St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 32, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 27 February 1892 — Page 3

(’ Improvements on the Monon. Great improvements on the Monon are pow to be pushed with all possible dispatch. R /The capital stock of the road has been tncreased, and $3,200,000 of the additional stock has been sold for cash, and this amount will be spent in the improvement of the road. Over 5,000 tons of heavy steel rails have been purchased and are now being put down, together with 250,000 new cross-ties. All wooden bridges wiil be removed and replaced with new firon} and steel ones. New locomotives, freight cars, and passenger coaches have been purchased. The terminals at OChicago and Louisville are to be doubled in capacity. Somewher: in the neighbsrhood of. §1,000,020 is to be spent in the preparation for the World's'Wuir. All the sidings along the route are to be greatly lengthened so that tho speed of trains can b 2 ilncreased with safety. A dining-car line is to be established between Chicago and Louisville. The Monon is now the ouly read having a dining-car servicy letween Chicago and Cincinnati, and the sarvice is to be extended to the Louisville line. In short, the Mcnon 1s to be made part of one of the Dbest, equipped and biggest systems that have a te. minal in Chicago. Miss PINKEY—A toilet set is entirely too young for my grandfather. Clerk— We also have them with fewer teeth in the combs. Goop ApvicE,—UsE HALE's HONEY o HoREHOUND AND TAR for a cough or cold. Plxe's TooIHACHE Drors Curein one Minute. LEARNING makes a man fit company for himself, T A SR AA M . 0 - 0.5 . T RSO .WA e, AL N A : ; /9\‘ b7 4 3 \ : ) N\ ‘u ¢ <Y i ¢ % YN qy & e $\ " { L ' .« \:.... ‘ o IR LY ? ¥ {BO | The coming woman can be healthy. She will be, if she’s wisely cared for. As/ she enters womanhood, Dr. | Pierce’s Favorite Prescription builds up and strengthens the system and regulates and promotes the functions. It's a supporting tonic, and a quieting, strengthening nervine. It corrects and cures all those delieate derangements and weaknesses peculiar to , the sex. In every case for which. it's recommended, the “Favordte Prescription” is_guaranteed o Py no , theres s«ane rF does . refunded. Mltß a risky way to sell it—but it isn't your risk. 5 AT 5 AN R DT“V[E oS RE BN o R 97 5 v ‘ K 79 : AR 58 _ SR AR Q P A = ot K 2 2 ,Jr e\ > 1 \’\:\\}%f e N R 1y | N £t \"% /PLEASANT MR ’v}“‘é")@s IR ~el ‘*'*‘?f, ‘,' @‘?a "Tflg‘g PR e el YHE NEXT MORNING | FEEL BRIGHT AN ! D NEW AND MY COMPLEX!ON IS BETTER,. My doctor says it acts gently on tha stomach, liver fgf&gl}gg;%r(fl‘}:nnggfiam lax;‘aizlrv.-. "rhis drink astea. It iscalled SIS v 5 LANE'S FIEDIGINE ruggists sell it at Soc. d SI.OO ) ) Buy one to day. La nn;v'n Fa&tilvs“:l“edrflrnfag\k(:c:n' t‘he bowels each day. Inorder to be healthy, this R . That l Thousands of delicate i women and girls doing : i = | housework, or employed Bearlng in stores, mills, facto- . ries, etc., where theyare DO\‘V n continually on their feet, . suffer terribly with disFeehng ferent forme of female -7 diseases, ggpecially “that bearing-down feeling,” Dackachs, faintness, dizziness, etc. Lydma E. FPiniham's Vegetable Compound will relieve all this quickly and permanently. It has per manently cured count- AT

N ot R Terare V- ot -L5 1 e ¥ S B SP ey less cases of Female Complaints, Ovarian troubles, Orgapic Diseases of the Uterus or . Womb, Leucorrheea, Inflammation, Kidney Complaints, etc. Its success is world-famed. All Druggists sell it, or sent by mail, 1n form of DPills or Lozenges, on receipt of SI.OO. liiver Pills, 28c. Correspondence freely answered. {ddren in confidence, 1 YDIA E. PINKnaM MED, CoO., LYNN, MACS.

