St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 8, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 9 September 1893 — Page 3
Made Miserable for ILife. This you may easily be if yon fail to remedy the indigestion and non-assimilation of the food, which are the attendants and originators of nervousness, that ever present ailment which no narcotic, mineral sedative or nervine can ever do more than temporarily relieve. Os course these remedies have no eft'ect upon the organs of digestion and assimilation, except to disorder and enfeeble them, thus aggravating the original difficulty. Among the most alarming ana dangerous symptoms of chronic nerv- i ousness is insomnia, which is the professional term for Inability to sleep, Where this ex- I ists there is always a tendency to mental over- ' throw, paresis and eventual insanity. Begin at : the fountain head of all this difficulty with I Hostetter's Stomach Bitters and avert evil I consequences. No sooner does the stomach I resume its tone, and the system gain in vigor , through the aid of this benign tonic, than sleep returns and the nerves grow tranquil. Chills and fever, rheumatism, biliousness and constipation yield to the Bitters. French in the Telephone. The French language, it appears, is ; better adapted to the purpose of the । telephone than the English. It is stated that the large number of sibi- ' lant or hiss syllable-, in English ren- 1 ders it a less easy and accurate means of communication. Some English words ‘ are especially difficult of transmission by telephone. The word “soldier” is cited as one of these. Proper name, i frequently occur in the midst of ar otherwise perfectly audible and intelli- i gent conversation which the on ■ cannot possibly catch. These must be spelled । out, involving delay.—Electricity. “Don’t Tobacco Spit Your Life Away" j Is the startling, t uthful title of a little book just recei --. d . tolling all about । Notobac, the wondUVfttf, harmleft*, eco- ! nomieal, guaranteed cure for the tobacco habit in every form. Tobacco users who want to quit and can't, by mentioning The Tidings can get the book mailed free. Address The Stek- । LING Remedy Co., Box 1280, Indiana Mineral Springs, Ind. ^“1 AM feeling very ill.” said a patient to his physician. “Let me see your tongue,” said the doctor. “It's no use," responded the patient: ‘no tongue can ; begin to tell how I feel.” For weak and Inflamed eyes use Dn Isaac Thompson’s Eye-water. It is a carefully prepared physician’s prescription. । The best opals are now obtained from Hungary and Honduras.
<||m^ SA?Z •'^^H^^^^tK-" ? KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet-less'-SP ot ^ ers an ^ enjoy life more, with , n ,m xV^nditure, by more promptly the’no D ? world’s best^products jto 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 perfect laxative ; •effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. ; It has given satisfaction to millionsand I 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 man- । ufactured 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. HOT WEATHER | opens the pores, the system is re- Y I laxed and nature * «*a y easily responds. Drive A all foul corruption ; j “ out of the body now J i by a course of * Kickapoo ; Indian ! Sagwa, Nature's Remedy of Roots, Barks V ■ and Herbs. The best Liver, Stom- ■ ach and Blood Renovater. All Drug- \ gists, fI.GO —6 Bottles for f 0.00. 9 e vj.« • ~ , 1 Theßest) Vsteiwf! Coat SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER Is warranted waterproof, and willkeep you dry in the harde:uatcrm. The' l new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect riding coat, and . covers the entire saddle. Beware of imitations. Don't buy a coal if the “Fish Brand” is riot on it. Illustrated Catak.gue free. A. J. TCWEIt, Boston, Mass. j - — —— — t ! non non acres of land laUUVtUUU for sale by the Saint Paul Duluth Railroad Company in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Cirou* i Urs. They will be sent to you Address HOPEWELL CLASKE, Land Commissioner,fit. Paul, Minn. aed head posses sureb II Bi rn ■■by Peck’s Invisible Ear Cushions. V. hlsperr Lard, Wkna Successful when ail remedies fail. Scldgnrß brF.Hiscox.SSSß’way, N.Y. Write for book of proofs r lt&“ MENTION THIS PAPER whith wnm»a To joveuttbsm. ■ MTCH MEN to TRAVEL. We ray SSO W ADI 8 GGLf to SSIOO a month A expenses. BTONE & WELLINGTON, ^M-ktH.-sON. WIS, Str Consumptives and people M who have weak lungs or Asth- g gS me, should use Piso's Cure for BB Consumption. It has cured W ^thousands. It has not injur- » MB ed one. It is not bad to take. K 3 Hlt is the best cough syrup. gSI gg| Sold everywhere. 25c.
