St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 15, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 31 October 1891 — Page 7

tOPKKw..VIB»O Worn-out, “run-down,” feeble women, need Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It builds them up. It’s a powerful, restorative tonic, or strength-giver —free from alcohol and injurious drugs. The entire' system is renewed and invigorated. It improves digestion, enriches the blood, dispels aches and pains, gives “res freshing sleep, and restores flesh and strength. As a soothing nervine, it allays and subdues hysteria, spasms, and all the nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease. It’s the only guaranteed medicine for women, it does what is promised —or it asks nothing. It gives satisfaction, in every case, or the money paid for it is' refunded. That’s the way its makers provo their faith in it. Contains no alcohol to inebriate ; no syrup or sugar to derange digestion ; a legitimate medicine, not a beverage. Purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system. Common Soap Rots Clothes and Chaps Hands. IVORY SOAP DOES NOT.

sb Sleeplessness Cured. IV I am glad to tertify that I used Pastor Koe- ' nigs Ne^ve Tonic with the best success for . sleeplessness, and believe that it is really a great relief for suffering humanity. E. FRANK, Pastor St. Severin, Keylerton P. 0., Pa. A Presbyterian Minister. Peoria, 111., September, 1890. Says Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic has become a household necessity in his family. It is in? valuable for nervous disorders, is easy to digest, and Ites no bad after effects. A. REINHARD, j Freeport, HL, Oct v 26, 1890. : We used 12 bottles of Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic for nervousness, and found it to have ths : desired effect in every case , dominican’sisters. nnFT'-A Valuable Book on Nervoui S, BJ L L Diseases sent free to any address ■ K ■ ■ an drpoor patients-can also obtain ||l Lak this medicine free of charge. | This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1876. one is now prepared underhis direction by the KOENIG MED. CO.. Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. 6 for 85 T.awe Size. 81.75. 6 Bottles for 89. YOU WILL SAVE MONEY, Time, Patri, Trouble, »»a.inctKß CATARRH BY USING jr F ELY’S CREAM BALM. Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y To eure costiveness the medicine must be more than a purgative; it must contain tonic, alterative and cathartic properties. Tutt’s Pills possess these qualities, and speedily restore to the bowels their natural peristaltic j motion, so essential to regularity. S3*. ■ B MB ANAKESIS gives Instant bw K u K IK ■ relief. and is an INFALLIH 8 1 B Vs BLE CUKE for PILES. , 9 E B® VA Price, $1; at druggists or M by nail. Samples free. | ■ ■ B ■ B M Address “ANAKESIS, s S Kam na ts? Box 2416. New York City.

1 4 T “MY WORK SHALL BE PERPETUATED.” The perpetuation of Mrs. Pinkham’s work was guarded by her foresight from the start. Every ; suffering woman applying to her received personal attention, and the details of every case were recorded. These records are to-day the largest in the world, contain facts not found elsewhere, now open to all women. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S is the only Legitimate and Positive Remedy for those peculiar weaknesses and ailments incident to women. Flnkham’sbo«k, “ CnMo t* Health and KUqnctt.,” IkiF beautifully UloaU ated, senten recolptoHwo 2c. stamps. ; Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn. Mass.

DAKOTA WHEAT RUINED RAIN AND SNOW PREVENT THRESHING. Dosses Will Keach Millions—Grain In Stacks Sprouting— The Supply of Machinery Utterly^ Insufficient—Scarcity ol Labor to Harvest the Crop Also I’roduces Disastrous Results. Destructive Weather.

