St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 30, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 10 February 1894 — Page 3
Tobacco Caused Consumption—Notobac Cures the Tobacco Habit and Consumptive Gets Well. Two Rivers, Wis„ Feb. 2.—[Special.]—Great excitement and interest has been manifested in the recovery of an old-time resident of this town, Mr. Jos. Bunker, who has for several years „ been considered by all his friends a hopeless consumptive. Investigation shows that for over thirty-two years he used three and a half pounds of tobacco a wees. A short time ago he was induced to try a tobacco-habit cure called “No-To-Bac.” Talking about his miraculous recovery to-day he said: “Yes, I used No-To-Bac, and two boxes completely cured me. I thought, and so did all my friends, that I had consumption. Now they say, as you say, how healthy and strong you look, Joe,’and whenever they ask me what cured my consumption, I tell them No-To-Bac. The last week I used tobacco I lost four pounds. The morning I began the use of No-To-Bac I weighed 127 i pounds; to-day I weigh 169, a gain of 41j pounds. I eat heartily and sleep well. Before I used No-To-Bac I was so nervous that when I went to drink I had to hold the glass in both hands. Tc-day my nerves are perfectly steady. Where did I get No-Tc-Bac? At the drug store. It is made by the Sterling Remedy Company, general 'Western office 45 Randolph St., Chicago, bat I see by the printed matter that it is sold by aT druggists—l know all the druggists in this town keep it. I have recommended it to over one hundred people and do not know of a single failure to cure.” Econnm v.
rjvuiium y. If one has a long job on hand it is the part of wisdom to seek out the best place to do it. “I ve just got back from Washington, where Ive been ever since election, trying to get an appointment, ” said a politician. “Gave up hope, eh?” remarked a sympathizing friend. “Oh, ne,” was the rejoinder. “I came home to hope. It's cheaper to’hope here.”—Chicago Dispatch. Anybody can criticise, but only the wise can commend. ST. VITUS’S DANCE, Spasms, Convulsions, Dizziness, Fainting Spells, Nervous Prostration and those nervous conditions brought on by functional disorders are permanently cured by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It’s a strengthening nervine and restorative tonic, prescribed by j an eminent Physician for all those distressing “ weaknesses ” and irregularties common to women. Mrs. Adam Berk, BerksCo., Pa., writes: "Dr. R. V. Pierce: Dear Str — My sister, Miss Cor-Stw.-zL. ■'delta Merkel, had St. J Vitus's Dance. Her flEa head and right arm U W moved or twitched to \ I constantly: she could V I,) J not walk without beI Ing held under her l / arms. She tried four 1 1 doctors, but without 1 / good. After fifteen gs. months, having been given up as a hopc-less invalid. I bought her Miss Merkel. Prescription; in two months she was well and strong.” PIEHCE tees a CURE. < I
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KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and imruvemcnt and tends to personal erjbyment when rightly used. The **any, who live better than others an^enjoy life more, with less expenditu^t by more promptly adapting th^ world’s best products to the’needs of physical being, will attest the vaMe to heakth 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 U ative ; effectually cleansing the s; ~ J i dispelling colds, headaches a,’ t ; nat ; 0D ’ and permanents curing < i It has given faction millions and ' met with Jhe approval of the medical ( profes»w' n , because it acts on the Kid- • neys Fiver and Bowels without weakemng 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 i
accept any substitute if offered. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCO^Y. DONALD KENNEDY, OF MUnt, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common Easture weeds a remedy that cures every ind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He hag, tried it in over eleven hundred cases, a .d 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. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warlanted 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 cr Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking' it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it wil? cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of iL Dose, one tablespoonful.in water at time. Sold by all Druggists.
