St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 49, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 24 June 1893 — Page 3

” e Scourge, a its congener, bilious rea affections of the stomach, ,>wels, produced by miasmatic air .er, are both eradicated and prevented je use of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters a purely vegetable elixir, indorsed by physicians. ansi more extensively used as a remedy for the above class of disorders, as well as for many others, than any medicine of the age A languid circulation, a torpid state of the liver a want of vital stamina, are conditions peculiarly favorable to malarial diseases They are, however, surely remedied by the great preventive, which, by invigorating the system and endowing it with regularity as well as vigor provides it with a resisting power which enables it to withstand disorders, not only of a malarial type, but a host of others to which feeble a? 1 ill-regulated systems are subiect. The Bit 1 ys are a safe as well as searching eradica / and have widely superseded that dam/ i drug quinine, which palliates but doe. eradicate malaria. 4 m ii >! ; i: i a i £ Q*. Chaplain of the State of Nevada t, "ST pen act used of plagiarism. One « Zj* « members complained that the / man Introduced in his i emarks the ; T^er day. word for word, ideas the ptor had heard expressed at a fune/GO f two years ago. Inquiry showed it IO & the Lord’s prayer the Si nator had Q Jerrod to—Cleveland World. tJ-'Vi er in IViv ri 5. Bavaria beats th > rest of Germany in ; the production of beer, its breweries I turning out a supply equal to 260 quarts j > per inhabitant per annum. And there is ' less drunkenness in Bavaria than in ' prohibition Maine. Free Text Books. Oyer 2,000 schools in Pennsylvania I outside of Philadelphia are already sup- i plied by the respective boards with free ' text books. e. I ! * I 3 I Mr. Joseph Godfrey “10,000 Needles •eemed to be sticking in my legs, when I wm •offering with a terrible humor, mv legs being • mass of running sores from knees itova. I was urged to take HOOD'S S tR-»AP UHLLA i and in a short time I was jterfectly cured. I ; Hood’s pa a x Bures am an old sailor, aged 74, in the best of health thanks to Hood's.” Jos. Godfrey. Ballots' Snug Harbor, Staten Island. New York. Hood’s Pills are the best after-dinner Pills, assist digestion, prevent constipation. JF A sensible Cook Boek S m » B I * or practical people. I IP Jr 2 o I Tells bow to make I K i M'J M 0 the best Brown Bread, B KzS B the best Meat Stews, ■■ the best-liked Fish or Meat Hash, Plain Cake, Apple Pie, Baked Beans, Doughnuts, Delicious Puddings from odds and ends. Tells ! how to economize and still set a good table, and also tells how to always have a good appetite and keep strong and well by tne use of the grand remedy of 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 V PP— a ? e - Address, Healy A. 0., »1111 m

' "f ' DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. La Grippe I Gripp! Gripp ! i After Effects Cured. Mr. TWger writes:—"l had a bad attack of the

Grippt l ; after a time caught i cold and had a *econd ■ attaca, it settled in my J kidnejs and liver, and ! Oh!such pain and misery in my back and legs. i The physicians’ medicine j and other things tliat I used 1 i, made no impression, and I ■ continually grew worse un- ' til I was a physical wreck, !

r Ack W

■nd given up to die. Father bought me a — bottle of Dr.FItafsSWA.TIP ROOT, and j before I had used all of the second bottle I felt better, and to-day lam just as well as ever. A I year has passed and not a trace of the Grippe , is left. SWAMP-ROOT saved my life.” D. H. Bilger, Hulmeville, Pa. Jan. 10th, 1883. • DROPSY I DROPSYI DROPSY!‘ Suffered Three Years. “Respected Dr. Kilmer A-Co., Binghamton, N.Y

Hr*’v7 * j

My wife bad suffered for three years with Dropsy, during that time she was attended by five different physicians, none of whom helped her for longer than a few days. We also used besides, more than twenty different remedies, but nothing would help. Then we used your

aXhTrTheSS MRS - HERMAN BROERffW. three bottles relief was apparent, hence sho continued to take it until she had used twentyfive One dollar bottles. Now she is healthy and strong, as she never was before. She will be forty-one years old on the Oth of next March and next to God she owes her life SWAMP-ROOT. T send yon this testimony and enclose herewith a Photograph of my wife. Your true friend, Hehm an Bnoxiuxa. Feb. 23,1893. L<iramies, Shelby Co., ()hio. At I>ruuK*«*t*» &Oe. or ^I.OO Wze< Tj “Invalid*’ Guide to Health” and Connuttatlen Free. vr ® pr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y. IQ £ Anointment U V( Cures Piles Trial Free. At Druggists 50a

BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD. dgnotbTd^iveF'^^ 1 ■’ with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which Stain the hands, injure tho iron, and burn red The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril Bant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Pasto ^hsh. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 To^o>

jTHE PARKS OF CHICAGO r PRIDE AND BOAST OF THE 1 ; CARDEN CITY. i : ’ , World’s Fair Visitors Will Find Vnequalod ■ ( XTeasare In the Many Charming Acres , ! <>f Artistic Greenness — IVw Citics So - I Famed—The Cemeteries. [ I Delightful Breathing Spots. , ' Chicago correspondence: ’ j The “stranger within the gutee" who , , Inspects the great park system of Chii cage will eeaso to wonder thereafter । why the Garden City is so famed. Few , • places of its extent have so many doi lightful breathing spots, and the girdle I of natural woods that almost shuts in ।' the metropolis seems to be continued i along tho boulevards and the chain of , ' parks that are tho pride and boast of

its inhabitants. Miles of magnificently paved reads devoted exclusively to driving, patrolled by special * officers, shaded by leafy trees, and su p p 1 i e.d w i t h splendid drinking fountains, link acres of well-kept, ^artistically laid out areas of greenness, an d the World’s Fair vis-

I y I i | DREXEL FOUNTAIN.

i Itor will find a source of unequaled : pleasure and satisfaction, in these charming with tho picturesque, mm me grandeur of the primeval forest with the refinements of tho model villa. Tho opulent tourist may view these places by foli lowing tho boulevards through them lin a dashing phaeton but, as a five cent fare will reach any one of them, the less favored or more economical may share tho pleasure, and we manv things not accessible save to the jkhlc--trian of leisure. l.lneoln Park. Lincoln Park is the m< -• popular in . tho city. It is one-half a mile by one' and a half miles in extent, and mav be reached by the North Division cable J

sß^" — v Tw, TMt TcC - .- ■ - - - . s _ —V .... - .

If itFTtE e_. -awßWKjiy n: tvC c l p

cars. It commands a grand panoramic ' t view of tho lake, and has within it- ; boundaries scenic beauties thi»t vie t with those of the finest jMirk- in the i world. Charming lawns and ex]>ansivo ' pleasure fields, magnificent groves, i i winding drives, fhiwer Iwds of the mo-t i unique and elaborate patterns, and fine ; < shrubbery lino an artificial river and j I lake well supplied with pleasure l»oats. : In addition to the-e, there L- an at- ■ : tractive zoological collection, including Ixuirs, seals. deer, butlali* s‘ ; and innumerable smaller representatives of the animal kingdom. Summer evening- free mu-ical c mcert- are provided, and on se. occasions the pris- ■ matie electric fountain is put in opera- i which include a cactus eonservatery ' and other structures filled with an in- ’ r b-- : ... ' : SKETCH CKO I GHtFULD PARK

foresting collection of tropical plants. • The various boulevards hauling- from I t'o i for several hours. The art feat- ' arcs of this park aiv quite notable, i including a fine reliquary tomb of tho i cemetery from which the park was ■ transformed, a striking bronze Indian i gixmp of life-size figures mounted on a massive granite jiedcstal, a statue of | Schiller, the German poet, a Lincoln monument, the Bates drinking fountain, the La Salle memorial, and the celebrated equestrian monument of General Grant. The south parks embrace Washington and Jackson, a portion of the latter being the site of the World’s Fair. Washington Park is a little north and

) west Os the Exposition, and may bo reached by the various lines of transportration" lea-ding to that place. It ; has 100 acres of meadow, a famous stretch of sward, and the breadth of treatment of tho landscape artist is further shown in a meandering sheet 1 of water thirteen acres in extent. This ' park has a fine collection of animals, in- ' eluding 130 full-blooded Norman heroes. Over ITO,OOO plants are set out annually from the nine propagating houses, Washington Park are well worthy a ramble. The Drexel fountain at Thir-ty-fifth street, one of the costliest in the city, is a prominent feature of the driveways, which abut on some of the rfw i IXI 1116 Oka South' Park's cost over ^.000.0r0, Washington has 371 acres, Jacksons 33. On the W«»t s|<Je, The west division of tho city has three notable parks Garfield, l)ouglas and Humbtddt. The first named is j reached by the Madis<<n slree’ cable cars in about thirty rainut*'-' ride from I ' . ■ Ggd< n avenue car-, and Humboldt by the Milwaukee avenue line. In all those charming sp :t- of verdure every ace» 'ry U> c< mfort und entertainment is t«> found. All have lakes, breezy > pavilions, ample resting benches, rustic 1 S' At - and arlmr-i, c m 4 nooks and oj>en

