times could afford. The first teacher of George Is reputed to have been a convict, whom his father bought for the purpose. All of Washington’s schooling ended before he was lfl. His long and brilliant career ns a soldier and statesman has given to history some of Ita most Interesting pages. “It was strnnge,” wrote Thackeray, “that In a savage foreat of Pennsylvania a young Virginia officer should firo a

shot, and waken up a war that was to last for sixty years, which was to cover his own country and pass into Europe, to cost France her American colonies, to sever ours from us and create the great western republic; to rage over the old world when extinguished in the new; nnd, of all the myriads engaged in the vast contest, to leave the prize of the greatest fame with him who struck the first blow.” As to the exteem and affection in which the name and character of Washington were held one cannot do better tiian quote Lafayette, who wrote from France as follows: "Were you but such a man as Julius Caesar, or the King of Prussia. I should almost be sorry for you at the end of the great tragedy where you are acting such a part. But, with my dear general, 1 rejoice at the blessings of a peace when our noble ends have been secured. Remember our Valley Forge times; and, from a recollection of past dangers and labors, we shall he still more pleased at our present comfortable situation. I cannot but envy the happiness of my grandchildren, when they will be about celebrating nnd worshiping your name. To have one of their ancestors n;»iong your soldiers to know he had the good fortune to be the frieml of your heart, will he the eternal honor in which they shall glory." The poet Shelley, aboard an American slifp. drinking,to the health of Washington and the prosperity of the American commonwealth, remarked: “As n warrior mid statesman lie was righteous in nil he did, unlike all who lived before or since; he never used his power but for the benefit of bis fellow creatures.”

Ontario's Rude Awakening.

In ten years’ time there will not be, In old Ontario, any firewood to sell, and tvhlle some farmers will have enough wood for therlr own use, most of them will be compelled to burn coal. Iu the southern part of Ontario County, about 90 per cent of tiie farmers are using coal, nnd 00 per cent of them have no wood on their lands. In other long-settled districts the condition is pretty much tiie same. The hush was the enemy of tiie pioneer, nnd his sons nnd grandsons have kept up tho feud, although the pioneer is long dead, and the bush long ngo whipped Into submission. The country needs trees, however, quite aside from Its need for stove wood. The streams of the province are shrinking visibly, nnd the climate Is undergoing change, hccnusc of the disappearance of the trees with wlilffh nature clothed the country.

Fair Warning.

The voice nt the telephone was a roar. “Hello, central!" "Hello!” Replied the soft voice. "Give mo Main 90,909. And say, centjnl, he's the agent of this flat I'm living In. I’m going to ask him what’s the reason we don’t get any steam heat. Please take your ear away from the 'phone while I am talking to him.” Thought and deed are the passports to enduring fame.- Skobsloff.

STORM TIES UP CHICAGO.

City Practically Cut Off from tbe World by Know ati<L Sleet. The snow, sleet and rain of Wednesday and the afternoon and night before, aided by the fierce northeast gale that at one time attained a velocity of fifty milq? an hour, blotted Chicago from the map, so far as communication with tho outside world was concerned, sll through the day and even well into the’ night. Telegraph and telephone wires were down iu every direction, and it was Impossible to get n message either iu opout of the city, except here and there iu the West. The city was completely isolated from the east, north and south, and it was with difficulty that the stock market reports from the east were delivered to the board of Trade and the Stock Exchange, coming by a roundabout course to the south and eventually filtering in from the southwest. Veteran telegrapliers recalled the blizzard that cut off New York City from the rest of the country iu March, 1888, when the tidings of the death of Roscoe Oonkling had to be cabled across the Atlantic and back again to get the news to the inland cities of the United States. While snow was falling In Chicago and as fur west as the Rockies and far into the north as well, rain was sweeping over tho country to the south and east. The gale from the northeast spread out until it embraced the sections which had escaped the snowfall, and there began the troubles of the telegraph and telephone companies. The wind had a clear sweep Over Lake Michigan nnd beat down upon the unprotected Indiana shores. There were no stretches of for est to break its fuyjie and In a short time the rain changtfifto sleet. Almost at once the effect of this was felt in Chicago. By midnight Tuesday the telegraph operators at the keys in Chicago offices found no response to their signals and long before dawn all communication with the East was effectually shut off. The storm swept on and circled around to the south of Chicago, carrying down the wires there. To the north the same difficulty had developed somewhat earlier and the western wires were working badly on account of the heavy snow. The New York gold and stock quotations were wired from New York City to Washington nnd from there forwarded to Cincinnati. From Cincinnati they were sent on again to St. Louis, nnd St. Louis delivered them to Kansas City, where they made another stride over the telegraph wires to Omaha. Here telephonic communication with Chicago had been established Rt 10:30 o'clock in the morning. The Chicago quotations were forwarded in the same fashion.

