Marshall County Independent, Volume 2, Number 6, Plymouth, Marshall County, 29 November 1895 — Page 8

J

ii

"WARNING FOR TURKS

AN ULTIMATUM TO BE PRESENTED TO THE PORTE. powers Will Make Demands When the Fleet Is Assstnblcd-Sultan Will ISot Be Allowed to Parley Minister Terrell's Action. Massacre and Murder Continue. A dispatch to the London Chronicle from Rome Bay? that information has l eached its cor: of indent to the effort that when the co.uhii.ed tioet of the powers has assembled in the Turkish waters an ultimatum will bo suit t) the sublime Porte r.nI that only n fdiort time will bo allowed him in whh.-h to make reply. The cable received by the State 0 partinent from Miuister Terrell at Constantinople stating that a n.assHc-e of tihrisi ms had taken place at Kharput, Armema, ani mat me American missionary property h a d been destroyed was later confirmed by a telegram from Coston giving another eable from Constan MKS. GATES. tinople addressed to the American Board of Foreign Missions from llev. II. O. Dwight. The missionaries at Kharput are all from Eastern States. The property destroyed is valued at between $75,000 and 5100,000. The telegram from Terrell said that the number killed was S00 and this is confirmed from other sources. The scene of the massacre is far inland and beyond the reach of a man-of-war, which would be obliged to pass the Dardanelles and enter the Black Sea to approach ren the neighboring coast. It was at this very point, Kharput, that the State Department sought to establish a consulate, in which purpose it has been defeated so far by the refusal of the Turkish Government to issue nn exequatur to Mr. Hunter, sent there from the department as the first consul. The latest news is so appalling that in Government circles it is a matter of wonder that the European powers can ionjrtr remain inactive. The news of the destruction of American missions has started the friends of the missionaries all over the country to telegraphing the State Department. Assistant Secretary Uhl has replied declaring that "nothing is being omitted by the State A. W. TERRELL, MINISTER TO TURKEY. Department in the direction of appropriate and energetic action." In this connection a cable from Marseilles, France, says the cruiser San Francisco has sailed for Turkish waters. When it first became apparent that a disturbance was imminent the American missionaries at Kharput applied for protection to Mr. Terrell. The latter called personally at the Forte and sent several notes on the subject to the Minister for Foreign Affairs, insisting that the Turkish officials should protect the American missionaries ard notifying the Sultan and

I

jp W 111

EUPHRATES COLLEGE K11AR1TT. 1. Ir. Itanium's House. 3. stable. .". Mr. Furrows' House. 2. Mr. Gates' Present House 4. Mr. Allen's Hou-e. C. Miss s I'.i:di and Seym-ur.

his ministers they would be held responsible for the safety of the missionaries. The Sultan is said to be alarmed to the verge of insanity at the assembling of the foreign fleet at Salonica Bay, and it is known that he has sent urgent messages to the Vali of the disturbed districts, ordering them to suppress the disorders. In addition a number of special commissioners have been hurriedly dispatched from this city to various parts of Asia Minor, armed with power to quell the revolutionary outbreaks. XO XKWSOF MK, AND MKS. GATES Chicago Missionaries at Kharput, Armenia, in Peril. Xo tidings have been received from Kharput, Armenia, relative to Rev. and Mrs. C. Frank Cates, Chicago missionaries, whoso lives are thought to be in danger from the Turks. Mr. Cates is president of Euphrates College, which has been partly destroyed. The college is a Congregational institution, organized and dedicated in 1878. Up to 1S0.'J it was presided over by Rev. C. II. Wheeler, I. I., its founder. In 180.1 Dr. "Wheeler retired and Mr. Gates was appoinieu p r e s 1 - tient. ine college is one of eo-educa-tion, and the attendance numbers, yearly, from 000 to 1,000. It is the largest and most KKV. OATES. important educational institution in Asia Minor, and has been most successfully

conducted by missionaries of the Congregational church. Kharput, the seat of the college, is a populon twn on the Kuphrates Itiver and the headquarters of the Christian population of Armenia. The college property consisted of twelve buildings, eight of which have been looted and burned by the Turk?.

