Jasper County Democrat, Volume 6, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 May 1903 — Page 3
The old. Invariable virtue of St Jacobs Oil makes It the king cure for Sprains and Bruises Price, 25c. and 50c.
Hicastdria ■ For Infants and Children. ■The Kind You Have ■ mwM Ww Cl V w DHUF% Hi X\fcgetable Preparalionfor As - ■ * - similaiing the Food andßeg ula- w # Unglhe Stomachs and Bowels of J BedFS 1110 / \ a gjg na | ;ur Q XMfsW Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful- \ m M a/ UF ness and Rest .Contains neither |;|| n f ML Jt s ■ Opium, Morphine nor Mineral, hi Ul / n # \l# NotNArcotic. y IlUir •roUfirSmJELPtTCmi) jfl | |/V^ ■fa Smma * \ I® a Set*- I A perfect Remedy forConsbpa- ■ rt' USB Hon. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea ® I l&f Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- fll wT [mm ft ham ness and Loss of Sleep. I IUI UfUl Facsimile Signature of 19 § Thirty Years ™»Sps^TnHiii ' EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. J|S Ul 99 Aj I 11 IW% -->*» n , ccirrMin oo*p*"t. *tw toss cm.
lyhggyjgf Loaded Black Powder Shells IBBr shoot stronger and reload better P than any other black powder shells on the market, because KYjlfL !Kj wSH the y are l° ac *ed more carefully BV | [W isS3|fl and made more scientifically. B-j/ilimj HIJNTER*S fAVOIMIjpy
Br omo-Seltzer ♦ Promptly cures all Headaches
WESTERN CANADA Is Attracting More Attention Than Other District In the World. “TffiE ORA HART OF TOE WOULD." "TUB LAND OF SUNSHINE." n< NATURAL FEEDINO CEOCNDB for STOCK. Aim nlcr Cm* ta ISOS—- • 1.587.550 A area. TtoUUISOS-IIT.SSS.7S4 Basket#. Abundanceof Water) Fool, Plentiful. Cheap Build* too Material; Oeod Grass for pastaraa and Ho*.a fertile •ell. a sufficient rainfall, and a climate girlng as assure! and adoqnats season of growth. Ileaieatead Lands of 1 SO Arras Free, (hs only chans (wing (10 sntry. Cion to Churchea. Schools, stc-i tUllnaja tap all Battled districts. Band for Atlas and othar Ilteratnra to BnporlnUndent of Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, or to G, J. Brough too, 4SU (Joiner Bldg.. OhJcagS) E. T PZZi. fe^h I tel& b^L-ha M fcfti v! Uclunra. No 1 Aranoo Theater Block Detroit. Mich ; Jas. Grier,. Bank Bto. Marie, Mich.i J. C. Duncen. MecLachlan. Waneaa, Wig. the authorized Canadian Oorarameat Airenta,whoßill anppl* yon with cartlßcato giriag so o reduced railway rates, sea
ramt’S Thompson’s Eye Witer
Price of Fane. It tickled Green when ho was asked To write hia autograph; But it turned up later on a note — And then he didn't laugh. . Aak Tear Dealer for Alien's Feet Base, A powder to shake into your shoes. It recta the feet. Cured Corns, Bunion*, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating feet nnd Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Base makes new or tlgl(t shoes easy. Sold by all druggists and ahoe stores, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Addreaa Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. An Awful Jolt. Said she: “I wonder why blondes are Always anxious to be wedded?” Said he: “I guess it is because They’re naturally light headed.” You can do your dyeing In half an hour with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. <•' “There is a fountain filled with blood” Is the most popular of Cowper’s hymns. It is considered one of the classic lyrics of the English laugunge. Via. Winslow's Sooth rss Item for OMldras Udtblngs softens the soma, redaces inflammation, o> leys pain* cures wind ooiio. 25 osnts e bottle. A great opportunity will only make you ridiculous unless you are prepared for it. 1
M / «*Ssssy"M- A MI t*. A feA if ml Hjf '''L 1 *".« Rom Mg K ' REMEDY It cleanses, aoothee and bn tbe l H«ad*qk<ckly?°l[ HRY I toflall Is abeorbed. Beals and Protect* the Membrane. Restores ths Senses of Taste and NmeU. Fall sin tte-at Droggists or by mall; Trial Size lOe, bynsfl ELY BROTHERS, M Warren Street, New York.
