St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 40, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 April 1892 — Page 3
Copyright isaa Can't be found —-the equal cf Dr. Fierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. If other medicines of its class were like it, theykl* be guaranteed. This is. If it doesn’t benefit qr cure, in every case for which it's recommended, you get your money back. It isn’t a “cure-all,” but it does cure . nil diseases arising from a torpid or deranged liver, or from impure blood. For all Serotinous, Skin and Scalp Diseases, it’s a positive reqiedy. Even Consumption, er Lungscrofula, is cured by it, if taken in time and given a fair tr.al. That a all that’s asked for it—a fair trial. Then, if it doesn’t help you, there’s no pay. We claim it to be an unequaled remedy to purify the blood yml invigorate the liver. Vv e claim it to be°lasting in its offsets, creating an appetite, purifying the blood, and preventing Bilious, Typhoid and Malarial fevers, if taken in time. The time to take it is when you first feel the signs of reeanncss and weakness. By druggists.
AT ’ ft ts? 5 I fAKE The next morning i feel bright and NEW AND hSftcOWPLEXION IS SETTER. I My doctor says it acts gently on the stomach, liver I and kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative. This drink Is made front herb!;, aud is prepared for use as easily I as tea. It is cal led LAWS WEDIGIHE All druggists sell it at 50c. and SI.OO per package, i Buy one to day. Lane's Family Medicine move, the bowels each day. Lu order to be healthy, this U necessary.
Free a beautifully .illus- ■ 1 V ♦ trated book, e^ntainby flail. "is ov e r ninety pages ’of most important m- . formation about the IO ailments of women. | w Also a full code of j established rules of ' |^ettqueU'??<?t^ me ” and a por p e —^MMwMnsnaMMiMM^ woman, young or old, shoulSbecome familiar
with, and advice which has restored many and many a suffering woman to perfect health and h^pin 's. No woman should live without a copy of “ Guide ta. Health and Etiquette” by Lydia E. Pinkham. Send 2 two-cent stamps to cover postage and packing when you write. Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass.
Physicians Couldn’t Ciire. X EEHamswble, Hamilton Co., Ohio, June, 1689. One bottle of Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic cured me entirely, after physicians had tried unsuccessfully far 8 months to relieve me of nervous debility. W. HUENNEFELD. Deem II a Great Blessing. Streator, HL. Dec. 5, 'SO. Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic is the very best I have ever found. I certainly deem it a great blessing to all persons aiKicted. May the blessing of God be upon it. Yours most respectfully, SISTER. OF ST. FRANCIS, O. S. F. Mobton, 111., July, 1890. I must inform you that Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic hud the desired effect in the nervous trouble from which I was suffering, and X need not use it any longer. A thousand thanks for the benefit derived from your medicine. CHRISTIAN KAUFMANN. & Valuable Book on Nervous V V » Diseases sent free to any address, jR F [ an<s P° or patients can also obtain B 5 1 this medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1376. raid is now prepared under his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. 6 for 85 Larae Size, 81.75. 6 Bottles for bl. QO©Q© O O O O Q It is for the cure of dyspepsia and its ^attendants, sick-headuclxe, constipa^f’’} tion and piles, that have become so famous. Tliey act gently, without grioing or nausea. @OOOOO9OOO Fa SC 3 ANAKESIS gives instant 19 0 Ku relief, and is an INF ALLI. H J g IX RLE CUKE for PILES. H 3 fa® W Price, $1; at druggists or Ki H 14 n A by mail. Ham pies i free. K»_M_ R-J Address “ANAKESIS,” LliSt*_23 80x2416, New York City. BEST POLISH THE WORLD. | 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 consum,er pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. KAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TOHS.
