St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 32, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 25 February 1893 — Page 3

Mr. Chas. Carman, from Petersburg, 111., writes; “1 know Salvation Oil to be a very good remedy for neuralgia, rheumatism, burns, toothache, and cuts. We are never without It. “ Peace and rest are found only aftei Struggle and effort. PURELY VEGETABLE—

Dr. Fierce’s Pleas- ) tat Pellets. They’r# ’ a compound of re- \ fined and concenItrated botanical ex/tracts. These tiny, / sugar-coated pellets ' —the smallest and ; the easiest- to take — absolutely and permanently cure Constinatirm Indi.

J

vuiisupauon, mcufestion, Sick and Bilious Headaches, Dizziness, Bilious Attacks, and ail derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels. They cure permanently, because they act naturally. They don’t shock and weaken the system, like the huge, old- fashioned Bills. And they’re more effective. One ttle pellet for a corrective or laxativethree for a cathartic. They’re the cheapest pills you can buy, for they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, ox your money is returned. You pay only for the good you get. ABSOLUTELY FREE. A Thrilling Book, To Any Reader Os This Paper, Tells All About the Indians. Imatest Publication In Its Line, Entitled “Life and Scenes Among the Kickapoo Indians”—Contains Nearly Two Hundred Pages—Sent Free to Everybody.

In order to make the public familiar with the habits, manners, customs, and history of one of the oldest tribes of American / Indians extant, we have published at greatexpense a large edition of a work entitled “Life and Scenes ’Among the Kickapoo In*

dlans.” Ail their peculiarities traditions, habits, fn fact, their whole life and customs are told in a manner which will interest the reader and hold attention to the end. The book also explains our connection with the tribe, how it came about and what has come from it. The book is profusely Illustrated and contains nearly 200 p,p. While this edition lasts we will send a ®°Py free to all who apply, enclosing three 2-cent stamps to pay cost of postage. We will guarantee to fill all requests received within the next two weeks following the appearance of this advertisement, but may not be able to do so later. It is for your interest, therefore to send at onceAddress HEALY & BIGELOW, 621 Grand Avenue, New Haven, Conn.

S 3 Tagwa ft Cures Colas,Coughs.Sore Throat,Croup,lnflnsnra,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. Bold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles 50 cents and SI.OO. p Nothing ukem SWIFT'S SPECIFIC is totally unlike an; other blood medicine. It cures diseases o the blood and skm by removing the poison and at the same time supplies good blood to th wasted parts. Don’t be imposed on by substi tutes, which are said to be just as good, it i not true. No medicine ||| TUE WHRI F has performed as many in lilt VvUnLli wonderful cures, or relieved so much suffering. “ My blood was badly poisoned last year, whicl got my whole system out of order—diseased ant a constant source of suffering, no appetite anc no enjoyment of life. Two bottles of brought me right out. There is no better remedy for blood diseases. “John Gavin, Dayton, Ohio.” Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. ROOT,BARK « BLOSSOM The Best Stomach, Liver. Kidney end Blood Remedy. Pains in Back and Limbs, Tired, Dragged Out. Nervous Feeling, Debility and Low Vitality Quickly Cured 03 well as Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sleeplessness, Dizziness. Rheumatism or Catarrh. Sample Free for stamps. AGENTS PAID WEEKLY SALARY. •1 box two months’supply I J Sent by mail oral molt Drag. BOe. “ one month’s supply 1 I gi»t«. Try It and Be WelL ROOT, BARK & BLOSSOM, Newark, N. J, PRETTIEST BOOK £"O J" EVER PRINTED. FriKEi Me SB MB KA Chea p as dirt B fi S by oz. and tt>. C^eop, pure, beet. 1,000.000 extras. Beautiful Illustrated Catalogue free. U. 11. SHUMWAY, Ruck lord, 111. AB El Ihe improved elastic truss is the only truss m exiaG •». F 116 fl a enee that is worn w ith ab^s g E Bl L. solute comfort night and M m day. and it retains the rup11 fl IT If tore under the hardest ex■l .IjWl* If ercise or severest rtrain. F O S« t—M « an,J "i' l cfTert a permanent Send for Catalogue Free. uu< j, f ' r ’ e ed> cure. .. v v Imvroveil lulaslic Truss < Bio ■a :■ v. a .-> . •._ WJiORBIS, Washington, D.C. X^iWlast war. 15 adjudicating claims, atty since. MENTION THIS PAPER whin warriwa to ~ K - icHTrivToß euchre parties R ’“h & Vl" r“ Chi^° TEN CENTS, in « per pack for the slickest cards you ever shuffled. For tl.Ouyou willreceive free by express tea packs. " Ut.vnoN 'lllis I’Al'tU »n«» warns® to "■■■—i un iim ii ~ri: r. trMeKwnit -tr—< umm I best POLISH IK THE WORLD. Kll!A v l DO WOT BE DECEIVED^’^ 3 ^®’^®^ witn Pastes, Enamels, and Paints wnicnj stain the hands, injure the iron, and burns red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril-8 liant, Odorless, Durable, and the con-| Sumer pays for no tin or glass package! with every purchase. . HAS AN ANNUAL SALE GF 3,000 TOiiS.|

