St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 16, Number 30, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 31 January 1891 — Page 7

A POTENTATE EXPIRES. THE SANDWICH ISLANDS KING IS DEAD. In the Midst of Strangers, at San Francisco, the Hawaiian Monarch Passes Away, the Victim of a Painful Disorder — Succession to the Throne. [San Francisco dispatch.] King Kalakaua died here this afternoon after a day and a half of terrible agony, in which all the forces of this unusually strong man rallied to resist death. He lay through the early morning hours in a semi-conscious state, occasionally seeming to recognize what was said to him. He seemed to improve a trifle after sunrise, but about 10 o'clock a collapse occurred and a report got out that he was dead. The news was made known at the hotel office and bulletins rushed East, but soon this intelligence was denied by the physicians. They kept the King alive by stimulants exactly as the doctors sustained Grant’s strength. He would have died early last evening except for liberal hypodermic injections of liquor. The question of the succession is vei simple, and will be peacefully settled. Kalakaua succeeded Lunalilo, the lust of the Kamehameha dynasty. XX hen Kalakaua was elected he named as his successor Princess Lilliuokalani, his sister, who is married to an American named John Odominis. She is now Regent, having been appointed such just before Kalakaua sailed on his visit to this country last month. All she will have to do is to take the oath of office and be crowned as Queen. Kalakaua 1., the deceased King of the Hawaiian or Sandwich Islands, son of Keohokalole and Kapaakoa, a native Hawaiian of the original royal blood, was bora Nov. 15, 1836. After the death •of King Kamehameha in 1873. without natural or appointed heirs, Prince Luualilo was elected to the Hawaiian throne, and at his death a year later High Chief Kalakaua was elected over ■Queen Emma to fill the place on Feb. 13, 1874, though his coronation, with that of his wife, the late Queen Kapiolani, was deferred to Feb. 12, 1883. Kalakaua’s reign was characterized by a large influx of foreigners and outside capital into the kingdom. Through the immigration of Portuguese and Chinese, early encouraged by him, the country has been opened up and its resources largely developed. In 1876 Kalakaua visited this country, and during his stay here the reciprocity treaty with Hawaii was contracted, which proved of • immense profit U the realm. Before this in tha early portion of his reign Kalakaua had permitted the native element to relapse almost to its original state of barbarism, and had himself reverted to paganism and heathen rites, manners and customs and resisted missionary advice in the management of his affairs. In 1881 the King had quite changed his views about the admission of foreigners, and he made a tour of the world, with a view to encourage emigration. His character was a strange one, and partly through the novelty of the spectacle of barbaric royalty errant and partly for more politic reasons, his receptions here and in Europe were marked by a most nattering display. Thus, while he failed in his original object, he became imbued

for royal forms tlm-t has j|HMßvh paiy riz< <1 his realm. In the - many a of his fninistry. which oc- ' cursedtlrroiitth the vicissitudes accotnpany/ng.hls humerous levies upon his mixed and restless subjects, a fewshrewd Americans have managed successively to control him by pampering hta taste for extravagance and display, a hey have collected private fortune# K»r themselves. A few of his eccentric acts were the $75,000 celebration of his fiftieth birthday, a $60,000 obsequy for a relative, and the expenditure of 80,000 for the fitting out of an embassy to the Samoan King to induce him to accept Hawaiian “Tutelage.” Through sinecures, licenses and bribes, revenues from the Queen s lands, and his regular income, the annual Hawaiian appropriations for the royal family came to about $500,000. In 1887 the white residents, upon whom the burden of his extravagance fell, plotted and successfully carried out a bloodless revolution, by which Kalakaua was forced to repudiate his ministerial favorites, and in a new constitution to yield the legislative powers to an elective assembly, while the principle of ministerial responsibility was adopted. King Kalakaua always entertained the highest respect for the United States, as well as a predilection for Americans. Through this disposition on the dead King's part, this country has become by the new treaty of 1884 possessor of exclusive rights to the fine harbor of Pearl River in Oahu, and he had frequently manifested a wish for ties still closer between the two nations. The Bad Lands. From the standpoint of utility the Bad lands of Dakota are well named. It is possible that they conceal mineral treasures; but to external appearance they seem utterly worthless to humanity. A vast extent of territory appears to have been the «cene of volcanic convulsion, • comparativelyrecent in the world's existence. The blackened masses of melted rock are thrown about in the most fantastic forme, and it is not hard to imagine that one sees the towers and citadels •of a forgotten race. In these fastnesses it would be 'easy for hostile Indians to conduct a prolonged defense. The only, and that a very important, difficulty would be themommissary. Buffaloes are extinct, and other game is not as abundant as twenty years ago, and what game there is does not take kindly to the Bad Lands. Besides, in the Bad Lands there is very little wood, and fuel is indispensable for a winter campaign. For Itching in Eczema. Shoemaker says that for itching of the skin, so commonly met with in eczema, there is nothing that affords such prompt .and effective relief as a mixture ot equal parts of glycerine and lime-water. This may be applied to the skin as often as necessary. Just a Drummer’s Idea. A new blacking-brush is so made that the blacking may be located in its back and completely hidden from view when not in use, means being also provided for conveniently drawing the blacking out from the back of the brush. This will enable a blacking apparatus to be carried in considerably less space. It is said to have been the idea of a traveling man. Apropos of “< -Gnomical desserts.” what is the matter with boiled rice in which a handful ot raisins are scattered? *