The weather of the past few weeks ‘ has undone much of the good that was done by the, fine weather early in the season in North Dakota, and the farmers in the Northwest will suffer losses aggregating in the millions. The damage can as yet only be estimated, but that the loss will be very great there seems no doubt. The railroads had made special arrangements to handie a great crop, and the farmers considered their own plans amply sufficient. But so great was the wheat crop that, first, it was almost impossible to hire enough help to secure the crop, and a very large part of it had to be left standing in the shock. Then it was found tha^t the supply of thrashing machines was insufficient, and that caused a delay which left fully half the crop still in the fields unthrashed when the rain came. Rain has been general and abundant, and it is this which has caused the greatest loss. At Jamestown, in the North Dakota Jim liiver Valley, rain and snow fell continually for a day and a night, and last week there was but one lull day’s wheat thra king. Reports are received of grain sprouting in the stacks. At FevH’s Lake, in the northern part of | the State, a heavy rain fell, which will stop thrashing for several days. No grain has been stacked owing to the scarcity of laborers. Lakota (N. 1).) reports snow, with thrashing stopped entirely, and fears that un'ess the weather clears soon much of the grain will be unfit to be thrashed, in the northern part of North Dakota there will, however, be more loss from lack of laborers than from bad weather. Northwestern Minnesota gives about the same report as North Dakota. It I commenced raining again about Crookston and continued all of one day. There have been only a very few days of dry weather in four weeks, and farmers are getting discouraged. In Traverse County and Central Western Minnesota the larger portion of the wheat has not yet been thrashed and men and machines are greatly needed. Ccflonel P. B. Walker, of Minneapolis, says of the situation: “I have just returned from a trip through that section. It made my heart a he to witness the ruin. In order to appreciate it one must actually see it. There are thousands of acres of simply wonderful wheatfields almost utterly’ destroyed by the rains. And the mud —it is perfectly execrable. Day after day we tramped in the slush across fields—slush half knee-deep. I went out with a Government surveying party to establish town lines, and the rain and mud broke up our party, and we were

forced to abandon the work entirely. “The reports published in the papers do notnover half the devastation. As far as the eye can rea h in every direction are great big shocks of wheat, and it all । would have graded No. 1 hard had it j been thrashed out before the rains fell. I Now nothing can be done. It is too late to save even a modicum. Were the shocks in a condition to be thrashed, it wou’d be a physical impossibility to do anything with the crop, for the reason that teams cannot haul the wheat to the ) thrashers nor haul fuel to the engines. “The difficulty in the first place arose over getting help to do the thrashing, but the railway companies succeeded in getting both men and machine into the fields. When they arrived they were । powerless. The mud was so deep that the horses mired to their bellies and । nothing can be done now until the sun dries out both the soil and the shocks of I wheat. “It is painful to stand on a prominence I and survey the situation. Everywhere thrashing machines are visible—all ' abandoned—and the wheat for hundreds of miles ruined. ” His Fnrt Was Too Ikavy. W. B. Arnold, an actor in the “Bine I Jeans” Company, severed his connection with that organization at Zanesville, । Ohio, upon rather extraordinary grounds. Mr. Arnold is 60 years of age. In his j part as Col Henry Clay Risener he is j obliged to seize and carry bodily off the stage Miss Jennie Endsly, who tips the beam at 177 pounds. This task was too । much for the veteran, who was willing, however, as a compromise to drag the fair one off. To this she objected, and a younger and stronger actor will be , secured. Making Huge Guns. Secretary Tracy and Commodore Folger, of the Bureau of Ordnance, made an official visit to the ordnance department of the Bethlehem (Pa) Iron Company. They witnessed the pouring of a । iso-ton casting, which is the largest ever I made in this country. They also witI nessed the forging of the first 13-in li ; guu made by the Bethlehem Iron Com- ! I pany. Armor plates were also forged. ; The visitors expressed themselves as highly gratified with the progress made 1 on the $4,000,000 contract. Half a Hundred Mangled. | At Tipton, Ind , one of the 75-horse '