grass pints. Through the elaborate shrubln-ry, woods, flower Ihhß, lawns and shady b Tib rs wind in and out milo of pleasant walk.- and driveway^ while wood.- stone and iron bridge- of tasteful design.-, drinking fountains and artesian min-eral-water wells are scattered about here and there. Garfield ha- I*3acres, Douglas five acres less, and Humboldt floo. Those parks a o connected by boulevard*, paved smooth as a floor, and lined with -tately elms, Ih^ides these parks, which are under the charge of ritate Commissioners, there are numerous small city parks, • H'cupying one or two -quais -of ground, set mainly in the residence ysirtions of tho city. The most notable of these Is the Lake Park, situated on the lake front. While its improvements are few, its site being made or filled-in ground, it is a pleasant place for a j stroll, for a whiff of fresh sea air, or a I view of the fashionable equipages to . lie seen any fine afternoon on Michigan I avenue boulevard, which lines the park ! on the west. The Cemeteries. The principal cemeteries of Chicago ; are five in number, and all are beauti- j lul in the extreme in point of location and interior environmenmont Green i j sward and flowers have taken the i place, in these peaceful cities of the i ' flrod. of the gloomy iron fence anfl ' ' Jrimimr b ’X-tJnsh hedyo of former s V< UIS. all<l they wro kept up to a perl ’ f ct degree <>l neatness and jivtseh.il!, which contains many sob I ! dices' graves and the fireman^ moimnwat. covers 5*H) acres of ' j g ouud. and is about eight miles from < th’ city, on the Northwestern Raili rood. Lt has a fine entrance arch, a I series of urettv lakes, and manv cmand

J i Pi j’l’ 11 .> IvlIV’T. tl.hl UAdir, gIUILU | and imposing monuments. Calvary, 'the great Catholic cemetery, lies "a I mile and a half north. Graceland i Cemetery is. next, to Greenwood, New : York, the largest in the country, and is reached by the North Division cable cars and the Northwestern and Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroads. The aim of its mamigeimmt has been to make it achecriu: and attractive, place., and so disassociate the idea of gloom. Scales are now made that will weigh the flame of a camlie or the smallest hair plucked from the eyebrow. In 1502 velvet was commonly used for book bindings.

- D(Mxl 1 \ PoWder AA^UTELY PURE All other baking powders are shown by the latest United States Government Report to be to the Royal in both Purity and Stropeth» -■•’T ■'3- ^. "'U W 7 dJOOZ t S ;sp;O< , »»**»*«* of u. S. Agricultural Dept.) V

