St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 45, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 27 May 1893 — Page 3
SOMETHING UN-USUAL, as a medicine, is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. -“X 7 ^ nc L because of — \ J that, there’s someH 1 thing unusual in YA--eP e o£ selling fl j it- Where every ry'J । <> other medicine of kinri only promj/M ^cd' tl^s is guaran- . k at teed. If it ever bu k ' 0T cure > you have your money It s the only guaranteed remedy for every disease caused by a disordered liver or impure blood. Dyspepsia, Biliousness, tho most stubborn Skui, Scalp and Scrofulous affections, even Consumption (or I un^ scrofula) in its earlies stages, all are cured by it. It purifies and enriches the blood, routes every organ into healthful action, and restores strength and vigor. In building up botn flesh and strength of pale, puny, Scrofulous children, or tv invigorate and brace up the system after “ Grippe,” pneumonia, fevers, and other prostrating acute diseases, nothing can equal the “ Discovery ” ’ * You pay only for the good you get, I | Pimples t | Blotches 1„ m r on UJ ItILL ? arc all caused by £ 1 5 Impure $ I Blood । • Be warned I Nature must be ase sisted to throw off the poisons. For ® A this purpose nothing can equal $ A Nature’s own assistant KICKAPOO | INDIAN | SAGWA I S A pure Vegetable Compound of A Herbs, Barks, and Roots. Contains \ no acids or mineral poisons. S It Is as reliable as the Bank of England. > • All that is claimed lor it, it will do. sl-00 a v 4 bottle. All druggists. g » Healy & Bigelow, V 0 521 Grand Ave., New Haven, Ccnn. © K Getting Thin is often equivalent to "At-fmo ill. If loss of flesh | spots ” in the system are J eradicated. Scott’s Emulsion is an absolute corrective of “ weak spots.” It is a J builder ot worn out ! tissue— nature s food | stops waste and ! } healthy flesh-x^ Prepared bvScoUJifj™:.?,.?*.™^ New York. Sold by dX* lstg ce y . — ■ -^w ■ • - , sileseans Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Con- i stipation, Sick-Headache, etc. • 25 cents per bottle, at Drug Stores. . Write for sample dose, free. d.F, SMITH & CO.^/Vcm York ' ■ “MOTHER’S •. FRIEND” /1 is a scientifically prepared Liniment i and harmles « every ingredient is of recognized value and in constant uso i by the medical pre session. It short- i ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes ' Danger to life of Mother and Child. 1 Book ‘To Mothers” mailed free, containm# valuable information and 1 vo’nri+nrv testimonials. Sent by expres... . . , . i of price, Sl-.50 per LotUe. 1 nn receipt , BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. Sold by all druggists. ! Coat ^SHJW^L WORLD I SUCKER Ti c FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof, and willkeep ynudw in tho hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLK KER is a perfect riding coat, and covers theendresaddle. Bewareof imitations. Don t Sv a coit f tho “ Fish Brand” is not on it. Ilhistraj£7('auioi^ A. J TOWER. Boston, Mass. J MENTION THIS PAPER wrraN wamro to inTiirim. BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD. DC NOT BE DECEiW^^ 3 ^™ with Pastos, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove-Polish is Bn.liant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. HAS AN ABHUAI SALE OF 3,000 TOSS.