power boilers in A. R. Dolman’s barrelheading factory exploded. Fifty hands were employed there, all of whom wore injured to some extent, two fatally. The factory was va ued at about §15,000. Afterward fire originated in the ruins of the Dolman factory and the surrounding ; buildings were destroyed, together with a large amount of heading. A Berlin dispatch says that the Kaiser Iras expre.-sed himself as deeply offended by the anti-Jewish agitation i which the bestowal of an order on a Jew living in Bielefeld has aroused. In re- j I ply to the representations sent through ] ! Chancellor Caprivi that the man had a I : bad character, the Kaiser has replied briefly and pointedly, rebuking the anti-Jewish prejudice that prompted the action. The Boston papers are so astounded | at the success of their bas '-hall team in I I its recent contest with the New-Yorkers i that they hint a suspicion that the lat- i 1 ter were paid to “dr >p” the games. 1 i This is quite as complimentary to the : ; skill of the local artists as it is to the honesty of the visitors.—Detroit Free | Pi ess. Boston having won both base-bal--1 pennants this year, the^standard of “cull | chaw” in that town will be advanced sc ; high that Chicago can’t approach it.— : Rochester Herald.

i RAPID RIDE TO DEATH. • AN AWFUL RAILWAY WRECK IN OHIO. While Rounding a Curve at High Speed a Baltimore and Ohio Train Jumps the Track, Nearly Thirty Persons Being Injured, Seven Fatally. Caused by Spreading Kails. A portion of the Baltimore and Ohio

’ fast mail No 8, from Chicago to New , York, jumped the track near Hicksvilla, Ohio, killing two passengers, wounding 1 five others fatally and twenty others less ■ seriously. The train consisted of baggage car, smoker, day coach, sleeper and private car of Vico President King. The smoker and baggage car remained attached to the locomotive, but the private car and the ladies’ toach went over the embankment and were wrecked. The day coach, which was well filled,, turned over oi.ee and bounded right side up. In its aerial maneuver it straddled two of the telegraph lines, and the cross timbers were wrenched from seve.al poles. The sleeper fared better, and . after sliding off its trucks it lay righ«e side up on the ground. Those in thds smoker escaped with a severe shakings up and many bruises. Neither the I smoker nor the baggage car left tlrW track, but the former must nave escaped very narrowly, the coach being t Ited to one sice in a threatening attitude The most serious injuries were received by । the occupants of the day coach. Nearly all the seats were wienched from their I places, as were the lamps, racks, and other furniture of the car, and the w ndows wore a 1 shattered. The train was running fully sixty miles an hour at the time, an 1 as near as can be ascerta nod the accident was caused by one of the drive whee's of the engine leaving the track at the switch near the water tank. This wheel spread the rails and all the cars excepting the baggage and smoker left the rack. Fur a space of 800 feet the rails were absolutely swept off the ties. The locomotive, baggage and smoking cars re mained’on the grade, which, all along this place, is about eight feet high After the coaches left the grace andwent into the ditch the locomotive, baggage ear and smoker went on several hundred feet, but did not leave the grade, although off the track. BURNED THE RECORDS. Court House Officials Arrested for a Dastardly Deed. The Court House at Washington, Ind , was recent y set on fire The Recorder’s and Sheriff s offices were totally destroyed and a portion of the Auditor s office was ruined. An investigation proved that the interior of t ic Auditor’s office, including all the important records, had been saturat’d with kerosene oil, and they were only saved by the prompt’action of the lire departm mt. The books had been taken from their

