St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 16, Number 46, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 30 May 1891 — Page 7

'—__—--—~—~____________ 1 BIG INSULT TO ENGIAND e THE BRITISH COLORS HAULED DOWN IN AFRICA. War in the Dark Continent Between Portuguese and British Colonists—English Steamers Seized—A Number Kiled in an Attack on Commissioner Johnston s Expedition. A dispatch received at London from Lourenzo Marqu-z, a Portuguese town of Africa, on the north side of Delagoa Bay, says that the British twin screw torpedo cruiser Brick, six guns, Com- | mander Alfred Winsloe, has arrived Ni¥ RS e R F ¥ a &

there and reports that a serious conflict has taken place between the British and Portuguese colonists. Commander Winsloe says that the troops staticned at the Portuguese military post on the river Pungwe have attacked the British South Africa Company’s expedition, commanded by Commissioner H. H. Johnston. Seven Portuguese were killed, but the British loss is nnknown. The British twin screw cruiser Magicienne, six guns, Captain J. P. Ripon, and the British composite gunboat Pigeon, six guns, Commander Henry R. P. Floyd, have arrived at Beira, Mash- | onaland, a Portuguese settlement in ; South Africa. It was at Beira that in | April the Portuguese authorities seized | British mail sacks and refused to allow |

them to be carried to their destination. These mails were intended for the British colonists in Mashonaland. The British colonists were indignant at this highhanded proceeding on the part of the Portuguese, and complained tothe Brit'sh Government about it, Then Colonel Willoughby applied for permission to proceed to the Pungwe River in order to pay the prescribed duties. but, receiving no answer after forty-eight hours, he started without permission, and the Portuguese opened fire upon his expedition, and seized the two steamers which composed it. The Portuguese also seized the mails and provisions aund imprisoned sixteen members of the.expedition. Colonel Willoughby endeavored to sacure the release of his vessels by payment of the usual customs duties, but the Portugue:e officials who seized the boats refused to ac ept this payment, and ordering the British flag hauled down, hoisted the Portuguese flag in its | place. The Portuguese deciare that the British are excluded from the Pungwe River, which Colonel Willoughby's boats were navigating when seized. THEY SWALLOW THE BAIT.

Stories of Big Winnings Bringing Crowds te Monte Carlo. It was a lucky day for the managers of the Monte Carlo Casino when, in studying how to avoid being bled by journalistic blackmailers, they hit upon the plan of devoting part of the'r illgotten gains to the formation of what Prince Bismarck would have called the “reptile fund” for the purpose of subsidizing the purchasable press in their interest. Since that time the world has been edified from time to time by circumstantial accounts of the most tremendous runs of luck on the part of frequenters of the Monte Carlo tables, and winnings have been reported as of common occurence sufficient to break the bank though it had been backed by the Rothschilds. That these ingenious baits have been swallowed is apparent from the increased attendance at the salons. The latest story of the kind was to the effect that the Duchess of Montrose had ~left Monte Carlo richer by 250,000 francs _than when she arrived thero, Follow- | ~ ing u pon this announcement came a rush | gy _;,i,‘u‘«;fé',gk.mn - fambling place, the | e PR i ¥ % > -~