; MANY BURN TO DEATH. 1I , disastrous forest fires in : I MICHIGAN. L ! : , iildilt Hen Take Refuge In a Well, Tim- । I bers Fall j n an j They Are Burned to a . । Crisp—Wisconsin Towns Destroyed—Sag- ‘ inaw’s Hud Blaze. 'j < Forests A'JarneI A forest lire destroyed Louis Sands’ lumber camp near Lake City, Mich. Out of a total crew of sixty men fortynine escaped uninjured. One, Edward , Sullivan, was seriously burned and ten are dead. Os those, eight took refuge in a well and were cremated there by the timber and curbing falling in on them and burning. Two tried to run the gauntlet and were burned to death. ' The men w ere assembled at dinner and j the forest lire, which was burning all ' around, entirely cut off escape. When J । the men, realizing their danger, rushed ' out of the building in which they ; had been sitting the smoke so i blinded them that they became । bewildered. They ran hither and I thither, unable to find a means of es- | cape, and their horses stampeded owing ।to the confusion. Eight of the men,- ! jumped into a*- nr m ill” ^dods and some of them thus escaped, j ! but the bodies of two of them were ' afterward found burned. One man ; i reached Lake City terribly burned and ; ' there died in fearful agony. Eight J i teams of horses were cremated. Tho i i bodies of the burned have been taken ' to Lake City, where the,y await burial. । Mostof the unfortunates were strangers, ( ! and the bodies will be shipped to friends | i where known. The fire in the timber !
near the camp ot liio igen, ummei « । i Dwiggins is under control and no fur- j ther danger is feared there. Suslnaw’s Big Blaze. i A little spark and a strong southwest gale at Saginaw, Mich., resulted in a , very destructive lire. In a brief period ( ; the work of years of toil was destroyed . ; and tho fairest portion of Saginaw left j a mass of smoldering ashes and debris, i • The fire is said to have started from the ’ ■ chimney of Briggs A Cooper, on what is known as the middle ground, and, wafted by tho gale, it swept down into the dismantled mill plant of Sample A Camp, on the docks of which were a number of piles of lumber. The Bristol street bridge next caught and a portion of it was destroyed. Thence the flames leaped to the east side just below Bristol street and north of the city hall, where were located a large number ' of buildings, including hose-house No. ;6,J. F. Winkler’s ice-houses. Eleven . ; residences on Tilden street and on botn i sides of Washington avOnue down to < Holden street were quickly licked up. : Then tho sparks were carried across I the old bayou into the premises of the i George F. Cross Luml er Company, tho 1 planing mill, lumber in tho yard and a dozen tenement houses melting like snow Next came the Allington A Curtis Manufacturing Company's extensive plant and Passot s old soap iae- , di of.which were wiped out. Here in ’ho city wkr, in"' » HnadeeeN^kJ 11 -' 1811 ^. Tim I . an b^eep north to <*L
j Kani ’« Wh n re tho ,irc eontu^ricie” towir i bU H ‘ and Bwa h / > City east. 1 sv at non Owpn^jrf^r , . Warren succumb., d Sr vi„ “^iflffmates were all remove 1 ! ear>W^afety. ^«rmany instances houses caught fire qjnd were destroyed before the occu- ■ £>ants were hardly aware that they wen* i in danger, and dozens of families saved ; practically nothing. It is impossible to | give a correct account of the losses and insurance. The former will reach nearly $1,5C0,C00, with probably an insurance of $700,000. Fully I,VCO men employed in factories burned are thrown out of employment and hundreds of families are homeless, as about three hundred buildings were burned. Only one life was lost, that of John Clark, employed in McClelland’s file factory, who burned in front of his own house. A fireman named McNally was quite severely burned. There will be many cases of distress, but the great majority of the losses are distributed among people comparatively well-to-do. The he- iest loss is that of E. German, which foots up to $350,000 and throws i 359 men out of employment. Wise > >?*.in . .vens I>v^troyc<?. Saturday was a bad day for the towns and cities of Northern Wisconsin, which are surrounded by the pine woods. The