-. A almple s ^»-*U4/o’nt, stated in simple language; wfth siucero feeling behind it. i» oitenmore efTo live than anything which orators practice under the name of eloquence. A g<»o<i example ie furnished in the memoir* of Jefferson Davi*. A young woman wrote to him "Dear Mr. I‘r sident I want you t ■ let Jeem* C.. of company noth, fifth ' South Carolina Regiment, come homo and get married. Jeems is willin', lis willin', hi* mammy sho is wdlin,' but Jeema’ Captain he ain't w.llm'. Now when wo are all willin’ ’c-'ptin' Jeems' ( a; 'a n, I think you might lot up and let J< em# come. I'll make Ulm g > BtraLht lack when he’* got married an l fight Just as hard as ever." Mr. I avia wrote on the letter. “Let Jeemi go. * • Jeem* went home, married tho affectionate correspondent of Mr bivis.roturn*d b> hi* regiment, and did tight as hard as ever. Water I’tiritlr I by Iron. The filthy water of the Rl'er Noth* ia jfir fled for use in Antwerp by being passed through revolving cylinder-con-taining email pieces of lion, bitte n pound* of metallic iron will pt rify I 0.000 gallon* of water. The water thua treated H *aid to I o t > rq a'ci, freed from germs, bacteria nnd other objectionable matters. English and French chernUt* find that the conta’t with iron reduces the organ. • mutter l v from 47 to Si jer cent, and alb ri - d by from 50 to 90 percent and all free ammonia Is removed. The process has been applied with eucceas to the Delaware River in Fenaeylvania. It Is -<mp|o and cheap. From all of which it may be inferred that th* ; assage of dr.nkfn ; wat< r tbn ugh In n pip a do- s n<>t Injure IL—BalUm<Te American. — St*th or Omi > Crrv r Tontio, ■ LVCSS U’CWTT. ' “■ Faaxa J. Crrset oath shat ba l« tba •enk'r par'.net of tt-.a Oruj of I t. Chknkt a Co , !.U:qj bus.: to tk.« l lt fat TUsdo. Cmnly *■ i Ms’r af.niMh a?-4H>at * a l ' firm will par tbs i of oi v tfUS'DHF.D DOLLARS for j v tubscrib.d la u.y A. W GIXASt ?*■ { X No -a y Hall's Catarrh Cnrtt Is taken Internally, and acts dusctly on tfiebiood and mucous surtae^g at the system, semi for testimonials, free F J. CHENEY A CO., ToWdu. a M-Swld by drowists 75c. — Old-Time Watch men’s Kains. The following instructions to watchmen are taken from the "Selectmen'* minutes' of Boat'd!) date! Nov. 1 li'd: "In eoing tho round* cure must be taken that the watchmen are not noisy, tut behave themselves wi h strict decorum, that thev frequently give the time of night and what the weather is with a distin t. but molera’e voice, excepting at times whe it is necessary to pose in alienee in order t ■ detect and secure persons that are out on unlawful actions. “>vu and your division must endeavor to supjress ell roi.ts, riots, and other disorders that may bo committed in the night and secure si ch persons as may be guilty; that proper steps may be taken the next morning for a prosecution as the law directs, wc absolutely forbid your taking private satisfaction, or any brit-e that may be offered you to let such go or to conceal their offense from the selectmen." Liinit"<l E t tes. Among the estates left by persons who died in Vienna intestate, and who-o heirs have not been found, is one consisting of an opera glass. Another man’s-estate consists of a scarf-pin. No other 5c soap has ever been made of half the merit of Dobblns’new Perfect Soap. Ono triai will drive all oilier 5c soap-out. Please ask your grocer for it- 5c a bar. A K’hkw In lustrv. Breeding pug dogs is one of tho industries of Osage City, b an. The Jap’s Gre< t ng. The Japanese for good morning is “0-hi-o."_ The average height of tho elephant isjm , " HELP IS WAITED a* _ * by the women who — are ailing and suf- . feting, or w eak and w exhausted. And, to W . B every such woman, help is guaranteed by Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- , tion. For young -LI -4SHjg J.l girls just entering t-. -r—- womanhood; ww- “ men at the critical “change of bf o ” ’ wom<;u approaching confinement; nursing mothers; and every w oman who is “ nm-down ” or owr- ; worked it is a medicine that buiius up, strengthens, au b regulates, no matter what the condition of the system. It’s an Invigorating, restoratlfc tonic, a soothing and bracing nervm*, and the only guaranteed remedy for “female complaints” and weaknesses. Tn bear ' ing-down sensations, periodical pains, ulceration, inflammation, and ever^ Kindred ailment, if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back.

