St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 39, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 16 April 1892 — Page 3
• Pleainreg of Memory. What a blessed thing is memory! How it brings up the pleasures of the past, and hides its unpleasantnesses! You recall your childhood days, do you not, and wish they would return? You remember the pleasant associations, while the unpleasant ones are forgotten. Perhaps to your mind comes the 4ace of some friend. It was once a pale, sad face. It showed marks of pain, lines of care. It seemed to be looking into the hereafter, the unknown future. And then you recalled how it brightened, how it recovered its rosy hue, how it became a ploture of happiness and jo”. Do you remember these things? Muny people do, and gladly tell how ‘he health returned, how happiness came back, liow the world seemed bright. They tell how they were once weak, nerveless, perhaps in pain, certainly unhappy. They tell of sleepless nights, restless days, untouched fool, unstrung nerves. And then they teil how they’ became happy, healthy and strong once more. You have heard it often in the past, have you not? You have heard people describe how they were cured and kept in health? You certainly can remember what it is that has so helped people in America. If not, listen to what Mrs. Annie Jenness Miller, who is known universally as the great dress reformer, says: “Six years ago, when suffering from mental care and overwork, I received the most pronounced benefit from the use of that great medicine, Warner’s Safe Cure.” Ah, now you remember. Now you recall how many people you have »heard say this same thing. Now you recollect horv much you have heard of this great Cure. Now you are ready to admit that memory is usually pleasing, that the highest pleasure comes from perfect health, and that this great remedy has done more to produce and prolong health than any other discovery ever known in the entire history of the whole world. i ■■ 1 • n coPYEosnr Goes,right to the spot —one of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They do the right kind of work when they get there, too. No ! violence, no unpleasantness—but a I mild and gentle cleansing and regu- ’ 'lading of the whole system. Sick < Headache, Bilious Headache, Dizzi- j ness. Constipation, Indigestion, Bil- 1 ions _Attaeks a aryd k nl I doran "menl3 1 “WP****^ cured. They’re the best Liver Pill ! ever made. Purely vegetable, per- 1 fectly harmless, easiest to take, and always fresh and reliable. Gently 1 aperient, or strongly cathartic, according to size of dose—one tiny “ Pellet ” for' a dose. They’re the smallest in size, but the most satisfactory in result. They’re the cheapest pill you can buy, because they’re guaranteed, to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You only pay for the good you get Can you ask more ? AT y 1 My doctor says ft acts gently on the stomach, fiver ; and kidneys, and Isa pleasant laxative. Thu drink is made from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily as tea. It is called 7 LANE’S ISEDIGIHE All druggists sell it at 50c, and SI.OO nor package. Buy one U>day. Lane’s Family Medicine moves the bowels each day. lu order to be healthy. LUU to necessary. , •* liow Old Many women fade carlv, simply bc- । i cause they do not 1 LVUh, take proper care , , , of themselves.' and not yet Whirled along in . the excitements of Thirty. | a fast-living age, ' _ ! they overlook those minor ailments that, if not checked in time, will ft>b them of health and beauty. At the first symptom of vital weakness, use i Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. The roses will return to your cheeks, sallow l p / ks depart, spirits / , ghten, your step be- ; come firm, and back and ■ - headache will be known I no more. Your appetite will gain, and the ' food nourish you. AU Drug-ists .vU It, or nt by mail, m form of Pills ^.r on receipt.*oo. Liver Pills, a.lc. Corre•pomlence freely answered, J * f***^,^. Address ui confidence. /p Lydia. E. PinYuiam Mep. Co., ■&, T-ynn, Mass. x Shi SH THE WGRLDJ SSWWfS? DO NOT BE deCEWEO^™^^ with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. Has AH ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOHS.
WHO WILL BE CHOSEN? WOMEN WHO MAY RULE ATTHE WHITE HOUSE. Wives of Distinguished Men Who Are i Named as Presidential Possibilities— Senator Hill’s Bachelor State —Some Interesting Facts About Well-Known Women. Mistress of the Manse.
