St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 22, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 17 December 1892 — Page 3
Don't!—lf a dealer offers you a bottle of Salvation Oil without wrapper or labels, or An a mutilated condition, don’t touch it—gton’t buy it at any pric?, there is someSihing wrong—it may be a dangerous or worthless counterfeit In-lst upon getting ' a perfect, unbroken, genuine package. Be ’ on your juard! The Burden that Gives Strength. “My burden is light,” said the blessed Redeemer. A light burden, indeed, ! which carries him that bears it. I have looked through all nature for a resem- i blance of this, and I seem to find a • shadow of it in the wings of a bird, which are indeed borne by the creature, I and yet support her flight toward heaven. —Bernard. | Go twice as far as liver pills and cure of tenet -Small Bile Beans. Deeb are reported to be rapidly increasing in numbers in Central and Northern Vermont. f ———— SUNSHINE \i / comes, no matter how I *\\ *-//<>» dark the clouds are, when ! the woman who is borne , _. — I > down by woman’s troubles turns to Dr. Pierce’s Fav1 v\' s> orite Prescription. If her ■ ,f / T^- life is made gloomy by the ■ * chronic weaknesses, deli- \ cate derangements, and .•' painful disorders that as- « nict her sex, they are com- • v pletely cured. If she’s yb'.' Vi overworked, nervous, or / iHtl V “ run "d° wn >” she has new * / an< * strangth- “ Favorite Prescription” fejjsaa is a powerful, invigorating EsSj tonic and a soothing and strengthening nervine, t — purely vegetable, perfectly J harmless. It regulates and promotes all the Soper functions of womanhood, improves jestion, enriches the blood, dispels achof and pains, brings refreshing sleep, and re- j ■tores health ana vigor. For every “female complaint” and disturbance, it is the only remedy so sure and unfailing that it can be guaranteed. If it doesn’t benefit or cure, you have your money back. Omi J?; - ONK ENJOY® Botl ‘lie method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts fently yet promptly on the Kidneys, aver 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 stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable siihotanceß, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 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. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N.Y. It Cures Colds,Coughs.Sore Throat,Croup,lnfluents, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. large bottles 50 cents and SI.OO. y A Or, as the world expresses it, “a well-preserved . IVnimc woman.” One who, unb I Ouilg derstanding the rules of z . health, has followed them, WOman and preserved her youthful appearance. Mrs. at Fifty Pinkham has many cor- | respondents who, through 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 system. Intelligent women know well its wonderful powers. It is the successful product of a life’s work of a woman among PJ women, and is based vfc' upon years of actual practice and expense. All Druggists sell it, or sent by mail, m form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of SI .00. Liver Pills, «sc. Corre- . spondence freely answered. Address in confidence. r . Lwt>'E. Pinkham Med. Co., Qi Lynn, Mass. in - ■ The African Kola Plant, AV ©I’M yyi 5% discovered in Congo, West II I • ■■ V* Africa, is Nature’s Sure ' Cure for Asthma. Cure Guaranteed or Ko f ay. Export Office, 1164 Broadway, New V ork. orlarge Trial Caee, FBEE by Mail, address OLA IMPORTING CO., 132 Vine St.,Cincinnati.Ohio. | MENTION THIS PAPEK whin wbitik. Ti^.nvsarissM^ | RHWSBSISi wltb^^spli, ^Euaine^s, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. , The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor- | less Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin I or glass package with every purchase. '
Over the Precipice. Christina Mclvor, a Scotchwoman, svas one day walking alone from Lochoroom to Kinlochewe. While pass- ; ing along the margin of Loch Maree, । she stopped on the brink of one of the precipices to take a view of the ' lake when, somehow, she never could ( tell how, her foot slipped, and she lost her balance and fell over the precipice. ' A tree growing from a cleft in die rock intercepted her fall, and preI vented her from plunging into the , deep waters beneath. She clung to | the tree with the grip of despair until she had partially recovered from the effects of the fall, and could realize the perils of her position. Beneath her was a sheer rock washed by the dark waters of the lake; above, a precipice impossible to climb. The place was miles away I from any house, and it was not the ! season of much travel to the lake. Her prospect of immediate help was faint indeed. To add to her misery she became painfully conscious that her right leg was broken below the knee. For a time she clung to the tree, but soon realized that she could not remain there. Besides the uncomfortable and cramped position which she was forced to assume, she was in imminent danger of falling. Mot far away a ledge jutted out ; from the steep cliff, it was not easy to reach it, but she determined