wind blew a gale, and vegetation is so backward that everything was as dry as tinder. The conditions were those ' i that generally obtain late in the fali, j and precautions against fire are then ; taken. As it was, forest fires raged all l along the line of the Milwaukee, Lake f Shore and Western Railroad from Antigo to Buckbee and from Eland June- I t tion to Wausau. The town of Bryant, ( near Antigo, was entirely wiped out, ( and the inhabitants forced to Hee for ( their lives. Thirty buildings were de- j stroyed and not a single house of any ( description was left to mark the town j uV.lb . About one millionJeet of lumber ' were also destroyed. I! here was little ■ ' insurance. Many of the inhabitants of I Bryant spent last night in the woods. ■ It was a day of great excitement at i ; Antigo. Forest fires blazed all around ! and there were several ala’ins of lire in i the city. The las’ tire starte I in the ■ afternoon and swept O' r , r the southern portion of the city, destroying A* ced s mill and about forty houses. The dam- ' age will exceed SIkO.WO and 200 people : I were made homeless. Mi >ne o a T’ wn Burlier. | A dispatch from Rock Creek, Minn., says that that town is destroyed. I
i Among the buildings are two general i s ; stores, a depot and several residences. ' I ; The 10-B will probably re ch $3 ),<)((>. I The wind at that point blew a gale, and i i the town had not appliances for light- ; 1 ing fire. Rock Creek is a railroad ■ town in the pine country, sixty miles north of St. Paul. ! PELTING HAILSTONES. ! Immense Dimage in Pittsburgh and Vicin- ; ity by a Terrific Storm. i Pittsburgh and vicinity was visited by i the most violent hail-storm every known < ’ the other afternoon. The effect was j most disastrous to life an I property. | , Heavv black clouds suddenly obscured ! the light of the sun, while the air be- ! came oppressively hot. Following a j i terrific electric flash came the crash and ; ! roar of thunder, shaking the very earth, i Before man or beast could seek a cover, . i the deluge of ice came and for five min- । ' utes there was a terrifying war of the j
elements. Chunks 2ce as big aa goose' eggs fell. Telephone and telegraph wires were prostrated in every direction; electric and eabls cars were stopped by broken wires or debris choking the conduits anl traffic was suspended for a long time. The stinging pelting of the hail caused a number of serious accidents by fren- j zied horses. Twenty horses, some of them valuable, are known t > l ave been killed in Pittsburg, eit er by collision or becoming entangled in electric wires, i John Downey, the driver of one team, ■ was dragged several squares and fatally hurt. Michael Dunn, aged fourteen, ' was almost electrocute 1 by stepping on 1 an electric light wire on Second avenue, ! One valuable team attached to a car- i riago standing in front of tho Monongahela House plunged int» the M' nonga* ' he'a river and was drowned. The fu« ' neral of Joseph Craig was proceeding ' along Stockton avenue, Allegheny. : when th ■ storm bin ke. In an instant ; the:e was terrible confu-ion. Some of the teams ran away, crashing into the carriages prece ing them. The hearse was badly damaged, and the casket was broken open. WORK DONE IN A YEAR, the New York ington. show encoui^ri results in / every branch of tho wor^y ~ V)0 report । of the permanent committ?W*K^raper- ; ' ance enters into that subject largely in ’ I detail and makes many recommenda- j tions. The report emphasizes the state- . ment that the church is not a political । organization, but owes it to God and । J humanity to give unequivocal utterance । i on such moral questions. i The total receipts of all the boards i
A iiu L’MCIA during tho year amounted to $2,799,^2, lan increase over 1b.»2 of The ! report of the Board of Church Erection Fund shows that during the year there were 239 applications for assistance. i upon which grants were made aggregating $105,391, and loans $' 1,1.>2. This total exceeds anv j revious year in the ! history of the board, and still there is l an insufficiency of supplies. Iho re- : suit of the year’s work of the Board of Aid for Colleges and Academies has <a w W jfe 7 : < VQf;,; , rs .
