Plymouth Tribune, Volume 2, Number 20, Plymouth, Marshall County, 19 February 1903 — Page 4

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And More the Pennsylvania will; have Spent Improving Its Property . fn Plymouth and Vicinity when

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Is Completed this Surnmer--The Vandalia in on Depot and Maybe Lake Erie also.

PENNSYLVANIA PENSIONS VETERANS

For two years past the Pennsylvania railroad company has been improving its property id Plymouth and through Marshall county. Hundreds of work-

The following diagram may not be strictly official,, but it shows the location of the new union depot and its proximity to the tracks of - Plymouth's three. good railroads:

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5 u j ; ::; : j : . . . ' J t i 4 fl' men bare been kept busy and thousands of dollars- expended. .The new . , ... double-track viaduct over Michigan street and the one overCenter 'street, along with, the massive new bridge crossing Yellow liter, must alone, have cost the "Pen pa' .company a whole lot of money. " ' - ; The top wave of these improvements will be reached this summer wbed the company, in conjunction with the Vandalia and perhaps the Lake Erie, will build 'a new. onion depot. The construction of this new building is now an assured fact,; and,' the Tribune is pleased to be able to so announce to its readers. ' . P; j. Fitzgerald, the, company's civil engineer, has the blue print plans of the building in his possession, but curious eyes have not yet been allowed , to get. much of a squint at it. Howby an employe who has looked upon the plans, the Tribune is safe in stating that the companies are not going i to be stingy ,ln this master, and the building' will be one' Plymouth may well be proud of. . , " ' Th trrnnndi about the lunctlon WiU Vw fiiipJ- (rraded and leveled';' and by w I O 4 . . ' ' early fall things will Iuok a right smart different down that way. This Improvement will serve to induce individual business and building invett ment in that section of the city and SPELTZAND DROAM A New Grain and a New Gms Cxn be Seen at J. D, McLaren's O.T1. . . : G. E. Bass came to Plymouth llonday evenicg with a fine exhibit of Minnesota , and North Dakota farm products. He has them on exhibition at Attorney J. D. McLaren's law office ca Garro streak From the display ose is almost tempted to believe that they do have a little growln vreathsrV up that way. II r. B&S3 hzs coma fine specimens of wheat, Car, cats, barley, rye and speltz. The latter 13 of Russian and German introduction, and i3aid to täte the place cf cats and corn for feed and wheat for four. It 13 a new wrinkla la the Cnin line, and yields frcm 40 to 0 tu2ht!3 per acre. The grarsca ca ertitlUea embrace timothy, buCalo and trccra. Thi3 latter; 3 of slow growth, tut zIIzt thD first ytir prcducca cssd and feed crcp la sdft abundance that it ü cee cf the ctr-lea of the great Hr. Zzzz Iz Izllzzz r :nt for Cirsy Cz r:.":!a, ar:il cititfira t!:-t hrj

MILLION

npnnfnM yiuiUPo

DEPOT

Mrs. 0. A. Hartmans ,qualnt little restaurant and lunch room may evolute 'into the Dalmonico Cafe of the West Side. 5 ' , " 1 ; . '. ?

. ' - Telegraph - .' -' - i Waiting Room Hi : o 5" . : , ' ' i ..... S ' Waiting Room '- -V . ; Basra

, Penaaylvanla Lines . : i

Long Storm Sheds will Cover the - - ' 2 1 . ' ' J ' .... ( Tracks, and all be coaty and snug. :f

. Besides the depot, new . sidings will be put in and Y's changed so as to be more out of the way of patrons going to and fro from the station.

Are Pensioned Like Untö Uncle Samuel's '. Soldiet Bpj; ; : Though perhaps not generally, knowi, thj Pennsylvania railroad company pensions its faithful servants., When one arrives at the ageof 65, and has-been in the company's employ 30 years, they may retire from the service and enjoy a pension the remainder of their lives, if they wish or the company requests it. Three of. its pensioners reside in Plymouth. John Hamlet receives $20.25' per, month, and will so long as tie" lives no matter where he may make his home. Edward H. O'Brien gets $15.30 a monrh and Joseph G Davis $11.60 .a month. Mr. Hamlet was a former section foreman, while the other., two men quit the road as crossing watchmen. All three are certainly deserving gentlemen, and it is a wise and beneficent department of the Pennsylvania's management which thus provides for its aged

