St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 47, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 10 June 1893 — Page 3

Jedge Wasem’s Proverts. Some patriots needs the tonnick of offls. 'Taint alius a good sine when a married man is anxious to join the army and site for his country. The nation that eats the Ameriken ' eagel has got to eat him raw. There’s a good deal ov spangle to the ■ Star Spangled Banner. : There is times when the Godess ov j Liberty gits a mite too frisky for a gal ■ ov her age. I When a i ongressman gits to makin’ ; love to the God less ov Libberty, he j talks bunkum. Pol’tishans ain’t heroes an I v*sy ; versy. A starvin' man in this country ought to be unconstitushunal. The Ameriken eagel was hatched on the Fourth of July—Free Press. Caution to Customers. Nothing of original or superior merit but has ! Its imitations and counterfeits,even to imperil- ' lug the health of communities. For this reason : the proprietors of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters : caution their patrons to scrutinize every bottle offered (and it is sold only in bottles) and verify its many marks of genuineness. A sufficient -warning to those meditating fraud can be found in the unbroken line of judicial decisions, exposing and severely punishing- every one detected in counterfeiting the Bitters, and the redoubled efforts that are 1 being made to protect the public from the de- I ception of these unprincipled pirates. Remember the Bitters is sold in bottles J only, never by the gallon or in bulk. Flavoring 'I eas In some parts of Europe a small piece ! of vanilla root is put into the teapot with the tea. But there is a daintier . way of taking vanilla flavor with the “cheering cup.” In England some tea services are flavored when in process of making. The potter mixes the essence with the clay, and it is thus baked into ' every piece of the service. Afterwards,! whenever the tea things get hot as they 1 are being used, they exhale a faint aroma of vanilia, which seems more delicate : to the taste. An Honest Young Man. A story is told of a young man whe ' was recently married to the daughter oi, a wealthy merchant. The groom didn’l! have a penny, but he was honest. He ■ was so honest that he wouldn’t ever | prevaricate in the marriage ceremony. ! "With all my worldly goods I thee ' endow, ” rea I the minister. “With all thy 1 worldly’ goods I me en- ■ dow, ” repeated the groom. Ask your grocer for a dollar’s worth oi Dobbins’ new Perfect Soap, 5c a bar. If he hasn’t it he will get it. A bar is worth twe bars of any other 5c soap ever made. Nearly Eqna'. The United States furnish 673,0(M Freemasons and 647,471 Odd Fellows With lodge-room reasons for late hours , and latch keys. I

Mrs. Theresa Hartson Albion, Pa. Misery Turned to Comfort Kidney Troubles, Sleeplessness, Distress in the StomacH*All CURED. "Albion, Erie Co., Pa., Feb. is, ’93. i “I can truly say that Hood’s Sarsaparilla has I done more for me than all the prescriptions and other medicines I have ever taken. For 1 fourteen years I have suffered with kidney troubles, my back being so lame at times that I Could Hot Raise Myself up out of my chair. Nor could I turn myself in bed. I could not sleep, and suilerea great distress with my food. I have taken four bottles of Hood’s barsaparilla with the most gratifying results. I feel like a new person, and my terrible sufferings have all gone. Life Is Comfort compared to the misery it used to ’e. I can now go to bed and have a good night's rest; can eat heartily without any distress. I am Hood’s pSK Bures willing this should be published for others’ i good.” Mbs. Theresa Hartson. Hood’s Pl'ls cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal, fl® fJX U A sensible Cook Book tLw sL.fi 3 for practical people, w ini a a* ■ Tells bow to’ make - 1 ’ a the best Brown Bread, ■ BsS3 SB S the best Meat Stews, / - ■ the best-liked Fish ! or Meat Hash, Plain Cake, Apple Vie, Baked Beans, Doughnuts, Delicious ; Puddings from odds and ends. Tells ! how to economize and still set a good j table, and also tells how to always have | & good appetite and keep strong and j well by the use of the grand remedy of j the Indians, Kickapoo Indian Sagwa. ; This valuable and Practical Cook Book ; should be in every kitchen; and we ; will send it free to any address upon ■ receipt of a two-cent stamp to pay j postage. Address, Healy & Bigelow, ; New Haven, Conn. Ely’s Cream Balm I WILL CUKE ! A I H Fa tu i rPrice 50 Cents. | as X i Apply tala mb. no- -rll. I ELY BROS.. K Wane a HU b. Z. VeZ-.L _ ' BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD. 1 I .' XX O / i with Piwtcs, Enamch, and Paints which ; f 1h« anti bum red. T p.Sun Stove Polish is Brilliar,*-, (>:-w, a: d Durable. F. icb package ; re.'-o, ;. t «ix- .-xw , when mortened will - makegmo trf I’a^te foli’.b. IAS AN Jmil SALE OF 3,000 TONS. i

