St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 3, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 4 August 1894 — Page 3

I Can’t Sleep I have a tired, worn-out feeling. Thia means that the nervous system is out of order. When this complaint is made, Hood's Sarsaparilla is needed to purify, vitalize the blood, and thus supply nervous strength. Take it now. Remember l|-|OOd’S 1 <%%%%%% PoHMa Be sure to get Hood's Cures and only Hood s. _ Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills, biliousness. Stood Up for Hts Rights. A west-bound train had just passed out of the Union Station at Albany (says the Express', and the conductor c was harvesting tickets. All the seats were taken and several passengers ■were obliged to stand us. Among the latter was a diffident-looking, mildjmannered man, who refused to give up ‘a ticket. “When I get a seat, you get a ticket,” he remarked mildly, but firmly; “you are probably aware that the company cannot collect fares from passengers whom it does not provide with seats. ” "Oh, come now, that don't go; I want your ticket, see?” Thus spoke ! the conductor. “No seat, no ticket,” laconically ob- ; served the passenger. “We’ll see about that,” growled the i conductor, who hustled around and finally found a brother-conductor who was going up tho road away, whom ho . Induced to give up his seat to tho mild- ! ly firm passenger. I “There s a seat for you; now give me 1 that ticket.” taid the conductor, in a fer cions tone. “Certainly, he e it is." And the । mild, but firm, passenger handed out a pass gv.od to Chicago. It won't do any good to confess your sins unless you are willing to forsake ; them. Woman's Best Friend It is the greatest of all rewards to receive such letters as the following from: — Miss Louise Muller, who lives at 44 Michigan Ave., in Evanston, 111.

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friends to use it. lam sure it will help them in all cases of womb trouble, leucorrhoea, irregular or painful ‘monthly periods.’ “ I am sure it is our best friend. I am so thankful to Mrs. Pinkham for the good she has done me that I wish every sick woman in America would write her at Lynn, Mass., and get her advice, or get her Vegetable Compound at any druggist's.” -tMDWAY’S n PILLS, Always Reliable. Purely Vegetable. Perfectly tasteless. elegantly coated, purge, regulate purify, clcan.-e and strengthen. HADwaVm FELLS tor the cure ot all disorders of the Stomach. Sowela. Kidnevs, Bladder. Nervous Diseases. IXzzinesß. Vertigo, Costiveuess, Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, and All Disorders of the Liver. Price 25 Cents a Hei. Sold by Druggists, or Sent by Mall. Send to DR YtADWAY & CO., Lock Bor 365, New York, for Book of Advice. W. L. Douglas ISTHEBtST. VllVt NOSQUEAKING. «5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALE X S 4.^.I°FINECAIf&KAN6AROI POLICE,3 Soles. eoso*2.WORKINGMF N ~ EXTRA FINE. ^S.^l.^Boys’SchoolShoes. ‘LADIESSENO FOR CATALOGUE W- L- DOUGLAS, BROCK ton, MAS 3. You can sure money by wearing tlio W. L,. Douglas 53.00 Shoe. Because, wo tiro tho largest manufacturers of this gradeof shoes in the world, and guarantee their value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you against high pricesand the middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom work In style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold everywhere at lower prices for the value given than an v other make. Taksnomb. * etltute. It your dealer cannot supply you, w» can. SEE CANNOT SEE HOW YOU DO W^ch^WlFE IT AND PAY FREIGHT. r ^ nvS 2 drawer walnut or oak Im ~ I proved High Im Singer »ewlag ma< a*r fine! v bnlshed, nickel plated , adapted to light ^*•^4 2**^J^^ and heavy work; guarantee'! for 10 Yoarv; with 4 LAZ Automatic Bobbin Kinder, Self-Threading Cylinu \ A Her Shuttle, Self-Set Ung Needle and a complete o of Steel AttackmeDte? shipped any where on £ • 80 Day’s Trial. >’o rnonev required In Usance. •k 000 now In use. World’s Fair Medal awarded machine and attachterntß Bny from factory and save dealer s and agent s pronts. Cat This Out and send today for machine or Urge free FREE ca‘alog>ie, testimonials and Glimpses of the World’s Fair. OXFORD MFC. CO. 342 Art. CHICAGO,ILL. tCt SHOCKING! A mild, conI^W Q tinuous current of electricity cures. Get a catalogue by writing THE OWEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 209 State Street, Chicago, 111. lely's CREAM BALM CURES •• head jMU&y X’j a nUm [PRICE 50CENTS. ALL DRUGGISTS^ nunnmOH A former sufferer will send you tho IlYXrrrXlU prescription that cured him. A«idress H J- iFerbynhlreJ in< lnn«(i, O. fcßl CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. S i El Best Cough Byrup. Tastes Good. Use gs tn time. Sold by druggists.