CIVIL WAR IN KANSAS. MILITIA CALLED OUT BY GOV LEWELLINu. Republican Members with Sledge-Ham-mers Break Through Strongly Barred Doors—State Troops with Gatling Gum Ordered to the Scene—A Conflict Imminent. Bordering on Anarchy. Topeka, Kan , special: Kansas is almost on the verge of civil war. The membeis of the Republican House Wednesday morning captured Rcpresentative Hall by force and turned out । the Populists. They are now in posI session, and Gov. Lewe ling has ordered 1 out the State militia to eject them, i There is great excitement and a riot is imminent. Ihe Populists, who have had possession of the hall in ihe afternoons, adjourned yesterday until this afternoon, and, as has been the custom since the beginning of the session, the Republicans expected to hold their reg ilar morning session to day. But last night the Populists swore in a large number of assistant sergeants-at-arms, who wee plaeed on guard, and the doors an I entrances to the hall were locked this morning. No one was admitted to the hall excepting Populists and members of the press, arrd they were required to show a pass and run the gantlet of a dozen guards. The Republicans were fully infornjed of all these preparations to exclude them from the hall, and last night a hundred men were sworn in as deputies. At 9 o’clock the members of the Republican House, widm their officers, started from headquarters for the State House. The march through the long corridors leading to Representative Hall was unimpeded and the little column forced its way through the line of guards at the foot of the stairs in the west wing and started up the stairs. On the first landing was a crowd of Populist House officers under command of Adjt. Gen. Artz. They we e armed, and the advancing Republican crowd was met with the muzzles of revolvers and Winchesters. Ihe Adjutant General commanded the Republicans to halt, but no stop was made, and the advance guard pushed into the crowd o’ Populists. Thr> eor four of them succeeded in passing the doorkeepers after a brief struggle and getting into the hall, but the Populists succeeded in closing the door and barring it.

The Republ cans on the outside demanded admittance, and when it was denied them Speaker Douglass swung a large sledge hammer and began to batter down the heavy doors leading from the cloak-room. It took many blows to beat a passage-way through, but the doors finally gave way’ and the Republicans legislators surged in with a loud shout. The Populists retreated, leaving the Republicans in full possession of the hall. Ever since the opening of the session the Populists have had the committee rooms, Sergeant-at-arms’ room and Chief Clerk's room. These were all locked and guarded from the inside, I ut after the House had been called to order the Republicans battered down the doors and took possession of them without encountering any resistance. The Republicans and Populists are both swearing tn officers as fast as possible to be m readiness for any emergency. -wv v av^ a. Dut the Troops. Representative Hall ttie lu'teiesc ui -m3 Populists centered about the Governor’s offices, and a guard was placed at his door. He issued a call fo~ three companies of militia immediately after the clash in Represen alive Hail to storm the hall and takej ossession of it. Many of the militiamen declare that they will under no circumstances respond to the call of the Governor, and that they will not be a party to an assault on the Republican House. The Governor made a demand on the sheriff to swear in deputies and assist him in preserving the peace, but the sheriff declined, saying that he did not propose to be a judge as to which of the claimants was I the legal House of Representatives. In a letter to the Governor he said that if the Governor proposed to protect the Dunsmore House, that House itself had full authority to enlist all the officers that it required to protect itself without any assistance from him. Over two hundred men took the oath of office as assistant sergeants-at-arms in the Republican House this morning, and the Adjutant General was busy deputizing assistants all day for the Populists. Populists say they will take possession of Representative Hall a‘ all hazards, and Republicans say that they will not yield even at the point of the bayonet. That a bloody conflict.must come all admit.

