St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 26, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 13 January 1894 — Page 3

A Boon to Humanity. A number of our great and most inverate tobacco smokers and chewers have quit the use of the filthy weed. The talismanic article that does the work is No-to-bac. The reform was started by Aaron Gorher. who was a confirmed slave for many years to the use of tobacco. He tried the use of Ao-to-bac, and to his great surprise and delight it cured him. Hon. C. W. Ashcom, who had been smoking for - y ear ®» tried No-to-bac, and it Cured him. Col. Samuel Stouts ner, who wouid eat up tobacco like a cow eats hay, tried this wonderful remedy, and even Samuel, after all his years of slavery, lost the desire. J. C. Cobler, Lessing Evans, Frank Dell, Geo. B. May, C. O. Skillingti n, Hanson Robinett, Frank Hershberger, John Shinn and others have since tried No-to-bac and in every case they report not only a cure of the tobacco habit, but a wonderful improvement in their general physical and mental condition, all of । Which goes to show that the u e of to- j bacco had been injurious to them in more ways than or.e. All of the above gentlemen are so well pleased with the results that we , do not hesitate to join them in recommending it to suffering humanity, as , we have thoroughly investigated and are satisfied that No-to-bac does the work well and is a boon to m mkind. The cost is trifling—a dollar a b ix— 1 . and the makers, the Sterling Remedy ( Company, have so much faith in Nq-to-bac that they absolutely guarajidea ' three boxes to cjjre any caso. xic-^tund box Tn every instance in Je effected a cure, with one or 1 cnallengLptions. No-to-bac has a won- 1 He SHHale upon its merits alone the United States, and can ‘“secured at almost any drug store in this country or Canada, and it is made 1 by the Sterling Remedy Company, ' Chicago office, 45 Rando’ph street; New ■ York office, 10 Spruce street. —From : The Press, Everett, Pa., Dec. 15, 1893. j The first medical school in the United States was founded in Philadelphia in 1764. For weak and Inflamed eyes use Dn Isaac Thompson’s Eye-water. It is a carefully prepared physician’s prescription. Seb “Colchester' 1 Spading Boot ad. in other column.

ABOVE ALL OTHERS, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, in every disease caused by torpid liver or im- ' pure blood. For Dyspepsia, Liver and Bowel derangements, and kindred ailments, noth- i tag approaches it as a remedy. PIERCE^ CURE OR MONEY RETURNED. ■ : : Mrs. Aurelia Van- i zilk, of Hamilton, Ind.. ' writes: “My friends । said I would never bo better, for I had ulceration of the bow- | I O! \3r Ugg. els. By the time I bad -jaS 6 j taken a bottle and a -W x. half of Doctor Pierce’s MgSk Effif Golden Medical Discov- 1 KSgk er y' bleeding had almost stopped. My appetite was good, noth- । 1 N seeme d to hurt me V s - the.t I ate. Myimproveattret.t* v»wnt S 1 ® 61 was wonderful. I aurelia vanzilb. Several years have passed and my cure is permanent.'' j hWI XKNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and > tends to personal enjoyment when | rightly used. The many, who live bet- i ter than others and enjoy life more, with ■ less expenditure, by more promptly ! adapting the world’s best products to i the'needs of physical being, will attest | the value to health of the pure, liquid i laxative principles embraced in the ■ remedy, Syrup of Figs. . j Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas- y ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, I 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 Kid- . neys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggets in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only,whose name is printed ou every package, also the name. Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. ' rAvdicnl Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common Casture weeds a remedy that cures every ind 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 warta?i?L w ben 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 bedtime. Read the Label. Send for Book.