to make the painful attempt. She suc- ; ceeded, and by dint of much effort, J managed to reach this shelf, where she was in comparative safety. The pain in the fractured limb was frightful; she had lost her shawl and had no protection from the cold, inclement weather. Her shrieks for help served but to make her hoarse. For three days and two nights the poor young woman lay in this perilous and exposed position without food, but slaking fever and thirst by water which trickled from the rocks overhead,yet all the time she suffered with pain and hunger most intensely. On the third afternoon Christina saw a fisherman’s boat on the lake. Summoning all her strength she cried for help. After several futile efforts she attracted the attention of the occupants of the boat, and they rowed quickly over to the cliff where she lay. By skillful manoeuvering on the part of the fisherman the unfortunate woman was lowered into the boat, and then conveyed to her home. It was months before she recovered from the effects of the cruel experience. A Mighty Hunter. It is the custom, in France, for all the fashionable world to go shooting in the autumn. Every possessor of a landed estate invites his friends from Paris to visit him at this season, and every visitor is expected to distinguish him with the gun. When Adolphe Thiers, the petit bourgeois statesman of France, became President of the Republic, he was invited one autumn to take part in the sports at the country estate of M. Casimir-Perier. He accepted the invitation, and consequently had to appear on the hunting field in shooting dress and armed with a gun. The whole entertainment was really in his honor. M. Casimir-Perier was aware that his old friend, now the President, knew nothing whatever about hunting. Put he. instructed his gameKeeper to follow M. Thiers about, and see that, in one way or another, the great guest of the occasion “bagged ’ more game than any other person. The game-keeper led the President to a certain spot, and said to him, “Your excellency, the game will ail be driven past this place. You have nothing to do but remain here, and it you shoot at all, you are bound to kill something.” But the Tresident, to his credit, decline ! this opportunity, and insisted upon traveling about with the other hunters—except that he never went to the right place, and never got a shot at all. The game-keeper was in despair. The distinguished guest kept him hopping about fiom place toplace, but alwaysoutof range of the game. Nevertheless, by collusion wth others, the game-keeper so managed it that, when the day’s sport was over. M. Thiers, who had not discharge 1 his gun all day, found a large lot of game at his feet, which was declared to be his “bag,” “This mine?” said the President, in astonishment. ‘ Certainly,” your excellency.” The President looked up with a twinkle in his eye. “Ah, I see,” he said, “I never shot anything before I became President: so 1 suppose this was killed by the office, not by the man. Picking Out a Profession. Let a boy decide upon his profession at 15, and though he may not immediately enter it he saves for preparation all the time his companion loses by putting off his choice urtil he is of age. And this early time is most valuable time, for it represents the distinctly acquisitive period of life—the period when the mind receives impressions most easily a P d retains them most tenaciously. The technique of any trade or business or profession is readily acquired by a youthful mind. Later on it seems to be grasped slowly and with difficulty. | My advice to boys is that they antici--1 pate their life work as much as possible. Get into the spirit and atmos- : phere of it; take the preliminary steps while you are full of enthusiasm.—Harper’s Young People. “Marriage has not changed him much,” said Mrs. Potts. “Before we were married he would not let me carry the lightest bundle—and he Joes not now. He lets me lug the heavy ones,”
Butchered the King’s English. One of Kentucky’s most successful politicians was a very illiterate man, but a man of strong common sense. I refer to Col. Joseph Le Compte. He filled many important political offices and several times represented this district in Congress, being a citizen of Henry County, once in this Congressional district. In one of his races his competitor was a Louisville lawyer, Thomas Q. Wilson, a college-bred man. Col. Le Compte had bceh a soldier in the war of 1812 and fought at the disastrous battle of the River Haisin and other battles of that war. He knew nothing of the rules of grammar, end cared less. Mr. Wilson in one of his speeches had ventured to say that the people of the metropolitan district of Kentucky should send an educated man to Congress—at least one who did not constantly in his speeches and conversation “butcher the king’s English.” When Le Compte came to reply he said: “I must admit that I have never set my foot inside the walls of a college or academy of learning; while Mr. Wilson was sitting in the hall of the academy and college acquiring a polite education I, with my knapsack <.n my lack and my musket on my shoulder, was up on the River Raisin learning to ‘butcher the king’s English.’ ” It is needless to say the accomplished butcher of the king’s English was returned to Congress. — Louisville Courier-Journal. How One Dollar Bill Was Spent. Bright young New York women are just now engaged in telling the readers of the New York World about the most profitable, pleasurable, and all around satisfactory dollar bills they ever sp< nt, and receiving from that paper other dollars for their trouble. Here is one of these dollar stories written by “Carmine”: “I was an artist, poor and promising. An order for a picture suddenly revoked left me dejected, despairing, with the waif howling at my door. Betaking myself to a country town I found encamped upon the village green a traveling circus. A storm had played sad havoc with the canvas of the side shows, and the alluring advertisements were entirely destroyed. This gave me an idea. I invested my last dollar in heavy sheeting, paints and brushes, and upon the snowy surface was soon displayed a monster sea serpent. Fire blazed from its nostrils, m n icing horns protruded, and I introduced nineteen distinct bodily curves, ending with a bow-knot at the extremity. My production found favor; the effe t was electrical. Small boys bio -kaded the grounds, and an order for a talking baboon and a living skeleton raised my spirits and filled my purse. Ino longer work as an ‘impressionist,’ but never has one dollar brought greater good fortune.” Are You Squirming? And is it pain that causes you to squirm? Rheumatism will make anyone wince. Counteract it, as you can readily do, at the outset with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which expels the rheumatic virus from the blood and promptly relieves the tortures that it produces. The evidence in its behalf on this point is ample and conclusive, and embraces the deliberate affirmations of many medical practitioners. Like all standard preparations, the Bitters deserves a persistent trial, which, if it receives, the happiest and most thorough results may be confidently anticipated. For j malarial, kidney and liver complaints, nenrai- i Ria, nervousness, liiUigoßtion and loss of flesh 1 and appetite it is a world-famous remedy. Convalescence after debiliating ailments is much facilitated by it. How to Walk Through Smoke. "Fer years,” said a woman the other day, “I have never slept without seeing that a couple of silk handkerchiefs hung near my toilet stand, and that the bowl was half full of water. Wi en I was a young woman, not out of my teens, I was in a hotel which took fire. I should have been suffocated if my uncle, with whom I was traveling, had not thrown a wet slk handkerchief over my la, e. Thus protected, I followed him through the hall filled with choking smoke, and down the stairway to safety. I have taught ti e practice to my children and it has become a habit with us all. You want good big ones, and they must be wetted thoroughly, then you may, if forced, endure the thickest smoke for a considerable time. —Philadelphia Press. “ How I Wrote Ben Hur,” told by Gen. Lew Wallace, is one scrap from the voluminous and superb programme of eminent writers and interesting articles which The Youth's Companion announces. It retains Its place in 550,000 families by the versatility and the instructiveness of its general articles, the high character of all its stories, the brigmness ot l.s illustrations. Then it comes every week, and one gets a great deal for Ji.75 a year. The price sent at once will entitle you to the paper to January, 1594. Address The Youth's companion, Boston, Mass. A Trifle Inconsiderate “You know that young Mr. Beausome who was here at the seashore last week?” “Yes, dear.” “You remember he proposed to all us girls in the politest way imaginable?” “Twice to me, you ren ember.” “Yes, and three times, to me. Well, here’s a poem of his in this magazine on ‘Unchanging Love. ” —Chicago News Record. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. Fol’ a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease, anil prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is 'aken interna ly in doses from ten drops to a toaspoonful. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails, to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 4S~Sold by Druggists, 75c. Do Right. Do right, and God’s recompense to you will be the power of doing more right. Give, and God’s reward to you will be the spirit of giving more. Love, and God will pay you with the capacity of more love, for love is heaven and the Spirit of God within you.—Robertson. Jayne's Expectorant is both a palliative and curative in all Lung Complaints, Bronchitis, etc. It is a standard remedy for Coughs and Colds, and needs only a trial to prove its worth. Among what may be calle I fancy metal gallium is the most costly, it being quoted at $l4O per gramme. “I will not stop to enlarge, ”ol serves the preacher, and then he stops, and enlarge is no name for it. Restore the complexion by cleansing tho entire system. Small Bile Beans. The brain of a man is twice as large as that of any other animal.