Governor Lewelling has sent an order by telegraph to Captain Willis of the Light Artillery, at Wichita, commanding him to bring his company with gatling guns to Topeka 1 y the first train and to assemble in the State house and await fuither orders. Boodlintr in Napo con's Time. M. Henri Bouchot, in his new work, “L’Empire,” makes public for the first time much interesting information about the profligacy of Napoleon 1., the facts having been gathered from official documents to which until now no writer has had access. During his reign there was an extraordinary era of good stealing. The offices were filled with spendthrifts, who were tools of the ruler. Many were lifted from poverty into luxurious living and commanded to spend money as freely as they received It. The attendants at court were most favored. The Duke of Padua received $56,000 annually and a mansion in Paris; Berthier was allow, d $220,000 and the exclusive revenue of Neuchatel; Bessieres drew $263,122 a year; Caulaincourt, $300,882; CamLaceres, $450,000; and others sums varying from $'13,000 to $180,0(0 a year. These w’ere stated sums, and in most cases there were pilferings besides.

About I'lantp. The Christ’s thorn came from Algiers about 1596. The Catalonia jasmine camo from India in 1629. The pink came f;om Italy to North Europe in 1567. The Provence rose was well known in Flanders in 1567, The red oleander is an Italian; first described in 1595. The savin is a Spanish plant; first mentioned in 1584.

NO MORE KNOCKING DOWN. The Old and the New Relations of Conductors to the Railroads. Time was that a passenger conductor on a railroad running out of Philadelphia used to drive to the depot in a fine carriage, with a driver in livery, whenever he was going to take out his train. He returned a small fortune when he was investigated. Those were days when conductors had a chance to steal the fares that were paid to them by passengers who did not have tickets. Very many of them did steal. Sums as great as $75,000 have been recovered from thieving conductors. It is told of one of these conductors that he once collected a fare from a man who was one cent short of the full amount. The passenger made good the shortage in a few days, and said to the conductor: “I suppose you have turned in my fare and now you will keep this penny?” The conductor looked at him. Oh, no,” said he, “I pocketed the fare and am going to t irn this penny in to the company.” AU this business is a thing of the past. To-day conductors get few chances to profit unduly. Not only are passengers obliged to have their tickets punched at the depots in the principal towns, but a far closer watch than that is kept upon the tickets. On tlife great roads the numbers of the tickets sold for each train are charged against that train. If a man buys a ticket and carries it several days without using it, that ticket is still charged against the tiain it was sold for. If several tickets thus charged are not turned in, the company looks into the case. If a conductor should lake tickets, as used to be d me, and turn them in to a friendly agent, unpunched, to be sold again, his accounts would not agree with the station agent’s or the general passenger cent’s records, and he would be called upon to explain the irregularity. Almost the only chance a -dishonest conductor has to “nip” a fare now is when | a man at a flag station has not been able to buy a ticket. The conductor is pretty certain to give him a rebate check, because the stray passenger may be a spotter.

Now Girls, T'j^ure Up. A woman's chance to marry at from 15 to 20 years of age is said to be 144 per cent, brom 20 to 25 the chance is increased to 52 per cent.; from 25 to 30 it diminishes to 18; from 30 to 35, to 15J per cent, brom 35 to 40 (he chances of an unmarried woman sink to 3$ per cent.; from 40 to 45 a still further diminution is seen, her chance being but 24. From 45 to 50 the old maid’s chance of getting a husband is but thieceighths of 1 per cent., while from 50 to 65 she is supposed to hace but onequarter of 1 per cent, of a chance.’ It should, however, be added that the table of averages doe^ not apply to widows. Accurate statisticians, 'who would not be caught in a mistake for the world, affirm that a widow of any age has at least seventy-six spinster drawing power, and some place her figure up to eighty-two. The widow’s chances at any age are therefore seven-ty-six to eighty-two times better than that of a spinster. How We Grow Old.