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. CALIFORNIA'S EXPOSITION IS NOW ON VIEW. Indications Are That the Show Will Be a Financial and Artistic Success—Brief Inscription of the Buildings—Patterned After the “White City.” Midwinter Fair Begins. The California Midwinter Fair is now open to the public. Here, in this Western metropolis, writes a correspondent, at the extreme edge of the Western hemisphere, with the placid waters of the great Pacific in view, the hand of man has created a city neither so beautiful, so wonderful, nor so extensive as the now quickly fading White^City by Lake Michigan, but one that is truly grand and of which the people of California and the other Pacific States may justly be proud. It was only in the latter part of last May, when the end of the Chicago Fair was in view, that some Californians in Chicago conceived the idea of having a fair in San Francisco. Shortly afterward it was decided to go ahead in the matter and Golden Gate Park was selected as the location for the fair, conceded by all to be one of the prettiest spots on the face of the globe. Aug. 24, in the presence of 80,000 yeonle. the enterprise was inaugurated by turning the first shovelful of dirt, Immediately after which the work of grading commenced, followed in a few weeks by

I | J? .A, ' ; AGRICULTURE BUILDING.

the inauguration of work on the main structures. Patterns As er Chicago. The Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building is the largest on the grounds. This building is Moorish in defeign, with all the picturesque effects* to which that style of architecture readily lends itself. The Mechanical Arts Building is the second largest structure, and is nearly pure Indian in design and highly artistic in its rich, Oriental sty’e. By far the most striking architectural feature of the exposition is the Horticultural and Agricultural Building. It is in Spanish mission style and is a low-roof design, so much in favor on the coast. This structure contains the greatest display of the products of the soil of California ever put together, and that is synonymous" with saying that is such a display of ag: icultural and horticultural materialas the United States havonevf ■■ A ® to SSoltffi? /I iimo 'Ll®' i^wij i ADMINISTRATION BUILDING. er seen placed on exhibition. It is typi- ' cal and almost exclusively Californian and will afford visitors an opportunity of judging of the vastness and variety of California's resources, such as no i amount of travel and observation could give. The Fine Arts Building is intended for a permanent structure, constructed of brick and iron. The Administration Building, like its namesake at the Columbian Exposition, which faced the grand basin, is directly in the rear of the allegorical fountain. In this the sculptor has tried to tell the whole history of the state and much can be plainly read from its design. The familiar statue of California, crowned with a wreath of poppies, stands on a pedestal whose rugged character suggests the mountain regions. The prin-, cipal central figure is the eagle, emblematic of the state’s loyalty to the

nation. The central figure of the grand, court is the electrical tower. On the ground he or is a pavilion for th© use of the public and flanking the open space there are four Moorish ! pavilions, containing four stories and decorated in Oriental ccl >rs. The base of the tower occupies a space of fifty feet square, while the first gallery, eighty feet from the ground, has "a seating capacity of 200. There arc three other galleries of large seating capacity, the topmost one being within six feet of the pinnacle. The concessional feat; res of the Midwinter Exposition are both numerous and interesting. There is a mt dest I counterpart of the great Ferris wheel ' of the World’s Fair in the Firth wheel, i which is 125 feet in height. There are I Chinese, Japanese, Hawaiian, Esqui- { maux, Canadian and German villages, j an ostrich farm, a Colorado gold mine, > a scenic railway, a Santa Barbara i aquarium containing a do; en sea lions, I a reproduction of Cairo street, a ■ Turkish theater, a Moorish mirror : maze, a repreduction of the cele- i brated Prater of Vienna, a tcmale-। house. a reproduction of Anne । Hathaway’s cottage, and last, but by no means least, a ’49 mining t oamp. This camp occupies a space 450 . feet long and 250 feet wide. In the . center of the camp is a street 450 feet long, lined on each side with old-time

shanties which do service as newspaper • offices, saloons, hotels, theaters, and gambling houses, as in the flays of yore, representing a typical mining . town. Mackay's, Perkins’, and Jones ‘ cabins are set up just as they were when the millionaire miners deserted, them. The camp promises to be one of the most interesting spcti on the Exposition grounds, as it is the g faithfully represent the days of L by I 14411 Si ™Eli SullUlll FINE ARTS BUILDING. mock duels, trials, lynchings, and other episodes of those stirring times. VOTE TO TAX INCOMES. The Democratic Majority Decides to Levy a | Tax of 2 I’er Cent. The advocates of the individual income tax proposition were triumphant, ! at a recent meeting of the Pome--Wavs and Means Cominittee. s ^ s .-n / , ... .1:. membei s wore present when the final ” meeting was held at the Treasury De- 1 partment. Comparatively little time ' was wrnsted in discussion. The ground

