St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 31, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 20 February 1892 — Page 3
-—h / a \\ A A 7 : L= N \ = Lv \ k | : ."‘\\§ \\\\\ AN . g \ : Used up. 1 It's the only way to use some | things, but it’s a'bag condition | ¥. for a man er woman. It means | distase. " Fake Dr. Pierce’s]’ Golden Medical Discovery, | ‘That means health, It invig-[} orates the liver and kidneys, | purifies the blood and cleanses | R s o s Rl AR
r . -N€Ws the whole system, ‘For all scrofulous humors and blood - taints, anq even consumption (or lung-scrofula), if | taken in time, if’s 4 positive | remedy. It's a guarantery one, | In all' diseases of the liver, ! blood and lungs, it's warranted | to- benefit or cure, or the! money is refunded. No other | medicine of jtg class is sold, | through druggists, on this pe- | euliar plan, ~ You can judge || why. You only pay for the. , good you get, f Rel e
QO% Pure, THE BEST FoR EVERY PURPOSE,
et L Oh, Woman! False modesty and procrastina. tion are responsi. ble for much of our suffering. et s B
"\\'—\ ~ *“I Hate to Ask My Doctor.”’ / e
B e A s g e “freely offered assistance of a womar. | - Lydia E. Pinkhant’s Vegetable Compound | is the product of a life's practice of & | woman among women, and an unfailing cure for woman’s ’ills. AL ‘_‘ It removes at once DAL ‘: those pains, aches, and “‘;\m } weaknesses, brightens B i:, 7 . ® . . > O the, spirits, and invigo- v - rates the entire system. Zow S 2 An unexcelled remedy ~ i ,/} je a #3 , & 7 for Kidney Troubles. :;j// ‘» Ll All Druggists eell it, ot sent 72| “P® X\\\\ Z | % mail, in form of Pills or Z@\2 / N 2 2 3 zengels)._loln r:céiftofSt.oo. & R i Aver ills. HC. Jorresponderice Freely nnswe;:!. /rwlé e tddreulln{‘:onfidence.“ g 9 YDIA E. PINKITAM MED. Cco., %“, fl'“m, LyYNN, MASS. g 8 4
e T B 0, TRIOODN e PR NIS e S R /TR \'_ s Eb ) w 2 ,A i o Y AR N ORI b ) & < i | R i A <y 208 Ve ©el St. Vitus Dance Cured. VIII | §AN ANDEEAS, Cal., Feb. 3, 1689, ‘3 My little boy, 13 years old, was taken sick with what i 8 called Bt. Vitus Dance. He bhad pot been able to go to sehool for two years. Ase soon as I read your book, I gent for two bottles Nerve Tomic and two bottles Irom Piils, and beLaa e Lt cuawa nged UP
!or.o the second pott,le R PRSEY .WA R e ythe boy was restored to his natural health, and s attending school, MICHAEL O'CONNELL. | warxor, IL, Oct. 7,189, | ‘ I have been suffering for years with headache and last May 1 bad it oeontinunously for two days, and the third da.z I fell into & Ait (apoplectic fit, the doctor called it). I sent for & bottle of Pastor Koenig's Narve Tonic, and it didme more gooed than 1 can tell, and I felt very thankful to God, the giver of all good, and to that yomedy. 1 did not have another fit sinoe. | MRS. SARAH GONIGAN. 1 —% Valuable Book en Nervoud 1 iseases sent free to any address, and poor patients can also obtain this medicine free of charge. | This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend astor Koenig, of lort ‘Wayne, Ind., since 1876, and fanow prepared under his direction by the i KOENIC MED.CO., Chicago, 1l Sold by PDruggists at 81 per Bottle. 6for 8G _YLarge Size, $1.75. 6 Bottles for $9. e —————————————————— e T e
o Tuit's Tiny Pills® e enaßle the dyspeptic to eal whntevéra he wishes. Thoy#ause tle food toassimilate and nourish the' body, give f 0 appetite and develop filesh. Price, 250 cents. Exact size shown in bslca 6 | 00H6OOBEOD T ANAKESISgives instant relief, and is an INFALLIBLE CURE for PILES. Price, §1; at druggists or by mail. Samples free. Address 'fANAKESIS,” L — Box 2416, NEW YORK CITY. I\Ior?)hino Habit Cured in 10 to 20 daéfl' No pay till cured. Wi WA oR. 4. ST PHENS, Lebanon,Ohios BEST POLISH iN THE WORLD. =y S -—"'<;v"'.’."f'§'-d“.‘.,‘«:z:-"f‘ BT o B 5y B i e AN s RO s S \'J'ff";f/"-"/ it 4 BQg I 3 :\\\,\\,\\“ fi%é‘ 3 . SRS Bis At gt T 3 A BPe P ¥ $ b T s€ 3 e % H‘fi--_-g,,—:‘:i{z- ; !}A E ;:‘;‘_ o V2Ol o G RN, I e it & FURE -28 ¥ 00 NOT BE peCEvEI == LR with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands,injure the iron, and burn off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril: liant, Odorless, PDurable, and the con sutner pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOKRS
