St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 15, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 29 October 1892 — Page 3
ily Human Nature. ' " rkable to observe how a man Walkr that his peculiar vice, be the cup that cheers, is the . _,.d means of fighting the par^"^t^pYdemie at hand . U g gS — — *- Maa William Mubden, 197 Third St, Albany, N. Y.. gives it the meed of praise, as follows: “I have used Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup and find it has no equal. No family ■heuld be without it” Augustus Cassab, as far as known, died from overwork and exhaustion. FITS.— AII Fits stopped free by Dr. ISiine’s G’ eat Jv’erve Reto- er. Nd Fits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and SB.OO trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 981 Arch St. Phila, Fa. Skin and Scalp Diseases, the worst forms of Scrofula, all blood-taints and poisons of every name and nature, are utterly rooted out by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. Por every disease caused by a torpid liver or impure blood, it is the only remedy so certain and effective that it can be guaranteed. If it fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Enlarged Glands, Tumors, and Swellings, and every kindred ailment, are completely and permanently cured by it. Ad VICS Countless letters are received by us from ailing • ... xx t women m all Aihng Women parts of the world, seeking , Free. advice. All are answered in a prompt and careful manner, giving each the benefit of the great library of reference compiled during a woman’s life’s work among suffering women. These are the largest records concerning Female Complaints in the world. Thousands of women have been benefited by Mrs. Pinkham’s advice after all other treatment had failed. Don’t throw away this chance. Write us about your case. It will cost you nothing, and may save your life. Your letter will be received and answered by one of your sex. Correspondence strictly private. We never publish even a letter of testimonial without the person's unqualified consent. * Corrcpnndcr.ce freetv answered. Address In confidence, LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED. CO., LYNN, MASS. Did you ever see a sickly baby with dimples ? or a healthy one without them ? A thin baby is always delicate. Nobody worries about a plump one. If you can get your baby plump, he is almost sure to be well. If you can get him well, he is almost sure to be plump. ' r he way to do both—there is but one way —is by caredi cod-liver oil. We will send you a book on it; free/ 7 ’^ Scott & Bownb, Chemists, 13a South sth Avenue, New York. 38 Purely a vegetable compound, made entirely’ of roots and herbs gathered from the forests of Georgia, and has been used by millions of people with the best results. It CURES All manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boil on your nose to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and Skin‘Cancer Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. BileßeMis Small. Guaranteed to cure Bilious Attacks, SickHeadache and Constipation. 40 in each bottle. Price 25c. For sale by druggists. Picture “7, 17, 70” and sample dose free. •/. F. SMITH & CO., Proprietors, NEW YORK.
RHEUMATISM HEmm/l Plain, common sense fifty-page < treatise on origin, causes, nature, varieties, prompt relief ” and almost infallible cure, sent for sc. nickel. No stamps. Write to It. N. SEARLES, ^New Haven, Conn.
BEST POLISH IN THE WORLoJ 00 HOT BE 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 con- । sumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS AH AHHBAL SALE OF 3,GOD TOWS.
