St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 16, Number 3, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 July 1890 — Page 8
Made a Mistake. A few weeks ago a citizen called upon a well-known athlete and engaged him to give lessons in boxing. and after about a month the teacher said to his pupil: ••You are in good shape now. and von needn’t be afraid to put up your hands with any of the boys.” Two days later the pupil returned with a pair of black eyes and a nose with the bark all off, and the instructor exclaimed. • Great Scott, man; but have you been in a tight?” ••Yes.” “And got licked?” “Yes.” ••How was it?” “Why, there was a follow I wanted to lick. That’s what I came here and graduated for. 1 met him yesterday and sailed into him. or started to sail into him, when ” • “When his crowd pitched into yon?” “Oh. no. I found I hadn’t the sand. Indeed. I tried to run away, and he hammered Halifax out of me. Y r ou are a nice man!” “What about?” “To take my money and then get me licked.’ “Licked! Licked! Why, you rabbit, do you think learning how to box gives you sand? If you had only told me that you lacked grit and yet wanted to lick some one, I should have taken another tack. I should have taught you to sit on a high fence and punch him jn the eye with a long fish pole as he went past.”— Detroit Free Press. Health demands a healthy liver. Take Simmons Liver Regulator for dyspepsia or indigestion. RICH HARVEST FORA MICHIGAN FARMER. I have suffered for years with rheuma tism, loss appetite and disordered blood, mid after great expenditure of time and money had almost given up all hope of relief. Hearing of Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, I grasped it as a last resort, and after using six bottles found almost entire relief. I am now able to work on my farm with ease, which I have not done in years, and I advise all persons suffering with rheumatism and other blood troubles, to try this tnedieiuo. Harwick Perry, Thurman Mich. Sold only by J. Endley. Prepared only by The Charles Wright Medicine Company, Detroit, Mich. Spring-time stirs up the bile. Simmons ’Liver Regulator removes it.
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I FOR GRAIN RAISERS. I Can they make money at present prices ? YES! HOW? By keeping the soil rich, By cultivating it well, By using the best seed, THEN Have their Grain and Seeds Threshed, Saved and Cleaned by the NICHOLS & SHEPARD It will handle Grain and Seeds FASTER, BETTER and CLEANER, than any other Thresher. It will save enough extra grain {which other machines will waste) to pay all threshing expenses, and often three to five times that amount. It will Clean the Grain and Seed so much better that you can get an extra price for it. It will do your work so much QUICKER, so much CLEANER, and so free from WASTE, that you will save money. Such Threshing Machinery is made only by
IN!CHOLSMW« BATT CE<C ftE ■■ ■ ...
No pill or nauseating potion, but a pleasant tonic and purgative is Simmons Liver Regulator. Hibbard’s Rheumatic syrup, $ 1 bottles 85 cents; 50 cent bottles 40 cents; 1 at J. Endley’s Drug store.