/ SOMETHING ABOUT ICE, —— Once It Wns a Great Luxury, Now It Is ' 0 Common N.casslly. ( At one time ip the world’s history ice was considered a great, luxury, anq / onl}:.thc rich coulq enjoy what is now looked upon as an absolute necessity, In ancient days snow was used gas a substitute. It was brought trom the mountains and stored away in pits dug in the earth, and wag covered | with straw or other Substances that ! proved non-conductors of heat and | also protected it from the air. ' | Mention of this fact is made in the | Proverbs of Solomon, ang it is fre- I ! quently alluded to in t-heAwrit,‘ings of" !’ the ancient Greeks and Romans. 1¢! | 18 still in vogue in Italy, where snow, f gathered in the appenines is brought, | by peasants to the prinecipal cities"l | and stored in cellars made ¢specially | - for the purpose, n many parts of | TFrance ang England the wealthy | | have ico-houses‘built on their estates, , : and fill them with ice from the neiar | B e SR
SO S AR el Ibm'ing lakes and streams, It was Ot until 1845 that ice was publicl}-"‘ sold in London then only in very small quantities, : , In America ice-houses have been known for at least 200 years. They } ’wel_;e at first very primitive aflairs, f béing nothing more than deep cellars, | ,’ the flooring made of boards or Stone, ’ - upon which was placed a layer of straw or sawdust. The sides were | lined with boards set about a foot, | from the wall, and this Space wus’ filled in with sawdust, tanbark, or | straw. A rough, . thatched r(mr; 1 completed the structure, which Was then filled with ice, between the | layers of which tanbark or sawdust | | was strewed., | € As a matter of COMRAE e
aiaan s o UG SUDBIY — | of cut ice was very limited for g long ! time, and it Was not until about fifty years ago that it became g (tomnm-‘ ; I dity, admitfuingnfpurclmsc by persons | | O moderate means, In New York | 1 City alone, at the present day, the | | yearly consumption of jee amounts tg | | about one million tons. l [ In addition to it emvployment for ] | cooling water and other beverages, | | in the course of time its value as an | f agent for preserving meats, fruit, 1 | ete., was recognized, and as a conse. ; | quence the d¢mand for it was greatly | - | increased. ’ ] : l (i‘rustwmfiu‘ authorities state that | sRg o W
( VG USe Os Ice for preventing the qe- { composition of dead bodies Wias known lin very early days, as there was g | } tribe in Finlang which, during the i [ latter part of the seventh century, | 1’ preserved the bn(lii’s of their.dead for | I Imany months without embalming i _ | them, using either snow or ice for the i | purpose, 1. "The first person to attempt to ex. | !porc.icc from this country to foroign/ | lands was an American named Tudor, { and although 'his first, shipment, in | g}p‘fi\’?}?t AL .r..':\ OOTSNesass awever, |
SRR YWA LUy Lel L the sole supply of ice depends upon |- its artificial manufacture, as it would be impossible to export it without | absolute loss. Os late ycars the | manufacture of artificial ice bas as- | sumed large proportions in the United \ | States, the hizh price and scarcity at \! | times of the natural article requiring | | the employment of cheaper means of | i pmductiun.-~—L')otmit: Iree Press. \ Plenty ot Gold Lett Yot. \ \ ¢‘‘The general impression prevalent ' thav gold mining in this country is \ played out is a greatly mistaken one,” e o oot Mat Galhoun at
SR DLAE, . LA I e the Eaclede. 1 have just returned from a prospecting trip through the Black Hills of South Dakota. Iwent there expecting to find a few good | paying claims, but was astounded ab | the rich and almost inexhaustible de- ‘ - posits of gold, silver, and tin ore located all through that section of ‘ country. While it is true that placer mining is now a thing of the past, | neyer have the opportunities been better for ledge mining. There is today more gold in the ledges of Calieoo tnan has yeb been taken out.
