St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 33, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 4 March 1893 — Page 3

Thb police force in all parts of the country bear uniform testimony to the great value of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup as a remedy for cough, cold and incipient cotiEamption. They all emphasize the fact that no one should be without it. Avarice is always poor, but poor by its own fault.—Johnson. Hood’s Cures Marvelous, but True Deaf and Blind, Caused by tho Crip and an Abscess I Airs. M. E. Wilson Syracuse, N. Y. "For three years I had rheumatism, and last December was taken with the grip. Three phyaiclana said recovery was doubtful. An abscess gathered in my head and discharged from the •are. I was very ill for six weeks. I became Deaf and also Blind. I lost all my courage. Made My Will, and prepared for death. But I thought I would try Hood's Sarsaparilla. When I had taken two bottles I began to recover my sight and hearing. The abscess, after discharging f> weeks, healed up; my appetite returned, and I graduHood s pSta Cures ally gained strength and health. 1 can now Sea and Hear Well, do my own work, and attend to my business." Mrs. M. E. Wilson, 310 Apple Street, Syracuse, N. Y. HOOD’S PILES cure Constipation by restoring th* peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. f Pimples | s Blotches s | Scrofula 5 J are all caused by s | Impure £ 1 in. iwim < ► Be warriW" y *WWfiW»» 11 {I sisted to throw off the poisons. For • k this purpose nothing can equal * A Nature ’s own assistant A I KICKAPOO I INDIAN SAGWA * A pure Vegetable Compound of 4 4 Herbs, Barks, and Roots. Contains A A no acids or mineral poisons. A A It Is as reliable as the Bank of England. \ w All that is claimed tor it, it will do. SI.OO a w 0 bottle. All druggists. a V Hbaly & Bigelow, F 0 531 Grand Ave., New Haven, Conn. 0 W ft Cures Colds,Coughs, Sore Throat,Croup,lnfluenso, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A •ertain cure for Consumption in first stages, and «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. p f fie Best I ' Waterproof Coat ; SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect rldir.g coat, and covers the entire saddle. Beware of imitations. Don’t buv a coat if the “ Fish Brand” is not on it. Hlustrated Catalogue t'reo, A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. J MENTION THIS PAPER whom wurriNa to advartiurl Sure relief a e rp rrnr * KIDDERS PABTILLEB.^»we i u”A MOSS, I BEST polish”' IN THE WORLD.] DONOTITDECEIVEir^^ with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain tho hands, injure tho iron, and burn red. Tho Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and tho consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS.}

CLEVELAND’S CABINET. SKETCHES OF MEN WHO WILL HOLD PORTFOLIOS. Cabinet Make-Up Curiously at Variance with Precedent—The President- Elect Has Relied Solely on Uis Own Personal Judgment. The President’s Advisers. Mr. Cleveland’s Cabinet is now complete. In making his appointments Mr. Cleveland has evidently been governed entirely by his own psi Banal Judgment, and neither outside influences nor established precedents have had any hand in his select bus. The Secretaiy o: State. Judge Walter Q. Gresham has the unique distinction of having acted successively as Postmaster General and Secretary of the Treasury nnder a Republican administration, of having b en courted by the Populists in connection with the Presidency in 1892, and, finally, of being install -d at the head of a Democratic Cabinet. He was born March 17, 1814, on a farm near Corydon, Ind. His early surroundings were unnrophetic of the distinguished position he afterward attuned, and his education. general and legal, was acquired only by dint of indomitable peiBistence and rigid self-denial. He was sent to tho Indiana Legislature in

