Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 15, Number 9, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 17 May 1893 — Page 6
TIIE XAPPAXEE NEWS. BY G. N. MURRAY. NArPANEE, : : * INDIANA. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. Bbcedeb & Wolff, manufacturers of carpets at Vienna, failed for 1,000,000 florins. Severe earthquake shocks were felt at Madison, Howard and Carthage in South Dakota. Nearly a thousand sons and daughters of the Green Mountain state witnessed the dedication of the Vermont Btate building on the world’s fair grounds. The State Investment <fe Insurance company of California has failed, causing loss to many persons. Gus Thomaston, Cornelius Wagner and Andrew Olson were killed by the cars while crossing a railway track in Chicago. At the thirtieth international convention in Indianapolis of the Young Men’s Christian association G. N. Pierce, of Dayton, 0., was chosen president. John L. Lamb, of Scranton, Pa., grand treasurer of the international organization of machinists, decamped with $5,000 of the funds belonging to the order. At the annual meeting in Toledo, 0., of the Order of Railway Conductors Grand Chief Conductor Clark, of Cedar Rapids, la., was reelected by acclamation. The shrinkages in values since the panic on the New York, stock exchange shows losses of over $'50,000,000, and most of this represents total annihilation of fortune. W. 11. Drkwey, an attorney nt Norfolk, V a., was under arrest charged with securing’ a large number of frattfl-ulent-pension claims, the steals aggregating over SIOO,OOO. Anew counterfeit s•“> United States Isilver certificate is in circulation. It is of the series of 1880, check' letter 10 15, bearing the signature of W. S. Rosecrans, register, and E. If. Nebek<y, treasurer, and has a small, scalloped 6eal. The portrait of Gen. Grant is poorly engraved, having a scratched appoaranefe, and some of the lettering is irregular. The Washington crop report for May shows a decided falling off in the condition of wheat during last April. The average for the whole country is given as 75.3 per cent., as against 77.4 for March. The condition for the six great surplus states is reported as: Ohio, 88; • Michigan, 71; Indiana, 79; Illinois, 62; Missouri, 72, and Kansas, 51, the average for these being GS.3 per cent., against 74.2 a month earlier. The,North German Lloyd line steamship Gera, from Bremen, arrived in New York with 1,400 steerage passengers, 130 of whom were suffering from smallpox. The New York Central engine No. ©99, which had made a record of 102 miles an hour, beat that by doing a mile in thirty-two seconds, which is equivalent to miles per hour. A youno negro who attempted sault a daughter of Capt. Janies Wham et Chestnut Ridge, S. C., wasTynched by a mob. Six horses ran in the nineteenth annual Kentucky derby at Louisville, Lookout winning by four lengths in 2:39 M. The levee near Lakeport, Ark., gave Way, flooding thousands of acres of cotton land and causing heavy losses to planters. Warren G. Lutterworth, ’ aged 70, committed suicide at Warren, Mass., by shooting himself through the head. His daughter Emma, who was trying to prevent the shooting, received the bullet in her brain after it had passed through her father’s head and she died also. The steamer Danube left Portland, Ore., for n China with 400 Chinese on board who had been refused admission to the United States. A freight train on the Ohio River railroad went off the tracks at Walkers, TV. Va., falling 35 feet, and three men were killed. Fire destroyed two business buildings at Pittsburgh, Pa., causing a loss of $150,000 and the fatal injury of two firemen. The seventy-seventh annual meeting of the American Bible society was held in New York and the reports showed the total cash receipts for the year ended March 31 to be $578,930 and the disbursements $526,537. The Columbia national bank in Chicago suspended with liabilities of over $1,000,000. The principal business of the bank was with country banks and they will be the chief sufferers. R. R. Robinson & Cos., bankers and brokers at Wilmington, Del., failed for $300,000. The Capital national bank at Indianapolis closed its doors with liabilities of $1,000,000. A granite monument to the memory of James Barren Hope, known as the poet lauMate of Virginia, was unveiled mt Norfolk. The Scotch-Irish congress of America convened at Springfield, O. The house of John Mahin and two other houses at Muscatine, la., were destroyed by dynamite. Mr. Mahin is editor of the Muscatine Journal, postmaster, and an ardent prohibitionist; and the residences destroyed were those of prominent citizens who have been active in prosecuting saloon cases. Mrs. Anna Harris, of Tonawanda, N. Y., charged with starving ber 9-year-old stepdaughter to death, was convicted of manslaughter in the second degree and sentenced to eleven years imprisonment. This is the first case in the history of American jurisprudence where a person was convicted of manslaughter in the second degree. The Sioux City (la.) engine works failed for S2OO 000. One-half of Spring Lake, Mich., was destroyed by fire snd fifty families were homeless. Total L055,|175, 000.
