St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 52, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 15 July 1893 — Page 7
A R dnoaa Loss. Why is it that people in general are so prone to disregard loss of strength, clearly perceptible in bodily shrinkage, failure of appetite, broken rest? Incomprehensible but true* Sheer carelessness, an overweening confidence in the power of nature to recuperate—these are suggestible reasons. One of the most observable signals of danger thrown by distressed nature is waning strength. An efficient tonic is the best- safeguard against impending peril. Among the in vigorants which modern science has develope I and experience approved is Kostett>rs Stomach Bitters and it occupws the first place. DigesGtm, renews d l>v tl is genial stomachic, compensates for a drain of v ta; force, and a reguIsir act o r of tire bowels ai d tranquil condition of the nerves, bet i insured bv its use, co-operate in the complete restoration of yig r. fae bitters remedies liv<r and kidney trouble and malaria. Weight of Tomatoes. A correspondent of tlio London “Gardeners’ Chronicle,” who has been raising plants under glass, finds twelve pounds to bo the average weight produced by a single plant (says Meehans’ Monthly). There seems to be no rec ord of the greatest weight a single plant would produce in America; but we should not be surprised if fifty pounds would not be an average for a plant under favorable circumstances. Constipation cured by Small Bile Beans. The earth receives only one two-bill-ionth of the heat of the sun. N. K. Brown's Essence Jamaica Ginger will cure dysentery. None better. Try it. 2S cents.
“LOOK UP, and not down,” if you’re a suffering woman. Every one of the bodily troubles that come to women only has a guaranteed ('tiro in Dr. Dicsrcyc*.^ Faiorilo IVoscription. That will bring you safe and certain help. It’s a powerful general, as well as uterine, tonic and nervine, and -it builds up and invigorates the 5 entire female system. It regulates and promotes all the proper functions, improves digestion, enriches the blood, brings refreshing slwp and restores health and
strength. sor ulcerations, displacements, bearingdown sensations, periodical pains, and nil ‘■female complaints” and weaknesses, “Favorite Prescription ” is the only guaranteed remedy. If it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. In every case of Catarrh that seems hopeless, you can depend upon Doctor Sage's Catarrh Remedy for a cure. It’s proprietors are so sure, of it that they'll pay SSOO cash for any incurable case. Sold by all druggists. ©i^ ,eKAPO ° • « « INDIAN • • sacwaJ Q The greatest Liver, Stomach, Blood and T Kidney Remedy. e Made of Roots, o Baiks and Herbs, X ® ami * 8 Absolutely 0 Free From X a f WaM r Harmful In-* S / ™ » ..O A W^Wi J • r:' t • Kickapo'* Indian llcdlcine Co., * * Ileafy A Bigelow, Agents, New Haven, Ct. * ) KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to persona! enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than otlfers and enjoy rife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a janfect laxative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. Ely's Cream Balm WILL CURE KCatarßYol 1 Price 50 Cents. I ® VW I ————j Applv Balm into each nostril. MBt-'rW'/ay v I ELY BROS.. 56 Warren St.. N. Y. WK? -J J i ® < H /qL-o- 3 ticingf physician). N» starving. //j i M * Thousands cured. Send Be in »t»tm ■•s \ J J <). W. I. SNYDER. AI. Mw Mail Dept. Mo Vk-kcr’s Thcnter. < hlcnu-o. 111. (£NSiON^>X^S% 3yrsln last war, ISa.ljudlcatlagclaims, atty tluco. MENTION’ THIS PAPER wuim wkitins to iDTiinijaA $7 5 .00 to $2 50. oo ^^iv - ing Io B F. JOHNSON * CG.. Riehmoml. Va BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD. ! I DO NOT BE DECE!V with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. KAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,00 C TONS.