VAS HINGTON correspondence: Who is to succeed Mrs.;Harris on as the first lady of the land ? Which will it be— Mrs. Harrison herself, or will it be Mrs. Stanford, or Mrs. Cullom, or Mrs. * Rusk, or Mrs. El- - or Mrs. Alger, ^or Mrs. Robert T. _ Lincoln, or Mrs. fjohn Sherman, or -Mrs. McKinley, or |will it be Mrs. Cleveland, or Mrs. Gorman,or Mrs. Palmer,
IV wiW I i ~ r-y'~‘— ymr:m!*uiHiii |ir ^SOWE®' 1 M mfr t U ll ‘
or Mrs. Whitney, or Mrs. Carlisle, or Miss Boies, in case our national politics take a somersault, as some think they will. If not any of these women, will it be the wife of the da’k horse, or will that sable-hued animal have a wife, or, not having a wife, will he want to wed? Anybody with a correct solution to this puzzle will supply a great public demand by stating it. The only prominent bachelor in the field is United States Senator David B. Hill. Just because he is in that lamentable condition his case can be disposed of first. If Mr. Hill comes to the White House we are going through the same delightful ■ experience that preceded Mr. Cleveland's | wedding day. It will not make the slightest difference whether or not Mr. Hill exhibits the faintest desire for feminine company, he will be the daily object of suspicion, and of course, he will do just as the other gentleman from New York did, and in due season take j to himself a wife. That point settiod, I will the objectof his affections be young ' or old? Well, he need not leave Wash- ■ ington to make an excellent choice and ; one that would do his own taste ami the I good repute of the nation infinite credit. I If it is to be President Hill what a quantity of feminine em< ons will be squandered in the directk • of the Executive Mansion. So far however, if Senator Hill has any weakness or any sentimental regard for the soc.ety of womankind he has kept it locked up in his innermost soul since he came here to live. Now for the ladies named and a good many others who may feel that they’ ! might have been mentioned with equal | । propriety. For verily and indeed the i i writer of this may see in the light of [ subsequent events cause to gnash here i teeth and muss her front hair with eon- i Burning rage that she did not have sense ; enough to do so. Some of these ladies i are as actively in the race ns their hu<- j bands, and a few make no secret of their I ambitions and hopes in that direction, j for. think they, nobody is ps well posted } people can showerupon its idol. I The most of these ladies, however,! keep securely locked up in their own 1 minds any rosy visions in which they ! may indulge on the quiet, and no amount of adroit questioning could i tempt them to make the slightest com- i ment on the political situation so far us | their own aspirations are concerned. In > a city and at a time like this, when the ; political stockpot has been put on for a I long boil, it requires a pretty well- j । guarded tongue to keep from airing ) | one’s knowledge of turns and moves that look so innocent on the face. For the social world the politic* of a president does not spoil the flavor of his dinner parties, and, sad enough as it may ' sound to the serious observer of current events, the dinners and dances of an administration are as likely to live as long in history as its foreign treaties. Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Cleveland are t the only ones able to view the situation |
MRS. HARRISON.
1 to its duties all the influences of a thor- i i oughly good heart, a well-stored mind, ■ a graceful dignity and a willingness to j serve others before she consulted her ; own convenience. She has kept all her old friends, no matter what were the variations of the political thermometer, and she has made hundreds of new ones. Two ladies were sitting opposite her one day lately at a luncheon. One ! more serious minded than usual said: i “Do you know what I read in that face? J A wonderfully clear conception of what ■ is right and a strong, earnest determina- j tion to do it.” Her friend replied: “Do i you know what I see? It is a sin pie ; thing, but it is very rare. Mrs. Harri- ; son may have more bonnets than when I j she came to the White House, but they i are the same size.” No President’s i । wife has shown a deeper interest in our ■ j local institutions nor a greater willing- j I ness to see and be seen at any and all ; I times by the people of this city. ’ Should Mrs. Cleveland return to the ' ; White House she will probably look at ■