faithful ex-employes. . v Estimates vary as to the probable cost of railroad improvements made la Plymouth and vicinity during the past two years and for the coming season, but they range from $100,000 to 1 300,000, and probably in the end the latter amount will be nearest 150, C00 acres of Minnesota and North Dakota lands for sale, with offices at Foreman, N. D., Breckenriage and Hallock, Minn. All their lands are located in the famous and fertile Red River valley . -These gentleman are not urging Indiana people to abandon their Hoosier homes for the northwest, but they do have good lands for sale that may be procured for ever so much less than Indiana agricultural land3 can be bought forand thus enable people of small raean3 to procure homes at low prlcc3 and reasonable terms. llr. Bas3 will be at Attorney HoLeren 's oSce with this fine exhibition all the week and farmers and other interested persons are invited to ceil and Inspect the display, llr. Eas3 can also tell you more about the country he represents in fifteen 1 ninutca thaa the Tribune reaa can write Into a column. , Call and cee him. I Otts my uhcle life to Eurdcc!: Elocd Eltters. U1CU3 covered ny tody. I ccesscd fceyend cure. B. B. B. ha? rzzlz viz perfect-

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DOLLARS to the total expenditure required. Alreadv the employes of the roads are enjoying the anticipation of being housed in their companies new official homeland when once located therein they will all look as pleasant and con tented as one . of Prosper Mickey's smiles. The severe cold weather has tangled, railroad work up' to such an extent j that all hands are glad to be abb to get their trains through on something like schedule time, iwithout wasting much thought about anything except Improved weather. Jacob Michael, the genial target man, says that trains on all the roads have become slow trains during the cold snap, and since the hundred mile an hour wind began blowing that frequently a train's shadow is blown so far ahead it arrives . at the target Onion Depot 1 ; to be Built this t m ( t ' j f - i v first and has to be lassoed and held for its owner. Jacob doesn't tell this shadow yarn for gospel truth, so the Tribune heartily joins the two target

New

Year

PPNNAW'VDTCDAWC : 9

' watchers, in their desire- for milder and more endurable weather. The Lake Erie & Western will In dulge in a large amount of new track laying and switch, building between Plymouth and Peru during the com ing summer. - Letter to Mr. C Kellisoii. Plymouth, Ind. De ab Sm; One xoat of Devoe is better than two of some mixed paints , ; The American House at. Tannersvllle (Catskill Mts.) N. Y., Chas. L. Wlltse, had two coats of paint flr years ago; last spring bad two more coats of the same paint. Owner was going to use Devoe but got the other paint a few cents less. Right across the street, Chatles Haner painted one coat of Deyoe at the same time last spring. ' The Haner house is the better job; but wait five years, : The point of the story is that Wiltse i3 sorry already. He has learned something that not one man in a thousand knows that a gallon of one kind of paint can contain twice a3 mush paint as a collon of another kind cf paint. You can't aSsrd to put oa another paint even if you have it givca to yea. At the came time, ycu see, that llr. 7iltS3's paint eppeara to have worn five yean give the devil hi3 due. i Ycur3 truly, F. 77. D-vcs&Coj

