St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 22, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 16 December 1893 — Page 3
GOOD SPIRITS good health i Is low spirits, ; ancholla, impair- I nemory, morose, ' irritable temper, fear of impend- I ing calamity and a thousand and j one derangements of body i and mind, result from pernicious, solitary prac)es, often indulged by the young, iugh ignorance of ruinous conses. Nervous debilidnon^« ^ToreaM Datea to health F^‘a» fa U ^dc£™W^^ treatment, of ^A^cnn^of^t’iia useful book will, on receipt SSS^A-JX&'&O-O. N.Y. •■^ICKAPOO SK INDIAN 2 • H SACWAe • The greatest Liver, 4 • Stomach, Blood and • Kidnev . g ' $ Laughing Dog, agt lobyrs. per bottle, (TJ a —— bottles for $5. ] * Klckapoo Indian Medicine Co., J • Healy & Bigelow, Agents, New Haven, Ct. !
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KNOWLEDGE 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’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 perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation, it has given satisfaction lu millMna-atnl-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 now in 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 warranted 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 dietever necessary. Eat — the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed^me. Read the Label. Send for Book. Deucate Women Or Debilitated Women, should usa BRADFIELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR. Every ingredient possesses superb Tonic properties and exerts a wonderful influence in toning up and strengthening he? system, by driving through the proper channels all impurities. Health and strength guaranteed to result from its use. “ My wife, who was bedridden for oAgil. teen months, after using liradfteld’t Female Regulator for two months £2 getting well.” J. M. Johnson - . Malvern, Ark, Eiunrnin Reculatcr Co.. Atlanta, Qa» Rnld hv J'riwie’t nt nor bo”!'.. “s^]^ nCTasia. CURED. I POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC I I *2* Givp® Relief in Five Minuter Trial I Package sent FREE. Fold by Drug- 3 ^’ B t3. One Box sent post-paid on re- I ceiptofsl.oo. Six Boxes. $4.50. Add. | ^^^gThos.Popham.Phlla.Pa J A Ri Tigm MEN t 0 TRAVEL. We pay f 5O ■ &» to a month & expenses. STONE & WJL ISLINGTON. MADISON, WIS. 11 m JConnumptlves and people KS who have weak lungs or Asth- K 9 ma, should use Piso’sCure for Consumption. It has cured thousand.. It has not injur- ES ed one. It is not bad to take EM it is the best cough syrup. KS Sold everywhere. 25c. £l9
MEANT IT FOR DUPUY. 1 ’bomb EXPLODED INTHEFRENCH j • CHAMBER. ' Paris the Scene of Bloodshed and Affright I Wild Scenes of Panic In and About the । Palais de Bourbon When the Explosion । Takes Place. I Reign of Terror. 1 \ f+or a dav of great excitement, folI the expl Sion of the bomb in i tho Chamber of Deputies, the authorithat they have the
itics announces hP miscre- ‘ bomb thrower in custody, the miscie 11 nnt is named Vaillant or Marchal. He : iu an anarchist and has made a full | confession. News to the effect that : the bomb-thrower was in the hands of 1 the volice was circulated in cans av f not m but the report was not until official announcement xvas made : in the evening, and now all 1 aris rests * easier The excitement caused in Faris Hbv the dynamite outrage within the Jl&amberuf M* ean freely bo • described While the house was in » i session during the afternoon a stranger ® 1 w’ o was cccupying a seat m the g t ! lerv threw the bomb to the floor of chamber. As the bomb struck it it is esLmiifffe&'TAaf ?Ag?itv-six per-
.sons, amony them many women, were i • I injured, several of them seriously and 1 • i one woman fatally. It is believed that I • j the bomb was set off by a time fuse and ! • 1 n t by a percussion cap, and that it ex- !