DIXIE’S FIRST MONEY. How the First of r«»n federate TreMury Nobs Was Maile. It took money lo carry on the war. i The Southern Confederacy started to I oppose the invading foes with an empty ■ treasury. So a “promise to pay” had i to be resorted to. One of the first things to be done by I the treasury of the young nation was to I issue legal tender of some kind. The making of Confederate bonds and notes was a great trial with the young treasury. In the South no engravers could be found and nothing like good bank paper. So arrangements were made to print some bonds in New York. The work was gone about very carefully and every means used to avoid detection. But the bonds were seized, however, before they left New York. These bonds were printed by the American Bank note company, and when the Federal authorities found this out through a tell-tale employe the Southern Confederacy bad to rely upon its own resources to get up bonds and notes. A engraver of cards and posters by the name of Hoyer, a German by nationality, lived in Richmond, and he was employed to issue the first notes, which were eight SIOO bills. One of these bills would bring considerable now as a relic. A paper was smuggled through the lines from New York and given to Hoyer. He had only old and inferior stones for engraving purposes, and with them he made the first Confederate Treasury notes. The stones had previously been used to engrave placards. Os course they were faulty and full of errors, and under any other circumstances would have been thrown away, but some kind of legal tender had to be secured at once aud the rude notes were accepted. When the Secretary read the proofs he ordered them printed, indorsing on the margin of the proof the following: “When the money changers become familiar with these incoming bills it will be as difficult to pass a counterfeit as if they had been engraved on steel —perhaps more so.” The German engraver used what was an old-fashioned press even in that day, and the bills were printed by band, a very slow and tedious process. These rude, uncouth bills found no buyers, but were accepted iu good faith by loyal Southern hearts. They were pledges of a brave, fearless people, aud by that people were accepted as such. They were not worth much upon their face, but thousands of men died to give them value, and three times us many died to make them worthless. Soon the country was flooded with Confederate bills. The number circulated depended on how fast the treasury could issue them. Bills o! small denominations soon went out of style aud nothing under SIOO left the Treasurer’s hand, while SSOO ahd sl,000 bills were as numerous as $5 bills are to-day. Os course the price of e erything went up, and it was a mere bagatelle to pay S2OO for a yard of flannel, or S3OO for a pound of coffee, or SI,OOO for a pair of boots, or SIO,OOO for a horse. Worthless as were these “promises to pay,” they cost more than any lendei ever issued by a nation on earth. — Atlaida J our mil. A DEADLY WEAPON. Carelessness in purifying the blood leaves vou at the mercy of that insidnous enemy Blood Poison, which sooner or later will strike its fatal blow. Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup has no equal as a blood remedy, and should be taken by every person in the spring. Its efficacy has been proven by thousands of testimonies like the following: Gentlemen: I have been ft great, sufferer for over ten years. My whole system became deranged from diseased blood, and I was,attacked with the worst form of kid ney and liver trouble, dyspepsia, neuralgia and rheumatism. My sufferings cannot be described. The sallowness of my skin disfigured me, and the neuralgic pain was so severe that it contracted the muscles of my face, partially closing my right eye. The ablest doctors gave no relief, but I am now entirely cured by Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, and wish to recommend it to all as a wonderful blood medicine. Mrs, A. D. Noble, Cor. Mechanic and Mason Streets, Jackson, Mich. Prepared only by the Charles Wright Medicine Company, Detroit Mich. For sale by J. Endley. Japan’s Material Resources. Some remarkable statements are made by professor Reit, a scientist who has been investigating the material resources of Japan. They reveal a national frugality and economy of a marvelous type. The area of Japan is less than one-tenth of its tctal acreage, vet its products support about 38,000,000 people. In Japan 2,560 persons subsist from each square mile of tilled land. A people existing in such circumstances must from necessity of preservation be provident, painstaking, hard-working, ingenious and frugal. The Japs appear to deserve all these adjectives. Agriculture with them is literally market gardening, because the soil is required to produce more than any other place in the world. There is an extraordinary increase of suicide and dueling in high military circles in Russia. 'The fashionable duel is fought at live paces with cavalry revolvers. HAPP Y HOME BLOOD PURIFIER is the Peoples Popular Medicine for purifying the blood ; preventing or curing Dyspepsia, Billiousness, Headache, Boils and all Fevers and Malarial Diseases. Price 50 cents and one dollar per bottle,