INDIANS IMPRESSED. THE SULLEN SIOUX AWED BY THE ARMY. V Grand Military Parade of the United States Army Witnessed by the Wily Rods at Pine Ridge. [Pine Ridge dispatch.] Ten thousand Sioux had the opportunity to see the strength and discipline of the United States army, for the end 1 of the ghost-dance rebellion was marked by a review of all the soldiers who have taken part in crushing the Indian rebellion. The day was one of the most disagreeable of the campaign. A furious wind blew from the north driving the sand and snow over the valley in blinding and choking sheets. The summits of the buttes to the north were then fringed with Sioux warriors, who were closely wrapped in their blankets and staring stolidly at the long lines of cavalrymen and infantrymen which stretched away to the south until they were lost in the flying sand. The redskins were a strange group of spectators. They looked like Arabs as they are sometimes seen in paintings, squatting on the ground or mounted on ponies on the top of knolls when the sun is sinking. The great Indian village two miles to the north was deserted, and the sullen Sioux seemed awed by the activity of the troopers. The warriors were still suspicious that some move would be made to wipe them off the face of the earth. Stretching in a long, ghostly line on the ridge of buttes to the north were their pickets, ready to give the word that would send the redskins (lying in case the soldiers should advance upon them. General Milos sat upon a black horse on the knoll to the east in front of his escort, which consisted of representatives of every ar the army in the lield. Finally tl re came through the gale the shrill notes of the bugle. They were so faint that they were almost lost, in the storm. Then one by one the trumpeters took up the call, and the great parade.of the regular army, which was the grandest since tiie tinal dispersement of the troops in 1865 in XX ashington, began to pass in review General Brooke, muffled up in a wolf-skin overcoat, grimy from the sand that swirled about his horse, and followed by his staff, led tiie procession. XX hen the horsetnep passed in front of General Miles, the two leaders of the campaign made the salute, then General Brooke, wheeling his horse over the yellow grass, took a position beside his superior. Through the blinding sleet and with beads mnflled in huge fur capes, came the great detachment of Sioux scouts with Captain Taylor, his sword at, a salute, at their head. Sergeant Red Shirt, the handsomest Indian in the Sioux nation, was at the extreme right, his long hair tossing in tangled masses over his shoulders. Yankton Charley, who saved the revolv.ers of poor Lieutenant Casey, rode at, tiie left of the line, his overcoat buttoned so closely about him that the war feathers on his breast were concealed. Then came the great swinging column of infantry in brown canvas overcoats, fur caps, the glittering barrels of their rifles over their shoulders. Colonel Shafter, with his side whiskers closely clipped, rode at the head of the advancing columns. This was the famous First Regiment of the army, and a- its