OB ■ WALTER Q GRISHAM 18'30, where he framed the Indiana Legion measure and saw it pass into a law. He commanded a a olunteer company at the outbreak of the war, and was disabled at the battle of Peach Tree Creek in 1865, after which he resumed the practice of law. He was appointed District Judge by Grant in 1869, in which capacity he served with ability for twelve years. Under President Arthur he acted first as Postmaster Gen eral and .later as Secretary of the Treasury, graduating thence to the Circuit bench, which he leaves now to take the premiership in Cleveland’s Cabinet. The Treasury Portfolio. J 4aha__kL_Carlislo, who will act as ■ nite eve fl lied the T 1 "pI n PP ea red o n t tyt stage of nation e Oa deities Carlisfai 9® championed in Cq . u7 / gress ,he n •'? r teeti “ principles X J n wiih which elevens \ ' x land’s name is now 7$ so distinctly associated. Strong in debate, with the vWv /\\v courage of his con- / o' victions and power j c. Carlisle. of leadership, he will be an undoubted ’element of strength in the coming Cabinet He was born in Kentucky 58 years ago, and after a brief experience as a pedagogue at Covington, Ky., he engaged in the practice of law. He served several terms in the Legislature of his native State, and from 1871 to 1875 he was Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky. In 1876 he acted as Presidential elector, and was elected to Congress the same year. The Secretary of War. The graduation of Col. Daniel S. Lamont from the position of Private Secretary to President Cleveland to the War portfolio is without a parallel in f the Washington / records. He wls !-• born in Cortland- ' 'v s ^ Fi' 1852,’ and inters the Cabinet at an exceptionally early age. Educa- BgwjPji vL i ted at Union Col- JL lege, he was early / / J*"/ initiated into the' / P f i mysteries of New York politics by daniel s. lam >xr. Samuel J. Tilden. When but 20 years of age he was a delegate at the convention at which Tweed was defeated by J Tilden. He held an interest in the' Albany A-gus and was co nectcd with that paper when Governor Clev land appointed him his Private Secretary. The Postmaste.- General. The appointment of Wilson Shannon Bissell is essentially a personal one. ami one for which tho uvut f. iemlshin ox

j tA i ’ v i . iriiusinp v a. isting bet ween the , appointee and the ■ President-elect Is responsible. Mr. ; N Bissell has no po- | 4 litical record what- ; ? ever, and his repu- i / tation, xvhich is a i h gh one and more ; than local, is based i X entirely on his | 'prominence as a j

wilson s. bissell cor[ oration lawyer j and on his general business ability. H e I was lo n in Oneida County, New York, ! In 1847, being taken when «ix years old to Buffalo, of which city he has been a I resident ever since. In 1872 he entered ; into a partnership with Lyman K. Bas^ ■ and a few months later Grover Cleveland entered the firm, It aving when ' elected Governor or the Stare. Mr. i Bissell is a. director in many corpora- | tions, railroad and commercial. The Attorney General. Richard Olney, who has been chosen for Attomey ('eneral, graduated from Brown Univers.ty in 1856 and Harvard ; law school two years later. Twice he j has be; n offered a Massachuset’s jus- ; ticesuip, but declined, having the last j offer from Governor Russell. Mr. Olney | was born in Oxford, Ma'ss., in 1835. His j only political venture was when he rep- j resented the Second Nor!oik District in ' the Legislature in 1871. This was tHe ! year when these was a great overturn I in State politics, William Gaston de- I leafing Governor Talbot by nearly

8,000 votes. In Mr. Olney’s district there was a close contest. On the face of the returns he was only five behind. A recount made it a tie, and on a new elaction he Avon the seat. It has been supposed by many tlrat Mr. Olney was a mugwump, but his fealty to his party has never been qu stioned. Secretary of the Navy. Hilary A. Herbert, the representative of Alabama in Cleveland’s Cabinet, will be placed in control of the Navy —x, Department. He is now a resident of Montgomery, C- WW ; Ala.,but was born at Laurensville, e. | S. C. When he V". jg=; was a child his " father removed to 'I rW< Alabama, settling in Greeneville. / r^^'/ /S. He received his I // f education at the / // ' University of Alabama and the UniH. A. HERBERT. verMty of vir . ginia, studied law and was admitted to practice. At the outbreak of the civil war he entered the Confederate service as a Captain an 1 wa* promote ! to Colonel of the Eighth regiment of Alabama volunteers. He was elected a member of the Forty-filth and each succeeding Congress up to the pres nt time. He was twice a member of the committee on naval affairs of the House and in the present Congress is chairman of that committee. The Secretary of the Interior.

