St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 10, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 September 1893 — Page 3
“August Flower” . I have been troubled with dyspepsia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble—J. B. Young, Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. One bottle of August Flower cured me. It was positively worth one hundred dollars to me—J. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Ont. I have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, It is the i best seller I ever handled—C. Rugh, Druggist, Mechanicsburg, Pa. ® 2 IL/’'ICKAPOO J INDIAN • 2 ■ W SACWA® ThegreatestLiver,! Stomach, Blood and Z KpgWjSßjSl Kidney Remedy. o Made of Roots, Z Barks and Herbs, Z and is Absolutely Z JwWamfflVev. Free FromZ Z All Mineral J Z ' V\ or OtherZ Z f tw/ia nan U Harmful In-| ® / VW . lAgredients. e ® / llaw B Druggists, $1 2 • Laughing Dog, age job yrs. jter^b• Rlckapoo Indian Medicine Co., 2 Z Heafy & Bigel<n^ s^nts, New Haven, CL o * 1 ’ ^^jSgysssssssssssss ! ENOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’neeas 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 perfect 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. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has nowin his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. A benefit is always experienced from ; the first bottle, and a "perfect cure is war- J ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. ( L)ose, one tablespoonful in water at bedume. Read the Label. Send for Book. ' I Waterproof I wSfeM?- Coat SLICKER The FISH BRAND SUCKER is warranted waterproof, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLIt KER is a perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddle. Beware of imitations. Don't i buy a coat if the “Fish Brand” is not on it. Illustrated Catalogue free. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. J « I EWIS’ 98 % LYF a Powdered and Perfumed. BES&j—p fan (PATENTED.! HESafcg'SfT The strongest and purest Lye made. Unlike other Lye, it being a fine /AP°wder and packed hi a can with -JtySgaraNi '©removal le lid, the contents are jgpjWSy always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 ISg? minutes without boiling. It is the best for cleansing waste-pipes, SB disinfecting sinks, closets, washE B, ing bottles, paints, trees, etc. .MU,,. PENNA. SALT M’F’G CO., l£tltZ3ESi"ka Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa. Us A KJTCH MEN to TRAVEL. We pay 850 ” Ais | C.U to Mil a month At expenses. STONE & WELLINGTON. MADISON, WIS. B Consumptives and people BB BE who have weak lungs or Asth- » ma. should use Pino’s Cure for BS K Consumption, it has cured Su ■ thousands, ft has not injured one. It Is not bad to take. ® It is the best cough syrup. ■ Sold everywhere. 25c.
THE STRIP IS OPEN. WILD SCRAMBLE FOR CHEROKEE LANDS. Scenes About the Registration Booths Before the Start—Description of the Beauties of One of the Fairest Spots on American Soil. The Now El Dorado. 1 Talk about “rushes” for froo land! The scenes just enacted at the opening of the Cherokee Strip surpassed any- ; thing of the kind ever known. For a \ week a constantly growing crowd i surged about the registration booths: for no one could secure land without । having first registered. Men, women and children, to the number of 20,000 ’ or 25,000, formed in lines and remained [ thepe day and night; many were overcome by the heat and dust; some died from exhaustion. Anything eatable commanded World's Fair prices, and water was 10 cents per cup. Still the mass of humanity waited and grow, restrained from premature encroachment by United States marshals and cordons of soldiers. There were half a dozen places for registration along the northern boundary of the Strip, and the scene at one was but a duplicate of the others. When the last moment arrived, and the word “Go” was given, with a yell that tore a hole in the heavens "the crowd started. Some on horseback, some afoot, some with wheelbarrows loaded with goods, some on bicycles, l and thousands in the picturesque j prairie schooners. Flowing with Milk and Honey. Comparatively little is known of the Cherokee Strip or “Outlet” by the average American, despite the fact i that it lies almost in the very midst । of the nation, at the thresholds of i five great States of the Union —Missouri Kansas, Arkansas,Colorado, and Texas, 5 And yet it is pronounced by experienced judges to be the finest body.of land of its . size on the whole American continent, with soil of surpassing richness and
G V vC? Zi on H E KE E S Ts-Vi : "I *) JI -- —— - —IX—__. j —— a. y* । ilk’ MAP OF CHEROKEE STRIP.
