Rensselaer Republican, Volume 25, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 September 1892 — Page 3

;Sjgg|s OXB ENJOYS Both the method and results whan 6yrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and- Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup cf Figs is the only remedy Of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. ■>■ yV Byrup of Figs is for sale In 500 and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. So not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL, LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. H.Y- - / WHAT OTHERS SAY.

“THAT TERRIBLE DISTRESS.” LIVER TROUBLE, BILIOUSNESS, NERVOUS PROSTRATION, AND * KIDNEY DISEASE. Treated by Eight Physicians 'Without Benefit. CURED BY LIVURA. U7CU M’r’o. Co, Deah Sirs:—“ For i about 5 je»r« I have wiß I ,>ccn nftk litlw 9jß J er trouble, causing me j IwS. •. Wjw Ito become rerj Bilious. I W] A v I had headache eontln- ; uUIT> m 7 appetite was / n Ter/ poor, and a aestkgmßKjsrL- ..,. ly faintness at tho pit. " f the stomach accomI 3 Jratt|f panied by a terrible , i distress. During the j .past two years my Mr. F. B. Archer, i Kidneys became rerp, Weak and pained me so badly I conld not rest! > Owing to extremo nervousness I was enable te I attend to my bnsiness, and in January i came | ■own with Nervous Prostration. Eight different Physicians have had mo under their care, but I j grew worse instead of better. —l -j Learning of PITCHER'S UTERI I began takIng it and my improvement was noticeable from tke Erst. I have taken 3 bottles and am ENTIRELY CUBED, able to attend to my work, and bavo sot felt so well tor 6 years. I give all the credit to PITCHER’S LIVURA. Respectfully, F. B. ARCHER, | |3O West Concord Street, Dayton, Ohio. 81 ;

LIVURA OINTMENT The Great Shin Cure, , Cures Eczema, Salt Rheum, Pimples, Ulcers, itch, and all affections of the akin. Heals Cuts, Bruises, burns, scalds, etc. Sold by all Druggists, or by mall. Prim 86 Cents. VoungWives m mmmmmmmU mmmmammammmi Who are for tho first time to undergo woman's severest trial we offer . “Mothers Friend” A remedy which, If need an directed a few Weeks before confinement, robe it of its PAIN, HORROR AND RISK TO LIFE of both mother and child, as thousands who have used it testify, "I used two bottles of Mothers Friend with marvelous results, end wish ivory woman Wtohas to pass through the ordeal of child-birth to know If they will use Motheri Friend forafew weeks it will rob confinement of fait* and suffering, and insure safely te ttfe es methsr end child * s Mas. Sam Hamilton, Montgomery City, Mo. Bsadpixld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga. ,

Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies Chemicals are need In th« preparation of r. BAKER & CO.’S reakfastCocoa ■Mik tl abtoluUl y per# ami tolublt. has more than three time* e •trcnyth. of Cocoa mixed lib Starch, Arrowroot or igor, and la far more ecoeee than one cent a cup. It le delicious, Bouriehlng, and JUSlur SIQBtTED. 8«ld by flrerere ererywbere. W. BAKER & GO., Dorchester, Xus. GUITARS md MAN DOLI NS Oeii.H mm hm «e<HMa |i»wi«iL Wiuete I WiSMSttfrArt t«M •twtr* Mid umUr <**r mm fuarurt**; MM* t* «m tkiUMineiiu in un Ywur *••«»! Jr ole- will «rd*e far |*-a. C« 1 •iiw k»*v name bwnal m litsiri*. troirt f«» Ui«*U»U4 ««ul »«• 1 LVOX * IIK-II.Y. eV.I Kluimia UlrMt, Cli)^ f<V 1/ 37-02 INDPLB ' | ' Fleo'i Remedy »■ Camnm j Ban. Kart—l to Pee, end CXwap—l Jg ®2SSE§mCB ■ Odd bjr drucglau or >ea: hy mall, flj Ma **.taeelUna.Waaea «*. (SI

THE NEWS OF THE WEEK.