WHAT OF THE WEATHER FOSTER’S F.ORECASTS TELL THE STORY. A Severe Storm Accompanied by Electrical Disturbances Will Cross the Mississippi Valley About October 31—Cooler Weather Will Follow. Cool Weather Coming. My last bul'.e’in gave forecasts of the storm waves to cross the continent from 1 24th to 28th, and the next will reach the Pacific coast about the 23th, cross the Western mountains by the close of the 30th, the great central valleys from October 31st to November 2d, and the Eastern States about November 3d. This will be a severe storm, and at its greatest force while crossing the Mississippi Valley. An ele trie storm will probably accompany this disturbance, causing many difficulties in the telegraphic service. This electric storm will probably be at its greatest force about Nov. 4 or 5. The cool wave will cross the Western mountains about Nov. 1, the great Cen- j tral valleys about the 3d, and the Eastern States about the sth. Local Forecasts. Weather changes move from west to east across the continent, and each local forecast is made for within 250 miles east and west of the magnetic meridian ; mentioned, and for all the country be- 1 tween 25 and 50 degrees of north latitude. These local weather changes will । occur within twenty-four hours before ! or after sunset of the dates given: SANTA PE, DENVER AND BLACK HILLS MERIDIAN. October30—Warmer. 31—Storm wave on this meridian. November—--I—Wind changing. 2—Cooler and clearing. 3—Fair and cool. 4—Moderating. s—Warmer. GALVESTON, KANSAS CITY AND MINNB« APOLIS MERIDIAN. October—30—Moderat ng. 31—Warmer. November— I—Storm1 —Storm wave on this meridian. 2 —Wind changing. 3—Cooler and clearing. 4—Fair and cool. s—Moderating. ATLANTA, CINCINNATI AND LANSINd MERIDIAN. October—30—Fair and cool. 31—Moderating. November — I—Warmer. 2—Storm wave on this meridian. 3—Wind changing. 4—Cooler and clearing. s—Fair and cool. Copyrighted 1892. by W. T. Foster. The News Aftermath. Count Eugene de Habtiges Is dead at Paris. The President has pardoned eleven convicted polygamists. Vlce Admiral Deinhard, stationed at Wilhelmshaven, died of paralysis. Botes City, Idaho, will be supplied with hot water from a natural geyser.
William Lincoln, a bank teller, died of hydrophobia in New York City. Serious floods arc reported in Italy. The lower part of Genoa is inundated, W. 11. Johnston, a printer, injured tn the street-car accidon; at CinnlnnaU. The Omaha Hoad has inaugurated a daily through train between Duluth and Chicago. Twelve thousand quail were killed in Bartholomew County, Indiana, on Saturday. The business portion of Johnstown, Licking County, Ky., was almost destroyed by fire. The Dominion government will maintain separate Catholic schools at the expense of the State. Roscoe Marble, colored, was hangel at Lafayette, Ga., for killing Rev. Nehemiah Witt. Homeseekers are crowding in'.o the Crow reservation, which has been thrown open to settlers. John Evans, a ccnvict at the Lincoln (Neb.) penitentiary, was fatally shot while attempting to escape. Four hundred bales of cotton in the hold of the steamer Sprihgwell, at New Orleans, were damaged by fire. The ship was uninjured. Heinrich Daniels, suppose! to be a resident of Toronto, Ont., committed suicide on a railroad train near Binghamton, N. Y., by shooting himself. The Briggs heresy prosecution has resulted in the Union Theological Seminary withdrawing from the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church. Gen. F. T. Dent, brother-in-law of Gen. Grant, who has been ill at Fort Logan, has improved sufficiently to be removed to his home in Denver, Col. Trustees Younghusband and Fontaine, of the Iron Hall, were overlooked ' in the recent prosecutions, and their cases wiil be taken up when the Grand Jury meets again. Robert P. Wilson, one of Buffalo’s distinguished lawyers, died after an ill- ! ness extending over several weeks : which battled the skill of expert physi- ■ cians. He was 52 years old. Prof. E. B. Andrews, of Brown University, Providence, R. 1., has been j appointed delegate to the International ; Monetary Conference, vice F. A. Wal- ‘ ker, who was compelled to resign. A premature explosion of fireworks at a Democratic rally in St. Louis, Mo., fatally injured Michael Ratchford, a candidate for the legislature, ana Fritz 1 Marquart. Others were painfully hurt, j A wall fell on a gang of men at the ; Gleason & Bailey mill, Seneca Falls, N; ; Y., killing George