The power house and carhouse of the Grand View Beach railroad near Charlotte, N. Y., were burned, the loss being SIOO,OOO. During the week ended on the 12th the leading clearing houses in the United States reported exchanges amounting to $1,370,604,109, against $1,373,638,156 the previous week. As compared with the corresponding week of 8192 the increase was 11.0. JonN Z. Carlisle and Charles Luttrell were hanged at Sherman, Tex., for the murder of W. T. Sherman at Denison on April 28, 1892. There were 257 business failures reported in the United States during the seven days the 12tli. In the week preceding there were 216, and during the corresponding time in 1892 the number was 209. R. J. Horinck, conductor of a general store and private bank at Grand Ridge, 111., failed for $300,000, and scores of farmers are ruined by the disaster. Forest fires burned hundreds of acres of oak, pine and cedar timber, many valuable cranberry bogs and three houses in Berkeley tow'nship, N. J. Tiie twenty-five ringleaders of the mob that took from jail at Chattanooga, Tenn., Alfred Blount, a negro assaulter, and hanged him, have been indicted for murder. The Ilygeian Ice company at Trenton, N. J., failed for $150,000. Several farms east of Pinckney, Mich., were swept by a cyclone and buildings were wrecked and several persons were hurt, but not seriously, though many horses and sheep were killed. Tiie collapse of the Columbia national bank in .Ch the failure of banks atr Rusiavjfle, Greentown, Oxford. Morristown, Arcadia, Spieeland, Orleans, Hebron, Brookston, Dunkirk, Geneva, Boswell, Knox. West Labanon and Greenwood in Indiana, the Richland. Edwardsburg. Lawton, Rockford and Charlevoix banks in Michigan, tho bank of Oregon in Wisconsin, the bank of Casey in Illinois and the bank at Clenrmount in Ohio. !Members of the local world's fair directory passed a resolution that the fair, should be open Sundays on and after May 21, the a.dmission to the grounds to be twenty-live cents, and the big exhibit buildings,to lx; closed. This action may by annulled by the national Commission. Joe Brannon, aged 19, was hanged at Charleston, S. C., for the murder of Stephen Kearney on the 31st of August last. The police at Buffalo, N. Y., claimed to have discovered evidence of a plot by anarchists to blow up the water works and fire the world’s fair buildings to avenge upon Chicago the execution of the anarchists condemned for the Haymarket murders. The new Ciinard line steamship Campania made the trip from New York to Queenstown in 5 days 17 hours aud 42 minutes, the quickest passage eastward yet made by any steamer. The total value of the exports of breadstuff's from this country during the ten months ended ’April 30 last was $157,653,913, a decrease of $95,000,000 from the corresponding period of 1892. John Weiss, grand treasurer of the Order Germania, a relief fund, sick and benefit association, departed from his home in New York with SIOO,OOO belonging to the order, Kendall Sc Smith, the largest miWing firm in Nebraska, failed at Lincoln for $250,000. The big department store of Frank A. Lappen Sc Cos. and the furniture store of the Lappen Furniture company in Milwaukee failed for $500,000.. At Louisville, Ky., tho firm of W. 11. Thomas Sc Son, the largest deulers in old Kentucky whisky in the world, pended with liabilities of $600,000. A severe “windstorm at Astoria, Ore., overturned a number of fishing boats and four men were drowned.. The percentages of the baseball clubs in the National league for the week ended on the 15th were as follows; Cleveland. .667; St. Louis, .067; Washington, .043; Pittsburgh, .636; Brooklyn, .583; Cincinnati, .572; Philadelphia, .500; Baltimore, .429; Boston, .462; New York, .385; Chicago, .286; Louisville, .200. Two persons were killed and several seriously injured by the a railway locomotive at Lebanon, Pa. The jury in the case of W. C. Kippey, accused of assaulting John W. Mnckay in San Francisco with, intent to kill, was dismissed, having failed to reach k an agreement. John Turley, who shot and killed L. F. Price, a conductor, on a train at Seymour. Ind., was taken from jail at Bedford by masked men and lynched. The Standard Oil company’s works at Whiting, Ind., were burned, the loss being SIOO,OOO. Ten men fell 3,000 feet to their death down the Red Jacket shaft of the Calumet and Hecla mine at Calumet, Mich. Kendall & Smith, grain dealers at Lincoln, Neb., failed for $300,000. The Kissamee (Fla.) City bank closed