St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 12, Number 33, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 February 1887 — Page 4
THE NEWS CONDENSED. THE EAST. “PrROF.” JouN DE LEON, the “astrologer,” who was convicted in New York City of indncing young girls to Panama for immoral purposes, under the pretext of finding elployment for them, has been sentenced to fifteen years’ at hardlabor in Sing Sing. NEARLY fifty people lost their lives in a disastrous railroad accident near White River Junction, Vt. Two sleeping-cars and two passenger coaches left the fore part of the train on the bridge and were pitched over the abutment and down to the * ice fifty feet below. The stoves in the cars soon set fire to the woodwork, and in half an hour’s time only a mass of ashes and twisted iron remained ol the great wreck. Only about thirty of the passengers thrown over the bridge escaped with theirlives. ... Boston gamblers are fri%htened over the prospect of the passage by the Massachusetts Legislature of a law against gambling in that State... John L. Sullivan put in an appearance on the New York Stock Ex~change, but his awkward attempts at the ways of speculators were met with howls of derision, from which he escaped in a convenient cab. EXPRESS MESSENGER A. S. ROBBINS. who was one of the six persons on board the wrecked Vermont Central train, and who had passed over the bridge before the necident occurred, said: “It is probably one of the worst accidents that ever took Flace in the United States. When we were airly upon the bridge we felt the shock and heard a erash bebhind. When we looked behind we saw the four rear cars piled upon each other over the edge of the bridge. They pitched over so fast that it hardly seratchea the edge of the bridge, and in a few minutes they were all on fire, with all the people in them. Oh, it was awful; the worst thing I ever saw or heard of.” A _‘fgcu}iax case has arisen over the matter of e identification of a body -claimed by two wparties, one alleging that it is the body of a female, and the other that it is that of a male. Even the doctors are equally divided on the question on account of the charred condition of the corpse. Clothing, watches, keys, etc., belonging to each of the victims, were found on the remains in such a manner as to indicate that two persons died together, and that one body was entirely consumed. There is nothing left of the other but a portion of the trunk, minus the head, arms, and legs. THE WEST. JOE Ac¢roN, the champion catch-as-.catch wrestler of America, defeated Evan Lewis, of Madison, Wis., in the presence of 4,000 speectators, at Chicago. The winner took 75 per cent. of the gate receipts and the loser 25 per cent. The men wrestled under special rules, which provided that two points—two shonlders down--*sghould constitute a fall instead of three. The terms were the best three in five falls, and Lewis won only the second, losing the first, third, and fourth. At times it was a decidedly nugly struggle between the men. Acton, although weighing only 155 to the 185 ‘pounds of Lewis, was the favorite in the betting. ... Edward Toew, city editor of the Arbeiter Zeitung at Milwaukee, was sentenced by Judge Sloan to thirty days’ imprisonment for contempt of court ...Henry Clay Dean, a Democratic orator who was widely known, died recently at his home in Putnam County, Missouri... . Mary Baker, residing in ‘White County, Indiana, has taken neither food nor drink for 110 days... Chicago elevators and vessels contain 13,712,500 “bushels of wheat, 7,131,309 bushels of corn, 1,029,512 bushels of oats, 152,663 bushels of rye, and 262,864 bushels of barley; total, 22,278,848 bushels of all kinds of grain, against 17,932,050 bushels a year ago. . LorENZO SNOW, a polygamist, on being released from the Utah penitentiary by a decision of the Federal Supreme Court, was taken to his home by Mormon friends in a four-horse dray.... Detective Hulligan, one of the officers maltreated by the desperadoes who rescued Harry McMunn on a Pennsylvania train, died at his home in Cleveland. He leaves a wife and four children. Pitt Smith has been arrested in Columbus on suspicion of having taken part in the rescue of McMunn. THE heavy rains of last week boomed the waters in the Western streams, and more or less damage resulted. A flood at Elgin, 111., iilled many cellars and partly destroyed one bridge. Several washouts occurred on the St. Paul Iload between Rockford and Janesville. A grist-mill and bridges at Shopiere and Turtleville, Wis., have been ruined. Mostof the factories at Rockford, 111., were closed, and hundreds of cellars were flooded. The inundation was the most serious ever known there. At Grand Rapids, Mich., nearly every cellar was flooded, and much damage was caused. At Monroe, Mich., an iron bridge was swept away and other property destroyed. The western ;fi)rtion of Detroit was submerged, the ichigan car shops and the steel spring works being compelled to close down. (onsiderable damage was caused at Chicago by cverflowing sewers, which flooded the basements and cellars of many buildings. THE SOUTEH. AT a funeral in New Orleans, the police nabbed Margaret A, Murphy, who had been seen to pick the pocket of a mourner. It was soon learned that she had practiced this game for many years without arousing suspicion, and had lived respectably on the proceeds. One hundred complaints had been filed with the police. ADVICES just received from Albany, Texls, report that Clara Barton is doing a great work in the drought-stricken portion of that State. Over forty counties are affected, representing a district as great as Pennsylvania. This region has been for two years without rain and without crops. The Red Cross Society is distributing clothing, food, seed, money, and in some instances forage. The fame of Miss Barton goes before her and great crowds attend her coming and her going. A NEGRO named Calvin Garmany, near Greenville, S. C., has just discovered that he is a free man. He had not heard of the emancipation proclamation. WASHINGTON. BY request of the War Department, railroads bhaving headquarters at Milwaukee recently sent to Washington a list of their rolling stock, and a statement as to their ability to carry troops to points on their lines..... The President has accepted the resignation of Gen. P. M. B. Young, of Georgia, Consul General at St. Petersburg, but has not yet selected his successor. SECRETARY MANNING has sent to the Hcuse Committee on Foreign Affairs a long reply to the request of that committee for his views with regard to the House and Senate retaliation bills, and for any suggestions that he may desire to make with reference thereto. The Secretary regreis that the tariff laws of the United States or the non-intervention policy of Canada should be the “divided disgrace of our common civilization.” He cautions legislators to enact laws looking forward to the eventual mergiag of the two countries into one, and submits a new bill to the committee
which provides that whenevar the President shall be satisfied that United States vessels are denied any of their rights or privileges in Canadian waters or ports, it shall, in his discretion, be his duty to issue a proclamation closing the ports of the United States against vessels owned wholiy or in part by a subject of her Britannic Majesty, and coming or arriving from any port or place in the Dominion of Canada, or in the Island of Newfoundland, whether directly, or having touched at any other port, excepting such vessels as shall be in distress; and every vessel thus excluded that shall enter or attempt to enter any port of the United States shall be seized and forfeited, or the value thereof shall be recovered from the person attempting to make the entry. THE delay of definite action on the antipolygamy bill by the Congressional conferrees threatens the defeat of the bill. ... The Commissioner of Patents has presented his annual report, which showed that the receipts had been $1,154,551, the expenditures $992,503, and that there was $3,107,453 to the credit of the patent fund in the Treasury. SENATORS on the Foreign Relations Committee do not believe that the nonintercourse bill pre%m‘ed for the consideration of Congress by Secretary Manning will be accepted by that body, THE President signed the Indian land sevelalty bill and the “ backbone” landgrant forfeiture bi 11...,. Citizens of New Lexington, Ohio, have memorialized the Senate to initiate negotiations for the acquisition of Canada, POLITICAL. A Biun has been introduced in the Dakota Legislature appropriating £150,000 to purchase seed grain for needy settlers whose crops were destroyed by drought last year. ...Speaker Carlisle has written a letter to Representative Randall, in which it is understood he expresses the entire inability of the tarift reformers to accept the internal revenue features of the bill prepared by the })rotection Democrats, and their desire for a much larger reduction in customs duties than the bill contains. The Speaker then, in behalf of his wing of the party, advances? propositions uvpon which to unite the party in favor of a bill to reduce the surplus revenue....A caucus of Republican Senators was held last week to consider the policy to be pursued with regard to a reduction of the revenue. No conclusion was reached.