depth, mineral resources of great value and inexhaustible quantity, natural scenery that is unrivaled, and a climate of delicious mildness and salubrity. The temperature there in winter varies from 35 to 48 degrees, and in summer from 77 to 82. All the extravagant things that have been written in rapturqps praise of Oklahoma are said to be more than true of the Cherokee Strip, for it is regarded us equal in its entirety to the very choicest portions of Oklahoma, while its best lands are said to bo veritable garden spots. The strip is 200 miles long and 56 miles wide. It lies between the 96th and 100th parallels of west longitude, with the southern border lino of Kansas as its northern boundary and the Creek country and the Territory of Oklahoma as its southern. Topographically it is rolling, broken by hills and uplands and interspersed with valleys , and Eden-like bottoms. Its many water courses are skirted with fine timber, oak, walnut, cedar, ash, beech, and hickory. The soil of the bottom lands and prairies is soft and loamy, black as Ink, and of marvelous fertility. Upon the ridges and divides the land is not so well adapted to agriculture, but as the forest growth is slight they furnish splendid grazing pastures for sheen and cattle, being profusely clotheu with succulent “bunch grass'." Owing to this self-cured “bunch grass” and to the mildness of the climate and the abundance of water, the hilly regions are claimed by old sheep-growers to afford the best sheep country in the world. Indian Neighbors. Prospective settlers in the strip may now prepare to get acquainted with the Cherokees. Creeks, Choctaws and other tribes or nations of Indians in the Territory, who. with the white homesteaders of Oklahoma, will be their nearest neighbors. They are as tribes exceed- i Ingly wealthy, and are now rapidly adopting American manners, customs, usages and garments. The Cherokees number about 20,000, the Choctaws 16,000, the Creeks 15,000 and tho Cheyinnes and Arapahoes 7,000, and all tho other tribes 22,C00, making altogether — ■ * — I Ary; 1 11® ।l J* LAND OFFICE. 80,000 Indians resident in the Indian Territory. The price to be paid the Cherokees by the government is $8,595,736. There being 8,144,682 acres of the land, the net price per acre is $1.05. | Each settler on the new lands, before ■ receiving a patent, is required to pay, 1 beside fees, the sum of $2.50 per acre ! between paraPeis 96 and 974, the sum 1 of $1.50 per acre between 974 and 984. and the sum of $1 per acre between 984 and 100, together with four per cent. | from the date of entry until the final j payment. Some of the lands between parallels 96 and 974 are worth SSO per acre in the wild state. They are splendidly watered and within easy distance of several thriving towns in Kansas and Arkansas, and every foot of it is capable of cultivation. Help It Along. One of the most touching sights on the streets of Chicago is the too com-
mon one ol a poor woman with hl | Ut. , tie one in her arms, hungry, but|L na . ble to buy food, and without any I’oß- - of work. The office of the 1 ren’s Aid Society at room 510,16711 ar , born streetj presented a few days! g 0 a much similar scene. A German 4 >m ’ an carrying her little baby, apllii fl for worlc. She could not speak a of English, and while she sat wai for an interpreter to come the t< ftt .g rolled down her cheeks and fell on baby’s little hands. No money, no work. It was the si E0 story. During the month just pas there were moro than fifty mot! )rs who were willing to go anywher , y they could only find a home for th,^. solves and their children. Many (X able to cook excellently; some h;J Q had homos of their own; al! aro anxioi 3 to provide against the winter soon i ■ come and the suffering that otherwi- \ 1 must bo thoir’s at that time. Til ! Society is looking for families in tt\ | country neoding domestics or secon i girls, and willing to take a woma\ ■ with a child. High wages are nq i asked; only kindness and charity, iM view of tho needs of the servants, an/ a homo, with its protection against th< threatening winter. K BABY ON THE SCALES. yj Interesting Ceremony in the White Hoase-4 [ Grover Makes a Close Guess. Baby Ruth’s sister was weighed th«t other day. Dr. Bryant hold the scaled and lifted the precious weight, but^® set it down at a sign from the I’ro^jß dent, who said: “Wait a minute. Let’s guess neNT? weight.” 