SCORES ARE MANGLED.
Appalling Disaster Overtakes ExCSf* slon Party at Detroit. At Detroit eight persons were killed sod forty injured, some fatally, by the pan-American fiyer on the Grand Trunk Railroad, which rushed into a crowd of excursionists who were about to boar<t an outgoing train for Toledo. The disaster was most appalling. The excursionist* were ujostly Poles who had journeyed to Detroit lor a Sunday visit with friends and fellow churchraen. They had spent a day of merry-making and celebration in honor of the 112th anniversary of Polish freedom, and were awaiting the excursion train to pull up on a siding of the Lake Shore road. The visitors were gathered in groups' and were scattered along the Grand Trunk track, which parallels the Lake shore at the scene of the catastrophe, Dequinder and Canfield streets. The excursion traiu came in sight of the crowds a few minutes after 8 o’clock. “Clear the track,” was shouted by officials of the Polish Lancers who were in charge. Everyone who had been standing on the Lake Shore track scampered to one side—to join their friends who stood on the Grand Trunk roadway. Thus It was that the entire party was assembled in a compact mass when the through train thundered in sight. The through train was running at a fair rate of speed, it being within the city confines, and its momentum was so great that the engineer was unable to check the engine in time. There is a slight curve before the junction of Canfiejd and Dequinder streets is reached, and the mammoth locomotive, with its glaring headlight and hissing steam-vent, was almost in the unsuspecting crowd before it was realized that death impended. The great engine, with its seven-foot driving wheels, rushed into the living mass of humanity and ground fathers, mothers and children beneath its wheels or tossed etheir forms hither and thither on its passage. The express ran for nearly two blocks before it was halted. It plowed directly through the center of the excursion party. llow hundreds escaped fearful death will never be known. Half-dead men and women were carried along on the cow-catcher of the locomotive. Women with babies in their arms were dashed down, some to death. Bodies were flying in the air. Piercing screams and the last groans of the dying were heard in unspeakable discord. Escapes from instant death are being reported and some are almost too marvelous to credit. Men and women who say they were directly in front of the locomotive wore lifted up and thrown to one fide without injury. Four of the dead were killed outright by the train and the others died after being taken to the hospitals.
PRIEST UNDER ARREST.
Father Walser Held for the Death of Agatha Reichlin. .¶ Rev. Father Ferdinand Walser, assistant pastor of Sacred Heart Church in Toledo, was arrested, charged with the murder of Miss Agatha Reichlin, the handsome sister of Father Churles Reichlin, pastor of St. Joseph’s Church in Lorain, Ohio, in whose house Father Walser was a guest. The murder was committed about 1 o'clock Friday morning. .¶ It is charged by the authorities that Father Walser entered the young woman’s room at the parsonage Thursday night during the absence of Rev. Charles Reichlin and crushed her head with a big paving stone. .¶ Bloodhounds were taken to the scene of the crime and given the scent of the murderer and, a dispatch says, they led the officers to the room occupied by Father Walser at the Reichlin home on the night of the murder. Later the dogs struck another scent and went directly to St. Joseph hospital, where Father Walser spent Friday night. The priest was taken into custody at the Reichlin home and taken to the county jail at Elyria. .¶ The officers admit that evidence against the priest is purely circumstantial, but say the chain is very strong. They further declare that there was much danger of mob violence at Lorain and they did not propose to take any chances in the case. While the feeling was very strong against the priest and a big crowd gathered when the officers boarded an electric car with their prisoner en route to the county jail, there was no demonstration. .¶ Sunday morning, upon the altar steps, the police who had arrested Father Walser were denounced by the brother of the murdered girl. Trembling with emo-‘ tlon from the stress of his feelings, Father Reichlin censured the authorities and exonerated the priest whom they suspected of killing Agatha Reichlin.
BOY’S BODY IN A SACK.