86000 POBGOCO O Tutt's Tiny Pills act as kindly on the @(thil(l, the delicate female or intirm@ oid age as upon the vigorcus man, ’ T(.Ffl @gq oTuit's Tiny Pills® . ‘&:‘l@ . egive tone and strength to the weak f:) stomach, bowels, kidneys and bladder @PRBOB3OHOO ANAKESsSlSgivesinstant relief, and is an INFALLI- . PELEg BLE CURE for PIULES, Price, &1; at druggists or by mail. Samples free, Address “ANAKKESIS,” -8| E Box 2416, NEW Yorx CITY, BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD, P e R\ 5 @ B o ‘\ G : Ly B SRa 3 (S%h 3 N ol Ssl PR }i::‘?’.::‘é?é{?m’i&!j-, 5‘% = ’V‘Q i 8 O @ ; E>> | o L ,% PSR el IS py R PSS L T gt @AR UG 00 NOT BE DECEIVED Sl with Pastes, Enamels, ans Paints which stainthe hands,injure the iron, and burn off. The RisingSnun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase, HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOXS. ||

QoQ 3 EJLSSE JAMES OUTBONE, DARING NEW YORK TRAIN-ROB-BERS CAUGHT. Desperate Fight on a Central Hudson Express—Flight of the Robber on One Engine, His Pursuers on Another—Finally He Surrenders. A Bold Bandit. The shooting of an express messenger on a Central Hudson train; the rifling of a valuable safe; the flight of the robber on the engine of another train, from which he drives the erew at the pointof a revolver; a running fight from the engine for miles followed by another engine filled with railway men; and the final capture of the desperado by a sheriff’s poese in l aswamp, after a wild pursuit across the country, are some of the sensational features in the most desperate attempt at train robbery in the history of the Central Hudson Railway, and which cast in she shade as an exhibition of coolness and nerve the famous exploits of the Jesse James band or other outlaws of Western fame. Says a Rdchester, N. Y., telegram: Train No. 31 on the Central-Hudson is | known as the American Express Com-pany’s-special. It runs every day In the year between New York and Buffalo, and earries only goods and property shipped by that company. The train leaves New York at 9 o’clock each evening and is due in this city at 7:05 in the morning. Nearly all’ the cars are run through to Chicago and contain the md3t valuable expross matter. One car is known as the "monoey” car and in it is | sent the specio from the United States Treasury for Western banks, as well as the mceney in process of exchange between the banks of New York and the West. Daniel T. Mclnerney was in charge of the money car on the tiip Saturday night The train was made up of eight cars and one day coach for the accommodation of the regular train crew. When the train was near Weedsport the conductor, who was in the coach with his two trainmen, thought he heard the air whistle sound very faintly. It was enough to areuse him to the belief that something was wrong on the express ear. Going out on the platform of the coach, he climbed onto it, and, looking through the hole which the bell cord comes through, he saw the upper part of aman whose e below tho eyes was coucealed by a red flannel mask., The messemger he colild not see, and he went Bick, set the air brakes, and called his two tralnmen. The three stood leaning out frém tho platform leoking forward along the sldes of the express car. Suddenly s form appeared at the side door of the express car. Revolver bullets whistled past #heir eves, and a veice was heard confmanding thom to signal the engineer to go ahead or take the consequences. The trainmen were unarmed. The condu tor told one of his men to jump off, run back to Jordan, and telegraph along the line to Rochester .that they had a train robber on Bet ./‘!‘m"uq otiie] e LT b the next stop. The train went to Fort Byron. Here tho brakes were set again and the canductor and trainmen went to the express car. The ecar showed signs of a desperate strugizle. Money packages snd jewelry were lying scattered- about, everything stained with blood, and Messenger M- | Inerney was lying bleeding from several 3 wounds and almost unconscious, The ! robber was nowhere to be secn and was | supposed to have jumped amd mado good { his escape. Melnerney wanted to be ’;1-nxught on to Rochester, and the train % went on to Lyons, the next stop. The | news had spread all along the { line by this time, and the sta- { tion at Lyons was alive. Among others In the crowd was a well-dressed young man vearing gold eyeglasses and carrying a sachel slung over his sboulder. Now, it happened that she tralnmen bad noticed the young man at the station at Syraouse before the train had started out. An aftempt to arrest him was made, but he pulled two revolvers, held the trowd back, and backed across ‘tlw yvard until he reached a coal-train, the engine of which had steam up ready to pull out for the West. He pulled the l pin holding the tender to the first car, climbed over the coal into the cab, drove Ithv engineer and fireman out with his | revolvers, pulled open the throttle and { started the engine. | Conductor Laas and one of the switchmen procured a shotgun, freed the engine of the express, and, with the fireman and engineer, started in pursuit of the fugitive. The Central-Hudson is a four-tracked road, and the engines, though they were going west, were not on the same track. The express englne soon overtook the robber, who suddenly } reversed his engine and let his pursuers pass him, pouring pistol bullets into the cab as his pursuers went by. Then the pursuers stopped and the pursued went ghead. About seven miles further on the robber found his steam going out of his engine. He dropped off at a crossroad and started across the country. He managed to terrorize a farmer into letting him have a horse, and rode on about two miles farther south, where he pro- § cured another horse. The party in the express engine had returned to Lyons, where the Sheriff of Wayne County had crganized a posse, which, under command of Deputy Sheriff Collins, started in pursuit. Meantime the farmers along the robber’s line of retreat had also turned out, fully armed, in pursuit. ' The robber was sighted about five miles south of Newark. Tho roads are very bad and he had made very poor speed. He abandoned his horse and ran across lots to Benton’s swamp, but the swamp proved to be teo full of water to be penetrated and the fugitive took up his station behind a stone wall and faced his pursuers. After some parley he surrendered to Deputy Sheriff Collins. He was taken back to Lyons and lodzed in jail. He gave the name of William Cross; said he was from New Mexico, and had been hparding in Syracuse for some time. He admitted he was the man who attempted the train ] robbery to Chief of Detectives Hayden of this eity. He is believed to be the much-wanted Oliver Curtis Perry who robbasd Express Messenger Moore near Utica last fall. The story of the attemptod robbery, as far as can be gathexed, is this: The express messenger will not talk. Cross boarded the train when it pulled out of Syracuse and climbed on top of the express car. e was provided with a hooked rope. F:Lsh‘-fiing the hook in }tlm slight cornice of the door on one side cf the car he lethimself down onto