its doors with liabilities of SIOO,OOO. Tightness of money and slow collections caused the failure. A fire caused by a defective flue in the bakehouse of the Aldine hotel in Philadelphia resulted in a loss of 140,000. A crevasse gave way at Brook’s mill in Arkansas, causing the destruction of crops in eight or nine parishes. By request of Secretary Gresham the resignation of William E. Curtis as chief of the bureau of the American republics was sent to the president. The annual meeting of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers was opened at Schenectady, N. Y. An extensive tin-ore mine was found near Kenova, W. Va., the analysis showing 70 per cent, pure tin. N. B. Martans, 70 years of age, of Woodland Cal., was robbed of $4,100 on the world’s fair grounds in Chicago by a pickpocket. An overflow iif* the Illinois and Sangamon rivers in Cass county, 111., flooded several thousand acres of rich farming lands, entirely destroying the wheat sown last fall. Clarence P. Teller, the noted Cincinnati diamond robber, escaped from the state prison at Jackson, Mich.
Rev. Dr. J. S. Baldwin, for twentvtwo years a Methpdist minister In China, says that if the Chinese are shipped from this country to China simply because they are here without taking out certificates, Americans in China will be likewise deported from that country to the United States. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Gen. Edward D. Townsend, for a number of years adjutant general of the army, died at his residence in Washington. At the meeting in Louisvilfc?, Kyi, of tho National League of Republican chibs W. W. Tracey, of Springfield, 111., was chosen as president. The National Republican College league in session at Louisville, Ky., elected L. E. Hawkins, of Syracuse university, as president. Edward O. Leech, director of tho mint, handed In his resignation to the president, to take effect at the end of this month. A Tiie state convention of Ohio prohibitionists will meet at Cleveland June 27 and 28. Gen. Samuel Ciiapman Armstrong, founder and principal of tho Hampton institute for negroes and Indians near Fort Monroe, Va., died at Hampton, aged 54 years. The republicans elected a senator in North Smithfleld, R. 1., which gives them a majority in the next legislature and enables them to elect republican state officers. W. 11. A. bishop of the Episcopal diocese of Vermont, died at Burlington. FOREIGN. Admiral Gomez y. Long, who commanded the Spanish vessels of war in the recent naval review in New York harbor, died in Havana. Herb Dalczuk, an actor at the theater at Lemberg, Austria, committed suieide on the stage during the play because of jcalopsy. Cable advices say that the revolution in Nicaragua is successful and that the revolutionists under ox-President Zavalle are now practically, in control of the government. The official announcement is made that Queen Victoria, lias approved tho apportionment of the earl of Aberdeen as governor general of Canada. The official estimate of the Bengal flndia) wheat-crop for the_season just closed is 443,243 tons, against 249,930 tons for last year. Rev. K. W. who was identified with the well-known Evangelical mission at Paris founded by him twenty years ago, died in that city, aged 77 years. The . schooner Espcrancc and her captain and crew of ten men were lost while on a sealing voyage in the gulf of St. Lawrence. George Victor, the sovereign prince of Waldeck, died at Marienbad, Bohemia, of pneumonia, aged 52 years. During the Maximilian holiday celebration at Durango, Mexico, an affray occurred between a mob of intoxicated Mexicans and the police which resulted in the killing of five of the mob and one policeman. A feud between rival camps of charcoal burners near Mazatlan, Mexico, led to a conflict in which ten men were killed and a number badly wounded. The steamer City of Hamburg collided in a fog off Trevose Head, coast of Cornwall, with the ip Countess Evelyn, and the crew of sixteen and nine passengers of the latter vessel were drowned. By an accident to a ferryboat near Boroyitcheo, Russia, dozens of persons were known to have been drowned and many more were missing. LATER. Tiie United States supreme court lias declared the Geary Chinese exclusion act constitutional, and all Chinese who fail to register will be sent back to their native land. The total number of Chinese in the United States is 110,000, of whom only 3,169 have complied with the law. Idiot immigrants will hereafter not