had all been argued and fought over I time and time again, and at this meet- | ing the issue was joined on two ] ropoBitions, one to levy a tax of 2 per cent, against individual incomes over $4,000 and against the incomes from corporations (that is, the difference between the gross income and the operating expenses, or, in other words, the net income); and. second, a proposition offered as a substitute by 1 Mr. Cockran (N. Y.) to tix the incomes ■ <rom corporations 1 per cent, and in- ' heritancei 5 per cent., to place a tax of 10 cents on whisky and to restore sugar : to the dutiable list at i a cent a pound, j Th- vote on Mr. Ccckran's substitute proposition, which was taken first, resulted in its defeat-^-7 to 4 —as follows: Yeas—Wilson. Cockran, Stevens and Montgomery. Nays—McMillin, Turner, Whiting, Bryan, Bynum, Tarsney and Breckinridge. , The prigwal 15 n num aivi Tur ~ 1 r Nays -Wilaeoji ery and Hreckinri<lge7^^^^^™®Nw^"™^ra.-»/ ; It was also decided, in Conner. with the latter proposition, to increase the whisky tax 10 cents a gallon that is. from !*b cents to $1 —t >be levied against whisky in as well as out of bond. Upon tho representation that this increase would work undue hardship to the owners of whisky in bond it 1 was decided to extend the To uled pe- > riod from three to eight years. Th.® tax o”, playing cards, at one time fixed at 6 cents a pack, was reduced to 2 i cents, and the contemplated tax on perfumes and cosmetics was discarded. No in rease was made in the tax on cigars, but the increase on cigarettes—sl per 1,060 —was allowed to stand. The committee estimates that the j tax on the incomes fr< m corporations : and individuals (corporations being treated as individuals) will raise S3O,- , 000,000 revenue—sl2,6oo,ooo from cor- ; porations and $18,000,000 from individ- . uala. The increase in the whisky tax. < it is estimated, will give an additional ; revenue of $10,000,000 per annum. The proposed tax on inheritances, which j was to be levied in case the proposition 1 for an individual income tax failed, i was not deemed necessary. , • INCREASE OF THE PUBLIC DEBT. i During the Month of December the Total Was Swelled by 86,861,662. The public-debt statement shows the net increase of the debt, less cash : in the treasury, during the month of December to have been $6,861,662. The interest-bearing debt increased S9O, • the debt on which interest has ceased : since maturity decreased $25,850 awl the debt bearing no intere t increased $2,062,361. The reduction in the cash balance during the month was $4,824,061. The interest-bearing i debt is $585,039,310, the debt on whieb^ interest has ceased since maturity is

fl 1 manufactures building* ' ... I $1,913,530 and tlic deLt bearing no interest is $376,653,077, a total debt oj $963,605,917. The certificates and treas-j ury notes olDot by an equal amount oq cash in the treasury amount to $604 J i 317,424, an increase during the month] .of $5,088,122. The gold reserve isj ■ $80,891,600 and the net cash balance] ’ $9,483,955, a total available balance! j of $90,375,555, a decrease during the’ I month of $4,824,061. The total cash in ; the treasury on the day the statement, j was issued was $737,014,701. The tot. : amount of national bank notes ou^ ' standing Dec. 21, 1893, was $208,4423 ; <>27, an increase in circulation since Dec. 31, 1892, of $34,141,215 and a <l^ j crease in circulation since Nov. 30 of j $408,761. The circulation outstandii g against bonds Dec. 31 was $185,087,715. J. P. PapENBROECK, dry g. ods, Cincinnati, Ohio, made an assignment to David J. Workum. Assets, $35,000; liabilities, $55,000. j

ABSCOJIWf PURE • The official reports show Royal Baking Powder superior to all others, yielding 160 cubic inches of - leavening gas per ounce of powder, a strength greatly in excess of every other powder tested.