G. W. CHILDS IS DEAD. THE EMINENT PHILANTHROPIST PASSES FROM EARTH. Stroke of Paralysis Deads to the End of the Career of the Great Philadelphia Publisher—Honors that Have Crowned His Works. Beloved by the People. George W. Childs, proprietor of the Philadelphia, Public Ledger, died at his residence from the effects of a stroke of paralysis, sustained by him two weeks previous. For some time previous to the day he was stricken Mr. Childs was overrun with work. The service at the Drexel Institute in memory of the late A. J. Drexel was to be held and Mr. Child; was particularly anxious that the occasion should be in every way wo. thy of his lifelong friend and companion. He busied himself arranging the details of the service and a; the day approached he became nervous and worried. The service was to be held Saturday, and Thursday afternoon Mr. Childs was sitting in his office at the Ledger talking _ u ith William T. Steele, his private secretary, and 1 F. Shepard, night editor of the paper. Suddenly Mr. Childs began to slip forward in hi. chair and would have fallen to the floor if the two gentlemen had not spi ung forward and raised him up. Mr. Shepard and Mr. Steele and Mr. Ch'lds himself believed
rW 4*^ GEORGE W. CHILDS. I that the attack was nothing more than vertigo. Mr. Childs lay down, and Dr. J. M. DaCosta, his family physician, was sent for. When Dr. Da Costa arrived he found that Mr. Childs had had a slight stroke of paralysis, due, as the physicians have since learned, to the breaking of a imall blood vessel in the head and the formation on the brain of a sma 1 clot of blood. Another physician was called in. The doctors at the time did not appreprehend any fatal results, as the paralysis was slight and did not greatly affect his limbs, and they had a good basis to work upon in Mr.’ Childs’ splendid constitution and orderly life. For more than a week Mr. Childs’ condition did not grow any worse, but on i the contrary showed s ight signs of I improvement. The clot of " blood I on the brain, however, was not absorbed, as often happens in similar ea-es, and after a week the paralysis tegan to j regress slowly. Shortly Ijefniy 10 o'clock on the night • l > fjfl I ni Mr. < hilus’"respiration ।. \jT. J Zmin e g t, r- _. i
i ii-iy d-zt' the sm?n« or and a ; though **". - - .. science anil ILiySieian^LfMU^yjaj life was done and at 3:^ o'cloeL^r*e*gener. us heart that bea^o for his fellow-men wa MD)i i Ex( ept his a if e , yjjX-nilds had no immediate family. / In-verially Liked. Few men have filled >o wide a niche w’chikL A “° ! ' lcan hi ' to, T as Georg- “• Childe He was not nrest i„ -
mo 4 4 2 great in^ erne that statesmen have been • he was a follower of succes fu’ . rather than their leader in not a 1 tion of public opinion, '-at Horace 1 publicist in the sen- .He P ot Greeley was a pubUK with men like rank or pretend p Everett. Lovejoy Garrison. PhiDiof aboliti' nists: and and th ' old phrade was wholly foreign the politicia Mr. Childs ra' eiy sought tohis natuolic sentiment, and never to le. d.eer did he so dict ate the polio hi the Philadelphia Ledger as to icya it an iggre-stve fact »r in public pairs. To profit by the accretion alre dy gained: t > build up in conservative ways and to hold on to every element of progress and never lose a point was the chief secret of Mr. Childs' power for good. That he did a world of good nobody will deny. He acquired th 3 means to do it, and he used it in a style of generosity peculiarly his own. In the death of Mr. Childs Philadelphia 10. es one of the citizens of which the city was most proud and the country al large one of its best-known private citizens. Fi om his early boyhood Mr. Childs' life was such that it can stand as a model aid example to all men for what a noble manhood and an
honest, upright, con cientious life I should be. From a poor and friendless boy, beginning life as an errand boy at $2 per week, he rose thr ;ugh c instant struggles to the position of one of the great publishers of the world and the honored and sought for friend of eminent men in all walks of life. How the World Waif*. The festivities of the winter carnival were continued at Quebec. The South Dakota firemen's^ annual convention has adjourr ed at Yankton. James CROSBY, a wealthy New York traveling man, Uiecl very suddenly at Houghton, Yicb? Senator Gorman introduced an anti pool amendment t > the interstate commerce law. Secretary Gresham gave a dinner Hi Washington to which gent emen only were invited. Twelve street car conductors in Omaha, Neb., have heen discharged for knocking down fares. Robert Palsey, a farmer, was robbed of SCO by highwaymen in a crowded street of Logansport. Ind. MAYOR HUSON and other city officials of Tacoma. Wash., were fleeced in a game of cinch by Peg Leg Fitzgerald, a confidence man. Criminal cases against Chief Ramsay, of the railway telegraphers, for cutting wires at Cedar Rapids, have been continued until March