A I.rgcnJ About Cholera. Here is an Eastern legend that Is ! timely. One day the angel of death visited a country in Asia. The king of the country ake l him what plague he btoug'it u: der his sable wings. "The cholera,” answered the messenger. "'nd how many victim* will the plague claim?” Six thousand." Cholera rage I throughout the k ng’s domain*. Twenty-five thousand peoj. Ie i died. borne time a^ter the king saw the angel of death again. Von di<l not keep your word.” he i said; "you promised mo the > holera । would take but six thousand of my sub- > jects. I have lost twenty-five th u- I sand." I did, keep my word," answered the somber enemy. t h Hera killed but six thousand In you; kingdom.’ "And ti e other lo.uO*, of whal did : they die'" "Os fear.”—New York World. \j p-o trh <». tli' Ahiintni mi Affc. The obstacle to tho general substitution of aluminium for iron and steel in the arts has ‘. en the high cost • xtraUmg .t from the native clay. : This has b»^n partially overcome by j r-g:.--s-,ve im; r- voment- in tho process ■ of manufacture, 1 ut still aluminium re- I m i n- t<>o co-t y to bo tho: ght of as a j ' baser m ■ withstanding its advantages in ot er re-p. . ts. The reported discovery of extraor linarily rich depo-ite of alunr.nium clay in Alabama and G< orgiu indi at>-s a long step forward tor the wiute me al. Six countie* in these two State.- are said to be underlaid with bauxite ore, some of wtiich has - yielded a- high as 48 per cent, of pure aluminium. It the :eports from these o,.nti<» are reliable the aluminium age is approaching.—New York Press. The Lkllc . 1 T wi?K which ladies may use the CaliforI oia li uni laxat ve. Syrup of Figs, nnWM'-: ■ 40 la write article’, look for the nameofthevhhforn.a lig Syrup t 0., jTinted nvor the bottom of the package. A Boom for JerusalemA r> al-estate boom has struck Jwu- : salem. It seems almost sacrilegious ! that "tracts ’ of "Holy Land" are to be i dre-sed up In the expletives of realestate advertising. Keep your eye on , Bethlehem’” for Instance. But nu ney con juers all things, inclmling sentiment. —Cincinnati Post I’laying C.rd-. You can obtain a pack of best quality playing cards bv sending fifteen cents in J p, -tage to I‘. S El’-Tis Gen’l Paei Agent, i C , B x Q R R. Ct . ag , B Hoop La! The grandfather of‘l ady Craven was at one time a Troy cooper. No wonder her parents managed to accumulate a barrel —Washington Post. I.ite.est ■ g Mudi. A native of Calcutta intends estab- । lishing a scake laboratory, for the study, under strictiy scientific conditions, of snake poisons and cures for snake bites, j Beecham’s Pills are not a new remedy. < They have been used in Europe for fifty years and are well tested and excellent. The Dirty Brute. There is a hog in Atchison which I chews tobacco. A silver I'nited States dollar is one I inch and a half in diameter; a half- । dollar one inch; a quarter three-quar-l ters of an inch. ' N. K. Brown's Essence Jamaica Ginger will • aid indigestion. None better. Try it. 25 cents.

The Oldest Medicine in the H is j>rc-&udy DU* IMAC THOMPSON'S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER. ’ This article w a car. fully preparea pnysiclan s prescription, and has been in constant use for neariv a century. There are few diseases to which mankind are subject more distressing than sore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies hare been tri .-a without success ForaU external inflammation | ■ of the eves It Is an Infallible remedy. If the direc , k ’ tion« are followed ft will ivpver fe'.il. We particularly I ’ i invite the attenoon of ph'-leians’<> its merits. For Sie by an drmrgfcrta John j. Thompson, sons * ft CO.. Troy. N. Y. Established '7s'. DROPSY™--cases pronounced hcrpeleßs. From first <1 se symp1 toms rapidly disappear.and in t- n days at least two- ’ thirds <>f all svmptcms are removed. BOOK of testimonials of miraculous cures »cut FKEK ' Ten Days Tre a-me nt Furnishsd Free by Mail. > DR. H. H GRllfi A SOKS 3P£CULISTS ATLANTA, GEBREU . OS , K tklnjr physician). N< f/] S • Thon*tn-k curc-i. S*nd ^cfnsvtnivA \ Wj JJ O. W. F. SNYDER, XI. D., Xlail Dept. X. McVlckcr’H Theater, Chicago, 11lPATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination-a nd Advice as to Patentability of In- ’ vention. Eend for Inventors’Guide, or How toGet » a Patent. Patrick O’Farheij^ Washington, D. G. 1 ^imuuummi ■■ IWIHIIIIIIIIiII'III 9 tire relief ICTHUS KSDDEKS PASTILLES.^^SiS Larlestown, Mbi* n a'STSS’Fe THOMAS P.SIMPSON Washington, f A I £ll I dP- C. No atty's fee until Patent ob- *” * ** * talced. Write for Inventor'^ Guide.