The thread that binds us to life 1b most frequently severed ere the meridian of life i» reached in the case of persons who neglect obvious means to renew failing strength. Vigor, no less the source of happiness than the condition of long life, can be created and perpetuated where it does not exist. Thousands who have experienced or are cogua^ttmany physicians of ' ’’"'itik of Hostetter's StomachM, >acrrat ® r ° to its wondrous <■ffiea<Y3l” , aUl ‘ J**t*^l . vvieu s> stems. A steady of the b< dily functions, renewed ai’Pßty wl flesh, and nightly repose attend the use ■ thorough and standard renovant. Use uoloc®^ tonic represented to be akin to or resemble/It in its place. Demand the genuine, which is/an acknowledged remedy for indigestion, malawia. nervousness, constipation, liver and kidney complaints and rheumatism.

Death of a Freak. The monomaniac who in 1839 stopped . Queen Victoria while she was riding on horseback in Hyde Park and proposed marriage to her, recently died in Bedlam, the celebrated insane asylum of Loudon. He seemed to be perfect’^ sound on every other subject, was welledwated and wrote very sensible memiors relating to insane asylums and the reforms which might be made in them. He was 84 years old. Dangers of the Season. The sudden changes in weather in the latter pait of the winter and early spring are a source df colds and coughs. This season is a particularly dangerous one for person t with weak lungs or of delicate constitution. A slight cold Is likely to bec< m; a serious or.e, and the cough that follows 18 the one great cause of the many deaths from consumption In the early spring. Never neglect a cold or cough. Keep a reliable remedy on hand and check tie first cough that may lead to consumption. As such a remedy the medicine called Kemp’s Balsam is strongly recommended. For every form of throat and lung disorder. Including the la grippe cough, croup aid consumption in first stages it probably lias no equal anywhere. Get a bottle to-day, Encourages the Epidemic. The Council of Snohomish, Wash., recently decided that whisky should be furnished to small-pox patients at $7 per gallon. It now appears that the small-pox epidemic is increasing, nor is it likely to end so long as the city shall furnish $7 whisky in unlimited quantities. We print in this Issue the advertisement of the celebrated organ and piano manufacturers. Cornish & Co., of Washington, N. J. The junior partner of this firm, due Hon Johnston Cornish,* has been represent the Fourth District. Os ?. e %tter sey Lithe Fifty-third Congress. No proof can be required as to the Stas:" - ? and resp nslbllity of the firm of Cornish & Co. than the c infidence placed in one of Its members by so large a section of the general public. Cape Colony’s Commerce. i The government of Cape Colony is I about to appoint a permanent commercial agent at New York. Cleanliness, exercise and diet are the cardinal virtues of good health. Take care of the first two, and if you know how and what to eat you need never be ill. It is claimed that Garfield Tea, a simple herb remedy, overcomes the results of wrong living. It is very hard to believe sometimes that a man can be doing right when he isn’t doing it our way.— Somerville Journal. For Coughs and Throat troubles use “BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES.”— “They stop an attack of my asthma cough very promptly.”— C. Falch, Miamiville, Ohio. He that calls a man ungrateful sums up all the evil that a man is guilty of.— Swift.

The Royal Baking Powder is indispensable to progress in cookery and to the comfort and convenience of modern housekeeping. Royal is undoubtedly the purest and most reliable baking powder offered to the public —U. S. Gov't Chemists Report. For finest food I can use none but Royal.—A. Fortin, Che/, White House, for Presidents Cleveland and Arthur.

Antkjuity of the Pump. hiJno^° mmon water P um P of to-day is on the Declan in-' vention which first came into general Phiiod n i n u th ° reign of the p tolemics, 1 hiladelphes and Energetes, 28 > to 221 . G. ihe name, which is very similar in all languages, is derived from the Greek word “pempo,” to send or throw. , ® most ancient description we have of the water pump is by Hero of Alexander^Sfhere is no authentic account of itsMeneral use outside of Egypt previous Bo its introduction into the German Ayinces at about the opening of the f^^nth century. 1 mips with plun3W>**id pistons were Invented by Mot iaA<iT in Englishman, in 1674; the double actlß^pump by De la Hire, the French academician, some twenty y ears later. ______ Smashing a Sentiment. Practical railroad men account it a great triumph that they have-knocked out Ae old theory that ever.- engineer musmave his own p t engine and must not Be asked to run any other. Until only* few years ago this was the rule eve T° n the roads. Each engineer grew accustom d to an 1 fond of an engine and believe 1 ho could get good work out of it, while a stranger to it would be sure to have the same trouble that he would expect with a strange engine. That is all changed now. and engmeers are expected to leave their sentimental notions at home and take whatever engine they are assigned to. °