The youngest man in the Cabinet will be Hoke Smith of Ge rgia, who. like Mr. Bissell, is a very large man, weighing nearly 250 pounds. A young lawyer in Atlanta six years I ago, he leaped to the front by his «. I ‘/i J energetic and sue- I ces-ful championIng of tariff reform principles in Georgia. bought the At]anta Journal for a small sum and / ■waged relentless ' war on the, oppo- ,o ^ SM,TH nents of Cleveland’s tariff views in Georgia. He finally worked the defeat of the anti-Cleveland forces in his State. He is a very successful lawyer, railroad cases being his specialty. The Portfolio of Agriculture. J. Sterling Morton was born at Adams, Jefferson County, N. Y., in 1832, going when a bov to Michigan, where he attended school at / Ann Arbor, later attending classes at Union College, r New York. From /J^it^New York ho went \\ to Nebraska, where Z h e acted as editor r^\\ / /Jtf of the Nebra ka V \ / /P' City News. After \\ V Z being twice elected 6. morton. to the Territorial Legislature, he made an unsuccessful run for the Governorship. Three times thereafter he was a candidate for the same position, eat h time without success. Mr Morton’s orchards at Arbor Lodge are the finest in the State.

MURDER AND ARSON.t^uoiph <>r Town. Ottuma (Iowa) special: There is now little doubt that Ottumwa was the scene, Tuesday night, of an atrocious crime, it being the murder o. a woman j and her babe by the unnatural husband j and father, who sought to conceal the | ctime by burning the hot.se and creI mating the bod es. The alleged murj derer is a German, 39 years of age, named Adolph Niese. Pending the verdict of the coroner’s jury he was arrested. Niese's house was discovered on lire, and burned to the ground with all its contents. Niese and three children, aged 9,7. and 5, got safely out. but his wife and 9-months-old baby were burned to death. Much sympathy was felt for the afflicted husband until ugly rumors got afloat, which were confirmed by evidence taken by the coroner. It was alleged that Niese ha I been untrue to his wife, that he had < u irreled with her, that her life was insured for ss,oi)u in his favor, that the household goods were ful y insured, and that Niese had killed hie wife and child and then set fire to the house. The testimony of Niese’s own children before the coroner's jury and others is exceedingly damaging. Niese took the three children out as the house to the home of Mrs. Pease, a neighbor. The oldest, little girl tola Mrs. Pease that her father had told her that morning that it the h .use burned and her mamma was burned up they would have money to buil 1 a new house, they would have nice clothes, and would have a new mamma. The sister of the dead woman, wh > is implicated in the dreadlul affair, is unmarried and came from Germany three months ago. She has been arrested and is now in the city jail. Her name is Hattie Volz. The post-mortem of the charred rema ns of Mrs. Niese shows that the skull liad been crushed, and there was a large clot of blood on one side of the head. It is not known whether the infant was killed before being cremated ■ r not. The woman’s life was insured for $ >,( <)(> in tho Covenant Mutual Benefit Association of Illinois. One of the most suspicious circumstances is that Vr fuHy d;es6ed ’ even to overshoes before amusing his neighbors . nd that among the first effects rescued’ lurancX^ build ^ — his m’ BERING SEA COMMISSION. Arbitrators M.>et laiis an I Adjourn to March 23. Be T HnV%T iSSiOn Os Arbi ^ation on the United t controversy between the >I d ? aUd *‘ ro ll Hri <ain met in 1 ails Uhursday in the foreign office to open formally the proceedings. There were present Just.ce Harlan of tho nitea States Supreme Cour;:, Ameriean arbitrator; I.ord Hannen, British arbitrator; Marquis Visconti Venosta, Italian arbitrator; Ham Alfonse de C ourcel, L'rench arbitrator; C. H Tup--1 vr. Canadian Minister of Marino am. l isherics, there as British agent; J. T. Williams, council for the United States; Sir Richard Webster and Sir Charles Russell, counsel for Great Biitain. Judge ( ram, of the Christiania Supremo Court, the Swedish arbitrator, will not go to Paris until tho next meeting. Baron do Courcelwas elected to preside. Ihe proceedings, which lasted but half an hour, were purely formal and tho commission adjourned until March 23. 1x 1848 1,631 journals were issuedin the United States.

A Word Lo American Housewives. O' Author of "Common Sense in the Household."