pioded just [as it left the hand of the I miscreant who committed the outrage, j To this fact is due the absence of mor- I tai injury on the floor of the chamber, ! while it also accounts for the number of the injured in the gallery, which, | owing to the dullness of the debate in i progress, was n t filled with the usual j crowd. Nor were many Deputies pres- I ent, the que-tion before the house on ! the verification of the credentials of the newly elected members being a matter of routine, neither calling'for ! nor commanding a large attendance. Debate was on a question incidental to an increase in military exj enditure, and in this connection leference was made to the alliance with the empire of the Czar. M. Lemiie was address- j ing the house and was in the midst of;
i a glowing eulogium tn Rus ia when he was interrupted by a hoarse shout from I one of the galie ies. He paused in his remarks, startled by the unwonted sound, and every eye in the house was i turned upon the direction whence it : proceeded. A roughly dressed man i with a shock of brown hair and weari ing a blue blouse was standing on his ■ seat waving a greasy cap over his head. । He was yelling at the top of his voice ‘ A bas le Czar!” Half a dozen attendants started in his direction, but before they could reach him he had extracted a bomb from the recesses of his blouse and launched it full at the speaker. I The report of the outrage spread like wildfire through the city, and ■ eager groups collected in all the main thoroughfares, reading by the lights j from shop windows the accounts upon < ( tby-vxplvMon published in the special' editions of the newspapers. FARM PRODUCTS SHOW DECLINE Department of Agriculture Makes Its Ofli- ' cial Returns for December. The statistical returns of the Department of Agriculture for the month of December are principally devoted tc the indications of the average prices ) of the product of the farm at the' points of production or in the nearest local markets. As thus indicated, the ‘
value ot corn is 3< cents per bushel, which is 2.4 cents lower than the corresponding price of last year, which was 39.4 cents per bushel, a figure which corresponds nearly with the" average farm price of corn‘for the decade 1880 to 1889, inclusive, which was 39.3, and. is 6.1 cents lower than the average for the three years 1890 to 1892, while the average price of wheat is 52.1 cents per bushel. The next lowest price in the twenty-three years fr.om 1870 to 1893, inclusive, was 64.5 cents in 1884; the average for the ten years 188 C to 1889 was 82.7, while for the three years 1890 to 1892 it was 76.6. The decline from the average of the last three preceding years, in two of which, viz., 1691 and 1892, occurredjthe largest yieid in the history of the country, 24.5 cents, or 32 per cent. Averages on other products are correspondingly ' Telegraphic Clicks. Burglars secured S4OO from the! store of J. Adams at Summerfield, 111. j A receiver is to ba appointed for ; the Oregon National Bank at Portland. The commissioners of Ada County. Idaho, are charged with malfeasance in office. i J. *V. Edwards killed his wife anc j him elf near Fulton, Ky. Cause un- ’ known. Many members of the St. Pa il police for co are confined to their homes 1 v the I grip. J j Stephen Easley has been appointee receiver of the Ohio Chemical Compa ny at Lima. j Curtis Poorman was shot and killed' by Dave Donley as the result of a quar-' rel at Humboldt, 111. Mrs. Healey, expounder of the I Quaker faith, has sued her husband for divorce, and Greenwich, Ohio, if enjoying a sensation. George Bunn, an American artistl was sentenced to fifteen years’ impris onment at Brussels for the murder o: Anna Hoffman. Robert Preston Bruce, a brothei 1 of the Earl of Elgin, the newly appointed viceroy of India, died at Edin ' burgh from influenza. C. B Lamborn. Land Commissioner of the Northern Pacific Railway, is re ported to be insane. He was recently given a year's leave of absence. The Louisiana State Lottety is pre- j paring to move from Now Orleans tc Honduras. ; Rudolph La Flamme, Minister o! Justice for the Dominion Government; under the late Alexander McKenzie.' died at his home in Montreal. Gov. Pattison has granted a respite of thirty days t > Henry Heist, the i Adams County (Pennsylvania) murder ) er. sentenced to be hanged Dec. 14. 1 While William Miller and W. II ) Shipley were cleaning a boiler at In-1 dianapolis. soma one turned on the' steam. The men were fatally scalded.