FIRE FIEND’S FURY. three towns swept with the BESOM OF DESTRUCTION. Phillips, Wk, and Belle Plaine and Brooklyn, lowa, Almost Annihilated—Thirteen Lives Known to .Have Been Lost— An Unprecedented Disaster. A Day of Horrors. Thirty-nine buildings out of “00 stand amid smoke and ashes on tho site of what was Friday the flourishing city of Phillips, Wis, tho county seat of Price County, and one of tho wealthiest and most prosperous of all tho towns in the timber regions of Wisconsin. Three thousand people are homeless and, except those who have been offered shelter in tho neighboring towns, have no covering for their worn out bodies. Worso than ; all, at least thirteen people are known j to have lost their lives. Tho dead are: | James Locke, butcher, wife and UvechilI Sren. Frank Cllss, in charge of tho dry kilns of i tho John It Davis Lumber Company, and 2-year-old child. Mrs. David Brydo i. wife of tho foreman ! of the Fayette Shaw Tannery, and two chi.- . dren. Mr. Bryden was aho supposed to have died, but returned homo that night, i having been away from the city, only to hear that bls family had perished. Unknown man. I All tho dead wore drownod in F.'lk Bake while trying to escape from tho tiro, except tho unknown man whoso i body was found in tho ruins of tho house of F. W. Sackett, editor of tho Phillips Times.

' TO I f [D9u t\a S J । ' I L / ! A s'Sh I*h 1, ^^*'***'**> > ^ 0 y. *. ® sWhw / । —-L I | )» jC I mi ) ; a -- xI/Lr ' “'/J —fcl » I 7^ \ M I MAPSHOWING KHAIIoX o| |OHI>.I JUUN

She savs: — “As I have .used Lydia E. Pinkham s I etable ComI found, and have thereby become entirely well, I am recommending all my lady

The property los- cannot at this t me 1 be accurately estimated, but it will i reach at least $1,2.~»0.0 -o. The immense plant of the John It. ! Davis Lumber Company is a tota .ss. amounting to between ss' o.” •” and , $600,0 0. On this property there is an i insurance equal to at least so. r-tifth-the value of the plant of the rest of the city about half the property was i insured. Many of the p.HHcr {>cople i ••art ied no insurance on their homes, and they have lest everything. There were many tine bush o-s blocks and । private residences in the city, anil every one was burne i to the ground. > Many of the residences cost upward of j $3,0(0. and were handsome own for a Northern Wisconsin city. Not since the cyclone of tire that ; wiped out the oxLsteuee of the village' of Peshtigo when many people wer- . burned to death, ha- there been a holocaust of the chain. *e of ths ci Four gales of fire following each other, a-s^on as one had ace mplished its work of destruction, cut four swaths through the city, lent ing standing only the Lutheran 1 hurch and some dwellings near the southern limits. and freakish y ..umping over the Woed r Town Hail and a gioup of dwe.lings in the very heart of the burned district. A system of wa er work ', which would ordinarily bo ample protection against the blazing fore-t-, was rendered useless by tho burning of the j pumping station in the first lire. Relief Como Quickly. In almost no time provisions con«ist- ; ing of bread, butter, coffee and cann- 1 articles had been received from ILC-Li I‘rentice. Dorchester, Medford and Butternut. To egrams were received ; from the mayor- of Ashland and Stev- ; ens Point. The former telegraphed | I that he wou'd send what was wanted, I and a man was at once sent to superin tend the shipment. Stevens Point .sent a car-load of provisions. Saturi day night eight car-loads of provisions i i had bean received. Major Upham, j who has had experience with the ter- j ; rors of fire, telegraphed that relief । j was on the way from Marshfield as : । soon as he arrived home from Milwaukee. Governor Peck sent the following ; message from Oco;.om woe: Will bring you relief at once. Wire me ! :it once what is most needed. Keep a stiff I neper lip. We are coming as soon as cars Can run. ; A telegram was sent to the Governor in reply, asking him to send blankets and tents, together with mess tents, for 1,t03 people. In response t> this 1 i the Governor telegraphed that there ■ ■ were no tents available at present, but ' 1 that he would be there in the morning : with sheathing, hammers and nails, and to be ready to begin the con trucI tion of temporary quarters. Ka'lw.iv Omcials Bender Aid. I General Manager Whitcomb, of the