Light frosts are reported in lowa and South Dakota. jT;,- jiyT 7 JL IW Jack Prince, of Omaha, broke the world’s professional bycicle record at Decatur, 111., on the Ist, running a Quarter ißT3ssr: Talton Hall, a desperate criminal’who was charged with ninety-nine murders, was hanged at Wise Court House, vjT. Va„ an the 2d, At Independence, lbwa, on the 31st uTt., Nancy Hanks trotted a mile in 2:05)4", lowering her recent Chicago record by two seconds. : . , ' The German evangelical - synod have adopted a resolution favoring the closing the World's Fair on Sunday. Officers for the year were elected . Valuable beds of terra-cotta clay have been discovered at Potoskey, Mich, The clay has been examined by experts, and is said to be of the finest quality. The hearing in the much talked of Borden murder case elosed on the Ist, and Lizzie Borden was ordered to jail to await the action of the November term of court A dispatch from Marquette Mich, states that tho steamer Western Reserve broke in two off Au Sable banks Tuesday night. AH but one of twenty-seven persons on board were drowned. The mystery surrounding the assassination of L. B. McWhirter, of Fresno, Cal.. Is still impenetrable, and the people aro beginning to fear tha assassins may be able to mako their escape. The reward fund has been augmented to $15,000. The totals of the cotton crop for tho year ending August 31 havo been announced by the secretary of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange, his figures showing aggregates of 9,015,379 bales, against 8,652,597 lost year, and 7,211,372 year beforeUast. A sudden rise in the Colorado rivor Is alarming people living in tho bottoms. Heavy rains are still failing and great damage is apprehended. Hundreds of dead cattle and all kinds of debris aro floating down, but so far no human bodies have been found. Mark Baldwin, the famous base ba'J pitcher, lato of tho Pittsburg.club, was arrested on the Ist on a warrant sworn out by Secretary Lovejoy, of the Carnegie Steel Company., charging him with aggravated riot at Homestead on July 6Ho Is accused of furnishing rifles to the strikers.

FOREIGN. An explosion occurred Friday in the Aggrappe coal miuo at Carnage, Belgium entombing forty miners. Ten bodies have boen recovered, Sarah Bernhardt rjdlculos tho idea ol the presence of cholera in France, and offers to give a benefit performance In any of the so-callpd cholera-stricken towns. While walking in Hawardon Park, London, on tho 3Dth ult., Mr. Gladstone was run over by a stray cow. He was cons id erably shaken up but not seriously in jured. The cow was killed.

GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS DEAD.

George William Curtis dlod at his home at Livlngstoue, Staten Island, Wednesday, Aug. Slst. His death was not unexpected. He bos been suffering for many months from what was believed to bo :ancer of the stomach. Mr. Curtis was born In 1834, in Provi denco, It. I. It was designed that ho should pursue a raorcantilo career, but such was not suitable to his taste. In 1844

he wont on a tour of Europe, which he flhally extended to Egypt and the Dark Coullneut, and his return did not take place until 1859. Mr. Curtis, while on thU trip corresponded with soveral metropolitan journals and thus began a literary careor which has proved eminently successful. In 1850 hestumped the country for Fremont, and ever since has takeu au active Interest In politics. In 18C3 ho became political edrtor of Harper’s Woekly, which position he hold until his death. Ills position os a civil service refortnar gave him a prominence still greater than had his connection with tho Weekly as Its political editor. Mr. Curtis was widely known also us a lecturer. Ho lielloved in ami advocated pure politics Ho wns the author of a novel or two aud probably a sow more on social questions.

POLITICAL

Wisconsin Democrau ronominated their ontlro SUilo ticket. Uov. Tillman has beon renominated by the Democrau of South Carolina. Tillman's majority in South Carolina will reach ten thousand In a total vote of sixty thousand. Henry JCabot Lodge, Tuosday, publicly announced that he was a candidate lor Senator from Massachusetts. Charles L. Henry, of Andorson, was nominated rur Oongrcra liy the llepiiUll.' cans of tho Seventh Congressional Dls* trlct. at Indianapolis on the 30th. Tho Democratic cauvu-jsof Indiana wm opened at Vlucennes 011 tho Ist by the Hon. Adlal Stoveusou, ox-Uoyoruor Cray, Senator Voorhocs uud other prumLneul DeraocraU. Myron W. Deed was nominated for Con greas by tho People's party lu the First Congressional District of Colorado on the lat. An-effort will be made to havo the DomocraU Indorse him.

