St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 18, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 21 November 1891 — Page 7

IT’S AN OPEN REVOLT. BRAZILIAN PROVINCES DECLARING INDEPENDENCE. They Mr 111 Have None of Fonseca—Rumors of New Secessions—Grande Do Sul Rejects the Dictator and Announces Its Autonomy. The Crisis in Brazil. When, on the 15th of November, 1889, Dom Pedro, Emperor of Brazil, was hustled on board a steamer at Rio Janeiro, and shipped to Lisbon, the world regarded the feat as the most completely successful and absolutely blood'ess revolution in all history. Those nations, like our own. who had ceased to respect the divine theory of monarchs, clapped their hands with joy and welcomed another and important acquisitson to the great family of republics. Though that revolution was as unexpected as it was thorough, preparations had been made Kr It as for back as 1683, by the establishment of a military club, whidh was the so uses republican ideas, and of whom th"' leading ; spirit was President Da Fonseca. Dorn ; Pedro, who had ruled the country since | 1831, was a man, like Abraham Lincoln, ; who, if he erred at all, erred on tne side of mercy. Like Lincoln, ho had also

U WW K. smsr DOM PEDRO. liberated the slaves; and as a member of the House of Braganza he had indulged to the utmost the political pretensions of the Catholic clergy. While not disliked by the people, he was considered to have passed the stage of usefulness His daughter, the Princess Isabella, had also ah owed herself to become the mere tool of Cardinal De Costa, the Primate of Brazil, and the p ople therefore, feared that on the death of Dorn Pedro the government would be handed over to clerical influence. It was this belief more than anything else which nurtured the spirit of revolution. When Fonseca established a provisional government many of the nobility and the Jesuits had to quit Brazil, and

I ''l ' Wlr gi|g» HOUSE OE DEPUTIES AT RIO JANEIRO. <

the founding of new convents and ; monastic orders was strictly prohibited. ■ The authorities of the church d d not therefore take very kindly to the republic,and being favored in their intrigues by all the monarchists and the owners of the liberated slaves, the clergy last February secured the modification of those temporary laws which legalized civil marriages, secularized the cemeteries, and excluded the monastic orders from the control of the public schools. At that time the provisional "ministry of the President resigned, and Brazil adopted a new constitution which, while not going so far as to restore the empire, was really a compromise between the principles of republicanism and the sullen attitude of the clergy. For example.

Hin 11H Mi m H 11 f i 111 ^//~/ f * .... — praca da acclamacao.

the new premier, Baren Lecuna, not only ignored those decrees which abolished titles but insisted on having his own rank of baron officially recognized. With such a premier the republicans were sure to ha • e trouble sooner or later. It has now appeared. Closely following the dissolution of Congress and the assumption of dictatorship by Da Fonseca, the important southern province of Rio Grande d'o Sul has not only refused to recognize this act of usurpation but has declared its-in-dependence and set up a miniature republic of its own, to the Presidency of which it has elected Silverco Martinez, a citizen of great influence. Reports also come from the northern province of Pernambuco, showing great discontent, and there are rumors of a dis juieted feeling in all the States, which bodes little good to the republic As the outcome of the action of Rio Grande do Sul, it is confronted already with the dismal prospect of civil war, for, having the army at his back, it is not likely that the dictator will submit to tho course which this province has taken. Later advices say there is no longer

any attempt to deny that the Province of Pernambuco has joined the Province of Rio Grande do Sul in declaring its - independence. Great excitement prevabs at Rio de Janeiro and throughout Brazil. It is reported that Marshal da Fonseca has been informed that he is 9 ; suffering from a disease which must soon 9 ; cause his death and that ho has an- - nounced his willingness to resign the reins of power. The German population of Rio Grande do Sul is reported to be organizing into armed bodies of men , ।on the plan of the Dutch settlers of i i South Africa and to be determined to de- • fend the independence of their new : State. i Rio Grande do Sul is the sixth largest i province in Brazil, the other five being j Ceara, Pernambuco, Bahia, Rio de Jani eiro, Minas-Geraes, and San Paulo. It i has an area of 91,335 square miles, a 1 ; population of 564,527, and is situated ..at the extreme southeastern point of Brazil, bordering on the frontiers of Uruguay. It Las a coa.t line of 400 miles, but n®t many ports of importance, ow- ; • ing t® the difficulty of navigation in । their harbors. Nevert’ie’ess it has con- ; siderabla commerce and promises to be- । come one of the most" prosperous of all ! the Brazilian provinces. It has valua- ! ; ble coal mines, important fisheries, raises largo herds of cattle and hand- ; ; some crops of wheat, which Is made into