DO.N’r KILL THE BABY. । Many a baby suddenly taken with croup has been dosed with a cough remedy containing an opiate until it died, not from the disease, but from the medicine. When your child has the cropp, get a bottle of Reid’s German Cough and Kidney J^uie. This great remedy contains neither opiate nor narcotic, and it is impossible to g lv e in overdose. If your druggie does not keep n, or ^r it for you, send Sylvan. Remedy Co., i w - s trial bottle by I F Oiap iree. vVrjfo, J plainly, and give the name of this paper.

Ojilike the Dutch Process No Aik alios —OR — Other Cheniicals are used fn the preparation ot W. BAKER & CO.’S I frMreakfastCocoa i ‘i 15 which is absolutely IB t I-f vVI pure and soluble. 08 1 1 11 V^^morethanthreetimes '■* l lit strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or 'OuSSSSJU#* Sugar, and is far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and basily DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mais. I■nr a l H Illustrated Publications, SfiSlKSaW™ MAPS, describing Minnesota. North Dakota. Montana, ■ iLnH Idaho, Washington and Oregon, the FREE GOVERNMENT 9 AND LOW PRICE a A LANDS j®«”The best Agricultural, Grazing and Timber Landa now open to settlers. Mailed FREE. Address CHAS. B. LAMBOKN, Land too., N. F. IL IL, St. Paul, Minn. MENTION THIS PAPER whkn writing to iDrianuu. The Oldest Medicine in the Vs'or Id is probably DR. ISAAC THOMPSON’S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER. K^tomanVh^e^^ century There are few diseases to w hleh manklnt. are subject more Ulstressiug than sore eyes, ana none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been tried without success. For all external inflammatvm of t te eves it Is an Infallible remedy. If the direction-, are followed It will neyerfafl. WeparticuiMly invite the attention of physicians to its merits. Tor sale by all druggists- JOHN L. THOMPSON, bU-x---fr CO Troy. $. Y Established Lim

Established ISSO. 'r>ut of each nook by dingle and brook Ihe Iterding blossoms lean and look.” A POT OF DR. 0. P. BROWN’S PRPr.inilQ reaches and cures disease • IIL-VIWO through the pores.arou«escirUCDDAI culation. heals inflammation, ii Ln DAL banishes pain. 25 & 50c. Drug gists’, or by mail. J. Gibson OINTMENT G^Street, Jersey r>ri From 15 to 25 lbs |Hk Harmtreatment (by pracI LP® t’cing ph nician). N e starving. f A IS Thousands cured. Send Gc In stainpri \. iLI J A O. W. F. SNYDER. M. D., Mail Dept. V, McVieKer’w Tlxeivter. Chicago. 111. SsENOWW IO CENTS OSILVEH.I HOWTO BmaheS W quick money HhonosaslißanO easy. THE WHALE OIL CO. WEST SU PEE! OR. W/5. C. N. U. No. 8 -93 W HEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, IT jilea.se say you saw the advertisement In this paper. ____^L I Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asthma. should use Piso's Cure for Consumption. It has cured thousands. It has not injured one. It Is not bad to take. It is the best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 25c. 9C

Ought to Keep a Boarding House. Mrs. Emma P. Ewing, of a New York sanitarium claims that she has fed fifty studients at the rate of 9 cents a moa I, and furthermore avers that the meals were good and that the students grew fat on them. 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 Library, 36 E. Washington street. Chicago, HL Saxon ladles never appeared in public. without the hood, which covered the hair and a large part of the face. Long Complaints, Bronchitis, Asthma &C-, are speedily relieved. an d if taken in time, permanently cured by Dr. D Jayne’s Expectorant. You will find in it also a certain remedy for Coughs and Colds. The villain’s censure Is extorted praise.—Pope. Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Gre it Nene He-toier. No I its after first dav's use MarSI 1 trial ‘"“ie tree to xit cases, bend to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St, Phila, Pa.

_ --...--W XV avxKKTUSU HtF LY S BAI M-Cleanses the Nasal vB eaKrsz Al lay s lain and Inflammation, ll<-;ils^Ba^^£ Jnl the Sores, Beetores Taste and Smell, and Cures Fx’ATARB'Ag MBkv , OltTs Relief at once for Cold in F ’"fo tke Nutnls. it is Quickly Absorbed. Druggists or by maiL ELY BEOS., 66 Warren St., N. Y.