el i e o iel R S g i+ ¥ b e~ The re fi"‘"""‘fl“’*“ %‘% I‘ i’{‘: ~ in the ladt month have been something __fabulous. = As one result there have been ~no less than seven suicides of ruined ~ players since May 1. The last self-mur-der to be recorded is that of a Bavarian banker, who is said to have lost a - million francs of his own and his clieats’ money. SETTLED WITH BLOOD. An Affair of Honor on the Site of the World’'s Fair. Baron Rudolph Kalnoky, son of the Austrian Minister of Foreign Affairs, and another guest at the Richelieu, who for convenience sake may boe called Jones, fought a duel in Jackson Park, Chicago, at an carly hour on Sunday. They jabbed each other with rapiers, shed their blood on the grass, and now Kalnoky is on a train with a wound through his lez, and Jones lics at the Richelieu under a doctor’s care. The meeting was as romantic as the third act of a modern melodrama, with the additional distinet'on of being the first duel fought in Chicago since Pottawattamie warriors hurled stones at ' each other in the davs before John Wentworth and civilization landed on those shores. A nobleman, a pretty woman, and an ictruding rival, a bottle of wine, an insuit, a blow: a challenge, a meeting in the gray mists of a May morn and the click of steel on steel. These are the in- ‘ gredients of a romantic tale which must | make every honest burgher of that town | feel like a citizen of Verona stalking through the streets with a rapier bang- l ing against his heels. The girl who was | the cause of the dispute is Mittie Atherton, who wears tights and sings in the Duff Opera Company. She is reported ’ as beimg pretty, shapely, vivacious, and engaged to marry another men from the duelists. One «f the Largest. Margaret Mullaney, who weighed 750 pounds. died from heart disease at New York. An undertaker found it impossible to put her huge bodyon ice, | so it was embalmed. An ordinary | coffin is sixteen inches wide and \ thirteen inches high. A l’!‘”i“. cloth- | covered box thirty-scven inches wide and ; twentv inches high enclosed the corpse. | Tt took twelve men to carry the coffin | down-sta‘rs. No hearse was big enough ! to accommodate the coffin, and an under taker'z wagon carried the body to Cal- | vary Cemetery. A grave is ordinarily | d\:g twenty-four inches wide. Ground | had been bought for two grave:, giving a width of forty-eight inches Sixteen | of the cemetery employes lowered the | coffin into the double grave. | —————————— | Lord Romil,’s Mijshap. | Lord Romiliy uset a paraffine lamp in | the drawing-room of his London rosi-l dence at midnight He was alone at | the time, and attempted to (xxtinguishi the fire unassisted. Shortly aftr the butier smelled the smoke, and on mak- i ing a hurried investigation found Lord Romilly lying senseless in the burning! drawing-room, the mnobleman having i * been overcome by smoke cud the fumes | aris'ng from the burning contents of the | lamp. Lord Romilly was subsequent- i ly removed to St. George's Hos- :

S7o SRSST ST S YR B o S IS B M ,;’pital, where all attempts to revive { him failed. Several fire engines, in | Tesponse to alarms sent out, hastened to | Lord Romiliy's house, about which an { excited erowd gathered.. The firemen, | on entering, found Blanche Griffin, a | housemaid, and Emma Love!l, the cook, lin the same state of insensibility in { which their employer was discovered. ; They were also removed to the hospital, { Where it was found that both were al- { ready dead. Another fema'e servant and the butler had suecceeded in escaping - from the house. George Byrne, a fire- ' man, received serons injuries while engaged in rescuing the unconscious inmates of the house. The fire, which was not extensive, was soon extinguished.

N e oey 1 FEAR A MONEY PANIC. . i e o L r;’ GRAVE FINANCIAL SITUATION llf IN LONDON. <'Op'niml Frevalent that a Crash Is Inev tab'e 1 Case the Portuguese Loan Fails—< ollapse of thos Barings and the Bunkrupf(-y of Argent ne Have *eared the Money-Lend rs. { All this week the air has been full of i gold, says a recent dispatch from ILon{don, City men are all talking gold, ed- { itors are all workiifg gold, English finan- | ciers overloaded with bad securities are ' pledging good ones in Paris for gold, oo Ay L e T L 57% =

{ hussia 1s swaliowing all the go'd she can get, taking $750,000 from this market, | Tuesday, as bonne bouche for $12,500,- | 000 more, which she wili swailow next ‘| week. American steamers are bringing | millions i1 gold weekly, and altogether | on the great staze of European history international money has completely usurped the placo of international mur/dor, and grim-visaged war has smoothed his wrinkled frontin view of the painful and unsupportable void in his trousers pocket which must be filled forthwith. The situation is poculiar: perhaps the most peculiar that uropsan finance has ever seen. It primary cause was the Argentine bankruptey and the failure of Baring Bros. If thestorm had blown itself out the weather would have cleared again and Suspense passed away. The intervention of the Bank ol KEngland, while it averted the crash, instituted at the same time a period of un- ! certainty and depression, tife gloom of which has steadily deepened. Argentine finances are completely hojeless. Capital has fled the country. The new national bank bill sent by its Government to its Congress this week is sime ply a futile attempt to cure ai ehronie fnvalla fMe ey S 0 T