A BILL has been introduced in the Nebraska Legislature providing that all railroads doing business in the State, shall, on the Ist of January of each year, issue arnual passes to the State officials and members of the Legislature... A bill to punish strikers who interfere with the lawful employment of other persons by a fine of SSOO and imprisonment for six months passed the Texas Senate with only three dissenting votes. ... The Sunday law passed by the last Louisiana Legislature has been declared constitutional by the Supreme Court of that State. A BILL has been introduced in the Legislature of Wisconsin to tax the capital stock of mining corporations $2 per SI,OOO, and giving swollen concerns until June to reduce their figures to a taxpaying basis. . . . The Senatorial deadlocks in New Jersey and West Virginia continue, there being little change in the ballots. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. AN order has been posted in Philadelphia clothing houses locking out all the cutters. The order affects several thousand emgloyes. ... Testimony is being taken in New ‘ork as to the cause of the present strikes. The strikers contend that the entire troubles were precipitated by an attemuvted reduction of the wages of topmen at Elizabethport and Port Johnson, and that it would be remedied by restoring Elizabethport rates. A NEW YORK dispatch says: “That the present year has opened most inauspiciously for the cause of labor is shown in the statement prepared by Bradstreet's of strikes begun during January. Within that limited period there occurred sixty-six strikes in various parts of the country, a very large majority of them being in Eastern cities. By tbese strikes 78,000 workpeople were left without employment. Onethird of the strikes were successful or were settled by compromise, and nearly onesixth of them failed. The others were still unsettled at the end of the month. During the present mounth the number of strikers has been largely augmenfed, so that now about 85,009 persons have struck since the beginning of the year. Over 14,000 more have been left unemployed through the closing of factories because of strikes elsewhere.” AT the Champion mine, forty miles north of Marquette, Mich., 500 men quit work because of the refusal of the superintendent to discharge a foreman. The Sheriff swore in deputies to preserve order. Owing to a difference of opinion with the suprintendent the emploves of the South Boston Horse Railroad struck in a body. GENERAL. THE school-house at St. Monique, Ontario, was destroyved by fire and four young girls who were in it perished in the flames. Three daughters of Mr. Ambrose, aged 10, 11, and 12 years, and a daughter of Mr. Joseph Forge slept in the place during the night. The origin of the fire is unknown. The charred remains of tke four young girls were found among the ashes, Sik AporrH CAnroN, Minister of War for Canada, said in an interview at Mon{real that in his opinion there was no probability of a rupture between Canada and the United States, that the war talk was all nonsense, and that the difliculty would be amicably settled. THE eighth annual convention of the American Agricultural and Dairy Association was held at New York. ... The first annual convention of the iron roof manufacturers of the United States assamblel at Canton, Oh'o, delegates being present from twelve cities. .. .The American Wheel Manufacturers’ Associatim convened at Pittsburgh with forty delegates, representing 85 per cent. of the United States wheel manufacturers, present. . . .The gr at Council of the Improved Order of Red Men held its annnal session at Kalamazoo, Mich., wit:l all the great officers and a number of delegates, representing 14,000 members, present. ... The National SugarGrowers’ Association met in St. Louis, and President Norman J. (olman, Commissioner of Agriculture, being detained, A. M. Scoville, director of the agricultural station at Lexington, Ky., presided. FOREEGN. WirnniaM O’BRrIEN published a letter declining election to Parliament on the ground that he could be of more service outside of Parliament than in it. .. .T. M. Healey was elected to fill the vacancy in the north division of Longcford County caused by the decision of Justin McCarty to occupy the seat belonging to Londonderry city... A mob at Tipperary,after burning a house from which a tenant had been dragged, declared that they would hereafter tolerate no evictions. Mr. Paineli's reticence is being ascribed by his enemi s to consumption, impending insanity, etc.... A Vienna dispatch announces that Bismarck has succeeded in establishing a coalition between Austria, Engiand, and Italy against Russia. Germany will join the coalition if Yrance supports Russia..... The French Minister of Foreign Affairs has informed the Cabinet that the outlook for international affairs is peaceful. THE German postoffice authorities are making extensive experiments with a view to connect the whole of Germany by the
telephone. . ..French commandcrs on the German Tlrontier have been ordered to avoid all exercises of their troops likelv to Dbe falsely interpreted by Germany. ...Spanish republican immigrants residing in France have decidled to form a volunteer force of 2,000 men to assist France in the event of war with Germany. Several members of the Anti-patriotic League in Paris have been arrested for placardiug the city with an appeal to the soldiers to desert or shoot their officers. A Berlin dispatch says that Gen. von Moltke, in receiving a deputation of conservative electors, declared that the political situation was most serious, and authorized the deputation to give publicity to his statement, STRIKING miners at Blantyre, Scotland, made a riotous demonstration and looted a number of shops. The local police were powerless and the troops had to be called out to quell the disturbance. A number of arrests were made.... The Italian Cabinet has resigned.... The West London Commercial Bank has failed.... The Belgian Government has increased its military estimates.... The German Minister to Tangier has been called hoeme to Berlin. . .In the French Chamber of Deputies the extra army and navy appropriation bills passed without debate.... A Socialists’ meeting at Stettin, Germany, was dispersed by the militin. Several people were wounded by bayonet thrusts. ADDITIONAL NEWS. A FOX-DRIVE at Linn Grove, 111., in which eigit hundred persons took part, resulted in the killing of but one animal. ....John Lucklum’s house, near Jefferson, Towa, was consumed by fire, the owner's father, wife and son perishing inthe flames. Neighbors found the door fastened when the fire broke out, and could render no assistance to the unfortunate occupants. .. . An Albuquerque (N. M.) dispatch says: “(reorge Lockhart, a Deputy Sherifl’ of Navajo Springs, accompanied by Ed Palmer and Tom King, started for Navajo reservation to arrest an Indian for horse-stealing. They found him on the reservation, surrounded ‘by a large party of his tribe. The Indian resisted arrest and Lockhart{ shot him dead. The other Indians opened fire on the three men, and in the resulting battle Lockhart, Palmer, and King were killed and left lying where they fell. Two Indians were killed and two wounded. The Indians then rode off to Bennett's store, near Manulas station, on the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad, and stole all the provisions they could carry off. Excitement is high, and the people living around the reservation are afraid that the entire tribe will go on the war-path and that another Indian war is imminent.”