WAS ABIDE TO DEATH | FIFTEEN PERSONS KILLED ON , THE BOSTON & ALBANY R. R. | — Chester, Mass., the Scene of a Frightful I Accident—Thirty Persons Injured, Some I Fatally—Western Express, East Bound, i Crashes Through a Bridge. | Many Are Mangled. i The Chicago limited express train for Boston broke through a frail iron । bridge on the Boston and Albany Rail- ‘ i road one and one-half miles east of ' Chester, Mass., and four Wagner cars were crushed, killing at least fifteen persons, fatally injuring several others, , while at least a score are badly hurt. > The wreck is the worst ever known on the road. The bridge was being j strengthened for the big locomotives, . and the workmen who were putting on , the plates were? at dinner when the ; crash came. The Ice (motive passed over the structure, but was smashed, I 1 the water-tank being thrown a long ; distance. The buffet. two sleepers ana j a dining car were smashed to kindling : : when they struck the stream twenty ; feet I elow, but two day coaches and a smoker in the rear dal not leave the j track. i There are a few houses in the vicini- ; ty and a m tn driving by gave the alarm i through the village street. In a few minutes hundieds were on the scene. • The shrieks of the imprisoned were I terrible, and scores of people looked on completely unnerved. The village , people soon recovered from the shock and were hard at work. The hospital j was a group of apple trees in an adjoining orchard, where scores wore taken. Ox t ams arrived with loads of straw, cushions, bedding, and food. The wounded were soon removed to houses and all that remained on the apple-strewn grounds were thirteen bodies covered with red blankets from an adjoining stable. The dead were many of them horribly mutilatedheads crushed in. limbs torn, and ten were only recognizable by th* clothing worn. The •• : n was seven minutes late at ChesL ^ad the railroad hands say it was going at the rate of twenty miles an hour when it struck the first of the two spans across the W’est Held River. The locomotive seemed to leap across the bridge as the tru-sos collapsed and fell over to the south. The theory is that the blow of the locomotive as it struck the bridge from the curve sent it off its foundations into the river. The railroad officials ioy that they find no marks on the bridge, such as would bo made by a derailed train. ONE THOUSAND DEAD. The List of Storm Victims In the South la Still Growing. Three hundred and ninety dead bodies have been found on the islands about Beaufort and Port Royal, and the total number of dead will reach 1,000. Over $2. ! HK).000 worth of prop- । erty has been wrecked near the same points. Both arc the d’roct J ■ liiTYlc coast. Every cn- o’ the fifteen i or twenty islands lying around Port i Royal anti Beaufort is ste pod in s>rI row. On every do >r knob there is a j bunch of crape and up n every hillside । there are fresh-made graves, some ' already filled, while others are awaiti ing the bodies that will be deposited in them just as soon as some one can be found to do the Christian act of shovel- ; iug the dirt up n the cuffin. The beeches, the undergrowth, trees and shrubbery, the marshes, and the inlets are turning up new dead bodies every time an investigation is made. Os the many disasters and devastations which have visited that section of the country none have been half as horrible. As the waters recede and the people move deeper int > the wreckage gathered by the storm, the ghastly pictures are uncovered. So frequent are the discoveries that the finding of a single body attracts no attention at all. It takes the discovery of a clump of at least half a dozen or more t > induce the people to show any feeling whatever. The horrors of the devastation can scarcely be imagined, and nothing can bo extravagantly said of the wreck and ruins. That part of S nth Carolina is known as the black di.-triet and is almost entirely inhabited by negroes. Os those drowned net more than twen-ty-five were whites and only five were women. SHERMAN ON SILVER. The Ohio Senator Speaks on the Repeal Measure. After the routine morning business in the Senate, Thursday, the bill for the repeal of the Sherman act was
taken up and Mr. Sherman, of Ohio, proceedto address the Senate. IT.- su’d that if the repeal of the purcha-ing clauses of the act of July, 1890, were the only reason for the extraordinary session, it would seem to him ins u ffi cie nt. It was, however, justified by the exbting financial
«/ / , JOHN SHERMAN.