Chinese Condolence. Few persons, however cultured, face without flinching the duty of addressing a letter of condolenc ? to a bereaved friend. If they use the lang. a°-e of m ideia ion they fear their words’ will seem but "cold comfort” to those that mourn; if they gush the note of insincerity jars upon their own feelings The following letter from a leddent of a summer resm t to the head < f a family in town that ha I lost a dear wife and m thor deserves to rank as classic in obituary literature: “Dear sir: 1 am very sorry vou loss the wise ladle; :he stay with God forev.e I r ' h en “ ho ] ive that time and said, \\e have t > be end, we will stay with God forever. And hope you far away off not be weary, and take good cate yourself, and look back vour children, and you have the best in the wor d But we hope her stay on this world longer and do more g hd. When I talk to my friends wh > know her they be sad when she gone: so one fr.end member her forever when she is live every year; the scholars rememberr the Lakeside Park. Now I do not know how the pa: k is t >be. So who do good the name is ’ame. “Wing, Wah, Lee & Co.” Here in artless but touching phrase is a tribute to departed worth, comfort to the afflicted, simple piety, and the pathos of human life. - Washing—' ton Post. When War Is Declared Against a man's happiness by his stomach the enemy may be pacified and broughtspeedily and easily to terms. That potent ’ regulator of digestion, Hostetter's Stomach m
Bitters, disciplines the rebellious organ Y thoroughly. Indigestion arises from weak- ■ j ness of the stomach, and the so >d in it. for J want of the power to digest, decomposes and acidifies, giving rise to heartburn, flatulence and pain, besides a |mult Hude of symptoms both changeful and perplexing. But peace I ■ soon reigns when the great stomachic is re- j sorted to and used with persistence. Dyspepsia gives rise to morbid discomposure of I ! mind, and even sleeplessness and hypo- ! chondrin in chronic ea^es. 'Io the complete I dismissal of these the Bitters is fully adequate. , Liver complaint, constipation, debility, rheu- ' ' matism and malaria are completely subdued 1 by this genial medicine. A Trade Union GOO Years Ohl. j In London ihere is a quaint old or-A ganization known as the Fellowship ofw Free Porters. It was oi ganized some-*} time in the thirteenth century and fori, nearly 500 years its members had thej I monopoly of the discharging of giainj from boats coming up the Thames. A?! century ago the organi ation had 2.50 U • members, with a surplus whieh in 1852 . grew to fxl.ooo. The een-t; uetion of f docks and the abolition of metaue oi k measurement of corn destroyed th' Aprosperity of the Fellowship. It ! ' been languishing for several years 11 refuses to die b cause no provision A * been made for the disj 0.-al of its fm 8 An arrangement has been made , cently whereby the funds are to bf'/ tributed and meanwhil • each m^’ *' is to be paid ten shillings a wp Toronto Mail. t j J । j Tariff and Taxation. •/* , Tariff duties and Internal reveal/ 1)1,1 < I tton on Incomes and corporation/ I citing public interest, but of quital ' aOC * l ; : interest are those things which tbe system and require at once un e, WB ' remedy. On this subject, with ikiAi ' recommendation, Mr. Pierce 11. .^>wn, Bridgewater. Mass., says: “In ‘s from all kinds of athletic sppr’s
VA* J J u..ed 4ukv ™prhlns and rhoumajß “I ha St. without ft for n<i the only thing 1 i .-r ! ter, Denton. 3ure toothache in ten min- ■ Jacobs <khd it Is usually prompt and saw tlrost-bites. Ail of these conimu.fdns are of recent date, showing unbated interest.
Last White Rhinoceros. A wondrous brute, which only within the present century emerged from the realm of myth into that of scientific knowledge, has within the present year passed into the realm of history. Reports from South Africa declare that the last whit ■ rhino eros has been killed, and that its skeleton, hide and ■ horn are now being shipnedto England to enrich the Natural History Mu. - um. Thus the largest of modern quad- ; rupeds, excepting the elephant, be- ( comes extinct, along with the beautiful ’ quagga. the dedo, the great auk, and i other noteworthy members of the animal kingdom which have vanished ' from the world before the rapacity of man. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ( Lucas County. j Frank J. Cheney makes oath tha- he Is the . senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., i doing business in the City of Toledo, County i and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the eum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured : bv the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK .1. CHENEY. ; Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Cth day of December, A. D. lt®6. । , — • — . A. W. GLEASON, ■ seal. - Notary Public, I 11 Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and i
acts directlv upon the blood and mucous sur- j! faces of the system. Send for testimonials, fre?. ij F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. I 4S*Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. A Comp::risen. Swell of the period—Oh, Doctor, I have sent for you certainly, but T must confess 1 have not the slightest faith in modern medical science. Doctor Oh, that doesn't matter in the least. You see a mule has no faith in the vet-, erinary surgeon, and yet he c ues himall the same.—Tagliche Rundschau. I ASA SIMPLE YET EFFEt TIVE REME- j DY for Throat Affections, Brown's Bic n chiai. Troc hes stand first in public favor. I They are absolutely unrivalled for the alleviation of all Throat irritations caused by Cold or use of the voice. The largest engine is at Friedensville, Pa.; its driving wheels are 35 feet in diameter, the cylinder is 110 Inches, and it raises 17,590 gallons of water per minute. For weak and inflamed eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye- water. It is a carefully prepared physician’s prescription. Dead counselors are the most instructive, because they are heard with • patience and reverence.—Johnson. Bebcham's Tills have a pleasant coating, disguising the taste of the pill without impairing it - efficacy. 25 cents a box. . Pierex, after work hours, busied , himself in arranging and caring for his coins and medals.