BABY M’KEh’S GOAT. 1 SAID TO BE A VICIOUS THOROUGHBRED. ] The President’s Grandson Cypresses a Longing Desire for a Little Red Wagon and an Animal of the Goat Kind—Senatorial Fighters. Another Resignation Rumor. WASHINGTON correspond-■ cnce: Another I
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and it was all brought about because of । a Harlem goat which Baby McKee ac- ' quired recently. I A week ago Baby McKee suddenly ! formed an idea that he wanted to drive out on his own account, and concluded ’ that a bearded go.it and a red wagon i would be about the proper sort of turn- I out. When he suggested the scheme to his illustrious giand father, the latter vetoed it, but there went up such a wail at : once that Baby McKee —who, by the ; way, is an infant industry old enough to : be spanked instead of encourag; d—was given his way, and one of the liveried i servants of the executive mansion was ; sent out into the hedges and the high- ‘ ways, commissioned to acquire a sad- ■ eyed William goat with unimpaired di- I gestion, a creditable imperial, and which
j would drive well hitched to a red wagon. ' 4 Such a goat was found to be a commodity j only in the Harlem market, and one was bought and installed, a day or so ago, in the Presidential stable at the dictation of the grand-on. It is believed that th 1 purchase of the I goat in Now Yo: k was a shrewd political move to strengthen the administration. It is said on the authority of a gentleman who is quite n ar to the Administration—being a doorkeeper—that the purchase of the g >at was discuss, d in a Cabinet meeting. Secretary Tracy proposed a Brooklyn goat and said that very vivacious and intelligent goats abounded in Brooklyn. Post:ra<t 'i-General 'Wanamaker proI posed an Angora goat. President Har- । rison objected that it would be unpat- ! triotie to import a foreign goat. All the i members of the < abinet then agreed (that it would excite the antagonism of ' the goat industry of the United States ito bring a go.it from abroad. Secretary i Rusk, speaking for the Agricultural De- ■ partment, thought it would be wise to j get a goat with long whiskers, line Sen-
ator Peffer’s. Secretary of War Elk ns BABY M’KEK ANO UIS GOAT proposed to buy a goat in Harlem, which he said would strengthen the Harlem Republican (Tub and make the administration popular in New York < City. I The president and a l the members of ! the Cabinet indorsed Secretary Elkins’ i ideas. A confidential agent of the administration was sent to Harlem, and he bought a promising goat of the owner of a goat farm on the rocks north of Central Park It happened that when the goat arrived "Willis,” the coachman, had taken the President’s Cleveland bays ; and gone out foi a drive. By an inadjvertence'of one of the servants the । goat was not assigned to any particular 1 suite in the presidential stablts, but : allowed to ramble around at his own i sweet will and feed on tap-robes, har- ' nesa and other luxuries which had been denied him in Harlem. When । “Willis” returned and opened the barn 1 door the William goat resented his appearance. He bleated loudly, stood on his head once < r twice and prepared to greet the coachman. When the greeting was over "Willis” was worse for the wear. By the aid of one of his staff he managed finally to lock the goat in an empty stall, and next proceeded to take an inventory of the supplies of the stable. He foun 1 two or three boxes of axle grease gone, the harness chewed up in a frightful manner, and an old mackerel kit, in which he had a stock of lins cd oil, had been drained of its contents and upset. “Willis” instituted an inquiry at once to learn how the goat happened to be installed in the barn, and when he learned the true cause he went into a case of sulks and hasn’t got over it yet. “Willis” has submitted an ultimatum customary with high officials when they threaten to resign, that the President must either accept the resignation of j his hated rival, the William goat, or the i coachman’s. Col. IngersoTs Gusli. Ingersoll’s address at the grave of Walt Whitman added nothing to the good gray i oct, added nothing to the esteem in whiclr he will be held by the present generation nor by generations yet to come.—Baltimore American. Col. Bob Ingersoll, like many a less able and equally ardent man, is sometimes given to gush. An instance is furnished in his declaration that AValt Whitman was the most eminent American. The general opinion seems to ba that this is a bad “slop over.” But, then, Bob must be eloquent regardless of fact.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Col. Ingersoll is nothing if not gushing, Put when he declared that the late AValt Whitman was “the most eminent citizen of this republic” we think that he drew it just “a leetle bit” strong. Indianapolis Jonrnal. Col. Ingersoll’s eulogy of Walt hitman was graceful but extravagant. Nobody but Col. Ingersoll would have called the good gray poet the most eminent citizen of the republic or have Baid that he had uttere 1 more supreme words than any writer of this or almost any other century. Sometimes an eloquent man gets carried off his feet. —Boston Herald.