be allowed to land in this country. German soldiers stormed Ilornkranz, a Hottentot village, and-diiring the fight seventy native women, ten" native men and boys and a few babies were killed. William 11. Myoatt, banker and real-estate dealer at Denver, Col., failed for $507,889. Lou Trench, who murdered Henry Faedler, was hanged at Brownstown, Ind., by the same lynching party \\lio hanged Turley at Bedford the previous day. In Australia the Bank of North Queensland and the Queensland national bank suspended with total liabilities of $40,500,000. A battle took place at W. J. Rainey’s coke works at Dawson, Pa., between about 100 drunken Hungarians and officers and nine of the Hungarians were left on the field for dead and four of the officers were fatally hurt. Eighteen men engaged in a walking match from Omaha to Fremont, Neb., a distance of 60 miles, Henry Lester wining in 7 hours and 10 minutes. The women’s congress, the first of a series of world’s fair auxiliary congresses, opened in Chicago with a large attendance of representative women from all over the world. John L. Sullivan was arrested at the depot in Bangor, Me., and placed in jail for brutally assaulting Max L Li/.ottc, a one-armed Biddeford lawyer, on the Boston train. Charles Lkndburo, Peter Johnson, John Larsen and John Swansen wgj*£ drowned in the lake near Chicago by the capsizing of a boat The Missouri court of appeals lias sustained the conviction of a barber in Kansas City for violation of the Sunday law, which provides that no VorU other than household offices or other work of necessity shall be performed on Sunday. Tim Ontario Coal company at Toronto failed for $400,000. The supreme court has affirmed its previous ruling as laid down in the Langfeld case, popularly known as “the hat-trimmings case,” and the United States will be called upon te refund from $8,000,000 to $10,000,000 to importers in New York and elsewhere.
, IT IS VALID. The United States Supreme Court,Affirms the Constitutionality of the Chinese Exclusion Act—No Funds to Enforce the Law. Washington, May 16. —The supremo court, through Justice Gray, sustained the decision of the New York courts in favor of the constitutionality of the Geary exclusion act. Justice Brewer dissented. Dissenting opinions were also filed by Chief Justice Fuller and Justice Field. Following is a synopsis of Justice Gray’s remarks, in announcing the judgment of the court: The power of this nation to restrict or prohibit tho immig ration of any aliens into the country, or to require such aliens already in the country to remove herefrom, was a well-settled principle of International law and was confirmed by an unbroken line’of decisions in this court. The legislative power of the government had not transocuded any of its constitutional limitations in tho act under consideration. It was within its power to determine tho regulations under which these aliens should be permitted to remain in the ‘United States, or failing to observe these regulations they should be required to leavo the country. As to the requirements that the Chinose entitled to remain in this country should establish that right by the evidence of one credible white witness, Justice Gray said that it was within the power of tho legislature to determine the character of evidence that might be received in a case at law and what force should be given to tho testimony so offered. Not discussing tho wisdom nor tho Justice of the act in question, which was beyond the province of the judicial branch of the government, it remained only to say that the judgment of the circuit court for tho southern district of New York in refusing to grant writs of habeas, corpus to the several petitioners was affirmed At the conclusion of Justice Guay's opinion Justice Brewer announced that he felt compelled To dissent from the view of the majority of the court, lie read his views at some length, declaring in substance that the act of 1892 was unconstitutional and that if it were upheld there was no guaranty that similar' treatment might not be accorded to ’other classes of our population than the Chi nose. Justice Field, who delivered the opinion of the supreme court in the first case timler the exclusion act, also read a dissenting opinion. He held that there was a wide, difference between exclusion of immigrants' and the deportation of alien residents, and In* characterized the act in the strongest language as inhuman and ffrutal, and as violative of tbc constitution