pectafiPh "of ’ Pur!ng fM* year the receipts have been $7 ,134, und ’ the donations in the shape of aid aggie- . gated SH3,G3O. Forty institutions have been assisted an l twenty States o; upied. The aggregate enrollment of students is 1,0 >2, of whom 2.794 are en- • i gaged in systematic Bible study. The report of the Board of Foreign I Missions displays a very satisfactory j : condition of affairs, the only gloom I being caused by the death of four mis- ■ sionaries. During the year forty-six I new missionaries were sent into tho 1 field, making a total in connection with the board of 622 missionaries, which with active agents of all grades reaches I a total of 1,1'47, including lb7 ordained ; ministers. The detailed reports from | the missions in Japan, China, Corea, ( Siam, and Laos, In iia, Persia. Syria, i Africa, Mexico. Central America, and South America, the board says, call for thanksgiving. The outlook wa- never more encouraging. The expenditures ■ tor missions in the more important ; fields were as follows: Africa, jU,k 7; ( hina, $180,067; India, $157,670; Japan, i s9i,'•( 2; Corea 3,">53; Mexico, $89,461; I’ersia. $9 >,012; Siam and I a <s. $-17,953; South America, ss7,lo’:$ 5 7,10’: Syria, $61,2!G; United States Indians, $19,848. The expenses of the home department were $50,2(0. j
SHOT IN A COURT-ROOM. Lawyer Wesner Murdered by Coley Brown Before the Judge’s Desk. The noonday quiet of Danville. Ind., was- disturbed the other day by two shots that rang out of the court-house win lows an l were plainly heard around the business blocks that surround the court-house square. Immediately some one ran out into the streets from the . court-room exclaiming: “A man has j been murdered in there.” “At ho is it?" ; ex laimed several. ’’Coley Brown has just shot Lawyer Wesner,” was the replv. Brown is president of the Indiana • W.^nef'w.tW.. i-amue.r 1 County bar. The shooting occurred 'in ' the ccurt-room directly in front of the i Judge’s desk. _ ! For several days a suit, Martin Hope ; against the Lebanon Gas Company, for ' damages has been on trial and been bit- I terly contested on both sides, and the shooting was the outcome of this suit. Brown drew his revolver and fired two shots. Wesner moved toward Brown and pulled a long dagger. Just as he laid hands on Brown Brown fell and AVesner dropped upon him. He was taken off and laid down. AVesner’s
strength began to fail and he died in forty minutes. Brown was arrested, his revolver confiscated, and he was • taken to jail. The coroner was called and his verdict was in accordance with the facts as stated, practically charging Brown with the murder. Brown ; was taken to Indianapolis, where he will be out of the way of mob violen e. ! Backboro i f the 11 hi ky Ttst i rok>”. i The backbone of the Whisky trust . will now be sorely tried if not broken, i Five of the largest houses have with- : drawn therefrom and will run independ- j ently. The houses are both the Wool- i nor distilleries of Peoria, the Peoria, Northern and Manhattan Distilling com- I panies, all of Peoria. The trust pays I rent to these houses to the amount of j sloo,l'oo. These five houses are the i largest and best in the country. They I have a total capacity of 16,h00 bushels, and are capable of manufacturing 80,000 ] gallons of spirits every day.
^1 ® fße on your Guard. | If some grocers urge another baking I powder upon you in place of the “Royal,” | it is because of the greater profit upon it. ,@ | This of itself is evidence of the supe- £ i j riority of the “Royal.” To give greater ® ' profit the other must be a lower cost powder, and to cost less it must be made . with cheaper and inferior materials, and ® V^ us ’ though selling for the same, give i Xess value to the consumer. S insure the finest cake, the most S & y wholesome food, be sure that no substi- ® ® ^F^ u t e h? r Roy a l Baking Powder is accepted 1 Nothing can be substituted for ® fthe Royal Baking Powder , and give as good results. j|
misake of the operator. ' II - ’feught the ^loon W >•< a HeaiUight. | I anil So Itcporteil. j It|s a sleepy little Massachusetts i towwut there was a railroad running thrA it, and forth ' accommodation of new summer patrons of the line a i stati had been I uilt, says the Boston j He^. The Pooh Bah of the place offltto l as telegraph operator, station agtnand yard master. Through some I mi^erstanding with the company . onefeoh Bah had been dischatged and ser%ion his way with a troubled con- ' sei le, and a new operator had been ।< nr led to fill his place. The new ma khile he was a good operator and . umTstood railroad matters well enough ito ip th n position, was totally unaeF qf Ited with the locality in which he i narfound hln self. The trucks from ,jj^^!<nr«~ilret< hed away through a of Jmi land for about a quarter of a milemd then disappeared in the cen- : ter of trfense forest of ft. and sprue The fir night that the new Pooh Bah was In ka rge he had just finished tak- , big or rs f, r a train that would pa-s s the ®tbon about 11 o'clock, and he Sleppies the station door to glance down tracks. Far down at the | odge o»the woods, that loomed up I Gainst the lighter gray sky of the suA^. r night, he saw a bright-n d light, a thinking it must be some • t* l3l h e did not know 1 th'* kv-'r s f the senvi-‘“MlHir'-v’plr with ni» wne. #u.vri.. ... main o'lpv door to inquire If all was well and’how the new man was getting along. ^The operator spoke of the sp- - ' cial tra'n that was coming up : h • tracks and the ' super’ looked puzzled and ' went to the door.