A Picture <f Modern Life. Some half dozen years ago I knew a man who was hard, stern, grasping; who never allowed a dollar to slip through his fingers, whose faithful wife worked early and late that he might not have to spend an unnecessary cent. Many and many a time have I seen her on hetknees, cleaning her floor with a brush; I have seen her, too, sta d up and put her hands to her back and moan with pain. I have seen her paint her floors, I paper her own walls, amt beat her own i carpets, with great rough hands and red , arms bared to the blistering winds, j Well, let me tell you how she was rewarded. I Alter years had wo n by in toil and care, v.ith never a caress or a word of apprvdatk n or a ray of pleasure, this unhappy couple bought a lot in a line location and built thereon a bi autiful home —one that excited admiration in ! every breast. It was all finished and : elegantly furnisho 1. The lawn was the loveliest in the whole city, with fountains playing ujon it from morning till n.ght; the greenhouse was filled with ram flowers. Oh, each time I passeel that house I broke a commandment! i 1 When it was ready for occupancy the : poor tired, worn-out wife sickened, anel I on the very night she was to have moved | into her new house she gave one long ; sigh and went home to a land whence I there is no returning. I In live months her husband had mar- ! • ried again, and everything that had been | planned with such patient hope and love , had to be changed to please the new ; mistress, wh.le the old one with the brokin heart lay with care-lined face ■ and hard, work-worn hands out in L ne i Fir cemetery. This was the first pici tine of its kin I that I ever saw, but I have since found admi able copies of it hanging along the walls of life. Tiap h r Catch ng Beetles. A curious contrivance by which those ■ whose kitchens and cellars are over- ; stocked with black beetles can get rid of at least a considerable portion of them has recently been patented. It consists
resignation rumor is ’ abroad this time i which seems to be ! founded upon fact. | It does not involve ' either Mr. Blaine or I the President, but instead a member of \ the official family ■ ^whose f u n c tions, I ^though ornamental, are quite ind is - ? pensable to the -President. This |tiine it is the Presi- ' dent’s squint-eyed ; coachman, “Willis,” I
! of a circular casting with inclined sides, : up which the beetles or other insects can run, and an inverted saucer-shaped I dish on a pivot in the center of the casing, with a receptacle for bait at its upper part. The arrangement is such that when a beetle steps up a side of the casing and over on the inverted dish its weight will tilt the dish and cause : the beetle to fall to the bottom of the trap, the dish righting immediately the weight of the beetle Is removed. How, “Indeed?” There is a scheme afoot to cr ate a । greater Boston by including sixty-eight ■ towns and cities in one vast metropoli- ; tan district, with Boston as the bub. ; The author of the scheme, which his ; name is Smith, hop s to overcome local jealousies by letting each town in the proposed metropolis manage its own local affairs. But Boston appears to lie somewhat lukewarm in the matter, asking, with line scorn, how there can be any greater Boston thin the Boston that now is. Falling Over a I'recipieo Is a terrible thing even in dreams. The victim o’ thia frequent form o' uig tiuarea.vake, wi h a Btart and a ciy; Lis limbs bathed In cold perspiration, bin heart thumping treruuudous- . ly.«^Moral : Don't sleep on your back, particular!, if you are troubled with dyspepsia and “t, »nd use Hosteller 's Stomach RHveV'cure these ;olut troubles. For aleopleaa. -i_ m-. , the ius.psrat.le attendant of chronic .he. and Its oCsprlng as won rutt-ra is HesMaaMTaoeiUg nmnlv. lie df*. id.-rall ,e ■■ syrnpW'ml. umi organa ut thinking are a faitlif^l reflector of Its disturbance, hi which the ll.^ ff>r and bowels also share. If wo are Vo ><f.tore quietude to the bruin and nervous bj st An, wo must re-enforce tho stomach and regulate tho action of the dfge-ti\e, secretive, and evacuutivo organs J revent ami remedy malaria, iuac lvin of the kidneva and bladder, debility, hi at tburu, i ick b< iuln< h<-an 1 la grippe with Ibis remedy, which Ln - received the uuquulitied sanction of < mi: e it 1 byekLina. Theke are nearly iOO.OOO miles of railway in the United Suites. In I^3o there were only 23 miles; in 1810, 2,SIS; in 1850, 9,021; in 1MG0; 30.G28; in 1870, . 