stringency. On one thing, he said, Congress and the people agreed, and that was that both gold and silver should be continued in use as money. Monometallism pure and simple had never gained a foothold in the United States. If Senators wanted cheap money and an advance in price, free coinage of silver, he said, was the way to do if, but they should not call it bimetallism. Mr. Sherman then proceeded to dhcuss the history of the act that bears his name. He was not in favor of the free coinage of silver, and regarded it as but another name for the monometallism of silver, i and was only in favor of the purchase of silver for purposes of coining. Telegraphic Clicks. The Denver Post has suspended publication. The First National Bank of Canyon City, Col., has failed. The pay of all the employes of the Big Four Road will be cut. STRIKING coal miners at Leaven- , worth declare strike at end. Thirty-two new cases of cholera were reported at Nantes in one day. The steamer Elbe brought $450,000 in gold from London to New York-
WARDING OFF SEASICKNESS. Keep Moving and Don’t Eat Much the First Day After Sailing. I There are countiest remedies sug-ge-ted to the seasick traveler by means I of which hoi e speedy recovery i s i holdout, and to the intending traveler ' by sea it is safe to say that there are given any numl o. - of suppesod-to-be sure preventives cf thii troublesome but never dangerous illness. There is not any known herb, drug, or line of acti । n that will prevent seasickness if once you start in < n that disagreeable path, but there a e many things that help to ward iff an attack which will indeed prove cf value to those who i dread so much- the crossing of the great Atlantic or Pai ilie feriies. It is advisable before < no starts on such a voyage to be particularly eateful as to their diet. t n the Hi 85 day out keep as much upon the feet as pcssib’e ana do not. be tempted to eat too heavily of the numerous palatable dishes that will be si t bef< re you. Walking up and down the deck < ontinuously is advised by many by arguit g that one more I quickly‘becomes used to the motion of ‘ Iho vessel in this < x rei e. and the : fat'gue which it induces brings the much-needed sleep. But it is uso’ess ■ to wea ■ i no’s self out helping to stave I off the holing of nausea if it once ati tacks you. Lemons are most grateful to persons in this stage, and there is no I letter ■ settler of an unruly • tomm h than iced champagne. 1 f you do not feel inclined to oat do not force yourself to go to the table, for it is ten chances to one that the very sight of Dad will make you retire ignominiously from th • festive board. A well known medical man declares that fifteen grains of sulphate of qum no taken from two to four hours before sailing will prevent all fooling of seasickness, even to u most sensitive subject. Whether this applies in all eases wo have no way < f ascertaining, i but it is quite simple enough to lie fol- . lowed out, and if it proves helpful it is ' worthy of all the confidence s t< h an authority places in it. Philadelphia J Times. The Editor Has Known Trouble. The b tters whi -h men write to men ! are rarely fraught with danger. They I average about six lines each, and and generally mere busines- memoranda. I But one is never -afo in venturing to ; corrosp >nd with the opposite s« x. ' Even Mr. PickwickV brief and jTassionloss epistle concerning chops and toma- ] to sauce brought him to great grief.and 1 the vast majority of letters passing be- i tween the wxo- would net bear miscellaneous public exuminatii n, us every one knows. It is believed that there is much leas correspond! □ ’oof this sort nowadays than the -e u~ed to b . It is well thus. For, after all, letter writing Is a grout b re and nuisance to most people, and for tho-e who really like it ana who are acrustomed towrite many long letters, it is a fearful wb t * ; of time.—Washirgt >n News. Thl« Muy Interne Vnu. Studsots. Teachers ttnalo or female). Clergymen a- . others In need ot change of employment, alhould not fall to »rite to H F. Johnsen A («, Richmond. Va Their great success shows that they hare got the p true ideas about tnnklng m.'UUX* show you how tn en» l v H ' SOIL in Egypt is til ed by exneth i the same kind of plow as that used there v>,OW years ago. The furrows ; made are' extremely shallow, and the | clods are further broken up with a big : wooden cudgel. Three different boring machines, designed to cut out a central core 24 feet in diameter, were invented for use in thu Hoosac tunnel.