REAL ESTATE TRANSFER LIST

Instruments Filed in the Recorder's Office to February 18, 1903. Heirs of Elizabeth Brown, dec'd to Rilla M. Rhinehart, lot 10 Spencer's add Lapaz; $100. Rilla M Rhinehart and husband, to Cyrus E Shafer, lot 10, Spencer's add to Lapaz; $100. Levi Hill and wife to Leslie Hill, sw q of sw q of sec 7. Tp 34, R 1, ex 7 5-8 a in ne cor; $350. Mary J Miller and husband to Daniel and Julia Grossman, part of Out Lot 2, Lowry's Con Add Argos, $1000. II W Haak and 'wife to Julia A Grossman, lots 1, 2 of sec 21, T 35, R 2, ex 15 a and church lot; $1000. Samuel T Bowman to Catharine M Bowman, his wife, w 67.52 a of s hf of ne q of sec 10, .M R L ex R R; $2500.John Crawford and wife, to Edward Dills, sw q of sw q of sec 27, T 34, R 1; $1125. Jacob D Hochstedler, dee'd by ex ecutor to Sarah -McGr ill. t wo lots in Argos in sec 20 M R L; $G00. John A Cutler and wife, to Enos Metheney and Gerrard B Harris, s 21 J'ft of n 43 ft of lot 1, Orig Bour bon; $1000. Alfred A Hull, to Louisa Huff, his wife, lot 9. Smith's add Argos: $400. Herman J Alerding to Marv Jane Davis, lots 1 and 2, Block 3, Davis Add. Bcurbon; $125. Mae Morgan and husband to Schuyler C Shilling, lots 12, 13, 14,Knapp's add Culver; 3700. David Fertig, dee'd by Adm'x to Johu W "NVolford and David C Knott, und J of w hf of ne q, ex 2 a in ne cor; $810.-, A John Sarauelson, jr., and wife, Q C D to Charles Samuelson. all int in W 46 a of frl, w hf of nw q of sec 20. T 33, R I; $1.00. George Stock and wife, to Wm Stock, Und hf of w hf of nw q of sec 32, T 35, R 3; $1400. . Wm Stock and wife to George Stock. Und hf of.w hf of nw q of sec 32, T 35, R 3; $1400. Albert B Wickizer and wife to Frederick A Copp, lots 10 & 11 Wickizer's 2nd add Argos; $200. Michael Speisstioffer, by Gd'n to William B Hess, lot 68, . Enterprise add Plymouth; $50. Sarah A Denuie, to Etta II Henry, lot 24, Soice's Sub Div of Out, Lot 18, Ewings add, Plymouth; $500. Heirs or George Bechtel, dee'd to Jacob J neckaman, s hf of se q of sec 12, T 34, R 3; $4800. James Clark and wife, to Isaiah E Ball and wife, all W of RR in lot 3, eq'-bff E&ide, E 28 28 a'of.sw q of ne q of sec 27, T 33, R 2; $1200. : Furnished by Cressner & Company, owners of the only abstract books in the county. Abstracts of title to all real; estate in Marshall County compiled promptly and accurately. ; ; Rice Mills in 5t Paul. There will be built soon in St. Paul. Minn., some of the largest rice mills to be found in the world. They will be built in order to mill millions of pounds of the "rough" oriental rice that the Great Northern railroad will soon be bringing into that city. Other plants also will be erected to turn the milled rice into different kinds of prepared .foods that will" be sold In all parts of the country. It is said that James J. nill had made up his mind that St. Paul should be the center of the rice trade in this country. Mr.nill is now building two ships to carry riee from Japan to America. They are to be twice as large as any vessel afloat upon the Pacific ocean today. Each will be able to carry 900,000 bushels of wheat or 200,000 barrels of flour in one trip. If each of these vessels can take 900,000 bushels of wheat to Japan and China on one trip, it can also bring back to this country od one trip 900,000 bushels of rice. This means that 2,000 carloads of rice will arrive in St. Paul each month, when the other boats that are in the rice-carrying trade and that ship their cargoes over the three northern transcontinental roads are counted in. Most of the rice will come from Japan, for the reason that rice coming, from China costs 37 cents more per hundred pounds in freight rates. $1.25 per hundred pounds being the cost of bringing rice from China to St. Paul. Dezfness Cannot be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of tno er. There is only one way to cure de&f oecs, and thai is - by constitional remedies. Deafnecs'ia caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the En a tachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling eound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the infiammtion can be taken out and this tuba restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nise cases cut cf tsa are caused by Catarrh, which b ncthinj but an inflamed condition cf the mucous cervices. We will give Oca Hundred Dollars fcr any cess cf Deaf nt3 (caused by catarrh) tb.it csenctbs cured bj H&ll's Citzrrh Curs. Ceed for circulars, free. F. J, CnrsxY & Co.,Tclsde, O. Celd by Drclet3, Uc. Hsll'j Farjiiy PlL's cr3 tea best. Urs. Austin's Buckwheat plcisss the whole family, from the baby to grandfather. Hakes a healthy, hearty breakfast that catlsf.es.

