St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 7, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 3 September 1892 — Page 3
A Gentlewoman. What la a gentlewoman? Let an Illustration be a definition. Mrs. William A. Hazard was a grand-niece of the late Samuel J. Tilden. She was his favorite niece, which shows that the old statesman knew a good woman when he saw one. Mr. Tilden, after giving liberal bequests to those allied.to him by blood or marriage, gave the bulk of his fortune to found a great public library. His kin, those who cared least for him, and were cared for least by him during life, decided to break the will. Mrs. Hazard refused to join in the contest and did what she could to defend the will by which she was to receive a little, though not much as compared with the $2,000,000 she would get if the will was broken. A hair-splitting judge decided the will invalid. Mrs. Hazard gets $2,000,000 as an heir at law. She has decided that every cent of it shall go to found the library her uncle desired to found. Mrs. Hazard is a gentlewoman. The others? Well, they do not define the same word, — Terre Haute Gazette. G. A. IL Encampment, Washington, D. C., Sept. ZO, 1892. The Monon Route to Cincinnati, in connection with the Chesapeake and Ohio Route to Washington, is the official route of the Department of State of Illinois. Special trains will leave Dearborn Station Saturday night and Sunday morning, Sept. 17 and 18, arriving at Washington the following day. The route passes all the famous battle-fields of Virginia via Gordonsville. On the return tickets will be honored from Richmond, passing Lynchburg and Appomattox. Only 82 Washington to Richmond via the Potomac River and Old Point Comfort Special stop-over privileges will be granted, enabling all to visit the battlefields without extra cost For circulars, maps, and further Information call or write F. J. Reep, O. P. A, 232 South Clark street, Chicago, 111. Sobriety on Railroads. The rapid growth of the habit of sobriety and temperance is one of the characteristics of the American railway service, the use of intoxicants becoming more and more the exception, although it is said to be the rule in the English service. It was a subject for comment in an English railway publication recently that the 5,000 laborers who were employed in changing the grade of the Great Western Railway were not allowed to refresh themselves during working hours with anything stronger than oatmeal water. Ladies, ladles, think of the engagements you have broken and the disappointments consequent to others and perhaps also to yourselves, all on account of headache. Bradycrotlne will cure you in fifteen minutes. Os all Druggists. Fifty cents. We should miss a great deal that is valuable in human nature if we confined our attention exclusively to important personages. FITS.—AII Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Keston er. No Fits after first day’s use. Mar. yelous cures. Treatise and <2.00 trial bottle free' to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 981 Arch St., Phila, Pa.
HIGH LIVING, if you keep at it, ! s apt to tell upon the liver. The things to prevent k this are Ug^Pierce’s Pleasant Feheta. al Take ono of these little Pellets for a Ttiey’ro ttio BfAirnp . | est, easiest to take, pleasantest and 8 most natural in tho way they act. H They do permanent g< 'od. ConstiH pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks | Sick or Bilious Headache, and all S derangements of the liver, stomach, I and bowels are prevented, relieved, | and cured. “ They’re guaranteed to give satis-
faction in every case, or your money is Zetumed, The worst cases of Chronic Catarrh in the Head, yield to Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. So certain is it that its makers offer SSOO reward for an incurable case.
Or, as the world expresses it, “a we 11 - preserved woman.” One who, understanding the rules of health, has followed them, and preserved her youthful appearance. Mrs. Pinkham has many correspondents who, through
A Young Woman at Fifty
her advice and care, can look with satisfaction in their mirrors. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound goes to the root of all female complaints, renews the vitality, and invigorates the sys-
tem. Intelligent women know well its wonderful powers. It is the successful product of a life’s work of a woman among women, and is based upon years of actual practice and expense. All Druggisti sell It, or sent Jr mail, in form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of SI .00. Liver Pills, Corre•pondence freely answered. Address in confidence. Lydia- E. Pinkham Mel Co., Lynn, Mass.