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

Yorktown will have a glass factory. Cholera appeared near Jonesboro fortythree years ago. There was a heavy frost fn Jackson county on tho 31st . James L. Jackson, of Orestes, Madison county, sgersirtt a grand-father; James Wilkens, of Lagrange, was bitten by a tarantula, which he found In a bunch of bananas. The Muncie Architectural Iron works were destroyed by fire on the 31st. Loss 173,060; insurance $40,000. Jackson county nutmeg melon shipments havo closed, showing a total «1 7,700 barrels, against 8,870 last year. Tho State convention of/, the Epworth league adjourned at Richmond, after electing new officers and deciding to meet at Indianapolis next year.' A section hand working on the P. C. C. & St. L. R. R., at Cementviile was struck on the log with a shovel by a fellow workman. He has filed suit against the company for $2,500. The SUite Board of Health is preparing a circular for distribution among county boards of health instructing cthem what precautions to take to prevent the introduction and spread of cholera. 7 383SE-3 Thirty-two ragged and weary looking tramps, claiming to bo miners from Ten neSsee on their way to Chicago to secure work, passed through English on the 3ist. ..and were glyen t\yo good, square meals and a place te sleep. Patents were Issued to Hoosiers Tuesday as follows; R. Eichstaedt, Michigan Ofty, drawer pull; J. A. Hunt, ludianapoliu, fire escape; J. G. Lightford. Indianapolis, motor for street ear; J. M. Trier, Jefferson, harvester and binder; B. C. Wickers, Lebanon, fence wire tightener. Bedford was visited by the cholera in 1833 and 1848. There was but one death at the first visitation, and the ladies who prepared the body of their neighbor for burial, bruised and bound bunches of bit ter herbs over their mouths and nostrils to avoid contagion. In 1849 there were but two deaths. A curious phenomenon is prensented at Jerome, Howard county. There has been no rainfall of any volume in that section for several weeks, and the drought was beginning to bo severely felt. Suddenly tho dry wells filled up. the springs doubled their flow, and the earth for a squaro mile and more became saturated with water, the ground in many places quito muddy. Lilly creek, a small stream usually, be came swollen and ovorflowod its banks, and everywhere tho water oozod out pi tho ground, accompanied by gas, which boils and bubbles and emits a strong odor. Jerome is located on a bltiff, but the cellars of the houses are filled with water, as if situated on low ground, while tho gas is present everywhere. Necessarily tho people are much alarmed, fearlug an explosion similar to the one near St. Paul last year. The,supposition is that one of the numerous gas wells in that vicinity has burst its casing leaving the gas to force its way to the surface as best it can,—

A CAUSE FOR ALARM.