e eR L AR NIENG. BAVO Yary ‘ | clearly proved their inability to govern themselves, and the country now owes | $600,000,000, or over 8150 per capita of a | population that would not themselves | bring that average under the hammer—judging from their late idiosyncrasies of action. Os this amount S4OO, 000,000 has come out of the European markaet, mainly from London. and is destined to be for the present a dead loss. The great financial checker-game of the last few months, has simply been a Christian endeavor ou the part of some energetic and ingenious people to sce that the loss falls not on them, but on somebo ly else. The months of depression thus inaugurated have reached their c¢limax in ~the partial failure of the Portuguese loan. All this week the Paris bourse has been feverish aud full of disquieting rumors. Pessimistic prophets foretoll an inevitable crash when the Portuguese account comes to be settled at the beginning of June. French bankers have managed to scrape through and place a third of the loan, but there is a wonderful lack of confidence in Portugal's condition, as her people have been taxed beyond enANTANCA and WAw ase. - M

— —orwme e UDITOWING capacity 18 | place Portuguese stock which they contracted to take and for which they must pay. Rumors even asserted that Barons Alphonse and Gustav de Rothschild of the Paris house had quarrcled over ~questions of policy and would dissolve, which report now takes the form of a statement that Paron Gustav has ccased actively to concean himself with the firm through il health Spain is in trouble and Las proclaimed its pressing need of 820,000,000 to pay for new railways and a new fleet. Italy is even worse off with a deficit of millfons, which can only be supplied by borrowing, as the last drop has been squeczed out of the popular orange by overtaxation: while the worst sign of all is that each tax brings in less than | before. Customs receipts in April alone | were $2,000,000 less than the Minister of | Finance had calculated, and the poverty and misery of the people. thousands of whom are in Rome without work or bread, are portentous. All the Latin countries, in fact—European and South American—seem to be more or less in trouble, and quite equal of themselves to bring about a great and phenomenal erisis in the money market. Strange to say, however. they are likely to be assisted in this work by the queer financiering of M. Vishnegradski, Russian Minister of Finance. M. Vish- ' negradski ever sinc> he assumed office - has had one ambition, viz.. to swell the | value of the Russian rable. This by the aid of French financiers and through buying up Russian paper, he has sueceeded in in doing in spite of the bitter | objections of all the exporters and mau- | ufacturers of the country. ~ Vishnegradski, having now by financial chicanery raised the status of tha ruble and of Russian securities to a degree entirely unwarranted by any increase of commercial jrosperity or any certainty of pea e, is struggling tooth and nail to maintain his position, and if he is forced to withdraw all the $55.000, 000 which Russia had until recently in 1,-ndon and which he has begun to draw | upon. it will probably bring about with i a crash the n\.~rl|:\n',:in;:- [MHI"' - At any ratec all finanmcial talk is} gloomy, and the monay crisis has umirw—i ly put in abeyance any pos:!ilities of | . war for some time to come i From Cottage to Pa’ace. The favorite wife of th2 Sultan was l once a poor girl living in the coal mines i ‘of France She was a beautiful girl, and | some charitable person fouad her occu- ' | pation in a fainous dress-making estab- | ! lishment in Irance. Shz was sent to i Constantinople with dresses ordered by l i the Sultan’s mother. Nothing more was | l heard of her for many years, until a lit- { tle inheritance was left her by a relative, ‘ and notices were published asking for ' her whercabouts. In answer to these 1 notices a wonderful equipage, escorted by mounted eunuchs stopped at the door of the embassy, and the Sultan’s orly tegal wife stepped down to declare herself the once IFlora Collin, and renounce { the legacy in favor of her kindred. who ! are still poor. . i Ex-PrRESIDENT ARTHUR’S old home on ‘ Lexingtoo avenue, New York, is for { sgle.