AT F J ^/PLEASANT
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THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND Mr COMPLEXION IS BETTER, My doctor says !t acts gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys, and Is a pleasant laxative. This drink Is made from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily as tea. It is called LAKE’S MEDIGIHE All druggists sell it at Me and |1 per package. If you cannot get It send your address for a free sample. Lau.Cs Family Medicine moves tfie bowels oaeh dar. In order to be healthy, this is ueca»(ary. Address ORATOR t. WOODWARD, Lbßoy, N. Y. F [best polish in the world? 9 j $ £ | 00 NOT BE DECEIVED^ 11 "’™"™ with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which sts,in 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 TONS.
FREE BUNKS FOR ALL. BUILDINGS ERECTED FOR ENCAMPMENT QUARTERS. The Busy Scene at the Monument Grounds, ■Where the Large Buildings Are Being Erected by the Citizens’ Committee for the Use of the Visiting Grand Army Veterans. Fifteen Thousand Beds. Washington correspondence:
88 ^7 — ta|lhHUUnirin>]H r ■ Ip
population of this town will begin to arrive. By the next day, so rapid will ba the growth, the high-water mark in the population will ba reached. A.^Bustlinfi: Sliort-Ulved Town. The town will continue to flourish and will no doubt be an exceedingly bustling place, and then in the course of four or five days an exodus will begin which will leave the place without a single inhabitant. All this sounds like a tale fiom a fairy book. But it is a sober fact. The only magician in the case is the enterprise of the business men of the city which has provided the buildings for a portion of the great multitude of old soldiers who will conic here to attend the G. A. R. encampment. Just now it is impossible to get an accurate idea of the immense undertaking which the citizens’ committee have on their hands. By the end of next week it is expected tjiat the buildings will be completed. Then there will be seen seven principal buildings grouped along the curving driveway which is on the south side of the Washington monument. A line of trees and clusters of shrubbery will partially shut off the view of the buildings from B street. All of the buildings, which are long structures with sloping roofs covered with tar paper and a line of openings for ventilation at the ridge, are built of wood, with canvas sides, the latter of which can be raised or lowered as the weather makes necessary. They have a uniform width of 64 feet, and a varying depth of THS principal building. from 200 to 350 feet. A building of the latter size has a capacity for about 2,300 men. Fifteen Thousand Men. The entire group will furnish sleeping quarters for about 15,000 men, and in the vicinity ether buildings will be put up, where the men can wash, and also buildings where they can get their meals In the vicinity space has been reserved for the members of posts which bring tents, with the intention of camping out. The buildings where the men will sleep are interesting for several reasons. The great size is, of course, an element that will attract the curiosity of the Emblio. But their design is such that hey will cost the minimum amount of money. There was no plan drawn, but Chairman Edson, in connection with Mr. W. C. Morrison, the builder,worked out the scheme from the basis of a known number of men that must bo provided with sleeping quarters. In a figurative way it may be said that 15,OCO men were put into their little beds, and the size of the buildings necessary to give them shelter was calculated to a nicety. While ample room is allowed for each man, yet there is no waste space. Eacn building is divided into two or three divisions by cross passage ways. Then aisles are run down the length of i the building with a row of bunks on each side, three high. The bunks are substantially built, and along each row is drawn tightly a substantial strip ofcanvas. The canvas is brought over a Strip of wood at the head of each bunk, then fastened down to strips in the ineide, thus supplying the place of a bolster. It is then securely fastened to each side of the bunk, and the same operation is repeated in the next bunk. In this way each bunk is supplied with a spring mattress which will receive the weary forms of the veterans and cause them to sink away into a dreamless slumber undisturbed by the nightmares which were a common experience of their soldier life, when they rolled over jSSSSS fllS fc V 1 j THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE BUNKS. on a stubborn root in the ground or some sharp-pointed stone. Each bunk is six feet long, two feet six inches wide, with a space of two feet eight inches between each bunk. Canvas Jns!ea<l of Boards. The use of canvas for covering the sides in place of boards is another admirable feature, as the canvas is not only cheaper, but it can be rolled up during a hot night, and if the weather is cool it will be ample protection. All
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TO build homes for a population of some 15,000 is, as a rule, } the work of years.