OVER SEVENTY DEAD. TERRIBLE RESULT OF THE IOWA CYCLONE. Greatest Severity Felt at Pomeroy, Where tire Cyclone Raged for Only One Minute but Left Fifty Dead and One Hundred Injured in Its Wake. Wrought Awful Havoc. More complete details from the cy-clone-swept section of Northwestern lowa do not diminish its horrors. The latest reports give the number of dead j at seventy-four, and it is said at least live more will die. while the injured number considerably over one hundred. A conservative estimate places the whole number that were either I killed or injured by the tornado at 250. j At Pomeroy alone over fifty are dead. | Five blocks of residences were com- j pletely swept away, not more than [ kindling wood being left of them. The disaster is the most dire one that ! has occurred in lowa since the Grinnell 1 cyclone. The loss of life at Pomeroy I is not so great us at Grinnell, but the destruction of property will he more complete. At 6 o'clock Thursday even- , ing a thousand happy people sat down to their tea-tables chatting cheerily. ■ unconscious of impending danger. Fri- | day morning moio than half of them j were wandering about homeless and ’ half crazed, depending on charity for food and drink, while strangers were winding the grave-clothes around their dead. Every house left standing was a
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hospital. Every citizen of I’omerov I mourns the les- < f a relative? or fri« nd. | Two hundred families arc homeless, i many having lost all they owned. Hundreds of people poured in < n ever y ti ain to view the ruins. ; nd to every one of them the ciinpletene -of tie hav> e wrought by the t una lo wa- pr.mfully apparent. Sixty-!i\c acres of deb; si's what is left of I'< m< roy now. Imag i:'' a gigantic pile of lumb r s att< ed in every liircction over a hr» ad prai rie and you have a good picture of this wrecked lowa city, : Nothing but the e« ea-L mi shat-' tered remains of a wa or the half- ( destroyed gable of a dwel• i ng risealxive ■ the level of the ground. The numerous KO “ /■ *- r .* < • 1* •** w sole srm nohs of an entire i amity. tret's that surrounded the t< ah have been swept awav so completely tl .n it would l>e ditlicuh to belics e t hat < ne j ever grew there. One hundred and I twenty-five residences, most a storv- i and-a-half or twe-story frame; -even churches, all frame: one brick and a j half-dozen frame business buildings i constitute the total of buildings that ! were wrecked. Os course, the loss on these is total. All the other business houses, probaldy fifty, were more or 1 less damaged. Those who arc eom]ie-
- cI TIE SAI’LSON (’AVE WHERE Tnr\TY-T\VO LIVJ - WEL’K SAVFJh
tent to judge say the loss in the city i will not be less than a quarter of a million. All in a Minute. The storm did its terrible work i in one minute's time. Just before dark great banks of black clouds massed in the southwest and another in the west. About 7 o'clock the two threatening pile- moved toward one another and then joined. The clouds took on a green tint, which was pierced with the sun's rays for a moment ■ non darkness set in rapidly. The elements seemed to form i ab nil the combined clouds, though scarcely a breeze stirred the tree-tops in the streets of Pomeroy. Those who were watching the phenomena say that a column of smc ke like a cloud dropped to the ground and gathered in strength as it advanced toward the town. They reeognlzed it as a cyclone and gave the alarm. Many sought shelter in cellars and others mounted horses to flee from the path of the coming destruction. ■ There was a dash of hail, a blinding : flash of lightning and deafening peal | of thunder. Men and women ran wildly j
about the streets shouting and gesticulating. The cyclone struck the town at the. southwest among the scattering houses in the outskirts. Roofs and shingles and sides of buildings were wrenched loose and were thrown to one side. On to the more densely populated district the monster of a e _ structiop swept, leveling all before it and leaving in its wake a cloud of splinters and wrecked homes, death and demoralization. The people were panic stricken and tied here and there amid the flying timbers until stricken down to the earth, mangled, torn, and dead. While the tornado la-led it was pitch dark, except for the vivid flashes < f lightning which lit the weii d and awful j scene. 