1840- -r r,- — 4,479. L’ '■ ' j J :i wEsSii^^

X. HICAGO correspondence: The

' visitor to the World’s Fair will have seen “the grandest show on earth” when he gets through with that great international exposition, but he will not ha . e fully profited by the opportunities his sojourn offers unless, in addition, he has devoted at least a few days to an inspection of the wonders

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of the World’s Fair city Itself. Chicago is the metropolitan marvel of the universe, and tho at ran who ta!<C3 in its main points of interest intelligently may’ gain an experience profitable, pleasing and instructive, and know in th ? true sense J of the woid what a real, modern city, i and a representative American city at I that, means, in these latter days of j rapid progress. There are older cities. I but not one in the galaxy claiming over i a million inhabitants is so typical of I ; the elements that go to “make the j j desert bloom as the rose,” and perform i i the transition in an incredibly brief i I space of time. As is it wonderful to । ■ contemplate the fair White City a ! , Jackson Park as the result of only two j j years’ labor, so does it require a stu- ; J pendous effort of the imagination to ! ! realize that Chicago, In less than half a ' I century, has sprung up as if by magic i ’ on a site which, in the early '49’s wa i the lone home of the prairie wolf and > [ the wild swamp fowl. A l»i ot Histo-v. Viewed in a historical light Chicago has something more to boast of than the novelty, rush and bustle of the average frontier town of mushroom growth. Tragedy haunted its inception, mighty sorrows dignified its maturer growth. The visitor contemplating a i passing glance at the fair city by the I lake, or the sojourner outlining a sys- । tematic inspection of its artistic, meri cantile, and material splendors may, i therefore, both profit by a preparatory peep into the story of the great metropolis, for the same is unique and impressive. Its original name, “Cheecagua,” derived from that of a long line p ot Indian chiefs, was a happy selection, previous. It shared tho inconsequential fate of border points until 180.1, when the government built Fort Dear- ; : born near its lake limit, which was de- i stroyed by the Indians in 1812, amid a 1 1 general massacre of its white inhab- ' ■ itants. Rebuilt, aruun I this border i stockade began to cluster hardy’ pio- I j neers from th ? East, their numbers in- j j creasing, until August 10, 1813. a town ' । organization was lormed, the leaders of i which, together With representatives of I the government, the following month j ' met in council with some 7,' 00 Pot- ■ i tawattomies, who hel l an aboriginal I • claim to the district and arranged for 1 their removal west of the Mississippi i | River. Then Chicago started on its ■ ■ race of wealth and progress. Four । years later it emerged from obscurity | as a full-fl'edged city with some 4,000 I Inhabitants, in ten years it had : 0,000 ' people, in twenty 112,000, and, in 1871, fairly reaching the 300,000 mark, its ' proud inhabitants went to sleep one

KsfwwflteW rrli L , « H ■■ • 8 1 yj.s? «vr s ^lr.Lr.dkd ilss ■- : j i & ‘Mm - t Vr Lj iq - i M 58 rU w ifcd wH F 3 f r-y itd h- iH eft p । Bi WMwr -" THE MASONIC TEMPLE. (Cldcago’s hlghe-t buil iing.)