Ought We to Visit Her? “Ought we to visit her?” is a mooted P" '"Nation in country neighborhoods, 'ere a call necessarily paves the way a much closer relationship than it Is in town. On the other hand, it is possible to ignore a newly arrived ;hbor in metropolitan fashion witha. . t seeming churlish and unsocial. A Jy y tielonging to one of the old New ”k families elected to try suburban (a 4with hei^oun|^^^b^Ui|4g|M||| ,h parvenue, who considered herself ib of the fashionable autocrats of the Hage, and who was not particularly Ifll up in the soc al pedigrees of New ork. chose to igno: e for some time le modest establishment which was » close to her own rather pretentious .Ila. Finally, however, after about a sar's knowledge of each other’s names id faces, the would-be great lady rused up to her somewhat astonKed neighbor as she was seated { n the <>ek of a ferryb >at en route to 1 Wn. She introduced herself in rather i patronizing fashion, and explaining ■ lat she really had no lime to make I isits, said, in a manner intended to be i racious: “I hope you will consider this I .call.” 1 ‘‘Thanks, so very much,” replied the I । jion of the Kniekerbocke s, very qui- ! I tly. “I shall be happy to do so. and I ! I Iso hope that you will consider it re- I B aimed.” Muscle and Vigor—A Difference. ■ M»uv muscular men succumb to fatigues ■ ^Korne with ease by persons far their inferiors in vg jysical strength. .Muscle does not imply vigor. '|Ki fact, it is not difficult of proof that athletes Ao not live as long nor enj y as good health as «le average individual who is vigorous -that is ■ l say, whose digestion and sleep are unimpaired, whose nerves are tranquil, and who has Jo organic tendency to disease. These requijßtes of vigor are conferred upon those inher tatly we ik, no less than upon those debilitated t ro igh wasting disease, by a thorough, per- I s Intent course of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, i t be leading national tonic, indorsed and recoin-I n leaded by physicians of eminence. It will not e Show you with the muscle of a Corbett, but it ' v 111 infuse eutrgv into your syst em, and renew ! t ie active : n i helpful performance of its funct -s. It averts and< ures malarial, rheumatic. i jji I kidney complaints, and overcomes dysj eps J r.constipation.liver trouble and nervousness ” Delay ha- always been injurious to t Yose whoaie prepared.—Lucau. F»vts or Ohio. Cixr or Toledo, i ,11,. Lvcas OorNTT, f relav “"i-f. .US r-. oe ,.du>t:g busineiia In the enyot Toledo, Co'unty State afonsaid, and tbas said arm win ixv «»•»’ HUNDRED Dr >l.l. UtS lor 1- (W 4 1 AKKH eauis,' be bans iW the use 1.-.. ... Cr re. Kem FK A N K J . < HEN KY. (I, rn to before me and subscribed in my , I neo, this 6th day of December. A. I> iSx>. D ‘ . A. W GLEASON. -j Leal. • Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, end tts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces a ’ the system. Send for testimonials, free. c • F J < HENEY A til., loledo, O. BiT-Sold by druggists, 75c. j I The real character of a man is found it onlv bv his amusements. o । Rough. Wintry. Chanokahi.e Wiather ; loduees Catarrhs, Coughs. Disorders of P e Lungs, etc., which Jayne's Expectorant timptly cures if faithfully administered. । The ancient ell, a measure, was tho i , mgth of the arm of Henry 1. I ! i ITIK ua tho liver, remove disease, pro- ' kite good cheer and good health, by the 1 Rrbf Beecham's I’llls. • Titr. romance < nds at matrimony.