But out on the plain that surrounds the Washington Monument there is to be a settlement of that size about the middle of September. * There Is nothing gthere now except ’ swarms of busy workmen, great "masses of lumber -and skeletons of Sframe buildings. About the 19th of September the
that the occupants of these quarters will need to bring with them is a blanket, I and perhaps a comb to smooth out their tumbled hair in the morning and enough | money to buy their meals. They won’t even have the bother of thinking wheth- । er burglars are likely to break in, as the committee will have the buildings in charge of a competent corps of watchmen. A Musical Theme. When the triple row of men, sixteen in file, stretching along some 350 feet —■ | and there are seven of such combina- j tions—engage in their nightly wrestle I with old Morpheus, what a chorus of sounds will be evolved. Such a chorus I properly arranged for the orchestra j would be a drawing card in the reper- I toire of the Marine Band. Mr. Chase, who is Mr. Morrison’s su- ■ perintendent, has over 100 men at work, and by the close of next week he expects to have all the buildings completed. Quar'ers Elsewhere. Although this group of buildings will furnish quarters for about 15,000 men, yet the citizens’ committee have tc look out for about as many more. Sc the construction of four or five similai buildings will be begun at once at Garfield Park, where it is expected some 8.000 or 10,000 men will be located. A couple of buildings will be erected on the square bounded by 7th, Sth, and C streets southwest, which will accommodate some 3,000 men. In addition, the committee propose to lease the new hall over the K street market if it is completed in time, where some 2,000 men can sleep. Nearly all the school build4 LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS. ings have been assigned to Grand Army posts free of charge, the committee further supplying the necessary cots. Altogether the committee will provide sleeping quarters for a good-sized army of some 40,000. Quarters for between 15,000 and 20,000 men have been secured by the posts of which they are members, and the rent of which will be paid by the posts, so that the committee will not be under the necessity of providing sleeping accommodations for this proportion of the thousands of old soldiers who intend to come to the city in September. Care tor Your Umbrella. “Show me an umbrella,” says a manufacturer, “that. Upholes worn in..the.silk, about the ring at the top, intact throughout, and I wjl show ' you the owner of an umbrella who ■ doesn’t deserve to own one, not if it ( is a good one; and show me an umbrella that has holes in it along the j ribs before natural use of it should make them come there, and I will show you an owner who carries his umbrella more for the sake of appearance than for utility.” A wet umbrella placed handle down down drips the moisture from it at ’ the edges of the frame, and the material with which it is covered dries evenly, and leaves no spot still soaked with water. If it is stood handle upward the water runs down to one spot at the top, where the strong cloth lining about the ring holds a good deal of it, and in a comparatively short time rots the material, and it breaks easily. The man who carries his umbrella swathed in its case when it is not called into use by rain, to give him a more stylish appearance on parade, will soon find it wearing out from top to bottom. This is because of constant friction between the- case and the silk, and no matter of how good quality it may be, the holes will appear in it long-before they should, and the dealer who sold the umbrella will of course be blamed for selling inferior or damaged goods. There are many ] eople so ignorant of the proper treatment of an umbrella that they will actually roll it up when wet, and leave it to rot and mold until the next time they want it for use. Os course, if it was not for such thoughtless folks we wouldn’t sell so many umbrellas, but we would escape a great deal of grumbling and growling from customers about the quality of what we sell. If you want your umbrella, and especially a good silk one, to last twice as long as it otherwise would, always leave it loose, whether in use or not, and dry it open, with the handle down. —New York Weekly. ll© Was a Proud Old Planter. “Speaking of the decadence ol American spirit reminds me. of a proud old Arkansas planter I knew before the war,” said Col. John Hathaway of Tennessee. “I met the old gentleman in a hotel at Little Rock, and, needing seme postage stamps, asked him if he could accommodate me. He took a sheet from his big pocketbook and told me to help myself. I took quite a number and tendered him pay for them. He straightened up, looked at me severely ovei his glasses, and said: ‘Sir, a gentleman does not peddle postage stamps.’ That old man’s grandson is now coachman for a wealthy Chicago pork packer, and appears to be not a little proud of his gorgeous livery. Prosperity is a great promoter of independence. The average man is humble enough when both his Etomacli and pocketbook arc empty.”—GlobeDemocrat. The gambling tables at Monte Carle netted their proprietors over $5,000,000 last year.