AP IRACE. WAAERAA, e For the placer or free gold was only i the result of decomposition of ledge | deposits. Up to a year ago the cost | of extracting the gold from the ore “ was more than the cold was worth, but since the invention of improved concentrators and the new electrochemical amalgamater, ledge mining will take an upward stride, as the cost of reduction has been lessened \ , more than one-half, thus making it | profitable to work those low-gmdc“ _ores which formerly could not be | \ worked at all. The celebrated Home- | stead mine located in these hills has produced its gold at an average cost | of $4.50 per ton, and is to-day, the Tawsest Daying mine in the United S G el
T, SN A . States. Well, all the country in tne 1 i vicinity of this mine is rich in depos--1 its of what is termed refractory ore, \ ;which, before the invention of the | { new reduction machinery, could not ‘ ;be worked without a loss, but with ' the aid of the inventions they can be made to pay from $8 to sl2 per ton | net.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. !'\ 3 : In Everything Give Thauks, . Bidding good-by to dome friends ; who had accompanied him on a fish--1 IDg expedition, Izaak Walton thus * spoke, and the words showed that he \ had imbibed the apirit of those who 3 T oo el g ane ol
from fishers of fich becamic Motvas > - | men: “Let not the blessings we Té- | ceive daily from God make us not to “ value, or not to praise Him, because | they be so commons: let us not forget !l to praise Him for the innocent | mirth and pleasure W€ have meb ! with since we met together. \\'h:ml\ would a blind man glve to see the ; pleasant rivers and meadows, and .| flowers and fountains, that we have -]l met with since we met together!” o e e e RELIGION does nob compel a person S.] to submit to attempted insults.
T 3 Industria Depactment, 5 ' The Chicago, Milwaukee and St, Paul , Railway Company’s 6,150 miles of road ‘ traverses a vast territory, rich in all the | Tésaurces that insure industrial success, I The Industrial Department is con- | versant with the Iron, Cdal, Lumberand I Tanbark, the Water Power (both river | and artesian) for factory and electric - Power purposes, the markets, the trans- - Portation ‘and finaneia) facilities, and other interests on the line pertaining ' to industria] development, and dissem- | inates information concerning same, | . A number of new factories have been Induced to lomte~largely through the ! imtrumentality of this Company—at | enterprising towns on its lines, As the interest of the Company is to | Bécure the location of industries at places where the Ssurroundings will insure their permanent Success, the information furnished a partiofiiur indust ; is pertinent anqg reliable. In ‘the Eastern States and in other parts of the worlq factories are so congested and distant, from the actual market as to result in‘fierce and destructive I ‘ Competition. That the West is taking a | blacaas ors . i =Y 353
PLB VS OL UNO preat mmanufacturing territories of the world is foreibly impressing itself upon discerning and enterprising manufacturers. Steps should - be taken by such while the field is as yet ! Dot fully covered, anq while inducements are stil] being offeredto locate in | the West, J Individuals or Companies wishing to | embark capital in Westein industry can - find a profitable field. For particulars relative to industrig] advantages on the line, address T.uis Jackson, Industrial | (‘Ommissioner, C. M &8t P Ry., 160 Adams street, Chicggo, 111, Who First Used tije Weed ? To me it appears probable that even before the discovery of the fourth quarter of the globe a sort of tobacco was smoked in Asia, This conjecture being mentioneq to the celebrated travyeler, M. Pallis, he gave the following A1 Wy- PR f G
S R S oot dhatiincAsia. and especially l in China, the use of tobacco for smoking . I 8 more anciept than the discovery of the New World, I, too, scarcely enter- ! tain a doubt, Among the Chinese, and | @mong the Mongol tribes, who had the | ! most intercourse with them, the custom { of smoking is so general, so frequent, ' and become so Indispensable g luxury; ’ the tobacco purse affixed to'their belt so - necessary an article of dress; the form of the pipes—from which , the Duteh eem to have taken the model of , theirs —SO original; and, lastly, the preparation of the yellow- leaves, which are merely rubbed to “pieces and then put into the pipe, so peculiar that we cannot possibly q}g\rivc all this frmn‘Anmrim, by ey -of butfone aavanian® . . 0