While in the War ! m with "Final ■ Il gaS Vi Hn- dtomy bed. usable to h W 11 hepiuyselfforfmentbA. I r j A s! r yeara cf tnlaery a t I! '■ nq aridn ma- binitt ad \\ CX -// vi- d me t tale II -lA ! s : » tt \-JNLNt / Bgff an !e< :!d nu« 1v 1: to a cbaiiAe torthe b.4ter As- t ' r ”<l "s Io tiles 1 '■Nflg aX- * r '*’s *'H. and have n i Mr. Whaler. ft i A Wmus,liWDlv »; n stre ! Baltm r... Md Hood’s^Cures Hood’s Pills cure liver ills 3Sc per box. I
RIIN’T tobacco spit !’?” 1 AB& Msl VM .MWIS IS THE TRUTHFUL, STARTLING TITLE OF A LITTLE BOOK THAT TELLS ALL ABOUT HO-TO-BAC, ~ | The ONLY GUARANTEED, niRMT.ESS, FCOSOWCM’ Cl RE tor the To! acco Ha! tln the w -Id; not for the REASON it makes Tobacco TASTE BAD, but because it ACTS DIRECTLY OY THE NERVE CENTERS. DESTROYING THE NERVE CRAVING DESIRE, preparing the way for DISCONTINI ANTE WITHOUT INCONVENIENCE. IXTO-rfO-IS A.C stimulates, W bn!'..'. !up an.i impr< t’ e entire nervous system Many report a gain of TEN POUNDS In as many days. Get book at your drug store or write for it—to-day. DRUGCsSTS yjr GENERALLY SELL NO-TO-BAC. If IOC ar© » tobacco user take time to read the following TRUTHFUL TESTIMONIALS, a few of many thousands from No-To-Bac users, yy printed to sl-w how NvTu-Bso works. THEY ARE THE TRUTH, Pl RE AND SIMPLE. We know this, and back them by a reward of $5,000.00 to anyone who can prove the testiW mon lata fal.- and that wo have knowingly printed testimo:.: ds that do not, so far as we know, represent the honest opinion of the writers. You don’t have to buy No-To-Bao on Wi E?X testimonial endorsement. NO-TO-BAC is positively iuarantced to cure or money refunded. We give good agents exclusive territory and liberal terms. Many agents make 810a day. MW
X CURED THREE YEARS AGO —USED LESS THAN A BOX OF M NO-TO-BAC. Mt. Carmel, 111., Oct. 10. ISW.—Gentlemen: I purchased one box of Gra your No-To-Bao three years ago. Took about three-quarters of tae box, [gj j which completely destroyed my appetite for tobacco. I had used tobac--STY co sinceyears es age. I had tried to quit of my own accord and found it impossible, but now I am comDlet“ly cured aud do not have the least |fy3 era mg for tobacco. I hope others will use your treatment. RS HOLLO G. BLOOD. USED EVERY SUBSTITUTE AND ANTIDOTE, BUT WITHOUT SUC-CESS—NO-TO-BAC MAKES A COMPLETE CURE, AND HE GAINS TWENTY-ITVE POUNDS. Kuttawa, Ky’., Nov. 22. 1392.—Gentlemen; I used tobacco for fifteen C® years, and, with all the will power 1 possessed, I could not quit I used every substitute and antidote I coula find, but without success I had A despaired of ever getting rid of the damaging tobacco habit and seeing CW your advertisement was persuaded by friends to try once more fient for one box, and began the use of it at once ami experienced btnefit I I*2 ordered two more boxes, and. lam happy to say, was cured of the «^fni « habit. It has been near!y a year since I was cured, and IhX no d7s e K whatever for the weed. I have gained steadllv in flesh Vv wolJhS when I began the treatment was 13? pounds, and t now weigh 160 pounds J Ifoel much better in every way, and get up In the morning without a Jh bad taste in my mouth. My digestion also is much improved To art JK 2P°J Ta J ltln ^ “k r d theraßf,l l fi ? of the tobacco habit permanently use grt No-To-Bac, for it is a succcsstul and wonderful remedy, manentiy, use Yours truly and gratefully, W. E. PEAY.