pinging Noises ^the ears, sometimes a ringing, buz- ’• y sound, or snapping like the report a pistol, are caused by Catarrh in head. Loss of smell or hearing i ‘lso result from Catarrh, which may । ‘levelop into Bronchitis or Consump- ' t on. Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures Catarrh L y thoroughly purifying the blood and . adding up the entire system. Get ’ food’s, because j Hood’s 5 ^ Cures Hood’s Pills cure liver Ills, sick 1 eadI Cke, jaundice, in Hire t’on 2c. Trv a 1 or. • i^’s Graam ' Jj«>anscs the Nasal ^^sages, Allays Pain <■1:! intlainmation. aZ'P’/u® ^^"stores the Sense ol I pa,Taste and Smell. ML Rj Heals the Sores. Sjply Balm into each nostril. ]ly BltOS., 56 Warren St., N.Y MbmbmbO A Pack of F'laylnjr Caril* ^E^HIMVcSpS furnished by the Burlington Route (C.. B. & Q It. R ), which is the Best A'.tSflßßMßa diway from Chicago and St/Louis to ali points Northwest. West and /rrsw&JlrrWl Southwest. Send 15 cents in Tiost.ige < wiaSjMgWWjs fora full d>,k to I>. s ursiis, Genoral Passenger Agent. Chicago. 111. ■ U 3 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty sui* I MENTION THIS TAPER warns. w ■ ■ fnaafr-rn men to travel. we pav stso 9 'VAhTEU to *IOO a month A expenses. 1 TONE* WEIYIN<?rON. MADISON. YY IS. , I ATENTS and PENSIONS Secured. No advance fee. I Fitzgerald & Co., “lathand G, Washington, D- L. St. -- - — । M| 1_ 4 wlilJßh.uM.yq.l3!jif„ w , । aa-M*-**^'**^ i •■■*■■ Consumpllvr’ and people who have weak lungs or Astb- g f T ® ma, should use Piso's Cure to. , I 8g Consumption. It has cred M fI f ■ thon.andi. It has not injur- KU 1 I Med one. It is not bad to take. • ■ ■it u the beat cough syrup. J Bold everywhere. (4— +

MILLIONS OF DOLLARS C Are annually lost because poor seed is planted. Now, when you sow you want to reap. For instance, A. M. Lamb, I Penn., made $5,80) on ten acres of vegetables; R. Bey. Cal., cropped 1,213 bushels Salzer’s onions per acre; Frank Close, Minn., 100 busaels of spring wheat from two acres; A. Hahn, Wis., 1,410 bushels potatoes per acre; Frank Winter, Montana. 216 bushels 8 pounds oat^Lomon^bushe^p^^jj^^^r^^l® 1”’^1 Will Cut ThiZdiir wild Se id It With 10c to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis." you will receive I their mammoth catah gne and ten sample packages of farm seeds. Catalogue alone, 5c postage. The greatest jumper is the common flea. It' a man could leap as far proportioned to his size and weight, he could go from St. Louis to Chicago in 1 two jumps. FOR COUGHS AND THROAT DISORDERS use Brown’s Bronchial Troches. “Have never changed my mind respecting them, except I think better of that which I began thinking well of.” —R«v. Henry IFani Beecher. Sold only in boxes. There are three things I have always loved and never understood — i painting, music and woman.—Fonte- ' nelle. The Puzzle Solved. । Perhaps no local disease has puzzled and baffled I the medical profession more than nasal catarrh. I While not Immediately fatal it is among the most i nauseous and disgusting ills the flesh is heir to. and I the records show very tew or no cases of radical cure j of chronic catarrh by any of the many modes of treatment until the introduction of Ely’s Cream i Balm a few years ago. The success of this prepare tion has been most gratifj Ing and surprising. FITS.—AU Fits stopped tree by Dr. Kline’s G’ o it Nerve liestoier. No Fits after first day’s use. Mats velous cures. Treatise ami fl.oo trial bottle tree to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kime, UtP. Arch St.. Phila, Pa. i She w:.s a dear, sweet girl, with a complexion of ! . angelic loveliness, such as all young ladies possess I who usa Glenn's Sulphur Soap. : Shiloh's Consumption Cure is sold on a guarantee. It .-ures in -ipieut Consumption. It 13 the I best Cough Cure. 25 cents. 50 cents and (1.00.