WOMAN'S BIBLE IN PRINT. Part First Seem Little Less than a Handbook of Infidelity. Religious and social circles are mueh worked up over part 1 of the woman's bible, which has just beer, published. A correspondent says that an inspection of advance sheets of this work shows it to be little less than a handbook of infidelity. It ridicules the biblical story of the creation, denies that Ioi ever talked directly with any man. strips the patriarchs of their halos, ami denounces Moses as a common "fakir." Indeed. Moses could not have fared worse in the book if Col. Ingersoll had written it. The style is not so flippant as he would have used, but it is none the less irreverent and blasphemous. As an example of the iconoclastic tendencies of the new woman, it is something awful to contemplate. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Cirannis says the book will be a decided detriment to the cause of woman suffrage. Mrs. Anna II. Shaw says it i the brilliant effusion of prejudiced women. Dr. Joseph II. Rylance says the very title of the Itook is ridiculous and is a mere cloak for a bitter attack upon Christianity. Elizabeth Cady Stanton is the head and front of the woman's bible enterprise. Joined with her in the production of this TITLE PAGE OF THE WOMAN'S BIIJLE. first part, which consists of comments on the pentateuch. are Lilli? Devereaux Blake, Rev. 1'hoebe Hanaford. Clara Bewiek Colby, Ellen Rittelio Dietrkk, Ursula X. (Jestefeld. Mr-. Louisa Southwork and Frances Ellen Burr. The method of work adopted by these leaders of thq new woman movement is described by Mrs. Stanton in the preface as follows: "Each pcron purchased two bibles, ran through them from 'lenesis to Revelations, marking all the texts that concerned women. The passages were cut out and pasted in a blank book and the commentaries then written underneath." GOLDEN CURRENT TO EUROPE. Snms Paid for Foreicn Titles Within a Quarter of a Century. Within a quarter of a century American heiresses have ojonvoyed to European aristocrats in the form of marriage settlements the vast aggregate of $UW,iro,000, or an average of ijU5.M;,l"0 a year. More than half this total has gone within the last ten years, so that the recent drain from that source has been much greater in proportion than the average for the twenty-five years. Xearly one-sixth of the total, or S'J.V.OOO, has gone within the year now approaching its end. Miss Anna Gould, now Countess do Castellane, carried off $15,(HX,000. Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt, now Duchess of Marlborough, takes $5,000,000 with her, and Miss Mary Leiter, now the Hon. Mrs. (.. X. Curzon, took away the matter of $.r,000,(u0. all within the period of a year. Of those who have contributed to this drain upon the resources of America to the extent of $1,000,000 and upward may be mentioned: Miss Virginia Bonynge ?4.r.'nj.00i) Mrs. J. 1. Ives r..'MXUM)0 Miss Jay l,n0,MM) Miss Constance Kinney I.inn'mnn) Miss Frances M. Lawrence... 1,1'mmmmni Miss Mary Leiter ri.ooo.fkk) Mrs. Charles F. Livermor 1,mmum0 Mrs. ileorge Lorillard l.tMto.iXMj Miss Cornelia Martin .,000,0j0 Miss Anita Theresa Murphy. . . 2,00O,OU) Miss Phelps 2,000,MNI Mrs. Marshall ( . Roberts 1L00,00 Mrs. Cornelia Rooseevclt l,ioo,M) Mrs. Isaac Singer f,00o,Mi0 Miss Winnaretta Singer L'H H , M HI Miss Isabella Singer 2,h0,(KH) Miss Florence Emily Sharon.. 3,00,N0 Miss Sarah Phelps Stokes.... 5,fKM,(MM) Miss Ellen Stager 1,000,1)00 Mrs. Frederick Stevens 7,Ooo,imh Miss Minnie Stevens 1,(mm,uoO Miss Belle Wilson .r, M m ,( N K) Miss Wheeler l,0OO,OOtj It is a curious fact that very few marriages of this kind occurred previous to twenty-five years ago. This fact may be variously accounted for. There were less large fortunes in this country before than since the war; there were less facilities for assH-iation among the people of opjMisite sides of the ocean, and, may be, the women of the earlier period were more patriotic than those of the present day. It is iossihIc that there were more marriages for love and fewer for mercenary consideration then than now, which would also be a factor in any statistical record of the subject One thing is certain, that the marriages between American women and European men during the earlier period of the century were without the financial consideration which is now as conspicuous a feature as it is in buying n house or a parrot. It may be added that there is only one well-known American who Las married a European woman of noble family. Xo Insulator of magnetism Is known.