Ziegfried, aged 57, ! Michael Mansell, aged 55; Michael Con- i roy, aged 52; Patrick Martin and Pat- i rick Conroy. All five of the men who ' were killed leave large families. Cart. Andrews, in his IG-foot dory, in which he crossed the Atlantic from Atlantic City, N. J., to Lisbon, has arrived at Palos, where he received an ovation. The Cherokee Commission has concluded a deal for the Kiowa and Comanche country, Oklahoma, or the surplus portion of the same, after the Indians have been allowed their allotments. A sum of $ ’,5C0,000 is guaranteed to the Indians, from which they are to receive annually G per cent, until the principal is paid. The deal will throw open to settlement 2,276,891 acres after April, 1814,
LIES ASLEEP IN DEATH. MRS. HARRISON PEACEFULLY PASSES AWAY. The End Was Painless—lncidents of the Home Life of the First Lady of the Land —An Ideal Wife and Mother. Rest at Last. Mrs. Harrison is no more. At 1:40 a. m., Tuesday, came the end. For the second time in the history of the White House a President’s wife has died within its walls. Mis. Harrison met death with the patience and resignation of a devout Christian, and her last days were comparatively free from pain. It could hardly be said that the patient was unconscious during the evening hours, for she betrayed some signs of understanding the attempts made to relieve her last moments by partially opening her [parched lips to receive the stimulating fluid applied to them from time to time. But not a drop could she swallow, and the power of speech had apparently left her frame forever. In addition the physician's experienced eye noted as the- evening wore on an increase in the difficulty of breathing, which was regarded as an ominous sign. At last the end came, and surrounding the bedside of the loved one were all the members of the family in Washington. For a few moments the silent watchers were over- ! whelmed with grief. When they emerged from the room, the President retired to his own chamber, and was alone with his great bereavement. Mrs. Harrison’s Home Life. Incidents innumerable are told of Mrs. Harrison’s home life. Mrs. Harrison directed her own household after the most approved housewifely exJwio f / 1 Mas. ikesioent hahrison. amples. Like theEmpressof Germany/ the granddaughter of Queen Victoria, she was reared and educated in the oldfashioned way. The housekeeping in the White House j was not a promotion to Mrs. Harrison in j a practical sense, as she never before j had a house with so few bed chambers I in it as lias the Executive Mansion, j The Empress of Germany has the minutest details of her imperial housekeeping at her royal I ngers’ ends; so had Mrs. Harrison all the domestic affairs of the President’s house within her knowing. She was the heal of the housekeeping and she managed it with all the cure and discretion that she ever exercised In l><-> owo none--. xloo-o---i maids, bonseki eper, and steward were I n’l uml.T Mia. Il arristm’H Ruporv^'ng I uirectiun, who-e first cure was for the I comfort of her husband. Mrs. Harrison was a model hostess, with a 1 ng experience in entertaining, both in Indianapolis and in Washington. in both of which places her name is a synonym socially for all that is graceful and agreeable. When in Washington during the Senatorial terms of her husband she never assumed the ca-es of a house of her own. but her quiet receptions once or twice each week, held in her parlors, were frequented by the best people of the city. Artistically she had what was almost a hobby for painting on china, in which she long indulged, and was very proficient. Delica'e, fragile bits of china, । plaques, and vases paintec by her bear I t-aers of an al o-t professional touch. This work, the result of an original taste, coupled with constant practice, is really charming. In making her designs Mrs. Harrison was accustomed to gather buds aud blossoms fresh from the Hower beds, and make her studies directly from nature. Mrs. Harrison was also fond j of artistic needlework and embroidery, i As a needlewoman she marked with I her monogram each piece of linen in 1 the house at Indianapolis from bedclothing to napkins. Among the social graces for which | Mrs. Harrison was known, and one ' fully tested in the White House, was I her practice of seeing each visitor who I called. She was never known to show ! irr tation or annoyance, and it must be j a flagrant case indeed when she refused to receive a caller.