OU I? A j I nr in THIO —1 It is sold by Druggists generallyand sent by mail on receipt of W o " < Hhail TMix the price—l box, 81; 3 boxes, 42.50. Remit in any convenient SQ i IO form. Our President, Mr. A. L. Thomas. is a member of the Bn tfjf PURI ISHFR*? ■ IS PLAIN AND TO THE POINT. Three boxes of NO-TO- . - great advertising firm of Lord & Thomas. Chicago. Vice-Presi- W » i uuuiuiil.hu > BAC, 30 days’treatment, costing 82.50, or a little lessnhan 10c a WH©?© 8$ OUV dent, M-. W. T. Barbee, is the principal owner of the Barbee X and How to Order g iisners or tins tobacco habit in any form, SMOKING, CHEWISG, SNUFF and Chicago. The Treasurer is Mr. H. L. Kramer, one of the ownpaper, know the CIGARETTE HABIT, or money refunded by us to dissatisfied pur- lift TA AIA era of the famous Indiana Mineral Springs, Indiana, the only O' S. K. Co. to be chaser. We don't claim to cure EVERYONE, but the percentage of li-I SUK I » place in the world where magnetic mineral mud baths are given W reliable and will cures is so large that we can better afford to have the good wlHof | । U r^d baSr We meXn S (m do as they agree, the occasional failure than his money. We have faith in NO-TO- of money will be proper! v accounted for. that our GUARANTEE JK' /W This we BAG, and if you try it you will find that NO-TO-BAC is to you WILL be MADE GOOD and YOUR PATRONAGE APPRECIATED. BE SURE when you write to Qh fiIIARANTFF TA N ft < name this paper and address THE STERLING REMEDY CO,, £ IQ OuSnßnlLLi B• “ WElvni SIM £ Chicago Office: 45 and 47 Randolph St. Box 1280, INDIANA MINERAL SPRINGS, IND. rW
■I ;or r @ other powder will, until used, and make more § w wholesome food. ® I - t ’ -l ~—— —
The Passing of t he Sheep. At a vet v early hour one morning, in I loreno?, I lay half asleep, when the bleating of a sheep brought me quickly to my senses, and I remember to have | heard that at this season the shepherds * c me down from the mountains with their fiwls, to take them to the warmer plains below. So I hastily aroused ths sleeping children, who only needed the word "lambs” to make them broad awake, and we flew to the windows, and 10l what a sight was i there. The whole street and sidewalk below, as far ns wo could sec in either direction, was filled with a moving mass. Hundrodsand thousands of sheep and lambs; flock- following each other in quick succession, with only room : enough between for the shepherd, who always leads the sho -p with a big [ cr«K>k, and generally carries one or more tiny lambkins in his arms. There was n > trouble w ith refactory sheep racing off in the w roog direction: all were content and happy to follow their Ixfioved shepherds, at whose sides trotted the faithful d<>gs and the big ! leaders of the flecks that wi re the l»»dls. It was the tinkling of these hundreds of t»ells that had aroused me so early. Never slnill I forget that strange, weird sound as it neo and fell on the early morning air. These numerous flocks of sheep piss j throufh the city twice a year in the h****ing. when they leave the warm lowbii.lt. > ’‘nr'UTlß for tbv hot th»rn I moiintaitis, and tn | fr">ty air drive- them buck t > the ■ plains. And, a*they m i-t pa-- through ■ the cities on their way, they are I obliged to linger out-ide the city' walls ' until busino-s in the street* is susp'nded, when the night guards open I the p nderms gat •* and all >w them to puss throt.gh. It was an impro—ivo sight to see those hundreds of she- p following their leaders so happily, and spike volumes for the friendlv relations existing between them.—\Vide Awake. An Arkansas Curio. _ The largest man in the South died at E m Springs, Ark. Ho was 70 years old) arid weighed 540 pnmd*. Ho had his coffin mada two years ago, and had since used it a- a granary. It he'd twenty-two bushels of wheat. It required twelve pall-b arers at the funeral. Who wovud be free fr >m ea.-;hly Uis must buy s boxot Beecham’s Fills. 25 cents a box. Worth a guinea. The motion of the earth around the sun is 68,305 milesan hour: over 1,000 miles a minute, or nineteen miles a second.