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the ather, and resting his toes on tlm"l ledge that runs across the car, he looked in the glass of the side door and saw the express messenger in front of one of the safes, which was open, making up his bills. He smashed the glass with his revolver, covered the messenger, and shouted to hold up his hands,. Instead of doing so Mclnerney reached for the signal cord with one hand and for his revolver with the other. A bullet smashed the hand, but not before the gignal had been given that aroused the conductor. Then Mecelnerney fired on the robber and put a bullet through his coat. Then the robber shot the messenger twice—once in the right leg and once in the left leg. He climbed into the car and a desperate struggle took place which did not end until the train was stopped for the first time, near Weedsport. It is evident that the robber had climbed on top of the cars and remained there until the stop at Lyons. Bo far as can be learned the robber secured absolutely nothing. NEGRO R‘OASTED ALIVE, jflorrible Punishment Meted Out te An | Arkansas Criminal. % Five thousand people stood on the public street this afternoon, says a dispateh from Texarkana, Ark., and with sullen faces, unmoved by anything savoring of pity, watched while Ed Coy, & negro, was burned to death for criminally assaulting Mrs. Henry Jewell last Saturday. Mrs. Jewell 1s the young wife of a respectable farmer living two mtlesesouth of town, and since his crime Coy succoeded in eluding the offlcers | until this morning, when he was discov- | ered at the ome of Ed Gaines, colored, | four miles north of here. He had a mis- | tress at the home of Gaines, and it was | she who digclosed his hiding place, fear | for the safety of herself and family act- | ing as the incentive. The posses in | search of Coy suspected that he was being harbored by Gaines, and two or | three times this week a rope was put | around the latter's neck to make him i give Information. He was also assured