e e e e e e———— % B; FUTURE PRICES FOR WHEA ; The Men Who Produce Wheat for 1 Next Generatfon Will Be the Rich Me 1 Wheat is he wealth-maker of the . ture. It has been too cheap to prod | for twenty years. The other extrem | mpon us. Consumption of wheat overtaken its production. There are more Government acres to subdue for! production and the increase in the po lation of tLe world increases its e sumption over thirty million bushels year. In the near future wheat will g in the farmer's granaries at from tweo three dollars per bushel. It is gratifying to have this view s tained by such an eminent authority Charles A. Pillsbury, of Minneapolis,

e N R I e S is at the head of the largest flour m | In this country, if not in the world. position as one of the largest cash b ers of wheat in America makes it ne sary that he should keep thoroughly formed as to all the conditions w are likely to affect the market price wheat and flour. Probably no one in United Sta'tes has made a deeper st of all phases of the wheat question, o better informed as to all the sources ’ statistics of its production, the relati of supply and demand and all the co tions of the market than he. . Wood Davis, in a recont elabo article in the Arena, declared that consumption of wheat throughout WOPIQ hadl Alnasides 00l T Raa R TR

n ] bt iay TuaUy OVERIESE - N 1| tion, and that at so early a date as 1 s l the United States will have cease - | export® wheat, aiid, in fact, would h t | to import it to supply its own deficie 2| The St. Paul Pioneer-Press, stimul " | by the statement of Mr. Davis, ca Y | Mr. Pillsbury to be interviewed, an v | latter agreed with the Arena writer * | the consumption had, in fact, overtall | the production, and that there had bl l| no inCrease of acreage of wheat to } | respond with Its increased consum , in ten years. »’ This will be gratifying news to t | Who have been producing wheat for ', last decade at ruinous'y low pri | They ought to have a benefit, and}i} ' signs of the times are wrong if theyte ' not going to have it. i e i ,’ A Pathetic Story. i The London Hospital tells of a " | stress who, like Hood's pathetic he Q 9 iin the “Song of the Shirt,” worke ill | the stars shone on the roof. Her pe- | sight failed, and the story goes on: Pho | saw &t the same time four hands, pur - needles, and four seams, She ab frst ! treated them as an illusion, but atfthe , end of some days, in consequend or weakness and prolonged mental ans ety, ' she imagined that she was realiy sdving ! fourseams at once, and that God, toxhed lby her misfortune, had worked a mracle | in her favor.” . “I Could Move the World If Ih-d something to rest my lever on,' said Archimedes. Large bodies moye or are moved slowly. But it is no impossible or even difficult task to render those small bodies, thekiduneys, active when they are not so. Don't tty te do this with unmedicated alcoholic stimulants, The experiment is unease. The sure, safe means is Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which affords just the right amount of atimulus without overdoing the mattar, Continued inactivity of either the kidnevs or Lladder, it should never be lost sight of, {s attended with grave peril, Bright's disease, dinbetes, and other ailments ¥hich affect the renal organs, hsntbtb‘ormh |in Inaction of the kidneys. To overcome s is an easy matter at the ontsst, Notso later. Now is the appointed time in s caseof this sort, Irregula-ity o} the bowels, stomach and liver, rheumatism and malarin arer by the Bittera, e i A MAX never forgives until hefhas had o chance to get oven and has proved the chance.—Ateh v