'-a<, guaranty: ImtCOHABnCURE SNUFF a-CICARn IE
I‘uget Sound Fish Stories. Puget Sound swarms with fish. Wonderful stories are told of them. So i plentiful are the salmon that during : the season when they are running up the streams it is said they will rush up a brook so thickly as to wedge together . and form a bridge that < ne can walk across. In jumping the falls of small creeks they often lacerate them-elves terribly on sharp rocks. Salmon is the favorite fish of this country. Even the ladies like them. One old fisherman down on the wharf t< Id how a lady uptown had a pet salmon. It stayed in a certain little cove. During the rainy sea- n the lady would come each day i to feed it with bread. When she would start back it would swim up the watery streets and follow her home, then swim down again to its little cove. * ' 'Ty queer tish are caught in these waters. One kind is called candle fish. llt i- dried and packed in boxes like candles. We are told the fishermen use them to light their homes, and that at one time all the boats on the* Sound used them instead of sp'rm-oil । lamps. By putting the heads of the fl*h downward in a candlestick and lighting the tai’, which, in conjunction i with the backbone, acts as a wick. It burns like a candle. They eat this fish, and when cooking it is so fat it | fries itself. —Chicago Journal. Quick Work. Dr. Edward Everett Hale has not ■ much pativuce with the idea that a - ■ <rv an nm t v ork «ix days over a ; s.TitH'n. Ho «a vs: a nci iuon ennsists of ub ut 2. >oo words. 1 take a cup of cos! o before breakfast and write about | six i ago, tliat is tGu words. In the s morning 1 dict.-.t - to my amanuensis , I.'- i> words. lam intensely interested , in the subject, and this takes only a ■ quarter of an hour. In the afternoon I look it over and add 500 or 600 words, and the sermon is done. In all, I haven't put my hand for over two hours t< > j >aper. - Exchange. Possilfv Dr. Hale resembles the woman who 'masted that she always prepared breakfast in less than fifteen : minutes; and her husband, with an agonized exp"> --ion, remarked that he had to eat it. Bloominpt m Bulletin. F. B. WALTHALL X CO., Druggieta, Horss C«v«, Ky., "i»j . “Hull’s Catarrh Cure cures every on« tLet takes it.” Sold by Druggists, 75c. “Yov promised to pay that bill yesterday, ’ said an angry creditor to a debtor. “Yes,” calmly replied the I other; “but to err is human, to forget | divine; and I forgot it.” The amount of m >noy held by various London blanks is not far short of 1 $1,150,000,000.