rm e kR ). B IS | where the habit of smoking tobaeco is ' hotsogencral, intervenes betweeh Pérsia * | and China, May we not expect to find | ] traces of this custom in the first account | of the voyages of the Portuguese and | Duteh to China? To investigate thig fsubjc(-t I have indeed the inclination, ‘ | l‘»ufi at present, at least, not sufficient | leisure, and I must, thergfore, leave it to others, However, I can now adduce ( one important confirmation of my conJecture from “ Ullog’s Voyage toAmericg, " i “It ia not probable,” sayg he, “that the Europeans learned the uge of tobaceco rica, for as it is -ve i 3 fom Amorica, for as it s evory ancion s o
parté of Amperica WIELO Mes soy plant grows wild, is the use of it—and | that only for smoking—-—either.general or very ircqu.-nt."—Bcckmun‘s Technology. Right or Wrong. | Which will ye have? It does seem 88 if some ! folks prv(ex" to have the last condition of .the ‘: liver rather than the first. They perpetually | dosq_ihemae\ves with purgatives totally withput virtue as altm'a&i\'e offiver trouble. Hostetter's stoinach Bitters {s tho successful candidate for the people’s choice, aud yet, popular and well krown as it is, there are unfortunates | who keep on trying the drastic remedies of for- } mer days. 31t is to the intvlll&uufi’panion of the public_that the well known anid long tried prop- | erties bf tho Litters appesl. Reason should be guided b};cm erience in; the matter of medica- | i “The Best guide to our teet is the' lamp of .et Ren LU A-t e ‘
TR -NG (ERENPHPS S S experience,” said a great patriot, of th» early revoluf ONAry period, and theyexclamation is pregnant with truth, For over & third of » century the Bitters daily has met with the in- | doreement of poople guffering from liver com- ‘ glaint, malaria, constipation, rheumatism, de- ‘ {lity and troubles accompanied by dyspepsia. Latterly it has declared itself and Leen thor- | oughly approved as a remedy for “la"grippe.” i The Education of Dutch Women. \ More and more voices are being raised | against the fashionable training given to girls and youlg women in Holland, and it is now frequently the case that parents prefer to send their daughters to the boys’ schools—an agreement which | requires a special permission irom the Tarali Sl e Sl N i e in\'al'iflbly
suthorities; Whith 18 &LUEMBE o sat o granted. It looks rather odd to see a few solitary girls among all the boys; but they get a better and more rational education in this way than by going in for the accepted training for Yyoung women. .« - - s Beware of ©Qintments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, : | As mercury will surely destroy the sense of gmell and completely derangs the whole system | \ when entering it through the mucous surfaces, | Buch articles should never be used except on “ grescriptinns from reputable physicians, as the amage they will do is tenfold to the good you ‘ can possibly derive from them, Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo; 0., contains no mercury, and is teken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and ! ucous surfaces of the system= In buying | Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine, | It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, \ by F. J. Cheney & Co. | “gaSold by Druggists, price 75¢ per bottle.
\ i eR s eme i How Would Our Farmers Like This. \ The Algerians know what a Teal | plagucpt’ grasshoppers is. In one dis- | trict of that country alone over 50,000 l'. gallons of the eggs of the pest were | gathered and burned lastiyonr. CAPT. KAXNE, the heroie commander of the British man-of-war Calliope, ab Samoa, in th famous hurricane Sf threo years ago, s been promoted to the of- | fice of flag captain to Admiral the Earl | of Clan William. e : \ «] have becen cccasionally troubled with 2 Loughs, and in qach case have used ) | BROWN’S BRONCIUAL TROCHES, which f \ have never failed, and 1 must say they are T e S i e world:n—Feliv A May,
geeane 1 BORY = ) o | Cashier, St. Paul, Minn. b . \ In all Spain there are only 3,231 chil- | dren in the gunday sehools. | em—- ! DANGER AIIEAD SIGNAL%ED BY A CouGH 18 | averted with HaLe's HONEY OF HOREHOUND AND TAR. PisE's TOOTBACHE prors Curein one Minute. 1 \ A ~uMBER of Nevw York Chinamen ride the bieycle. et e \ Ir afflicted_with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isano Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sellit. 230 ‘ R e e l WATCHES are set in pocketbooks DOW.