tm 1 lfm

J

WIPED OUT BY FLAME

Excelsior block, Chicago, totally destroyed. Assre-ate Lotra Will Rach $21,000 Plants of Twenty Firm in Ashes -$300,000 maze in Woolen Kxchaiic Bloc!: Many Firemen Buried. Burned Like a Tinder-Box. IRE at .Ta k.a arid Canal stret K Chicago, destroyed tw.i b 1 o c 1; s owned by W :i r 1 e n Springer, S-J TOO persons out of e m 1 1 o y m cut nnd caused a l.tss or" ..COU.OOU Thv.iVilav afternoon. The Ii: burned fort'ir e hours. Vir Inn'red v.-oiii'-n ail! girls on a sixth tlr were in langer at one time of being cut oft" b the llames. but they were save; by the presence of mind of a po!:ee.i:i n. The liremen were threatened by the frequent falling of the tall walis and by explosions of oil. They had several runs for their lives, with narrow escapes, but they luckily came through ".nse.it h The Springer buildings were occupied by manufacturing eoncerns. au 1 the Harnes spread so rapidly that the occupants had barely time t o seize their books and a few personal belongings and escape with their lives. The buildings were equipped with automatic sprinklers, but these were as helpless as garden sprinkling pots to stay th tire. There u re a No two lire walls, but the flames passed thes. barriers as easily as though they were but lath. Feathers and oils and inks carried the tire from floor to floor and from end to end of the big blocks with lightning speed, and in half an hour tho wh.de Canal street front was ablaze. This front presented a surface 1 S t feet long by seven and eight stories in height. A h;ifhour later the Jackson street uide.. I', I feet deep nnd seven stories high, was

1

7V

EXCELSIOR BLOCK OS FIRE.

spitting lire from every window. So much valuable property adjoining was threatened that the lire department turned out with thirty-five engines, the largest number called into use at a single lire in five years. The lire broke out about It o'clock. Three hours later there was little left of the two Springer buildings but parts of their walls, and their contents were all burned or lay in hot heaps of debris in the basements. Less than 000 worth of property was saved by the occupants. When it became known that hundreds of women were in danger in one of the tall buildings the crowd wanted to make a rush for it, but was kept back by a detail of police from the Desplaincs street station. Oflieer Thomas Brennan had gone into the building and had prevented a fatal panic by barring the stairway with his stalwart figure until he could reassure the frightened women and send them down the stairs in platoons. Even then some of them fell and bruised themselves in their hurry to escape, but as they poured out of the doomed building the crowd sent up a shout for the women and thv gallant oflieer who had saved them. Oil Kx plosions. It was reported that the basement under the rooms occupied by the Shober oc Canjueville Eithograph Company was filled with oils, and the firemen worked i'i constant fear of nn explosion. Fortunately when the explosions came their force spent itself upward. The loud reMrts were followed by a cloud of timliTSi srJt-mf-c? KXCKI.SlOi: III.ik'K ISKFOKK T1IK Klüt-.. bers and debris flying toward the upper floors, which fell back into the seething pit without injury to firemen r -pe -tutors. Many of the floors were filled with printing presses and other heavy machinery. As the supports were weakened by the flames the machines broke through the floor and went down to the bott ;n with crash after crash as they struck each succeeding floor and landed in the basement in jangled masses of rods and wheels. As the flames spread from one section of the buildings to another, and floor afler floor gave way, the noise resembled a battery of artillery in action. Then f illing walls added their thunders to tho occasion. The first section to tumble was the sixth nnd seventh stories of the Excelsior Block on Canal treet. A warning crack and a shout from the crowd sent the firemen flying for their lives. The wall fell half way across the street and sent bricks with sufficient force to have killed the firemen, who oscapd the danger by barely n Rocond. The next section to fall was on the north, but it struck the Wilson building and went through the roof without a rebound. A little later three upper Btorie.s of the Jackson street wall toppled outward ami across the street, but it hnd been expected, and the firemen were out of the line of danger.