CURED HIMSELF, HIS FATHER, HIS BROTHER-IN-LAW, AND MS W NEIGHBORS. Q NASSAU, lowa, Nov. 21,1592-—Gentlemen: I am glad to say that since Jg i I commenced th,' use of No-To-Bac, which was the sth of July.lSß3. I aa| have never used tobacco in any form and consider myself completely fjl cured. I can also say that my father, now about 65 rears of age, after using tobacco lor forty-five years, was cured by the use of three boxes L*J I also Induced my brother-in-law and neighbors to trv No-To-Bac and they were cured. F.O. PRICE. Bw CHEWED TOBACCO FOR FIFTT YEARS-AFTER SPENDING SI,OOO ® FOR TOBACCO NO-TO-BAC CUBED HIM. Springfield, Ohio, Nov. 22, 1852.— Gentlemen: On the 16th day of May, 1892, I commenced the use of No-To-Bac, and cast tobacco out of mymouth and have not tasted the weed since and have no desire for it Jr I would advise all who want to stop using tobacco to give No-To-Bac a /a trial. I used it for fifty years and spent SI,OOO for tobacco. No-To-Bac Mt nas mode a complete cure. GEO. W. WASKEV Jgg” “CIGARETTE FIEND FOUR TEARS.” Fa FARMER Cm*, 111., June 13,1S92.—Dear Sirs: Ihave just finished the 13 use of one box of No-To-Bac and lam happy to say that lam cu:ed from 3? all desire for tobacco. For four years 1 have used cigarettes almost >-% constantlr.ns well as tobacco in all of its forms; butto-davl have no desire for tobacco whatever. Do noteren remember what it tastes like Ifeel deeplv grateful to you and your remedy for my present condition, «« and be assured that I will speak a good word for you among mv afflicted .bK friends. B. B. BATES. gl
‘August Flower” “I ready to testify under oath that if it had not been for August ; Flower I should have died before this. Eight years ago I was taken j sick, and suffered as no one but a dyspeptic can. I employed three of our best doctors and received no benefit. They told me that I had heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so that I had to throw it up. August Flower cured me. There is no medicine equal to it.” Lorenzo F. Sleeper, Appleton, Maine. ® Wpl HARVEST M EXCURSIONS Will bn run from CHICAGO, PEORIA and ST. LOUIS via the BURLINGTON ROUTE AUGUST 22, SEPTEMBER 12, OCTOBER 10, On these dates ROUND-TRIP TICKETS will be SOLD at To all points in NEBRASKA, KANSAS, COLORADO, WYOMING, UTAH, NEW MEXICO, INDIAN TERRITORY, TEXAS, MONTANA.
Tickets good twenty days, with stopover on going trip. Passengers In the East should purchase through tickets via the BURLINGTON ROUTE of their nearest ticket agent. For descriptive land pamphlet and further Information, write to P. S. EUSTIS, Cen'! Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111. Form Ad lUI-S3 Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —OR— Other Chemicals aro nse( l * n th9 preparation of W. BAKER & CO.’S I OBreakfastCocoa kA ■ which it absolutely F | V\| pure and soluble. > fIJ It has morethan threetimea IW*i ’fl ^renyth of Cocoa mixed Efl jL, Ir* ■ iwith Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and kasily DIGBSTED. ' Sold by Grorers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. A* IEWIS’9B%LYE I Fowdered and Perfumed, jggj) (PATENTED.! The str> 'uyest and purest I.ye made. Jdl Unlike other Lye, it being a fine A powder and packed in a can with “reinova l le lid, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 WaHy minutes without boiling. It Is the best for cleansing waste-pipes, v i disinfecting sinks, closets, wash. ■ i ing bottles, paints, trees, etc. , PENNA. SALT M’F’U CO, Gen. Agfa., I’hi la.. Pa. REVERSIBLE - — COLLARS &CUFFS.— PAPHAt L.MUR!U.O.TASSO.]| The best and most economical Collars and Cuffs worn. Try them. You will like them. Look'well. Fit well. Wear well. Bold for 25 cents fora box of Ten collars or Five pairs of cuffs. A sample collar and pair of cuffs sent Ey mall for Six Cents. Address, giving size and ' style wanted. "Ask the dealers for them." _ Reversible Collar Co., 27 Kilby St. Boston. JPkClkaC S JOHN W. MORK is, Washington, D.C. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ■ LatePrlncipal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. B 3 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since. MXNTION THIS PAPER nrm>. to A>vsnvna Sure relief > ctum | KIDDERS PASTILIf | $75.00t0 $250.0o ™ ing for B. F, JOHNSON & CO„ Richmond. Va. I C. N. U. No. 36 -03 NATHEM VVltrriNG TO ADVKKTfSERS, ■ iv please say you saw the advertisement lu this paper.