— R R 3 The Ladfes. : 1§ The plaasant effect and perfect safety | fitr Which ladies may use the California fAuid laxative Syrup of “ Figs, under all . nditions, makes it their favorite ERedy, T, get the true and genuine ucle, 100 k for the name of the C(ali- - ['nig Fig Syrup Co., printed near the Vltong of the package, A About Feellrg 014, iflo healthy mind in g reasonably | ‘lthy b‘ody ever feels old. T, B ! old is to Bo tired of living. Wise (8 " Whose years Point that way, | gtid o being caught feeling positively R 2 Sometimes,betray a sort of affec--80 in their assumption of the eon-“-ioxm worn-out, lie-weary, septua- : 1&1'!&“ tone; while in their hearts they E twlth the old divine that life lis too B 8 thing to feel old in, and “time | 5 o lef ROVelty, a late and upstart B, € . Cactof the Ancient of Days.” T -daypaya. tribute to common : sy ©eknowledge a brotherhood | vl§ ird of men, go disarming e Man: . ,Lge_av, s S
> | loc& =" Ever Printed—Can You Find 1 ; g the Word? Rt d 8-inch display advertisement *| 1= ndy this week which has no two ey Wwitlexcept one word. The same is ; 1 ;1 new one appearing each week €Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This ® \o¥®es a «Crescent» on everything th W o and publish. Look for it, send tft“? name of the word, and they wil] T “9 40U BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS, o o' ES FREE. ] - | Y 4 Winter Goods. "oy “ling among wholesale dealers 1Y 1/@oods is the rule nowadays, ] of K _ \ ik "One more milg winter, and - W gWas, change the character of sour Pparations. We are tired of loading | Wwith winter wear and finding no sale | fOriL."——Boston Journal, i ANY book in “Surprise Series,» (best au- ) l:Jr‘s)‘ 25 cent novels, about 200 pages each, ! NMifree, PostDaid. by Craci. & . 208 OaA(
.. T o) MRARIR UO, of Philas : dg’phia. Pa..on receiptof 20 Wrappers of Dob- | W' Electric Soap. Send 1 cont for catalogue, i \’\_. | Arkansas pig has a scent equal to tiog's. His wonderful instinet saved Eowner's child from drownin’g one day & long ago. e DON'T IRRITATE YOUR LUNGS with a Stub'n Cough. when a remedy sate and cerin as Dr. D, Jayne’s Expectorant can be so sily procureq. Sore Throats and Lungs © speedily helped by it. oo THE greatest pleasure Bown is to v a good action by. stealth, and have it | und out by accident., ! 5 Brgen BEECHAM'S PILLS have been in popular @ in Europe for 50 years, and ure g safe, tre and gentle remedy, o 5 cents a box. & _‘--M\ THERE are 300,000 blind people in Eu|lpe‘ —-\. - ‘
IS WORTH C%ATARR\'\D SSOO RO WRERT {TO ANY MAN, “AYF Efifl;@é& § : !" o!\\'l\\\' VE il : Y _Q‘q,, (‘3‘ : Frurerine o W/ SE L
R ——————— : ‘o S ¥ oun Hothafs | ung ors & | We Offer You a Remedy which Insures Bafety to Life of Mother and Child. ™ “ WIOTHER'S FRIEND ” Robs Confilnement of it '1 Pain, Horror and Risk. ‘ After us!ng(mebn@enfi.“ Mother’s-Friend” 1 ‘ suffered but little pdin, and did not experience that wenkness afterward usual in such cases.—Mrs. ANNIE GacE, Lamar, Mo., Jan. 15th, 1391 Sent by express charges prepaid, on recelgt of price, 81.50 per bottle, Book to Mothers malled free, SBRADFIELPD REGU LATOR CO, ATLANTA, GA, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
‘ Beauty often depends on | ! plumpness; so does comfort; | SO does health. If you get | thin, there s something \ ‘wrong, though you may feel \ no sign of it. | Thinness itself is a sign; | sometimes the first sign; | sometimes not., e L A
qne way 2. = o plumpness is by CAREEUL | LIVING, which sometimes 1n- | cludes the us€ of Scott’s | Emulsion of cod-livertoil. \ \ Let us send you—iree—2a | little book which throws much | light on all these subjects. \ ScotT & BOWNE. Chemists, 132 South sth Avenue, New York, Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver | oil—all druggists everywhere do. sl. \ aB, . | e . -
iyer and Stomach Remed The Great Liver and Stomach nemedy, For thecure of all Aigorders of tve Stomach, Liver, \ | Bowels. K aneys, Bladder. Ne:vours Disecases, Loss of | | Appetite, I acache. Cong ipation, Costiveness\n- \ { nigestion, Biliousness, Fever, lutlanimation of the \‘ Bowels, Piie _and all derangements of the nternal { | Viscera. Purely vege table, coutaining no mercury, | | minerals, oT deletedlous drugs. i { c ‘fl Will be accomplished K \ L by,takir g one of Rad- | ‘ way » Pilis erery Worning, about ten o’clock, 28 & | ‘ dinner pill. By so doing ; SICK HEADACHE, | Dyspepsia, Foul Stomach. Biliousness, will be , t avoided, ard the,food that is eaten «outribute It 3 neurirthing properties for the support ol the na ural - g Ul S
MMM AN AT RS e S waste of the body. = Bz~ Observe the following symptoms resultirg from Disease of the Digestive Organs @ Constipition, Tuward Yiles, Fuilness of the B oed in the Head, Acidity of the Stomach. Nausea. Hea thurn, Disgust of Food, Fu lness or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eruectations, tinkirg or T.uterirg cf the Heart, Choking or Suflfocating censations when in a lying posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots ot Webs betore the Sight, Fever ard Dul Pain in the Head, Deticiency ot Perspiration, Yetlowness of the £kin and Eyes, Pain in the Side Jones'. Limbs, and Sudden F.ushes ot Heat Buruingin ihe F.e=h. A few doses ¢f RADWAY’'S PILLS will free the gy-tem cf au the w 0 ove-named disord: rs. Piice 25 cts. per box. Sold by all drmg rists, & end n letter-stamp to DR. RADWAY & Cg.. No. 32 Warren street, New York. £ Informatibn \ worth ihong-nds will be sent to you. TO THE PUBLIC: Be sur: - na ask for RADWAY’S, ! :1‘1‘(; Lee that the name “RADWAY” 18 on what you ' .