I flour in its own mills. The Italian col- | onists produce 25,009 pipes of wine an- ; nu&Uy. Wool is grown and cloth man- ( ufactured, and fine cassimeres from its merinos are sold in Rio Janeiro. The dispatches itato that this province is largely co’onized by Germans, and maintains an army of 50,C.,9 men of German origin. The statement, however, is not altogether correct A Ger- ; man colony of 126 persons v ,s organized at San Leopoldo by Pedro I. in 1824, which has increased since that time to j over 40,000. The dispatch, therefore, must refer rather to the entire German population than to the number in the i army, though it is not improbable that ’ a liberal element of. Germans or German descendants are to be found in the ranks, and that to this extent it will be found superior to the native forces when it is j called into action. Out of tliis colony J forty-three others have sprung in this ' province, the members of which are largely engaged in agricultural pursuits, : the principal one of which is the cultivation of tobacco. Their whole num- ! ber, however, does not roach 50,000. It wll be seen from th s general ■ sketch that in military strength and' re- I sources Rio Grande do Sui is in a post- I tion to make serous trouble for the die- ■ tator. If £lie revolution breaks out in other provinces, as now appears likely, ! it is not impossible tfhat he may meet with a fa'e akin to that of Balmacedu. so far at least as defeat is concerned, i The situation, indeed, is a deplorable one, but there appears to be no other solution of the problem than by the stern and bloody arbitrament of civil war. The cause of the present trouble may best be judged from 6ho following language of the Primate of Brazil, so far back as February, threatening if

j the constitution did not suit him “that a ; conflict, painful and grave, will ensue throughout our dear country, which can but result in the direst calamities.” President Fonseca is a man of ability. He was the soul ancl life of the movement which deposed Dom Pedro, and has both the army and navy at his back. He is also a large landholder in the very province which now revolts, and while he has been forced to dissolve Congress, tha,t body was never very friendly to his administration and had ranged itself in opposition to the party who, by a masterly stroke of policy, made the country a republic. Julian Hawthorne, who has bees writing a history of Oregon, took the

precaution to send West every chapter of the work as soon as completed for examination and revision bj- a committee of men expert in the history of the State. This will undoubtedly secure accuracy of statement, but it must tend to hedge Hawthorne's descriptive work somewhat. The people of America who have sat under the spell of Edwin Booth’s masterly acting certainly hope that the reports that he has lost his mind are not true. It is bad enpugh for his health to be in such condition that he leave the stage, without the additional misfortune of a clouded intellect. There has been opened in London a most curious exhibition c ’ carnivorous plants, of which some Uve hundred species are known to the botanist. It is described as 4 ^ most interesting show, and it must also be not a little uncanny.