't?hu.t death would ecertainiy be his por- i tiocn should he fail to notify the posse upon the first appearance of the hunted ' man. . : [ l This morning early the mistress of | Coy went to the house of A. B. Scott, | %fl white neightor, living near by, and | ! fold him that Coy was at the 1o:1se of | | Gaines. Scott at once sent a mossage | f with the news post haste to town, anq o | | posse immcdiately went out to arrest | ! the negro. Meantime, however, Coy | % had left Gaines' house, but was up{n‘ei hended and taken in charge by Mr, Sbott | iand two sons, whe held him until thei i sarival of the men from town. The! !lnttvr immediately brought their prie- | | oner in, and, placing him in a carriege, | | cons eyed him to the Jewell farm, | § where Mrs. Jewell, without hesita- | i tion, identified him beyond all doubt as | ‘ the man who asepulted her. The trom- | | bling wreteh was then returned to town, | whiere the'leaders, after a censultation, ! ; decided to hang the negro to a tolegraph | ole on Broad et, %e State line, !&e most puhfl@?&fl 1e city. Coy | was accordingly marched to this poins with & view to carry out this programine, LN SaW . fupe and T o Y Wlth the ronpé’ [angionge 18 100 good for him! Burn® him, burn him!™ was the shout that went up from 5,000 | throats. | | Coy was strapped to the body of a tree | gwith fron [fastening and coal ofl was | g poured over his entire person in liberal { quantities. There was a moment of | | shence and then another shout went up: i “Let Mrs. Jewell, apply the match! | Let Mrs, Jewell set him off!” i Walking slowly, very pale but coli leceted, sho woman emerged from the | ccowd. Herappearanece before them set | the crowd wild and a mighty cheer went | j up trat ahmost shook the ground on i whith the¥y were standing. The crowd | teN back at her approach, making a ,puwwuy for the brutal negro's victim, | who, leaning on the srn of a male rela- | tive ou either side, walked unhesitating- 1 ly forwarded to where the negro stood | pinioned, struck a parlor mateh, and ‘I with the utmost deliberation fired the f negro's elothes tn two places. In a seo- | end the poor wretch was one mass gs 1 flames, but even then his wonderful { nerve, exhibited ever since his arress, | never forsook him, and while suffering :the tortures of fire he actually called { to the men of the assembly and in a g clear voice requested of tdeux “Move ! back so that the ladies can gee.” He reo- | i ferred to the negro women, a large num- j | ber of whom witnessed the execution. ! ] Death came in twenty ninutes, i { The excitement over the horrible { affair having largely subsided, the peo- ! ple are coming to their sober senses, x and general regret is expressed. That i Coy should have been hanged or shot is | generally admitted by everybody, but | burning the poor wretch at the stake | was a shock to civilizatien. The mob | was mostly composed of young railroad men who lost their reason in their thirsé for revenge. Ther'e is strong talk among influentlial citizens of ealling a mass meeting to denounce the burning of Coy as barbarcus. The citizens feel that unless some such step is taken the affair will result in the permanent injury | | e % | WDEN a case presents itself like | that of William Arthur McCord @nd Mrs. Thomas Pinkney, the eloping couple from Toronto who were cap- . tured in Detroit, there is an uneasy ' susplcion that perhaps the whipping post should have been kept standing for just such emergencies. When a man will accept the hospitality of a home, receive financial assistance and | the treatment of a near friend, and | then violate the sanctity of that home, rob the hand that helped him, | bring sorrow upon a happy family and the shadow of disgrace upon three in- ' nocent little children, the law is without adequate punishment for the ingrate. But perhaps the whipping post would be too good for him. I T Oasis of Touat has become a | bone of contention between Irance and Moroceo, while the cause of contention is in a mood to set up a gov- | ernment 6f its own. Out of these | recent difficulties there secems greater f chance for war in the necar future than there does in the troubles Which have so long disturbed the continent- | al powers of Europe. ! A TEAR is eomposed of water, minute . proportions of salt, soda, phosphate of | lime, phosphate of soda and mucus, and ! when seen under a microscope after | evaporation, looks like a very small fish- | bone, owing tothe salines forming themselves into lengthened crosslines, ‘