TO GUIDE THE MARINER. Six Thousand Eightliouhch in the World, 80 J of Them in America. The lighthouses of the world are in round numbers 6,000, with about 250 lightships. Os these lights Europe has 3,3«9; North America, 1,329; Asia, 476; Oceanica, 319; Africa, 219; South America, 16.’, and West Indies, 106. Tho coasts of the United States are illuminated by 802 lights, distributed as follows: Atlantic coast, 467: Gulf coast, 79; Pacific coast, 38, and the northwestern lakes, 218. Os the lights thirty-two are displayed from lightships, nearly all of which are on the Atlantic toast. The most famous lighthouse of which history gives any record was the lighthouse of Pharos, on the eastern end of the island of that name in the Bay of Alexandria. It xvas I egun by Ptolemy Soter and was finished by his successor, Philadelphus. It is said to have been 400 feet high and to have cost 800 talents, equivalent to $1,240,00 >. The oldest lighthouse in the world is fit Corunna, Spam. It was built in the reign of the Emperor Tra am and in 1634 was reconstructed. England and France have towets erected by their Homan conquerors, which were used as lighthouses. Contrasting them with the light-towers that have been built for the benefit of commerce we see that the art of building has lost nothing with the laj>se of time. The great improvement of the later towers over their predecesssors is tnat the stones of each course are now dove-tailed together laterally and vertically. Formerly metal or wooden pins were used or dependence placed entirely in cement. The modern method was first used at the Hnnois Rock light, on Guernsey. On^ie upper face and at each end of dove-tailed projections, end, ate dove-.ailed Indentations. 'ln6 upper and under dove-tails fall into each other, and when the hydraulic cement is placed on the surface it so locks the dove-tail ng that the stones cannot be separated without breaking. So, when the cement is set and hardened the whole of the base is liferallv one solid mass of granite.—Boston Globe. The Modern Invalid Has tastes medicinally in keeping with other luxuries. A remedy must be pleasantly acceptable in form, purely wholesome in composition, truly beneficial in effect and entirely free from every objectionable quality. If really ill he consults a physician; if constipated he uses the gentle family laxative, Syrup of Figs. . V! nlals at Blaine’s Grave. Since the burial of Mr. Blaine’s body at Oak Hill cemetery vandals and curi-osity-seekers have turned out in such force that it has been necessary to place a guard at the grave in order to prevent it being stripped of tl e flowers placed upon it. Women are the chief offenders. All of the visitors are not of the same type, however, and many admirers of the deal statesman have brought floral tributes to be laid upon the grave.

Ax Aggravating Sore Throat is soon relieved by Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant, an old-time remedy for Bronchial and Pulmonary affections. A war-horse is not to be compared to a peace donkey. tfl LET IT EUN, and your cough may end in something serious. It’s pretty sure to, if your blood is poor. That is just the time and condition that invites Consumption. The seeds are sown and it has fastened its hold upon you, before you know that it is near. It won't do to triflo and delay, when the remedy is at hand. Everv disorder that can be reached through tho blood yields to Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. For Severe Coughs, Bronchial, Throat and Lung Diseases, Asthma, Scrofula in every form, and even the Scrofulous affection of tho lungs that’s called Consumption, in all its earlier stages, it is a positive and complete cure. It is the only blood-cleanser, strength reBtorer, and flesh-builder so effective that it fan be ynaranteed. If it doesn’t benefit or c ure. in every case, you have your money back. All medicine dealers have it.

<1 great buffalo berry. KW 5 a r v -'3 K gS3KN Bj Ulm! ft I ll ISI 3B wft jH H a KrS 18 !w i is truly ihe greatest novelty of the century. This shrub grows 10 to 15 fret high, covering itself in early spring with beautiful wk 1 a. r . ‘i ..re fiieceede.i by great quan1- titles oflus •.■usfr.it. It is hardy, as beautiw v- a ' :1 ‘ a . 3 a F'cr are, w Idle the fra it is inion-parable, it w fl grow ar:y and everywhere and forms a --C grand addition U-•• nr lawn and garden sh.ubs. 7'"’ Each, 30c.; 10 for 01.25, postpaid. A (2 ’ JUN EBERRY. ^7 A FhT ’3 > of 'vondrous beauty; corers itself I Vii U/ I wi,h a “ass of pure white, deliciouslv ? fragrant blossoms. These are followed by I, V] • large, dark colored berries, excellent for pies I' sauce, etc. Each. 25c.; 19for$l°5 GW BUFFALO BEH,^ /W^SALZERSTREf CRANBERRY FverGiU^’; cranberry. 1 — x —— —" ■■ h. Lrerybody is land ot cranberries, and we 3 RAPE NEW FRUITS, sOc. K “aye a shrub that will flourish and bear prox^n^SS dwarf shrub fruits ever introduced created such a sensation as uiglOUSlyin every section ofAmerica. Each our BufTaiu Berry. Juneberrv and Tree Cranberrr. From the time tha Thp almvo 1 \ n leaves betrin to unfold they tire a source of constant beauty. Shrubs w’ih ® pOStpaiu, only 50c.; Fluted this season bloom and bear the next year. Hardy as oak. "iin catalogue, 58c. order to -DAY. ^ ur mamm °th catalogue is mailed upon receipt of Bc. for postage ’’ One plant of each of the three rare fruit novelties, will be mailed I H M M A CAI 7CDQC CT fl HA I _ o y° u postpaid for but » r, pcG_ 5 collections for $2.25; 10 collections for $4. JLzsi- a“. w M Fl O£wLJ UU • 9 VTOS SG, W IS.