'File rain came down in Torren'-. the roar of the thunder an 1 Hie storm was deafening. The air was full of sticks, st< nos. m id, hoi-e-. cattle, pig^, chickens, houses, maebiaery. bricks, ; human beings, and every t hing that wa s ! unable to resist the force i f the terri--1 ble tempest. It was all over in a few seconds, oh. whut a piteous spectacle ; greeted the eye of the agonize I sur- | \ Ivors! Dead people were on every ride, i Husband am! wife lay on the ground, ; th irglassy eye - turned heavenward and | the bodies rent and torn in the most I cruel manner. Mothers and their little t babies were found stark dead, with their brainso zing out of their crushed ; skulls mid their life blood soaking the J rod beneath them. Rescuing parties । at once set out, and the dead and ( wounded were brought in as fa>t as , men could work. Tre telegraph and telephone line wer • blown down, and Ed Masterson set out in a horse to Man-on for help,, lie suec< eled ini flagging Vice IT< silent Ilmahnn'sj
‘ -jH la! train, wbie’i fivw back t ' Man- ; j son. and help from all t e t was al mg I > the line was Mwn on hund. Fifteen j snrge»ns were soon eating for the woumb-d. The G >od T< mplars' Hall was turned int > a bo-pit ;i, und the <dd ( i iio-t nice building did dc.t i as a morgue, j Fhe shrieks of the in unded and the j g an- <>f th.- <iy ing were m ugleu w ith | the agonizing moan- of thore so srd- : denh U-rest of t'n ir dear on* s It mu? a sight that beggars descripti m. Sweep of th.- Morm. As shown by the ac-oni] any .’ g map, tin- tormuio -tart* d a short distance i west of ( Teroke. and followed .-10-oly I the Illinois ( «-Ltra ! Ra;iroad. cutting . , a swulb trim one-quarter to one-half ‘ ...n ~t.i n.oi tsonpl.-tol-i .L-mollshing . . cry tl mg m:t • pith Tor a Uisi...,, .. ot , -ivt . m: e-. \ a- tbi- strip, in a ldi’i i: to the d.-vastat i< ii wrought at I’mnro.. Eendm storm Ijike, and other towns i i it path, ur - wrecked homes ni),; ruit ci. farm ’I hr actual loss of life in the path of the storm through th.- r untry cannot yet: I*. a.-eurat- v ataU -I. but it Is kn mn t > im» gi< at. and the daimigr t > prop.-:!, is tr* inemlous. I h< tisand- of act . -of < ■ rn ai< nr have Is ,1. d. -troy cm In many huge fieldsof i-o-n not ,ing is loft but the roots, and ir som. instances they have been* torn out. It is difficult to'e-timate the loss, but it will reach far up in the thous: nds. Not a burn, or a house, or shed, or fenc,-. or tree in the path of the -torm stands. A swath was mowed! through the bigg, -t part of the wihhls. Huge trees were torn mt by their roots: and others equally as large w.-re bro-: ken off at :h- phu-e where their cir-i cuniference wu< largest. Ten farm-i • homes am. all their barn- and’ outhouses Is- ween Pomeroy ami Fonda have been wrecked. Only splinters of j the largest buildings remain. < ,<>i .!!<>< s p uni- for Hr Ip. Gov. Hoies was telegraphed as to the se p • of the disaster and ap]>ealed to for ;.id. \\ rn- •< p>u the Governor immediately fix k the tr iin for Pomeroy,
* hi arriving there and looking over the ■ de-olatc waste, he issued the following I proclamation; I To the People of Iowa: i Fiom a personal examination of tT.e ruin wrought by the storm of last evening I find that forty-two are already dead and upward of KO are seriously injured in this town, which had a population of l.nou souls. The gaeat bulk of the residence portion of the town is completely destroyed and hundreds of families are homeless and destitute, In at least one town west of here eight or ten are said to have been killed and many injured. The necessity for aid is Imperative. The good people in towns adjacent to Pomeroy have supplied immediate wants for board and clothI i'lg. but it, is impossible for them to supply all that will be needed in the future. Money, however, is the gnat necessity of tile bom . We must not only help these' people t o live, but. we must aid them to rebuild their destroyed homes. Permit me to recommend that in cv, ry city and town of the State immediate steps be instituted by the Mayors and municipal officers to organize relief committees and piompi.ly proceed to collect an 1 forward aid. This may be directed to the "Belief Committed of Pomeroy. lowa," which will be organized during the day, and will consist of thoroughly responsible persons of this and other tewnuso that aid will be fairly and equitably distributed to all who are in want. Cit izens j Uwa.it is no exageration forme to say that no m< re d serving apptal was ever made to J yon tor ; id. Be sure that von are both promt t and libeicl. Horace 11 ues. j Governor of lowa.