52,922; in 1880, 93,296; in 1890, 166,817 miles. How’• l ids ? | We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case f Catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Ball's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY it CO., Props , Toledo. O. , We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cha. . . ney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business traiisvtioiis aud financially able to cany out any obligations made by tbelr firm. West.K Tiiiax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Waldino, Kinnax & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken iuternallv, acting s directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 750 per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. New York is the leading Irish city in the world in point of jo;ulation. Dublin contains 254,060 human souls and New York claims to have 300,000 Irish citizens. Excellent Service. At 5:45 p. m. the -Fast Train” leaves Chicago, via the Wisconsin Central lines, j for St. l aul, Minneapolis, Ashland, Duluth and the iron to vns. composed of through' Pullman vestibuled sleepers to Chippewa Falls and Eau Claire, St. Paul and Minneapolis, Ashland and Duluth, making close connections at Union Depot, bt. Paul, with the new train which has just I een placed in service via the Northern Pacific Railroad to the Pacific coast, leaving St. I’aul daily at 9 a. m. At 10:45 p. m. the “Pacific Express” lea ves Chicago for the Pacific coast, xla the Wisconsin Central and Northern Pacific lines, composed cf Pullman vestibuled drawing-room and tourist sleepers, running tl r. ugh to Portland, Ore., and Ta< onia, Wash., without change. For tickets, time tables, berth reservations, etc., apply to Ci:y Ticket Office, 205 So.uth Clark street, Chicago, 111., or to Jas. C. Pond. General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Chicago, lIL The output of iron in the Southern States for 1& T was about 2,912,' 0J tons. Any book tn ‘-Purpris ■ Series,” (best authors). 25 cent novels, about 209 pages each, sent free.postpaid, by Cragin & Co., of Philadelphia, Pa..on receipt of 20 wrappers of Dobbins' Electric Soap. Send 1 cent for catalogue. Ethel: “I will wait until I fin lan ideal man before I marry. ” Clarissa: s “Yes; but suppose he wants to marry an ideal woman?” Mr. C. D. Paixe, publisher of the Union 1 Signal. Chicago, HL, writes: I never saw anything that would cure headache like your Bradycr tine. Os all Druggists. 50c. I Our bewildering language. The count, whispering: “Ah, malemoiselle, you ave sooch a beautiful hide.” If you will be truly happy, keep your ! blood pure, your liver f rom growing torpid, I by using Beecham's Pilis. 25 cents a box'. | Chicago has a Woman’s Banking Company. For a Concn on Sore Throat the best medi- I cine by far is Hale’s fatnouu Honey of HobbKOUNU and Tab. | Fike's Toothache Df.ofs Cure in one Minute, i
A MOST GRAPHIC STORY. IT IS TAKEN DIRECT FROM REAL LIFE. A Charming New England Lady Tells Iler Experience Both Abroad and in America. Tho unwritten romances of life are more 1 wonderful and far more interesting than : the most vivid works of fiction. Trie one we are about to relate occurred in real life, and is Loth interesting and instructive. ■ Mrs. JenisJe liay formerly lived in Man- ; Chewier, N. 11. Her home was pleasant, : her surroundh gr comfortable. In the year 18b0 she visiteu England, and nhile in that country began to experience strange sensa- ; tlous. At first she attributed them to the I change of cl.mate, but they c nitlnued and ; Increased, until finally, Use many anol cr ; woman, sho became utterly discouraged. it was while tn this condition that Mrs. Kay returned to America and her home. Thousands of women who read this story £un appreciate the coi dill, n In which Mrs. Kay then was, and sympathize with lor sutl'ering. Two prominent physicians were called aud endeavored to da al! in their power for her relief. In s,.ite, however, of gheir skill M s. Kay grew weaker and mote