WORTH READING. Mt. sterling, Ky., Feb. 1889. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, OGentlemen I desire to make a brief statement for the benefit of the suffering. I bnH boon Wn catarrh of 7h7 he~l throat and nose, and perhaps the blaiiaei — for fully twenty-five years. Having tried .other remedies without success, 1 was led by an adverttsemwtu. c-^Qno]-Demo-crat to try Hall’s Catarrh Cure. I have just finished my fourth bottle, and I believe 1 am right when I say I am thoroughly re- . stored. 1 don’t believe there is a trace of the disease left. Respectfully, WM. BRIDGES, Merchant Tailor. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. 75 cents. EUI R l&B Anyone can play the Piano or Organ IVIUOIV WITHOUT-A TEACHER! Tl»e NEW YORK "WOBLD” savs : Ono of the wonders of the nineteenth century is Soper's Instantaneous Guide to the keys of the piano or orgau—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 (SI.OO, is a mere trifle when compared to the benefit to be derived. The thousands of flattering testimonials which have come gratuitously to ths publishers from persons who are using the Soper Instantaneous music, speak nope too highly of its meritPrice, SI.OO, Including Set of Ten (10) Pieces of either Church Music or Popular Airs. Address, SOPER MUSIC, 62 World Building, New York. Such glorious yields yon may have by planting BALZER'S SEEDS. They never »■ fall. Tfrnv always sprout, grow and produce. 60.000 Bushels Potatoes Cheap. S . rw-as PKk, EARLIEST VK6ETABI.K NOVELTIES. snfflcDnt tor a family, Foatpald for 81.00. iJFarm Grain Samples. Sc; wth cate. ICc. 11 Grass H Clover Samples 10c; wlitb cata. 18s s Field Corn Samples 12c; with catalogue Wo. Onr mammoth Seed Catalogue costs over SoO.OOO. It is mailed you upon receipt of postage. Its a valuable work, worth ten tii..es its cos£to you. ^"l2s'oo^ ■I& Buys a GOOD ORGAN, | Thia gives you an Idea of our prices. We sell ^j^nuluci turer’s p'rices-direct from the factory to tbß»se^Th«JU^ I means just half the retail price. Aou save the other tvi- e One Thousand Organs and I lanos per month. and Sn n“ nt VOU to an Organ or Kano of ourmc/.etn every g I F S If you live within 200 miles of ns, you V I can vMt , ouf factory at our expense, and see for yourself, g Write at once for our new Catalogue, r ’ Fee tn any address. It contains beautiful colored ittvjtra- ■ —~~l‘...Aii fillA to nt 'nvunto descriptions and lowest prices < i the latest 9 I and finest styles of Otgans and Kanos. It will save you g OraansYrom S^oo up-* Planes from 8175.00 up. S CASH, or on EASY CREDIT, g -‘i; 'ey 11 Instruments shipped on trial. No satisfaction ~o pay. ■ '• Eirs-t National Bank,your own Banker, ■ tsaSfud and all Commercial Ayenctcs. Write for Catalogue to-day, and get our Special Offers. ■ :CORNISH ORGAN AND PIANO CO., I Established26Years. WASHINGTON, N.J. ■

‘August Flower” My wife suffered with indigestion and dyspepsia for years. Life became a burden to her. Physicians failed to give relief. After reading one of your books, I purchased a bottle of August Flower. It worked, like a charm. My wife received immediate relief after taking the first dose. She was completely cured—now weighs 165 pounds, anfi can eat anything she desires without any deleterious results as was formerly the case. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Washington House, Washington, Va. ® AT BP 11 * y I TAK? T NeW E A X N T O WoS.'ilAlg!; rs% G E H T T TE»?“ acts gently on tlm stomach liveLANE’S HEDIGINE X “ d ♦' r" If yon cannot fri I. and aour addrew 'or a free aample. l au.’a Tamil, U-diriM, •10,0. U1» bowel, eaeh da,. In order to b, healthy tSis ia uhw. I ^; r ?4 d /5 , ,. 0RAT0R k wood ward. £‘k?,v N " ““r UKNTION THIS paper .«„ Iu