. ... A dispatch from Warsaw, Ind., says a terrible tragedy occurred about two miles north of that place. A party of hunters on their return to their homes happened to pass the farm residence of Henry Dunham, when they came upon his mutilated remains in the lane near his residence. Instantly starting to alarm the neighbors, they did not enter the house until after their arrival. On opening the door they discovered the fittlo, 2-year-old girl with her throat cut from ear to ear.and Mrs. Dunham near by, alive, but 50 badly cut and injured about the head as to render her insensible. Mr., Dunham’s body was so badly torn by hogs as to make it impossible to ascertain how he was killed. It is believed that the erime was committed by robbers, as Dunham had sold some wheat and live stock for $250. Only ®9 was found in the house. A prAaMATIC and sensational episode occurred at the Grand Opera House, San Francisco, where Adelina Patti was giving her farewell concert: While the diva was singing, says o San Francis o dispatch, a crank attempted to throw a dynamite bomb on the stage. The matter exploded in his hands, injuring him severely, Although the house was crowded there was no panic, The police inmmedintely rushed into the gallery and arrested the dynamiter, It is supposed he objected to Patti's high prices, The diva immediately aftorward sang “Home, Sweet Home,” apparently unaware that an attemapt had been made on her life. When the bomb exploled a panic was narrowly averted. People in the galiery were rushing about seeking the quickest means of exit, and it was only by the self-possession of the newspaper men present in the box, coupled with that of the diva. that a stampoede of the entire house for out-doors was preventad, The bowmbthrower said he had stooped to pick up his hat and cane and found a package under the seat, which he picked up, and that as he raised it to see what it was it exploded, l'houngh he was badly burned about the face and hands, he received no serious injuries. He gave his name as Dr. James Hodges, a dyspepsia specinlist, His age is 71. FREIGHT officers of the Pennsylvania Road, at a recent conference, agreed that the company would be benefited by the operations of the intorstate commerce law, although six hundred contracts will be daily copied and sent to the commission. SECRETARY MANNING has been elected President of the new Western National Bank of the city of New York.... .John C. Leighton, ex-(lerk of the Municipal Criminal Court at Boston, is a defaulter for a large amount, some placing it as high as 8200,000. He held the oftice for nearly twenty yvears, and was appointed last December, but immediately resigned. MEMORIAL services in honor of the late General John A. Logan were held in the Senate on the 6th inst. The Senate chamber was packed with attentive listeners—Mrs. Logan and family being among the number. Fifteen members delivered touching eulogies on the life and services of the dead Senator, In the House of Representatives eulogistic addresses relative to the death of the late Congressman Price of Wisconsin were delivered by Representatives Caswell, Thomas of Wisconsin, Hudd, Pettibone, Henderson of Towa, and Breckinridge of Kentucky. The House pass:d a bill authorizing the Fort Worth and Denver Road to lay track through Indian Territory The Senate bills appropriating £21,000,0)0 for coast defenses and gun foundries were sent by the House to the Cominittee on Appropriations. Rise and Fall of the Bustle. The popularity of the bustle as an article of female adornment is hard to account for. Some ten years ago it reached a high state of development, and was then discarded for a time, but latterly it has become again in vogue, and this fall has probably touched highwater mark, both in size and popularity. It is a strange taste that stimulates the physical development that the bustle indicates, anl it would, no doubt, be impossible to trace its origin; and probably not one in ten thousand who wear it care to know so long as it is the fashion. In looking at a well-bustled woman one is led to believe that the intention of this addition to her figure was to imitate the graceful outlines of the quail or a modified form of the peacock. It looks handsome enough wher the annex is skillfully constructed and gracefully worn, but the uninitiated cannot but sympathize with the wearer in the great responsibility which she assumes, and in the constant fear that must haunt her that something may go wrong with this elaborately built-up portion of her anatomy, but such considerations do not daunt a woman. She gets and wears what fashion dictates and takes all risks, There is a movement on foot, however, which may cause the downfall of the bustle. In European capitals fashionable dogs are beginning to be adorned with them as far as the exigencies of the canine anatomy will admit. This fashion, of course, will spread, and it is likely that when it becomes general -women will resume their natural shape and leave the bustle to the dogs. You may be sure the man who, on all oceasions, falls to praising your friends without reason or stint, has very few of his own. “PLEASE pass the butter,” a maid was heard to say who was attempting to milk a fractious cow,
Novels and Novelists. | If one were asked to name the classic novelists of the English-speaking world he would probably mention Defoe, Swift, Fielding, Smollett, Sterne, Dr, Johnson (Rasselas) and Goldwin among tle earlier ones, and Godwin, Maturin, Anne Radcliffe, Jane Porter, Regne Maria Roche, Miss lidgeworth, Miss Burney, Jane Austen, Charles Brockden Brown (the American supernaturalist), Bulwer, Disraeli, Captain Marryatt, DBeckford, Hope, Cooper, ‘ Lever, Dickens, George Eliot and ‘ Hawthorne. The above names wou'd | not, could not, be omitted. Os course, | others might be included in the list. For instance, Scott’s son-in-law, Lockhart, was a novelist of distinction in his day, but he never was a favorite novelist of the entire English-speaking world as most of the above writers were and are. He was never a universal household novelist, as they were and still are, “Robinson Crusoe,” “Gulliver’s Travels,” Mrs. Shelley’s “Frankenstein,” and Mrs. Radeliffe’s “Mysteries of Tldolpho,” and Johnson’s “Rasselas” are housepold books, world-books. Meantime the army of the linglishwriting novelists, living and dead, defies enumeration, like the autumnal leaves or the sands on the seashore. And the cry is, in all critical, journalistic, and review quarters that still they come. Meantime, the above writers of fiction remain the masters in that department of literature, Their supremacy 1s not disputed. Taine calls Scott the Homer of modern citizen life. Bulwer and Disraeli (I use the names by which they we:e oricinally and lone known as writers)