7 Pi ' ■/' -A'! MRS. CLEVELAND.
■ things in a mu ch : different light from what she did when she came there to be married in June, 18S6, or when she left there in March, 1889, to return to private life. There certainly never was a queen who created any more popular enthusiasm at every public appearance and of
whose movements the most trifling details were read with more avidity. Just I in the height of national interest in him- j self Mr. Cleveland took to himself a I wife. All the world loves a lover and his bride, and if ihe eagle eyes of the ■ feminine journalistic fraternity of this J city let any little picturesque details of 1 their daily life pass by without a pleas- I antly worded paragraph it was only be- i cause they forgot it. Sometimes the gallant sex took a hand in writing up the Cleveland home life. The history of that
period establishes the fact that these domestic sketches were not as acceptable reading for Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland as the uniformly kind and well put things which day after day were evolved from the pens with a woman’s hand manipulating them and fairly throbbing at the [ same time with nervous anxiety to get ' the results into print. Mrs. Cleveland ( many times expressed her appreciation , of these attentions, and has often referred to it since, showing con clusively that ladies and gentlemen temporarily residing in the White House are pretty ■ steady readers of all newspaper matter * in which their names appear. Mrs. Stanford is one of the busiest ■ women in America. She has her homes, her charities, her every-day interest in all the work of the university erected in memory of her son, and still finds time to entertain elegantly in her home here and to pay hundreds of visits every season. At ' home in California she has all the same I duties to perform, with the additional j obligations that come of closer ties. ! Mrs. Stanford’s mail is as large and j oftentimes larger than that of a public i official. Her well-known charities are, : of course, one reason to make the bur- j den of her correspondence so heavy. ( The wildest flights of fancy seem to i fail one in trying to imag ne what | White House life would be if Mrs. Whit- , noy was first lady of the land. Sho ; made a niche for herself in the social ; history of the Cleveland administration, । and it is extremely doubtful if she will i ever have to be pushed to the wall for ■ anybody else. She entertained like a i princess, and Wash ng on never I e tore J or since saw her equal. The wife of the Senator from Illinois, | i Mis. Palmer, is a d< 1 ghtfully cheery i
MUS. I’AUMEU
i children in the family ar? very numer- | ouv Mrs. Palmer has ft mid much to ' entertain her lure the past winter and I has mingled considerably in so dal life. Mrs. McKinley is no generally known jin Washington because her delicate j health rarely allowed her to lake p .rt in any social affa rs. Mrs. Cullom is one of tho most agree-* able hostesses in the Senatorial circle, and has a wide circle of admirers in this city and many more of them home in Illinois who would like to get notes fr >m her dated from the Executive Mansion, although Mr. Cullom has announced that he has no ambition in that direction. I Mrs. Cullom keeps pace with her husI ban 1 in her knowledge of public measj ures and the ups and downs of politics. • She is an accomplished woman in many ■ respects, but in n< ne, perhaps, are her | characteristics better displayi'd than in her housekeeping. If the pres dential aspirations of the Governor of lowa are r a'i; cd then the
future mistress of the White House will he Miss Hides hisdnnrhgoo 1 specimen of a progressive Western vvonnn. She is good-look- ' ing also ami need I not have b ’on
i Miss l oies so mis- HOU . ! long if she were no so minded. She ' has a great deal ol tact, considerable I knowledge of political affaits. no fad- or i crazes, but plenty of general, all-around I culture. She is devotial to church work; believes in temperance ami prohibition for those who vant it. Her Christian name is Jessica. Mrs. Elkins wo ud make a qu only i first lady of the land. She is probably tin- youngest of any in the list, and has just the perfect health, happy dispi s - tion am! social tastes that would lit her for this high honor. Nature has been kind to her in many ways. She is eni (lowed with g >od looks, good temper and I a good h< art. There arc shoals of people right ! around here who would like to see Mrs. i Carlisle mistress of the White House, ■ and who also believe that if she settled i her mind right down to securing the i Presidency for her husband that viet ry ■ would be theirs. The way they argue | is that she never has fade I in any con- , test in whien she vas interested heart and soul. She has always accompanied j her husband on his political campaigns, j and if there were any < hanges in the cur- ■ rent she was just as quick to see tin in 'ashe ws. There never was a woman j more devoted to her husband’s constitu- i I ents and as ready to lay aside all her i pleasures to enterta n them during their I visits to tho capital.
from the mount I of ex pe ri e nee. ! Mr s . Harrison 1 has known also | tbe hard work | while the strug- I gle is pending, as ; well as the de- j light of the vic- ■ tory. Her career j as mistress of the "White House will : 'm ak ea bright | page in its hist- > ory. She brought ;
\ MISS RVSv.