depres-ed, while the agony she endured seemed to increase. It was at this time that a noted physician wl o was called declared Mrs. Kay was suffering from cancer, said there was no help, and told hi r friends she c mid not live more than a v.eek at iho furthest. And here comes the Interesting part of Die story, which we will endeavor to tell in Mrs. Ray’s own words, the said: “Unßeo n to all these physicians, I had been using a preparation of which I had heard much. I did not tell the p lysicians because I feared they would ridicule me, and perhaps order its discontinuance. During all the while that th' physicians were attending tue the preparation was steadily and faithfully doing Its own work in its own way. and 1 had faith in its power. At ; last the doctor said there was no use of his । coming, for he could do me no good. I had I suffered so much that I was quite willing to die, but it seems I was nearer relief than I knew. One week from the day the doctor last called a false growth, as large as a coffee cup, and which icoKed as though it had been very large, left me. I sent for a doctor, and he declared it was a fibroid
tumor, but said he had never known one to Come away of Itself before. I Immediately began to gain health and strength, and I unhesitatingly declare that my re cue from death was due solely to the marvellous effects of Warner’s Safe Cure, which was the remedy I took unknown to the physicians, and which certainly rescued me from the grave. It is my firm belief that many ladies who are said to die of cancer of the womb are cases like nine, and if they could be Inducqjl to use Warner's Sato Cure they, 'like me, might bo saved." The above grapbl'’ account is perfectly true in every respect. Mrs. Jennie Kay f^fow living at 142 West 6th street.. South Boston. Mass., and If any lady doubts the above statement she can address Mr-. Ray, who will gladly answer all questionsoipgrant an interview of a confidential nature to any lady who may choose to call upon her. It Is said that “ .uth Is stranger than fiction.” and when tho thousands of suffering, helpless women who are upon the roadlwhleh physicians s y leads only to death, consider the story us above given, there Is reason for hope and Joy. even although they may be now in the depths of despondency and misery. To such ladles tho above truthful account Is willingly given. A Georgia man boasts possession of an ordinary school slate, which has been in । ns'.aut use for more than fifty years, , and is yet unbroken. Why cont.nue the use of remedies that Only 4 rollcv e, when Ely's Cream Balm. pleajAint of application and a sum euro for < anil cola in head, can bo had. Iff* ’ tt ~C T f' r c atlXfirbo- , so deaf 1 coul I n t hear c mmon conv'jMntl.n. 1 suffered terribly from roaring bead. 1 procured a battle of Ely’s C>q®. Balm, and In three w eeks could hear a* vAMI as <•» er. and now 1 can say to all whf/nro afflicted w th the worst of diseasev. Cr.tarth. take I.iy’s Cream Balm and be cured. It is worth SI.<»00 to any man. wom:tn or child suffering from catarrh.—A. E- Newman, Grayling. Mich. Apply Balm into each nostril It Is Quickly A s irbed. (hi ts liEMG’ at once. Price 50 cents a’ Druggists or by mail. ELY RRuTHFKS. 56 Warren St., New Y rk. COUGHS. HOA KSEN ESS, SORE THROAT, i etc. .quickly rellev ed by Bhow ns Bhonch io. ’ 11KX hes. '1 hey sin pass all other preparations In rem i Ing hoarseness and as a evutjh i remedy are pre-eminently the best. A Poughkeepsie man, 72 years old, is suing a GO-year-old widow for breach of promise of marriage. I .. lie/ Hr. Warren I>. Wentz ot Geneva, N. Y., Is given the highest indorsement for honesty and integrity by all who know him. For years he has worked for Mr. D. I’. Wilson, theihar-ness-maker and member of the Geneva Board of H al th. Head the following statement o: his terrible sufferings from Dyspepsia And his cure by Hood's S irsaparilla : -I was taken Eick last Oc obor with gastric lev. r, and my recovery was considered almost hop less. Alter 7 wetks the fever slowly left ue, but I could not e.it the simplest food without Terrible Distress It seemed that I had recovered from the fever to die oi starvation. I took pepsin compounds, 1 ismuth .charcoal, cod-liver oil an 1 malt until i mv pbyrician