“Mud that Ig More Valuable than Gold.” "There Is no gold in the hills around . our place, but there is mud that is more valuable than gold,” said Mr. H. L. I ■ Kramer, who registered yesterday at , the Auditorium, of Indiana Mineral . Springs, Warren County, Ind. It is a magnetic mineral mud, and It is more valuable than gold, for it cures rheumitism in every form, no matter how long the victim has been a sufferer.” "O, • no,” laughingly replied Mr. Kramer to I the reporter’s question, “we do not give j our patients mud to eat; it is made up ■ in poultices and placed on the joints I where the pain is the most severe. i “It is only within the past few years , that this wonderful Magnetic Mud dei posit has been known. Large quantii ties of it have been carried away, and ■ people are traveling from far and near to our new hotel and bath house, costing over $150,000, which has just been completed, in order that they may drink the Magnetic Mineral Water and bathe in the mud. There are upwards of two hundred people there to-day, and many have recovered so rapidly as to make it a wonder to themselves and their friends. We look forward to the time when people will be journeying to the In liana Mineral Springs from every State and Territory in the Union to be cured of chronic, rheumatic, and kidney diseases that baffled the best medical skill.” The mud is found immediately at the base of the cente” of a horse shoe shaped bluff, where the springs are also located, and it seems that the waters of the springs pouring forth there for countless ages has thoroughly impregnated this deposit with mineral properties, and magnetized it so that when a steel blade is left in it, after a few hours it becomes thoroughly magnetized so you can take up a large darning needle. Mr. 0. L. Stone, general passenger agent of the 0. & E. I. Railway of Chicago, has issued a beautiful little pamphlet which tells all about this wonderful health resort, and gives the experience of many prominent people who have been cured there within the last year. It will be sent by mail free, upon request.—Chicago Tribune. Philosophy of the Street. Girls learn faster than boys, and forget easier. No woman likes to hear her ealc friends ridiculed. It is generally better and easier to do a thing than to find an excuse for leaving it undone. It is not what a man does, but what he gets caught at, that weighs in the world’s judgment. People who have no time to pray are never too busy to walk half a mile to spread a scandal. Courtesy costs less and brings larger returns than any other investment a young man can make. When a boy and a dog become friends it is hard to determine which is most in need of commiseration. The great drawback to doing one’s best is that the world at once demands more of the same quality.—Milwaukee Journal. Mermaid and Mermer. The dugong, a species of whale found abundantly in the waters of both the great oceans, but especially off the coast of Australia, in the Pacific, is believed to have furnished the slender basis upon which all mermaids and Inerlengtli Is rroip eight to t it has a head much resembling that of the human species, and breathes by means of lungs. It feeds upon submarine bods of seaweeds, and when wounded makes a noise like a mad bull. Long hair in the female species, and hair and beard in the male, add to the human resemblance of the head and neck. The flesh of this whale is used for food, and has the flavor of bacon, mutton or beef, according to the parts taken. A Broken Heed, Indeed. This, and no mistake, 1b ths individual whose stamina has waned to such a low ebb, for want of an efficient tonic, that he would certainly topple over and fracture something if a bulky subject, such as a fat wife, for instance, were to lean upon him. Build up, ye