Covered with Burlap, Corpse la In* terred in the Wood a. Tied securely in a burlap sack, buried four inches under the surface of the ground, the body of 6-year-old Paul Paszkowski, who had been missing for a week, was found in the woods at Grand and North Sixty-third avenues, Chicago. A bullet wound in the left temple told the cause of death, but mystery surrounds the cause or motive. Suspecting murder, the police arrested two boys who were- seen in company with young Paszkowski the morning of his disappearance. The prisoners are Julias Wiltrax and William Black, each 11 years old. Both lived near the locality where the body was found. The grewsome discovery was made by Game Warden Klupka and Alexander Schreiber, who live at Grand and Fiftyeighth avenues. They were passing through the woods with two dogs. ' One of the animals scratching in the earth disclosed the body and after a little digging the men brought it to light. The policy were then notified. The youthful prisoners denied any connection with the shooting, but were detained by the police and sent to the juvenile home. Because he had been threatened with ejectment from a rented bouse in Brookline, Hartwell Stafford entered the office of the Edison Electric Light Company in Boston and twice shot Stillman Bishop, a bookkeeper. The victim Is Stafford’s landlord. His injuries may prove fatal. At Columbus, Ohio, the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers adopted the report of the wage committee as far as it appertains to bar and twelve-inch miHs and guide mills, which Is practically the same as last year.
“PE=RU-NA SAVED MY LIFE,” - Writes Mrs. W. Mcßoberts. Women Made Strong and Happy i —■ “I Do All My House Catarrh of the Pelvic Organs Is a Fre- ilßlffi {!Tj|] l t rr% j quent Cause of Barrenness. |j - ; WOFK *111(1 1 AKI Pe-ru-na Eradicates Catarrh From the w* I Care of My Baby and 1 Fee| So TO the woman of ancient Israel not ||i|K9 wZ- | J to become a mother was regarded 19hi | I 1\ I \JOOQ» as the greatest of earthly calamities. ■IIUIHIIIII r vfiv U I To become a mother —more especially HSiPIIIHII ll Is? arf j the mother of a strong, healthy boy— In ill IP! !' IW was the hciglit of glory for the faithful lIHHftl , |\j^j=ss|S3SS^M woman of the good old Bible days. liHllllllilllilpl 1 i /j ! '||!|||i!! l il||||l||!| ! |i| T Even now, when maternity is not es- HI 1 vdll MHragiH!! I teemed ns of yore, the mother of healthy |M | l 1^1 ' j if*?' -ijsik. • children is an object of admiration, and Hm r • tj I sometimes envy, by her neighbors. As 1 I I compared with ancient peoples, the I _ average American woman has a low ap- ffjßSr^vlv 'ra *^ k l I ! ! fcC Ereciation of motherhood. There are, owever, a great many exceptions to T/lV \ I l\Hir®CS"V, C The accompanying letters from grate- II 1 ijf ful women who have been made strong, H i\L\\iß]ffltjv»fcr,8 i A healthy and happy mothers need no add- l\ WS&KllfzFsiffy U l/Wi®c\W JpL —'■'>’s L I ed words of onrs to make them con- ■ moM it Mi UaJwMwj r i W U. vincing. Catarrh had weakened and I A Ml Ml'\4Siv y-j ' ''Ak'7jW;V Jy] ’L *9. impaired their entire systems. Feruna n ' WSwJJl,mil tlll j i WuSifei. ? ] i TIcS made them sound and well. I \ \WM////M&& '£w/i Iwll 111 Ra* Mrs. L. M. Griffith, Arco, Idaho, I If/ IFt //\ “Yonr, medicine did me a wonderful f \ J vli \frk amount of good. It cured me of barren- \ ~~ A "fft I ners. 1 nm 30 years old and never had * any children; but since beginning your — 1 1 , A YOUNG MOTHER’S LETTER. \ I f !’ Mrs. W. Mcßoberts, writes to Dr. Hartman from Delano, Miss., the j ! " DoctorS. B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio: i \ I - I Dear Sir: —‘ ‘ / feel perfectly well of catarrh. J did as you directed me « 1 l /1 U- l • to and took Peruna and Manalln. The third of March I gave birth to a * \ 1 .] /7X|t ; ' 10-pound baby girl and we are both well and happy. lam very thankful 7 Y JM p JthL/W) ll l\ < * \\ to you, and Peruna saved my life. I recommend it to everyone and can’t I » . L 'JUr v"\' * ;; good, —she Is a Pcrimafbaby. 