A. Trick nt n Mnsqucrade. I A trick that was amusing for the I completeness of the deception was re- [ cently carried out nt a mask party, j says the Boston Coaru r. The dancing I was kept up until midnight, and supper was postponed until that hour in order to delay the unmasking. Just as the guests had reached the supperroom a couple of policemen presented themselves at the door and insisted upon being allowed to go into the house. Finding the host in the midst of the guests, and the fun of the surprise of the unmasking just at its height, the policemen demanded of him the names of his guests. “The names of my guests?” the host repeated in surprise. “Yes, sir; wc must make a list of them.” “Make a list of them?” the gentleman repeated again, with growing indignation. “What an insult! I never heard of such a thing.” “Can’t help it, sir; we have to obey orders.” The guests were as indignant as their host, but there was nothing to do but to submit, and some very sagely remarked that the simplest thing was to give the man the list and let him go, as no harm could come of letting the police have the names, although of course they had been sent for under a mistake. While the list was being ■ written, and the company were standing about with muttered expressions of indignation and sympathy with the host, one of the policemen stepped coolly up the supper table and helped himself to a glass of champagne. “Look here, my man,” the host said angrily, “the law may give you power to come into my house and take a list of my guests, but it certainly doesn’t give you any claim on my wine.” “Why, I thought that was included in my invitation,” the policeman responded, dropping into his natural tone and pulling off his wig to disclose the familiar head of one of the friends of the host who had sworn to him that ho would come to the party without being recognized. “Os course, if you say so, my dear fellow, 1 will let it alone.” The confused laughter and exclamations of the entire company answered. HOW SHEDDERS SHED. Th© Toothsome Crop in It* Various of Development. Crisfield, Md., supplies most of thr crabs all the year round for the markets of the leading cities of this country, .says the Pittsburg Jnspatrh. Thf crabs are caught in the ChesajNtnke bay and are packed in crates and barrel# for shipment. Over half the inhabitants of the town ipake their living out of crabbing. Whenever a female crar is scooped up in the crabber’s not it b always thrown back into the bay; that keeps up the propagation, and hence the supply is always adequate to the demand. It also accounts for the luscious quality of the huge blue vial caught in these waters. 'lne crabs are caught during every month in the year and in all stages of development. Millions of crabs are shipped north on the East Shore railroad every Year and the Maryland soft crabs meet Jersey soft crabs in the New York market on equal footing in spite of the difference in the distance they are. carried. The crabs in market in winter are always hard-s’iells. and, in fact they’ would he if they were brought from the tropics. They arc dredged or raked out of the mud in the Chesapeake and its estuaries, and thousands of them are caught by oystermen. The crabs are dormant from fall until spring, even in the Gulf of Mexico, where they are more abundant than anywhere else on this country’s coast. In the spring, when they come out of the mud and masses of seaweed, they go right into the business of shedding. Really, it seems as if the crab had little else to do in summer but shed his shel’ and get a new one of larger caliber. 'Die hard crab first puts on a leathery undergarment, aud while it is growing he is known as a “comer.” In a day or two. when this under skin is completed. he is a "shedder,”’ and then he is fitted for bait, because his hard shell can then be stripped off, leaving the leathery integument entire. In this condition he is more valuable than a soft crab, owing to the constant demand for bait and the fact that the “shedders” are less frequently caught than soft shell crabs. In a single day the “shedder” parts his shell and becomes a “buster.” Taken then he is the best of bait, but left in the water a few hours he will throw off his shell, crawl out of it entire, and commence to swell and stretch out his elastic covering. Then he is a soft crab pat excellence. On the. night of the day the crab divests himself of his mislit shell he is in the best condition for frying. In another day, if he is not taken from the water, his new covering becomes like parchment, and in twelve hours more the parchment hardens so that it just yields to pressure. Then he is known as a “buckler,” and is of little use except as a broiler. The crab fishing business is put down at $500,000 per year by the lish commission, and probably the estimate is by no means complete, as it is difficult to obtain accurate information from the men engaged in any kind of fishing. In Virginia and Maryland there are several big canning factories putting up crab meat for inland cities, and the business is carried on extensively. The crabs are caught in summer by baiting set lines with tripe or fish, and the catch per man will average sixty dozen a day, AH the soft crabs taken during the summer are sent to market, and in May and early June the soft crabs to be found in New York come from Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina. In the latter part of June soft crabs begin to be caught in Jersey walers, and the price then declines. When soft crabs are scarce $2 or $2.25 per dozen is not regarded as an excessive price, but in the height of the season the ruling price is $1 for large crabs, and 75 cents for medium and small, Shedders seldom go below 75 cents a dozen, and are more frequently valued at $1.50, and sometimes command $3 per dozen.