iSRS e Ry No Opium In Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fall. 25c An Appetit There is nothing for which we recommend Hood's Sargaparilla with greater confidence than for loss of appetite, indigestion, sick headache and other troubles of dyspeptic nature. In the most natural way this medicine gently tones the stomach, | assists digestion, and makes one feel “real hungry | Ladies in delicate health, or very dainty and { particular at meals, atter taking Hood's Sarsy ; parilia a few days, find themsalves longing for | #nd eating the plainest food with unexpected i relish and satisfaction. Try it | s iI l I { Fold by all drugxists. $1; sixfor §3. FPrepared only ; by C. I, HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass, . 100 Doses One Dollar 1 | 1 | l ! % . | o | The success of this Great Cough Cure without a parallel in the history of medicine, All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos- | | itive guarantee, atest that no other cure can suc- | cessfully stand. That it may become known, | the Proprietors, at an enormous exm:xwt{fléf placing a Sample Bottle Fume-futo€very home in the United Stateeand Canada, If you have | a Cough, Ser¢ Throat, or Bronchitis, u.‘C(Jh{mu it will cure you. If your child has the LT _P" or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relie : i ln"l“, :ill k\ n \:nz'iil that H;\‘:.'h\“u\' (]}\e:;Sc | (»“]}>\xll!;\!;\)l\'_ use it, Ask vour Druggist for | QHIIL.OI’S CURE, Frice 10 Cts,, 50 cts. and f ‘s“,\,_ If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, " use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts, i B i | : H | | I he Soap i | | ) i X | | C 1 i’ | M t I L 15 LCIHUON,

Matter of Opinion., There is an old, hut ever good story, f a man who did not play the violin, ut “thought he could if he tried.” He as not alone in his density of se]f—an—l reciation. One littie boy, at least, is tted to bear him company, He belongs to a very musical family, ut is himself entirely destituts of ap-t‘ preciation or “ear.” Knowing so littie of musie, however, he is ignorant of what he has missed. One day, a visitor Wwas present when the other children were singiug delightfully at the piano, 'while Frank sat at a distance in aggrieved silence. “Why don’t you sing, t 00?” asked the guest, during a pause in the muain

'w‘;'i‘" B L en e ,u AP NROU 1k vl Imusic. 1 “They won't let me,” was the injured respose. ] “Don’t you sing?” “Sometimes, but they say I sing out of tune.” “Oh, then you’re not musical, like the others?” “I don’t know about that.” retorted Frank, still more aggrieved. “The { trouble is, nobody thinks I am!” e : Syrup of Figs, | Prodaced from the laxative and nutritious juice ot Calitornia figs, combined with the medicinal vlrtqes.ot Plants known to be most beneficial to the human system, acts c;ntly l(l)ln.tlus; kidneys, liver and bowels, offectn claansiug the system, dispellin colds Sy e ::gogeadaches. and curing habitual Not to He Borne. “Oh, it must be dreadful to be poor,” said a fastidious little girl. “You have to be so dirty!” The state of uncleanli- | ness is, nevertheless, not always neces- | sary, as many & poor person can testify, | but it is often @ condition of choice | rather than dest'ny. Says the Philadel- - A “poor whive-trash” girl from the ~mountains of North Carolina was received into the house of a lady in Raleigh for training. She was taught to be orderly and clean, but suddenly diseipline ceased, for she fled to her mountain home. Thither the lady went to find her. “Why did you leave me?” she asked. “Well, Mis’ Blank.” was the reply, “I couldn’t stay. I was just cloyed with neatness!” ‘. e ————————————————————— ————— ":iulde to Health and Etiqurtte” Freo! One 0f the greatest medicines on earth for women is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Send two two-cent stamps for “Guide to Health and Etiquette,” by Lydia E. Pinkham, a beautifully jllustrated book, containing a volume of invaluable information. It hrs saved lives and may Save yours. Adea.ess the Lydia E. Pinkham Medical Company, Lynn, Mass., and be sure to mention this paper. Bonnets and Birds, Olive Thorne Miller has posted, from her home in Brooklyn, 20,000 printed slips, asking the women of New York not to wear birds or their plumage. And the women of New York go on wearing birds and birds’ wings until, according to .dealers, the demand for this style of ornamentation s greater than ever before. The only consolatlon in it | for Mrs. Miller is that she has done her duty. Bouxp 10 Dc It.—The man who chases bubbles will be sure to bark his shins. The | man or woman who buvs a bottle of Dr. i White's Dandelion Alterative wiili find it | the best remedy for malaria, billousness, | dyspepsia, rheumatism and neuralgia. It | purifies the blood and overcomes that feel- | fog of weariness, : Tur way of an eagle in the air is one | of those things of which Solomon nx-t preéssed himself ignorant, and there is somgthing truly marvelous in the mech- ‘ - ntrels the seythe-like | sweep of wiug peculiar to most birds of | e . | Tae children consent to be undresseq | and go to bed only oncondition that mamma ives them each one more Dr. Bull's Worm | fiestrflynra. They taste so gool. Worms don't like them. though. By mail, 25 conts. John D. Park, Cincinnati. Ohio. i My first is on or under a table. my second is a kiod of grain, my third is what every man works tor and my whole forms one of the United States. Mat-ry«-monoey M. L. THOMPBON & CO., D. uggists Coudersport, I'a., say Hall's Catarrh Cure {s the best | and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold Drusgists scll it. 75, Tne decrease of tho resistance of bismuth when melted is claimed to be due 10 an essential projerty of the metal rather than to an accident of structure. *AIL Is not gold that glittars,” but the brightness which {llumines any houss or kitchen cleaned with SAPOLIO is worth more than gold., Try a cake. TuE length of t Gallet girl’s dress is | considerably over two feet Pittsburg Dispatch. BEECRAM'BS Plnrs act like magic on a | 1 Weak Stomach. ! THE tired street-car horse knows “the luxury of whoa.”—Washington Star l FITS.-All Fits stopped frea by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fiig after firat 14v's usa. Marvellous cares. Treatize and $:.% tiial bottle free to | ! Kitcases. Send to Dr. Kline, Wl Arch St., Phalla, Pa.