officers passed in front of General Miles, their swords flashed through the flying sana and then fell at their saddle girths Captain Dougherty, the grim veteran of a dozen Indian wars, and the man who had his three-inch rifled gun trained on the hostiies all the time they marched up the valley to the agency, was at the head of one of the columns. Then came the Seventeenth Infantry, swinging along with the jauntiness it, displayed when it. marched through the blizcard and sand along the Cheyenne River. Thore was a rumbling back >f the infantrymen. The mules, with patient-looking faces ami statuesque ears, were dragging the machine cannon, those guns the Indians declare shoot to-day and kill to-morrow. The noise came from a battery of galling and Hotchkiss guns, with mules plodding at t heir sides, with cart ridges packed in white canvas bags on their backs. Be hind these machine cannon was ( apt. Capron's battery of three inch rifled guns, with soldiers holding earbims sitting on the caissons. Behind the artillery was (ho. Carr, astride a bay horse am! leading the Sixth Cavalry. Behnd these troops was still anotlxr battery of grim Hotchkiss guns, tlw> carriages of which still bore evidence of the furious storm of -hot that raged for at hour at Wounded Knee. There was another butte: y of machine guns and then came in long column front the most, celebrated regiment in the Western army. It was preceded by a bugle corps mounted on w hite horses, ami from the glittering instruments there came a shrill blast that even the s reaming of the storm could not drown. The troopers of the Seventh Cavalry, a regiment that has been torn ami leveled by the silent ghost-dancers on the buttes, was approaching. As it passed General Miles the entire staff doffed their hats, while the commander himself w aved his white-gloved hand. Troop after troop passed by with guidons that had been riddled by Indian bullets until It temp and K troop came in view. Tin appearance of these ire aroused the emotions of the spectators. B troop was not so large as those that had preceded it, and K troop was even smaller. When the savages at Wounded Knee turned their carbines upon the soldiers these troops faced the awful tire. K troop was without its commander and all of its commissioned and non-commissioned officers. The only one who was not killed or wounded in that terrible tight, and the only one to lead B t roop was a second lieutenant with a bandage about his lo ad, but the gallant troopers who remained rode witli proud bearing, their rifles being held over the heads of their horses. Behind the cavalry came the hospital and supply trains and pack mules. The column was an hour passing General Miles, there being nearly 4,000 soldiers and 3,700 horses and mutes in line. Gossip from Everywhere. A statue is to b erected in Marseilles to the memory of the caricaturist Daumier. It is estimated that the total cost of the new science and art buildings in Dublin was about $1,000,000. Hubert Herkomek succeeds the late Mr. Herbert as a correspondent of the British Academy of Fine Arts. Collector Erhardt, of New York, has been sued 4,000 times for the settlement of disputed points in the customs laws

' Site Was a Chicago Girl. “Mabel, my dear, is it true?” “Yes, mamma.” The elderly matron fondly stroked the bright golden hair of her ebeautiful daughter, and a smile of gratified motherly pride played about her lips. Timo had dealt gently with the elder of these । two women. In the few threads of silver | that shone in her still lustrous and wavy i hair, in the scarcely perceptible lines at , the corners of her soft gray eyes, and in j the slight hollows that suggested rathei j than indicated an impaired symmetry in ; the pure oval of her pale cheek, might be seen the evidences that the passing j years had touched with loving tingeis । the face of this gentle mother. I “Clarence has asked you to be his wife; j “Yes, mamma.” “I need hardly tell you, ’Mabel,” re- । joined her mother, “that your father and > I will interpose no objection in the way | of your happiness. If I had been asked , to Tname the young man to whom 1 I should prefer above all others to intrust I the future of my darling child, 1 should । have named Clarence Dashaway. He is I a noble, high-souled, chivalrous young man. the native nobility of whose char- ' after mirrors itself in the glance of his eye, the tones of his voice, and in every j movement of his manly figure. In win- I ning th«lJove of Clarence Dashaway. my : child, you have fulfilled every wish that i a fond mother could cherish for her only J daughter. ” “Yes. mamma,” said Mabel, her beau- 1 tiful face aglow with love and pride, "i I have got there this time with both feet. . - Buffalo Tidings. Protect Your Health. Cold and moisture combined have a torpor- | izing effect upon the bodily organs, and the di- , geetive and secretive processes are apt to be ' more tardily performed iu winter than in the I fall. The same is true, also, of the excretory functions. The bowels are often sluggish, and the pores of the skin throw off but little waste matter at this season. Tin system, therefore, requires opening up a little and also purifying and regulating, ami the safest, surest aud most thorough tonic and alterative that can be used for these purposes is Hostetter’s Stomach Bit- j ters. Persons who wish to escape the rheumatic , twinges, the dyspeptic agonies, the painful dis- > turbanees of the bowels, the bilious attacks, and I the nervous visitations so common at this time | of the year, will do well to re-enforce their svs- i terns with this renowned vegetable stomachic । and invigoraut. It improves the appetite, strengthens the stomach, cheers the s[ irits.and ’ renovates the whole physique. A Dandy Friutor of 'Other Days. “You didn’t know Tom Stewart, who was a printer here in the ’so's.” said an old typo to the writer. “1 don't mean the Tom Stewart who was an editor, but the one who thought ’he was a printer. He was a sort of dandy printer in his day. One of the sort who thought fie knew it all. One night we received the Governor's message and the managing editor wanted to print it in full. But the foreman told him he couldn't do it because there wasn't enough type in the office. Tom Stewart went into the com-posing-room and looked about the cases, and seeing that the 1 oxes whi h contain the capital letters were full he said to the formair. ‘D n it, man, set it In caps.’ This is a story which the printers will appreciate.” An Illustration Os the value of extensive mid judicious advertising of any article of undoubted merit Is found In the remarkable suceo-s of