Edward B. CSallup, manager for Mr. Springer, put the loss on the seven-story Excelsior Block, 175 to Psi Canal street, at S'J'jri.OOO to e-ÖO.OOO; that on the eightstory block at 171 to 17:? Canal street at $70.000, and that on the Xo. 10 building on Clinton street at l'ö.fwH). He intimated the insurance would come near the value of the buildings. The property of the tenants in the buildings was all heavily insured. The origin of the .Ire is a mystery, although the supposition of employes about the Em.iierich feather renovating institution was that gas jet by accident communicated its thime to some of the chemi:i!s r.se'i in the chaning of feathers and t!:if an ( xp'osion followed which filled r;'t ;' r with 1'anie. The blaze spread m i l and c: u : t the woo iwork that sur-i-oi'hded ;:ir shaft in the corner of the :'; or. and which ran from the basement c'e.ir to the roof. It served as a chimney f.ir the fü'nios to leap to the floors above. The burning wood fell to the floors below :mi ! started the blaze among tin material stored on thetn. In fifteen minutes alter the first p trk of f'.re was seen, the seven stories of the Kxcclsior Block were bhix.inv like ; furnace. Breaking out in the afternoon of a raw, snowy November day, just as the first tr.'vel from the I'nion station to suburban I - : 1 t i was about to begin, the fire created a tremendous sensatir-n among the dirty ways of Canal street, in the dark depths of tii- . tation. and in the Sprir.ger buildiius themselves, where hundrels of men, women. i'irN and boys tied down the narrow stairways for their lives, and. finding themselves safely in the streets, hr.uhed and clapped their hands for the joy of safety. Then they watched the shell pnss more quickly than any building of its size in Chicago has ever burned before since 171. The character jf the interior construction of the Springer buildings has always been condemned by the wage earners of the West Side and feared by the firemen of the city department.

SIX F1KBM KN D1:AI. Horrible KeHiilts of Another Fire In a Seven-Story Buildintr. At 9:f0 Friday morning fire which was the cause of death and the loss of property worth $.V0,00 broke out in the fourth story of Kuh, Nathan k Fischer's new building, the Dry (ioods and Woolen Exchange, at 115 nnd 217 Van Buren street nnd 1'7 and U7S Franklin street, Chicago. The flames burst through the windows all along the front of the building, and in an instant the whole structure was a mass of curling fire. Jumping from the upper windows, a number of people were dashed upon the pavement and sustained fatal injuries. Hanging between life and death, a score or more of shrieking, screaming girls clung to the window casements of tho building. With lightning-like rapidity engines and hose carts surrounded tho blazing structure. In a twinkling every fire escape in the building was alive with hclmctcd liremen bent on saving the lives imperiled above. Catching its breath, tho spellbound crowd gazed upward as one of the girls-, driven to frenzy by the choking, blinding smoke, leaped in midair to what appeared certain death. A fireman's strong arm extended from the fire escape was almost wrenched from its socket as he caught the flying human figure. A second later another girl threw herself headlong. But no protecting arm saved her, and, turning over and over, she fell to the sidewalk below, a mangled, bleeding mass of humanity. After the fire was entirely under control and while the firemen were on the first tloor of the si met tire, throwing v :ii r on some still smoldering flames, the second and third floors suddenly gave way and crashed on the first, covering the firemen. Captain Louis Feine, of fire company and the lieutenant and four pipeiiioa of the same company were buried beneath falling floors of the building. WOULD RETIRE GREENBACKS. Secretary of the Treusury Declares His Policy in a Mew York Speech. The address by Mr. Carlisle, Secretary of the Treasury, at the annual dinner of the New York Chamber of Commerce was a plea for the retirement of the legal tenders. He took the ground that no change made in our currency system will afford relief unless it provides for this retirement, as the circulation of the legal tenders has a tendency to drive out of use and out of the country the very gold in which the Covernment is compelled to redeem them. His exact language was this: o hange that can be made in our currency system will afford the relief to which the (loverninent and the people are entitled unless it provides for the retirement and cancellation of the legal tender Cnited States notes. Anything less than this will be simply a palliative and not a cure for the financial ills to which the country is now subject." He added that "no other (lovernment in the world is required to supply gold from its treasury to discharge the private obligations of its citizisus." Citizens of Thompson Township, Ohio, are being terrorized by n lioness and two leopards, which escaped from a circuä some time up) nnd traveled from Marion County. Many sheep and calves have been killed. Farmers go to their field work henvily nrmed. Trnvel nfter night lias been entirely stopped. A hunting party will be organized. The trials of the notorious Scatterfield whiteenps have begun at Anderson, Ind. Another nttempt to kidnap Mifs Hudson, the State's principal witness, has been frustrated.