pleasant place to visit anil ea h member ; of the family contributes alike to make jit so. Mrs. Rusk is a thorough houso- । keeper. Her tastes are quiet and do- ; ; mestic, but she is a plea-ant woman to I meet in society, and certainly none of ■ the Cabinet ladies have acquitted them- । selves better of their social obligations than she has. Miss Rusk inherits all i the charm of her parent's entire naturalI ness, and has impressed herself upon every one as one of the few girls that no amount of flattery could spoil. In everv way she is her mother’s right hand. " j Mrs. Sherman is known the length and breadth of 11m land, and in this city her many years in official life has made the home of Senator and Mrs. Sherman like that of a permanent resident. No one better understands the demands of society and few are better able to acquit themselves of all its manifold obligations. Therefore many know her in- i timately, and think it the happiest priv- 1 ilege of their lives to be able to say so. Few women are better acquainted with 1 national events than she is, and fewer i I still whose ripened judgment, would | । carry the same weight on almost any । i topic of general int< rest. In manner she is kind-hearted but quiet, and per- ; haps a little reserved, though always a I fluent talker and a charming companion j with those she knows well. He conquers twice, who imon victory overcomes himself.
little lady, who has । made many friends । during her brief n sidence h ere. She is 35 years the junior of her husband. She was a widow before she married Senator Palmer. She has six grown-up and inarm d stepchildr< n ami the grand-
j-a — I 1
If it's going to be President Rusk everybody else as well as the farmers can congratulate themselves in the p r-onnel of his 1 family group. Mrs. and Miss Rusk would be charming hostesses in the ’ White House. The Rusk house is a
The Collapse of a Rotten Tenement,' With crumbling foundation and Hhaky, bulging - ”s, Is not more certainly to be looks i for than tL. «udden giving way of a constitution sapped by overwork, unremitting anxiety, or exposure to hardship and maVgn climatio Influences. ■ Against the disastrous effects of eacn and all of these, llostetfer'B f tomacb Bitters is an effectual safeguard. It fortifies the system against ' them by Infusing in oit fresh vigor begotten of renewed aud complete digestion and assimilation of the food, and It a consequent roparativa action upon the exhausted t Issues and impoverished circulation No preparative for the undergoing, without injury, of an unusual amount ; of bodily or mental work, no mea-is of averting malarial inftetion or disorders born of bad diet and impure water equals thia superlatively fine defem-lvo invigorunt. Tako it for dyspepsia, constipatk n, cliioußncßS, rheumatism, kidney trouble, la grippe. Choosing Between the Attractions. Barnum’s circus had just struck a town in Vermont. Aunt Polly had never , leen the elephant, in any sense of the : word, and had been telling for weeks how she “did just long to go to the show.” When the proper morning came Aunt Polly’s married eon, Josh, told her jto be ready at 1 p. m. and they’d take ।in the show. “Well, now,” exclaimed ! Aunt Polly, hesitatingly, “I don't know about that. I want to see the show awful bad, but, you see, Deacon Perkins’ i funeral comes off to-day, and I don’t 5 just know which I’d enjoy the most, i There’ll be lots of folks there, and besides, I may live till Barnum conies । again, but. this is the only’ funeral Deacon Perkins will ever give. I guess, Josh, I'll have a better time at the funeral than at the circus.” And Aunt ' Poliy went to the funeral. —Boston Sunday Globe. A Bridal Bouquet. The bouquet carried by the bride at a recent wedding attracted much admiration from the novel manner of its arrangement. The flowers were lilies of the valley, white orchids and orange blossoms, held together in a loose bunch and tied with narrow white ribbons h aging down in many long streamers. Down the length of each streamer little sprays of lilies of the valley and orange blossoms were fastened, and a tassel of these flowers finished each end. The effect was exceedingly graceful.