hanged for murder. f Harvey Pate and”^* Stier. Die on the L 1 Gallows at Danville. w PntA and Frank Stiers were | Harvey Pate ano r mU r- r executed at Danvile, •, e ^ rO p fell | der of Henry Helmick Thear^ I without incident J h e case on of I dered interesting by {or | the Governor upen the 1 ca . | Hon P theGovernor sail that he con- I Bidered hanging an unnecessary c ruelty^ I murder. Inasmuch, bowe v e r , as cap- J \ -—
Ip& ® I * /few, ■■ ■ ■ M „ HARVEY PATE. ERANK STIERS. ' - .' —f ~ j, comnUrtferftß ! prisonment unless stru^M^MMic ’r>a
1x L j j M) ||u , ns were adduced, and no such reasons were apparent. The wanton murder of Henry J. Helmick, a wealthy farmer of 1 Hot Township, by Harvey Fate, Frank Stiers,
j Charles Smoot, and Elias McJunkins, । upon the high road, while he was drivI ing home from church with his wife on 1 the evening of Aug. 25. caused intense excitement in an otherwise quiet ! neighborho >d. The four highwaymen stopped the farmer about 9 o'clock in the evening and demanded his monov Helmick refused to surrender his cash. The next instant Harvev Fate, the leader of the quartet, shot the farmer. Stiers almost at the same moment fired his revolver and the farmer fell dead upon the shculder of his thoroughly frightened wife. Smoot and McJi nkins, wh so attempt to hold Helmick’s noises hal failed, viewed the awful work of their companions with a fear which later caused Smojt to make a confession implicating his companion-.
s ‘ The arrest and trial of the young desi peradoes quickly followed. ' Pate and i, Stiers were sentenced to death and the . others sent to prison for life. AFTER BOND COMPANIES. J^ostofflce Authorities Determine to Stop Lottery Games. j Uncle Sam has issued orders against a batch of fifty bond and invent neat concerns by which they may be forced out of existence. They are to be proceeded against for violating the anti- . lottery law. Postoffice Inspector Stu1 art, of Chicago, has received orderj not to allow the delivery of registered letters or money orders at any post- , office in his dLt.’ict to the following ' concerns: ‘ Equitßble Investment Company and Perpetual Maturity Bond Companv, Connell Blntf-v i Town; lowaGuarant.ee Tnv - | Keokuk; Reserve Fund I vestment Com van v I Creston, Iowa; United States Investment Corn’ qany, Bankers’ Investment Company Capital , Consol Company, and Columbia Bond Investi ment Company, Minneapolis; North American i Bond Investment Company, St. Paul; Guaran- । tee Investment Company, Milwaukee; State of i Washington Bond Company, Chicago; Phoenix Loan and Investment- Company. Colorado Guarantee and Loan Company, Guarantee Investment Company, Investment Bond Com- : pany. and Workmen's Investment and Bond I Company. Denver; Wadem Investment Company, Pueblo, Col.; Pacific Coast Bond and Investment Company, Oregon, Utah; Utah Savinas Investment Comp my, Mount Pleasant; Utah Guarantee Investment Company
j ; beattie; Guarantee Bondanc Investment Coai- . 1 pany, Covington, Ky.: Columbia Investment : and Bond Company, Newport, Ky.; American 1 । Guarantee Savings and Investment Company, ; Fort A alley, Ga.; National Confederation . I Guarantee Company, Nashville, Tenn.; Phce- , : nix Savings and Investment Company, Waco, ; Tex.; American Bond Investment Company ; Equitable Investment Company, Missouri ■ Loan and Investment Company, and Nebraska I Savings and Investment wmpinv, Omaha, Neb.; National Guarantee Investment Com-’ ' pany, Lincoln, Neb.; National Savi ings and investment Company, Tekonsha, • Mich.; Columbia Investment Company , Saginaw, Mich.; St. Louis Mutual Bond Investment Company and Guarantee Investment Company, St. Louis, Mo.; Pettis County InI vestment Company, Sedalia, Mo.; Missouri State Loan and Investment Company, Fayette । Mo.; Provident Bond and Investment Com-’ I pany and Franco-German Electric Company | Cincin- ti, Ohio; California Laud and Water Company, Dayton, Ohio; Union Investment Company and Louisiana Lottery Company, Kansas City, Mo.; Guarantee Investment Company, Hull, Ill.; American Certificate Com- । pany, New York City and Utica, N. Y.; ProviI dent Bond and Investment Company, PhilaI delphia and Washi gton, D. C. Newsy Paragraphs. Cheyenne Indians in Indian Ter”i- --| tory are in want. , Delegates attended the Topeka, Kan., convention in the interest of a great north and south line. Another wholesale reduction in , freight rates to the East has been an- I ; nouneed by the Erie Railway. i B. F. Colburn, a 70-year-old trap-'’l per, was found dead at'Columbia, Su 1 D., with an iron rod run through his I head. I “Old T^W^JiR Hubbard,” a n> | torious thiG ''-gone insane in Tole- f do’s jail, ana - be taken to a madhouse. A i At Portland, Ore., Mrs. George H. Williams, religious enthusiast, has finished a forty-day fast and resumed eatj logA meeting was held at Washington to plan for the military encampment of the Knights of Pythias in i August, 1894. ' In Mexico, Juan Guadalupe was shot by law for beating to death his 3-year-old boy who refused to drink a cup of coffee. । George AV. Grandey, an authority! on English literatu e. died at Ver-I. gennes, At., of general debility. Hei was born in 1812. German agitation against the Rus . sian and other commercial treaties it increasing, and also against Caprivli personally. Austrian Socialists have decided t □ inaugurate a universal strike as a pr< test against the army bill now befoig o the Reichsrath. 5 The annual statement of theAtchh. son, Topeka and S.mta Fe Railroq t a shows net earnings for the year we L o $16,065,538, an increase of $948,082. g Mrs. Dupont, divorced wife of WiTn. iam Dupont, the powder manufacture was married to Willard Saulsbury, s< of Senator Saulsbury, of Delaware, Wilmington. Mrs. Dupent secured । divorce in North Dakota two years a- i and was awarded $1,000,000 alimon ‘ I
Take no Substitute for Royal Baking’ Powder. —lt is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia.
Forgotten Novels. ? lan of Feeling,” by Henry m ykenzie, which was once in everyone 8 hands, has rested undisturbed f %,o A eral £ en 9 ra tions, until, in the pi-Ksent rage for reproducing the works ofltne past, a publisher has be n found enterprising enough to venture a reprlm; in luxurious “get up" of what, was a dentury ago regarded as the masterp>*¥ of the “Addison of the North;” as regards Fobert Hage, Mrs • Ch arlotte Smith, and others ,x 1/ hme, it may safely bo said that 'nooks are now known only to antiquaries. Yet their success , , 0 of Publication was great. More’s “Coelebs in Search of a TMrlwWy 11„ ^*ll n 58?!u""u a coVy ; and with his unfailing crfiWal acumen described the story to CblS^dge as one of the very poorest sortp common novels, with the drawback of dull religion in it. Had the relijon been high and flavored it woij have been something.” He returtfd the borrowed book to the lender witl the following lines inscribed theijin byway of expressing his contemi for the work and its author: fever I marry a wife II 11 marry a landlord's daughter pr then I may sit In the bar lAnd drink c<dd brandy and water. —the Year Round. I A Tonic that Quiets the Nerves. jAa 1 the sedatives and nerve foods and aaw ICB > Ixl which this age of medical discover)* 80 Prolific, can restore quiet to the nerves 80 long a* the tranquillity of th« Benß itive organs is disturbed by irreguI/; Jgeition. When the food is not adequately •'Sted and assimilated, a tonic or invigor-
ati: effect Is not exerted upon them, they ren a weak and unstrung, and nightly repose Is turbed and fitful. Beginning at the sou tin head, Hostetter’s Stomach B.ttcrs refi is a disordered condition of the stomach and >romotes general vigor, in which the ner । share in common with the rest of the eys r. A regular action of the bowels and live resulting from the use ot the medicine alsi onduces to this good effect. Malaria' rhe latism and kidney complaint all nervedis rbing complaints-are removed by the Bit I AZIL grass neither comes from nor grt b in Brazil. It is strips from a sjx es of Cuban । aim. T more CataiTh in thin aectlon of tbs than ad other diseases put together •aW 11 ” the last few year* was aupposed to be lEoßblo. For a great many years dootore pro. ’ a ‘O 2 *! disease, and prescribed local constantly failing to cure wiSKal treatment, pronounced it Incurable. proven catarch to be a conntltn. tlotament. Hall's Catarrh < uw. Cheney * Co., Toledo. Ohio, is •Ac iiily c'-astltutional cure on the market. It Is taken Internally in dosos from ten drops to a tMapOOnfu!. It acta directly upon the blood andmucous surfaces of the system, t hey offer one hundred dollars for any case 1: falls to cure Send for circulars and testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENHY A CO., Toledo, O. WSold by Druggists, 75c. T.:e great school at Harrow in Enflard was founded by John Lvon in 1571. Asthmatic Troubles and Soreness of the Lungs or Throat are usually overcome by Dr. 1). Jayne’s Expectorant—a sure Curative for Colds. A SINGLE cannery in Delaware canned this season 1,060,000 cans of corn. “Life Is a battle field on which we fight for fame.” To preserve health in this fight uss Beecham's Pills, 25 cents a l ox. ’ Os 1,000 deaths in Europe, 16 are by violence; in the United States 41.