u

NEURALGIA OF THE HEART

THE TERRIBLE DISEASETHAT ATTACKED MRS. HENRY OSTING. Blowly Losing; Her Life Physicians Were Powcrlesa-FriendsWere HelplessAt Last She Found a Kemedy nith Which She Cured Herself and Langhcd at Physicians. From the Xeic Era, (Jreenbnrg. 2nd. Hearing through Messrs. Bigney & Co., druggists, of JSunman, Uipley County, Ind., that Mrs. Osting, wife of Henry Osting. a prominent and influential citizen of that tow n, had been cured of a bad case of neuralgia of the heart ami stomach, the editor of the New Era determined to know for the satisfaction of himself and the benefit of his readers the truth in regard to the matter, and took advantage of a trip to S unman last week. The Osting residence is a very handsome one, and on every hand are seen the footprints of good fortune. Mrs. Osüng herself, hale and hearty, invited us into her cozy parlor. One could hardly believe by looking at the lady, who showed all signs of good health, that she was but nine months ago a despondent victim of that dread disease, neuralgia of the heart and stomach. In answer to the question if she had been cured of a bad disease of neuralgia by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and as to whether she objected to an interview, she replied in her pleasant way, "Why. no. sir, I don't, for they've done me such a wonderful good that I f'M'l I owe everything to them." And tue statement was to be believed, for she was the example of perfect health, and we were informed by her neighbors and friends that but a short while ago she was only a living corpse. Mrs. Osting continued: "No, sir; I never did have good health; I was always naturally weak. When quite young I began experiencing trouble from my heart and stomach, w hich the doctors said was neuralgia. I was continually suffering great pain, but not one of the many wellversed physicians from whom I received treatment was able to do me any good. Severe, sharp pains would shoot over my entire body, and more severely through my heart and stomach. My entire system became nervous as pains would increase; my appetite began to fail, and for weeks I could not eat a meal just mince over the victuals. I couldn't sleep, and would only pass the nights in agony. It's a wonder that I kept up at all, for it's so little that I could eat and sleep, for 1 suffered so. No physicians could do me any good. My family physician said the case was hopeless. I was discouraged. I had tried every medicine that I could hear of, that was claimed to be good for my troubles, but not one did me the least good. Finally, I heard of Dr. Williams' Fink Fills, and our druggist, Mr. Bigney, advised me to try them, for he said they had done so many people good. I had no faith in patent medicines then, for none had dune me any good, but I thought I would try them, for surely they couldn't hurt me. I found relief immediately after I began taking them, and the longer I took them the better I got. My the time 1 used six boxes I was entirely cured. 1 never had been able to do my work before. 1 began taking th pills last October, and in December I was well and able to do my work. I can truly say, for the benefit of other sufferers, that I owe my health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." To confirm her story beyond all doubt, Mrs. Osting made the following affidavit: State of Indiana, County of Ripley, ss: Mrs. Henry Osting, being duly sworn on her oath, saith the foregoing statement is just and true. Mi:S. II EN II Y OSTING. Sworn and subscribed before me, Julr 20, lS'JÖ. V. W. BICNEY, Notary Public. Dr. Williams' Fink Fills for Fale Feople are considered an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, that tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration; till diseases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They are sold hy all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price (00 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 they are never sold in bulk or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Williams' Med. Co., Schenectady, X. Y. Big Profits on Pennies. Gold is coined in Philadelphia and San Francisco. Not enough of it comes Into the mint at New Orleans to make the coinage of it there worth while. All three mints make every denomination of silver pieces. The minor coins of base metal, cents and nickels, are all minted in Philadelphia, when; nearly lUO'OO.WJU pennies are turned out annually. Cents being; of small value re carelessly handled, and are lost in such great numbers that the treasury has to work hard to maintain the supply. The profit to the Government on their manufacture is large, however, inasmuch -s tlie blanks for them are purchased for $1. per l.Ooo from a firm in Con necticUt that produces them by contract. Elanks for nickels are obtained in the same way, costing Cncle Sam only a cent and a half apiece. Gold pieces are the only coins of the United States which are worth their face value intrinsically. A double eagle contains: $20 worth of gold, without counting the one-tenth part of copper.