“German Syrup” My niece, Emeline Hawley, was, . taken with spitting blood, and sha became very much alarmed, fearing ■ that dreaded disease, Consumption. She tried nearly all kinds of medi- ; cine but nothing did her any good. . Finally she took German Syrup and : she told me it did her more good । than anything she ever tried. It stopped the blood, gave her strength and ease, and a good appetite. I had it from her own lips. Mrs. Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn. Honor to German Syrup. o «—*- reversible - — COLLARS acCUFFS. — — ^RAPMAtUMURIU^TA^SCG The beat aud most econow.tcal Collars and Cuffs wo r n. 1 r T pair* \ J by mail « A < ollnr Co., 27 Kilby St- Bo«toa. DADWAY’S n PILLS, 1 urrlv tittle, mild and reliable. Canse perfect t; J? < t • absorption «ud bFa.thful lanty J r t.., /’!?•' of a ] disorders oi the ^tcxnaehL kiv r. Bow .a Kidneys. Bladder. Nervous Diseases LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, BILIOUSNESS. TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. PERIE^r DIGESTION will be accomplished bv taking lUdways Pile. By their AN n BILIOUS pr- i’t rth s the* stimulate the liver in the secretion i ot the bile and its Jnvharxe through the biliarv dux tn ih. s* pills in doses of from two to four will qui' kly n calat-' the a* ti« n of tne liver and free the patient 1 :l th**** di>ord th. One or two of Rad* way's P s. taken daiL by those subject t > bilious palne and t-r;-! iity ■: the i:v-r. will keep the system rr*r ilar and s* are health? digestion. Price. 25c per box. Sold by all drugyista. RADWAY £ CO.. NEW YORK. ^Oe^eans Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Constipation, Sick-Headache, etc. 25 cents per bottle, at Drug Stores, Write for sample dose, free. y.A. SMITH & CO.^^r* NevoYorkRADFIELD S a /iff? Y tfhace — REGULATOR W peculiar to th. M 5 A3 £l v >, e as chronio S J>=Lk ® Y.thvl ^313 time it 3 /Mi 1 a’ vH tions of Ii . organs. Yotn»a. a ‘* fspernberty'.tiv* o i<i cr ones a t the rEeub pause, will find in ft a healing, soothing tonic. Tho highest recommendations from prominent physicians and those who have tried it. Write for book “Tc Women," mailed free. Sold by all druggists. Bradtield Regulator Co^ proprietors, Atlanta. Ga. Ely's Cream Balm ’ WILL CUKE ■C^ TA ^aO| G AT f.'l t z 0 I Price 50 Cents. I W / W I —-1 Apply Balm into each nostril. SHIV 'C’*'l ELY BROS. 56 Warren St„ N. Y. I Tn«Hri ikin A SPLENDID TRAVEL NG side line _ For Traveling Men who vi? 1 »MT ft-’ WU ■ many towns. No samples to lyi JPj IW I carry au<l no -ales to make. *** ~ * * The work can be don- in a * :pw rainntes while waiting for trains. No expense attached to it—clear ca a profit. Manv traveling men now making their daily . expenses with it. all v ithcut taking any time front their regular business. Wr.te to day for particular^ g.ving permanent address. . ••KtnVINS.” Lock-Box 81S. Cliicag u Hl. Fiwton Hoti 1 ^ ^('orner Sixty-third Street i nd Princeton Avenue (Englewoodi. Chicago. Eirst-clAss beds, good tabs©. i Kates S-I per day. Electric cars to World’s Eair i Grounds: 10 minutes'ride. F W. Jones. Ih-oprietor. Garfield Tea^ : Cures Constipation, RestoresComplexion^Saves Doctor^ BiUg Sample free. G lrfirldTse. C0.,319 W Asthst--N. x. Qurss Sick MENTION THIS PAPER wu» -aivr-a w> VS; g P Fk H" I I The improved elastic truss I 111 IF T In I 1 la V I ■ Wll L, ~ c ci^bt .11.1 i Mi SKC* Ch day. and it retains the rupI Iplini. 11 ture under the hardest <-il.llKrll ercise or severest strain. It LU « a Dd will effect a permanent ! S«:>d for CalalortuePm'. and speedy cure. Ini] roved Elastic Truss Co.* 522 Broadway.N.Y WESTERN PAR# LANDS! A pamphlet d“> 'riptive of tho farm 2—nds of Nebraxia. Nuri G't t Kansas a . 1 Eastern CoMrado, with se»t on al map. will be mailed free to any ad- ' dress on applieaticn t > l\ s EFsTIs. General Passenger Agt.C.,B i Q. IL R .Chicag \ 111. ..... —• _ . *S d Z Morphine Habit Curotl in IO ■ m to 30 <i:»y-. No pay till cured. VS SMSCTB DR. J.STEPHENS, Lebanon,Ohio. ! l\ N. u No. 25-03 "WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, t ’ please say you saw the advertisement ; In this paper. EK Piso’s Remedy sot Catarrh is the Re«t. Fa=ie«t to Tse. and Cheapest. SS Sold by druggists or sent by mail, 50c. ET. Hazeltine, Warrea Pa. H