The Cholera Stricken Ship Moravia Reaches New York. Iwenty-Tno of Her Passengers Died During tke Passage Across tke Atlantic. New York, August 31.— The steamship Moravia, of tho Haraburg-American lino' which arrived this morning from Hamburg, had twonty-two deaths ou board during the passage, which the ship doctor says were from cholerine. Twenty were children and two adults. Thirteen were natives of Poland, Dve of Prussia, one of Austria and" throb of hosse. Att were buried at sea. The first doath took place August 19 and tho last August 39. The steamer has been ordered down to tiie lower bay. Tho steerage passengers were carefully Inspected and wore all found to bo in good health except three children were 111 with measles. __ 'JMio health officers who made theta” spec lion of the Moravia's passengers pronounced the cause of death In the stricken cases as true Asiatic cholera. All tho emigrants ou the steamship aro being removed to llofTman’s Island this afternoon. The vessel and cargo will be thoroughly disinfected while lying in the lower bay. It was Impossible to get any but meager facts this afternoon regarding the Moravia's condition. Dr. Jenkins was summoned from the shoro when his deputy, who first went aboard of her, learned ol the condition of affairs, and ho personally In lory lewbdtiitAlil p’s ph ysician' and officers regarding tlio disease aboard the ship The surgeon of tho Moravia declared that' the twenty-two passeugors of tho ship undoubtedly died of cholerine, and Dr. Jeuklns Immediately ordered tire off shore, giving Captain Thclles, her commander, Instructions to anchor off Hoffman Island and to romaln there until ho received further order. After tho doctors loft the steamer sho weighed anchor and Immediately returned to tbo lower bay, tlio yellow Hag, Indicating that she had coutagion ou board, flying from her foremusthoad. It was Qrat<glven out that tho Moravia had a clean bill of lioalth and that the doctors had boeu surprised at tho clean and healthy condition of the vessel. Tbs return of Ihostoamor to tho lower bay croatod no surprise or snspleloa, us It was Del loved that the Immigrant paseengorsoa board wore to bo (.routed U» n bulb u( I loir man Island, and then lauded for the fumigation of the ship uud their clotlilug. It was not till after noon when the fuels Ilegau to gain circulation. Thou there was a panic among tbo people who hail llockod down u> the shore to witness the -oiwwatloas of the doetore- on tho vessel. I lie story was at first discredited, Irjt l)r. Tnlmugo hoou coii'lrmed It. Those who heard it Immediately hurried away from the station.

James F. Ligate, Mia noted Republican leader of Kansas, has joined the Farmers' Alliance and will Luku the stump for the People's Parly.. He will be the chief .'peak or at a People's parly rally BUS I Saturday, when he last Liiejtepubllcau parly and joined the People's Party.

How Great Cities Grow.

fChicago Daily Newa-Record.) Unthinking people suppose that big cities grow like jelly fishes, gradually expanding from a single center. But they don't. They coverthe ground just' tin a crop of parsley spreads over a new-ly-hoed garden. Shoots springup hero and there from a great number of cenR gradually extends until the ground is completely covered. The various root centers are plainly dfseerniDle about Chicago, and the vacant spaces between them are just as plain. Leave the city and you run through a rapidly fill ing blank spot before you strike Engleyssood; a blank, then Auburn Park; another blank, then Pullman to theSouth Chicago to the east, and .rust beyond you Hammond, with vacant spaces between each of them. Another blank and then you come to Griffith —a rapidly growing new center. This leads one to inquire what la 1 necessary to make a root-center? What determines where they will grow? Evidently railroads, The junction of two or tin oo railroads la the vicinity of any large city Is sure to develop into a suburb. Therefore land near to a junction which is twenty miles from tho coutcr of a eity is often worth more than land nearer the city but remote from any railroad or only on one. Griffith is at the junction of four great railroads and two fuel oil pipe lines; One of Its railroads is a complete belt linoyt»ncircling Chicago and bringing twenty-four more railroads into immediate switch connection'., It is strange such an important point was overlooked for so long. When a few months ago Jay B. Dwigglns & Co., of Chicago, laid out a town there, four factories immediately located, and liuuses and stores are springing up like magic.

PEOPLE.

It is said that a number of women editors in the United States receive salaries of $5,000. The Earl of Huntingdon is about to marry Miss Maud Wilson, a rich Australian beauty. Baron Hirsch, the Hebrew philanthropist, is planning an extended tour through the United States and Canada. Allen Milton Browning, of Huntington, W. Va.. is sixty years old, has been married six times, and has sixtv-seven children. Dreher, the Vienna brewer, is reputed to be worth over $40,000,000, to which the profits of his breweries add $2,000,000 a year. , The mother of the Rev. Robert Fulton Crary, of Poughkeepsie, is the only surviving child of Robert Fulton, the inventor of the steamboat. Prince Bismarck's favorite son is said not to be the elder, Count Herbert, but the younger, Count William. who is president of the Council at Hanover. Harry A. Garfield, the eldest son of ex-President Garfield, is to be a professor in the new law school of Western reserve University, Cleveland.

“Songs of Sunrise Lands" is to be the title of Mr. Clinton Scollard’s forthcoming book—a book of poems evolved from travels in Greece, Syria and Egypt. A reunion of the Harlan family, descendants of George and Michael Harlan, who came to this country from Scotlaud in 1682, is to be held at Richmond, Ind. There are about B,OOOQ of them. The Czar is never lonely on hia splendid yacht, the Polar' Star, as she carries a crew of 300 men who are selected from the best sources in tho imperial fleet.