tho California FtO Svhvv bh'b ban simply been phenomenal, ersKur Hits age of great enterprises. Organized a few years ago ttHhinnufadure a new and more perfect remedy than ha I ever been produced, a laxative withlwigln*! 1 and attractive fentur.’s. pts'jjSbedfroni de- I lichnis fruits and health-gix ins plants, one which would Ih- j 'easant and refreshing to " the taste, ns well ,s re illy lienetlcta) to the system, the mana; ment very wisely con- I eluded to select the leading new-papers throughout th<‘ United st tt<- to make known to the public the merits of the now remedy. Syrup of Fig-. A- happens with every valuable remedy, cheap substituteI are being offered to the public, but with I the general diffusion of knowledge It Is be- ■ coming more difficult each day to Impo-t on the public. Health l» t o imp n t ant tube I trifled with, and reputable druggists will i not attempt t > deceive Ihr public, as they all know that Syrup of l lg- I- manu ifa- t- | I tired by the California Fig syrup । <> | Sail I'rancl- -o. Cal . Louisville, Ky.. New York. N. Y. Do not m . ept any • ho»p, i >n- ’ advert.-ed imitations If offend. Christina's < harm ot Manner. Queen Christina of Spain j- often men- | ! tinned as possessing a charm of manner , whi 'h can overcome defect* of figure and {

I countenance. When -he was a bride her ; manner was not only cold but forhid- । ding She had a tall, thin figure, a mouth i that ran from ear to ear. a bad tomplexi ion. and she was witha , wholly devoid jof gracionsness. She wore her mantilla without any coquettish airiness. But through a constant efl rt to think and sav and do th" right thing she became I interesting anti agreeable. Her figure is still mere skin and bone, and the face plain, but the expression almost beauti- | lies it. Madden ng I ncertainty. Yai -ley See here. Wakwire. you are a married man and ought t > know something about the way -of women. 1 want to ask vour opinion on a little matter. 1\ lekwine —Well? Yabsley 1 wa- calling on a young I lady last evening no. I didn't say what her name was and along about 11:30 she began asking me about my favorite breakfast dishes I'd like t.> know . whether she was hinting at housekcop- j ■ hur >r intimating that it wa- the- for me ‘ I t.o go home. Titrnal. Seitinx cl;’- Mao vzixi lor I may, i 1891, will contain “Mount ashington in ' Winter,” bv Edward L. Wilson, beauti- I fully illustrated; the third paper on Japan (witn many illustrations); “About Africa.” bv J. Scott Keltic: “A Marine Tale,” by Frank R Stockton: “Neapolitan Art.” a full-page portrait of Living- ’ stone. Poems, Point of View. etc. Now is the time to subscribe. 25c a numbei. j $3.00 a year. Charles Scribner's Sons, . 743 Broadway, New York. The Force of Habit. When Mr. Parnell inquires as to what I is the matter with his leadership he • must not be surprised if the people respond: “O'Shea's all right. Washing- ' tun Post. “‘BROWN'S BRONCHI AL TROCHES'are | excellent for the relief of Hoarseness or ; Sore Throat. They are exceedingly effeetive." - C/lHsfimi World. London England. As large a sum as was ever obtained | for any invention was enjoyed by the Yankee who invented the inverted glass bell to hang over gas jets to prevent ceilings from being blackened by smoke. It pays to use SAPOLIO in all cleaning, for “Thift and Cleanliness are twin brothers.” Sapolio is a soliil cake ot Scouring Soap. Try it in house cleaning. Ear-rings with drops are beginning to be seen again, but the fancy for any tpeeJes of ibis ornament is on the wane.