irrevery section. He regretted to say that the decision of the court was, to his mind, fraught with tiie gravest dangers to the priceless constitutional liberties of the people. ■ Child Justice Fuller also dissented from the opinion of the court. After.the court had concluded the announcement of opinions, Mr. J. Ilubley Ashton, of counsel for the Chinese, moved for a rehearing of the case and an argument before a full bench at tho next terra. The court took a short recess to consider the motion of J. Ilubley Ashton for a rehearing of the cases before a full bench at the next term of court. After the recess the court denied the motion for a rehearing, so the opinion stands as announced. Washington, May 16. —The decision of the supreme court of the United States declaring the Geary anti-Chinese act constitutional has caused great excitement in official circles and much consternation elsewhere. There was a hope that this law would receive the condemnation of the highest legal tribunal, but it appears that it must stand. The administration is now faced with an order from congress directing that unless all Chinese laborers be registered before May s—one year from the approval of the act—they shall be deported from the United States unless such laborer can prove accident, sickness or other unavoidable cause. Congress appropriated SIOO,OOO for carrying the Geary law into effect. Its preliminary work of arranging for the registration of Chinese, including an extra force of internal revenue officials to supervise the registration, has already cost in the neighborhood of $75,000. This leaves but $25,000 to deport those who fail, neglect or refuse to register. The president suspended the operation of the law pending an appeal to the supreme court, and this will add a few days’ grace, it is thought, to the erfier for registration. It is perfectly apparent to the president and all the officers of the government that the Chinese cannot be sent out of the United *States unless some provision is made to pay their passage back to China. There is no money available for such a purpose other than the sum specifically set aside by congress, and this is to all purposes exhausted. Should the Chinese combine and refuse to register now, which is probably what they will do under the advice of counsel, no steamship company will carry them away unless their passage is prepaid or a sufficient guarantee given by the United States government. Outside of this confusion which is already bothering the administration stands in striking prominence the fact that it will require over $6,000,000 to deport the Chinese now in the United States should they refuse to obey the Geary law and that so far as all practical purposes are concerned there is scarcely a dollar to do it with. In view of all these circumstances it is probable that the president will be compelled to let the Chinese remain where they are until congress shall meet and provide him with the means for carrying out the provisions of the Geary law. ENGLISHMEN OF NOTE. Mr. Gladstone’s name occupies twenty-two pages on the catalogue of the British museum; Tennyson’s fiftyseven. Q The bishop of Liverpool is one of the most stalwart members of the Episcopal bench. He stands over six feet high and is, or was, a model of a university athlete. Dukii Cuarlks TnEODOre, of Bavaria, not only learned but steadily practices the art of healing, and recently performed his two thousandth operation for cutasoct^
Hor ThU! We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured byJAall’s Catarrh Cune. F. J. CRenet 6l Cos., Props., Toledo, O. We, the unders : gned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, 0., Waiding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous •urfuces of the system. Price. 75c per bottle. Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials freei “There’ll be more money in the second edition of your book than in the first, of course,” said the publisher. ‘Then why not have the second edition first?” asked the practical poet.—Harper’s Bazar. On Time, And very early too. That’s what any one should be in treating oneself for inaction of the kidneys and bladder. The diuretic which experience indicates as supplying the requisite stimulation to the organs without exciting them, is Hostqfter’s Stomach Bitters. Don’t delay; kidney inaction and disease are, not far apart. For fever and ague, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism and nerve debility, also, use the Bitters. “I’m out for the dust,” said the parlor Oarpet as it swung over the clothesline. But the colored man. beat It at its own game.