! On the Way to Paradise. | i Tet us hope that tha people who hl.llltuslly | - disregard their health will reach that deeirable place, and avoid the locality which is less desirable as an eterna] residence on account of the hsa.t. and surroundings generally. But while | we tarry in this vale of tears, why should we \ vcluntarily endure the tortures of dyspepsia .when a systematic use of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters will rid us of the atrocious malady rwhich-nuleu physiclans are very much a$ | ' fault - tends to shorten the term of our exist- ‘ ' ence, Heartburn, biliousness, constipation al- | " most always nceompa.ng this complaint and are | ! -ymgtomutio of it. These are all extinguished | . by the Bitters, w' ich also conquers completely | ; malaria, rheumatism, nervousness and debility. | | Bince the appyearance of “la crippe” it has shown | . & singular mastery over this formidable com- | | Elgint that has carried off soo many of cur | rightest and best. The Modern Stove. To Benjamin Franklin we are largely | indebted for the stoves which less than . a century ago began to replace the fire- | places in our homes. In 1745 a stove, } merely a portable iron flreplace, was in- | vented by Franklin, and in subsequent | years various other stoves were also in- | vented by him. One of the first at- | tempts at making a closed stove of iron { was by Cardinal Polignac in 1709. Be- | tween 1785 and 1795 scveral improve- { ments in the manufaciure of stoves were ‘ devised by Count Rumford. ‘ The word stove, as applied to a heater { for a room, seemsto be of about the | same age as the article 1o which the ' name is now applied: as, while the word ‘| as a name had an existence in early English, it was used in a different sense. Both Lord Bacon and Woodward used it - as referring to a house or room arti- | ficially warmed, and particularly a hot- | house for plants. Bacon also used the ! word as a verb in the way of keeping ‘x | warm in a house or room, as “to stove ' orange {rees and myrtles,” to quote ! from his writings. Pepys usedthe verb | in a nautical sense, as heating for the ' | purpose of making pliable, as “to stove : golt ropes.” But all these definitions - are obsolete now, such disuse dating "+ from the time when Dr. Franklin made : his discoveries and applications.