Tin Any boy who reads this advertisement can start in business on . his own ac count selling The Saturday Evening Post No money required. He can begin next week. Many boys ane over $5 a week, Some are maKing$15. "pHE work can be done after school hoars and on Saturdays. Write to us at once and we will send fuU instructions and xo copies of the magazine free. These are sold at 5 cents a copy and provide the necessary money to order the next week's snp- ' ply at the wholesale price. $225.00 in cash prizes next month. THE CURTIS PUBLISHING" COMPANY Philadelphia Tippecanoe News.. Luther Helpman and son were in town Fridav. Mr. Jefferson Worthinirtou was at Aros Tuesday. A Y. M.'S. C. has been organized here with a membership ot 22. Mr. Hugh Aoglin, who resides at Warsaw spent a few days with his father at this place. Mr. Simeon Brockeu. who has been in a critical condition for some time, is better at present. Tippecanoe, has again been the victim of a Stage troupe, which proved an absolute fake. M. B. Grove, the Milford tombstone man, was here a few days In the interest of his tombstone business. George A. Booser, left for parts In Missouri, where he expects to tiud a suitable location for a state mill. Mrs. S. M. Cooper left Saturday evening for a few waeks' visit with her daughter, who lives at Macomb, Ohio. S. E. Starr, the Illinois man who purchased the Burr farm, north of Tippecanoe, was here a few days look ing up the matter of the Speisstioffer bottom lands. The infant child of Lewis Swihart, died February 15, aged 18 months. Funeral services were held at the Dunkard church.Tuesday at 11 o'clock, conducted by Rev. Henry Deardorff. The efforts to organize what is called the American Society of Equity, is receiving support from many of our best farmers here, and Mr. Samuel Crull authorizes us to say that he will be glad to lecture on the subject at anytime, anywhere In the county. I have several farms, that are bargains, and would be glad to hear from prospective land buyers. More sales and less commission is one of the many reasons Why I undersell other firms. Philip W. Swihart, 'Phone 3, Tippecanoe. Ind. . At the home of Rev. Rhodes, of this place, Ota E. Field and Ida Stuckey were quietly joined In marriage, Rev. Rhodes officiating. Mr. Field is known in this community as an energetic and trustworthy gentleman, and likewise the bride a refined and estimable lady In every respect. Despite the fact that Isaac Rhodes, constable of Tippecanoe, was just fined $25 and costs at Plymouth and let go pending good behavior, it is uow reported that at Lcesburg, where he was directed with a warrant to bring a fugitive, he became intoxicated, and was fined again. If we undeis'and the statutes, the third offense of tuis kind will disqualify him as constable. No Reunion ol Derr.ocrats. If we are to judge by the utterances at the Columbus banquet last week, and the tone of Colonel Bryan's newspaper, there will be no harmony or reunion of forces within the democratic party if he can help it. In the last issue of the Commoner Colonel Bryan has a. Call to Arms!" in which he says: "Reports from every section of the country make i t certain that those who left the party in 1896 under the pretense of opposition - to : bimetallism are making a systematic effort to regain control of the party .with a yiew to placing it in the position it occupied under G rover Cleveland's administration. In this they are being aided bv the less extreme representatives of the corporation element . that voted the ticket for regularity's sake without indorsing the platform. These elements do not work openly and honestly, but covertly and through agents who beg for 'harmony' ,!; llr. Bryan urgt3 the immediate organization of clubs in every voting precinct composed of 'Kansas City platform democrats." Try Tits Tcrcuim.