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Two Whims of an Emperor. In one particular al least the youns j Emperor of Germany seeks to emulate the example of the famous Caliph of j Bagdad. He makes a practice of ; prowling around incognito, as if he were determined to find out by means j of his own eyes and cars the will and wants of his people. The military people do not fancy thi# sort of thing, for they are (in Ger- j many, of all countries) severe stickler? i at etiquette, and they regard it as shockingly infra dig. that their sovereign should snoop around barracks in the darkness of night in the disguise ot a patrolman and sometimes as an officer. Another practice of William’s is tc ' call informally upon his acquaintance# in Berlin; at any hour of tiie da) r or I evening he is likojy to make his appearance in the house of a friend, ami, of course, being the Kaiser, he has tc be made welcome. It was not a fortnight ago tiiat Herbert Bismarck was entertaining a party of friends in hi? ' bachelor quarters when, all of a suddeu, the Emperor walked in. A seat ; was put for his Majesty at the table, ' and for an hour or so the Emperor ! chatted gayly with the guests; then, apologizing “raei ei-ly for his intrusion, the Kaiser badu the eompanv good eve- I niug and went his-vay. ('ni -ujo S\ws. MILES' NERVE A LIVER BILLS. । An important discovery. They act on the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A m>w principle. 1 hey sp.-odilv cure biiiotisne.ss, bad taste, torpid liver, pil-s and eonstipution. Splei: lid for men. woinen and children Smallest, mildest, surest. 3 ) doses for 25 cents. Humph s free at! J. Endley \s drug at ore. Xs r ils.*• 20vio cXj "W om' oins Si>!M trniia: l- tv.c a >•- -»rin nn-t Saini :sSy hikl iii.liniiHpolis hi-,1 Mi.-hin-ai. Oily. I'.rci't coi,nei iiaic t-.> a”.l hom tiil |>.>a,e. in ibe Itnite.t Statei, ne<l ( nnivbl. NOKIH BorSlifßOM W A I.KERTOX. •Xo. Id rassriiger livves 4:03n m ♦No. I<> I hs-o nger Leaves ..t" l> 1> m I I No-I? - — ■• 7 if. •• i I |Nu. H*) Local “ •• 1.55 “ i Sth'Hi B X'NL FLO.’! WALKEKTON. I fNo 11 P;i>s»Miger l.rnvc* " -i c m IN-x ) ’■ “ - 5' ! ♦ No. i“ “ L>.:ly except Set. “ 1 o Ep m rNo. l'i! Loeut '• S . -uui I •I -a ily eX”ept Snndny. H ni'y exei-pt Siimlay. i No. H, via T.pton, nrrives Bloomington at 9 S 5 p. m., Hulking .hreel vosom Oon With •<.v A. fust tiain a.-riva g Kh.ors epy so next nioming eon ;■ eetlng <jired at l<nns.-is City lor 1 >.-o wr, San Francis*.> u:.<i aii points West. Fn." reclining ehulri-am between 'l ipton and Mit^ouri river lor j Lb-otigh pa-sengers. Nos. 9, in, 11 Umi 12 connect nt Tipton with j iv.am line trains for Sandusky, Bloomington and i all points ea:--t nnd west. !-or tickets, run s and I general iiifon.uuion. cnli <>n F. ' Ticket Agent i.. E. & W. R. 8., nr address 11. C. < • ri'. BritGy, . Trutile Manager. A. Gen’l Pau. Agt i Jndlaiir.puiib. Ind. 13. & O. 