1 “Ten pounds,” said Mrs. ClovelandA “Eleven,” Mr, Perrine said. Dr. Bryant looked at the youngsteW^ critically, and said: “Nino and a half.>, “I should say,” Thurber remarkedß : with the air of a connoisseur, “I shouW say, well, now ” *‘Oh, guess, Thurber," the President] interrupted. “It’s not a matter of life or doatn.” “Twenty pounds,” Thurber said, somewhat rattled, and he blushod liko a girl who had just been kissed and .caught at it. Then the President, who had insisted on having the last guess, put on his
glasses and bent over the I aiket. With the air of a man who hasn't been catching and weighing bass all summer for nothing, ho said: “That's a nine-and-a-quarter pounder or there’s something wrong with the scales.” The Doctor then lifted tho basket once more. Tho indicator stopped i short at tho figure 8. “Good heavens’" tho President exclaimed. in a frightened toner—four pounds. Why, Doctor!" “Its all right,” tho Doctor wi!4. “The basket got caught on my arm.’ Ho freed it and tho indicator shot down to twenty with a thud. "Well, I'll bo tho President bev A MRS. CLEVELAND AND THE BABY, gan. Just, then he saw that Baby Ruth had hold of tho basket. “Go away from there, Ruth,” he said, gently pushing her off. The basket rose as he did so and settled at thirteen and a half. “Gee whillikens!” Thurber ex- ' claimed, “that's a bouncer—thirteen ; and a half.” “Hold your horses, my boy," the President observed, “you must allow for the basket. Let's see. four from thirteen and a half leaves nine and a half.” “Just my guess,” Dr. Bryant observed. “Yes," the President replied, “but you haven’t allowed for Nersbreakfast. That weighs a quarter of a pound, so you see that I take the And with the proud °f a con " queror lie strode from room and went into his office t> resume his work. F How the WorlS^ bOL-Rnew cases of havo oc . curred in Berlin. r The Robinson Press^ Glags Workg> ; 2GO mem 1 * 3 ’ ° nl °’ employing a A'r an employment agent of Kansas Cityf’ M w j a9 "found murdered in her offic^ th? n^’ An Tr? ^e personnel of tify a hope C S C tran^^/ 063 not JU9 ' , death a/d m ade B ° h “ “ j ‘ho notorious an-archr-t now in lai, - x York 1 either insane or “ suited in tht inju^f at Cincinnati reole in their effortR 0 a number of P GO * - . p to escape. Officials of L . o . , . Line have violate™® Ward Steamship Ing es Chmamefe^” “ k ‘ho makSVlf.™™, S P“ ißh “S”-; of o .Goo oA° r k struck on account of a reduction o 4 $2 per thousand< PilXrXsT atC( ; “ ation at ” an k Sun '” s a ^ voi ks, V' . jot and killed at Memphis & the watchman of the Memphis Bnf c £ ’ Ccmpany . r /V
TWO TRAINS COLLIDE frightful accident on the ILLINOIS CENTRAL ROAD. One Portion of n Heavily Laden World’u Fair Train Crushed Into by the Second Section and the Three Rearmost Cars Completely Telescoped. Nino Meet Death. Nine people were killed and twenty Injured by a fearful rear-end collision between two sections of the Bip Four train, known as No. 45, near the village of Manteno, a few miles north of Kan- | kakee, on the lino of the Illinois Central Railway. A special train left Chicago at 9:20 o'clock at night over the line of the Illinois Central railway, but conducted by the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway Company. The train was in two sections ' and was silk d with World's Fair visitors from Indiana and the Southeast. , At 10 o’clock the first section stopped lat Manteno, a town of GOO inhabitants 'forty-six miles fr<m Chicago. It is reiback the ptoper distance to signal I the other half of the train, approachking at, a high sp ed. L tho rear section sti tick the r.