Ullsluullly hails IUUS SAAARNI VY A4 SR WA AVVA N delineated, for the most part, the patrician life of England, and this they did with masterly pens, although they were most versatile writers, especially Bulwer was such, as the long list of his novels indicates. Dickens and Thackeray for a time, with their gush and satire of rank and gaste, threw them into the shade, but they, or their novels, have re-emerged and are almost as rruch read as ever they were. Time does not dispel the charm of “Contarini Fleming” and “Coningsby,” and is not likely to. So with a number of Bulwer’s novels, Such as “Paul Cliftord,” “Rienzi,” “The Last of the Barons,” ete., they must be read as long as Scott's are. What a splendid picture of the stirring age of the “Last of the Roman Tribunes” is Bulwer's novel of that name. Years ago some of our hypercritics were fond of declaiming from the lecture rostrum against Bulwer and Disraeli and in praise of Thackeray and Dickens. Dut the two former were as great in their way as were the two latter. As for Fielding’s “Tom Jones,” torevert, abruptly, to the earlier English novelists, its pages are not readable at the present time. Fielding was agreat delineator of character and profoundly versed in the lEnglish human nature of his time, which was apt to be coarse, brutal and sensual, In fact, his “Squire Westerns” and “Tom Joneses” are too gross to be tolerated at this era. The reader of “Tom Jones” now would need to bathe himself thrice in running water byway of purification. 1 Fielding's “Parson Adams” is worthy to take its place alongside of “Don Quixote.” NRichardson’s once famous | novels of “Pamela” and “Clarissa Har- | lowe” would now be found too tedious | in the perusal for the most determined | novel reader. Smollett's *Roderick | Random” gives us vivid delineaticns of l the rough old naval officers of the | Commodore Trunnion sort, who made | British men-of-war in the first half of | the eighteenth century literally float- | ing infernos by their brutalities. } “Don Quixote,” “Gil Blas,” “Gulli- | ver's Travels,” “The Tale of the Tub,” ¢ “Robinson Crusoe,” “Tristram Shan- ! dy,” “The Vicar of Wakefield,” “Ras- ; selas,” “Wilhelm Meister,” and “The | Sorrows of Werther,” “Vathek,” Schil- | ler's “Ghost Seer,” “The Nouvelle Hel- | oise,” “Consnelo,” “Jane Eyre,” Hope’s | “Anastasius,” and “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” | are the unique books in the field ot fie- | tion, veritable world-books.—Boston | Traveller. Z e e i Important, | When you visit or leave New York City, rave | baggage, expressage, and $3 carriage hire, and | stop at the Greand Union Hotel, opposit: | Grand Central Depot. ! 613 rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million | dollars, $1 and upwards per day. European | {\lan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the rest, Horse cars, stages, and elevated railroad to all depots. Families can live better for less money at th:> Grand Union Hotel than at | any other first-class hotel in the city. ‘ | Opportunity Makes a Man’s Reputation . We forget that old (ien. Washington | had been sitting in the Virginia 1 egis- | lature years and years without making ~any speech, when he was picked up and sent to Congress, and there made | Commander-in-Chief of the forces of | the revolted colonies. Suppose he | ' had not been in the Virginia legisla- i ture all those stupid years, what pros- | pect would there have been of making | "h'm Commander-in-Chief? He was | ' not nominated for any great services I “he had done in war, though he had ' been in action; he was nominated be- t - cause he had been faithful as a Deputy in the State Legislature, and the delegation knew him and put him forward l where he derived his immortal fame. His political administration might have | “been a failure but for the confidence ho ‘ had obtained in the hearts of the people by national services known to all, covering a period of ten years. So he was the unanimous choice for President. Suppose he had not been in the war, which was not a school of political economy, what chance would he have had to be President? And in point of fact nearly every great man in history was not born either pure or great, but he became true and distinguished by sitting in the public sight. —Gath. L What the feing Costs. The elaborate icing that imitates frost and ice on Christmas cards is done by scattering particles of ground glass over gnmmed cards. These tiny aton s penetrate the lungs of the poor girls employed in the manufa-ture, and either kill them or render them soon helpless invalids. For eight years Col. D. J. Williamson, Quartermaster, U. S. A., and ex-U. 5. Consulat Callao, was crippled with rheumatism. He got no relief until he used St. Jacobs Oil, which cured him. No remedy on earth equals it for pain. Price, fifty cents a bottle. : 7 Couldn’t Be Fashionabie. “Fashion decrees that trousers shall be worn longer this season,” said Jimmy Saywell to Artaxerxes Flamm. “Is that so? Well, I'm sorry, but I can’t conform to the fashion in that case. It would be impossible for me to wear these trousers any longer and maintain my position in polite society.” ExaMmiNE not the pedigree nor patriwony of a good man,
| Trouble Ahead. When the appetite falls, and sleeps grows restloss and unrefreshing, there is trouble ahead. The digestive crgans, when healthy, erave food ; tho nerveus system, when vigorous and tranquil, gives its possessor no uneasiness at night. A tonic, t) be effective, should not be a mere appotizor, nor are the nerves to be strengthened and soothed by the unaided action of o sodative or o narcotic. What is required is a medicine which invigorates the stomach and promotes assimilation of food by the system, by which means tho nervous system, as woll n 8 other parts of the physical organism, is } strengthened. 'These are the efects of Hostetter's Stomach Bittcrs, a modicine whose reputation is founded firmly in public confidence, and which physicians commend for its tonie, ’ auti-bilious and othor proporties. It is used l with the best results in fever and ague, rheumatism, kidney, and uterine weakness, and other maladies. Ir was Thackeray’s delight to read each number of “Dombey and Son” as it issued from the press. He had often been heard to speak of the work in terms of the highest praise. When it had reached its fifth number, wherein Mr. Dickens described the end of little Paul with a depth of pathos which produced a vibratory emotion in the hearts of all who read it, Mr. Thackeray | seemed electrified at the thought that there was one man living who could exercise so complete a control over him. Putting number five of “lombey and Son” in his pocket, he hastened down to Mr. Punch's printing office, and, entering the editor’s room, he dashed it on the table with startling vehemence and exclaimed: “There’s no writing against such power as this—one has no chance! Read that chapter describing yvoung Paul’s death; it is unsurpassed—it is stupendous!”—£H, H., Ntoddard.