—Art Interchange. < atnrrli Can’t Cured With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, ns they cannot re<wh the seat of tbe disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you have to take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall s< atarrh Cure is no quack medicine. It was proscribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, • >rnblned with the best IJood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catairh. Bciwl for tosthnonlnls. free. P. J. CHENEY A CO.. Props., Toledo, Ohio, bold by druggists, price "se. Chinese Suspension Bridge*. From an early date the Chinese seem to have constructed suspension bridges of considerat le magnitude, one in the Province of Yunnan, constructed A. D. 65, being the most celebrated. Na. M. A. Mrn at, WHtnlnxton. Det, writes: *4 had one of my severe headaches and was persuaded *o try your valuable (Brady crot.ne > medicine. I never had any - thing to do n>o so much good f .r headache." ti Druggists. Fifty rsals THE King ut A“lmnt* f a.i.i wives. Many of them are the daughters of the chiefs of tributary tr.b's over which the king has jurisdiction, ar ’ ire sent to him as hostages. (RA iixx Co.. Philudelphla Pa., will send, postpaid, for 2 Dol.bins’ Electric Soap wrappers and :en eont-. any volume of -Surprise Scries." (best authors . 25 cent novels, about 200 pugea Send 1 Cent stamp for catalogue. Next to moral weakness, a fear of diffieultii'S to be met is undoubtedly the most unfortunate mental trait of any young p* rson. The progress of science hi medicine ha* j reduced nothing better tor hunian ills than Lie eclebrau-d B<*eobam’s Pilis. Has a man a right to throw away his own happiness any more than that of another? I’EoriJt auk Killed bt Corons that Hale’s Hokey of Horfhoi:ni> axd Tar would cure. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one Minute. Mvch doing is not so important as well doing. \ 11 .1.4. i.t A. ... of Kendallville, Ind., Bays Hood B Sarsaparilla is of Medicines t— J And his Cure was Almost a Miracle ”C. I. Hood & Co.. Lowell, Mase.: “Gentletßen : When I was 14 years of age I was confined to my bed for several months by an attack of rheumatiem, and when I had partially recovered I did not have tbe use of my le s, bo that I had to go on crutches. About a year later Scrofula in tho form of White Swel ings appeared on various parts of my body, and for eleven years I was an invalid, being con lined tv my bed six v ears. In that time ten or eleven of these sores appeared and broke, causing me great pain and suffering. Several times pieces of bone worked out of tho sores. Physicians did not help me and I Became Discouraged ■I went to Chicago to visit a sister, as it was thought a change of air and scene might do me good. But I was confined to my bed r>ost of the time. Iwas so impressed with the success of Hood’s Sarsaparilla Incases similar to mine that I decided to try it. So a bottle was bought, and to niy great gratification tho sores soon decreased, and I begiin to f.el better. This strengthened my faith in the medicine, and in a short time I w as Up and Out of Doors ; To make a long story short, I continued to take hood's Sarsaparilla for a year, when I had becom • bo fully released from the chains of disease that I took a' position with tho Flint & j Mn ling Mfg. Co , and since that time have not ; lost a single day on account of sickness. I always feel well, am in good spirits, and have a good appetite. I inde'rse Hood’s Sarsaparilla for it has been a great blessing to me, and to my friends my recovery seeing almost miraculous. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla is tho king of all medicines.’’ 55 ilium A. Li nn, No. 9 North Railroad et., Kendallville, Ind. HOOD’S FILLS Cure Biliousness*
H' WR H^veToHJ^ Ihl nbyßUcians Cosildn’t Cure. X Bkdamsviluk, Hamilton Co., Ohio, June, 1889. One bottle of Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonio cured me entirely, oft-er physicians had tried unsuccessfully for 8 months to relievo me of nervous debility. W. HUENNEFELL. Deem It a Great messing, Strbatob, HL, Dec. C, DO. Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic Is the very best I have ever found. I certainly deem it a great blessing to all persons afOlcted. May the blessing of God be upon It. Y’ours most respectfully, SISTER OF ST. FRANCIS, O. 8. F. Mouton, 111., July, 1890. I must inform you that Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic had the desired effect in the nervous trouble from which I was Buffering, and I need not use It any longer. A thousand thanks for the benefit derived from yourmediclne. CHRIffTIAN KAUFMANN. A Valuable Book on Nervous O L w Diseases sent free to any address, S si « I an< l Poor patients can also obtain | Ilk La tills medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1876. and is now prepared unde»his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Sold by DruggiKts at SI per Bottle. 