yCENf“ AR R S ; st 1 RIS CONSUMPTION This GREAT COUGH CURE, this success. ful CONSUMPTION CURE is solq by drug. gists on a positive guarantee, a test that no other Cure can stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, j will cure you Qromgtly. If your child has the CROUP “or WH OPING COUGH, use it quickly and relief is sure, If you fear CON. SUMPTION, don’t wait until your case is hope. less, but take this Cure at once and receive immediate help. Price Eoc and SI.OO, | Ask your druggist for SHI OH’S CURE, | If your lungs are sore or back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters, ; —
N m—— 1 = A >3‘\) AT 2 (e (L **3,‘ 3 ’ \\\\‘.ég}’li{;‘- D l ; : 1\.‘,;4 oP BE : A%s © B : & . AF{E ' S o [ 5T 2 S : A ;“N,;_ , - A .:‘(%‘}r;“ ‘.A\\'Q ;1“‘ ° 3%‘2l—__.‘ . Y AL SR KRN & - 3 : #(f y .:‘;' ?'T\‘\' \‘?‘i’\“ p \\V" P’ PR BT ’f gs= F,—:‘?’@@ A% n B ts :i;LR % W @ | PSS B IS | ] R\ oS . | THE NEXT MORNING 1 FEEL BRIGHT AND ! | NEW AND My COMPLEXION IS BETTER, i f My doctor says it nots gently on the stomach, liver | ! and kidneys, and isa pleasant laxative, This drink | | 1s made from herbs, and is brepared for use as easily | astea. Itlscalled el R
. B ¢ | ( LANE’S JMEDICINE 11 druggis 1 Itat 50c. and gI.OO ek B BnAy one to ;;\;.sc Lan:’o Fa:nx;lv‘.\ledroeizlgal;oavgé ! the bowels each day, Inorderto be healthy, this | 18 necessary, 3 —W%WE‘\\T | AND APPLIANCES l " . cILRE TONE |~ many i UP THE | DisEßses hedh o 8 SYSTEM l WHEN B AND ' ALL oPR _ RESTORE | OTHER E =il e LOST REMEDIES [ZSB SRR | 005, FAIL, IS P TRY GET ONE. |'~ (TRaDZ MaxK) P ONE. DR. A. OWEN., | A GENUINE CURRENT oF ELECTRICITY | Is generated in g battery on the belt, and can be | &ppiied to any {»art of the body. The current | €an be made milq Or Strong as the cage may require, and ig absolutely under control of” the Wearer at all times, OUR ILLUS'gBA'i"ED CATALOGUE | Contains fullest i 3 ormation regarding the cure | of Acute, Chronic and Nervous Diseases, Sworn l Testimonialg With portraits of People who havae been cured Pei.nloriraits of
L BNt T AAOO Y Ygte ML S M iy i 00l a0 | | 905, 207, 209, 211 STATE ST. Cor. Adams, .. The Owen Electric Belt Building, : CHICAGO, ILL. - \ New York Office, 826 Broadway, Cor. 12th St YHE LARGEST ELECTRIC BELT ESTABLISHMENT | | IN THE WORLD. & \ When writing mention-this paper. iy \ ELECTRICITY VS. STEAM. Yn an interview in the New York \ Herald the other day Chauncey Depew told a reporter that in &wenty-five\ il years he egpectcd to see electricity - | replace steam as d motive power for
Bs e e T railroads and steamships. This is probably correct. The old methods are giving way to the new. Many people think, for instance, that there ' {s no connection between the lungs and the kidneys. Modern science has shown that they are both members of the excretory family—that the kidneys Tremove the uric acid from the plood, the lungs remove the carbonic ‘ acid from the blood. If the kidneys e 2od TGI e gy el i
| are affected ~paditionsl BUIEEE S O i thrown upon the lungs and they ‘,reak‘ ‘ down from Overwork. REID'S GERMAX CouGH AND KIDNEY CURE treats both the lungs and the kidneys, and by restoring them both to their normal | condition relieves the patient from a cold that settles upon these organs\ and that if neglected will produce dangerous results. Get this great remedy of any dealer. \ SYLVAN REMEDY Co., Peoria, 111. ‘ QRATEFUL—-COMF;ORTING. BREAKFAST. wne a thorough knowledze of the natural lawt leasß O T ian and nutrk