lean, pithless and strengthless, with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which will enable you to eat and digest heartily, and thus acquire flesh and vigor. The fortress of life will speedily capitulate to the grim scythe-wielder, death, if you don’t. Nervousness, sleeplessness, biliousness, constipation, malaria, rheumatic and kidney trouble are all conquerable by this superb restorative of health and vigor. In connection with the use of the Bitters, it would be well for the debilitated invalid to study the w-ants of his enfeebled stomach with a view to the selection of the most digestible articles of diet. Kings Around Their Necks. A strange custom amonu the Bayanzi, who live along the Upper Congo, has been described by explorers. Brass rings, sometimes weighing thirty pounds, are welded around the necks of the wives. At first the neck becomes raw by the chafing of the ring, but after awhile it becomes calloused, although a woman has to hold the ring up frequently to get relief from the weight. The ring is never put around a woman’s neck until she has attained her full development. The women are proud of the ornament, believing that it enhances their importance and beauty. To Reclaim CO >,OOO Acres. Plans have just been completed for the construction of another great irrigating canal with reservoirs in Arizona, in the Santa Cruz Valley, and when it is completed 300,000 more acres of the great American desert will be supplying the finest kinds of fruits and grains and other products for the Eastern markets. Save Yourselves, Coughs! Hile’s Honey of Horehound and Tar prevent bronchitis and consumption. Pike’s Toothache Dross C urein one Minute. There are 800 bath-houses in which a bath can be had for one cent in Tokio, Japan. Dyspepsia, impaired digestion, weak stomach, and constipation will be instantly relieved by Beecham’s Pills. 25 cents a box. We should stop the mouth of slander by prudence.
ALL THE SAME, ALWAYS. SPRAINS. CRUISES. Mt. Pleasant, Texas, Pittsburg, Pa., June 20,1888. 302 Wylie Ave., Jan. 29,’87 Suffered 8 months with One of my workmen fell Ftrai n of back ; could not m from a ladder, he sprained Walk straight; used two g 9 and bruised his arm very bottles of jggai|Erg3is^”W badly. He used St. Jacobs Oil, g g t Jacobs Oil Was cured. No pain in Slg’Ag ® and was cured in four 18 months. KaMUm ® m slUlraii days. M. J. WALLACE. ' FRANZ X. GOELZ. A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CURE.
Normal. From an Incident reported In the Pharmaceutical Era, it is plain that some doctors are not sufficiently on their guard against frightening their patients without good reason. Old Lady—Doctor, do you think there is anything the matter with my lungs? Physician (after a careful examination) —I find, madam, that your lungs are in a normal condition. Old Lady (with a sigh of resignation) — And about how long can I expect to live with them in that condition? The True Laxative Principle Os the plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Syrup of Figs, has a permanently beneficial effect on the human system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral solutions, i usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Being well- armed, j you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Railway Growth In the Union. There are nearly 200,000 miles of railway in the United States. And yet the time is easily within the memory of ) middle-aged men, when the total railway mileage of the country was less than 10,000. HALL’S CATARRH CURE 1b a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Bend for testimonials, free. Sold by Druzgistß, 750. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. We judge our neighbors by ourselves, when they are good; when bad, by other neighbors.