She was probably one of the most industrious mistresses the White House has ever ha 1. Her own method of life was so simple that it gave her more time than ordinarily comes to persons in high places to devote to things she liked best. She was a constant reader of the best literature an I devoted to her brush. She had been a diligent pupil for several years in the study of china painting, and her talent was often displayed in the gifts she made her friends at the holiday period. In carrying out the hospitality of the White House she has never been excelled. She presided with easy dignity and grace upon ail occasions, and omitted no detail that would add to the pleasure of those attending them. She carried out to the letter the written and unwritten laws of the house, and did as much more as it was possible to do within the limits of each season. Jagson says the man who can’t take a joke always seems to be the editor of the paper he sends his to.— Elmira Gazette. Miss Wallup has been appointed a school teacher in a Kansas town. Iler pupils should be made to understand that she will maintain the credit of her name even though the punishment room sounds with anguished yells. Music hath charms: .Tones—“l heard a song last night that took me back to my mother’s knee.” Adams—- “ What was it?” “The Patter of the Shingle?”
Her Kaine. Th© New York Sun has been saying a good word for a class of people who are commonly treated as if they had no names, in the ordinary sense of the word. As one housekeeper expressed herself, “I always call my cook Berks, my maid Mary, and my man John. We're constantly changing, and I can’t be bothered with learning and trying to remember their real names.” It might have been suggested to this “lady" that her indolence in learning her servants’ names had perhaps something to do with their short terms of service. Servants being human beings, it is not so very surprising that they should like to be treated as such. If the cook is a married woman, why should not the fact be recognized? “Mrs. White, Airs. Brown would like to see you,” was the message that the housemaid brought from the cook to the mistress. The mistress remonstrated, “Mary, why do you not say, ‘Mrs. White, the cook would like to see you?' ” “0, ma’am, Mrs. Brown wouldn’t like it.” “But I wish it." Shortly afterward the girl returned. "Mrs. Brown says, ma’am, she wasn’t baptized ‘Cook’” The cook was indispensable, and accordingly she remains Airs. Brown. And why not? Out of the DLc'i. On the first day of the Wilderness fight, says Major Wright, in “Glimpses of the Nation’s Struggle," the Adjutant of the One Hundred and Forty-sixth New York was prostrated by a minie bullet which shattered his left arm. He crawled into a ditch, across which the Confederate lines charged and were repulsed. The ditch was soon filled with the wounded and unwounded of both armies. All that afternoon the fire was so hot that not a man dared io raise his head above the ditch. A majority of its occupants were Confederates, one of whom, an officer of the Tenth Virginia, ordered his men to spread blankets for the wounded Adjutant, and to make him as comfortable as possible.
As darkness drew on the wounded Adjutant told the Confederate officer that if he could get into the Union lines lie could secure better medical attendance, and that, being wounded, he was not worth n.U 'h as a prisoner. “If you can get there you are at liberty to do so,” replied the Confederate. The Adjutant exchanged cards and shook hands with the officer, and both men climbed out of the ditch, but on opposite sides. The Adjutant reached tho Union lines, where his arm was amputated and he was sent home. Tasks That Must Be Done. Natura has assigned important tasks to the liver and the bowels, and being mutually dependent upon eacli other ior tho regular and adequate discharge of these tasks, a cessation of work by one causes the other to lapse into inactivity. The tasks of secretion and evacuation must be performed, or the system is poisoned and disordered. Moreover, fatal inflammation of the bowels or abscess of the liver are apt to ensue if inaction of these organs is allowedTto go unheeded. The dangerous tendency, should be checked at th; outset with Hotstetter’s Stomach Bitters, an anti-bilious specific and laxative without a peer. Never does this medicine cause a qualm of the stomach or uneasiness of the bowels. It does its reformatory work pleasantly though with reasonable activity. It 1 r -vents malaria and rheumatic disease, kidney complaints, and relieves d’-pupaia and uervonov>«“« “fleered u Middle Course. A writer in Harper’s Magazine says that smrA- years ago, when stage-travel-ing was! more common in the White Mountain region than it is now, a. well known driver had a curious accident. The night was dvrk and cloudy, and both lamps upon his coach wore brilliantly lighted. All at once he heard the gallop of an approaching horseman. The road was narrow, and tho driver pulled up his team to let the man on horseback go by. The next instant there was a tremendous collision with his leaders, and ho jumped from tho box to seo what could be tho matter. It turned out that the other man, an Ir.shman, had ridden squarely between the leaders, an I the three horses were floundering together in the mud. With much difficulty they were disentangled, and explanations were in order. “How in creation did you get in there?” asked the coach-driver. “Didn’t you see my lights?” “Faith an’ I did,” said Pat, “an’ I thought I’d go between ’em.” HALF-FARE TO SEE WESTERN LANDS. Last Chance This Year. The third and last Harvest Excursion will be run to especial territory—Oklahoma and Indian Reservations and Texas. The Great Rock Island Route runs into and through these reservations, and is the only road that touches these lands, lately put on the market.