Do You Wish the Finest Bread and Cake? It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest and strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweetest, most delicious food. The strongest baking powder makes the lightest food. That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome food. should not every housekeeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food with the least trouble? Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sulphuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. Certain protection from alum baking powders can be had by declining to accept any substitute for the Royal, which is absolutely pure.
The Canals of Mars. As to the nature of the canals, it is still more difficult to suggest any satisfactory explanation. Several hypotheses have been presented, none of which appears entirely to meet the case. I have already remarked that there has not been lacking the suggestion that these curious streaks represent the lines of actual artificial water courses on Mars. The straight and undeviating course which they pursue might be regarded as lending some degree of probability to such a view, but, fays an exchange, the enormous scale on which they exist seems to compel the rejection of the hypothesis. It is true that, if we ! consider only the influence of the force j of gravity on Mars, giants could dwell ’ upon that planet whose mechanical I achievements might vastly surpass the greatest performance of our engineers; for a body weighing a ton on the earth ' would weigh only seven hundred and ! sixty pounds on Mars, and, on the Other ! hand, a man on Mars possessing rela- ; tively the same activity as one of us { might be fifteen feet tall and strong in ■ proportion. But, even granting the ex- i istence of such a race of Goliaths on our ; neighbor world, it is not conceivable : that they could have constructed a sys- [ tern of tremendous canals over half the ’ surface of their planet, or that they j would have done it if thej’ could. The canals of Mars are enormously disproportionod in magnitude to the most i gigantic inhabitants that a due regard । fur tii^*aw of gravitation would suffer I us to ^,«xtrm Ttrr’'O. A Summer Boy. A mother sent her boj’ into the country, and after a week of anxiety received the following reassuring letter: "I got here all right and I forgot to write before. It is a very nice place to have fun. A fellow and I went out in a boat and the boat tipped over and a man got me out and I was so full of water that I didn’t know nothing for a good long while. The other boy has to be ; buried when they find him. His mother came from Lincoln and she cried all the time. A hoss kicked me over, and I have got to have some money to j ay the doctor for fixin’ my head. We are going to set an old ba: n on fire to-night and I should smile if we don’t have bully fun. I lost my watch and lam very sorry. I shall bring home some mud turtles, and I shall bring home a tame woodchuck if I can get ’em in my trunk.” —Lincoln Journal. Quiet U e xiln< s . The maelstrom attracts more notice than the quiet fountain; the comet draws more attention than the steady star; but it is better to be the fountain than the maelstrom, and star than comet, following out rhe sphere of quiet usefulness in which God places us.—Dr. John Hall. The Tobacco Plant. A new use for the tobacco plant is said to have been discovered. Its stem and waste, it is claimed, are equal to linen rags in the manufacture of paper. hirs. Sarah Muir Os Minneapolis. "I was for a long time a sufferer from Female Weakness and tried many remedies and physicians, to no good purpose. One bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla made so great a difference In my condition that I took three bottles more and found myself perfectly well. I have also given Hood’s Sarsaparilla to the children, and find that it keeps them in good health." Mrs. Sarah Muir, job loth Av. So., Minneapolis, Minn. HOOD'S PILLS cure all Liver Ills. Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat. Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee. For a Lame Side, Back or Chest Shiloh’s Porous ' : Plaster will give great satisfaction. — 25 cents.