-ar of the sleeping ear Lunead when going at t he rate of almost mile a minute. The engineer saw Rhe impending calamity and jumped Ixith the fireman after doing every- . thing ptssible to cheek the speed of । the engine. Both were badly bruised, Luit escajKul with their lives. The ™hra© rear sleepers on section No. 1 were telescoped, the powerful engine of the second section driving its way I into them, and every person in the crowded cars was killed or injured. Scene of Horror. The scene about the accident was one of almost infinite horror. The engine plowed its dreadful way literally through the holies of sleeping men and women. Blood besmeared the iron and wood of the shattered ea s, that taking on the force of the locomotive added to the disaster. The night was dark and the shrieks of the injured and dying mingled wit>. the hiss of the Steam from the broken boiler. The passengers on the coaches of the train behind escaped with nothing more than a shock, which in s me cases was sufficiently severe to throw them from their sleeping berths. Many of them dressed and hurried forward to assist in the work of rescuing the unfortunates who were still pinioned in toe wreck. They were hardly on the 'ground before the residents of Manteno had reached the spot. Houses rear tho I place of the collision were hastily thrown open, and each l>eoame an ini- : provised hospital. Several physicians wore on the ears and they passed among the wounded, alleviating with the few resources at their command the sufferings of the wounded. Sheets and table cloths were torn into bandages and wounds skillfully dressed while brave and kindly women ministered to their wants with coffee hastily prepared and with cups of water. Help Ar riven. Some of tho trainmen hurried to Manteno and then wired to Kankakee and Chic igo for assistance. A dozen; physicians from Kankakee arrived at the scene of the wreck as rapidly ns as they could Ih> conveyed in a hurriedly made up train. As soon as the injured ware rescued from the wreck they were taken to Manteno to Imv cared for prior to their removal to Chicago. The arrivals were timely and their efforts much appreciated by tho terror-stricken passengers, many of whom, otherwise uninjured, were suffering from the suddenness of the shock and were going alamt w: inging their hands and crying. Tho cries of those who were caught by- tho broken timlsrs and twisted ironwork of the shatt iel sleeping cars were pitiable and the work of getting th<*m out attended with the utmost difficulty, so thoroughly had the engine done its work « f destruction. As the labors of the relief party proceeded. dead and dying were found mingled with the sometimes unconseioir- bodies of th< < • whose lives were providentially pr served. The worst of it all was in the rear ear, where the ponder us locomotive had struck with unchecked force. But so tremendous was the impact that each of the three rear coaches contributed its quota to the list < f casualties. Several were hurt by being hurled from upi ev l>erths t > the floor bel< w. who escaped further damage, 1 nt all these were able to be abcut aid some of them aided afterward in the work of mercy. The wreck was the w« r-t that has occurred on the Illto is Gent tai system for twenty years. Several of the injured are bey. nd recovery, and it is probable that the list of fatalities wiU be swelled to fourteen. How the World Wa-s. Bismark is worse again. CHOLERA is abating in Italy’. EXCHANGE in India is steadier. i LEATHER tanners are to form a comj bine. Prague is practically in a state of t siege. i War has been waged with the Wyoming rustlers. Erie won the pennant in the Eastern base-ball league. Coal diggers in the north of France threaten to strike. The Argentine-Chili boundary treaty ■ has been approved. i The street car companies of San ’ Francisco are to be consolidated. The Crescent Athletic Club, of New i Orleans, will go out of business. Six notorious shoplifters have been captured by’ Cincinnati police. Patrick Shea has been held to the grand jury at Chicago for killing Edward Ford. COLORADO silver men are figuring <vn establishing a State silver bullion depository. Boilermakers at St. Louis, on a strike for two months, have declared the strike off. George W. Curtis, who committed suicide at Chicago, left a note asking t > be cremated. Officers of the United States cruiser Chicago were entertained at Havre by the Mayor. A transcontinental railroad passenger rate war has been brought on by the Southern Pacific.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Reports Ro>hl 1 rowder