Reforming » Parrot. A Pittsbu gher who spent a part of last summer in England tells an incident which sadly disturbed the religious peace of a parish in Penzance. A maiden lady of that town owned a parrot which somehow acquired the disagreeable habit of observing at frequent intervals: “I wish the old lad}’ would die.” This annoyed the bird’s owner, who spoke to her curate about it. “I think we can rectify the matter,” replied the good man. “I also have a parrot, and he is a righteous bird, having been brought up in the way he should go. I will lend you my parrot, and 1 trust his influence will reform that depraved bird of yours.” The curate's parrot was placed in the same room with the wickc d one, and as soon as the two had become accustomed to each other the b d bird remarked: “I wish the old lady would die.” Whereupon the clergyman’s bird rolled up his eyes, and in solemn accents aided: "We beseech thee to heilr us, good Lord!” The story got out in the parish and for several Sundays it was necessary to omit the litany at the church services. SIOO Reward. SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure i'. all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, aud giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred for any case that it fails to cure. Send Address, F. j. CHEMvi a. vv. t *S“8old by Druggists, 75c. A Natural Barometer. A very curious stone which is found in I-inland actually foretells probable changes in the weather. It is called seamakuir, and turns black shortly before an approaching rain, while in fine weather it is mottled with spots of white. For a long time this curious phenomenon was a mystery, but an analysis of the stone shows it to be a fossil mixed with clay and containing a portion of rock salt and niter. This fact being known the explanation was easy. The salt, absorbing the moisture, turned black when the conditions were favorable for rain, while the dryness of the atmosphere brought out the salt from the interior of the stone in white spots on the surface.

Commendable. According to the annual report of the Toynbee hall settlement, in the east ; end of London, there uas been an im- ■ provement in the housing of the poor, : and also in the condition of the streets; i a large increase in the rate of wages; j libraries and baths have also become more numerous, and, altogether, the standard of liv ng has greatly improved. A Garden Started Free of Charge. This Is a special offer made to the readers of our paper by the great seed hcu o of Messrs. Peter Hender-on & Co.. New York. The full particulars arj contained in their advertisement In this issue This is certainly a remarkable proposition anti one that has not been exceeded even in these days of great inducements I’ractical Royalty. The Czarina of Russia believes in “home industry,” ev dently. While seamstresses are employed by the dozen in the royal household, she herself not only makes the clothing of her youngest children, but untrims their hats and trims them over again to suit herself. THE THROAT. — “Brown’s Bronchial Troches" act directly on the organs of the voice. They have an extraordinary effect in all disorders of the throat. Both Greek and Roman ladies painted their faces: for white, using white lead; for red, the juice of an unknown herb. Disease is unnatural and is but the proof : that we are abusing Nature. It is claimed 1 that Garfield 'J ea, a simple herb remedy, J helps Nature to overcome this abuse. The wind never blows to suit the man | who rises late. FITS.—AII Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Gre it I Xeno Ke-to'er. Xo Fits after first day’s use Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bottle tree to ' Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 981 Arch St . I’hila. Pa. I