South American Hooses. . New Orleans Picayune relates the bowing regarding the' non-combustible ^°mieiles alleged to be numerous in ' °uth America. They build fire-proof ‘buses in Buenos Ayres and Montevideo without thinking of it, and, while using UH the wood they can afford to. they use neither iron nor the larch. Trees are scarce in the neighborhood, and timber has to be brought down from the upper water in hardwoods. Being dear, a little o' it is made to go as far as possible. I he floors and the roofs are supported hy joists of hardwood, as among us; across these are laid flat rails of the same, and the spaces between these are bridged over by thin bricks thirteen and 0I “‘-half inches long, with their ends •’esting on the rails; another layer of J ... ... >! 1

bricks is then laid with lime, and genera‘iy on this a layer of tiles. The doors und windows have no boxes, but simply ; frames, which are set up when the walls ure going up and built in. There is no lathing or wainscot or skirting of the I bottoms of the walls. A house thus ; built cannot be burned. A man who han practiced medicine for forty years ought to know salt from sugar ; read what be says : Toi.euo, 0., Jan. 10, 1887. Messrs. F. J. Cheney & Co.—Gentlemen—l h&Ve been in the general practice of medicine for most forty years, and would say that iu all my practice and experience have never seen a iir'eparatlon that I could prescribe with as much I of success as I can Hall's Catarrh ■ WU), manufactured by you. Have prescribed ^wgreat many times and its effect Is wonderfulF<md would say in conclusion that I have i v“t to find a case of Catarrh that it would not । B they would take it according to direci Twib. Nours truly, L. L. GORSUCH, M. D., Office, 215 Summit St. | We will give SIOO for any case of Catarrh that I cannot be cured with Ball's Catarrh Cure. i Taken internally. . F. .1. CHENEY A- Co., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Probably Engaged. “Can I see Miss Hokus?” “Not just now.” “Is she engaged—or is she in town?” “Oh, she's in the parlor, amt as the ! light's pretty well out, the chances are 'by this time she's engaged.” Phlbulel- ■ phiu Timex. Do You Cough? ; Dent delay. Take Kemp's Balsam, the i best cough cure. It will cure your coughs , and colds, h will cure sore throat or a 1 tickling in the throat. It will cure pains in ; I the chest. It will cure influenza ami brim- ; . chills and all diseases pertaining to the ; lungs because it is a pure balsam Hold it i I to the light and see how clear and thick it | Is. You will see the . xcellm t effect after I . tilling the first dose. Large lotties 50 ! ' cents and $L Tako Warning in Time. Soon the hour will Im at hand when it will lie far more comfortable and health) to say good night to her in the parlor or hallway, and not to draw it out as far as the sidewalk. Why rub. and toil, and trear out yourself j and your clothes on washday. w lien. ever I since 1864, Dobbins' Electric boap has been offered on purpose to lighten your labor, ' I Now try it. XOur grocer has it. The bridegroom’s wedding-ring is j becoming of quite as much imimrtanee a< I the bride's from a fashionable point of • view. Conscience is the voice of tiie soul; passion the voice of the body.