P CHICHESTER'S ENBLISH, RED CROSS P DiAMOND BRAND | THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE. The only Safe, Sure, and reliable Pill for sale. | Ladles, ask Druggiss for Chichester's Bnglied Diamond Brand in Red and Goid metallie | boxes sealed with bige ribhon. Take no other kind. Kefuse Substitutions and Imitations. g All pilis In pastebosrd baxes, pink wrappers are dangerous counterfeita. At Druggists, or send m 4e. in stamps for particulars, testimonials, and "l{clfif for Ladles,” in letter. by return Mall } 160,000 Testimonials. Name Paper, CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., Madison Bq‘unrq i N PUTLADELPHIA ©» ]

A 0 * £

{~ RLI el ‘ :S Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Ph{sicians. ('\)?l Prd Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the R | S tast. ldrenkc it mthut objection. Bydrug;sts. 6') ey . e . e . _Thebestis aye the cheapest: ‘ ‘ S _ ° . ® © ls s7/ d m ‘lv % n = é&;’; of:and substitutes forial i GRS POLIO-— Iris asolidy: A, coke of scouring soap Try i 3 ‘ MNLY Tin your nexl house-cleaning. ™ | REAL ECONOMY. It is worse than nonsense to buy a chca‘p art.icle with which to damage more valuable property. Scouring soap is at best, only a trifling expense, but with a poor and cheap article it is likely to do considerable damage to fine marble or other property. |