“German Syrup” Mr. Albert Hartley of Hudson/ N. C., was taken with Pneumonia. His brother had just died from it. When he found his doctor could not rally him he took one bottle of German Syrup and came out sound and well. Mr. S. B. Gardiner. Clerk with Druggist J. R. Barr, Aurora, Texas, prevented a bad attack of pneumonia by taking German Syrup in time. He was in the business and knew the danger. He used the great remedy—Boschee’s German Syrup —for lung diseases. ® A Scranton, Pa., Man Says: 1850 “DR. O. P. BROWN'S 1893 PRECIOUS PllR!:n OF HERBAL CURED ME itching OIMTMEHT \ l,l IeBS thau one ' veek \ RLES It in wortli per pot to any sufferer.” Henry Col« h. 1Y1» Summit Ave ,Ser «nton, i*a. I>e~. »O. o*4. 25 & 50?. DruKKibtH* or by mail J Gibwon lirown 4 1 Grand St.. Jersey City, N.J. Send tor book on < nre ot Disease by Herbal Hemedies I'' ix $40,000,000 Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in 1891. Yonr • invention maybe valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and intelligent advice, fret of charge, W. W. DUDLEY * CO., Sc Heitors of Patents. ’ Pacific Bldg., G 22 F St. N. W„ Wasli^tou, D. C. 5 Mention thin paper.

Valued Indorsement

of Scott’s Emulsion is contained in letters from the medical proies-

sion speaking of itsgratify^ ing results in their practice. Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil with Flypophosphites can be administered when plain oil is out of the question. It is almost as palatable as milk—easier to digest than milk. Prepared by Scott t Bowne, N. Y. All druggists.

RADFIELD’S FEMALE I REGULATOR, has proven an infallible specific lor all derangements peculiar to tno । femalesex,suchaschronio womb and ovarian diseases. If taken in time it I regulates and promotes 1 Honitny action or all firncl tmne of me generative 1 organs. Young ladies at the age of pubertv, and

■ 0

runw win ones at th c mcno- | PX'™' fla dmita healing, soothing tonic. I “^“.est recommendations from promlI Physicians and those who have tried it. I II rite for book "To Women, - ’ mailed free. Sold. by ail druggists. Bradi ield Regulator Co.. I proprietors, Atlanta, Ga.

SE E D S O WARRANTED. O / Best in the World. By mail, postage paid, j cent a package and up. wjGrand lotof EXTRAS given; with every order. Prettiest ffjjand only free Catalogue in! l the world with pictures ofi Jail varieties. Send yours H and neighbors’ address. R. H. SHUMWAY, ^ROCKFORD, - ILLINOIS i

— mwnwwwimiiiffli

Ely’s Cream Balm WILL CURE Gatarrh ; Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St.. N. Y.

& ARE YOU PRETTY? O Are you happy an«i healthy ? That I was \* 'it gneither-you may s> e by THIS -/vy? Am Iso now ? You mav easilv judge bv^ _ _ X tmxs If vou are ill, tired out. have de4 4<\fects of figure or complexion, ’’•rite me at once & \tor advice,photos Journal-FREE. (Postage2c.) ' » | Ed. Ladies’Home Journal. San Francisco, Cal. -1 asasasEfiesasE s . js as-asssasEs=s2sass2 sasas

w I Sa

■ S pt V I 5 » Ti e improved elastic truss UIIUI|||JL is the only truss in existHI I r a ellt * tliat is "orn with ab81 U I | Wll solute comfort night and A I f n F" n day. an d retains the rup- |” I I LIS tore under the hardest exit UKL U . and wiinX Stml for Catalogue Free. and speedy cure. Improved Elastic Trash Co.,SJ2 Broadway,N.Y. Garfield Teas Cures Constipation, Restores Complexion, Saves Doctors’ Bills, ham pie free. (• arfield laa Co. , 31U W. 15th St. - N. 1. Cures Sickendhch6 । MENTION THIS PAPER whin whitin** to advrktuhmh. PATENTS!PENSIONS! Send for Inventor’s Guide, or How to obtain a Patent. I Send for Digest of Tension and Bounty Laws. I’ATKICK O'FAKbELi.. Washington. I>. C. mbhrhhomf" S <TO U n tiefng physicianY N © starving. ** * Thousands cured. Send 6c iu stamnsi \ v.f J_j X v ‘ 1 • SNYDER. M. D., Mail Dept. \ icko Tlion.tor, C'liicay;o, 111. n£JiE£ NESS ^tAD HOISES CURES' l^» JU || Invisible Ear Cushions. U hispersheard, . , a Successful w hen all remedksfail. Soli CDCC ryF.HiscoXa 85SB’w av . N .Y. Write for b 'ok of proofs I aEC ( • x - 1 • Ao. 9—»» W writing to advertisers, inthK;;;' 1 >O " sa " advertisement

EUXZ, - vxn» IP^S' I H^LO in H£ N 1 K* /