Usep Red Star Cough Curo effectually. Dr. C. Faweett,Union Protestant Infirmary, Balt.more, Md. Ne depressing efiects. A Dubious Explanatien. Giotham Minister—l understand you are one of the ministers who accepted the invitation to attend an opera ballet in Chicago. Chicago Minister— Yes, I went there with the intention of Proavlung against the attire of ballet gfrls on the following Sunday. Gotham Minister—Did you? Chicago Minister—No. Gotham Minister —Why not? Chicevo Minister—Didn’t find anything to preach against.— T'id-Bits. # % ¥ ¥ Dolicate Diseases, affecting malo or female, however imduced, speedily and permanently cured. Illustrated book for 10 cents in stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Association, 603 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. A MECHANIC'S wife rarely wears a tulle bonnet, and yet her bonnet is usually the restlt of the use of the tool. Established in 1872, The oldest family story paper published in tho West is the Chicago Lelger, and its growth has been steady and abiding. The present year | has so far been the most successful since its stirt. The Ledger gives no premiums, but the money paid out by many publications for watches, chromos, ete., is use lin making the paper | more acceptable to its readers. By | this course it is enabled to give a family paper for $£1.50 per year which is cqual to its Lastern $3 competitors. Don't take cur word for it, however, 1 Lut send for a sample copy, which will | be mailed free by the Liedger Company, | 271 I'ranklin street, Chicago. r A Good Showing. ‘ The twenty-firat unnual live-stock report of | tho Union Stock Yard & Transit Co., for 1886, | by Geo. T. Williams, Sec'y, shows the total recoipts, for the year, of cattle, calver, hogs, shoep and horses, at the Chicago Unton Stock | Yards, to have baen 9,770,340, Os this num- l ber a table, giving the recoipts by railroads, ‘ shows the (~ B. & Q. to have delivered 2,535,- | 081, or 26 per cent. of the whole. The total number of cars received was 285461, of which the (~ B. & Q is credite 1 with 56,500, a greater numbar by 17,5855 than the road having the next highest showing, and 27 per ceat. of the total car receipts. This is certainly a good showing for the C., B. & Q. l Deep Sea Wonders | Exist in thousands of forms, but are sur- ’ passed by the marvels of invention. Thoso i who are in necd of protitable work that can be | done while living at home should at once send } their address to Hallett & Co., Portland, | Maine, and receive, tfree, full information how | cither sex, of all ages, can earn from 85 to 825 l per day and upwards wherever they live. You are started free. Capital not required. Somie have made over 850 in a single day at this work. All succeed. “Rough on Dirt”’ whitens ciothing yellowed by careless washing or use of cheap washing ‘ compounds. Washes everything from finest ‘ laces to heaviest blankets, T'here need be no fear in using this arlicle. Does not rot nor yellow, 5 and 10 cents, IF YOU ARE LOSING YOUR GRIP 1 On life try “Wells' Health Renewer.” Goes direct to weak spots. For weak men, delicate women, “BUCHU-PAIBA.” | Qnick, complete cure, all annoying kidney diseases, cataarh of bladder, ete, %1, If muslins, calicoes, ete., appear to not wear or wash as well as formerly the reason is in the use of inferior alkaline-—soap-washing comspounds that destroy thoe texture and neutralizo the colors. Shun them! Use **Rough on Dirt,” Wants the Facts Known. Mr. Ed tor: land my neighbors have been led 80 many times into buying d fferent things for the liver, kiduneys and blood, that have done us more harm than good, I feel it due your read :rs to advise them when an honest ~and good medicine like Dr. Harter's Iron Tonice can be had. Yours truly, i AN OLD SUBSCRIBER. | WELLS HAIR BALSAM. [ If grav, restoroes to original color, An elegant | dressing ; softens and beautifies. No oil nor | grease. A tonic restorative. Stops hair coming out; strengthens, cleanses, heals scalp, sble, THE best thing on earth to add to starch togive a good body and beautiful gloss is ““Rough on Dirt,” only washing compound that can be so used. Makes ironinZ easy and saves the starch, . Has dirt-removing power double that of any | other, . I'l.\‘n's'l{mmwly for Catarrh is agreeablo to use. It is not a liquid or a snuff, §oc. Hood’s § 1l This successful medicine isa arefully-prepared o§tl':x(-t of the bLest remedies of the vegetablo kingdom known to medical science as Alteratives, ]th()()¢1 Purifiers, Diureties, and Tonies, such as Sarsaparilla, Yellow Dock, Stillingia, Dandelion, Juniper Berries, Mandrake, Wild Cherry Bark and other selected roots, barks and herbs., A medicine, like anything else, can be fairly judgsd only by its results. We point with satisfaction to the glorious record Hood's Sarsaparilla has entered for itself upon the hearts of thousands of people who have personally or indirectly been | relicved of terrible suffering which all other remedies failed to reach. Sold by all druggists, #1; six for 25. Made only by €. I. HOOD & C 0.,, Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass, ~ 100 Doses One Dollar FORALL., ®3oaweekand ei;’{r;fi:;;a; Fuld. Outtit worth %5 and particulars ree. I.O.VICKERY, Augusta, Maine, OLD CHRONIC PILES.-NONS™ CAsks. "==Also other Rectal Diseases cured by measures mild,sate,and certuin, Write torleferences. M;(,““" M.D.,208 N.Clark St., Chicago.
Why did the W of this country use over #kirteen wmillion cakes of Procter & Gamble’s Lenox Soap in 1886 ? Buy a cake of Lenox and you will soon understand why.