1 have such good health now. Ido all my I " | \ \ ! own housework and take care of my baby, and feel so good. f )\v>\ V/ n\ ° ••There are three or four of my neighbors using Peruna now, since It t r—vj/y /I’ o did me so much good. They were Just run down, and they think it is 1 f 111 h \ oi/ fine. It Is so good to give strength.”—-Mrs. W... Mcßoberts. * ffll jr -J medicine I gave birth to a 10-pound lin. I had been ddetoring for several ffi I ( /| baby girl. She is now six months old years, but kept getting worse. One day LI/] // | I 1— and weiglis 25 pounds. My friends were a neighbor woman brought me your .11 ] II | > V?fW. **(\ \f~/i ail surprised. Some would not believe book, the ‘llls of Life,’ and wanted me If f II l V-W^SS/r^!/ it until they came to see me. to take your medicine. I told her that // II / II l \ •. “My husband says he never saw such I hf d given up all hope of ever getting It/ J/ I\ \' -\\\\\ a change in any one ns there was in me } u t ad tried f° I P UC ' I medicine. I I j \i after 1 had taken three or four bottles of My neighbors thought I was nearly 1/ I T\ !■ V L ’ Peruna. I am stronger than I have dead with consumption. II I ///jn- Jt 1 been since I was quite young. God! “Finally I concluded that I would ll X/wf/i/,.. ‘la \j/\ wwßWJnvfV^» bless you and your medicine forever. I make a last trial. So my husband 1 JmW /'vib,‘' ■ Jrl U 1 cannot tell you all. My letter is too got me a bottle of Feruna and Manalin. \y//v h /J I, V_ long already*; but I will say Peruna I commenced taking them according to £// ' 'll cured jne- I never saw or heard of directions. That was two years ago. A %(/,t ■ -r^7 anything half so good. I can never year ago last November I gave birth.to ' j ~—- thank you enough for your kindness, a 10-pound baby boy, who is well and V4 ‘ H “i w - In cases of la grippe it works like a! hearty; and I aur doing my own house- i write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a charm. It cured my baby when other ' work. I can never give Peruna too j full statement of yonr case, and he will medicines failed. She was real bad with great praise. I think it is the best med- be pleased to give you his valuable adla grippe.”—Mrs. L. M. Griffith. ieine I ever heard of.” —Mrs. E. E. j vice gratis. Mrs. E. E. Thomas, Alpha, Mo., Thomas. | Address Dr. Hartman, President of writes: If you do not derive prompt and satis- The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, “I have used your Peruna and Mana- factory results-from the use of Peruna, Ohio.
mi ram toiwn There fa no satisfaction keener than being dry end comfortable when out in the hardest-storm. YOU ARE SURE OF THIS IF- YOU WEAR . Till tTEDPROOF JJ :D CLOTHING De IN BLACK OR YEU-OW KtD BY OUR GUARANTEE *VCB rO.,&OATON.I“IAS.V.UJA.t, AADIAN Ca.l ImUD.TOBO-iro.LAK, T7-V- ---< YOUR PRALSR. he will not supply you 111 m M Will pay for s A-LINE advcrtissmcl t ITP m II four weeks in 100 high grad* Illinois Nk 111 utjwspcpe is— loo.oo circulation per week all 111 KUsrant.ed Bcuj for catalogue. 8 LariI dard-l uion, SOS. Jeßcrson St.. Chicago.
DOAN’S CHANGE DODBT TO GLAD SURPRISE
Everett, Mass. — I received the sample of Doan’s Pills and they stopped all my trouble of pain in tlic back, from which I have suffered for two years. lam a sole-leather cutter, and being on my feet and lifting heavy dies all day, appreciate the help Doan’s Pills have given me. I feel like a new man.-— Geo. A. Burgess, 163 Belmont Street. St. Locis, Mo.— Received sample, and am on my first bottle from the druggist they helped me wonderfully. I had a feeling of wanting to urinate all the time, and trouble in passing, burning and itching. That is all gone now, and I feel thankful.— E. K. Stevenson, 6351 Easton Ave. Aspen, Colo., April 10, 1903. Doan’s Kidney Pills accomplished the desired result in my case relief came the second day after I commenced taking them. I was troubled with retention and dribbling of the urine. Now it is natural and free ms ever In my life.—D. L. Stafford.