WY W WERTIAN S which govern the operations OU O B ora - tion, and by & careiul application of the fine Proi er- { tri tles'of weli-gelected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided _"‘:_ our breakfast tablas with a dellcately flavoured beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. 1t is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may bs gr dually built up until gtrong enough to resiat every tendency to disease. | Hundreds of subtle maladies ara floating around us ready to- attack wherever .there {s a weak pont | \ We may escape mary a fatzl shaft by keeping our- i | selves well tortifiad with pure plood ard a properly i | nourished trame.”—*Civil Service Gazette.”’ | { Made simply with boilinz water or milx. Sold | ! only in half-pound tins, vy Grocers, labelled thus: § | JAMES EPPS & CO., Homoeopathic Chemists, | | sl LONDON. ENGLAND. ' \ i 'PATENTS! PENSIONS! | | - 8 - B { Send for Inventor’s ( suide,or How to ybtain a Patent. ! | Send for Digess of Pension and Bounty Laws. | ' PATRICK O'FARKRELL, Washington, D. .1 | e & FAT FOLKS REDUCED e eo e A e i ]
x%f\ Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, X 0 B Sas (\ {) My weight was 220 pounds, ROW itis 193 | a reduction of 125 Ibs.” For circulars address, ‘:‘ilh 6¢c., | Dr. O.W.F.BNY DER. McVicker's Theatre, Chicago. 1L 3 Kemedy Uree. INSTANT RELIEF. Final | b cure iu 10 days. Never returns :no purge; g no salve: no suppo-itory. A victim tmo:i in vain every remedv ; has dISCOVs red a simple cure, \ which he will mail free to his fellow sufferers. Ad- , dress J. H. REEVES, Box 3290, N. Y. City, N.X. l i Piso’'s Remedy sou Catarrh is the Hes ’ \ Ml Best, Fasiest to Use, and Cheapest. W | oy Sy AR -~ Sold by druggists or seut by mail, { soc. E.T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. ; ‘
— ?Tr—_—_: “Allg' ust: ’ Flo wer’ My wife suffered with indigestion and dyspepsia for years. Life be- | " came a burden to Her, Physicians | failed to give relief After reading | one of ‘your books, I purchased a | bottle of August Flower. It worked | like a charm, My wife received im- | mediate relief after taking the first | dose. She was completely cured—- | Now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat | anything she desires without any | deleterious results as was formerly | thecase. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Washl ington House, Washington, Va. @
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~ | It Cures Colds, Coughas, Sore Throat, Crou v Influvnza. “'h(mpin;; Cough, Bronchitis axfi { | Asthia, A certain cure for Consumption in firs d | Ftages, and a sure relief ip advanced stages, Use s, | Btonce. You will see the excellent eflect after s | laking the first dose. Sojq by dealers eéverywhere, s | Large bott.es, 50 cents and SI.OO. ] e- . .. = . Pour : ’ & ' Ds 2 |4 S o { Ry < l A=A SRS P e i < : PILLS il { %] :88 DO NOT GRIPE NOR: SICKEN, { Sl Bure cure for SICKY HEADTTRERR ACEHE, impaired digestion, consti- . pation, torpid glands' They arouse g e vital Orgu;ls, rcmov% nnusear,_g‘:;Yt ziness, ical effect on Ald- = o ne Snmfi)ladder. Conquer = : X giliongnervoun 315so o — orders. Estoblish Date <! ural DAILY AcTiox, Beautify Complexion by Purifying i blood. PureLy VEGETABLE, s The dose is nicely adjusted to suit case, as cnecrill ean ‘i never betoo much. Each vial'eontains 42, carried in vesg pocket. like lead pencil, Business man’s great l convenience. Taken casier than sugar, Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear ‘‘Crescent.” Bend 2-cent stamp. You get 32 page book with sample. OR. HARTER MEDICINE €O., St. Louls, Mo e Bbatol i 5, e it Laa Ji i . | Za% OLD o\