flight., to awaken with their homes, j f their palaces of industry and art, all ; ; the accumulat“d wealth of years,swept i . into nothingness at a single fiery ; breath. T 'n* (Arri 4 I iip ; The great conflagration of Oct 9 i : ’ IS7I, thrilled the entire world with its i sudden awfulness. One division of the i I

city and the richest p irt of another were entirely devastated. When men found time to reckon up their losses, 2-0 lay dead, 98,5(bi were homeless, and property to the value of $620,01D,. (00 was in ashes. Such a disaster might well induce men to give the spot over to the bat an 1 the owl, or, slowly ■ rebuilding, stagger back to half their j former greatness. Not so Chicago!J Ph i nix-like, it arose from the embers of desolation. “Kesurgam” was its i hope, “nil desperandum” its motto. In ' a day a now building arose in the burnt ! district, in a week the debris ■ was disappearing, in a year old i sears were covered over. Finan- ! cial panic and a second fire beat । vainly against its stout walls a few i years later. t hies; o's ’• pu on. In 1890, the census awarded Chicago : a population of 1,101,2 13, since when i annexations and natuial increase have • probably carried the figure a quarter of | । a million hi gher. It has become ths j center of 7^.86 । miles of railroad, repreI seating thirty companies It has nearly ' 4 o mi.es of street, horse, electric, elevated, and cable railways, one company ; of which has transported 7i,0( 0,000 pas- । j sengers in a single two v > months, and 1 its annual g neral giowth has an aver- ! । age of fully twenty per cent. Its yearly I clearing-house I usine s is over four I and a 1 alf l iilions of dollars, its I lumber receipts 2, j Ou.Ol o,< 03 feet. , i gra n receipts 235,0 10,i>0 ) bush- i - els. Its stock yards cover over sou: hundred acres of grou: I. its school buildings number 219, it- n aguilb ent ; hotels are among the largest and best ! appointed in the word, while its ten, fourteen, eighteen and twenty story i : usiness bu Idings are to the new beft i V-H- . "Sp i ; - * TTf" i 7 i holder marvelous as the pyramids of Egypt. The stranger starting out to take in ' the principal points of interest in the city can do so on a i economical and i satisfactory I asis, if he will primarily | block out his intended tour. Nearly ; every building or S[ ot of imi portanoe is accessible by horse, | ' cable, or elevated cars, and the i faro is uniformly 5 cents. The parks j that surround the city like glittering ! emeralds in a fair crown, the cemeteries ■ a little farther removed from the city's ; j bustle, the stock yards, the hospitals, j ; the churches, the charitable and reform- j j atory institutions, the rolling mills, an I i ; other Industrial works ere all within an hour’s ride of the city's center. After the visitor has devoted a single luxurious day to a drive along the 1 magnificent boulevards, taking in a general idea of picturesque Chicago, he may visit individual j oints of interest I more cheaply and at his leisure. The

edifices of the business center aione are worthy of studious attention, while the water, police and fire systems, the harbor and its shipping, the public liIrary, and the municipal, county and government buildings and institutions arc rich with a detail that will interest the eye. and expand and instruct the mind of the beholder.

I A Matter of Health $ 1 s X -W-ZTA ' t I ™ COS ^ S more to make Royal Baking Powder , J A than any other, because its ingredients i 5 are more highly refined and expensive. But J ! | the Royal is correspondingly purer and ; | higher in leavening strength, and of greater ■ r money value to the consumer. The difference in cost of Royal over the best of the others $ ' does not equal the difference in leavening strength, nor make good the inferior work 4 | of the cheaper powders, nor remove the x P impurities which such powders leave in £ $ the food. IlWhere the finest food is required, the | Baking Powder only can be used. S W Where the question of health is considered, | hd baking powder but Royal can be used ; S safety. All others are shown by official j 5 analyses to contain lime, ammonia or alum. 5