Why the Japanese Women Look Pleasant.

Perhaps the secret of the sweet expression and habitual serenity of the Japanese women can be found in their freedom from small worries. The fashion, of drest never . varying, saves the wear of mind on that subject, and the bareness of the houses and simplicity of diet makes housekeeping a mere bagatelle. Everything is exquisitely clean, and easily kept so. There is no paint, no drapery, no crowd of little ornaments, no coming into the houses with the footwear worn into the dusty streets. Aad then the feeling of living in rooms that can be turned into balconies and verandas at a moment’s notice, of having walls that slide away as freely as do the scenes on the stage, and let in all or change the suites of rooms to the shape and size that the whim of the day or the hour requires. The Japanese are learning much from us, some things not to their improvement. We might begin, with profit to ourselves to learn of them.

No Wonder ' wife People speAk well or iR HOOD'S “For a long 1 S' t * m9l WM Uou,>lo<l wltll 7 weak Btomach. Indigea- / Slow end dyapepale. "I bofwn taking Hood's SarA saparllla amt bavo not r,,lt ®° * 811 11,1 ovcr for veers, .by food seldom Ur. U.J. Bmwdege. troubles me sow. My sister also took Hood's ft»r«aporills wttb very pleasing results, i don't womler people speak well o I Hwod’sMereaperltle- Don’t see liow they oon help It," R. J. Bhundaos. Norwalk, Ct , N a Be sure te g t Hood's Sarsaparilla.

Hooom Prixe sot eaall v, yet promptly end efficiently on tire tleer and bowels. Cupt. Watkins, of the steamship City of Paris, is quoted as saying that tho City of Romo, of tho rival Anchor line, is the moot beautifully modeled vessel that ever sailed into tho port of New York. Prof. Joseph Burnby, the musician whom Queen Victoria tias knighted, was born in Yorkshire, and, like Sir Arthur Sullivan,began life os a choir boy. He is a prolific composer ot church uud song must.*. JBaroness Burdette-Coutts, despite her eighty years, expects to cotuo to the Columbian Exposition at the lead of the philanthropist section.

When the Trap is Sprung

Upon us, as it sometimes is, in a most unexpected manner by disease, we appreciate the tact that It is a most. Insidious foe, and that not only is it necessary to combat it by the most potent medical agencies, but to prevent Us manifestation at all by counteracting the causes that produce it. Thus, exposes in Wet weather, the enforced wearing of damp clothes during a storm, a thorough draught, uaaccustomed diet and water. bodUvor mental overwork, are breeders of disease, but Hostetter’s This medlcine fortifies the system against the assured effects suoh causes would otherwise produce. To the mariner, miner, the outdoor laborer, the slave of the desk and ’ pen, and the overworked generally, it is of the utmost advantage, Dyspepsia, kidney trouble, malaria, biliousness, all yield to it. Kossuth, who will be 90 years old on the Ist of next month, is about to publish the first volume of the memoirs on which he has been engaged since shortly after the close of the .American civil war. Medical science has achieved a great triumph in the production of Beecham's Pills which at So cents a box replace a medicine ohest. ■ Louisiana wants $11,0(0,OCfl in sugar bounties out of tho Treasury. The bounty system will raise cane there, at least.

Nothing Lik it.