THOUSANDS ARE SLAIN.

A Bloody Rattle Between Moroccan Army and the Pretender's. According to a dispatch from Tangier, the Spanish embassy lias received news of a still more bloody battle in Morocco than that which took place Jan. 20. The Sultan's troops, numbering 12,000, attacked the pretender’s new encampment, treachery and bribery again giving the imperial army the advantage. A terrible fight took place around Bu Ha mara’s person and according to the

SULTAN OF MOROCCO.

lateet account* continued right up to tho gates of Fez, where, after losing 2,300 slain, the rebels succeeded eventually in rescuing Bu Hainarn. A later dispatch from Tangier said that while pursuing the pretender's forces the Sultan’s cavalry was attacked by the Kiata tribesmen, but with oth2l- - the war minister came up in time to participate in tiie fighting, and tho result was a victory for tin* imperial army with heavy losses on both sides.

CRISIS IN HONDURAS.

Bonilla Proclaim* Himself President of the Republ c nt Amnpnla. The State Department has been advised that Sierra, the hold over president of Honduras, has turned over the presidency to a council of ministers nnd that Bonilla, who claims to have been elected to the presidential office, has proclaim»d himself president at Amnpnla. The warships in commission in San Francisco harbor will be on their way to Amapaln, a point on the Pacific coast of Honduras, within a week. Tho New York, Boston nnd the Ranger are now In the bay ready to start ou short notice, prders have been received from Washngton that all work ou vessels now at the Mare Island navy yard be completed with the greatest possible dispatch. In view of this order an extra fores of men will bs employed at once, and a night force was started to complete the repairs on the U. 8. 8. Bennington, which is practicaly ready for service. Several other vessels can be ninde ready for sea within a short time. It la understood that the trouble brewing In Honduras is the only reason for ths animation now being shown nt the Mare Island nnvy yard.

Interesting News Items.

Two trainmen injured, Nichory, N. C. Freights collided. Daniel Brassier, 103, Napoleon, Ohio, celebrated his birthday. Walter Kenval. Knoxville, Tenn,, guilty of bigamy. Four wives. Lon* highwayman held up the agent of th* Southern Pacific ticket office, Reno, I. T., and secured SI,OOO. Two New York “dagoes” quarreled and one of them fired a gun, the bullets striking n small boy and a girl. Th* children are In a hospital.