— Buffalo Courier. In every community there are a number of men whose whole lime is not occupied, such as teachers, ministers, farmers’ sons and others. To these classes especially we would say, if you wish to make several hundred dollars during the next few months, write at once to B. F. Johnson & Cos., of Richmond, Va., and they will show you how to do it. A young man with pushing qualities can always get something to do even if it is nothing better than engineering a lawn mower.—Buffalo Courier. “ The IH.uk Crook ” Remains at Me.Virkor’s Theater till the end of June. July 2nd, Mr. Denman Thompson will begin his ‘World’s Fair season, “The Old Homestead.” Regardless of the fact that the cyclone always travels in a great hurry it, manages to pick up many valuable things qn the way. —ln te r Ocean. * Ladies can permanenth r beautify their Complexion with Gmmiji's Sulphur Soap. Uill’s Hair and \Vtusker Dye, 50 cents There .are accidents that are peculiar to the seasons. /Tin? balloonist gets the worst of it m the iafll.- Binghamton Leader. Sick Headache, chtffsjoss of appetite, and all nervous trembling sensations quickly cured by Lecciiaia's Fills, 25 cents a box* Talk about your transformation! We have seen a square man turn round.—Yonkers. Statesman. It’s a sure sign that ague has come to stay when it gives you the shake. —Inter Ocean. THE MARKETS. New York. May-16. Live STOCK—Cattle. H 45 (fa 5 43 Sheep 3 fv) ft 5 75 < Hogs 7 50 M 8 03 FLOUR—Fair to Fahey.. 2 55 <(4 3 65 Minjiestjla Patents. 4 -5 oi. 4 (V) Win;AT No. 2 Red 79 1 /, No. 1 Nri’theru 81 ft 84 : ± COKN-No. J sP*fo; 53 Ungraded Mixed 50 ft 5 1*4 OATS- -MixedWestern 30 ft 38 KYI*:- -West in (> ft 07 P<>KK Mess. 20 75 ftil 50 LAKD -Western Steam 11 10 ft\\ 15 IiUTTER— Western Creamery. 28 ft 29 CHICAGO Steers.... J.T95 ft 6 00 Cows 1 75 ft 3 GO Stoekers 2 9) ft 4 (,) Feeders. 4 00 ft 4 65 Butchers' Stegys 3 75 ft. 4 10 Hulls 2 25 uu 3 75. ROCS -Live a. 7 10' ft 7 60 SHEEP ■. 350 ft 0 00 UIJTTEK Fair to Choice Dairy. 18 (<?* 22 EGGJv -Fresh 13 ft !8£ BROOM CORN— Hurl. 4 ft Self working. <'rooked. ... 2 ft 2V4 POTATOES New (per hub.... f/. ua ki POlHt \ss 20 1 5 ft 20 30 LAKD—Steam 10 FLOCK—Spring Patents 3 75 Qn 4 10 Spring Straights 325 (<(, 3 50 Winter Patents.. 3 89 4 00 Winter Straights 3 20 ft 340 GRAIN-Wheat, Cash.-.,. 744 Corn, No 2 443 Oats. No 2 29 ~ a ft 30 Rye. No 2 59 ft, 00 Harley, Good to Choice 43 ft 55 LUMHEKSiding 16 50 (£24 50 Flooring 37 OJ <7(38 00 Common Hoards. 15 25 ftWt 50 Fencing 14 00 ftM 00 - Lath, Dry 270 ft 2 75 Shingles— 2CO ft 3 15 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE-Steers 14 50 ft 5 60 Hoteliers’ Steers 360 ft 4 65 HOGS 090 ft 7 .35 SHEEP.' 4 ft 5 25 OMAHA. CATTLE—Steers |3 80 ft 5 30 Stockers and Feeders 300 ft 4 40 HOGS—Good to Choice ‘ 7 20 ft 7 40 Light and Mixed 7 20 ft 7 30 SHEEP 400 ft 5 50
A FULL STOMACH ought to cause you no discomfort whatever. If it does, though—it there’s any trouble i after eating—take Dr. Pierce’s iPleasant Pellets. They’re a f perfect and convenient vestpocket remedy. One of these tiny, sugar-coated, anti-bilious granules at a dose regulates aud corrects tiie entire system. Sick or Bilious Headaches, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilions
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cannot cure. Bj
“German Syrup” I am a farmer at Edom, Texas. I have used German Syrup for six years successfully for Sore Throat, Coughs, Colcfe, Hoarseness, Pains in Chest and Lungs and Spitting-up of Blood. I have tried many kinds of Cough Syrups in my time, but let me say to anyone wanting such a medicine—German Sy ntp is the best. We are subject to so many sudden changes from cold to hot, damp weather here, but in families where German Syrup is used there is little trouble from colds. John F. Jones, fe
In the Spring Many people are troubled with dizziness, dullness, unpleasant taste in the mecatag, and that “ tired feeling.” Pimple#, boils and other manifestations of impure blood also appear, annoying and depressing. To all such sufferers we earnestly urge a trial of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. No preparation ever received such unanimous praise for its success as a Spring medicine* It cures scrofula, salt rheum apd every other evl< dence of impure blood. It overcomes that. M tired feeling” and all other debility.