DOUBTFUL WORDS. — Expressions that Are Incorrect ami Siiouhl Ke Avoided. Miss Hodgkins, teacher at Wellesley College, has prepared for the benefit of her young lady students tho following list of “words, phrases, and expressions to bo avoided;” “Guess” for “suppose” or “think.” “Fix” for “arrange” or “prepare.” i “Ride” and “drive” interchangeable. (Americanism.'' "Rear’ as an adverb, in expressions j “real good” for “really" or “very good,” etc. “Some' or "any” in an adverbial sense; e. g.: “I have studied some” for "somewhat,” "1 have not stu lied any* for "at ail.” "Some” ten days tor “about” ten days. Not “as ' I know for that I know. j "Storms” for it “lains” or “snows” moderately. “Try” an experiment for “make” an experiment. Singular subject with contracted I plural verb, e. g.: “She don’t skate well.” Plural pronoun with singu'ar antecedent. Every "man" or ‘woman” ; should do “their" duty; or. if you look i “anyone” straight in the face “they” wiil flinch. 1 "Expect" for "suspect." j “First rAte" as an adverb. “Nice," indiscrimately. “Had ’ rather for "would” rather. "II .d" Better lor “would” better. f° r "immediately." i^^T’W/T’Tor “person.” for "assure.” “StuprfV-^r-informe 1.” Try “an^—gfvrv.-. •..“ Try “ar'|!” d*^, for try “to" do. “Cunning” for “smart;" “dainty. ” “Cute" for “acute." “Funny” for "o ld" or "unusual.” “Alove” for “foregoing.” “more than" or “beyond.” I Does it look “good” » nough for “well” enough. The matter “of” for the matter “with. ” "Like" 1 do for “as" I do. Not "as good” as for not “so good” as. Feel “badly” for fe, 1 “t ad.” I Feel “good" for feel "well.” ! “Between" seven for "among" seven, i Seldom “or” ever for seldom “if” ever, or “seldom or never." j Taste ami smell “of ” when used transitively. More than you think "for” for “more than you think." "These” kind for “this” kind. I “Nicely” in response to an inquiry. "Healthy” for "wholesome." Just “as soon” for just “as Eef.” “Kind of.” to indicate a moderate degree.—Buffalo Evening News. The Ladies. Tim pleasant effect ami perfect safety : with which ladies may use the Califorl Lia liquid laxat ve. Syrup of Figs, un- ! der all conditions, makes it their favorite i remedy. To get the true and genuine ' article, look for the name of the Cali- ; fornia Fig Syrup Co., printed near the I bottom of the package. Honors for an American GirL I Miss Klumpke, a young American girl, has won for herself recognition in l France as being one of the most learned ■ astronomers and most indefatigable and successful observers in that counj try, Eirayears ««<». sh.- was repeived as a puj^J the Obscrx atoiro. beinzj I she first 11 to whom the doors of that instil ut ’ on tverc opened, n ,3m te beaten 1,200 times thinnir tL" " p’^tnary printing paper; one ..mice cad be made to cover 1,460 square feet. * I For weak and inflamed eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye-water. It is a care- ! fully prepared physician’s prescription. ; An ocean racer burns about $13,0 0 j worth of coal every trip. I N. K. Brown's Essence Jamaica Ginaer is a I wonderful tonic. None better. Try it. 25 cents.

A FULL STOMACH ought to cause you no discomfort whatever. If it does, gggfel though—if there’s any trouble i after eating—take Dr. Pierce's I l||i|§S;Plsasant Pellets. They’re a perfect and convenient vestpocket remedy. One of these tiny, sugar-coated, anti-bilious granules at a dose regulates and corrects the entire system. Sick or Bilious Headaches, Coni stipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, ; relieved, and permanently cured. i They’re the smallest, easiest to take, । cheapest, and best. They’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money is returned. -- -ct, is perfectly, permanently, positively cured by Doctor L J Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, i Tproprietors of this medI regpSSM H * icine prove that by their I ■ & Offer. It’s §SOO cash for a A case 0 ? Catarrh which they cannot curs. By all druggists, 50 cents.