Scrofula Afflicted me four years—blotches all over my body, ) swelling in my neck, and ' in less than a year had lost 40 lbs. I was induced by H. L. Tubbs, our druggist, to try HOOD’S h SARSAPARILLA, and « the blotches and lump in
Mr. G. W. Doner, my neck disappeared, and I soon began to gain in flesh. In four months there was none of the disease left in my sys- ' tern, and I was as well and strong as ever.” G. W. Doner, Osceola, South Dakota, HOOD'S PILLS are the best family cathartic, ! gentle and effective. Try a box. Only 25 cents. DADWAYT PILLS, The Creat Liver and Stomach Remedy, For the cut e of all disorders of the Stomach, Fiver, Bowols, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Headache, Constipation, Costiveness. Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles* and all demn cements of the Internal Viscera. Purely Vegetable, containing no Mercury, Minerals, or Deleterious Drugs. Price, 25c. per box. Sold by all Dru^^ints. DYSPEPSIA. PR. RADWAY'S PILLS are a cure for this complaint. They restore strength to the stomach and vuabio it to perform its functions. 'The symptoms of Dyspepsia disappear, and with them the liability ol >3” *0 contract diseases. Take the medicine in r.itc ana mspeenug iuu. - * — --- ! L#-<)bßervetJie following Hymptoms resulting from the dig--tiv« oiwanß. nation in ward piles, fullness or blood Tn mo bond I ”VStU. 1 *?; the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food,fulliiesn or weight of the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering cf the heart, choking or suffocating sensation when in a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs before the sight, fever and dull pain in the head, deficiency of perspiration, yellowness of the skin and eyes, nalu in the side, chest, limbs, and sudden flushes of neat, burning in the flesh. A few doses of RADWAY'S PILLH will free the sys- | tem of all the above-named disorders. Send a letter stamp to DR. RADWAY & CO.. No. 32 Warren Street. New York, for "False and True." Pimples Blotches EVIDENCE That the blood ii wrong, and that nature is endeavoring to throw off the impurities. Nothing is so beneficial in assisting nature as Swift's Specific {S. S. Sj It is a simple vegetable compound. Is harmless to the most delicate child, yet it forces the poison to the surface and eliminates it from the blood. I contractei' a severe case of blood poison that unfitted me for business for four years. A few bottles of Swift’s Specific (S. S- S.) cured me- J. C. Jones, City Marshal, Fulton, Arkansas, Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
A remedy-vzhich, if used by Wives about to experience tho painful ordeal attendant upon Child-birth, proves an infallible specir fle for, and obviates the tortures of con- ') flnement, 1 weening i the dangers thereof to both mother and child. Sold by all . druggists.- Sentby express on receipt of price, 21.50 per bottle, charges prepaid.
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BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Ga. FIVE WWWSSI | for Elegant Steel Engraving of Cleveland or Harrison. size 14x18. Each purchaser entitled to oue guess as to the number of votes either will poll. Three hundred and five donations, one each of J 5.000, SSOO. fXO. J2OO, $100: three hundred of $lO each. Cleveland and Harrison each polled over 5 COO CM 0 votes in 1883. SCHEKECTAaY CAMPAIGN CD. Box6ls,Schenectady.N.Y.
Lyon & healy. b 53 Monroe St., Chicago. WMI Mall Free their newly enlarged Catalogue of Band Instruments, Uni-/P” forms and Equipments, 400 Fine 11-U | lustrations, describing every article required by Bands cr Drum Corps, l Contains Instructions for Amateur Bands, fl Exercises and Drum Major s Tactics, By ■i^Laws and a Selected List of Band Music. l
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Barlow’s Indigo Blue. Ilie Family Wash Blue, for sale by Grocers.
‘August Flower” “ lam ready to testify under oath that if it had not been for August Flower I should have died before j this. Eight years ago I was taken sick, and suffered as no one but a dyspeptic can, I employed three of our best doctors and received no benefit. They told me that I had heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so that I had to throw it up. August Flower cured me. There is no medicine equal to it.” Lorenzo F. 1 SIHEPHR, Appleton, Maine. © ! REID’S GERMAN COUGH AND KIDNEY CURE. This great remedy is the best thing on the market for all maladies that arise from colds. These diseases are ' many, for when a cold attacks the system it produces a congestion in the ; blood vessels, and whatever organ is affected is weakened just as this con- ' gestion is widespread or small in extent. Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure relieves the system by stimulating the circulation, inciting the kidneys to action, and thus enaj bling the lungs to proceed in their I work of removing the carbonic acid I from the blood. When this is accomplished the cold is cured and the person is restored to health. The ordinary cough remedy seeks to stop tho cough simply by drying up or paralyzing the muscles so that the sufferer Is unable to cough, but they do not । seek to remove the cause of the trouble. A cough thus checked is often ; driven upon the kidneys, and serious ' trouble is the result. Reid’s German , Cough and Kidney Cure opens the । pores, stimulates rhe secretions and drives the disease away. Get it of any dealer. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111. Tie Best] Waterjroef Coat WORLD! SLICKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof, and will keep you dry in tho hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLICKER 13 a perfect riding coat, and I covers the entire saddle. Bewarcof Imitations. Don’t buy a coat if tho “ Fish Brand” Is not on it. Illustrated Catalogue free. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. DR. T. FELIX GOrRAI D H ORIENTAL CREAM OR MAGICAL BEAVTIFIER. >5 3 Removes Tan, Pimples, Freckles, R b Moth Patches, Knah end Shinins' | eases, and er try. blemish on Ife■« «. beauty,and deflesde. ’ 8 o wi jeACS’ectlou. Ithagsto . 1 fir T' ' - S«a K Liv u «sr bruß. ffoods Dealers in the U. 8.. Canada, and Eu. i FEED. T. HOPKINS, Prop’r, 37 Great Jones t
I EWIS’ 98% Liu Powdered and Perfumed. . |b (patented.) f The strongest and purest Lye mad*. Unlike other Lye, it being a fine P powder and packed in a can with * removable lid. the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 minutes without boiling. It is the best for cleansing waste-pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SALT M’k’G CO, » Gen. Agts.. Phila., Pa.