See hand-bills giving particulars, and remember the date is det. 25, for Chicago and points to and including Mississippi River, and one day later for Missouri River points. John Sebastian. . G. T. and P. A., Chicago, 111. Improved Bread Making. It would seem as if the method of bread'making could be but little improved, but an English gas engineer has devised a process which is said to be a decided-improvement over that at present "used for baking the “staff of life.” The process consists in placing the molded dough in a gas oven just warm, and then gradually increasing the heat until the maximum point is reached. The theory upon which the method is based is that the usual great heat of the oven kills the yeast germ, thus preventing it from fulfilling its allotted work. Some experiments recently made showed that the loaves baked by the new process were larger in size and finer in quality than loaves from the same batch of dough which were I aked in a regular oven. Have You Asthma? bn. R. Schiffmann, St. Paul, Minn., will mail atrial package of Schiffmann’s Asthma Cure free to any sufferer. Gives instant relief in worst cases, and cures where others fail. Name this paper and send address. Wooden raUroads were built in England in 1602; iron rails were first used in 1789; the first iron railroad was laid in America in 1827. If you are constipated, bilious or troubled with sick headache, Beecham’s Pilis afford immediate relief. Os druggists. 25 cents. The father of Thomas Paine was a corset-maker and taught his son the same trade. How Absurd to < roak and Wheeze with a cough which Hale’s Honey of Hobehocxu and Tar will cure. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one Minute, London Tinies first printed by steam in 1814. astonishment.
Wlicn Nature Needs assistance It may bo best to render it promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Largs Size. A stout lady went into a shoe-store in New York City, and said to a salesman: “I want a pair of bath slippers, please —and very quickly.” “What number, ma’am?” “What number? No. 246, sir.” “No. 246? What do you mean, ma’am?” “Why, No. 246 sth avenue, of course!" Important to Fleshy People. We have noticed a page article in the Boston Globe on reducing weight at a very small expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp for a copy to Betina Circulating Library, 36 E. Washington street, Chicago, 111. Where Does th) Danger Come Tn? The perils of the sea do not seem to be so very terrible when it is shown that out of 560,000,000 passengers carried last year on American waters, and from American ports, only sixty-five lives were lost. Fine Flaying Cards. Send 10 cents in stamj s to John Sebastian, Gen'l Ticket and Pa ; s. Agt, C., R. I. & P. R’y. Chicago, for a pack of the “Rock Island” Playing Cards. They are acknowledged the best, and worth five times the Cost. Send money order or p >stal note for 50c, and will send five packs by express, prepaid. Water is composed of oxygen and hydrogen in the proportion of one volume of the former gas to two volumes of the latter. S. K. COBURN, Mgr. Claris Scott, writes : “I find Hall’s Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy.* Druggists sell it, 75c. James Buchanan's death was caused by rheumatism and gout at 77. >King Os Medicines is what I consider Hood’s Sarsaparilla. For 6 years I was confined to my bed with white swellings and scrofula sores. To my Win. A. Lehr. great joy, when I began with HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA the sores soon decreased. I kept taking It for a year, when I was so well that I went to work, and since then have not lost one day on account of sickness. 1 am always well aud have a good appetite.” Wm. A. Lehr, 9 N. Railroad St., Kendallville, Ind. ___ HOOD'S FILLS are the best aftor-dinuer Pills, assist digestion, cure headache and biliousness.