Highest of all In Leaveni g Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
The Expansion of Chimneys. s^^that facilities are afforded for the making of exact measurements of t e expan ion apd contraction of a factory chimney. It is generallv conceded tnat b iler chimney shafts should not be attached to the'walls of any important building < n account of cracking the walls by the expansion of heated brickwork, but data on thesubje^t are scanty, and there are even IW-sons who have doubts whether btfekwork really expands or contracts w^in heated. An excellent opportunity iff settling this question has re: entiy* Resented itself in England. It was U' elect a casing of orna- ’ 5 ST divided with a brick flue \rt> M 3|third of its height. The 'Wen of the brickwork gave ’-r; mrtunity of observing from the Aho casing any movement of exOl contl ' act i°n of the chimney j jplf. As the boiler fires were drawn afternoon, and relighted rTj Monday morning, the chimney / ‘de l down. :n 1 observations made tlle toP of tlie casing wall sip wed a r ontr action of the chimney of 5 milliJ e ' ers » or 2-1 t'is inch during that t #ne. As the surrounding wall was Will about 6 feet below the lop of the '■limney when the n easureniviits were 3ade, andas the first 33 feet of the aft remained practically c >ld on ac- ‘ Ir.mt of the air space between it and t jhe center fit e. it mty be taken that jlie length of the brickwork in which Ihe ex] ansion took place was ab ut 50 le?t. According to this a shaft 10D W,-ct high would expand about 4-K tis |mth when in use. It is probable that the expansion observed wou’d have I [been 50 )er < ent. gi c iter if the chim- : r.ey hud le m allowed a longer time to I ci ol dow n. $4 to California. This is our sleeping car rate < n the Phil-lips-Kock Island Tourist Ex ursi< ns fr«'m 1 ^Ehicago to Los Angt4cs or San Francisco, via the scenic route and Ogden You can go with Phillips, the best of all excursion managers, for he has each party accompanied by a special agent who goes the entire trip with patrons. These personally conducte i excursions leave Chicago twice a week, Tuesday and Thursday. t\e have also a daily tourist car service, via our Southern route, through the boau-
tlful Indian Territory and Fort Worth to , Los Angeles and San Francisco. "1 he tourist car rate via this route, the same Apply at Rock Island ticket office, 104 Clark street. John Sebastian, G. P. A.. C., IL I. & P. Ry„ Chicago Aluminum For F.s s't Lights. The use of aluminum a- a substitute ■ for magm sium for the production of ; flash light is growing in favor among i phot graphers. Its chief advantages ate its higher activity and its freed' ra Jrom objectionable odors on ignition. ■ *"'• ^^Lomii-Ts^il aluminum bronzt he^ h h* of allowing the grease ignition wneu uwl«.’.- a*ihen>s »ht flame. Am ther advantage posfs?ssed by aluminum over magnesium is it- lesistance to oxidation when in line powder. The mixture recommended b. Prof. Glasenapp for photographic work is composed of: Aluminum i owd >r 21.7-parts by weight, sulphide of antimony 13. s parts by weight, potassium chlorate 6-1.5 parts by weight. In ■ preparing the mixture the same pre- , cautions must be taken as with mag- ■ nesium. 542.50 FOK A FARM WAGON. The best wagon in the world can be i had for $ 12.5 b: a barrel cart for 53.50. If You Will Cut This Out and 'end It With 5c to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., , La Crosse, Wis., you will receive their *®ammoth catalogue, where you can id about this wagon. C True eloquence consists in saying all that is proper and nothing more.— Rochefoucauld. Don't Allow Youkself to trifle with a Cold, and so encouia;e the development of ; some latent Pulmonary and Bronchial disease, which often ends fatally. You had better cure your Couah or Cold by promptly resorting to Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, an old-time remedy for ad Coughs, Lung and Throat affections. People need religion most when they can't have their own way. See “Colchester' Spading Boot ad. in ' other column.