Far seven long years I suffered more or less, with Kidney and Liver Complaint,and during that time doctored with a number of Physicians, who stated that my case was bevoud cure. I found no Remedy like Swamp-Root, and to-day, thank God. I am a well woihan. Mrs, A. Wbelchel.Olio, Ind. ■ 1 It was lucky for this country that wo didn’t begin shutting out Italian immigrants before Christopher Columbus came over.—Free Press. “A wtii'j to the wise is sufficient," but It is not al.tuys wiso to say that word to one who is suffering tho tortures of a headache. However, always risk it and recommend Bradycrotlno. Of all Druggists. 50c One of the hardest mon in the world to get along with is the man whoso religion is all in his head.—Ram’s Horn. Don’t'trifle with affeQtions of the throat and lungs. Take Hale's Hotter or Houxhouwu or Tab. . ....... - . , . . —* - Puti’s Tootoaciii Deops cam la on* minut*. One of tho first Indications that a woman is in love is that sho will begin to deny any suggestion that she ever caied for any ono before. When you seo a rattlesnake with ten rattles and a loot ton, you tpuchthe button and UiO%uako will do tho rest. " We will give SIOO reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props.,Toledo, O. i “I’ll copper on your tray,” said the gambler as he chipped in a penny on the con - tribution plate.

The Only One Ever Printed—Can You Find the Word?

There is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. Tho same is true of each new one appearing each week from the Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This housoqilaces a crescent on everything they make and publish. Look fur it, scud them the namo of the word, and thoy will return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITJXOQBAPHB or samples free. On tho Turtle-back: Mand—l wonder why they call It the angry sea. Webb— Perhaps bocauso so many people persist in crossing it,

To Colorado Aid the Far West.

This is the season of the year to visit th: great West, and to take a trip into the rtoDderful Rocky Mountains. No heat, no dust, and no inconvenience, but a trip through the most magnificent scenery on earth, through the Heart of the great Rocky Mountains. The Colorado Midland Railway, the “Pike’s Peak Route,” takes the traveler to all the moat interesting and beautiful portions of the western country. To Denver, Colorado Springs. Manitou, Leadvillo, Aspen, Grand Junction. Salt Lake City, Ogden, San Francisco, and ail Pacific coast points. There is no other line in the country which passes through an equal amount of magnlttoeut scenery. The Rocky Mountains look their best at tblr time of the year, and a trip now will be a treat to bo remembered through life. Double daily train service and splendid equipment Any ticket ngont In tho United fctitca con sell tickets and check baggage to any point in Colorado and Utah or to any Pacific coast and Northwestern point. Further Information can be secured at any tleket office, Or by addressing (’has- S. Lee. General Passenger Agent, Colorado M'dl-nd B tilway, Denver, Colorado

Tbanli» to (hv lord. XII 8». P.Ot, Minn., OetolMr, ISM. i recently had the opportunity of teeUng the celebrated Pa.tor Koenig’s Nerre Tonic In a vary severe an A poor widow to whom I have frequently given *id and aeeietenoe in my capacity as City Missionary uni bar 11-year-old daughter to me one evening to prooua users“l Sid: while aha waa relating her daeUtnUca and stating that bar mother wai new waarir totally blind, the pens ihlta anddtet* r«U lato an epileptic fit. 1 gave her two battle* 0 f yonr medteino, and tho girl ie sow well ard happy and the support of her aged mcUtar. The Lmj be tbankea i I twins that inch a e*»e at this redounds to yonr honor and to the glory of Him above, who has «ven yon the knowledge to prepare each a Liaising for suffering humanity. R- R. IRMBCHEU, Missionary. 699 Otsego Ava ritLL s&'s&i&nrfr ter 11 This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Port Wum. liid* since ISA and Isnow prepared sailor his direction By the KOENIG MED. 00., Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggist* cl *1 par Bottle. SJbrS& Largo mas, »L7K. SBiWulwga ... rrre.-All ntastopMdirM by Dr. Kline* U< eat Narva lie.to. or. No rite after find day's use Mai. veloua cures. Treatise and g. OH trial bottle tree to Fit caaoe. Send to Dr. Kline. Ml Arch bt Phi la. Pa. ■MHMMIHHMMIIHMMiHIiHIIiIHMIMIIiiIIHHIHiHnaa UTAH. Tbo land of sunshine and flowers—rich also tu mineral and agricultural resources —ls beat readied by the Rio Grande Western Railway. Seo that your excursion tickets read both ways via that road, which offorscholco of three distinct routes and tho most magnificent railroad scenery In the world. Send 35c to J. li. Dennett. Salt Lake City, for a copy of Illustrated book, “Utah; a Peep Into tho Gardeu VVullod Treasury of tho Gods.”