Grace before Meat

There's a difference between being full of thanksgiving, and being full of Thanksgiving dainties. Hut the one thing generally leads to the other. How can it be helped when the turkey is so good, and the pie so enticing? Here's a helpful hint. For that full feeling after Thanksgiving take a pill. Not any pill, mind you. There are pills that won't help you. Take the pill that will. It's known as Ayer's Pill and it's perfect. It is sugar-coated, pleasant to the palate, and its operation, like that of nature, is effective and without violence. Keep this in your mind if you want to enjoy the holiday season: Grace before meat, but a Pill after Pie.

ill

1

A Bent Bone. A case entirely new to medical fc!ence came under the observation of the physicians at the Maryland University hospital last week. James Tymor. was the patient and he was atl'ku d in a most peculiar way. Tyir.on i employed in a bakery and Is aK ut 10 y ars of age. While at work lie accidet.tally fell upon his right aria. He felt an acute pain in the member, a if it had been fractured. The pain was intenseand finally Tymon's emp!oyrs sent him to the hospital, where be was examined by the physicians in charge. To their surprise they discovered that Instead of being broken the bom of the forearm was bent so as to form aiim-st a complete circle and wa firm in that position. It was something the physicians had not eomo in contact with bofore. It is supposed by the doctors in. attendance upon Tymon that the bone had become softened in some way, either through eonstitutional weakness or a peculiar diet.

False Witnesses. There are knaves r.ow and then irrt witt who reprt-sont eennln leal bittis .'itnl poisonous stimuli as identical with or possessing properties akin to these cf Uostuter'6 Stomach Bitters. These si-.m.ps cl!v succeed in fo:sti:ig their tnishr eonjj-ectijs i.' cr. people unacquainted with the iteiitrc article, which is as much their oj petite a day Is to night. Ask and take no s:,bsti!ute for the grand rcn:edy fr malaria, dyspepsia, constipation, rheun.atisin and kidi:y trcuLIe. Trying to Kxplain a Mystery. The apparently mysterious way in which newly formed lakes, ponds, canals, etc., become populated with fish was discussed by some of the membersassembled at a recent reunion of tho Piscatorial Society at the Holbc-m restaurant, London. More than olo 0? them considered that this was effcr-tec by birds which had been feeding or. fish spawn elsewhere, and which, alighting on these new waters. Croj i?c some of the spawn from their lilh?. Very Iiovv Kates to the South On Dec. 3 the Clu'-apo ar.d Eastern Illinois Kailroad will M.-11 ore way Jnd settlers' tickets to all points in tin Soutb at very low rates, i-'or detailed infe-nnw-tion address City Ticket Uüire. i::;0 Clark street, Chicago, C. W. Humphrey, Northern Passenger Afrent, St. Paid. M'.r.n . ct Charles I,. Stone. General Passengtr ulC Ticket Agent, Chicago. Public sentiment powerfully restrains men from doing wrong: but, when they have done wrong, sets itself as powerfully agrunst them. l.eecl.er. Asthmatic troubles and sorenes. cf the Lungs or Throat are usually ovcreoiLf- by Dr. L. Jayne's Expectorant a sire curative for Colds. The man is traveling" in the wrong- direction who thinks money can make him happy. Hopeless, The doctor and intimate friends considered my case, I was so weik and exhausted. I decided to take Hood's Sirs:iparilla and soon began to improve. After I 1 al taken ten bottles I was entirely cured, and have ever since been free from all ills peculiar to my sex. I confidently recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla," Müs. II. L. Lake, Meredosia, Illinois. Hood's SarsapariEla is the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye to-da y. Hnn,t'c PUfc ine habitual constiphtku. uuuu a 1 111a price .55 0enu per bo. feFkf-aVfe S World's f air I ttlUHIlST AWARD. i j IMPERIAL! y 4T? A KIT TTvT Always WINS HOSTS off I FRIENDS wherever itsi I Superior Merits become I ! known. It is the Safest! I FOOD for Convalescents I ! I Sold by DRl'QOISTS EVERYWHERE! C John Carle & 5ons, New York. J La&ii . KIDDER'S PASTILLES .by mall. Stowf 11 AC

-1 n

Cm

I