Good Qualities Possessed by Hood's Sarsaparilla are almost beyond mention. Best I ) of all, it purifies the blood, thus ( strengthening the nerves, it regu- < lates the digestive organs, invigoy~ rates the kidneys and liver, tones • builds up the entire system, IF Rheumatism Its career of nnei I qualed success proves beyond a ■ question that :s Hood’s^Cures Hood's Pills cure all Liver His, Sick Headache. Jaundice. Indigestion. Try a box. 25c. Ely's Cream WILL CURE CATARRH Ol | Price twATP'y Balm Intoeach nostril ELI BROS ,iu Warren St.,N.Y. ° ' prettiest book r" ever piuMtm. rnxE C'.e ip, pure, bat. 1,000.000 extras. Beautiful Illustrated Catalogue free* — H. M. SHUMWAY, Ruekford, lU. and PENSIONS Secured. No advance fee. I I Fitzgerald & Co,, "tathand G," Washington, D. C.
The Only One. R Mllwa ukee and St Paul ail a ay K the only line running solid Ves--Ibuled, Electric Lighted and Steam Heated P«m S Chicago, Milwaukee, St I a til and Minneapolis. , Chi' ago, Milwaukee and St Paul ,n .Til? the on!y linc r «" a *ng frolld Vestlbmed. Electric Lighted and Steam Heated trains bctv. ee n Chicago, Omaha and Sioux The Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Railway Company now operates over sixtvone hundred miles of thoroughly equipped load in Illinois, Wisconsin, Northern Michigan, Minnesota, lowa, Ml.-souri, South and North Dakota. On all its through lines of travel the Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Hallway Coaches. The through trains on all its * Unes are systematically heated by steam, i No eftort is spared to furnish the best ac- ■ commodations for the least money, and. in i addition, patrons of the road ar«- sure of courteous treatment from Its employes. । Small Books. Pliny tells of a book of Homer's Iliad ' known in his day that was so small that it could be entirely hidden in the shell of a hen's eggs. In late years Prof. Schrieber, the inventor of the new “microstereographic process.” translated both the Iliad and the Odvssev into a volume so small that it c mid be hidden in the shell of an English walnut. Gold In Circulation. Ihe amount of gold c in in actual I c reulation in the world is estimated bv the Bank of England officials to be about 865 tons. Thk breath of a chronic catarrh patient is often so offensive that he becomes an object of disgust. ! After a time ulceration sets in. tlie spong.v bones are attacked, and rrequentlv destroyed. A constant j source of discomfort is the dripping of the purulent secretions into the throat, sometimes producing inveterate bronchitis, which is usua iy the exciting j rails' of pulmonary disease. The bri.liant results i i by its use for years past properly designate w" 8 I I Cream Balm as by far the best and only cure Shiloh's Consumption Care sold on a guar- ■ ante; , it cures Incipient ( ossWbl’don. It is the best Cough Cure. 25 cents. 50ceflts abd f 1.00. I.ovcly warmth of color.with traces of pink ] and whit . is the exquisite ecniplexii n which follows the use of Glenn’s sulphur Soap. FITS.—AII Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s G-e it Nerve Kestoi er. X Fits after first day’s use. Marvelous cures. iYeaiise and £.’.110 trial bottle free to Fit eases, bend to Dr. Kline, S 3! Arch St.. Fhlla, Pa.
| Mothers’ | I Friend_ J Is a scientifically prepared liniment ^3 ; —every ingredient of recognized value, and in constant ' ■ use by the medical profession. These ingredients are combined in a manner hitherto unknown, and WILL DO all that is claimed for it, AND MORE. It ‘ Sent by Express en Receipt of Price, tO , .’ Book to “Mothers” mailed FREE, containing voluntary testimonials ^^s Sold by All Dricglsls. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Oa. ^SSSCOLLARS MID CUFFS: pdante * Dusens y angelo y ; ! \raphaem(murillo\ * tasso \ i k* Th A TMEME” are the Best and xMost Economical Ilie LinEnE 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. Aik the Dealers for them. Sold for 25 cents for a Box of 10 Collars, or Five Pairs of Cuff*, A SamKe C»!lar and a Pair of Cuss sent by n:ail for six certs. AdarMS y Giving Size and Sty/e anted, REVERSIBLE COLLAR CO., 27 Kilby Street, Borton, Mass. The person planting Salzer ’f Seeds never know? of bard tirnee.B^C^-MsL^ because they double all yields! Try It for IrM and bo happy. Vt retable st.-ds S r the million, j" Earliest Vegetable: I? pa- I-arsrest gr^^ers of tai m S«ods in the vrorM. TREE. sample pk<. “Get There Eli*’ Radish lit for use in 16 day?and catsfor 7c postage. Catalogue alone. Sc. for postage.