Established ISSO. Nature’s Summer Remedies. ’'The Lord created medicines out of the earth.. And he that is wise will not abhor them.
I>r O. I*. Brown’s b iILOOD PURIFIER and J LIVEKINVIGOKATOR J>Old Reliable Remedies—Standard as j flour in all markets, i composed of ' best blood herbs. st: 2 of herbs which act on the Liver and bowels; cures Biliousness .Li ver C >mplaint.Jaundice: tl. Druggists, or 47 Grand st.,JerseyCity.N J
* RIPANS TABULES regulate; * the stomach, liver and bowels, pun- * ' $ O’the blood. are safe and effectual; • J tne best medicine known for bilious- $ • [Q? ness. constipation, dvspepsia, foul* ’ breath.headache,mental depression,* I painful digestion, bad complexion,* • and al l diseases caused by failure of « 9 the stomach, liver or bowels to per-J e form their proper functions. Persons given to over- • C eating are benefited by taking one after each neal. 1 ! ♦ Price, $2 ; sample, 15c. At Druggists, or sent bj mail. • I • RIPANS CHEMICAL CO.. 10 Spruce St.. New York. * FOR EXCHAWGE For Eastern Property. Good Farming Lands, I Houses and Lots. Orange Groves, etc., located ill I Southern California. For full particulars address RALPH ROGERS, 217 West First Stieet, Los I Angeles, Cal.
$40,000,000 Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in 1831. Your Invention may be valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and intelligent advice, fret Os charge, W. W. DUDLEY & CO., Solicitors of Patents, Pacific Bldg.. 622 F St. N. W„ Washington, D. C. Mention this paper. eMHttms ofbad eating;cnres Sick Headache; restoresi’ompleirnn :eiiresCon»tipation. Scad Car Fim bau>pU w ii 9 \>*Jt ihiu bucct, how CUj.
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| FMT FOLKS RESUMED Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, Mo., writes: I “M v weight was 820 pounds, now it is 195,
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i \ xll I I My wei^nr wasozu pounns, now it i» a reduction of 125 J ba.” For circulars address, with 6c., Dr.O.W.F.SNYDER, McVicker’s Theatre. Chicago, 11L PATENTS! PENSIONS! Send for Inventor’s Guide, or Howto Obtain aPatent. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Laws. PATRICK O'FAKKELL, Washington, D. C. nor<LE bicycles sls Breecii-Loadery gR WAUkiudacheaperthauelse-fr-v GQ He—Ji where. Before vou bur, Rf LES||W^^ E Vo«ulc" WATCHES ICC Main St.,Cincinnati,O» HEMORDIA THE OXLY SI KECI SE. Price 81.00 by mail. HEMOEDII CO., 110 Fulton St., New York. C. N. U. No. 36—9:4 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, please say you saw the advertisement in this paper. Piso’s Remedy foi Catarrh is the ggl UH Best. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest fessnss® ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mall, OS 50c. S- T. Hazeltlne, Warren, Pa.