Y Keep Your Blood Pure. . A small quantity of prevention is worth many pounds of cure. If your blood is in good condition the liability to any disease is much reduced and the ability to resist its wasting influence is tenfold greater. Look then to your blood, by taking Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.) every few months. It is harmless in its effects to the most delicate infant, y< l it cleanses the blood of all poisons and builds up the general health. G” O' cured me sound and well of contagious Blood Poison. As g , M , n [ discovered I was afflicted with the disease 1 commenced taking Swift's Sjhn die S S S > and in a few weeks I was perma- ■ nently cured.” George Stewart, Shelby, Ohio. Treatise on B. vsi ami Skin diseases mailed free The Swift Specific Co Atlanta, Ga.

Took Him Literally. Major I think. Uncle Lpb. it's high I time for vou t<> haul u your Icrn' that is. stop drink mg. It'll kill yon. sure. Unde Eph Ma ah. 1 fear d 1 been too long at it and cam' stop. Major Eph, it's nvnr t o late to mend I ncle Eph tafti r a h>ng -p 1 I ot thinking> Es dat - so, Majah. 1 gm -- 111 keep on a while hmgah. t . Knowledge Is I'owtm. — It Is •■aid that knowledge i- pi-wer. I; it :t t > ;. g,"Hideal of it to know ho" to get without A ' • ' • " ' and its nee,ls enabled Hr. A hit. to pr dui - the most woe lerful e nigh ren.edy <aer offered to the -..‘k and afflicted. Il I- ‘ all< <1 l>r» White's Puhnoi ria. and is - Id by dri* gists .a. rvwhere. Three -iz< s—2s ceV. ' ,u :anl '*• 'Wn’deari -i place on earth is home, anil when a man's monthly bills t ne in ^^ttjiuui lull ’ realize it. tMtnty candies that children cry for are 1/. Bull’s Worm Destroyers. They please the children, but they kill the worms. Ir is said that a divorce lawyer would starve in Japan. Then by all means let him be sent there. — Itanis Horn. Beecham’s Pills cure Sick Headache. A reporter must know the ropes in order to get in many lines. — Teats Sittings. Best, easiest, to use and cheapest. Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50c.

C/ are cured by Directions witi| eac^ Bottle,^ ^SorelSroa’p wounds, Gins. Swellings THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. Mi. CATARRH FREE /"a Buys New Silver-plated Singer Sewing I 9 ■ Machine,warrantedoyears. Forparticulars. address ®.<».AK AM.CUicagolll., k

Totally Helpless From Sciatic Khcumatism. “In May, 1885.1 was taken with sciatic rheumatism in my legs and arms, and was confined to my bed entirely helpless. In August I was just able to move around. I was reduced to a mere skeleton, my appetite was entirely gone aud my friends thought I could not live. I took almost everything I could hear of. but with no good results, during that winter. One day, reading about taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla iu March. April and May. I concluded to try it. One bottle gave me so much relief that I took four bottles, aud since then I have not been troubled with rheumatism, and my general health has never been better. My appetite is good and I have gained in flesh. I attribute my whole improvement to taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla." Wm. F. Tavlor, Emporium, Cameron County, Pa. N. B. If you decide to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla do not be induced to buy any other.

Hood’s Sarsaparilla i Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only ' by C. 1. HOOD X CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell. Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar / W ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver aud Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual i constipation. Syrup of Figs is the [ only remedy of its kind ever pro- i duced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in J its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its i many excellent qualities commend if to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c 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. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N.Y. MEMORY Mind wMxl.-nng enreff. Books Ic'-nod >n one roACmg. Testimoninls from all parts ot the globo. Prospectus Pv.ST I r-J K-l FRrg, sent on application to Prof. F 1 > |*| A. I-olMtte, 337 Fifth Ave. New York.