W. L. DOUGLAS 93 SHOE ! equals custom work, costing from I L CruniUt $4 to sb, best value for the money I MtnUWt 9k in the world. Name and price i Lwht s.stampeds.stamped on the bottom. Every I I I f( . ,7 pair warranted. Take no substi- ■ / K tute. See local papers for full £ ul.rr 7 description of our complete lines for ladies and gen- | /TY"' f. '•^.tlemcn or send lor II IVJ L'DCUglaJ'p '^''illustrated Catalogue ^ iving . in * jui -r- J/- btmctions latest smisr ' l "*'^ how to orderby mail. Postage free. You can get the best bargains of dealers who push our shoes. WALLPAPERS®! \ 10x13 for 81.35 13x14 for 81.50 C I & 14x16 for 1.75 16x18 for 3.00 4 | I Celling* to match from ?5c to 40c extnu Send 8c for Sam I " I ple< anil full Directions for Hanging. I . A SCOVILLE WALL PAPER MFG. CO.. 4 ! Jc 250 to 254 S. Clinton St.. Chicago. w j ■ A Pack of Playing Cards ! furnished by the Burlington Route (C.. B. A Q K. Rd. which is the Best Railway from Chicago and St. Louis to all points Northwest, West and Southwest. Send 15 cents in postage i for a full deck to P. S. EI SIIS, General Passenger Agent. Chicago 111. 1 Consumptives and people l|| who have weak lungs or Asthma. should use Biso’s Cure for K| Consumption. It has cured gM thousands. It has not injured one. It is not bad rotate, KS It is Wie best cough syrup. Sold everywhere. 15c. 9 ■ I I
“COLCHESTER” SPADING MA MOT' » Best in Marke * ‘ best in fit kW j BE StIN WEARiNG 1M : WAUI'Y. qV JuL - jS or tap sole ext,-nd- the whole lenirtK "'‘totb' heel.prou.S '■ t« g i th ’' bnot ,n digg ng aUj W otb, r b ■ r i wo. * ask ,.]wr dealer y W Toil THEM, and don't be put off with - - ■ inferior goods. Colchester Rubber Co. Thin Children Grow Fat on Scott’s Emulsion, because safestfat so o d s make fat children. proportion to their inability ta assimilate food rich in fat. Scott’s EmWroiF~ of Cod Liver Oil is especially adaptable to those of weak digestion—// is partly digested already. Astonishing how quickly a thin person gains solid flesh by its usel Almost as palatable as milk ^Prepared by Scott A Bowne, N. Y, All druggist,. WALTER BAKER S fe GOG^i 6HOCOLATE Highest Awards (Medals and Diplomat) World’s Columbian Exposition. On the following article^ namely; IEAKFAST (01, iEIIVS So. 1 (H'M'fll ATE, IMAS SWEET CBMHATE, WILLA CHOCOLATE, )COA BITTER, For “purity of material.” “ excellent flavor,” and " uniform even composition.” BOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & C0 M DORCHESTER, MASS.
Innn nnn acres of land . uUU^UUV for sale by theSauri Pact. 4 Dvlcth Railroad Company in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circe® lai9. They will be sent to you Addrew HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, St. Paul. Minn. ASTHMA — CURED. I POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC I ItEg&gsLS) Give. Belief in Five Minute*. Tnalß - Package sent FREE. Sold by Drt g-■ onre-B ri ce i a* ft ft for a oae VF inch advertisement spS ~ one week in 100 Illinois Newspapers — gnarW anteed circulation 100-600 copies. Send for Catalogue. S STANDARD-UNION 93 S. Jefferson St. Chicago, liL cggSf (Tiiis adrertis«n«it measures ©ne Inch.) fIENSIONI?”S.'^p 3 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, a*ty smew MENTION THIS FA PER ww> vawwe »• ivohmm aGSNTS MAKE Ssa Day KetAUs3^ts^2t^^oM^^n:ouße. Sample post pa;d^vecents.FOßSHEE& MAKIN Cincinnad.O C. N. U. <’ -94 WHEN WRITING TO AH'. ERTISER^ AA pleaae say you saw the adverU-exucnS in tins paper.