Hr, Geo. W, Twist Coloma, Wis. ** A few years ago my health failed me, and T consulted several physicians. Not one could clearly diagnose my case and their medicine failed to give relief. After much persuasion I commenced to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. Have taken several bottles and am much improved. From an all run down condition I have been restored to good health. Formerly I weighed Hood’s - .Cures 135 pounds, no„\v I balance the“scales at 176 pounds. Hood's Sarsaparilla lias been a great benefit to me, and I have recommended it to friends, who realize good results by its use- ’* Gko. \V. Twist, Coloma, Waushara Cos., Wis. Hood’s Pills. cure live/ fils, sick headache, jaundice, indigestion. Try a box. 25c.
Br. Kilmer’s S\MP*RGOT
CURES A PHYSICAL WRECK! Dr. Kilmer & Cos., Binghamton, N. Y. Gentlemen:—l desire to tell you just how I was, so that tho public may know of your wonderful Swamp-Boot. Two years ago. last October I had spells of vomiting, I could not keep anything in my stomach; tho Doctor paid I had consumption of tho stomach and bowels; continued to run-down in weight; I was reduced to CO Ihs. 1 would vomit blood, and nt one time ns much as three pints; we bad two of the best Physicians and they said, my case was hopeless. “Oh, my sufferings , were terrible.’’ A neighbor told us of your Swamp-Hoot, and my husband got a bottle; I took it to plenso him. I used six bottles of Swninp-Koot and I am now nearly os well aa ever. I tctlg’h 108 /ft*., do my own work and take care of my baby. Every one says, I tea. rat,.a from thr drad, and many will not believe that I am still living until they come and see me, and then they can’t believe their own eyes, lam looking- .<> tell . Very gratefully. Mns. John Cuamtine, Jan. 10th, 1893. * Antwerp, N. Y. At Druggists, Price—soc, or SI,OO, l)r. Ivilmcrte Parilla Liver Pills ARE TIIE REST! 43 Pills. 35 cents.
SPURGEON WROTE .* . . ** I testify to what I have with my own (-yen, ami I believe you have saved numbers from consumption. What I lmvtt seen of God's Healing Power through you, demands of me that I speak for the good of others.” The above 15 an extract from a letter written by tiie late Key. C. H. Spurgeon to G. T. Congreve, of London, whose BALSAMIC ELIXIR, nas been a Standard Remedy in England for nearly three-quarters of a century Mr. Congreve has now opened it Depot in America,at 2 Wooster St., New York. If your case Is a serious one, obtain Mr. Congreve’s Hook on Consumption and Diseases of the Chest, mailed free to any part of tho United States, for 35 cents, or send .00 for a copy of the book ; a 50 cent bottlo of Hslsamic Elixir and a 50 cent bottle of Pills, as recommended in Mr. Congreve’s treatment. BT Mention this Paper*
Unlike tiie Dutch Process No Alkalies Other Chemicals ISSpLllteOfe are used in the preparation of Jfl&K W. BAKER & CO.’S- | MißreakfastCocoa Pn f'i n which is absolutely Pin i \ll pure and soluble. hlj I 1} 7 |Tj It has more than three timss Mnu i a l;’ll fAo strength of Cocoa mixed fyML* *[ {- fa with Btarch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more economical, costing lesa than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and basilt DIGESTED. ' Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & C 0„ Dornhester, Man,
IEWIS’9B* LYE I POWDERED AND PERTTJMKD La (PATENTED). The strongest and purest Lye - made. other Lye, itbeing . n fine powder and packed In a can ► with removable lid, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap In 20 minutes without boil* trig. It la the best for cleansing waste pipes, disinfecting sinks,, closets, washing bottles, paints,, trees,etc. PEXNA.SAI/T M’F’fl CO. Oen. Aienta, PMILA*. Pa* ~ ria.MQ tkMJNTCi*.
tl i i | < i viau ibu ten