0 for ®5, Large Size. 81.75. C Bottles for S 9. A SICK LIVER is the cause of most of th« depressing, painful and unpleasant sensations aud sufibrings with which we ar; afflicted; and these sufferings will continue so 1 n r »« the Liver is al owed to remai i in this sick or sluggish condition. To stimulate the Liver and other digestive organs to a normal condition and healthy activity, there is no better medicine than DADWAY’S n PILLS, The most perfect, safe and reliable Cathartic that has ever been compounded—PUltELY VEGETABLE, , positively containing no Mercury or ether deleterious substances; having all the beneficial properties that Mercury is possessed of as a cathartic, without the danger of any of its evil consequences, they have superseded Mercury, and have become the Pill of Modern Science. Elegantly coated and without tasta there Is no difficulty in swallowing KADWAY’S PILLS; mild and gentle or thorough in their operations, according to the dose, they are the favorites of the present f 'e. i They cure al. disorders of the Stomach, Liver Bowels, Kidneys. Bladder. Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite. Headache, Costiveness, Indigestion. Dyspepsia. Biliousness. Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels. Piles, and all the derangements of tfie Internal Viscera. 25 cents a box—sold by Druggists. DR. RADWAY & CO . 32 Warren Street. N. Y. City. Consumption carries off i many of its victims needa m — b lessly. It can be stopped * sometimes ; sometimes it cannot. * It is as cruel to raise false ; hopes as it is weak to yield to false fears. p There is away to help r within the reach of most who are threatened— careful liv- • Ing and Scott's Emulsion of o cod-liver oil. t . Let us send you a book f on the subject ; free. ScottS Bownk, Chemists, 134 South 4th Avenue, New York. | Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion pl cod-liver Oil—all druggists everywhere do. |t. i 3’ ■ B ANAKESlSgiveslnKtant Sa 9 I I ■ ■ relief, mid is an INFaLLISI I S I W BLE CURE for PILES. 8 I &■ Price. »l; at druggists or j I _ w by mall. Samples free. ■ LLU Address “ANAKESIS,” a ■ EM SB go, 2418. x KW York City. The Silver Bill. Mr. Bland acknowledges that the Silver bill is beaten, and he is a very i much disappointed and disgusted man. At the beginning of the session he had so large a majority in favor of it that every one supposed j he had a walkaway. The people of | the West will have to depend upon ' themselves hereafter. They have one consolation: they will And in Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure the best remedy on the market for all cases of lung trouble. It contains no opium or chloroform, nor any other deleterious substance, but it will cure any malady that comes from a cold, and is particularly efficacious in pneumonia, croup in children, pleurisy, rheumatism, and other maladies that people are subjected to who are I exposed to the open air. Ask your ; druggist for this great remedy, and i take no other. The small bottles are 25 ”ents, the large ones 50 cents. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria. 111. PATENTS! PENSIONS! Send for Inventor’s Guide, or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Laws. PATKICK O’FAKtvELL. Washington, D. C.
THE COST IS THE, SAME. iti 111 ii a J THE HARTMAN STEEL PICKET FENCE 1 Costs no more than an ordinary clumsy wood pieket affair that obstructs the view and will rot or fall apart I in a short time The Hartman Fence is artistic in design, protects the grounds without concealing them, and is nracticailv everlast.ng. lI.LI\'TR.VIBI> CATALWE Him PHIUES A.Xl> TE*ll MUX IALS ! MAILED EREE. Address your nearest agent. HARTMAN MFtl. CO., Beaver Falls, Fa. T. D. GANSE. General Webern Sales A sent. 508 State St., Chicago. Lvplow-Saylob Wibk Co., St. Louis. Mo , Agents for Southern Missouri and Southern Illinois. Av'Alwaas mention this paper. I ..
© « FAT FOLKS REDUCED I /VN Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, Mo., writes: I \ Ul I j “My weight was 920 pounds, now it is 195 a reduction of 12b lbs.” For circulars address with 60.. I Dr. O.Wj’.SNYDER. McVicker’. Theatre. Chicago. UL Send me any picture and 1 will mail you .X CABINET PHOTOGRAPHS of same. postpaid, for ONLY ONE DOLLAR. Now is your chance. Superior finish and guaranj teed. F. G. GLKSIENT. 10 So. pc“idA St . Chicago, LU.