I Farm Labor in Ciiina. The farm help can be had in China at a very low figure. The laborer hires himself, or herself, out for a certain I period, and his value is regulated ac- ; c irding to the season. I may add here ; that this is the first case of similarity I I etween America and China that I have j ever come across. During harvest time I j a good man gets from 10 to 15 cents per I day, or from 70 cents to $1.05 per week. ' j This is including board, of course. On i ‘ ordinary occasions, whtn employed by ; the month $1.50 to $2 is considered a good amount. When an agricultural ! laborer binds himself with a one year’s : < ontra d to work for a certain man. his I wages hover around sl2 for the entire , period. There is coolie labor in Amer- I iea, but none of the wages paid are as I low as this. The reason i< simple. The s cost of living is greater in the United 1 ; States than it is in China. A man who : works for sl2 a year pays about 50 copi per cash during that perio I for house I rent. This is equal to about 5 cents in our money. His dress costs him but i $2 a year, if, indeed, that much, and a ' man can be well dressed from that sum. I If the laborer has no family, he may ! manage to save a little. A man who | saves three or four dollars a year does fairly well, but the majority Jive from hand to mouth, and their •whole life is a hard struggle to kecj the hun^rj wolf from the door. —American Agriculturist. _ How’s This! We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any eas« of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo, Ohio. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the lai! 13 roarj. au I believe litm nerfoetiy (Jblo. Walpino, Kinnan A Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. Ohio. Hall s Catarrh Cure is ta’’.en internally, acting directly upon tho blood and mucous surfaces of tlie system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per lx?tt!e. Sold by all Druggists. ; Cast Up by the Sea. Flotsam is the term for such goods as are lost in a wreck and lie floating in the water; jetsam for such goods as have been thrown overboard, and ligan for such goods as have been sunk with a cork or buoy attached to mark their whet abouts. Flotsam, jetsam and. ligan are not the lawful spoil of the i finders, but must be delivered up to j those who can prove a right to them, ' the owners paying a reasonable reward to those who saved an 1 preserved them, i which reward is called salvage.—Globe- : Democrat. Work tor Workers. Are you ready to work, and do you want j to make money? Then write to B F. Johnj son & Ca, of Richmond, Va., and se - if j they cannot help you. A Monster. A “hog-killing” in North Perry, Me., ■ recently deserves more than local fame. The victim weighed more than half a । tou. One dose of Beecham’s Pills relieves sick i Iftadache in twenty minutes. For sale by 1 i all druggists. 25 cents a box. — | The oldest flute in the world is made ' of the thigh-bone of a sheep and was found In a tomb on the Nile.

swim SCIATICA ( RacKncbes k/all&ches, i IT Has no EQUAL. * TRADE MARK <3 R E V E R S 1 B L E «—-^ COLLARS 3:CU 1 The best and most economical Collars and Cuffs ; worn. Try them. You wilt like them. Look well. Fit well. Wear well. Sold for a5 cents fora box of Ten collars or Five • pairs of cuffs. A sample collar and palrof cuffs sent by mail for Six Cents. Address, giving size and , I Style wanted "Ask the dealers for them." Reversible Collar Co., 27 Kilby St. Boston. WESTERN FARM LANDS! A pamphlet descriptive of the farm lands of Nebraska Northwest Kansas and Eastern Colorado, with sectional map. will be mailed free to any ad- . dr--s on application to I’, s. FCSTIS, General I’asI senger Agt.C.,8.&Q.1i.8 .Chicago, 111. Garfield Tea s, Cux-es Sick Headache. Restores Complexion-Aaves De ctors Bills. Sample free. Garfield Tea Co.. 319 W. 45th St., h.x. Cures Constipation I ^MENTION THIS Cater wbi» warns* to