I At the Harvest of Death s Much grain is prematurely reaped by the > scythe of disease that might have ripened to • a golden maturity if “minor" bodily troubles i had been attended to in time. Nothing is ; truer than this—bodily ailments not only grow I apace but begat one another. Thus bilHousL noss, constipation, dyspepsia follow close on the heels of ene another, nourish together, the one perpetuating the other, and begetting a numerous progeny of later ailments more or less severs as their oauee is more or less dis1 regarded and neglected. Incipient rheumatism, malaria and “slight" inactivity es the kidneys, of what dre disaeter they are the cause when but slight ®r ne attention is paid to their early warnings. Check these “minor" ailments with ' Hostetter's Steinach Bitters and forestall the inexorable reaper, who oxoot® the forfeiture of life as the penalty for disregarding the means of 1 preserving it. j His Andtence. A pretty story, which has, moreover, the merit of being true, is told of a certain professional singer. He had a beautiful tenor voice, of which he was apt to take the best of care, so that when he was crossing the Atlantic one summer with a party of frknds they were not surprised to find that he disappeared from view every evening at jusf about , the same time ! “Afraid of tha night air-,” said one, I with a slight smile. I “Afraid we’lT ask him to, sing, probably,” said another. But no one aues- j tioned him, as h's was known to be quite I ■ immovable from his own way. | "But when the last night on board came a delegation descended to hl's | state-room to beg lor a song or two, and discovered that ho wa-s not there. They looked for him in vain, until at last the Captain, who had evidently kept the secret as long as he could, said, pointing in the direction of the engine-room: “Lthink you’ll find h m down there; that’s where he’s gone every evening. ” : Sure enough, when the delegation arrived at the (ngiße-rocm, they heard । the sound of a guitar and a voide, and there, lolling against the wall, was the recreant tenor, singing his best for the delight of the stokers, whom he had entertained in this way for more than an hour every evening during the voyage. Effective Advertising. I Many farmess and people living in small towns make a specialty of fine stock, such as i pigs, cliickens, pigeons and the like. These could use the lists of the Chicago Newsi paper Union to advantage. Write th’e adi vertlsement plainly, stating the exact facts | in plain language, and send it to the office I u>f the Union in thicago, and we will give । you rates. As an example of this sort of I advertising, we would refer our readers to the work that the Sylvan Remedy Co., of I Peoria, is doing in these lists in bringing to the notice of the public the merits of Reid's j German Cough and Kidney Cure. Tihese I a'ds ate written up fresh each week. They I dealSvlth all o’ the popular topics of the day in i n original, breezy, and striking way, so that they make very good reading matter by themselves. In this way they cover the whole ground, and prove that people net only read advertising, but when it is properly written they like to read it A Kansas Family’s Snap. A family In Southwestern Kansas is ‘ making a comfortable living out of the State school funds. The family is the only one living in the school district in which their home is situated. The father and mother compose the school board, and the daughter is hired by them to teach the district school, drawing S4O a month pay. Not a < hild resides in the district, and the school has been closed '' tYio' money' apportim.iJjV’li!.d r a ws the State. This state of affairs has just been discovered by the authorities, and the family will soon have to find other employment. State of Ohio. City of Toledo, ) Lucas County, f ”• ; Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he la the I senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney 4 | Co., doing buHfnesa hi the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that'said firm will pay i the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for I each and every cubo of Catarrh that cannot be I cured bv the use of Hill's Catarrh Cuke. FRANK J. CHENEY. ( | Swor^ to before me and subscribed in my l presence, this Bth dav of December. A. D. 18SB. ( , A. W. GLEASON, I I - seal. I Nota’-y Public. | 1 Hall's Catarrh Cure is takt n fn’ernally. and acte directly on the blood and mucous surfaces ; of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Ei’Sold by druggists, 75c. New Bicycle Tire. In a new bicycle tire, the wheels, instead of being fitted with pneumatic or I cushion tires, have the groove tittcwl with complete cycles of balls, which revolve on pivots fixed in the grooves of the wheels. These balls bite the ground, and the machine travels up and down lii.l th wonderful celerity. Do Not Get a Chance. Guest—lsn’t this chicken old? I Waiter—No, sah. Chickens nobber libs to be old in dis ne'ghborhood. Turkish soldiers are said to be very poor marksmen. Recent target congests in the Turkish army “demonstrated"! i tha not one soldier in twenty could hit ; a man at twenty paces. A target about ■ four feet in diameter, placed thirty rods i away, was hit on an average only oneo , out of thirty shots. T. hire are more Germans than Irish j i in the United States. FITS.—AU Fits stopped tree Pv irr.tvune s urea. Nerve Restorer. No Firs after first <Ht’s use. Marvellous curem. Treatise aud * ‘.OO trial bottle fremto Fit oases. Send to Dr. Kline. 931 Aroh St.. Phila.. Pa. Raqwm’s - " PILLS, The Greatjiver and Stoinaciißanifidy, For the cure of all disorders of the Stomach. Liver Bowels. Kidneys, Bladder. Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, H aoache, Cons ipalion, Ooetiveness, Indigestion, Biliousness. Fever, Jbtlaiwnfation ot the B wels, Piles, and all derangements of the nterual viscera. Purely veg< table, containing no mercurr minerals, or delete;ions drugs. PERFECT DICESTIOM KIrKWS way s Fills etery morning, about ten o’clock, as a dinner pill. By so doing SICK HEADACHE, Dyspepsia, Foul Stomach, B liousness, will be avoided, and the food that is eaten ■ outribute its nourishing properties for the support of the na ural waste of the body. Ite* Observe the following symptoms resulting from Disease of the D.gestiveOrgans; Constipation Inward Hies, Fullness of the B cod in the Head’ Acidity of the Stomacn. Nausea. Heaitburn, Disgust j o- Food. Fu lnes< or Weight in the Stomach, i-our Eructations. Mnkiig or F.ut ering if the Heart Choking or Suffocati' g Sensations when in a lying posture. Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs beioreglro bight. Fever and Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of tee bkin and Eves I Pain in the Side. Obese Limbs, and Sudden F usbes ol Heat Burning in the F esb. A few doses et RADWAY’S PILLS will free the system of ail the a< ove-nained dlsord rs. Price 25 cts. per box. Sold bv all <fragel?t« tend a fitter stamp toTHt. RADAVAY & CO No. 32 Warren street. New York. » Information I worth thons nds will be Bent to you. TO THE PUBLIC: Be sura uid ask for RADWAY'S and tee that the name 'KABWAF is on what you buy. . ' p A Quickly obtained. No at y’s 7. , - 1 7““" * fee until patent is allowed. | ^dvice i Book free. SU33E PATERT A6C Y Wash., D.C.