‘August Flower” “I have been afflicted with biliousness and constipation for fifteen years and first one and then another preparation was suggested to me and tried, but to no purpose. Afr nd recommended August Flower „d words cannot describe the adu’ "ation in which I hold it. It has given me a new lease ofilife, which before was a burden. Its good qualities and wonderful merits should be made known to everyone suffering with ■dyspepsia and biliousness.” JESSE Barker, Printer, Humboldt, Kas.@ Sii It Cures Colds. Cousbs. Sore Throat, Croup, Influenza. Whoopmk Coujfh, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure fur Consumption in first S'aves, aud a-ur - relief in atlvanced stages. Use at • n e. You will see the excelle it eflect after taliing the first dose. Seid by aea.ers everywhere. Laige bolt e-. 51 cents and SI.OO. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187a W? BAKER & CO.’S 51 Breakfast Cocoa from which the excels of oil ^ aß been removed, Zs absolutely pure and it is soluble, d* Cllca fin If R1 \\ are used In ita preparation. It iW ’ IH I H has more than three times th, lit I t lili strength of Cocoa mixed with Ma 'i I B a I Starck. Arrowroot or Sugar, I i |l S I an( l * 8 therefore far more ecoSbl I I /I U S Domical, costing less than on, K&H I I Ij (j Icentacap. Itiadelicious,nourishing, strengthening, easilt digested, and admirably adapted for invalid! as well as for persons In health. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Masa, ONLY TRUE (SP IRON Atonic Parity BLOOD, regnlata KIDNEYS, remove LIVER disorder, build strength, renew appetite, restore health and vtotgSiA vlgorofyouth. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, that tiredfeelingabsolutely eradicated. Min<l brightened, brain 1 ' power increased, I Q If* A bones, nerves, mnsI Sil IL* cles, eeive new force. 5 Gh S • I » suffering from complaints peL M 07 I L SJ culiar to their sex, using it. find — । a safe, speedy cure. Returns rose bloom on checks, beautifies Complexion. bold everywhere. All genuine goods bear ‘Crescent. ’ bend us 2 cent stamp for 32-paga pamphlet. H 6 OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St Louis, Mo. MOTHER CYCLE SHOW.
This time it is being held at the LCBI RG MTU CO’S Salesrooms, 821, 323 and 325 N. Sth SU, Philadelphia. It includes the Sprinter Safety, a diamondframe, long head, long wheel base, straight tubes throughout, etc., and the Ladies’ Sprinter, a handsome drop frame. The Traveler Safeties are the beet value ever offered and range in price from 813.00 togaO.OO. About twohundred different styles to select from. We also manufacture Children’s Carriages, Refrigerators, Office Desks, Reclining and Invalid Rolling Chairs. Name goods wanted and catalogue will be sent. Liberal discounts to the trade.
MH W|S|ri
Sib HktntT Thompsos, the most noted physician of England, says that more than half of all diseases come from errors in diet Send for Free Sample of ^Garfield Tea to 319 West j 45th Street, New York City.
GARFIELD TEA = ofbad sating;cure» Sick Headache; reßiore»LomplexKm;cure*Conßtipation. Egg M ■■ IlhiHirated Publications, with U j I MAPS, desert mug Minnesota. K ?■ North Dakota. Mo tana, Idaho, II I I Washincton and Oregon, the Free v ■ Govern me Jit and CHEA I 1 Northern 2 Pacific R. r LHIWQ Best Agricultural, Grazing and Timber Lanas now open to settlers. Mailed FREE. Address CHAS. 8. LAMBORN Land Com. N.P.K.R., Bt.Paul.Minn. ras £ ! fiS i A 12-inch Statuette of the Great gj I fl 18l L I Statesman, sent to any address, ol UiHl 125 cents. IC. >. GRAY, ■ 183 Madison St., Chicago Uli MDMILLS direct fr. m factory to user. Write for Vs 111 price. Shields Windmill Co., Nashville, Mich.
C. N. U. No. IG ‘Ji WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, ’ * please say you saw the advertisement in this paper. ggj Piso’s Remedy foi Catarrh Is the ® Best, Easiest to Use. and' Cheapest, gg|Sold by druggists or sent by mail. BS 50c. FT. Hazeltine, Warren Pa. IB