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CICLOIIt HITS Jl BOAT

Siks It and Sends at Least Seventeen Persons to Tho r Long SI ep. DEAD MAY NUMBER TWENTY-PIVI3 Eight of.Those on Board Are Missing in a Boat Names of Those Known To Be Lost, Norfolk, V.l., Feb. 18. A special 1o the Virginia Pilotsays that the crew of eight which embarked in life boats were picked up after rowing four hours by the tug Gazelle, and landed at Tunis. Norfolk, Va., Feb. 18. A cyclone struck the passenger steamer Olive, which plies between Franklin, Va., and Edenton, N. C at 9:30 p. m. Monday and sent her to the bottom of the Chowan river off Woodley's pier, between Mount Pleasant and Oliver's wharf. Seventeen people are known to have been lrowned, and others who were rescued are in a serious condition. The whirlwind when it struck the Olive caused her to go over on her beam ends, and when she righted it was only to sink on account of the water she had taken. Most of the passengers and crew were below at the time, and had no opportunity to reach the pilot house of the vessel. This point was the only portion left above water and in it standing waist deep from the time of the accident until O o'clock in the morning. Captain Goo. U. Withy and five others were saved. Thon Known to Ilare Perished. ' No complete list of the dead has been obtained, but it Is known that the following perished: Jacob Laslter, white, Rich Square, N. C, salesman for Carlin & Fulton, Baltimore, hardware dealers; Mrs. Bennett, Franklin, Va.; 12-year-old daughter of Mrs. Bennett; Mrs. Vaughan. Franklin, Va.; F nk Hunter, George Butt, W: II. Edwards; Andrew Vaughan, colored deck hand; Abraham Cooper and John Prescott, colored firemen; Esther Williams, colored cook: John Cooper, colored porter, George White, colored preacher; the others being unknown. Eight Other Persona MUslng. According to the statement of Captain Withy to the . Associated Tress correspondent there are seventeen known to have been lost on the sinking steamer, and a life boat loaded with Engineer C. L. Conway, Assistant En gineer J. P. Murphy, Turscr J. N. Bell, one white and two colored pas sengers (unkrown) and two colored deck hands, which left the steamer in hopes of reaching a vessel whose lights could be seen in the distance, is yet unheard from. If these have been drowned the death list will reach twen ty-five. At 6 a. m. yesterday the river steamer Pettlt hove in sight, and rescued the almost frozen known sur vivors. Later. It la learned that a white man named Wilder, of Coleralne, N. C, is also among the drowned, making the eighteenth victim. ' ... . DID MCCn DAMAGE ASHORE Am Wall m Giving Several Persons Close Calls for Life. The storm, or a development thereof,, that struck the Olive did a lot of damage ashore. A fierce wind and tidal wave swept ' across ' Munden's Point, Va., Monday night, destroying several houses and barns and the roundhouse :f the Norfolk and Southern railroad, from which several persons narrowly escaped with their lives. The residence of Thomas Morris was entirely destroyed. Morris, his wife and daughter were in the house at the time, and narrowly escaped being crushed to death. All ' were injured. The house of Elijah White also was entirely demolished, the occupants narrowly escaped with their lives. White was quite badly Injured. At high tide a tidal wave swept across the land between the ocean and Pamlico sound, which washed away everything in its course. Several people living on the water front were compelled to wade through water up to their waists in order to escape from their homes, which were being washed away by the tide. At Newport News two small schooners, the Roger Quarles and Decatur, laden with building material, sank In the harbor yesterday during a squall. The crews, escaped. Snow fell there yesterday and there has been a gradual drop in the temperature. A heavy sea was running all day. Serlons Flood Threatened. Indianapolis, Feb. 17. Dispatches to The News say that a serious flood Is threatened in southern and western Indiana. The heavy rains of Saturday and Sunday have started the Wabash river on a rampage and there is fear that one of the worst floods In years will occur In the vicinity pf Vlncennes. WAS CALLED QEMCE BT A DREAM Woman Committed Suicide Because of the Command of a Visionary Skeleton. Kokomo, Ind., Feb. 16, The belief that she had been specially summoned by an uncouth visitor from the other world so preyed upon the mind of Mrs. Hayes Parker as to lead her to commit suicide In a horrible manner. Mrs. Parker dreamed that a grim skeleton entered her bed chamber, and, laying a bony hand on her shoulder, gave the command: "Come with me." So firm was she in the thought that this was a call for her to enter the great beyond that Fhe deliberately planned self-destruction in' order that she should not receive a second and more imperative call from the ghostlv visitor. In committing the deed she had severed the Jugular vein and windpipe, asd al30 the arteries of the wrists, literally hacking herself to death with her husband's razor. They had been married only a short time and she had been In poor health. She was 25 years old, and formerly was Miss Birdie Boswell. Before committing ths deed Rha called in the fanlly doctor and bested him to give her poison.