sh Ives, placed in piles, and saturated ! with the oil. The city soon filled with furious pee- I pie from all parts of the county, and , the wildest excitement prevailed until it ■ became certain that the perpetrators of I the deed were safe y inclosed Uy th | stone vails of the Daviess County jail. I The conspirators who are in the uhU for i the crime, says a dispatch from Iha,; place, are County Auditor James Lavelle. Aaron B. Hawes, a prominent Steele Township farmer, and Basil Ledgerwood and Samuel Harbin, two day laborers of this city. A warrant is out | for Michael LavoHe, the Auditor's broth- j er. but he cannot, be found by the oili- | cers, and it is believed that ho has fled ; the country. County Auditor Lavelle has been Au- j ditor for eight years, and for the eight years immediately preceding he was | Deputy Auditor for h s brother. His j b rm expires Nov. 1 and a few weeks ago I the commissioners ordered an inw stir a- ! tion of his books and accounts, appoint- < ing ex-National Bank Examiner Samuel 11. Taylor and Edward F. Meredith, a prominent attorney, to do the work To this Lavelle made strenuous objection, and used every means in his power to ; defeat or postpone the proposed invest!- ! gallon This opposition was continued, and the time was set to begin the work, when but a few days before it was to have begun an alarm of tire was sounded and the Court-House was found to be in flames. Si spicion pointed t > Auditor Lavelle as concerned in the incendiarism, and the officers began work at once under the direction of County Attorney John C. Billheimer and Sb Tiff Charles Colbert Five new jugs that had < obtained kerosene were found in an outhouse, where they had been thrown by the incendiaries. With this valuable clue tho man who bought the jugs was easily found, and was arrested and lodged in jail. His name is Samuel Harb n. At first.he denied all knowledge of the fire, but under a vigorous pumping he weakened and agreed to tell the whole story i of the plot. lie stated that^he was hired to do tho ; work of destroying ti o court house ■ records by Auditor Lavelle and Aaron 18. Hawes. He and Basil Ledgerwood , were to bo paid SSO 1 each for the work , Lavelle gave Harbin money to get coal i oil and Ledgerwood money to buy a r< - * volver. Lavelle took Harbin and Led-

gerwood to the court house and to d them where to set the fires.and gave them keys to the court house and offices. That night they carried in the coal oil,' flooded the offices, applied the torches ana tied The arrangement was to a ; certain extent abortive, as the Auditor's records, which make the investigation possible, were saved, although all the va’uable records in the Recorder’s office, fixing the title to all the landed property in Daviess County, were destroyed. The I loss to +hc county by this is incalculaI bie. As soon as Harbin had completed his | testimony, warrants were is ued for the I others concerned. Ledgerwood, when arrested,' knocked under at once, telling the same story Harbin told. Every statement corroborates the evidence secured. Auditor Lavelle was immediatelyitarrested. A B. Hawes soon joined ■ him, but Michael Lavelle could not be found, and has not been arrested. Led1 gerwood and Harbin were arraigned in | court, and pleaded guilty to the charge i of arson. i Auditor Lavelle's bondsmen, becoming frightened at the turn affairs were । taking, required him to turn over all his property t > them, and this was done, I Hawes lives on a farm of 500 acres’ ! owned by his wife, and is-in good cir- : cumstances financially. He is a des- । perate character, however, and he was I brought in at the muzzle of a Winches- | ter.