'S'lsl « TASU.E. Note —“a"or“p" before time signifies a. m.or p. m. WEST BOUND. Pittsburgh Ip B.i'olp 8 SO) I | Wheeling IplO.ioj H.l.’ca 8.10 ’p 3.40 Zanesville ;ai2ol a 1.25|a10.10 p 5.57 i Newark ; ul2-tii a 2.1a alo 601 p 6.4 > | Mt. Vernon ]a I>2 a -1.33 aITHS p 7.11 i Mansfield ia 2 SG:a 5.55 prLlO p 8.42 I Tifiin.... la 4.bl a 803. p 2‘25 p!o2o| Fostoria.. In 4.l’3|a 8 3i)lp 2 43 . plO-45 | Desltler la 5 (-3 u 9.22ip 3-22 p11.4U I Defiance a. 5 1 ’ a 10.16 p 4-U5 a 12.46 AuburnJunetio -la 640^11.34 2 07 Avilla 1 jpl2.u7 Milford Juntion.la 7.4"ip 1.15 La Paz Jnnctoii, k-2031 Walkerton p 7.22ia 8.57|p 3.07',a 5.40 a 2.5 S Chicago I llUial 9.401a 9.301 6.5a EAST BOUND. Chicago alo 10q, 255 a ■ n sjii>~p 4.15 Walkerton pJ2.l!i;p 5.07 a 5'.46 p 7.22 a12.57 La Paz ulr . , Bremen a11,30 Napanee al 1.47 Milford Junction p 5.57 p12.0S Avilla p 1.05 Auburn Junction p 7.05 p 138|p 9 36 Defiance p 3.05 p 7 55 p 3 05 p 10.35 Deshler Ip 3.45|p 8.35 p 4.15 p 11.16 Fostoria p 4 as|p 9-17 p 5 23 a12,04 'Tifiin p 4.43 p 9.28 p 5.55 n 12.29 Mansfield p 6 07 pl 1.05 p 8.45 a 2.11 Mt. Vernon p 7.04 a1284 pl(k()9 a. 3.17 Newark p 7 45 a12'47 pH 00 a 4.00 Zanesville |p 8.4 a 1.38ja 1.f4|a453 Wheeling p 12.45 a 5.30> 4.5' a 8’55 Pittsburgh alo,soia 7.45 Washington a11.45 p 4.05|p 6.50 p 8.51 Baltimore h> I (K> p 5.15jp 7.50 pIO.GO New York |n 5.50 p 9,55jtt (; .3»l Accommodation train leaves Walkerton at 6.20 a. m. daily and arrives a.t Chicago 9.30 a. m. Accommodation train leaves Chicago at 4.15 p. m. daily and arriyes nt Walkerton 7 p. m 1 Where no time is given trains do not stop, CHAS. O. SCULI,, O. P. McCARTV, Gen. Pass. Ag’t. Assist. Gen, Pass. Ag't., Baltimore, Md. Columbus, O. C. D. FOSTER, Ag’t., Walkerton. Eilert Extract of Tar & wild Cherry is a safe, reliable and pleasant remedy for Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma, and all throat troubles; will relieve and benefit consumption. Try it ami be convinced. Every bottle warranted ; price 50c. ami one dollar per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Prepared by the Emmert Proprietary Co., Chicago, 111,
■ ■ > . TrfT - — ■ .w-. •■■l-WiWMr - i-t >■ mbit- -HMrif-T in rr 1 "\ PRUDENT Storibkccpers of America, > appeal to your intelligent > r 'A eye mid comprehensive judgvwnt us careful buyers, to > 5 wrirf/ tr 7 us ono sample older for READY-MADE > ? pSh'-i -i V*! CLOTHING. We would like to have you compare our > S IS goods with any you have in your store from other man- > S ufactmvrs. If tiio reader is not a merchant, please ask > S VosN S' '7^'4 your dealer for garinems bearing thio woU-known label I > —j i ? 2 are willing to ship out Clothing on approval, and ? S return charges on any goods you do not like after ? 1 S they are received. If our goods are not bettor made, / > 'irfßg. - 2^ b ettcr trimmed, better Ct ting, and from fifteen to forty A ) i-tjf'S- I Fer cent, cheaper than any otlior firm in America will ? \ x ■.< sell for, we will return your money. We turn ourstcek ? \ '"-n, ? ; -1 ? bS-’ YJ eight times every year, and aru satisfied with 5% profit. ? “ TERMS, WHOLESALE ONLY, no discounts; net cash. C EaL HUNTLEY & CO., Wholesale Tailers, < j 123 St 184 Market Gt., CHICAGO, ILL. > \ Ori tur Co — < \ / RK®ERKNCKS. - First National Bank of Chi ? T, ’^•3^“' eago.capital $3,000,000; Continental NaUonal Bank? <r €-<- a y** of Chioa^i, capital 42,000,000. ? •\_Z Said for our Illustrated Price List. C