Women Barbers. ‘ The lady b trber,” said Louis Ed- ■ monds, who is at the Lindell, “cannot I be called a success. In almost every i city women have opened barber shop's ’ with a great flourish of trumpets, and j have been patronized very liberally by the youth of the city, who regarded I the idea as distinctly novel. But the cases where the project has proved anything like a permanent success are very rare. I have been shaved twice by a lady barber, and would not go through the ordeal a third time even if paid liberally for so doing. It is not because a woman cannot shave so much as because she cannot keep a razor in good condition. “It looks very easy to strop a razor, but every man who has tried to shave himself recollects how he has absolutely failed to produce the desired effect, in spite of the most vigorous applications of energy and what he regards as skill. A woman is at still greater disadvantage, and can seldom sharpen even a penknife, let alone a hollowground razor. The only possible I chance the average woman barber has is to keep a man busy sharpening her razors, and by so doing she has to pay away the buls of her profits in the way of superfluous wages. In addition to this, most men who are expert strop- । pers are also expert barbers and preler to complete the operation themselves.”—St. Louis Globe Democrat. A Simple Barometer. A simple barometer can be made by filling a common, wide-mouthed pickle bottle within three inches of tne top with water. A ordinary Florence oil flask should be washed thoroughly and stripped of its straw covering. This should bo inverted, and its neck plunged as far as it will go in the pickle bottle. This gives a complete barometer. In fine weather the water will rise into the neck of the flask higher than the mouth of the pickle bottle, in wet or windy weather it will fall to within an inch of the mouth of ! the flask. Before a heavy gale of wind, I and at least eight hours before the I gale reaches its height, the water has, it is said, been seen to leave tho flask altogether. A SaffYon-colored Index Os the condition of a bilious stomach and •lußßish liver Is the human countenance. Not only the skin, but the eyeballs, are tinged with the yellow hue when the bile gets into the blood. Besides this, sick headaches ensue, the longue becomes furred, pains are felt in the liver and through the right shoulder blade, and dizziness is experienced upon rising from a I sitting or recumbent posture by the bilious invalid. For these and other indications of biliousness. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is a sovereign remedy. It is also efficacious in chills and fever, dumb ague, ague cake, inactivity of the kidneys and bladder, rheumatism and nervousness. It stiD.ulates, restores digestion and sleep, and tends grca‘ly to mitigate the infirmities of age. It Would Be Tolerable. A gentleman who had promised to meet his wife in a large establishment where all sorts of things are sold at low prices, wa< making his way, says the Bazar, through the throng of women. Forced to pause for a moment near a counter behind which stood a pretty saleswoman, he b urted out: “Is there anything on earth that would reconcile a man to such a crowd as this?” “Yes, sir,” was the quick reply; “belonging to the firm." Quickly Settled. It was Paul do Cassagnac who wrote to Victor Noir: “I am the offended Farty. I have the choice of weapons. choose the French grammar. You are dead.” Everglades are called by the Indians “grass water.” Low tracts of land inundated with water and inter- : epersed with patches of high grass, | peculiar to the Southern States, are ' known as everglades Sick Headache, lassitude, weakness and loss of appetite, caused by malaria, can be Immediately cured by Beecham’s Pills. The effective strength of sects is not to be ascertained by merely counting ! heads. —Macaulay.