From Catarrh. It Is But a Step To Consumption And thousands of people are unconsciously taking the fatal step. If you have Catarrh in the Head do not allow it to progress unheeded and unchecked. It Is a disease of the system and not simply of the nose and throat. The blood reaches every part of the system. Therefore the only way to cure Catarrh Is to take a thorough blood purifier like Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which perfectly and permanently cures Catarrh. HOOD’S ) "■~^nTrn g, ' i ! |a J CURE'S I Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills, Bilious- I Bess, Jaundice, Indigestion. Sick Headache. CANNOT SPARE healthy flesh — nature never burdens the body with too much sound flesh. Loss of flesh usually indicates poor assimilation, which causes the loss of the best that’s in food, the fat-forming element. Scoffs Emulsion of pure cod liver oil with hypophosphites contains the very essence of all foods. In no other form can so much nutrition be taken and assimilated. Its / '•.nge of usefulness has no limitation where weakness exists. Prepared by Scott. A Bowne. Chemi ata. New York. Sold by all druggists. ■ A Pack of ^Playing; Cards furnished by the Burlington Route (C.. B. & Q. R. R ). which is the Best Railway from Chicago and St. Louis to all points Northwest. West and Southwest. Send 15 cents in postage for a full deck to P. 8. EUSIIS, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, Ixx. (
A Timely Bit of Advice. In these times of grip and pneumonia it is of great importance that we should know where to look for a safe and sure remedy. A slight cold may become a serlous one, the scarcely noticeable pain in the chest is too often the forerunner of pneumonia. The first cough may lead to consumption (a cough is always dangerous). Never neglect a cold or cough for even one day, but get at once, as a safe and sure remedy, Kemp’s Balsam, the best I cough cure, which Is recommended on all sides. It should bo kept in t he house ' regularly to avoid delay when needed It is sold at all the drug stores. littL^p was a daiß y»” but she put her ittle French-heeled shoes on a piece of \ n a .flash was transCOKCHS AND COLDS. Those who are suffering from Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Sh ° ul l try Brown’s BronchiaZ, I Roches. Sold only in boxen. The Lord Mayor of London receives as large a salary as the Fresident of the United States. See ‘‘Colchester’ Spading Boot «A in other column. P ITS.—-All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's G, e Nerve Kestorer. No Fits after Sr^t velous cures. Treatise and fj.oo trial bottle free to lit vases, bend to Dr. Kliue, U3l Arch St, Pbila, Fa.
——— ST. JACOBS OIL _ SkSanenta Rneumatism.