RECORD OF THE WEEk

INDIANA INCIDENTS TERBELY TOLD. Krrlnic Man Kills Wife and HimselfCourt Declares Sheriff Dudley Illegally Ousted-Rivers Out of Their *s»k»—Railway Gets Franchise. John Stark, living at Rosedale, killed his wife by shooting her through the head. He then turned the weapon on himself, with fatal effect. The tragedy, it is said, had its origin in a visit some months ago to the Stark homestead of Mrs. Stark’s" sister. Stark, it is said, became too intimate with his sister-in-law. Mrs. Stark asked her husband to have the young woman sent away from the place, which was done. This was about six moiltlis ngo. A few days ago n child was born and Stark was claimed as its father. The young mother insisted on coining to the Starks’ home to reside, but Mrs. Stark objected. She did come, however, whereupon Mrs. Stark demanded that she be taken away at once. This was done h.v Stark, and upon his return home he seized his revolver from the bureau and killed liis wife .md then committed suicide. Rivers on the Ram page. Dispatches show that nearly all the larger rivers are on the rampage, as tlie result of heavy rains and thaws. The lowlands .along the Wabash were under water, and in the vicinity of Lafayette the damage is heavy. At Evansville the Ohio invaded many business houses along its banks. Many factories were shut down.'- ■Merchants received warning in time and removed their goods. Between Huntington and Fort Wayne on the Wabash there was a lake of water twelve miles long on either side of the railroad. Terre Halite Grants Franchise. The Terre Haute City Council lias passed an ordinance for a fifty-year franchise for the street railway company, for which the company is to pay $78,000, SIO,OOO to be paid at once and the remainder in annual payments beginning iu 1918. The new ordinance contains no provisions for safeguarding the city's interests in event of new conditions within fifty years. The Council voted an increase of salary for the Mayor and the board of public' works nnd bought a strip of ground for $25,000 for a park. Anti-Lynching Law Is Invalid. Iu the case of W. P. Maxwell, coroner, versus John S. Dudley, the deposed sheriff of Sullivan County, quo warranto proceedings to compel Dudley to vacate the office of sheriff. Judge O. B. Harris decided that the anti-lynching law is unconstitutional, and that Sheriff Dudley was illegally declared ousted by the Governor. The case will be appealed lo tho Supreme Court at once. Fatally- Shot in Saloon. George Baugh was shot and mortally wounded by Charles Iliilen. The sh ading occurred in Baugh's saloon at Vincennes. Hulcii was ordered out and began shooting. Baugh will die. Hulen escaped across the river into Illinois. Theater Burns at Frankfo t. The Columbia Theater, the only playhouse in Frankfort, was burned. The lire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin. The loss is $40,000; insurance, $12,000. Maccabees Hall also was burned at a loss of $4,000. % Brief State Happenings. Grace Jackson, aged 10, was drowned in a cistern in Clinton. The girl had been sent 'after vinegar for supper and fell into the cistern. Notice has been posted, that the New York store, the largest department stort in El w ood, ow ned by Louis F. Knere is in tlte hands of creditors. At .Goshen two trains collided and one was thrown acros another track and struck by a fast milk train. The tracks wore completely blockaded, several cars were burned nnd tlie train crew injured. The property loss aggregated $ 100,000. Fully 1,000 consumers of city water in Noblesvilie been me violently ill the oilier morning and none of them lias fully recovered. The unusual color of the water first attracted attention. The ice breaking up in the river had allowed the river water to enter the water mains. Lewis Clark and John Blight, arrested in Pittsburg, have been brought to Logansport. They are under indictment charged with attempting to hold up the Adams Express office last August. The messenger drove the robbers mvay after a pistol battle in which Blight was wounded. Morris Callahan, the messenger. had $150,000 in his keeping at the time. A man named Morgan, who found the meirin Pittsburg with the help of the Panhandle secret service, gets $2,000 reward. Gustave Charles Earth man. a man of line appearance and address, was taken mip custody by Chief of Police Bongerz at LnPorte. Later an insanity commission adjudged him to lie insane, lie harbors the hallucination that President Roosevelt beat him out of a sum of money. He paced the stone Hngging of the jail forty-eight hours without seeking sleep. The officers believe Earthman is a disappointed office seeker, mid that his derangement is due to failure to secure preferment. Oscar Brickie nnd Florence Merrill, employes of the Rochester Cigar Company, previously unacquainted with each other, were murried the other morning by the purchase of a marriage license in u banter. The groom was jokingly asked by other employes why he did not marry Florence, who was a stripper in tlie shop. Ho replied he would if Charles Beholders, nnotlicr workman, would purchase the license. The girl consented. The bride, groom nnd Beholders went to the cerk’s office, procured a license, a minister wus summoned, the ceremony was performed, and the groom was in search of n house—all in fifteen minutes. Joseph Bogart, 08, of Culver, was found dead in n hog pen with tils face utmost nil eaten off by hogs. He is supposed to have dropped dead while feeding the animals. While en route to n funeral, Benjamin Gillen nnd Thomas Crlsuinn were mu down and killed h.v a Vnndnlia train Ht a crossing at Darlington. Peter MeCrea, a deaf mute; 58 years of age and the owner of $25,000 nnd 100 acres of Innd, was assaulted at Shelbyvllle by Jeff Richardson with a spade and his skull fractured. MeCrea cannot live. Richardson is in jail.