| How’s This! . We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any caso of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking ~ Hail's Catarrh Cure. } ¥, J, CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, Chio. We, the undersigned, save known F. J. Cheney -for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly ~ honorable in all business transactions, and ~ financially able to carry out any obligations . made bz thelr firan | W(}):g'xrn TrUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, . WaLDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Drug- _! flsts, Toledo, Ohilo. ) all’a Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- . Ing direetly upon the blood "and mucous sur- . faces of the system, Testiuwnials'sex:&g!‘m. | Prioce 75 conts per bottle, Sold by all Druggista, i G i Rk § Ancient Greek Mannscripts. i Flinders Petrie’s researches in Egypt | have brought to light some manuscripts 2 of Greek literature far earlier than any ' elassical text we have had before. The ~ scholars have found three pages of the lost “Antiope” of Euripides, and also { fragments of Plato’s “Phwmedo.” The | text of the latter eonfirms the suspleion | that the editers of Alexandria regularly \improvea and touched up the original text to suit their ideas of style. An- - other fragment is identified as a portion of the eleventh book of the Iliad, and it %qu!ds into the Eea'd. ;n! the nbe!! excitIng snuffs are being superseded by Ely's . Oream Balm, a cure for Catarrh and colds [ in she head. I HAvE been a great sufferer from catarrh for ten years; could hardly breathe. Some nights I couid not sleep. 1 purchased Ely’s Cream Balm and am using it freely; it i: | working a care surely. I have advised several friends to use it, and with happy results In every case. 1t Is the medicine above all others for catarrh, and it is worth its weight in gold. I thank God I have found a remedy I can use with safety and that does all that is clafmed for it.—B. W. Eperry, Hartford, Conn. { Apply Balm into each nostril. It sis Quickly Absorbed. Gives RELIEF AT ONCE Price 50 cents ut Druzgzists or Ly mail ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Bt., New York. ¢ But Little Pure sugar. : A San Francisco chemist says there s only ene refinery in the world that makes absolutely pure sugar. This manufactory in in Germany, and it supplies ! chemists and druggists with sugar for solusicns - hich must be unclouded. This chemically pure articla would not find much sale for table use, as itis a dirty, grayish-white in appearance, When dissolved it gives a perfectly clear solution, there being no artificial coloring matter in suspension, i The Unly One Ever Printed - Can You Find the Word? i There Is a 3-inch diplay 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 «Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they wiil return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS, Or SAMPLES FREE. Another Fairy Tale. An old Australian who is In St. Louis says that the thrilling stories about the boomerang are the purest fiction. The weapon is merely a native’s tomahawk, and it is no more dangerous than a combined elub and hatchet would be in any . gkilled hands, | Avorp ALn Risk with a Stubborn Cough by using atonce Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant, a sure remedy for all Coughs and Colds, and well calculated to exert a beneficial influence on the Lungs and Throat. | Good Reasons. . Adobe residences are becoming popular in Southern California from the fact _that they are cooler in summer and warmer in winter than ordinary residences. i it’s Worth It. { Lady snake charmers are getting - scarce and the wages paid them by American museum managers have risen to SIOO a weelk. | CRAGIN & Co.. Philadelphia. Pa.. will send, postpaid, for 2 Dobbins’ Electric Soap wrappers and ten cents, any volume of “Surprise Beries,” (best authors), 25 cent novels, about -200 pages. Send Icentstamp for catalogue. [ Ix Europe red hair is asscciated with deceitfulness. A German proverb printed in 1512 says: “The short in stature are naturally proud; the red-haired are uni trustworthy.” i COUGHS AND HOARSENESS.—The irri- | tation which induces coughing immediately ! relieve@ by use of «Brown's Bronchial . Troches.” s£old only in boxes. | SIX YEARS ago a St. Louis girl swal- ' llowed a needle. Last week it was cut out of her arm, i BEECHAM'S PrrLs will cure wind and pain ! in the stomach, giddiness, fullness, dizzi- | ness, drowsiness, chills, and loss of appetite. | I you set up for a growler, you can t always be busy.

-BY @ { StJacebsQil AFTER 22 YEARS. Newton, 111., May 23, 1888. From 1863 to 1885—about 22 years—l suffered with ' rheumatism of the hip. I was cured by the use of St. | Jacobs Oil. T. C. DODD. | Sfi\UP‘*f EGS | TR\ T ‘%’ © )\ Gt AR S\ G SN 0\ O \/g\? ), AR g R TTGINER (SR R ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts iently yet promptly on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the

e eDO S P gl . -, 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, pregared onl{7 from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its | many excellent qualities commend it | to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. : | Byrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug-/ gists. 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 gubstitute. | CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. | SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, | LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, M.Y. | N LA P=3 e(S S 17 o ' Ce g R R -e 3o B o A S R i TR Gl s s s P s | T GREAT COUGH Chikin i moeem Cure can stand successfully. If you have a COUGH, HOARSENESS or LA GRIPPE, it will cure you Rromptly. If your child has the CROUP or WHOOPING COUGH, use it quickly and relief is sure. If you fear CONSUMPTION, don’t wait until your case is hopeless, but take this Cure at once and receive immediate hclp, Price soc and SI.OO. Ask your druggist for S}IItOII'S CURE. If your lungs are sore or back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters.