RAD WAY’S n PILLS, The Creat Liver and Stomach Remedy, For the cure of all disorders of the Stomnch, Liver, Bowels. Kidneys, Bladder. Ne vans Diseases, Headache. Constipation. Costiveness. Indigestion. Dyspepsia. Biliousness, Fever, Jnllammation of ihe Bowels. Files' nn<l Asmcnsmnents of ll>o Internal Viscera. Purely Vege! Minerals, or Deleierlous Drugs. Price, 25c. per box. Sold by aU Druggists. DYSPEPSIA. DR. RADWAN'S PILLS are a cure for this ccdipiaint 1 l;«y restore strength to th© stomach and enablo it to perform its functions. The svmptome of Dyspepsia disappear, and with them the liabi’itv of tlie system to contract diseases, lake the mt di< in© according to the directions,and observe what we say in 1 also and True" respecting diet. w“Observe theiollowmg symptoms resulting from diseases of the digestive organs: Constipation, inward piles, fullness of blood in the head, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food,fullness or weight of t>.e stomach, sour eructations,sinking or fluttering < t the heart, chok ng orsuffoca ii g sensation when in a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs bt fore the sight, fever and dint pain tn the head, deficiency cf perspiration, yellowness of the skin and eyes, pain in the side, chest, limbs, and sudden hushes of heat, burning in the tb sh. A few doses of RADWAY'S DILLS will free the fystein of all the above-named disorders. Send a letter stamp to DR. KADWAY A CO.. No. 0? Warren Street. New York, for “False and True.” “MOTHER’S *. FRIEND” .• is a scientifically prepared Liniment and harmles - every ingredient is of recognised value and in constant uso by the medical profession. It shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book ‘ To Mothers” mailed free, containing valuable information and voluntary testimonials. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt Os price, §1.50 per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Ailaria, Ga. Sold by all druggists. I The Best I "gs SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddle. Bewareof imitations. Don't buy a coat if the “Fish Brand” is not on it. Illiist’ated Catalogue free. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. | & The African Kola Plant, discovered m Congo, West ; mB a B BCA Africa, is Nature’s Sure ! cure for Asthma. Cure Guaranteed or No Ibxport Uilice t 1164 Broadway, New York. I Trial Caso, FISK 33 by Mail, address EkOxtA IMPORTING €O., 132 Vine St..Cincinnati,Ohio. BICYCLES Gis creech-Loaatrg gs j.®n All kinds cheaper than else- I $7.00. Vk '"hC'C- hrfore you buy, , JlFLESSrMjj^ra^^^ WATCHESWWB M'^ißeaainSt.,tind« l! sii,a 1
—EL i S CR&AM BALM—Cleanses tho Nasalrut Passages, Allays l ain anti Inflammation, Heals FO” Txa &SST the Sores, Kestorcs Taste and Smell, and Cures । W ■k .^Ol^Givt’s Relief at once for Cold in Head. Apply into the Nostrils. It is Quickly Absorbed. gjijaP MdMiHMBMWi 50c. Druggists cr by mail. ELY BROS., 5u Warren St, N. Y. sCc]
Uyr All you have guessed about n■ w * nsurance nia y l ,c wrong, PAY ft y ou w i s k to l <u °w tll ° urot tintli. send tor ** How and I uul" issued by the PENN I snr MLILAL LIRE, 921-3-5 Chest- i Abt. nut Street, Philadelphia.