and Jew. Mid to“rant h nf eS tV n theSr own be ”ef Usually find som« ^ ose , of ot hers, can Alexander B r . oQn d of sympathy, the East ®°“® rvl,,e ’ a missionary in tong convXH ay G ’bralter had a ’^Ject of Scrint^ 1 '. 11 a Jew on the bourse, neither < PtU m' tra ditlons. Os other’s point o ld . ^“Rrehend tho *o bar to mitu L hat thh was their manner of J. eS J? ect ’ was P rovod Bionary: Parting. Says the misMy frien^waTa f open street, broad shoulders « u ^“''t man ' with whiskersencir Hn "m h i ad bushy brown, was possessed if vJr® sace \ Ho *rms; raisins tn. ' er N long and strong assumed a throitp? 80 that they almost °nce threw the n,n R aspect, he a 1 at mo towards hi r ° U " d my neck ’ drew breast nnd 1: h “J’ P ressed me to his Certkiniv \. S ( Cd me on both cheeks. Scotchman appeared to me. a Such denio. ’ and 3 u ’te unaccustomed to dinarv tip ’ I tra .^ ns ’ the most extraorA wn^u rm i nat on to an argument, for samn.rf a ^' and day arrived hour r, V® to aga I was at an eany n my way to the harbor, and just io spot where I had previously met u n ’ * c »me upon my Jewish friend. '' e exchanged a friendly greeting. I “P ooc l-by»” said I. “I’m bound for lAI al awn. " | I was not go ng to allow a Christian to pc outdone by a Jew, so, grasping him Kirmly by the hand, I drew him toward nne, and throwing my arms round his nock, pressed him to my heart, and kissed him on both cheeks, just as he had done to me. I have often thought since, that if we, Christians and Jews, could in our intercourse witli each other proceed a little more on this system, wo should probably bo able to understand one another better, and more readily find our way to one another’s hearts than is often tho case. Rescued from the Depths of Misery. The misery endured by unfortunates whose livers are derelict in duty is unspeakable. Blok headaches, nausea, costiveness, disorder of the digestive apparatus, heartburn, vertigo, unrest, sourness of the CTeath, uneasiness beneath the short right ribs and right shoulder blade, fickle appetite,are among the hateful indicia of biliousness, which, however, speedily vanish when Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is employed as a regulator. Most effectually is its work of disciplining carried out, as a complete renewal of the digestive, secretive andevacuativo functions satisfactorily proves. In caw of malarial disease the liveris the principal gland involved, and for maladies of a malarial type Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is an absolute specific. As a laxativepainless but effective—it is unrivalled, and it is an admirable preventive of chrotfic kidney trouble arid rheumatism, and a suparb general tonic aud corrective. > Progressive Mexico. Civilization of the highest modern typo is rapidly advancing in Mexico; where it seemed not many years sineb to have an unpromising fieid. Fewer revolutions and more railroads is tho order of tho day; and the result will bo to place Mexico, in another generation or so. in tho rank of st one and influential republics. Tho transcontinental railroad from Tampico on the Gulf of Mexico to Ma/at- ; lan on tho Pacific coast, a distance of ; 1,250 miles, is nearly half finished, and

! will open a rich and productive country to settlement and trade. Several mil- ’ lion dollars will bo expended by the gov- । cement on tho harbors at its eastern ai^ western termini, and the road will ' pa»s through districts rich in tobacco and cotton fields, and in mines of lead, silver and run. Happy Babyl Because he is healthy. There is no baby comfi itbut in health. There Is no baby ■ beauty but In health. All "bis comfort is from fat, and most of his beauty. Fat is almost everything to ■ him. That is why babies are fat. It is j baby’s wealth, his surplus laid by. What I he does not need for immediate use he tucks under his velvet sKln to cushion him I out and keep the hard world from touching him. This makes curves and dimples. Nature Is fond of turning use into beauty. All life inside: ail fat outside. He has I nothing to do but to sleep and grow. You know all this—at least you feel it. When baby Is plump you are as happy as he is. Keep him so. But what if the fat is not there? Poor : baby ! w,p must get it there. To be thin for i a' baby, is to lose what belongs to hhn. i Why should the little mortal begin his life with suffering! Go to your doctor. Don’t bo dosing your baby when all he needs is a little manago- ! went. A little book on careful living, of inj finite value, will bo sent free if you write I for It to Scott & Bowne. Chemists. 132 South i Fifth Avenue. Now York. Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil, at any drug-store. sl. That Heathen Chinee. Chinees cigar manufacturers have j located in Cuba and are flooding this i country with a brand of cigars called “choice Havanas,” but which in reality are an article made from cheap tobacco Imported from Hong Hong The cigars are popular with dealers, because they are enabled to buy much cheaper from tho Chinese than from the native manufacturers. while they sell at the same price as the genuine Havanas. In the museum of the dead letter office at Washington, D. C , there is a piece of paichmcnt up< n «ll 1* is penned a cony o f vic Lord s prayer in fifty-four differ-c-llanguages. We will give SIOO reward for any case of catarrh tha f caunot be cured with Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. We should often be ashamed of our best actions if the world were witness to the motives which impelled us. FITS.— AU Fits stappel free by Dr.Kllne’s Great Nerve Ite-itorer. No Fits after first day’s use. Marvellous cures. Treatise and S'.’.OO trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Phlla.. Pa.