| You want the Best t Royal Baking Powder never disappoints; never makes sour, soggy or husky food; never spoils good materials; never leaves lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake; while all these things do happen with the best of cooks who cling to the old-fashioned fe methods, or who use other baking powders. 3 E If you want the best food, Royal E Baking Powder is indispensable. K iZ'SA ALA A H AA A <: < J AAA
SAFETY IN A FAST STEAMER. Bucti Vessels as the Campania Must of Necessity Be Strong. A ship that can make a voyage to New York and back in a fortnight will earn fifty-two freight- in the year, in.Btoad ol twenty-six of tho boats of ■twenty years ago. says the Saturday ■Review. The crew costs no more, if uLhe coal does, atul tho earnings arc wlouble. But there is yet another view iof the matter. The fate Sir William rpearae, who began these fast Ixiats by the building of the Arizona, and whoso successors at l-airiicld have built the Campania, once asked a friend, whose imagination reeled at the idea of a , twenty-two-knot boat.whether he would i not prefer to go down in a fast boat in ■ preforo*M*o to meeting an ignominious ' death in an ocean tramp. The humor ; of the leutiment lies in the fact that it ,is the ocean tramp that always goes 'down in the case of a collision, and it is the fast Ixiat that sends the tramp : down. Parliamentary humanitarians : should see to this. Surely their reekI loss ingenuity i~ equal to tho discovery |of some way 'of preventing jxmple from I choosing their mode <>i drowning. , Those who know most alxjut boats know that the safe boat is the fast boat, Ixvause the fast boat must of nece.-isitv lx? strong. The fast and ' strong tK>at never wifite for the waves i to hustle and buffet it; it gix-s through i them. Once in a while, it is true, an । equinox may contrive a gale that will . trouble even the Campania, but a wave requires time to gather itself together and Hjvnd its strength, and a fast boat of the right build d«x-s not wait. There are. of coursm fast fair-weather boats, designed to make "record" passages in sunshine, which do so, but which flounder in the trough of tho sea when the waves roll high. These are tho Atlantic imp* slers.and wise men avoid them. For Ite^lth anil l‘lea.uro. Vtolt tba Jmll an a Mineral Springs, Warren County. Indiana, on thalhie <>f the ( htcaso and Eastern lillnol* R.iLroad. 120 miles South ot ( blcago It is a naturally beautltm place, lately Improved with a jt’o,ooo bote- and Lath- hen - -. Mean.-heated, elrc-trl,-lighted, an llt the only place In the wor,d c-’t m.iuoilr mineral 1 n.u i »' Ti. ,r . f,. , f.- ,- -,rln r ’ „.*uy cauea of rheumatism. kWIn y and ; liver trouble, akin and blood diseases taat tm- beat iff phyal-ie " and s - enttfl treatment failed to Mae fl L Beautiful tx> >lo« and printed matter sent by mall for the , askin; Write to H. I. Kramer. Manager. 1' O. Um A Indiana Mineral Springs, Warren County. ImL Sit Hors \rc Not Good l'astors. A sailor who in tho oldon days of lofty sjmrs would work like a dog high ; ‘on a plunging, shivering yard in a driv- । ing sleet and a howling wind and never : murmur, except to swear and swear- ' ing doesn’t count at tea, except when lone swears at a sujx-rior a sailor who i had the t« mjx-r of ana: ge! under those 1 joircumstiinees would growl and grum-! ble and sulk like a sick lx.-ar at the j slightest ache of hunger in his stomach. The sailor has a wonderful ca- i , pacity for whisky, go<xl, bad. or inj different, but he rover plumed him-e'.f as a faster, and he probably never will. ! ! —New York Tribune. Artistic Fellow. “Physiognomical Haircutting” is the anm unecment < f a 80-ton barber who , is a little more than up to dat - in his methods. One's hair and Iward are trimmed by him to suit the features. F. J CHENEY A CO., Toledo. 0., Preps, of Hail s Cxtarrh Cure, offer 810) rewnrd for any cis' , f catarrh tl a’ can not b - cured by taking II ilia Catarrh Cure. Send to: teatimonlala, tree. Sold by I>ru»glßts, 75c. . Jasfer i- an impure quartz, usually containing much iron. It is found in red. brown, yellow, green, black, and blue. If you will bo truly happy, keep your I lo id pure, your liver fr m urov inz t rp d. by using Beecham’s Pilis. 25 cent-, a gx. J^^Tuk black diaTnm.i A so lur d thn’ it “cuuiiot i.. iwiiishod Sample Plicliltgr t!ail,<i •'■ecAddress >mill Bile Beane, New York. A TEASPOONFUL of microbes contains over 4,000,000 individuals.