7:j -m^c *170372. -sr. CHURCHES IN WALKERTON. MFTHOiHST KPISUOPA L —Rev. Matthfwr. Pniipir. Services nt 10 A. M.,uibl 7P. M. Bablmil School nt 9 A. M. ROM AN <’A'!’lL >! !<' - Priest. Frtibcr Knot.!,, .-f-nbi-s nt iu I. M„ on every eeoulbi Sunday of etch month. UNITED Brethren in CHRL-T.-Rev. i.L- Pastor ■ • Icea e• ;ry Sul bath ui , o', Ines p. m. V.eef-<lay mtvh-cs TiivSiiay hb<t I l.ui -iny eveuiug.' at 7 o'clock, bumlayrvnool r.t y u. m 1 H F UHt’RfTI O’.'' GOD - ' folds it- meetings In th'- !'o s ' .'lib'll i . •- 1.1 i.'h ( • I i F I.IIA Y ' i nt 2 o eloek 1' M. Exeo.-i es—^abbtitii School I - Social worship aud piuu-bing PR ISo YTEJ u'. S ClJ'Kt'tl - RkV. Pr.KNTICK- I Pastor. .-e’.VH't--' evety aliv’crt.; TiHsiay at i":'"? 'U.ivol 7 p. ’.il Sabi'-ith sehoo! nt . ;; o ' io. s p. ci. Prayer meeUug Thursday eve. 1 . ut 7:45 o'clock. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST.-.-H-i’d their Pah- ‘ i bath sell ml an I - otlal m 'etln at Mr. Rowell's • I luci- ■ evi-ry i-aii'.mb. Cidltd Saturday morn-1 I tug ut 9.30 o’clock. i I LODGES IN WALKER T ON, J. O. il. F. l.’iTty, No 137, uieets In their new E.ul every Moud'jy evcnm-L at 7 o'clock. VisI illug brethren me eoidiioiy invited. 11. A. Woodworth. List.. Dep. G. M. Fred Younu, N. G. D. N. Hi delmyeu, V. N. G. E S. Nichols. I‘e ^muent Sec. MASONIC. State', meetings of Walkerton Lndg?. No. 356, F, A A. M . of imL, will be held in ths if j i Hail in Wi.lke.iton on the 2d ami 4th Wedi.es-1 I day evenings of i..i h month, at BP. M. Visit- ' ing brethren in good standing, are cordially | welcomed. Chas. Pool, W. M. I , s. J. Nicoles, Sec. CAMP OF THE FONS OF VETEE \NS.-Stated 1 ; meetings, on Tuesday of each week, Bp. m. A. H. BARBER. Captain. G. IL Leslie, Ist. Sarg't. I KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS, Walkerton Lodge No. 2C3 Regular meetings on Friday night of each Week. G. II Lr'ALiE. P. C. A. F Yoi xc., C. C. "“cinuiYs Y^siY TgsYpiY county/'' COUNTY COUKT ..:cets 2d Monday in March,4th Monday in May, Ist Monday in October. 4th Monday iu December. Danill Noyes, Judge. J.E. Oku, Prosecuting AttorneyCOMMISSIONERS’ COURT meets the first Mondays in December. March. June and September of each year. J. Dougherty, Jacob Eaton arid D. W. Place, Commissioners. ' COUNT7 CFFIiCERS. Aaron Jones. Aud’tr. T. M.Howard Recorder Nm, McMichael, Clerk. John Finch, SheriK Geo. H, Stover, Treas’r. B. F. Waldorf, Surv’y’r Dr. Montgomery, Coroner. l in- St. Joseph co. liihiieiiM PUBLISHED WEEKLY, Terms, $1.50 Per Year AN EIGHT-PAGE, FORTY-EIGHT COLUMN SHEET, A live, local family newspaper, giving all the news, local and general, in spicy, readable form. Let THE IL DEPENDEXT be considered a household necessity, and everybody subscribe. ACliauce To Make Money. Salary and Expenses paid, or Commission if preferred. Salesmen wanted everywhere. No experience needed. Address stating age. 11. "W. Foster & Co., Nurserymen, Geneva, Y. N