“German Syrup” Judge J. B. Hill, of the Superior Court, Walker county, Georgia, thinks enough of German Syrup to send us voluntarily a strong letter endorsing it. When men of rank and education thus use and recommend an article, what they say is worth the attention of the public. It is above suspicion. “ I have used your German Syrup,” hesays, ‘‘for my Coughs and Colds on the Throat and Lungs. I can recommend it for them as a first-class medicine.”— i Take no substitute. 3 NEARLY ? hoooOi 9 MILES 1 C INA LITTLE OVER H pOOO Minutes £ | The New Fast Train J VIA THE 11 Lake Shore and N. Y. Central Route. 3 |CHICAGO TO NEW YORKj C ^^2o HOURS? L L v. Chicago 2:00 P.m. ■ A AB. NEW YORK II ,nfi A U J 7 wt X T DAY. ILUuA.M, ■ ■ '■ €. K. WILBER, T r p - 4 Tit. ftgt., VTetf. Pa... AM. S CLEVELAND. CHICAGO. J QADWAY’S' 11 READY RELIEF. CUBES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitis, Pneumonia. Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, inflammations. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chilblains, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after rc’.dmg this advertisement need any one SUFFER WUH FAIN. Radway’s Ready Relief is a Sure Ctrre for Every Pain, Sprains, Bruises, Pains in the Back, Chest or Limbs. It was the First and Ls the Only PAIN REMEDY I That instantly stops the most excruciating palns.alI lays inflammation, and cures Couge-tions, whether of the Lungs. Stomach. Bowels, or other glands or organs, by one application. A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure Cramps. Spasms, Sour Stomach. Heartburn. Nervousness. Sleeplessness. Sick Headache. Diarrhea. Dysentery. Colic, I'latui lency and al! internal pains. ’ There s uot a remedial agent in the wo-ld that > will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malanons. i Billion- and other fevers, aided by RADWAN A PILLS, so quickly as RAdWAY’S KIAD* RFIJEF. — ’ C<-JKfa2i> WISINU BREAST r'rr"?-'L JI-lIIMIKIBI ' "MOTHER’S FRIEND” offered child-bearing woman. I have been a mid-wife for many years, and in each case where “Mother’s Friend” had been used it has accomplished wonders and relieved muck suffering. It is tho best remedy for rising of the breast known, and worth the price for th*! alone. Mas. M. M. Bruster, Montgomery, Ala. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, 51.50 per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Sold by all druggists. Atlanta, Ga. ^He^eans Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Constipation, Sick-Ileadache, etc. 25 cents per bottle, at Drug Stores. Write for sample dose, free. J.F. SMITH & CO./^New Yorki r on s vr Sr '< ULtt PRINTING OFFICE OUTFITS at reasonable ratee and upon liberal terms. Warr* FOR Pabticulabs. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER I UNION, 93 South Jefferson Street. Chicago. & ffetng physidanA Ne starving. ® » Thousands cure 4. Send 6c !n stamp % \ Wl / 1 O. AV. F. SNYDER, M. D-, Mail Dept. A McVicker’s Theater, Chicago, 111. PATENTS. Examination and Advice as to Patentability of Inention. Send for Inventors’Guide, or H< to Get a Patent. Patrick O’Farrlll, Washington, D. C. ^cre relief • ctw % KIODE^’B IMSSggBRqHIPffCT M-Si oa V r as•?o THOMAS P. SIMPSON.Washin-ton, FR 8 Kd 1 N.>atty sfee until Patent b- ■ taiued. Write for Inventor’s Guide. S S ? Morphine Habit Cured in IO to days. No pay till cured. WB &R. J,STEPHENS, Lebancn,Ohio. $75.00 to $250.00 1 lag for B. F. JOHNSON & CO, Richmond. Va C. N. U. No. 23 -93 AAIHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, ?> please say you saw the advertisement In this paper. aS Piso’s P.emedy foi Catarrh is the Best. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest, km Sag Sold by druggists or sent by mail, |9 SO 50c. E. T. Haaeltine, Warrea Pa.