Be Humane, Even to Kats. When you catch rats with a trap, don’t use a steel trap that will seize the rat by the leg and cru<. ay hold him till he has gnawed the imprisoned limb free, and goes out into the cold world with three legs and only the mutilated half of the fourth. Deal gently with the erring rat, as Izaak Walton would have you deal with the worm you impale upon the hook. There are many good rat traps in the market. M hen you have caught your rat, asphyxiate him with a little chloroform. The disagreeable operation of forcing ■ liquids into the head, and the use of excit- | ing snuffs are being superseded by Ely’s I Cream Balm, a cure for Catarrh and colds । in the head. I have been a great sufferer from catarrh for ten years; could hardly breathe. Some j nights I could not sleep. I purchased Ely’s I Cream Balm and am using it freely; it is ■ working a cure surely. I have advised sevI eral friends to use it, and with happy re- ; suits In every case. It is the medicine j above all others for catarrh, and it is worth : its weight in gold. I thank God I have i found a remedy I can use with safety and : that does all that is claimed for it--—B. W. ; Sperry, Hartford, Conn. Apply Balm into each nostril. It Is ; Quickly Absorbed. Gives Relief at once. J Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. . ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York. Wrist Watch. A novel idea is a watch set in a leather bracelet to be worn round the wrist. It will bo found very useful to the fair sex, a- it obviatoe tLo uwessity ot disarranging the dress to ascertain the time. 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, lIL Very few people go into an argument in order to discover the truth ot the : matter. They want to hold their own । and rout the enemy. Hence the general loss of temper. Any person sending $3 for a club of three yearly subscriptions to the St Louis Weekly Globe-Democrat will receive one copy free for a year. Address GlobeDemocrat. St. Louis, Mo. Brass pins were first made by the Saracens in Spain in A. D. 800; were I brought to England by Catharine of Arragon, wife of Henry VIII. We eat too much and take too little outdoor exercise. This is the fault of our modern civilization. It is claimed that Garfield Tea, a simple herb remedy, helps Nature to overcome these abuses. A document envelope which works like a telescope, adjusting itself to one paper or to fifty, is a recent invention. THROAT DISEASES commence with a Cough. Cold or f'ore Throat. “Brown’s Bronchial Troches" give immediate relief. Sold only in boxes. Price 25 cts. The patent for the manufacture of artificial stone expired July 14, lb‘Jl. Small Bile Beans will cure U. The average weight of a skeleton is about four.een pounds. FITS^AII Fits stepped tree by Dr. Kline’s Gre < t Nerve Kestoi er. No Fits after first day’s use. Mar- } yelous ernes. Treatise and $2.00 trial bottle free to I lit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 93' Arch St , Phila. Pa. I£NSION^K^ "Successfully Prosecutes Clasps. Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau* 3 vrs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since, MENTION THIS PAPER whim WKime to adybbtiskbs. High Five or euchr eparties should send at once to John Sebastian, G. T. A. C., R. I. &P. R. R Chicago. TEN CENTS, in stamps, per pack for the slickest cards you ever shuffled. For f I.ooyou will receive free by express ten packs. MENTION THib I'AI’EK whkn wkitxno to adtmktisbks. RFAHTIPHI cur -ous eccentricities are iilustraVI 11 Uk ted in Dr. O P. Brown’s unique Alirm 1893 SHAKE SPKAKIAN ALUUttH Ai AN \C. One or more sent for friends on receipt of address on MAQ’C postal. J. GIBSON BROWN, 4? hlhm O Grand Street. Jersey City, N.J.
BUI I Anyone can play the Piano or Organ MUOIU WITHOUT’A TEACHER! The NEW YORK ' WOULD” says : One of the wonders of the nineteenth century is Soper’s Instan. taneous Guide to the keys of the piano or organ—to teach any person to play upon either piano or organ at once, without the aid of a teacher, and the price asked for it (Sl.bO) is a mere trifle when compared to the benefit to be derived, the thousands of flattering testimonials which have come gratuitously to the publishers from persons who are using the JSoper Instantaneous music, speak none too highly of its merit. Price, §I.OO, Including Set of Ten (10) Pieces of either Church Music or Popular Airs. Address, SOPER MUSIC, 62 World Building. New York.
fl'S SB IM Morphine Habit Cured in IO S Sis SBs EtIR to 30 days. No pay till cured. VS IWfifl DR. J. STEPHENS, Lebanon,Ohio. MEN 1 ION '1 HIS PAPER *hkn writing to advkctimkui. WfiNTFR’ MEN TO TRAVEL. We pay .«50 I jKis I LB* ■ to $»1OO a month and expenses. STONE & W ELLINGTON, Madison, \\ is. MENTION THIS PAPER when to A OWmui . LIPPINCOTTS Now stands in the front rank of monthly publications. Each number contains a complete novel, as well as a liberal quantity of miscellaneous matter. One year’s subscription gives a volume of nearly 2,(100 pages. Ihe best writers of the age have been secured, and new features will from time to time be added, which will give to Lippincott’s a distinctive place of its own. lor full pro-pectus address LIP--I‘l NCGIT’S MAGAZINE. Philadelphia 25 cts. single number; $3 a year. Send tor sample copy.