4 SALARY With expenses paid will come han Ay to anyone who is now ont of employment, especially where no previous experience is required to get the position. If you want a position, boo advertisement on page one, headed, “A Chance to Make Money.” Dr. Eliols Liver Regulator at J. Endiey’s Drugstore. MonuiiietiK Persons who are thinking of placing a .monument or tombstone at the grave > of their friends, can be shown designs ‘ and prices at Vincent’s furniture store. ; Ail work warranted to give satisfaction. RE 4ARKABLE RESCUE. Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plainfield, 111., makes the statement that she caught cold, which settled on her lungs; she was treated for a month by her family physician, ha t crew wome- Her druggist suggested Or. King's New ‘Discovery for Consumption; she bought a bottle and to her delight i found herself benefited from first dose. She,continued its use and after taking ten bottles, found herself sound and well, now I does her own housework and is as well as ' she ever was —Free trial bottles of this Great. Discoveryat J - Endley’s. EJsjcEtless’s Arnica Sa!»e. The best salve in the world for cuts, braises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin I eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay 'required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per For for sale by J. Endley mGHIWQK ■DIABETES LIVER AKO KIDNEY DISEASES. Bottle sl. Ask Druggist •* write WH». T. LWOLEY & CO., 314-534 La Bolle St., Chtoogo. HL S St. Lotus,Mo., Aug, I,’SS. Buiohtixb cured me ? of Diabetes, aud tb-day am hearty and well. q Mns.A.A.GiLLiiir.TreßaAVoman’s Exchange. » Chicago,Doe.i. ’37. My Kidneys troubled me; e several years, Übightixb entirely cured me. “ A. C. SMITH, Western Ncwa Co. £ Jus.M.Xorrie, Azn C„ 11. L&P.K. H. v Buffalo,N Y.,Mavll,’Bß. Suffered from Ltran* t bago seven? Tcnre. liniynTDiE cured me. Shan- ? nag, Capt. SteamerChemung, Un. St’bcat Co. IST. Lottis, April ii/M. BkIGHTTNE gives satlatacdon. Dura Co. OOP Franklin Av. St. Louis, Dec. 12/88. BiiICHTINK has till the S virtues ckilraedAUsTnnooK.D’gs 109 S. B’ way. J Rockville, Ind., Nev, 18. ’Bl. Can recommend g BRIGHT!NE highly.-Rsv. JoM lIaWKW. g Chicago Times,March ’BB-Globe, Nov. 17,'88 J . Illustrated Centurv, Jan. 23, 'BB.— Cornraprcial B [I Tiavollcr, Feb. la, >B, VR A IBS BRIGiiTI^E. a q Refer to MuL Xnv. & Loan AMU., Bullock Bros, 8 K J.3hcpard,SupLU.9.Ek. Q.F.KlmballGlaaalmp. g r; f. —aW GEORGE IIUNTOON, General Agent, LaPorte, Indiana. Myron Leßoy, Local Agent, Walkerton, Indiana,