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Marriage is very largely an accident In few cases do men or women set up a standard of manly or womanly excellence and choose by it. In most cases people become engaged as the result of propinquity rather than because of any deep rooted preference. And so it often happens that the wife enters upon the obligations of maternity just as th oughtlessly a s she entered on the marriage relation, because no one has warned her of the dangers she faces. Thousands of women oecome invalids for lack of 'knowledge of themselves. It is to this large body of women that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription comes as a priceless boon, because it cures womanly ills. w Favorite Prescription " establishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflammation and ulceration and cures female weakness. It makes weak women strong, sick women well. After my first child was born." writes Mrs. ; Jordan Stout, of Fawcettgap. Frederick 'Co., Va.. ' "my health was very poor for a long time, and last winter I was so bad with pain down in back I could hardly move without gTeat euffering. My husband got me a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and a vial of bis 'Pleasant . Pellets.' which I used as directed. In four days I was greatly relieved, and now. after using the medicine three mouths. I seem to be entirely welL I can't see why it is that there are so many suffering women when there is such an easy way to-be cured. I know your medicines are the best in the world." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets the fa- i( vorite family laxative. - One Pellet a ?! laxative, two Pellets a cathartic dose. A Weak Stomach. 1 causes a weak bodv and invites duea?e, Kodol Dyspepsia Care cures and) strsegthend the etomacb. at d WHrds off! nod overcomes disease. J. B. Tal-r. a . prominent merchant of Cbr ssman, Tex., sajs: M I could not eat because cf ä weak stomach- I lost all ftreegth and run down in weicht. All that money, could do was done, but all hope of resov-j j ery vanished. Uearing of forae woniler-j I ures effected by use of Kodol, I coc- ' eluded to try it. The first boit'e bene4 :. fitted rce and after taktr four battles and I am fully restored to my usuaj streok'th. weight and health ' j De Witt's Witch Haztl Saive. j The only positive cure for blind, bleed ng, itching and protruding piles, cut? burnt, bruies. ercema and all abrasioct ot the skin. De Witt's is the only Witcl '. I Hazel Salve that is made from the pur unadulterated witch hazel all other are counterfeits. De Witt's Witch Htze Salve is made to curb counterfeits an' made to sell. For sal by J. W. lies? If you the of Buckwheat, try Mrs Austin's famous Pancake Flour for ;' , change. Made from the great foot cereals. 96t24 18t4 ; Live for those who love vou. j For those whose hearts are fond an true, The only way to do this right, Take Rocky Mountain Tea at night. J. W. Hess. A Mother's Recommendation. I have used Chamberlain's Coug Remedy for a number of jears ac have no hesitancy in eaytof? that it i best remedy for coughs, colds and crou I have ever used io my family. I hav 1 ot words to express my confidence i this remedy. Mm. J. A. Moore, Nort Star, Mich. For sale by J. W. Hees. Tendency of the Times. The tendeocy of medical science is t ?ard preventive measures. The bes thought of the of the world is bein given to the subject. It is easier ac better to prevent than to cure. It hi been fully demobstrated that poet tnonia, one of the most dangerous di eases that medical men have to conter with, cao be prevented by the use Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, Pne monia always results from a cold rrom an attack of influenza (grip.) ar. it has been observed that this retuec counteracts and tendency of these dr eases toward pneumonia. This h; been fully proven in many thousands cases in which this remedy baa bet used during the great prevalence . colds and grip In recent yearr, and et be relied upon with implicit confienc Pneumonia often results from a iligl cold when no danger is appreh'jodc until it is suddenly discovered tb the is fever and difficulty in breathing it pains in tbe chest, then it is announce . that tbe patient baa pneumonia. Be c the safe side and take Chamderlaic Cough Remedy as soon as the cold contracted. It a'ways cures. For ea by J, W. Hess. , 1 When you feel blue and that ever, thing goes wrong, take a dose of Chsc berlain'a Stomach and Liver Tablet rhey will cleanse and invigorate yci stomach, regulate your bowels, q you a relish for your food and make yc feel that in this old world is a goc place to live. For sale bv J. W. He' I Kindly take notice that Ely 'sLiquJ Cream Balm is of great benefit t those sufferers from nasal eatarrfecannot Inhale freely through the riy. but must treat themselves by spra ing. Liquid Cream Balm differs ; form, but not medicinally from tbj Cream Balm that has stood for ycat at the head of remedies for catarrl It may be used in any nasal atomize 1 The price, including a spraying tub is 75 cts. Sold by druggists and ci! ed by Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Strce; New York. 'Adosein time eaves', lives." D; Wood's Norway Pine Syrup; r yremedy for counts, colds, p: diseases of every sort. 1 . For a good, hearty, nourl:l:fr j t.I: ter breakfast, toft one fcr vr;:i c play, eat ilrs. Austin's Pz.zzzl:zz. j