“German Syrup” My niece, Emeline Hawley, was, taken with spitting blood, and she became very much alarmed, fearing that dreaded disease, Consumption. She tried nearly all kinds of medi-^ cine but nothing did her any good.Finally she took German Syrupandi she told me it did her more good than anything she ever tried. It stopped the blood, gave her strength and ease, and a good appetite. I had ft from her own lips. Mrs. Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn.; Honor to German Syrup. O AT ” THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT ANO NEW AND Mr COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says it acts gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys, and Isa pleasant laxative. This drink Is made from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily as tea. It is cal led LANE’S MEDICINE All druggists sell it at f>Oc and $1 per package. If yon cannot get it, send your address fur a free rumple. Line's f amily Medieino no>e» the tioweh rieeh dav. in order tn be healthy, this is uece*uwy. Address ORATOR P. WOODWARD, Leßoy, N.Y. F MENTION THIS PAPER which wmitinu to auvsariatas. ———— Croup. It is a fact that pigeons suffer from something very much like the croup. A false membrane forms in their throat and suffocates them just as it does with children. The reason! grown people do not suffer from| croup is because the inner part enlarges with advancing years and thus prevents the membrane’ from filling the passage. If your children! get croup, give them Reid’s GermanJ Cough and Kidney Cure. It is the' best thing in the world for this^ malady, and is the only one that you; can give again and again without' any danger, because there is no poison in it. Any druggist will give it to you, particularly if you insist upon it. Druggists are human, like other people; you want to tell them exactly what you want. The smaTT buttles are twentj'-flve cents, the larger ones fifty cents. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies VMjJj -onOther Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO.’S f MreakfastCocoa FW 'Tm a'hich is absolutely Sre f s lj I ’ pure and soluble. lIS I 12 y kli Ithumorethanthreetimet gaN ! sr; I the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily digested. jld by G-o< crs ererywh,.re. W. BAKER & CO.. Dorchester, Mais. 1 RIPANS TABULES regulate? a stomach, liver and bowels, puri-^ ! f y kloodj ar ® and effectual; > J tne medicine known for bilious- > G f*<■>>** A)/cess, constipation, dyspepsia, foul# • breath.headache,mental depression,# 0 painful digestion, bad complexion.# 0 and diseases caused by failure of • t stomach, liver or bowels to per- ♦ ®form their proper functions. Persons given to over-J 0 eating are benefited by taking one after each neat J 0 Price, $2 ; sample, 15c At Druggists, or sent b\ mall, z 0 RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 10 Spruce St., New York. J lILN f!ON IHIS PAPER WUtN WBITINa ro ADVKBTLBBM. hDfiDQVWJ® nav I H s VF ■ cured many thousand cases pronounced hopeless. From first dose symptoms rapidly disappear, and in ten days at least twothirds of all svmptoms are removed. BOOK of testimonials of miraculous cures s-ent FREE. Ten Days Treatment Furnished Free by Mail, OR. H. H. GREEN & SONS SPECIALISTS ATLANTA, GEORGIA Garfield Tease Cures Constipation, Restores Complexion, Saves Doctors’ Bills. Sample free. Garfield Tea CO.,3WW. 45th St., N.Y. Cures Sick Headache MENTION THIS PAPER wh»n wbitino to advbrtisbrs. AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY or commission, to handle the New Patent Chemical Ink Erasing Pencil. Agents making 950 per week. Monroe Eraser Manufact’ing Co., XSSO, LaCrosse, Win, MENTION THIS PAPER wnti wamna to adtbstyssm. FAT FOLKS REDUCED AaXx \ Mrs. Alice Maple, Oregon, Mo., writes: i \ H l / J “Mv weight was £29 pounds, now it is 195, a reduction of 125 lbs.” For circulars address, with 6c., Dr. O. W. F,S N Y DER. McV' ic ker’s T h eat re, Ch icago, 111, MENTION THIS PAPER wiin wbztinh to advibtisiu.
v uwiuuinv, UI tt W TURK. <’. N. U. No. 51-94 WHEX WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, V v please say you sov the advertisement in thi“ "aver. I Consumptive, and people who have weak lungs or Asth- IS ma, should use Piso’s Cure for g® Consumption. It has cured thousands. It has not injur- 9R ed one. It is not bad to take. Sa It is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 85c.