For the Ladies. Laughter is the {»oor man's plaster, Making every burden light; Turning sadness into gladness, Darkest hour to May dawn bright. "Tis the deepest and the choapest Cure for ills of this description, But for those that woman s heir to, - Use Dr. Pierco's “lavorite I'rescription, Cures all weaknesses and irr(-gnlu.riti(m’,, “hearing down” gensations, “internal fever, bloating, displacoments, infl ymmation, morning gickness, and tendency to cancorous diseaso, Prico reduced to one dollar. By druggists. Dip you ever notice how they flt.ru;,'glo to conceal the identity of hash on a bill of fare by putting it in French? I Had a Dreadful Cough, And raised a considerablo amount of blood and matter; besides, I was very thin, and 80 weak I could scarcely go about the house, This was the caso of a man with consumption ari-ing from liver complaint. He rccqvern;d his health completely by the use of Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery.” Trouszands of others bear similar testimony. Tur umbrella is the check-rain of the human anin.al.—Boston Transcripl. SuppeEN Changes of Weather are prmln‘ctive of Throat Diseases, Coughs, Colds, ete. There is no more effectual relief in these m‘m-armn to be found than in the use of BROWN'S BRONcHIAL TROCHES, Prico 20 cts. A FIRE-PLACE has a grate opportunity. —Carl Pretzel's Weekly. INDIGESTION, dyspepsia, nervous ]‘»_rn%?:‘ar tion, and all forms of gencral debility relioved by taking Mensman's Poptonized .B(j(!f Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. it contains blood-making, force-generating, and life-sus. taining properties; is invaluable in all enfoeblod conditions, whether the 1 snlt of exhaunstion, nervous prostration, overwork, or acute disease; p:n'tivnlurly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co. proprietors, New York. e ———————————————————————— LS CATARRH CREAM BALN gespre— g " & LLY'S N 1 have wused o B 8 REA“’ BA‘. \D hotlles ({f‘/-.'/l;/“\'( reain : COATARWR[SCO H Lalm and considei &COLEHU,HEAD muyself cured. Isuf-Bhs n . . . Wi g sered 20 years rom HAYFEVER ! : f catarvh «1/1(1(‘:lfcll'l"{~ b >, S A\-; . al headache and this s ;«, : ‘ is the first vemedyp® . ‘j) M | . : % 5 ~6, £ ‘ that afforded lasting Q:‘.Sy @\Q"\( %‘O6O R i s . DS VNS < relief.—D. T. Hig-K /A <\ d(l" W < L .. P U E ginson, 145 Lake St., o _ USA. o 1. AY FEVER A particle isapplied into each nostril and is agreeable to use, Price 50 cts., by mail or at druggists. Send for circular. ELY BROTHERS, Druggists, Owego, N, Y. pATENT FOR SALE. THE ADAMSON CO., Patent So'icitors, Muncie, Indiana. to 88 a day. Sampies worth $1.50, FREE, 5 [ines not under the horse’s teet, Address Brewster's Safety Rein Holder, Holly, Mich, Morphine Habit Cured in 10 to 20 days. No pay till cured. Dr. J. stephens, Lebanon, Ohio. GUGEBIG IRON MINING INVESTMENTS. secnrity guaranteed, Address H, F, Kirk&Co., Mack Bik.,Milwaukee,Wis, Send for Pension laws to FITZGERALL & POWERLL, U. S, Claim Agents, Indianapolis, Ind. on James River,Va,, in Clarcmont Colony, llastrated Circular Free, J.EF.MANCHA, Clavemont, Va, N and Morphine Habit Cured in 10 to R 0 days, Refer to 1000 patients cnred inaliparts. Dr, Marsh, Quiney, Mich. SEWING MAGHINE FREELY L e ont oy i nosite" Sewing Machine FREE to persons sending us their PO, and express addressatonee, Th Favorite Company, Jersey City, N.J. R.B. & A. P. Lacky, Patent Attorneys, Washington, D.C, . ¥ [nstructions and opinions as to patentability FRY K, 84717 years' experience, L Garden Seeds ! o N Mailed FREE. Lt ANCES BRIL, Hempstead, Long Island, N, Y. PIUM HABIT &y, ot Notaparticle pain B cvselt denial, Payv when enred. Handsome book Y (o DR. C. J. WEATHERNBY, Kansas City. Mo. ADVER“{HSERS or others,wno wisn 10 cxaming this paper, or obtain estimates on advertising space when in Chicago, will find it on {ile at 45 10 49 Randolph St n S 0 ORD & THOMAS, PR RQ 8 TR o BN Y e B LN PR RN & LAI 8. 8. Launxusack, 115 Broad at, Newart N 3 Fresh! Reliable! Wholesale at Netail. Free by mail at 2 and 3 cts, per Large Package ! # Seod Store open 24 hours every day., MAMMOTH SELD FARMS! One ACRE OF GiLass! Beautitul lusteated Catalogue FREE, H. W. BUCKBEE, Rocktord Seed Farm, Rocktord, 111 = = s = MIBOOO TO HRiwin Worth of NEW NOVELS hy the best AMERICANAUTHORS canbie obtained by Lii})m'!'llllll'! for “SILIPPPPINCOTTS MAGAZINE”? Which costs but 25 cents per month. Send 23 cents for F:illl]“lv' copy, or send your address for full deseriptive cireular to J. B, LirriNcorr CoMPANY, Philadelphia, ECLECTIC SHORTHAND ! :T.hw best and briefest svsten: extant. Send for circular, l,'.f'“f\,‘ $ 10, ; li. A. GILL, 208 North Clark St., Chicago, \ | l o : ‘ poke gy TN ’ ¢ i v PLSO 'S CURE FOR k& CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. [y ‘i -15‘5 Best Cough Syrup. Tasfes good. Uso hg ekt l:) timo. Sold by droggists. 'd' | o ) ‘DT TG B CONSUMPFIONSs | b - HAINESVILLE, N. J,, g | ; October 15, 1886, ;’ R 5 : L. T. HAZELTINE, i l e Warren, Pa, 3 ‘ i Dear Sir: b 1 1 was taken with a very B | B severe cold last Spring, ' B# and tried every cure we [ b i badin the store,and could 8 | mal get no help. i ! o 1 hm.l our village doctor ’é‘f‘ | @ proescribe for me, butkept [ bt : 4 B gotting worse, I saw an- ;‘, s other physician from Port —,_Tif3 | B Jervis, N. Y., and hetold i ¥ me ho used Piso’s Cure K i for Consumption in his {8 & practice. Lo | B I bought a bottle, and X | B 8 Dbefore I had taken all of [ i B it there was a change for ¥ | P thebetter. Thenlgotmy §i§ | M employer toorderaquan- §& i tity of the medicine and §8 M keep it in stock. I took [ i one more bottle, and my & LR Cou%h was cured, o) Respectiully, ia g I'raNE McKELvY, s b RT el Y TR s AT e g{flff&l&@*’?s GURESFORSL ) B CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS, o ¥4 Dest Cough Syrup., Tastes good, Uso PR (‘?‘ in time, Sold by druggists, b Rl eARR S S WBN 1 | ol el b Loy e Y R H
. Dr. Willivms’ Indjan Pile Ointment & is a sure cure tor blind,blreding or t itehing piles. Cure guaranteed, b Price 50¢ and £l, At drugeist’s or mailed by WILLIAMS MG, CO., Cleveland, O.