Hfe BEP Tir t E W*f D f ffitOt PLEASANT THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY OOMPLEXION IS BETTER. Ml Sector sere R act* gently ea the etiaaeeh. Near aodudnays nod isapieaaaot laxatlra. TWa drink to - —*■* LANE’S FAMILY MEDICINE aSSSSsHgI
TO INVESTORS « VERY UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY Mr. John Brisben Walker is taking the Presidency of a Company which offers unusual features for safe and highly profitable investment; namely. First Mortgage, 6-per-cent., Real Estate bonds, accompanied by a 60-per-cent. bonus in the Company’s Preferred Stock. This Company takes over more than 900 acres of land within 3 J-j miles of center of Denver. Berkeley Heights is the most beautiful plateau around this rapidly growing metropolis of the Rocky Mountain region—the most prosperous city on the continent to-day. The property is to be immediately developed upon an extensive scale as a residential quarter upon modern plans, with reservations. Mr. Walker will hold a controlling interest in the stock, and personally recommends the investment as absolutely safe and likely to be extremely profitable. For further particulars address James Randolph Walker, Secretary, Tha Berkeley Heights Investment Co., Irving-ton-on-the-Hudson, New York.
Aching backs arc eased. Hip. back, and loin pains, limb swellings and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick dust sediment, high colored, pain in passing, dribbling, frequency, bed wetting. Doan’s Kidney Pills remove calculi and gravel. Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness, dizziness, headache, . « . nervousness. OUT AND y/rT Vyv//HII SEAL TO co.. buffalo, n. r.. obtain a tmial »o«. race. y-y 3W tDoansWk Y 3 (Swell i I SttATVitiM cut*. I kr pllhl Rtncmctw. /MC /Y>\ C ewawa O.wrra.'f-Sg I* ZA fOvNAM t ° Consult our Pl)vsieian by mail: medical advice free.
This Trade Mark appears on Cooking Stores of hie beet merit The “Klein, Kool Kitchen Kind” make so amok* tmelLsooi dirt uhn or ex ScSnclaj^aadMtoaiufidcsgajjjrf'! 1 " r ’ rr ,'' m remUlfjMroanVemdmo™ Jnitanleker wuh more comfort and In a Klean. Kool Kitchen. Bold at gooßatoreetorea. A»>lease the read* ifirh.
Sour Stomach “After X waa Induced to try CASCARKTS. I will never be without them in the houaa. My liver waa in n very bad shape, and my head ached and I had stomach trouble. Now, since taking Cascarets, I feel fine. My wife has also used them with beneficial results for sour stomach," Jos. Krehuno, 1921 Congress St.. St. Louis, Mo. BEST FOR m m. M THE BOWELS ™MdJIiSK) CATHARTIC PtesssnS, Palatable. Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, Never Sicken, weaken or Gripe, lie, 2Sa, Ma. OURE CONSTIPATION Ctarltar RmaAf Compear, CSlcafa, lootral, Now Tort. US hq-tq-bic
Burlington Junction, Mo.— I received sample of Doan’s Pills and they are all that is claimed, they relieved a pain in my back, and did all that was represented.— C. C. Rat, R F. D. No, 1. Tatlorsville, Miss.—No man can tell the good of Doan’s Kidney Pills until he tries them for a weak back. I tried everything and jjot no relief until I used Doan's Pills—J, N, Lewis. West Branch, Mien., April 11th.— Many thanks for trie sample of Doan’s Kidney. Pills. We had tried many remedies with little benefit but found -Doan’s act promptly, and hit the case, which was an unusual desire to urinate had to get up five and six times of a night I think Diabetes waa well under way, the feet and ankles swelled. There waa an intense pain In the back, the heat of which would feci like putting one’s hand up to a lamp chimney. I have used the free trial and two full boxes of Doan’s Pills with the satisfaction of feeling that I am cured. They are the remedy par excellence. — TV F. Hai.i.aud.
ALWAYS THE BEST Queen & Cfescentßoote and Southern Railway Direct Connections at Cincinnati Write for printed matter and rates W. A. Beckier, Chicago, lIL B. P. Brown, N. E. P. A., Detroit, Mich. W.W. Duanavant, T.P. A„ Warn*, a Chss. W. Zell, D. P. A* Cisdmsd. a W. C. RJnearton. Q. P. A., Ciacimtsd, a
-Cs Me Ps Mo, 10-IOOM arm wamm to AWEtTtsBB fleam its ” yea m# IDs Miwtocnl la (Ms papw.