A Warning Word

^c»‘arrh, whether in small or all “ wtMs treacherous disease to continue Its c urae unheeded and unchecked. It is liable to develop Into bronchitis, or consumption, that most dreaded destroyer of human lie. ‘ 8 * diße “ e ° f the STB,em ' " B< not 81m - < WbTT thr ° aL The b ood re «bes every Mire catarrh Therßtore the Proper way to ™ 5“ h to ‘^e * mmedy which will reach w e JrsT e throngh 018 bloo<l ' This is just what its succ± 8 il D ‘ ril ? does - and thlß i 8 ti,e Becrotor its success in curing catarrh. It expels the icrofi. ulsus taint which causes and sustains catarrh, and wh7ch h dl/ ealt!lV tone tO ,he whole 6yß,em Tuffer frem . CamiOt malntain it 9 hold. If you Buffer from catarrh, try

Hood’s Sarsaparilla

bv'cV Btß ’ ' Slx lor * s ' Prepared only by . ■ HOOD * CO„ Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. JOO Doses One Dollar

Driving Out the Rabbit Fest. Australians are re'oicing now because a new and successful method of hunting rabbits Is running out tha pest, from tne co.onies, says John Murray, of Melbourne. The rabbits are thus disposed of: Th > rabbit-hunters gather to the number of eight. One carries a bull’seye lantern and another a bij? bunch of smal^ iron rings, each fastened to a stria/ 90 th«t they will jingle together. >jin^^jthers carry clubs or air-guns—-usHrX air ' guns Th® P arty poos ver y w the haunts of the rabbits, timn £ to get there between 8 or 9 o’clock in toe evening. The men with lanterns and rings choos? an open place and ihe ones with clubs get tn the shelter, forming a circle about twenty yards in diameter about the two The fellow with the rings set up 'a great jingling and the larftern is moved rapidly around the circle. This charms the rabbits, and they come from all directions toward the light just as moths rush to a candle. They can be clubbed to death at leisure, for the lantern and the ringing sound seems to stupefy them. I have known six men to kill thousands of rabbits in two hours. The Only One Ever Printed-Can Yon Find the Word? There is a 3-inch display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house 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, OF SAMPLES FREE. A Cow’s Wild Flight. It is nothing strange that sometimes a hunted wild animal, running near a town or village, should enter a house in its efforts to escape—though it is apt to be rather exciting—especially if the animal is large In Bodiga, Cal., not long since, a man lassoed a wild cow, ho being on horseback, when the animal broke the lar at and made a dash for liberty. Not far off there was a large house, with the front door wide open. She rushed through the door, up the front stairs, through a narrow hallway, into a bedroom, out of the window, on to the roof of the porch, from which she leaped to the ground, striking with such violence as to break her neck. jHget the dollars we have to scuttle for th^—no mistake about that; but there ar»i fferent ways of g.>ing about It. and if yiWreuot Hattstiod with your progress at present, then write to 11. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va.. who can give you a good pointer or two. Read carefully their advertisement in another column, and write them at once. “The early bird,” etc. The new tunnel of the Baltimore and ! Ohio Railr ad, under the city of BaltiI more, will cost upward of 8'>,009,000. j It is being pushed night and day, fully j 1,000 men being at work upon it From 25,000 to 30,000 letters arc posted | every year in England without any ad- । dresses.