1N \ ,‘Y o ] “" 3 y SR ) L < S T e D Lol w : XLR e o Dt s I "":,"‘z/’.‘n‘ INTS & ‘ - Bt Rsk g o S el | 4 ) > Sy e et oA e ' (== TWyet AT S ot s :::—;_'f':gv~:~é;":_ e '}—\,/'_A—.“:é;éfi"‘r- Foage st i ?_'é*-sf-;“ eiT SR . x v | AWKEYEURUB 8 STUMP ACHINE , Works on elther sStanding Timber or Stumps. Pulls | an ordinary Grub in one and & hulf minutes. Makes & | clean, sweep of two acres st a sitting! A man, 8 boy aod a horse | can operate it. No heavy chains or rods to bandle, The crop ‘on a few acres the firat year will pay for the Machine. You es 2 { mot longer afford to pay texes on unproductive timber land. \ Clesr it, raise & bountiful crop with less labor and recuperale | your old wern out land by pasturiog. It will only cost you & : postal card to send for au {llustrated Catalogue, giving price, terms and testimonials. Address the Manufacturers, JAMES MILNE & SON, SCOTCH GROVE, 10WA. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878. l - - _ 00 'S | W. BAKER & CO.S
& 2 Breakfast Gocoa 1&;:\;; . from which the excess of oil 7 P-8 Has been removed, "'{o(/"" Is absolutely pure and ¢() A\ it is soluble. 8 e -+ e '; N No Chenvicals RlB A\ are used in its preparation. it ¢ ( { B \Q\ bas more than three times tié it |- i \ sirength of;‘gocou mixed with l {W { ftl Starch, ArrowrootCor Sugar, \.\" ‘iR l and is therefore far more ecoo nomicul‘,"'(usfing less than oné \ L centa ciip. Ttis delicious, ncure s ishing, strengthening, EASILY
T M eye DIGESTED, and admirably adapted® for invalida as well as for persons in®health. Sold by Grocers everywhere. 2‘ W.BAKER &CO,, Dorchester, Mass. "2 FAMOUS ODELL TYPEWRITER % . & Jtis used by o""" o . ¢‘l ‘,@%Q’ every Retail > eCT & 20, Store, law- ¥ Re ¥ 5 &0, yer, Minis-, { Q e W 4 é # ter, Doctory | SEIRRD LN o every Publis | RGN XS SRR oo e School is | Y 3 7 £ ;\S\,\\b e adopting it ; G SY. Loy S T 8 PSRN TR Editors s\n& ./‘,,J.,u b | ey £33 3 —j;“,“,?:“ig_,' "f:" - »’E%,‘F all the Govi\ = /fi,.,’*v-f’; g,* },-_,,»':'f—{ ¢, exnment Ofs RS ST RN EE fiCCTS, bei \ ¥ l‘ii‘;fi:— - 9.,‘-‘::";;_.'7!:-.'%‘;-" "«,-;‘)‘ 3,89, ‘,: ;,1 of i | A\ TN ST RS TRy CASe its | = &,"_“)_; SN ‘;_;1&‘; 5 clean print, | B O s “%j} -TS simpiicity & | BN S ee 0 i£ald \ | =N -'—*'Zji’-'l,-.""’;‘-" eAg copiea ~No | —-;;.;’ SPRAGI S= - teachrs 76i‘ [Check Periorato! £ rxua. quired; will g | doyvur work in one hour'’s practice. Sent {0 ang town {- | inthe U. S. forsl deposit, balance C. O. D. subjecet 1@ B 2 taes Srder now and et the Agency. ODELL TYPE TCL A et Chicazo; 1l
Sal. OTEES Ae e SRR 'RITER CQ-., 358 to 368 Dearborn R A Iy set § 5 3 i s is AL 4 \ b 27 e R R PELER SR ‘ B e | P ‘_'( e ‘4\‘s 27%..1 $ 1 4 7 i Iy i % bl 3. PO ¥y "\ B G 5 L é‘} 5 ii G e RSN {3 YT ! &3,% ey N‘}; N Shn s ei 2 mau:l3W.s;-.:sz..s.r.,:orsmpua & Over. , comes resalts of bad ealingicures Sic% Heéadaches 'ren.orenComplex:on;curcsb nstipation. : lllu.ih'ah'dl’ul)liculi()ns.wilh MAPS, describlug Minnesota, North Dakota, Mo.tana, jdaho, Washington and Orezon, the Free Governmeut and CHEAV Northern , Pacific R. R. Best Agricultural, Grazing and _Timber Lands Low open 1o settlers. Mgu'(—d FREE. Address CHAS. B. LhmnßNLLuurer‘om. NP.K.R, St Paul, Minn. ASTHMA DR. TAFT'S A?THMAdLEN! ; - never fails; send us yous :, sddress, we will mail trial GUREB BOTTLE FREE | YHEDR.TAFTIRDS.M.W..KUCHESTER.N.Y. i RRy e aimaec ] C. N No. 8-92 { _______,_,_,_._—————-—-—,,______\ } \\THEN WRITING TO ADYVERTISERS { please say you saw the ndvert.isemen‘ ?‘ in this paper.