v - - \ 1 eO\ A & AN ({ //-. | Nyt - % { \NR\ZZ A ) N 1 3 ‘V_Qv ////,v \) / - Ny O —) S/ 7 st o - POPYRIGKT Inyo, g A heavy burden | =all the ills and ailments that only female flesh is heir to. It rests with | you whether you carry it or lay it down. You can cure the disorders and derangements that prey upon | ] .. ) your sex, with Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It’s a legitimate medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate organization. For all organic displacements and weaknesses, accompanied by weak back, bearing-down sensations, and for ali uterine diseases, it’s a posi- | tive specific. It’s guaranteed to | give satisfaction, in every case. | If it doesn’t, you’ve only to ask | for your money and it’s cheerfully | refunded. If it does, you'll want | to ask for nothing more. It’s the cheapest medicine you can use, | because you only pay for the good | you get. It improves digestion, enriches the blood, invigorates the system, and produces refreshing sleep. l AYER’S | Sail i is booming | all over the land, : being everywhere i considered | The Superi remedy for scrofula and all forms of blood disease. Take no other "MEDICINE ' Cures others, will cure vou. , - | B READY RELIEF, ' THE CHEAPEST AND BEST MEDICYNE | FOR FAMILY USE IN THE WORLD. i ! NEVER FAILS TO RELIEVE i | i | PAIN. | | Cures and Prevents Colds, Coughs, Sore ! Throat, Inflammmation, Rhewmmuatisin, Neuralgin, Headache!t Toothache, i | Asthma, Difficult Breathing. ! CURES THE WORST PAINS in trom one to twenty minutes, Notone hour after reading this advertisement need any one SUFFER WIT. 4 PAIN. INTERNALLY, & half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will in a few n:inutes cure Cramnps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heartburn, Norvousuess Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Diarthea, Colie. Flatuleney, and all internal patus. bo¢. peor Bottle. Sold by Druggists. An Excellent and Mild Cathartic, Purely veg- ' etable she sufost ol best medicine in the world for the cure of a lisorders of the fAGH OR BOWELS LIVER, STOMAC : Take a rding t lirecti 5, they will restore 1 .‘;.\l \-“A:, - A.’ - |'A ‘: "-,‘f\‘\‘\ .l~”4:<£,(n From the “Pacific Journal.” | “A great invention has been made by Dr, i Tutt of New York. He has produced T ‘tt.’ H | D which Imitates nature to perfection;itacts instantancously and is perfectly h:\rmh:w.-' Price, 81. Oflice, 39 & 41 Park Place, N. X, . : TOMAN, HER DISEASES AND THEIR \\ Treatment.,” A valuableiliu-trated book of ' T pages sent free, on receipt of 10 cents,to cover cost of mailing, etc. Address P. O, Box 106}, Phila, Pa

B Y 2RI TBOSTED AR ATE AT BrENTAR lOs vt W BB | Perhaps you do not believe these statements concerning Green’s August Flower. Well, we can’t make you. We can’t force conviction into your head or medDoubting - icine into your throat. Wedon't Thomas. want to. The money, is yours, and the misery is yours; and until you are willing to believe, and spend the one for the relief of the other, they will | Stay so. John H. TFoster, 1122 { Brown Street, Philadelj .ia, says: *“ My wife is a little Scotch woman,’ thirty years of age and of a naturally, delicate disposition. For five or six: ‘ years past she has beea suffering from Dyspepsia. She . Vomit became so bad at last 5 that she could not sit s Every Meal. down to a meal but | she had to vomit it { as soon as she had eaten it. T'wo ‘ bottles of your August Flower have | cured her, after many doctors failed.’ She can now eat anything, and enjoy it; and as for Dyspepsia, she does not know that she ever had it.” 3 THIS IS i 1H 4 X s [l WHO (@S MAKES 2 - . u_,%‘l, & ; , AND T SRS LL= | S RN S - { \ B o 4 Bt ST A ' i | éTAND A\RES D s CALES Fl\”\ix S s cfi," ATA T FR EEESBOOKAN a8 = s RICE LIST, R Z IO [IA N : " JONESBINGHAMTON.NY, i . B il atda l‘ | & OUR CATALOGUE AND PRICE-LIST OF PAPER STOCK, PRINTING MACHINERY AND [ PRINTERS' MATERIALS. ( . This useful hook gives the sizes, weights and quality of the different varieties of paper usually re- ’ quired by newspaper and job printing offices, with prices for the same. It also contains a complete description of the various kinds ot furniture and maehinery necessary in a well-regulated printing office, fully illustrated, together with prices of the same. In addition to the above our catalogue thows carefully prepared estimates of the amount of material required for newspaper and job printing offices, ranging in price from S2OO to $2,000. This convenient catalogue will be sent to any address, &nstage puid, upon receipt of a request for the sanle, by the CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, Chicago, Il

3y o EWIS’ 98 °< LYE Powdered and Perfumed. (PATENTED.) The strongest and purest Lye kma.de. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 minutes : without boiling. Xtiss the Rest for softeuing water, cleansing waste-pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. e PENNA. SALT M'FG CO, ] Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa.