E -ELY'S CREAM BALM-CWmMMtIN# £ .'TuJJCT^i Passage*, Allays Inin aud I anamination, HmI#MKJ"> "Cjß Am,ly into th* Ko»trils. It it Quickly Jbmrbtd. KKSi'r 60c. Druggists or by mall. £LY BUCti.,64 Warn* St, W. Y-PWTN>V Wb I ndianapol is Susi nessU n a verpitY lyi limoibort; esponsosknr: no Iso for Diploma; osutedy IlurtD«saßcn.>ol lu sn unrlriiwlooraEwrclal center, endowed end patronised by professions! sad huilnajmen MH EEB A OSBORnTC^

‘August!, Flower’” —“f amTeady to testify under oath - that if it had not been tor August Flower I should - have died before this. Eigb£ years ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one. but „a dyspeptic can. I employed three of our best doctors and received no benefit. They told me that I bad heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so that I had to throw it up# August Flower cured me. There is no medicine equal to it.” Lorenzo V. Sleeper, Appleton, Maine. ! iiiii.'m - ' iia in ■ 1 n .1 It Cams Colds,Coughs. Bar* Throat,Cr*uy.lslams»,Whooping Cough, BroaohitUani Arthfts. A | certain cure for Consumption in Ant stages, a sure relief in advanced stages, Cse at ones. You will ode tho excellent effect after taking" the 1 first dose. Bold by dealers everywhere. Large ! bettlei 50 cents and SI.OO. v

A FRIEND IN NEED. The old adage Is that “A friend la need is • friend Indeed.” Tills everyone will acknowledge who has tried that sterling remedy, Reid’s German? Cough and Kidney Cure. When racked by a violent cough or suffering, with a terrible eold this great remedy! comes like a messenger of peace wttW healing on its wings. It at once stimulates the kidneys so that they resume their normal functions; it atds the lungs to throw off the surplus carbonic acid; Afid it restores the circulation to it?, accustomed vigor. When this ts done; but not until it is done, will the system be restored and thej cold be banished. No one can tako even one dose of this great remedy without feeling the benefit. It acta at once, and at the same time it la perfectly harmless. It never under any circumstances does harm. Tfria makes it the most invaluable of cough remedies. Get it of any dealer. f Sylvan Remedy Co,, Peoria, IH. I

A Ramble Throng!* Wonderland. The season of 1893 brings from the Northern Pacific liailroud company a book emitted “A Ramble Through Wonderland,” with 105 pages and over twentylive haudsomo illustrations; the printed matter graphically describing tbo territory betwoen tbo Groat Lakes and the Pacific Ocean, with brief mention of Yellow Stono Park and Alaska. Other interesting publications from this road are tho Yellow Stono Park and Alaska folders illustrated) con tabling excellent maps respectively of the resorts mentioned, and telling lii an interesting manner of tho most beautiful and marvellous caglons an Gio face of the earth. The broad water-folder, relairrig ta th? famous’ Hot Springs and Natalorlnm at Helona. Mont., and “National game reserves of North America,” a book of special Interest to sportsmen. If vou wish to take the trip of a lifetime send to Chas. S. Fee. Gcuoral Passenger and Ticket Agent. St. Paul, Minn., for copies of these books and folders.

♦ Going to Buy A Dictionary? J < i BET THE BERT. . ► p||! i > Folly Abreast o t the Timas. < > ;;'A ChOteoClft. <[ I > A Grand Family Educator. <I < > Tho Standard Authority. < > o Successor of tho authentic "Dm! ! A bridged.** Ten yoers spent in reviling,, , «> 100 editors employed, over 8300,000, , < i expended. _______ < , J > SOLD BT ALL BQOKSILLECg. J J < | Beset bn reprints es obsolete editions., , ;; - , , a. * c. MRRRIAM CO.. PabUshers, ! , 4 i Springfield, Msgs.. U. 8. A. , , GARFIELP^AB! U or bad aa I Ingicmree Blah tlanaieeMai l,,r»r«(omplM io»: tara.Co.i.l Ipm lea. Usi let Free tempi* *• »• * e-e «•>* Sows. >»e Verb CHy.