; “What special train do you mean?’ he a-ked. “I see none. ’ i “Why, there it is, down by the black woods: don’t you s>e the headlight. ” replied the operator. “M<adl ; ght be hanged!" growleltbe ' official. "That’s the moon rising through the woods t the en lof the , tracks.” What an Oi Found la a Bale of Ha’.. A few days since E. D. Smith killed ' an ox whi h had been stall fed for some । weeks past, and woen its h was c it open seven and cne-half ounce- of foreign matter were found inside. This stuff consisted of a half dozen t ebble , 1 several pieces of wire, copp< r riv ts, one j iece of a file and fifty nails and pie es of nails. The nails were of ail sizes, from the small shingle to the eight-penny, both cut and wire. These metallic dainties evid< ntly passed into tho stomach alonrr with other food. The wire was of the Kin I always u.-e I in binding baled hay, on which he had ■ been fed recently. He had not been ♦ +«» tiin Hivurv o’ p kp£? of nai’s.
treated to me iuxurx oi a ui ugho, ' and no theory is advance I to account for how this job stock of hardware h d ■ be n accumulated. The process of digestion was necessarily slow, and none । of the article - showed any signs of de- ; compositb n. The ox was in excellent I condition, showing that he had suffered n > inconvenience from < arry ng around this e4rgo of rock and iron.—Everett <AV as. I) N e ws. ■ SIOO Ileward. ®IOO. The ^a’ler i cf this pap -r will ba please 1 ' to lea)*, that there is at least one dreaded diieasefchat Ecience has been able to cure in alii! stages, au d ^at is Catarrh. , ie.r.iirea a • >n- • W ?o!rb r ' o ,%ai.nient. Halls Catarrh Cure is tff?rnallv, acting directly upon the blood ", k r”tncous surfaces of the system, thereby ' <ipa»r7ving the foundation of the disease, and Lm. im7tho patient strength by building up the ! constitution and assisting nature in doing its i work.' The proprietors have so much faith in i its curative powers that they offer Oue Hundr. i I Tollars for any case that it fails to cure. Sena ; for list of tes itnonials. j Address, F. J. I HhNEi & CO., Toledo, O. ■ h3*Sold by Druggists, 75c. Jedge Waxem’s Proverbs. Nine men out of every ten think they could be statesmen. j ’Tain’t necessary to ask about a man’s moral charackter when you air
looking fer a hand in the pollitikm ■ feeld. Money is what give sparkel to <am- 1 panes. Pollitishans c-nsider buyin’ a vote an investment and not a crime. Candidates air seldom jumped on when they air down. Penshuns i ays pollitishans. ’Twouldent be so bal, mebbe, es a man could git a house and lot or a farm । ' fer his vote. It’s a mighty pore sort ova feller j sitzen we’ve got that won’t lern to rede i n I rite.—Free Press. ! The longest tunnel is the St. Goth- । ard, nine and a half miles. It is 26J ! feet wide and 13 feet 10 inches high. i Beecham’s Pilus cure sick headache, dis- | ordered liver, and act like magic on the vital organs. For sale by all druggists. ; The firgf cotton mills were erected at , Beverly, Mass., in 1787. 1