RNJBU(;; News =O6

- EE—— TS L RN N R R AR Wi 0D | Bt. Vitus Dance Cured. VIII i SAN ANDREAS, Cal., Feb. 8, 1889, | My little boy, 13 years old, was taken sick with what is called Bt. Vitus Dance. He had not been able to go to school for two years. As soon as I read your book, I sent for two bottles Nerve Tonic and two bottles Iron Pills, and before the second botile and pills were used up the boy was restored to his natural health, and is attending school. MICHAEL O'CONNELL, WaLxvT, 111., Oct. 7, 1890, I bave been suffering for years with headache ~ and last May 1 had it continuously for two days, and the third day I fell into a fit (apoplectic fit, the doctor called it). I sent for a bottle of Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic, and it did me more good than I can tell, and I felt very thankful to God, the giver of all good, and to that . remedy. I did not have another fit since. | MRS, SARAH GONIGAN. —A Valuable Book en Nervous Diseases sent free to any address, and poor patients can also obtain this medicine free of charge. i ledy has 1 prepared by the Reverend pz;k?fi rfifffiné. (3; F‘Srp:an_\-x‘;e, Ind., since 1876, and isnow prepared underhis direction by the KOENIC MED. CO., Chicago, Il Sold by Druggists at 1 per Bottle. 6 for 85, _ Larze Size, $1.75. 6 Bottles for $9. | Med . c I D.s ; Takes hold in this order: 1 Bowels. ; - Liver, . Kidneys, w ® . Inside Skin, ° - QOutside Skin, ; Driving everything bLefore it that ought ' to be out. You know whether youw need it or not. - Sold by every druggist.and manufactured by - DORNALD KENNEDY, POXBURY, MIASS. N | fi"fi flCARTSandat 1 PR!GE H! qu @HARNESS.___— R . < S We Cuat the Prices and sell Mere than all our competitors, and are still Eaasee 7y LEADERS OF LOW PRICES. | | ¥ SPECIALCUT PRICESAMPLE OFFER : , B§2o 2 Man Cart...only 8 9.50 | v-m 860 Open Buggy...only 27.50 | S o [ 2 &89 Top Buzgy...only 38.00 @!{!’"" 3 ‘ 810 Blfxzrz}' Harness only ;l‘.'.“.'i B actory. S Middle--347-50 m:%‘:nrofl(i.((’,“;‘A"'talogz:x'eeNo.l'}' r(;cce. U.S.BUCCY&CART CO.ll Law.St.Cincinnati, Oy | NSR@NJ OFEN W.MORREIS, | \\’ushiugl(&n, D.C. | ucce ily Prosecutes Claims. " L&%e Pflncgsai‘l‘:}JXminer U.S. Pension m!g‘au. | 3yrsinlast war, 15adjudicating claims, atty siuce. EHEISIONS - Dae all SOLDIERS ! 4 disabled. s2fee for increuse, 26 years ex- | perience. Write for Laws. A.W. McCorMicK . & BONg, WASHINGTON, D. C. & CINCINNATI. O,

l “German Syrup” Mr. Albert Hartley of Hudson, | N. C., was taken with Pneumonia. | His brother had just died from it. When he found his doctor could not | rally him he took one bottle of Ger- ' man Syrup and came out sound and | well. Mr. S. B. Gardiner, Clerk | with Druggist J. E. Barr, Aurora, ' Texas, prevented a bad attack of pneumonia by taking German Syrup | iln time. He was in the business | and knew the danger. He used the great remedy—Boschee’s German Syrup—for lung diseases. @ £ : A, . _;,3,.—_-;’__- A:_-l-‘":t_" 2% '.A - "!’ . ;.‘ie ,"\ “ 4 - el o1 B Ll S R f - R v.,. ::E“'»;“‘f??.i,; e