“August Flower” “What is August Flower for?* As easily answered as asked. It is for Dyspepsia. It is a special rem-; edy for the Stomach and Liver. — Nothing more than this. We believe; August Flower cures Dyspepsia.; We know it will. We have reasons; for knowing it. To-day it has an| honored place in every town and; country store, possesses one of thei largest manufacturing plants in the! country, and sells everywhere. The, reason is simple. It does one thing, i and does it right. It cures dyspepsia®-
AT F J tAKB A OPbEASANT ri*
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THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND lAY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. I My doctor says It acts gently on the stomach, liver end'kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative. This drink is made from herbs, aud is prepared for use as easily as tea. It is called LINE’S WEDIvIHE Al! dmgxUta s-l! it ;-0e and $1 pe> pauksg*. If yon cannot it, send voar addreaa for « free sample. UnA Family Hedicine moves the howoU on«*h d.u. In order t> be hea'thy, this is ueceasary. Address ORA P. WOODWARD. Leßoy, N. Y. P Two Great Remedies. The human citadel is open to at-; tacks from two sources, and, aside from accide its, these two arc the avenues from which all of the maladies that aillict the race spring. The first of these are what are known as the excretory organs. These are the lungs, the kidneys, and the skin. These suffer from congestion, which takes the form of colds. Starting from what is called a cold, the maladies that result are widespread, ranging xrom a cough to consumption. They attack all ages and all stations. No one is free from these troubles. There is, however, a remedy that is a safeguard. This is Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure. It contains no poison, but it will heal any form of lung; trouble, or any malady that arises from a cold. The other class of diseases arise from derangement of the digestive organs, and result in constipation. When the bowels do not act, the stomach scon refuses to digest the food, and we are troubled with indigestion, fever, and a long train of disorders that embrace a wide range of maladies. The Laxative Gum-Drops will correct any; difficulty of this sort. They contain, nothing any dealer. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria. 111. A hiL UILILIL PRINTING OFFICE OUTFITS at reasonable rates and upon liberal terms. Wbitb fok Pabticulabs. CHICAGO XEWSPAPEK UNION, 93 South JeH'erson Street. Chicago.
I EWIS’ 98% LYE 3 Powdered and Perfumed. S ho (PATENTED.) The strongest and purest Lye made. Unlilio other Lye, it being a fine E powder and packed in a can with •removebte lid. the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hurd Soap in 2) minutes without boiling. It Is tho be.t for cleansing waste-pipee, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. I'ENNA. SALT CO, s Gen. Agts., Phils-. Pa.
90*900009 0 09 9 9 999099 W* RIPANS TABULES regulate! the stomach, liver and bowels, puri-g k fy the blood, are safe and effectual I the best medicine known for bilious- < / ihss. constipation, dyspepsia, foul a breath, heedache,menial depression, a painful digestion, bad complexion.® and all diseases caused bv ulure of®
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♦ the stomach, liver or bou c «; to per ® ♦ form their proper functions. Persons given to over- • Beating are benefited by taking one after each neal ♦ ♦ Price, $2 ; sample, 150. At Druggists, or sent b\ mail. ♦ ♦ EITANS CHEMICAL CO., io Spruce St.. New York, • $40,000,000 Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in lS9t. Tour invention may be valuable. You should protect it bv pat-nt. Address for full and intelligent advice, free Os charge, W. W. DUDLEY & CO., Solicitors of Patents, Pacific Bldg., 622 F St. N. W„ Wasiiin^ton, D. C. Mention this paper, • JR FOLRS KEBWD Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon, Mo., writer 1 \ ;i iI J weight Whs3L V J pounds, now it is 196^ a reduction of 125 lbs.” For circulars address with 6c., Dr.O.W.F.SNY BEK. McVicker’s Theatre, Chicago. 111. gARHaOTEAS: VIW of bad eatingjenres Sick Headache; restoresOomplexion :currHCon«t ipat lon. S,^ tK irM baiupU 10 41V tLih biri.4l, ^ew Ink City. PATENTS’ PENSIONS! Send for Inventor’s Guide, or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Laws. PATRICK O’EARKELL. Washington, J). c! AND HEAD NOISES CURES |[J| E■ fel B 5y Peck-s Invisible Ear Cushions. Whispers heard. K CTjfcr-ws Successful when alI remedies fail. Sold par* rv F. Hiscox. Sub h’way, N ,Y, Write for book of proofs I liE S
c. N. r. No. 44.93 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, . ’ P*easc say you saw the advertisement in t his paper. Piso’s Remedy foi Catarrh Is the OJ Rest. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest HM . A ■B Sold by druggists or sent by mail, | SI &Uc. E. T. £azeltiu® Warren