^@AYIEVER&COID IR HEAD KP^trils. Is quickly abseil t. « applied into the ^S^gCOLLARS ANO CUFFS? /A—--^DANn^^UB£N«m6UO)J WAPHMW ^URILL^ Th a “I are the Best and Mosittuuuink^ 111 C LlncllE 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. Reversible ; both sides alike ; can be worn 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 25 cents for a Box of 10 Collars, or Five Pairs of Cuffs, A Sam fie Collar and a Pair of Cuffs sent by mail for six cents. Address, Giving Size and Style Wanted^ REVERSIBLE COLLAR CO., 27 Kilby Street. Boston, Mass. -rr -A-A’ 1 £ ' - ’-tr , ' :;i ”. '' ■PT’* ? • •• ■■ I ■ r ‘•ij" • । . J i '• I i- if uuk-xV ■ Especially for Farmers, Miners, R. R. Hands and others. DouWSKole extending down t-o the heal. EXTRA WEARING Thousands of Rubber Bo t wearers testify this is the best they ex^Bad. Ask your dealsr for them, and don’t be persuaded into an inferior
' THE JUDGES WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION Have made the HIGHEST AWARDS (Medals and Diplomas) to WALTER BAKER & CO. On each of the following named articles: BBEAKFAST COCOA, . . . . Premium No. 1, Chocolate, . . Vanilla Chocolate, German Sweet Chocolate, . . Cocoa Butter For “purity of material,” “excellent flavor,” and “uniform even composition.” WALTER BAKER & CO., DORCHESTER, MASS. 10^0 flAfi ACRES OF LAND .yWU^vOu for saie by the Saint Paul 7 & Duluth Railroad Compact in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Gro®. Urs. They will be sent to you Addns. HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner. St, Paul. Minn. DROPSY^® cases propounced hopeless. From first dose symptoms rapidly disappear, and in ten days at least twothirds of all symptoms are removed. BOOK of testimonials of miraculous cures rent FREE. Ten Days Treatment Furnished Free by Mail. । DR. U. L 6AUI I SONS SPECIALISTS ATLAKTL GEORGIA
J—WJIIIIIII lILHIIH.JHU, ‘August Flower” ‘‘One of my neighbors, Mr. John । Gilbert, has been sick for a long time. All thought him past recovery. . . e was horribly emaciated from tho inaction of his liver and kidneys. , It is difficult to describe his appearance and the miserable state of his Health at that time. Help from any source seemed impossible. He tried your August Flower and the effect upon him was magical. It restored | him to perfect health to the great astonishment of his family and friends. JohnQuibell, Holt, Ont.® * a O 16 ’ @ B V* va & f 4 * ‘ H WN* C ? lds ' 0ou S hs So™ Tl>roat,Cronp,lnflnen. ra.Whoopmg Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma a certain cure for Consumption in first eta?es ard • sure relief in advanced stages. 1°" "Xm* b’T'r* effect after Ukin * th *
SkICTURES, Pictu^B'ames, a Mirrors, Photogra^H Photo M Engra vi n g.;. Cinet * Frames, and Beatrf^* tic Wares. Catal^^T of atures upon receii^Hfstainp. EARLES’ GALLmIS, 816 Chestnut St., PhilaWphiaPa. MENTION THIS PATER when writing to advertisers. IA STHM AC U | ’•Schiflinann’s Asthma Cure never/alts to I give instant re iefiw ihe worst eases; i nsures coni-1 sortable sleep: effects cures where ethers fail ■ -I trial ton’-Inces the most skeptitxil. Price 50c an I S SH, o: Druggists or by mail. Samp e FREE for I stamp I r. R. SchiiTurmn. St. Pant § Washington, D.Ci ^Successfully Prosecutes Claims. K Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau Si 3 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty sin r f" MINTION THIS PAPER wkim wimwa to adtrrtf ■ M1E«88 AUD HEAD NOISES CuREB Sg BP MM g* by Peck’a Invisible Ear Cushions. hisper? heard. UUErla Successful when all remedies fail. Sold CH ETC bv F. Hiscox. b 55 IPway, N .Y. Write for book of proofs ■ HE" • MENTION THIS PAPER whan wnrrixa to adyertisebm, THE SMOKER’S DELIGHT. Now is your time to buy line CIGARS at prices below cost. Send Three Dol ars and you will receive a I>ox containing fifty of the most delicious cigars, usually sold for five dollars. G. Bormann, 10 and 12 Old Slip. New York. Ser's • i. Mali I &fl i f”P * ,o Tou Want Money? We give perI Ui 11 r N manent position in every county on sat- ; L.“SJIL.W ary: no canvassing. Send stamp for , reply. The L. A. Clark Co.. Bridgeport, Conn. [ PATENTS and PENSIONS Secured. No advance fee. I Fitzgerald & Co., "rathand G,” Washington, D. C. i C. N. U. No 50 -93 when avriting to advertisers, “ please sny you sow the advertisement I in this paper.