Xt Cures Colds, Coughs. Sore Throat, Crou Irnfluenza, Whooping Cough, Brenchitis nfa Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in fir-4 Btages, and a sure relief in advanced stsges, Usa atonce. You will see the excelle t eflect after taking the first dose. Soid by deaers eveiywhers, Large botties, 5) cents and SI.OO. e T | TO MOTHERS. . Every careful mother knows thabt . there is more danger to the children | in the spring months of the year from ! colds than there is in the winter. The i high winds, the changing weather, the rains, and the sudden alternations from hot to cold, all combine to make March and April a dreaded season. | For this reason every mother ought { to provide herself with REiD's GERS MAN CouvGH AND KiDNEY CURE. This i . " . | great remedy is the best thing in the | world for children beeause as it con- ! | tains no poison of any sort it can be given them at any time and in such amount as will relieve them. When they begin to get hoarse give them this remedy, and when ihey go to bed at night give them a dose and they will sleep all night. If thegcough, . e O o s 2 035 : y : :11 davoided av once. ASK your dealer | for REID’'S GERMAN CouGH AND KiD- } NEY CURE, and take nothing else. | SYuvAN REMEDY Co., Peoria, 111. | SRS @ & j i‘ {1 4 t ‘l—i 3 | Q’: Y il S e | BRI = ——= | R Sei SR | (eSS = Y “f‘;«f?i Sosße e L .v; ° g& xv. ,PJ’ AT 0 ;;.7", - Ny }2 § & Calin s B Tl R B NSt ‘ ‘*‘i%f‘g;fi;f’ik’ést_,fifi?fifim L ek R, | B RES e pBOS | RELIEVES all Stomach Distress. i REMOVES Nausea, Sense of Fullnesg, i CONGESTION, PAIN, | REVIVES Fauixe ENERGY. | RESTORES Normal Cirenlation, 833 i WARMS TO TOE Tips. ‘ flDVR’.A HARTE}AEVEADINNECo._.‘g_I._!:og!s: Me. | < —O | %0 FoR i 4, ! A% I > | g - ; QQ In _ord t2lCts. (‘(\“ B NorT RN CROwWS TR\ | B g i L i | (.: ¥ 1 Pkg. kudl:f:, Catalog Price q IPLEqcttuce, 50 cts. ~ | O 8. 1 emato, Speclal Price : | 8 5 Pkgs. Elegant p Rl ShemnucEe } T il2cts. | gund{:"al(;:.‘dfii,r;)g(o) g:‘:::?fs;:l‘ Alf?:.r.'f: | and Roses by the 100,000. Send be. for A8 | PP finest Plant and Seed Catalog published. /Sos { o) Man.v(‘nk-redPtates. ’ i A Catalog and above 9 Pkgs., ITc. (2% ; @, YOHN A. SALZER, & { b LA CROSSE, Qa | ‘&4 : Wis., ,95- | >

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Y g N—— e { b Overa | 4 comeoes ¢ - = A * results | ofbad >ating;cures Sick Headaches 5 _‘_l'}llog‘gs(}onxplexxon;(‘ureb(,'onalipulio“.

FAT FOLKS REDUCED )fv'[rs. Alice Maple, Oregon, Mo., writes: “My weizht was 3% pounds. now it is 195

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| - 88 5 & DAJ WEIS ML WOD daV POURUDL, NOW 1L 38 200, | areduction of 125 Ibs.” For circulars addre =B, with Cc., Dr.O.W.F.SNYDER. McVicker’s Theatre, Chicago, 111, : Remedy Free. “INSTANT RELIFF, Final i E cure ii: 10 daye. Never returns :no purge: no saive: no suppo-Itory. A victimn tried in vain every remedv; has discov-red asimnle cure { which he will mail free to his tellow suTerers. Address J. H. REEVES, Box 3290, N. Y. City, N.Y. Morphine Habit Cared in 10 to 20 days. No pay tiil cured. DR.J.STEPHENS, Lebanon,Ohio. C.N. U, No. 9 -92 \VHPZN‘ WRITING TO ADYERTISEKS, please say you saw the advertisemcent In this paper. G‘f‘ o R‘SO:SCU bl &Oms": rid = Consumptives and people S wlO have weak lungs or Asth- S | i m 2. should usa Piso’s Cure for. e 1 %@ Consumption. It has enred § | E% thousands. [thas notinjur- ! 2 ed one. Itis not bad to take. } B 11 is the best cough syrup. : i ; Bold everywhere. 235e¢. : - R T S e 7 | g ! i

0 NSRS Siz Hexnr Tuo;x:;g;,_{l; most noted physician of England, says that more than > half of all diseases come from errors in diet. Send for Ireec Szmple of Garfield Tea to 319 West 45th Street, New York City.