confessed that ha did not know I v hat else to try. Everything I took seeme 1 I i Like Pouring Melted Lead into my stomach. I happened to think I had j part of a bottle of Hold’s Sarsapaiilia that had ■ been in ths house for two or three years, that I ’ lound had benefited me previou Ely for dyspepsia. I I egan taking it and soon be.an to feel better. I I have now taken a little owr two bo’tles and can truthfully gay I le I well again, and can eat anything without distressing me, even to I pie and cheese, which I have been unable to touch for years. The English language d es not contain words enough to permit me to express the praise I would like to give toHeod's Sarraparilla." W. D.Wentz.lß’2 Castle St.,Geneva, N.Y. A Good Voucher “I have known Mr. Warren D. Wentz for many years, and can vouch for him as a man of veracity and one well an wn about here. I have sold him several bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla during the past fewmcEths.” M. H. Partridge, Druggist, Geneva. N. Y. HOOD’S PILLS Curs LIVER ILLS.
Tbe Only One E rer Printed - Can Ton Find the Word? There Is a 3-!nch display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same Is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a “Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for It, send them the name of the word, and they will retur.n you book, beautiful lithographs, or samples free. _______ Gladstone„is said to regard the eating of salt as an aid to health. If affl ctel with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isa io Thommon’s Eve Water. Diumrists sell it 2>a i SMwfegil 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. j Jacobs Oil. T. C. DODO. I
ONU enjoys Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the atomach, prompt jn its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most heaithy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it tho most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and'Sl bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SiN FRANC SCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KV. NEW YORK. N.Y.
Kennedy’s . Medical Discovery lakes hold in this order: Sowels. Liver. Kidneys. Inside Skin. Outside Skin, Drivins everything before It that ought to be out. I'ou know whether yon need it or not. Sold by every druggist, and manufactured by DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS. Smple Cake of Soap 128 page Book on Derma4ogy and Beauty. Illustrated. On Skin, Scalp, Nervous and Blood Diseases. Sent sealed for 10c.; also Disfigurements like Birth SI arks. Moles, Warts, India Ink and Powder marks. Scars Fittings,Redness of Nose Superfluous Hair. Pimples, etc. JOHN H. WOOD BURY, . fXl^’rflG'gß ••ermalologi.t. 125 •tree*. N. V 50* 1. City. Consultation ——*** mi free, at office or by letter.
RIPANS TABULES regulate} k the stomach, liver and bowels, puri A fv the blood, are safe and effectual; • the best medicine known for bilious- • >/ness. constipation, dyspepsia, foul® / breath, headache.mental depression, • painful digestion, bad complexion.# and all diseases caused by failure or • the stomach, liver or bowels to per- ♦ |
o e jr
• form their proper functions. Persons given to over-j o eating are benefited by taking one after each neal.J © Price. $2; sample. 15c. At Druggists, or sent bj mail. J • RIFANS CHEMICAL CO., lb Spruce St., New York d Send me any picture and I will mail you CABINET PHOTOGRAPHS of same, postpaid, for ONLY ONE I>OLLAK. Now is your chance. Superior finish and guaranteed. F. G. CLEMENT, 10 So. Peoria St., Chicago, 111.
' CHEAPER THAM BARB WIRE. a ~ ■ L •” \ z\ /\ \/' Mzy/ *• -V, if/ « * *-\}}"" ^r^'* *‘* ^T**j HARTMAN WIRE PANEL FENCE. Double the Strength of any other fence; will not stretch, sag. or get out of shape. Hann'e-. to stock. A Perfect Farm Fence, yet Handsome enough to Ornament a Lawn. Write for Prices. Descriptive Circuit and Testimonials cho Catalogue ot Hartman Steel Picket Lawn Fence, Tree and Flower Guard- Flexib"* Wire Mats, &c. Address yo.ir nearest agent. HARTMAX MFU. CO., Heaver Falls, Pa. T. I>. GAXSE, General Western Sales Age t, 538 State St.. Chicago. Ludlow-Saylob Wibe Co., St. Louis. Mo., Agents for Southern Missouri and Southern Illinois.' Al ways mention this paper.