i Lost My Hearing As a result of catarrh in ti e head, and was deaf for over a year. 1 began to take Ho oil’s Sarsaparilla, and found when 1 had taken 3 J® *4^ B bottles that my hearing [ j was returning. It is now I more than a year and I can j > .-eta. hear perfectly well." Ibt- b e’ man Hicks, 90 Cai ter Street, Kuchester, N. Y uaa n ’ c HwUM O Lierman Hicks. Sarsaparilla CURES Hood's Fills cure all Liver Ills. lljiousness. Jaundice, indigestion. Sick Headache. EsS Consomptlves and people HH on who have weak lungs or AsthKi mu, should use Piso’sCure for Si Consumption. It has cured gS thousands. It has notinjuw MB ed one. It Is not bad to take, gH Bl u is the best cough syrup. HR H Sold everywhere. 25c. sea m|HinH iwi rm | ;
Taking Chances. It was late at night and my horse was | clean played out. when I came upon a i mountaineer's cabin, and hailed the house. Two or three dogs set up a furious barking, and presently the door was opened and a voice called through the darkness: “Who’s out thar’ and what ar' vo’ fussin' about?" “I'm a traveler in search of lodgings," I replied. “How manv of yo’?” “Only one.'* “On a horse or mewl.” “A horse.” “Wall, yo' stay right on that hoss till I git the candle and hev a look at yo'!” He left the house by a back-door.and came round to me. holding a candle in his left hand and a shotgun in his right. After taking a long look, he asked: “Whar'd vo' come from?” “Bristol. ,r “What fur?” “To see the country.” “Got any shootin' irons?” “No. Hut what's the matter that you are so suspicious?” “Wall, I want to know who is who befo’ I take him in. Y’o’ kin git down and I'll gin yo' a bed, if yo’ want to run the chances.” “What chances?” "Why, my boy Jake is out coonhuntin’ and will be home bimeby. When he comes he'll take a look at yo.' If Jake says yo’r a traveler and thar's nuthin’ to fear then it'll be all right, but if Jake says yo’r one o' them revenue fellers a-smellin' 'round fur stills we'll gin yo'jest three minutes to meet yo' Maker! Will yo' take the chances?” I said I would, and was soon in bed. An hour or two later a light shone in my face, and I woke up sufficiently to hear Jake saying: “I reckon he's all right, pap. but if he hain't we kin shoot him befo' he gits away in the mornin'!”—Free Press. Unroinantie View of Love. On few subjects is there more nonsense talked than on love. A girl begin- life with a dose of unattached affect i< n. Some one asks her to marry > ■him, on which she concentrates this) | affection on him. If name ono v>r<a I n-k.-d her. tho wnn>ntr.itinn would I ■ have taken place on the some one else. | Having l»eeoino betrothed, she con-| siders she is in that peculiar condition ! I which is called being in love. The best guarantee, however, for a : happy marriage is not so much being : in love a- a certain fitness of things and a reasonable liking lx?tween the | contracting parties If both are pieas- I ant in their relations to each other, the I mere fact of living together and having i identical interests develops affection. I know that this view of matrimony is ' contrary to the ideas accredited* in novels. It is, however, true. In France, where marriages are generally ar1 ranged between two families, they turn ' out well; better, in fact, as a rule, than in English love matches. — London j Truth. The World’s Great Cities. According to the “Statistician and Economist,” there are fourteen cities j in the world each with a population of ‘ 1,000,060 or over. These are named in the following order: London, 4.421,661: Paris, 2,260,045: Tokio, Japan, 1,620.- ! 820; Canton, China. 1,600,000: Berlin. ■ I 1.547.533: New York. 1.513,501; Vienna. 1.103A57: Chicago, 1,09^,576; Philadelphia, 1.044,894. Five Chinese citie.estimated at 1,000,000 each complete the list. These are Changchoofoo, Sian. Singnan Fu, Soo Chow Foo and Tschantchau-fu. Are You Happy? 7 be man or woman who is profitably employed Is generally happy, it you are not happy It may be because you have not found your proper work We earne-t y vr re all such per ons to write to B. F. John-* son & Co, Rtchmcnd. Va., and they can show you a work In which you can be happy and profitably employed. A Freak. A newspaper has just been started in London, which is printed on a postal card. The first number has four illustrations, u comi<- trag-edy. a few jokes and puzzles, and some advertisements Is IT probable that what a million women Bay after daily trial is a mistake? ’1 hey say Dobbins' Perfect Soap is the best 5c soap ever made. Have your grocer order of his wholesaler. Try it. Only sc. Ten thousand of our population live at an altitude of more than 10,000 Let. Cure for Colds. Fevers and General De- j billty. Small Bile Beans 25c. per bottle. | The highest volcano is Fopocatapetl, I Mexico, 17,748 feet, with a crater a mile | in diameter and 1,010 feet deep.