E ILLUSTRATED PUBLI- | CATIONS, WITH MAPS, describing Minnesota, North : Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington and Ore- =~ gon, the Free Government and Cheap | NORTHERN PACIFIC R. R. ~ Best Agricultura’, Grazing and Timber Lan : open to settiers. Mailed FREX::. Ad\x]ress " | CHAS. B. LAMBORN, Land Com. N, ®. 3. 8., st. Paul, Mizn, * SAMPLES SENT FREE | ot spring patterns with bor- | ders and ceilinzs to match | (medlmlf million rolls of: { -sered at wholesale prices | White blanks, 4¢ to 6¢; R . Gilts, ¢ to 35¢; Em- : | be ssed Gilts, 10¢ to 50c. ' { 1 will send you the most ropular colorings, and guarantee to save you money. ALFRED PEATS, Wall Paper Merchant, 63-65W.Washington-st.,.Chicago { ; Y WHEN THE DEAFNESS IS CAUSED By TH M) SCARLET FEVER, COLDS, . . ] MEASLES, CATARRH, &c. Y BY THE USE OF THE INVISIBLE ‘ D I"‘ Al 1 wkich is guaranteed to help a larger o per cent. of cases than all similar do- . vices combined. T'kesame to the Ears HEAR N a= glasses are to the eyes. Positivelyin- { s visible. Worn months without removal ! - H.C.WALLUS, Bridgeport, Conr | 1 & | S | g B : | Ilguarantee to cure 9 per cent. of the worst cases of REEUMATISM with my SPECIFiC BLOOD TREATMENT, and 'will retund a'l money paid it [ tail to accoroplish justwhatladvertis. Patieuts ata distance treated by mail. Forcircu'ar: and testimonials adCresk DR.G.W WoAGAMOTT. ioStata Nt (Thieavan 1 rEdrßerhßn e Package makes 5 gallons. Delicious, sparkling and appetizing i Sold by all dealers. A beautiful Picture Book aud Cards sent free 4 ! suy cne sending their address to Tke C. E. HIRES CO., Philad's, - @ &9 FAT FOLKS REDUCED o 2 ISto%lbs.Qermon:h by harmless herbal { (\\\ { Jremedies. Nostarving, noinconvenieuce | I land no bad effects. Strictly confidential. ! Bend 6. for cirenlars and testimonials. Address Dr, | O.W.F.SxYDER,McVicker’s Theatre Bidg. Chicago, IIL' | oBN U No. 22—91 -‘ }fvv . ;’l‘:‘ralfll‘ MLy yva ;:l Wolnoe AL‘A\;TL:E;T&‘.;-I‘ in this paper. + ——— eet e e———— Al . g \\ -5W : 3 27 5> \ N /% AR R o ) RS 3 {7 =R\ it R o ot ol '(’:‘ TR S\e) &9 O | Pke R N “--'3/—’ A P PR eSS A 4:.“\, ’ \“ &// R Y= e A c v D A ‘-— / P \\ el $ % s As"‘;/‘ 77 , - R>AL f y —NERS R ™~ o ;P S~ oSy '7 LY ==y Z R B \ 7 “((."i /fi = | NG { / : ,/(; - ég\\\‘\ : 11 £) 77 BN NN\ { ““MY WORK SHALL BE PERPETUATED.” ! The perpetuation of Mrs. Pinkham’s work was | guarded by ler foresight from the start. Every, | suffering woman applyingto herreceived personal i attention, and the details of every case were re- | corded. These records are to-day the largestin | the world, contain facts not found elsewhere, 1 now open to all women. | PINKHAM'S compount i LYBIA E. Compound | isthe only Legitimate and Positive Remedy for | those peculiar weaknesses and ailments jncident | to womeg. | p===¥rs. Pinkham’sbook; ‘‘ Gulde to Health and Filgnette,” | Lfif beauti®lly fllustrated, sent on receipt of two 2c¢. stampa, ‘ iydia E. Pinkham Med. CO.; Lynn, Mass.