0 3 [T Relieved and Cured by Dr. J. A, Sherman’s method., Those who cannot avail themselves of personul attendance can have home treatment appliance and curative sent for $lO only. Send stamp for circular. 204 Broadway, New York.
» ROWNS == B\ e ' ) i 4 ,_' h % 2 [ PLIT i N e o [ o““qm\h v 4 >: — R 8 b /“,\ 1 > Q ; o w 2 VRS 4: @ , : 4 {QUR gaß = D T =lz g Mo V) { M2l S {: ~THE £ B = BESTTONIC, : B -~ e This medicine, combining Tron i i : vegetable tonics, quickly and «-nnth.i&“" ] : Cures Dyspepsis, lu(llglesu..“, ‘{,mfiy ; ness, Impure Blood, ularl., Cl\u- 4 and Fevers, and Neuralgia, h it is an unfailing remedy for Diseage - Kidney and Liver. c3ofthy % It is invaluable for Diseases pecnli s - 7 d all who lead se Arte Women, and all who lead sedentary liveg ; Itdoesnotinjure thet -l-lh,cnuseheu’dnche' ] ; produce constipation other Iron medicines &Ol‘ k. It enriches and purifies the blo 0y 1 ; stimulates the appetite, aids the ussinlilnl‘i'(‘)l’ i 3 of food, relieves Heartburn and lickfhlufl an: i strengthens the muscles and nerves, ¥ : e For Imtermittent Fevers, Lasgity, E Lack of Energy, etc., it has no equaj, ey - ¢g®»~ The genuine has above trade mark gy . : crossed red lines on wrapper, Take np olheg ; ' Iy by BROWN CHEMICAL (0., BALTH : 4 _ Made only by BROW 0. uioneg . earnh f ELEG RA_PHYL;UWL ;:sr.)‘.(‘rgi?l’l‘glm 4 :' furnished. Write Valentine Bros,, Jflmmn“c, Wiy _ EVERY ONE SHOULD KNoy That a complete novel, by some well-kno w » v i contained in each :luull‘v\o-r)' h*nn!wr of Wn authoy, 4 PINCOTT'S MAGAS? ) }!‘;{nll|l,l~ Copy mailed on receipt of ::éé.!.&{,‘%. - J. B LIPPINCOTTCOMPANY, l,hiludolvhlz | Tl LADY AGENTS st omo Janal , employment at S3O to 10 Der - 3 ‘ oo 1 onth Aelling QueenCitySyp. E 1 t%} '. .bg’n porters, Rample (»I|(fity?;a 3 Lo a" \ildress Cincinnati Suspendep - ) N (', 11 K. Ninth St., Cincinnati, - a live ener ;fi et = E WANT YOU! ipoorenne vrum'\m.. employment to represent us in every i) ’ county. Salary 375 per month and expenses, or g E ] large commission on sales if preferred. Goods stapls, - ¥very one buys. Outfit and particulars Freg, - STANDARD SILVERWARE CO., BOSTON, MAS, - F TH ANNUAL REPORT OF THg ' '@ PENN MUTUAL LIFEINS.CO, B / OF PHILADELPHIA, PA,, - shows stability, steady gre Wb, thrifty map. azement, and low cost, Os interest to thogs ! ‘ seekinz the BEST forms ot life insuranes Get it and other publicitions of agents in )l citiesand laree towns,or write “'”"‘”“lll\"‘m'lce.[’hfla 3 3 Every man, wo- ] FREEm;m.lm\w or girl FREE ] that sends their name and address upop g postal card lwmn-w March 18t will »ece "8 | a copy of The Greatest kami) story Paper uflln-m West. FREK, Al | e U B Clil CAGO LEDGER, ‘hica O, . 1 FREE (I"[3x*._ FREE| AR . ) _ STy %) YD) 1) AR 1 Ive | 2ok 1 VLY e - -‘(“‘\-\’“; ‘}“.‘A Prettiest lustrated ! A d I "’_*l*_,‘ K } SEED-CATALOGUR M\;“; ‘Q:‘}c ’é) & & lover printed, Cheapest A Dy msS iPR « 1 ost, SEEDS grow . 8 R fi A i » L \ ,"vfi, e fli, R (fardeners trade a spe } \l3 Py *\:f"‘ A " eialty. Packets only 3¢, ] DA €7y ‘E"fg" “ Cheep as dirt by oz, & 1%, i b "Na‘w 100 00 pK 1S NEW €Xlras (Tos, ) R, H. SHUMWAY, Rockford lil. T e ; 34 ad Tbl A%} 5o de S £ ei o . ] L7 A3 &5 DRt 47 o Sade®’ THE ONLY TRUE e, S s "-A"t‘ 03 & h PTG K Myt e i [ 3 ] ‘;‘ Q ‘ ); M‘“.!R o N 24 .y i ook AR & 2 A et 2 " i A g S e [ : i B TR Bt T ; -. A G, <8 Will purify tho BLOOD regulate Wl VSR (o LIVER and KIDNEYS and ey 3 Kestore the HEALTH andVIGYIS OR of YOUTH. Dyspopsia,Want gi RN of Appetite, Indigestion,Lack of g 5 Strength and Tired Feeling ab. fr":"fi'/fi'-'n“-' golntely cured: HBones, mos[w:s(fi“, cles and nerves receive new 3 \\E‘f force. Enlivens th) mind Laedy and supplies Brain Power, & eme——————— O soring from complaintspeca. 1 LADQE‘% I'i“.: hlv':l eirsex will find in DR, i } G HARTFR'S JRON TONICa - mafe, speody cure, Givesa clear, healthy complexion, | Allattempts at connterfeiting only adds to Its popu | larity. Donot exp riment—get ORIGINAL AND BEST ' Dr. HARTER'S LIVER PILLS | Cure Constipation.liiver Comolaint and Sick 3 Headache., SBample Dose and Dream Book ] , maliled on receipt of two cents in postage. . THE DR. HARTER MEDRICINE GD., ST. LOUIS, MD. i T T TN ey | E =S e . oL | BN Ve SEar e b = | B Cizs A it == ¢ | i‘_‘, .'