■■■■■■■■■l MI ■■ ■ ■ I IKT A DAY. I Lawrence, Kans., Aug. 9, 18S8. H | George Patterson fell from a second-story H » gs ? V 4 window, striking a fence. I found him using ■ SI st. jac obs om §'■ I, He used it freely all over his bruises. I saw M o him next morning at work. All the bluespots M M 4^/ rapidly disappeared, leaving neither pain, H scar nor swelling. C. K. NEUMANN, M. D. S . "ALL RIGHT I ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT.” ■

Ilf rS 1/ an J Women, fom any ailnv-nt VO r Ha Whatever. Bend fora HEALTH HELPER, IlLHllitai Dr. J. H. DY E. U f i. > S.Y. PATENTS! ■BMBzanKa«nEESzEK3Exawi Washington. D. ■ R « FIT FOLKS REbUPED % Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, M . tea: I \ u( I J “My weight was32o pounds, nc’A it 195, a reduction of 1'25 Iba.” For circulars address, with 6c., L>r. QIW .F SNYDER. McVickers Theatre. Chicago. HL DETECTIVES Wu;*-d iu every ceuuty u> act in the Srcret Service under fHMcu".Kvis from Capt. rannan. ex-Chief Detective® of Cin- I iu >yUaxed and found lawful by United States Government. :

SAM SMALL. Sam Small was a drayman at one time, before he became a preacher, and his outfit is described as “a small, rickety, rattling, ramshackling wagon and a sorrel horse that was c-ltl and experienced enough to have comlLown from the Revolutionary war?i But Sam has made up for his draytnan’s outfit since then. Just now he is I having a monkey and parrot time j over a real estate deal. If Sam will ' take Reid's German Cough and Kidney Cure he will be astonished to | find that he can preach three times . as long as he is now’ able to do. This great remedy is unequaled for its effects upon the organs of the throat. For this reason it is tlie best thing in the world for clergymen, actors, singers, and all persons who have to depend upon the voice for a living. It is impossible to take an overdose, and on this account it is invaluable in a family where there are children. For sale by all druggists. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111. *—_ <

"I have Buffered with catarrh In my head for years, and paid out hundreds of dollars for medicines, but have heretofore received only temporary relief. Hood’s Sarsaparilla helped me so much that my catarrh is nearly cured, the weakness of my body is all gone, my appetite is good-in fact. I feel like another person. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best medicine I have ever taken." Mbs. A. Cunning ham. Providence, R. L “For several years I have been troubled with that terribly disagreeable disease, catarrh. 1 tock Hood's Sarsaparilla with the very best results. It cured me of that continual dropping in my throat and stufed up feeliag. It has also helped my mother, who has taken it for run down state of health and kidney trouble.? Mh. s e jj. Heath, Putnam, Conn.

Sold by all druggists. »l;sixfor»s. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD 4 CO„ Apothecaries, LoweU, Masa. JOO Doses On© Dollar

ON IS 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, ita many excellent qualities commend it to aH and have made it the most popular remedy known. F -rup of Figs is for side in 50c ar x $1 bottles By all lead’ng 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. LDUISVILLE. Ks. NEW YORK. N.V, SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION cunt. The success of this Great Cough 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 Bettie 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, 1 or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief i is sure. If you dreadT that insidious disease I Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for j SHILOH’S CURE, Price io cts., 50 cts. and | SI.OO. If your Lungs are sore*or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts.