| Hood’s^Cures < 1 a 'a health failed me. After (' \ \ muc ^ persuasion I comimenced to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and am \ A. much improved. From aa all run down condition I have been restored to good health. FormerMr. G. W. Twist, ly I weighed 135 pounds, I now 176. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has been a great benefit to me.” George W. Twist, Coloma, ( Wis. N. B. Be sure to get Hood’s. Hood’s Pills Cure all Liver Ills. 25c. r~iENSIONI?ESSiIS^’ •’Successfully Prosecutes Clabris. I«ate Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty ciiice. MENTION THIS PAPER vraww wmttin® to adtxbtm*m»
“Linen?” Collars and Cuffs. zCZ^x Z^7*\ //^''xX z^^^x z 2 mBEN^YANGELO^ Th a “I TMENC” are the Best and Most Economical lliC Lili Ell E Collars and Cuffs Worn. They are the only goods made that a well-dressed gentleman can use in place of linen. Try them. You will like them ; they look well, wear well and fit well. Re- O v rsible ; both sides alike ; can be w’orn twice as long as any other collar. When one side is soiled use the other, then throw it away and take a fresh one. £ Ask the Dealers for them. Sold for 35 cents for a Box of 10 Collars, or Five Pairs of Cuf^ ^7 A Sample Collar and a Fair of Cuffs sent by mail for g ! six cents. Address* Giving Size and Style Wanted^ g f REVERSIBLE COLLAR CO., 27 Kilby Street, Boston, Mass. g
Western. Pleasure Seeking. I When the main line of the Northern I Pacific was finished to Garrison Junci tion, in Western Montana, a reporter of a Helena paper noticed a dilapidated j prairie schooner, covered with burs and alkali dust, and loaded with a cargo of tow-headed youngsters. “Going back East?” inquired the reporter. “No. We heard there is going to be a circus in Helena this week,” said the proprietor of the strange vehicle. “I own a mine on Stony Creek, eighty miles south of here.” “ Eighty miles! Why, you must have had a rough trip?" “Pretty tough, but the children cried and teased till I had to do it,” said the pater-familias, “Aa soon as ever I can make a stake, I’m going to move where a person can see a monkev without hav- 1 ■ ing to kill his horse doing it.”—Phila--1 delphia Times. CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS, Detroit. Mich., says: “The effect of Hall’s Catarrh Cure i« wonderful.’’ Write him about it. Sold by Druggists, 75c. It may pass for a maxim in state that the administration can not be placed in too few hands, nor the legislation in too many.—Swift. There is no index of character so sure as the voice.—Taucred.
$lO A Day Free! Enclose in a letter containing your full name knd address, the outside wrapper of a bottle of Smith’s Bile Beans (either size). j Ifyour letter is the first one opened in the first mprtiing mail of any day except Sunday $5 will be sent you at once. If the ad, 3d, s 4th, sth or 6th, sl. Ask for the SMALL size. Full list mailed to all who send postage for it (2 cts.). Address J. F. Smith & Co. i No. 255 Greenwich St., New York. | “ Not a gripe in a ba r el o< ■ harvesF^ EXCURSIONS Wil! be 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 I-lOW To all points In NEBRASKA, KANSAS, COLORADO, WYOMING, UTAH, NEW Mexico. INDIAN TE RRI TO R Y/T E XAS, MONTA NA. Tickets good twenty days, with stopover on going trip. Passengers In the East should purchase through ticket* via the BURLINGTON ROUTE Os their nearest ticket agent. For descriptive land pamphlet and further Information, write to P. S. EUSTIS, Oen’l Passenger Agent, Chicago, HL Form Ad-101-93 Unlike tiie UH Process' SNo Alkalies — OR — her Chemicals are used in the preparation of r. BAKER & CO.’S reakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. \ has more than three t imea le strength of Cocoa mixed ith Starch, Arrowroot or agar, and is far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Maw., The Oldest Medicine in the World is frobesbly DR. ISAAC THOMPSON’S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER.. This article is a caretully prepare.! pnyslcian’s pre. l scrlpilon, and has been in constant use for nearly a L centurv. There are few diseases to which mankind r aro subject more distressing than sore eyes, and ’ none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been tried without success. For al 1 external inflammation -of the eves it is an Infallible remedy. If the directions are followed it will never fail. We particularly Invite the attent’on of phvsieians to its merits. For sale bv all druegi’ts JOHN L. THOMPSON, SONS k CO.. Tboy. N. Y. Established 179;. rnnn nnn acreTof land SaWiiy.UvU for sale by the Saint PaVI r - ' H, & Dfluth Company in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Ciroos ’ lars. They will be sent to vou . ■ Address ^LCPEWELL CLARKE. X . 1 1. <NM|^issiouer, St. Paul, Minn. ■■■ flrbvPeck-»i Cnshkina. y Successful*. remedies f aft. Sold ►v F. Hisccx. 853 B’way, MA rite for book ©f proof® ■ K t®' » » MENTION THIS PAPER wrkn wettino to iDTrrmiM, SSSIMBS3SQEBEESK3 Sore relief iCTjHfl' • * KIDDERS PASTiLLES^SoS^: C. N. U. No. 38 93 WIIEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, ▼ V idease say you saw the advertisement In this paper.