_3;“34:)". »:'.‘,/“1& = z shy (WG |E= o SWAY. ‘,’:,‘;;. SR SRS = Pt T B kit U 1 | TERIERER RL o : | BRRR hiiEnets gTaeR e ' | B e gzifl'ém Tt R r;rPR NS U | ~.igs % h‘wflsé“ iF 5 1" | PSR ‘_4?";‘.777 fli% B 3 ?g)w, e | BT MR AS S T R | Baad s N RN kfi,fi;fi« 21 Y "“_,:‘rd>:"f. W 1 | &?};-‘;;»&'fl"- By :,J‘.:#é"' B S A 1 | SERALLICIE g R RS R SRR | -w‘vwfiww R ,35%1 i ARG I R o K 4 Gy 28y § RPN el I Ez.h\h..:z:‘-‘.’i‘ui TR Ye T { Jroptd.Stallion CHERI, 579 (2423), Winner o1 Swee ‘ | stakes Premium at the Great Percheron Bhow of lhoi ‘ Ills. State Fair, held in Chicago Sept. 1886, Property ' W. L. ELLWOOD, IMPORTER AND BREEDER OF The Largeat Breeding Istablishmentof Pure Blong Percherons in the United States. - Five hundred hea | of Pure Blood and Grades now on hand, a large nums | ber of which were imported in July, 1886, and anothag | large import tion of from 130 to 200 head will arrive i about the middle of October. Visitors always wals | come-come and see them. 1 handle nothing but the { best, and take pride in showing stock. | L.ocation, DI3 HKALB, ILIL. i 1858 miles west of Chicazn, on Omaha Div. . & NW, Ry. B@®~sSend for Catalogue, ~ & RT oo s o m = (ONCERTg # % Q) 4 . 67 k=o3 3 R, A b X A0 'Q.‘h.‘-“‘ 11 s 1 ‘(‘ e "‘4 At AN | WIZARD 0L &) Y ' "". “‘ TROND Bm L) ‘ /! A | (GRS TR A L) S { w\" ! = l.’ v ( ‘ d ! g !\, ,\J_ ‘n' l\ W S . & s =3 - . d * Have been enjoyed by citizens of every town and [ city in the U. 8. Marvelous Cures have been wit nessed by thousands of people, who ecan testify 10 l THE WONDERFUL HEALING POWER OF . .‘ By s I | : Hamlin’s Wizard Oil. | Neuralgia, Toothache, Headache, Earache, Catarrh, Croup, Sore Throal, ! Lame Back, Stiff Joints, Contracted Cords, . RHEUMATISM I e ) | Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Fever Sores, l Wounds, Old Sores, Chilblains, Frost d l Bites, Sore Nipples, Caked Breasts, an . _All Aches and Pains, ' are quickly relieved by this magical r('uw“ty. llr\gbl | once and you will never be ‘\'ll?l\\lll it. Korsale l{ 5 Druggists. Price, 30¢. Our SONG BOOK freetflé\o- | Address WIZARD OIL COMPANY, CHICAGO. i WiiAK from Nervous Debility, Vb | tal Wasting, &e., send stamp for B“;":: ‘ of Remedies, and cure .\'(‘H‘r"“l' d ] home, Dr. J. RENNErT, Peru, InG | IR SSR RSERA Sure rellef T“MA‘ ' ' ' YR l‘l\cc&’nrf!.AS : KIDDER 8 PAST iLIES.hy mail. Stowell & Cov TR e s Larlestown, Madh o 4 g WEAK, NERVOUS F..oPI.Em Lasiiae And others suffering HH |‘s;;'|"| ‘.‘.fiug’:\’:‘x: nt"“\n‘ll-( debility J'”“‘“"‘?{‘l:;g (eI TR 41,'&9} ‘hronie disenses, p-“?ld aré P FLFCTM( { \;"‘7}l" {ecline of young OI ‘( Dr. “""‘ e(P positively | eured i prae -.::flm‘ \‘;Lf‘fi'}“"';" k‘,‘ “:"‘;;(T' ko {‘;;l‘l"l'llf.‘ Thb\l:«nngl in every 3 SState in iln-ul'mnn have :w"l; ("’l;‘r‘a“.) Electric! 2340ty instantly felt. ]‘:uvnu-d.'H“Fl;cclrle years. Whole family can wear same belt thioss ime | Suspensories free with male belts, Avoid wore < i {tations and bogus companies. Eleetrle 'll'll”, Vhlebe I Rupture, 700 cured in’sh., Send smml‘f"rpanlhcm | DR.W. J. HORNE, INVENTOR, 191 WABASH AV., GHIGET: | N7 u m IF{OU WART TO ' W WH kR . ,x)()h&"),fl‘.:nh things you nhever kpes#or thongb of about, nman body and g@®turioud Omc Wlow life is perPerugred. héalid e«l,mxmfiflf’“‘"o , diow to avoid pityurtgy P ance and indiscred _ dlmo to apply Home %%, o all forms of “f"“c_ Ito cure Cron fi;&l Eyes, ture, Fh”"!‘wu“b : l{-)_"nmmut:: .flfqr/wm marria lipe prrize b :t(:l-le) r“R E!I)"F 3 | 'HITE, (K;‘fi ] BLUE furray il Pub, Cc.. Box 789, Now Yorks B R eI i . g CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS i 3 Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use ke ‘0“?_: in time. " Sold by druggists. - o SRR a0 SN N T SERALS T 1 7 AN ";;}.'!""“C @Nswp 3 |CN . i 3',* - ; v_”‘_,’/ C.N.U. No. 7-87 AR R \»‘———_——————_‘/’ ‘\] HEN WRITING TO AI)VERTISEnge please sny you saw the advertiseme! in this paper,