THE COST IS THE SAME t H jtßrrod «. ; IL-'AFTER 20 YEARS. AFTER a The Hartman Steel Picket Fence ; Costs no more than an ordinary clumsy wood picket affair that obstructs the view I and will rot or fall apart in a short time. The Hartman Fence is artistic in design lirotects the grounds without concealing them and is practically EVERLASTING Must rated Catalogue with Prices and Testimonials Mailed Free. i Branches: HARTMAN MFG. COMPANY, BEAVER FALLS PA. 102 Chambers St., Nev/ York; 503 Sate St., Chicago) 51 and 53 S. r orsvth St., Atlanta,. Ga.’
“August Flower” “ I am Post Master here and keep a Store. I have kept August Flower for sale for some time. I think it is a splendid medicine.” E. A. Bond, P. M., Pavilion Centre, N.Y. The stomach is the reservoir. If it fail.-, everything fails. Tha liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the heart, the head, the blood, the nerves all go wrong. If you feel wrong, look to the stomach first. Put that right at once by using August Flower, It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. i Unequalled j J SERVICE | a FROM . . . % - i CHICAGO ?
I ^E!SS to . - » F iffiSS BUFFALO J S NEW YORK a J BOSTON --- A L and £ g Intermediate W f TOURIST O points | | TICKETS W 99 e I 5 to ths 3 « eastern be- g £ ■ SOBTB now on B 4 k sale. Send for ■ C K list of routes ana ratse. in A. J. SMITH, C.K. WILBER, S P ( G- ?• * West Paw. A^t., M U J CLETELAKD. CHICAGO. HEEDrSS Which nature is constantly giving in the shape of boils, pimple®, eruptions." ulcers, etc. These show that the blood is contaminated, and some assistan--e must be given to relieve the trouble. I 9 tne remedy to force out these poF gEOMßyajifi sons, and enable vou to GET WELL. I have had for years a humor in my blood, which made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples would be cut. thus causing the shaving to be a great annoyance. After taking three bottles ^ acf- ’ s al ‘ -lear and smooth as ic should be—appetite splendid, sleep well, and feel like running a fool all from the use ot S. S. S. Chas. Heaton, 73 Laurel st. Phila. Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta. Ga. ri* FT SKILES. M. !>., Oriiical ^anitHiiuin* Fl* 186&-1370 Marren Avp.,Chicago Tel. West .21). Mrvoue Diseaße*. Paralysis, insomnia, st. Vitus s Dani'e. Melancholia. Nervous Prostration. Hysteria, ate. successfully treated. Add. C. s. Fleming. Mgr« Th? best and most economical Collars and Cuffs worn. Try them. You will like them! Look well. Fit well. Wear well. Sold f<>r 2.5 cents fora box of Ten collars or Five pairs of cuffs. A sample collar and pairof cuffs sent bv mail for Six Cenlw. Address, giving size ami style wanted. "Ask the dealers for them." Reversible Collar Co., 27 Kilby St. li o«ton. t| EWIS’ 98 % LYE Powdered and I'erfumed. En (PATENTED.) The strangest and purest Lye made. Unlike other Lye. it being a fine powder and packed in a can with' remora v le lid, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 minutes without boiling. It is tlio best for cleansing waste-pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. rENNt. SVI-T M’E’H CO. Gen Aeta . Phila., Pa TRAVELING »7™° IMF many towns. No samples to Jy a a 1 <as 1 ca l ry and no sales to make. “ » The work can be done in a ; few minutes while waiting for trains. No expense attached to it—clear ca-n profit. Many traveling men now making tbeir dally expenses with it. all without taking any time from their regular business. Wr.te to-day for particulars, giv.ng permanent address. ••ROW INS.” l.ocli-Box 818. Chicago, 111. Mod H BiTConier Sixty-third Street and Princeton Avenuo ((Englewood). Chicago. First-class beds, good tabid. Rates S 2 per div. Electric cars to World's Fair Grounds; 10 minutes' ride. F. W.Joses. Proprietor. s nnn non acres ° f land for sale by the Saint Paul ' & Duluth Railroad Compast in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circa* lars. They will be sent to you Addres. HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn, hui UAL ... 'j RI S F* Pi da > - and i* retains th. rupg’l 11 IL Si lure under the hardest ex-. 8a I i “ IBS ercise or severest strain. L* W ■ ? an< J wiil effect a permanent Send for CataloQiie rife, and speedy cure. Inu roved Elastic TYuss Co.. 822 Bhoafway. N. Y Sure relief a o TTTW k KIDDER'S PABTILLES.KS.t£K 350^12^^^253830®^^^^'-'^ es tv wa, Ma&b <•M- U. A O . ^8 > s W H k N WKITIX « TO ADVERTISERS, please may you saw the advertisement in this paper.