Careless Correspondence.

▲ gentleman and hi* wife had beet* Invited to an evening party. He went* ed to go, but hig wife declared that •be bad no gown suitable for tbe occasion, and asked him to send “regret*” to their hostess. Thereupon the man, while at bis office, penned this facetious note: “We regret that your kind Invitation must be declined for all the conventional reasons, but the real reason Is that half the family has nothing to wear. My w ife’s latest dress Is over three weeks old, and her hat Is twelve hours out of date. You will appreciate the hopelessness of the occasion and excuse us.” lie thought this so good that he went further, and determined, to be smartly sarcastic at the expense of his wife, lie wrote a note to her explaining that he would not be at homo for an early (linuer, as she had asked him. The note ran; “I ennuot accept your invitation because I am going out to an evening party where the guests are not expected to wear anything of Importance. Sorry I won’t be there to kiss you good-night.” Unfortunately he wag careless; the notes went Into the Jvrong envelopes, and tho lady who had invited the couple wns somewhat surprised at th# man’s auduclty.

Disconnected.

“Say, Maine,” said the hello girl during a lull in tho calls, to her intimate friend, who occupied the next chair, “is it true that you have broken off your engagement?” “Sure thing,” answered Mnme, as she chewed her gum with renewed vigor. “Oh, Mnme, did you, really?" “Well, I guess!” “Oh, Mame, what was the matter?” “He heard about my going down the river with a strange man.” “Oh, Mame. did he really?” “Yep. Then he had the nerve to call me tip over the ’phone and read the riot act to me! Said if I was going to carry an like that he didn’t want me to be wearing his ring.” “Oh, Mame, wliat did you say?” “Ring off!”—New York World.

Remarkable Ants’ Nests.

Tort Darwin, in South Australia, boasts some of the most remarkable ants’ nests In the world. They are known as “magnetic” nests, for the simple reason that they are, without exception, built in the due north and south direction. Consequently a traveler journeying through a district in which they abound may readily direct his course by their aid. No living man knows why these tlnv architects build them In this way. They are merely one of the many marvels of the great land “down under.” It seems, however, probable, that Instinct leads these tiny creatures to so construct their dwellings that the tierce noonday sun shall have the least possible effect upon their interiors. The Chicago and Northwestern is the only double track railway between Chicago and the Missouri river.

Hereditary Resemblance.

“What you chillun been doin'?” “We ain’t been doin' uuthin’." “Deah me! You grow rnoah liko you* pa every day."—lndianapolis News.

Mrs. F. Wright, of Oelwein, lowa, is another one of the million women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. A Toune New York Lady Telia of a Wonderful Cure: “ My trouble was with the ovaries; I am tall, and the doctor said I grew too fast for my strength. 1 suffered dreadfully from inflammation and doctored continually, but got no help. I suffered from terrible dragging sensations with the most awful pains low down in the side and pains in the back, and tbs most agonizing headaches. No one knows what I endured. Often I was sick to the stomach, and every little while 1 would bs too sick to go to work, for three or four days; I work In a largs store, and I suppose standing on my feet all day made me worse. “At the suggestion of a friend of my mother’s I began to take Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Comround, and it is simply wonderful. felt better after the flrst two or three doses; it seemed as though a weight waa taken off my aboulders; I continued its use until now I can truthfully say I am entirely cured. Young glrla who are alwaya paying doctor’! bills without getting any help as I did, ought to take your medicine. It costs so much tear., and it is sure to cure them.—Yours truly, Ansi. Aina I'm m., 174 St. Ann’s Ave., New York City." tiOOO forfolt If original of obooo lotto s Droving gooutnooooo cannot bo proOutoO YJadway’s U Pills *1 U 4 ■ nd rvlUbte. Ohaae pee. tft-tfca. complete absorption and healthful "ror'thj/vira of mil dlMrdera ot (he Atom act. Llrar. Bewela. Kidiiapa, Bla-Mar, Psm-te Irreealarttlaa. Blok Haa.lacba. H'llou.naaa. lu.pepele, Indlmmtlon, Cion. Pboo and all daransemeaU of the laterBel Viarera.