I© LOST TIME. ® H £ nui Newton, 111. From 1863 to 1885 —about j 22 years —I suffered with rheuh matism of the hip. I was cured by the use of 8 St. Jacobs Oil. T. C. DODD. I S RIGHT! ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT” 0 ran piSO’S REMEDY FOK CATARRH—Best. Easiest to use. x Cheapest. Relief is Immediate. A cure is certain. For pfjsj , Cold in the Head it has no equal. ■ It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the nostrils. Price, 50c. Sold by druggists or sent by mail. - J Address, E. 1. Hazkiaxnb, Warren, Fa. ESSea

The Only One Ever Printed—Can You Find the Word? « * s a 3*l® c h display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is °L eaC n ne ^ one a PP e aHng each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This “O«so places a “Orescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, beautiful lithographs, Or SAMPLES FREE. Sox f® folks who arc always anxious about whether we shall “know each b™ r i th X re ’ a pass t ! leir ne xt door neighbors in the street without speaking. Thnm B Tij > «<t d V Wi w ?° re ? yeS ’ ÜBe Dr - l3a ' l ° Ihompson s Eye Watery Druggists sell it 250 He who will not answer to the rudder must answer to the rocks I 8 Cured by frequent small doses of Hiso s Cure for Consumption. Envious men grow lean at the success of their neighbors.

Out of Sorts Describes a feeling peculiar to persons of dyspeptic tendency, or caused by change of climate, ■•ason or life. The stomach is out of order, the head aelxea or doea not feel risht. The Nerves seem strained to their utmost, the mind is confused and irritable. This condition finds an excellent corrective in Hood's Sarsaparilla, which, by Its regulating and toning powers, soon Restores Harmony to the system, and gives strength of mind, nerves and body. N. B. Be sure to get Hood’s Sarsaparilla which in curative power Is Peculiar to Itself. OIVJC 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 and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, ite

many excellent qualities commend it 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, UUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. Nd. SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cou^h Cure is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price io cts., 50 cts. and st.oo. If your LunTS are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. THERE IS BUT ONE VOICE Tn the unanimous shout of the thousifhds who use Dr. White’s Pulmonaria. It proves that this medicine has many warm friends and admirers among all classes and ages. Old and young alike, shout its praises and declare it the greatest cough remedy on earth. It cures a Cough in less time than any other remedy. It cures Croup in a few minutes. It cures Whooping Cough in ten days. It is the only remedy that will cure Consumption. It is harmless and pleasant to take. It costs 25 cts., 50 cts. and $1 per bottle, and every bottle is warranted.