aw “ I RELIEVES INSTANTLY. ELY B ROT IIE US, 50 Warren St, New York. Price 50 cts. BSw a-vgaa Oiso s REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best. Easiest to use. EgtHS Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For mgM Cold in the Head it has no equal. A “=» JSM HHgSWBaIM nostrils. Price, cue. Sold by druggists or sent by mall. Vvsffi Address, E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. CURE BiiiousnessL This Picture, Panel size, mailed for 4 cents. IwSaiUt >€!■ J. F. SMITH & CO., Makers of “Bile Beans,” H S hs jra cfei 'K 255 & 257 Greenwich St., N. Y. City. OB!■ n On rv I CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH, RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND A rmmNkh * P\u\is b r THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE. The only Safes Sure, nnd reliable Pill for sale. ask Druggist for Chicketti'r's English Diamond Brand in Red and Gold metallic \ y / rP) boxes sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other kind. Refute Sabetirutlom and Imitations. ' All pills in pasteboard boxes, pink wraupers. are dangerous counterfeftM. At Druggists, or send th k 4c. in stamps for particulars, t»-gtimouials, and ‘•Relief for Ladle*, 9 * tn letter-, by return Mall. —A // 10.000 Testimonials. Name Paper. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL Co., Mndlaon Square, X bold by all Local Drug^t*. * FIULADKLPIIIA, l’A. “1 wept when Iw&s born^nd every day W®®^Sa<polio is a.so lid ca.kc e ofscouringsoa.p used for cleaning purposes^-

“Ah I Ah! ” Cried the house- . wife, “ The Secret I know, no . DIRT can resist SAPOLXO.”

“German Syrup” For children a mediA Cough cine should, be abso- ■ rrnnn lately reliable. A an P mother must be able to Medicine, pin her faith to it as to her Bible. It must contain nothing violent, uncertain. >| or dangerous. ?t must be standard in material and manufacture. It

must be plain and simple to administer; easy and pleasant to take. The child must like it. It must be prompt in action, giving immediate relief, as childrens troubles come quick, grow fast, and end fatally or otherwise in a very short time. It must not only relieve quick but bring them around quick, as children chafe and fret and spoil their constitutions under long confinement. It must do its work in moderate doses. A large quantity of medicine in a child is not desirable. It must not interfere with the child’s spirits, appetite or general health. These things suit old as well as young folks, and make Bosch ee’s German Syrup the favorite family medicine. V OO A. 6 175 W. L. DOUGLAS S 3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. ?SC.OO Genuine Hand-seweil. au elegant and O stvlish dress Shoe which commend-i itself. I* A .HO Hand-sewed Welt. A tine calf Shoe unequaled for style and durability Goodyear Welt is the standard dress Shoe <5 at a popular price. H8q.50 Policeman's shoe is especially adapted O lor railroad men. farmers, ete. All made in Congress. Button and Lace. । SQ.OO lor Ladies, is the only lumd-sewoii Shoe O sold at this popular price. Dongola Stioe for Ladies is a new departnre and promises to bew very popular, shoe tor Ladies and 51.75 for Misses still retain their excellence ter style, etc. All goods warranted and stamped with name on bottom. If advertised local egent cannot supply you. send direct to factory, inclosing advertised l price or a postal for order blanks. W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton, .Mass. -VASELINE-

FOR a ONE-HOLLA R BILL sent us by mail w-p will deliver, free of all charges, to any parson in — the United States, all of the following articles, caretully packed: One two-ouuce bott’e of Pure Vaseline 10 cts. One two-ounce bottle ot Vaseline Pomade.... 15 “ One jar of Vaseline Cold Cream 15 “ One cake of X’aseline Camphor Ice 10 < >ne cake of Vaseline Soap, unscented 10 “ Onecakoof VaselineSoap.exquisitelyscented 25 “ One two-ounce bottle ot white Vaseline 25 “ 81.10 Or, for pontage stamps, any single article 'it the price named. On no account be persuaded to accept, from your druggist any Vaseline or preparation therefrom unless labeled >rith our name, because you will < r rtainly receive an imitation tohich has little or no volue. Clieaebrough Mfg. Co.. 24 State St. N. Y. * I prescribe and tally eadorse Big (• as the only in specific forthecertaincure T 0 s DATB.^ of this disease iEßjunclwl noi to* (j. H. INGRAHAM.M. D., e»o»e auletar.. ” Amsterdam, N. Y. 53® Mt do nW by th. We have sold Big G for vrf-W- .n- many years, and it has ESl—given the best of satisWM Cin,-mnati.W,i|tp* faction. Ohio. D. B. DYTHEiCO.. « Chicago, 111. 81.00. Sold by Druggists. i O. N. U. No. 5-91 i WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. TT please say you saw the advertisement i in this paper.

“Oh! Oh!” Cried the DIET, “ At length I must go, I oamot withstand SAPOImIO.^