Miao® F*gG INSTANT RELIEF. Care to 15 day^ I S £ va Never returns. No pu.ge. No Solve. .w B Bfl g suppository. Remedy mailed free. Address B IKbEbV J.H. HEE\’Eb,Bvi32UU,New YorkCity.N.Y. A mouth and board, or highest commission and 30 days’ cred t to age ts. I*. W. Ziegler & St.L PKIVSICZ: ’VS - Due all SOU»IER9t 4 disabled. *2 fee for increase. ‘4> years experience. Write for Laws. A.W. McCormick dt Sons, Washington, D. C. & Cincinnati. O. i ■ 3yrs in lost war, ISaJjudicatmgclauus, atty since. KANSAS FfiRMS KS^ Lar. est crops ewr raired. Buy a farm. Descriptive listtree. CHAS. B. WOOLLEY, Osbobne. Kan. i Graham L lour and Corn, in th Sb/W 100 per rent, more made in » «uitry. Also POWER MILLS and FARM I LED .MILLS. Circulars and testimonials scut cr . .ppiK-Mion. WILSON BROS., S ASTON. PA. oi i I Gil 'end to 319 W. 45diSt.. 2LY. .for Banplas of GARFIELD TEAS of bad euiing; cures Siclx Ileadaclio; i res toresCoixiplex ion; curves Const! pat ion. Consumptives and people 9 who have, weak lungs or Asth- 9 ma, should use Piso’s Cure for 9 Consumption. It has cured H thousands, ft has i^nt injur- Fj ed one.* It is not bad to take. 9 It is the best cough, syrup. 9 Sold everywhere. 25c. 9

“German Syrup” Here is an incident from the South -—Mississippi,, written in April, 1890, just after the Grippe had visited that country. “lam a fanner, one of those who have to nse early and work late. At the beginning of last Winter I was on a trip to the City of Vicksburg, Miss., where I got well drenched in a shower of rain. I went home and was soon after seized with a dry, hacking cough. This grew worse every day, until I had to seek relief. I consulted Dr. Dixon who has since died, and he told me to get a bottle of Boschee’s German Syrup. Meantime my cough grew worse and worse and then the Grippe came along and I caught that also very severely. My condition then compelled me to do something. I got two bottles of German Syru p. I began using them, and before taking much of the second bottle, I was entirely clear of the Cough that had hung to me so Tong, the Grippe, and all its bad effects. I felt tip-top and have felt that way ever since.” Peter J. Briars, Jr., Cayuga, Hines Co., Miss. 0 It Cures Colds, Conylis. Sore Throat. Croup. Influenza, Whooping Coußh. Bronchitis ana Asthma. A ceresin cure for Consumption in fir-t b aires, and a snr- relief in advanced stages. Usa at ■ n c. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by uea.ers eveiywhere. Laige bott es, 5) cents and |I.OO. °N LYT RUE iron Atonic Will purify BLOOD, regulate VWtaai KIDNEYS, remove LIV’ER v\ - T;? ’ I?,- .renew vigor of youth. byßpepsia, Indigestion, that tired feelingabsolutely eradicate^ Mind brightened, bralu power increased, B 2 IP A bones, nerves, milsg figlll W cles, receive new force. I fl SI I ■ > Suffering from complaints peL ” W a L O culiar to their sex, using it. nnd a safe, speedy cure. Returns rose bloom on cheeks, beautifies Complexion. ISold everywhere. All genuine goods bear ‘Crescent® ° bend us 2 cent stamp for 32-paga pamphlet. , DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis. Mo. I _ . ILLINOIS^^^^CENTRJL ,W®jis SOLID VESTIBULE TRAIN Daily at 9.00 p. m. from Chicago. New and elegant I equipment, built expressly for this service. Train lighted throughout by gas. Tickets and further information of your local ticket r. --nt, or by addressing { A.H. HANSON, G. P. A, lIL Ceut. R. R. Chicago. 111. | ™Age, stability, sound methods ; cash values, incontesta^’IiITIIAI P°^ c ^ es ’ th® best tViU I UHL extension system; low 1 J£ F cost. Address i Lil L 921-3-5 Chestnut St., Philad’a. h^TV^ET^ > LaP^IVATE 130 Adams St., CHICAGO, ILL. Cures for Life all Chronic. Nervous Diseases, Organic Weakness. Bashrulnees. Un”tn- ss to Marry. Soo Frequeot Evacuations of the Bladder. Barn nness. Book "LIFE’S SECRET ERRORS, witu Question List. for4-cent stamp. I L'. N. U. Au. J7-«L ! WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, ’ ’ please say you saw the advertisement In tin. paper. XaTTIOXA E. IS A POSITIVE CURE For all taose Painful Complaints and Weaknesses so commoamoag the Ladies of the World.