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। < xiii.k *j' 11 * Send t» 519 45U*3L, K.T.,fo» Sample*«f
in
BARFIELD TEA S of hadeai mg;curo« Sick Headache; £e»toreiConn>lciion;curci Constipation.
“German Syrup” Two bottles of German Syrup cured me of Hemor’-hage of the Lungs when other remedies failed. I am a married man and, thirty-six years of age, and live with my wife and two little girls at Durham, Mo. I have stated this brief and plain so that all may understand. My case was a bad one, and I shall be glad to tell anyone about it who will write me. Philip L. Schenck, P. O. 80X45, April 25, 1890. No man could ask a more honorable, busi- ; ness-like statement. _® It Cures Colds, Coughs. Sore Throat, Croup, Influenza, Whooping Cough. Bronchitis and Abthnia. A certain cure for Consumption in first | raises, and a Mir 1 relief in advanced stages. Usa I at on e. You will see the excelle it ell'ect after taking the first dose. Sold by nea.ers oveiywiiero. Large nottles, 59 cents and SI.OO.
The Excretory Organs. The excretory organs consist of the lungs, the kidneys, and the skin. The lungs remove the carbonic acid from the blood, the kidneys take the uric acid from the blood, and the skin removes the surplus water and at the same time assists the lungs in removing the carbonic acid. Now if the skin be suddenly chilled, the small pores through which the water has been oozing are suddenly closed. The work is tUen thrown upon the lungs and kidneys. If a large p rtion of the skin is thus affected, the kidneys refuse to perforin their office, and, in common language, “the cold settles upon the kidneys,’’and the result is that all the work of purifying the blood has to be done bj the lungs, and if this is prolonged for any length of time they break down, and the result is pneumonia or pleurisy, and, under certain conditions, consumption. Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure incites the kidneys to action, stimulates the circulation, and thus enables the system to relieve the lungs of part of their work. Get this remedy of any
dealer; 25 and 50 cents a bottle. Sylvan Remedy Co.. Peoria, 111. (^LITTLE LIVER PILLS DO KOT GRIPE NOR SICKEN. Sure cure for SICK HEAD^CHEi impaired digestion, consti- . pation, torpid glands. They arouse ▼hal organs, remove nausea, dizS tineas. Magical effect on Kid- < nevs and bladder. Conquer 3 bilious nervous diso Ol orders. Establish nat- < w ural Daily action. Beautify complexion by purifying blood. Purely Vegetable. The dose is nicely adjusted to suit case, as one pill can never betoo much. Each vial contains 42, carried in vest pocket, like lead pencil. Business man’s great convenience. Taken easier than sugar. Sold every* where. All genuine goods bear “Crescent” Send 2-cent stamp. You get 32 page book with sample. DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St. Louis, Mo. THERE ARE ONLY A FEW LEFT.
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f Successfully Prosecutes Ciai/ns. Lite Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3 yrs in la&t war, 15 ad indicating claims, atty siuceb © ^FAT FOLKS DEDUCED / /] Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, Mo., writes: i \ Hl I / “My ~“ight was 320 pounds, now it is ]jsb B reduction of 125 lbs.” For circulars address, with fic^ Dr. O.W.F.SNYDER. McVicker’s Theatre. Chicago. ILL
< *«• >» 17 WRITING TO AIAVERTISERS, iu tbbpaper ay y° u saw the advertisement B ~ g ! Consumptive* and people H| who have weak lungs or Asth- BS mg, should use Piso s Cure for ■■ Consumption. It has cured 9 thousands, ft has not injur- |9 ed one. It is not bad to take. Ba It is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 35c.