Not Pastry. That old story of Marie Antoinette and the starving peasants has often be n told a- an illustration of the heartlessness and carelessness of royalty concerning the cornu on people. It has served its purpose well, but unfortunately it is not iitiite true. When Marie Antoinette was informed of a famine in i tho neighborhood of the Tyrol and of the starving of tome of the peasants there, she replied: “I would rather eat pie crust than starve.” Some of the story tellers, by the way, have it pastry, others cake. Thereupon the courtiers laugh.d at the ignorance of the pampered prim ess. who could suppose that starving peasants hid su h an alternative food as pie crust. The ignorance, however, was all on the side of 1 the courtiers and those who repeated ! the story in its ordinary form. The princess was the only person in the court who really understool the habits of the peasants of the particular districts in question. They cook their meat, chiefly young veal, by rolling it in a kind of dough made of sawdust, mixed with course flour to hold it to- । gether, then placing this in an oven or wood embers until the dough is hard- ; eno I to a tough crust and the meat is , roa-t< d throughout to the proper point of cooking. The crust is then removed. Mar e Antoinette said she would rather i eat pie crust than starve, knowing that j those meat pie crusts are given to the ; pigs, and they are nourished by them ' them in spite of the wooll Will I e of value to the worm oj . tinting the improvements in the me- I c! aui al arts, and eminent physicians ; will tell you that tho progress in medic- । inal agents has been of equal impor- i tance.’i nd as a strengthening laxaTve .
that Syrup of Figsis far in advance of all others. Nothing; to Brag Os. The story is going ro :nd th at forty ■ years ago a New York man marked a : quarter an l put it into circulation, end | now it has just returned to him. That’s j nothing. We put a j lugged half dollar into rculation yesterday, aid in less , than four seconds it cam • back to u-. Yet we don’t go np and down the earth bragging a’ out it. —Ar! ansas Thomas ; Cat. A st imp th it Costs 81,250. The rarest stamp in the world is said ; to be an American one—Brattleboro, : 1846. Unused specimens are very rare, | but there is supposed to be only one used specimen in existence. It is worth $1,250. Thou oughtest to be ni -e, even to j su; erstilion, in keeping thy promises; : and, there!ore, thou shouldst be equally , cautious in making them.—Fuller.
lrfights toKjll. it) j (an^Oll
® TRADE MAW — REVERSI3LE COLLARS BcCUFFS. ■— qmL m I The best and most economical Collars and Cuffs ; worn. Try them. Vou will like them. T.nnk well. l it well. Weal Soil ““‘25 cents fora box -f Ten collars or hive I ■ pairs of cuffs. Asamplei-oIUr and pair« cuffs wnt । ■ bv mall for Six Cents. Address, gning size ana , style wanted, Ke d^r S for t..r,n
' Reversible < < o.M: K 1 :■ St. 1 LARGE profits can be made year- . \:v by the right of | sale for lowa. Nebraska or S. Pak. SL Make application wj at once. Address ; for Price, Terms Props . 201 HerJ pm Ci. e igj j z , | Price 50 Cents. | S ! I ’ Ar,ply Balm into each nostril. । ELY BROS. 56 Warren Bt.. N. Y- x ~” d | THOMAS P. SIMPSON. Washington, ’ PfiTtHlS” '*• 5 wry-be untb Patent co- , » K 8 b »a . laeJ . Write fur Inventor sOmdo.