“German Syrup” Those who have not A Throat used Boschee’s Gerand Lung man S?™? for some severe and chronic Specialty. trouble of the Throat and Lungs can hardly appreciate what a truly wonderful medicine it is. The delicious sensations of healing, easing, clearing, strength-gathering and recovering are unknown joys. For German Syrup we do not ask easy cases. Sugar and water may smooth a throat or stop a tickling—for a while. This is as far as the ordinary cough medicine goes. Boschee’s German Svrup is a discovery, a great Throat and Lung "Specialty. Where for years there have been sensitiveness, pain, coughing, spitting, hemorrHage, voice failure, weakness, slipping down hill, where doctors and medicine and advice have been swallowed and followed to the gulf of despair, where there is the sickening conviction that ail is over and the end is inevitable, there we place German Syrup. It cures. You are a live man yet if you take it. 0 WrtfflMleT GLOVES FREE. Last year we gave awav several thousand pa rs nt Gloves (and notapiirof t om tailed to give satlsi.ction) snd w-e nave made another oontra t with Carson F.rie. >ooit 4 Oj. wuereby we can until further notice furnish Ilie Weekly Times One year and a pair of LADIES’ Os) FOSTER DACING KID GLOVES for JI.JU OB THE DAILY and SUNDAY TIMES By Mail Three Months and a CA PAIR OF GLOVES for &<£.OU Ine are the t osteb Lacing Gloves (5-Hook). TRE CHICAGO TIMES is known and recognized as the LEADING NEWSPAPER of the GREAT WEST, and has become a HOUSEHOLD WORD throughout the UNITED STATES. It is replete with the news of the day, including Politics. Family Literature. Market Reports, Farm, Dairy, etc., etc., etc. The paper alone is worth the price of subscription—ONE DOLLAR A YEAR—hence subscribers secure a valuable premium for ALMOST NOTHING. In ordering state plainly the SIZE and the COLOR desired. Do not Bend postage stamps in payment. Remember, you get the BEST WEEKLY PAPER OF THE WEST and a pair of FINE. FASHIONABLE KID GLOVES, furnished by Carson, Pirie, Scott & Co., Chicago Agents of Foster, Paul & Co., for the very SMALL SUM OF SI.BO. Addre s THE CHICAGO TIMES CO., Chicago.

Wh KI • Sa S ® Si RELIEVES all Stomach Distress. REMOVES Nausea^ Sense of Fullness Congestion, Pain. REVIVES Failing ENERGY. RESTORES Normal Circulation, cad Warms to Toe Tips. OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. Kt. Loulg. ILLINOIS^^^^CENTRAL jlßfijis SOLID VESTIBULE TRAIN Daily at 9.00 p. m. from Chicago. # New and elegank equipment, built expressly for this service. Train lighted throughout bv gas. Tickets and further Infor* mation of your local ticket agent, or by addresting A.H. HANSON, G. P. A., Hl. Cent. R. R. Chicago. HL AREY9UAFARMERP ■ If so you are one from choice and can tell whether farming as an in1 vestment pays. Do you make it gay ? Have you first-class tools, fix- . tures, etc.? You say yes, but you i are wrong if you have no scales. l You should have one, and by sendl ing a postal card you can get full . information from ; JONES OF BINGHAMTON, b BINGHAMTON, NA ; BARFIELD TUS ofba-1 eutlKg;cnre« Sick Headache, «itoresComplexion ;cT»re«Con»tipatlon. band tzs ft— tkcpLo »» 319 Waal Ulb Suma, Kew XerM ©UHr W fat folks reduced Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, Mo., writes: 1 \ Ml I I "Mv weight was 320 pounds, now itislSo, & reduction of 12a lbs.” For circulars address, witn oc.. Dr. O.W.F.SS YDER. McVicker’s Theatre. Chicago.lll. DETECTIVES Wanted in every County to act in tbe Secret Service under instructions from Capt. Granuan, ex-Chief es incinnati. Experience not necessary. Particulars free. AdarcM ' Grannau Detective Hnrcau Co» « Arcade, Cincinnati, O» Agents Make $5 a Day Distributing samples and selling our Medicinal and Toilet Soap to families. Ladies and Gentlemen. Samples tree. Crofts .V Reed LaSalle Sr.. Chicago PTnr-JSXOrva — One all SOLDIEBSt ■i disabled. $2 fee for increase. 26 years experience. Write for Laws. A.W. McCormick A Sons, Washington, D. C. & Cincinnati, O. INSTANT RELISF. CnrelnlSdars. c % J Nel er returns. No । urge. No Salvo. No S 5 S . V suppository. Remxvi MAH-ED fbkr. Address E j. li. KEEVES.Box329O.New York City,N.Y. j ouis MSJiSfe PATENT SOUCiTORS C. N. U. No. 43—91 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, II please say you saw the advertisement In this paper.