B NEURALGIA ARE CURED BY ST. JACOBS OIL. PROMPT AND SURE. Jr Tbi»person plantingSalzer’wScedsneverknowaof hard because they double all yields! Try it for 1891 and happy. Vegetable seeds for the million. 35 pkgs. Earliest Veg-etablc seeds, • l.W| o»tpai 1. Tjx’jrr ;t trrowrn of Farm Feeds in tho world. PREK, vjpJyE sample pk«r. “Get There EH” Kadish tic for use in 16 davsand catfor 7c postage. Catalogue alone, &c. for postage. COLLARS ANU CUFFS. '^ APKAE ^' Thp “T TMENE” are the Best and Most Economical iHC LlxiEliE 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 Cuff% . .4 Sam,*, 'e Collar and a Pair of Cuft sent by mail for six cents. AddrMs, Giving Size and Style li’anted, REVERSIBLE COLLAR CO., 27 Kilby Street, Boston, Mass. ;! One bottle for fifteen cents, ) , .. i; Twelve bottles for one dollar, j mai ' f *' 3^^ <[ Ripans Tabules are the most effective rec- !; ipe ever prescribed by a physician for any ;! disorder of the stomach, li\ 7 er or bowels. I 1 Buy of any druggist anywhere, or send price to 1; <[ THE RIPANS-CIIEMICAL COMPANY, io Spruce St., New York. ]>

“COLCHESTER” SPADING BOOT. V-' Wjbh. ■ eMss and others. The outer o” tap sole extends •= the whole length of the sole dwn ' L 'Sviv/festHSa j to the heel, protecting th ■ shank in dite' ing ig. ging and other work. Best qua.ity throughoii’ ASK YOUR DEALER, ' 4<

“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 fails, everything fails. The 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. •

A Weak Digestion j strange as it may seem, is caused from a lack of that which is never exactly digested — fat. The greatest fact in connection with Scott's Emulsion digested fat —and the most weakened digestion is quickly strengthened by it. The only possible help in Consumption is the arrest of waste and renewal of new, healthy tissue. Scotfs Emulsion has done wonders in Consumption just this way. Prepared by Scott k Bowne.N. Y. All druggist*. Young Mothers! We Offer You a Bemedy which Inourea Safety to Life of mother and Child. “MOTHER’S FRIEND” Robs Confinement of ita Rain, Horror tindSiale. Afterualngonebottleof “Mother’s Friend’’ I •uttered but little pain, and did uot experience that weakness afterward usual tn such cases.—Mri. ARRIE GaQK, Lamar, Mo., Jam 15th, 1391. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price. <1.50 per bottle. Book to Mothers mailed trea. BHADFIELDBEGVLITOB CO., ATLANTA, GA, BOLD BY ALL DRUGGIST! nCAENESS AND MEAD NOSSES CORn Sis U s Peck’alnvUibleEarCn,b!ons. Wal,per«n«*rw Sucewsful when *ll remedies fall. SoldrpCß tv r. Hiacox. SSS B’way, N .Y. Write lot book at proofs T HL"

1 nnn non acres of lawd I^VUU^UUU for sale by the Saint Paul .hi । । A Duluth Railboad ; Company in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circoa , lars. They will be sent to you Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Miun. Will pay for a one inch advertir-emena one week in 100 Illinois Newspapers — guaranteed circulation 100,000 copies. Send for Catalogue. STANDARD-UNION 93 S. Jefferson St., Chicago, 111. L ■■• advertisement measures one inch.) CURED I POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC i Give® Relief in Five Minntpg Trials 1 Oovßox «eut po«t-naid on re-S ceipiof 11.00. gix Boxes, Add a Tbos. Pop,iam,Phila.Pa 9 XytHEN M RUING TO ADVERTISERS Please say you .aw the advertisement kt this paper.