“German Syrup” My acquaintance with Boschee’s German Syrup was made about fouri teen years ago. I contracted a cold which resulted in a hoarseness and j cough which disabled me from filli ing my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After trying a physician, without obtaining relief I saw the advertisement of your remedy and j obtained a bottle. I received quick and permanent help. I never hesitate to tell my experience. Rev. W. H. Haggerty, Martinsville, N.J. O W. L. ’ DOUGLAS S 3 SHOE NoVWiP. Do you wear them? When next in need try a pair, they will give you more comfort and service for the mor-ey than any other make. Best in the world. ^4.OG^ X^2.sa 53.50 W 152.00 $2.50 S 52.2 S B I 5i.75 I W. L. Douglas Shoes are ma^e In ail the Latest Styles.
If you want a fine DRESS SHOE don't pay $6 to $3, try my $3.50, $4 crss Shoe. They will fit equal to custom made and look and wear as well. If ycu wish to economize in your footwear, ycu can do so by purchasing L. Douglas Shoes. My namo and price is stamped on the bottom, look for it when you buy. Take no rubstitute. I send shoes by mail upon receipt of price, postage free, when Shoe Dealers cannot supply you. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Ma«s. AT i^^^ A /PLEASANT THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT ANO NEW AND tAV COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says it acts pently on the etorrach, liver and kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative. This drink Is made from herbs, and 13 prepared for use as easily os tea. It Is called LANE’S MEDICINE All draretsu ..11 It »t 50c ind »l per I*’**; [f N, »er. 1 vo r -xddreM fr r a free eamr e. l^ar 9 r annl? Srdlejß® mo’M the bowel* eerh day. In erdtr t It k'CUy. l “' s ’’ ; urv. A idre»* ORAT ‘K. k WOODWARD. Leßw. >. Y. F Mention this paper «■»» nm.. to ■ Purely vegetable, mi Id and reliable. Cause peri?cl Digestion compiet - absorption and healthful r gularity. For the cure ot a i disorders of the St •inach < , Liver, Bowels Kidneys, Bladder. Nervous Diseases,
LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. PERFECT DIGE<nOM will be accomplished by taking lud raW Fil s. B> t heir ANTI-BILIOV3 properties the'- stimulate the liver in the secret; -a . of the bile and its discharge through the biliary ducts. Ihes^ pili' in dos *-M trom two to lour will , Quickly rvgui.*t-r th a- tion ci liver and tre - taa patient from these disord rs. One or two of Radway's P.lls, taken dailv by those subject ti bilious . pains and torpidity ot the liv-r.will keep the system regular and secure healthy digestion. Price. 25c per box. Sold by ail druggists. RADWAY & CO., NEW YORK.
The Oldest Medicine in the U'orld isfrolably DR. ISAAC THOMPSON’S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER. This articie is a can tally prepared vha sk pui s prescription, and has been iu constant u>e for nearly a century. There are few diseases to which mankind are subject more distressing than sore eye». and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been trk-d without success. For all external innainmati a ; of the eve s it Is an Infallible remedy. If the dire^ i tions are followed it will never f .11. We particularly ! Invite the at-en Von of ? hvsfcfcnsjo it= merlt s . H r sale by all dmzyists JOHN THOMPtjbh, SONS Garfield Cures Constipation, Restores Comp.txion^Saves Docto^ Ri I is. sjimnle free. G .artkild Tea CO., W. xDtn b-. .X .
blds. bampie iree. u a, *** .».- — Qu res Sisk Headache MENTION THIS PAPER who wbxtin® to advbztubm. _ c C From 1 r t- - O. W. r. K'nilEß, V>. Mail Dept. V Me Vieker’s Theater, Cliivajjo. 111. I Snre re lief i m-to j KIDDER’S ^ST!LLES.^r^S £69 a25*3 Morphine Habit Cured in 10 SB 2^228^ to 20 days. No pay till cured. ^5 DR.J.STEPHENS, Lebanon,Ohio. C. N. I . No. 21-93 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, tv please say you saw the advertisement In tins paper. Pisn's Remedy foi Catarrh Is the gA IES Best. Easiest to Tse, and Cheapest. M| ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mail. £■ 50e. E. T. Hazeitiae- Warren, Pa. 38