Central, sent the following telegram to all officers and agents: You have heard of the disaster that has overtaken Phillips and other points on our line. Use your best efforts to get together supplies that will be immediately useful and forward them io meet the emergency. All supplies consigned to tho authorized relief committee will be transported free, and you will give preference over other freight. If necessary send supplies on passenger trains to meet immffllate wants. People Have Been Courageous. In the face of the calamity that has befallen tho people of Phillipa they have manifested a courage that is remarkable, and have really seemed in good spirits. Every effort put forth has been to care for the immediate wants of the unfortunate. Mayor Koch of Milwaukee headed a fund with SIOO, and SSOO city funds were temporarily u ed. Eau Claire, Wausau, and Chipp wa Falls wore among those contributing liberally of cash. IOWA TOWNS SUFFER. Belle Plaine and Brooklyn Lose Upward of Half a Million. A fire which started in a Belle Plaino, Jowa, blacksmith shop, on Saturday afternoon resulted in the nearly total destruction of tho business part of town, only three buildings remaining. The loss is estimated at $50b,0(0, with perhaps insurance amounting to $:00,000. The flames, owing to tho buildings being very dry, were soon beyond control. From Krohl's lively stable tho flames leaped across the street into another livery stable and tho engine-house and spread up the main street wnat the Henry Hotel; then across the street into a billiard hall, and continuing .■ust on«iilfc<l tho ontiro buHlnr,— t n< i of the city, leaving ruin ami ashes In ' its wake. It was a terribly fierce fire, and with i one engine, hook and ladder truck, | hose carts, and other apparatus noth- I

I Ing could be done to ehoek the ttnm- s which speeded from building t > building with great rapidity. People Hv- ! ing in tho up . r stories of buildings , wore comp I o ’ u> f,-.- <or their lives, : and in one imoame tho family ot John i B. U'icht Were u -eued from tho - cj ond story of the drug store of Vanina- ! tor A < o. by means of ladders, so fast I wa - the si rend of the llames. BrikoktTn, hiw », > r c srii. A disastrous fire twoka o ; in Wood KibbvL furniture and undertaking * establishment at Hrixiklyn. lowa, Satj urdav morning, and in two h- io ev- ■ ory bu-ino" bui ding on Front and ' .’a kson -ire,:- was in : .on-, in 1 iding ; the i hron.cle oltiT, the po-to it co. and | the o) era house. Tho 10-s i- over Al.'>oj>fh> and the in-uraiax* nearly i-A- --। 000. Tiie National and Niagara In- ’ sura nee t'ornpauies are tho heaviest h sers. Others are t e Continental, Home. Hartford, farmers’. Council Bl ill- < apitol. North Brit -h. .Etna, and Pho-nix. The following are tho f > <es. with the amount of insurance carried Brooklyn Chronicle, L*>JMlo. partly ii -ured: Butt-’ I arb r shop o. no insurance: Wo i d A K ibby m’J.Oo i. insurance 'I.'KX); Dr-. Conawty and Busby Aj.o n', no insurance; Scott. Heed A Scott T ti'. no insurance: Poweshiek County Bank $ 1.5 0. in«t ram e sp,3«H); Boston (’ othing House t.'.OvO.insurance ■ U'.ii । ; P< st Jlice SII.AXi. insurance fl.j fW; J. 11. Wood tLhc. insurance 0: Bayburn A fa'o *1 'i’insur- ! ance sl.s'f; Dr. A. C. Lundes ^I’O I insured: Chat-lon We-t L. H Talbott t-Vhi, insured. C. T. Hainsburg T.'il', insurance S’kAOi; Leonard Bro-. s.U.o i >. insurance 17.' 0 I; ; William Hankey $l?,0 0. insurance $6,0 Ml; Graham Bros. $ ’.OOO. insurance $1,500: Dr. A. I-’. Anger $1,600. insurance $600: I. O. O. F. hall $10,000: insurance $6,200; George Kraft S3.(MD, I by damage; Karr Bros. SL’,O 0. insuri ance io.OOD: J. W. Johnson S6.O.M>, | partly insured: Mills’ variety store : j $2,000, insurance $^00; Mustapher & ! Butts SI,OOO, no insurance: F. P. Shra- I ! dor $5,000 insurance $3,506; W. L. I Paul S6OO, insurance $100: I. L. Drake , sls ', insured: Wil iam Manatt $6,000, no insurance; Phil Kilmer SI,OOO. inl sured; Wood A Derrance sx.o>l. ]mrtI ly insured; First Bational Bank slo'3, i ; insured; Sterling' A Tabott building SIOO, insured: Bowers building S2OO. 1 j insured: Boughton, jeweler. SSO, in- , ; sured; K. H. Bigelow S4OO, insured; | Westley Man .tt $4,000, no insurance. Two MILES east of Eufaula. I. T., । Samuel Checota aad Billy Narcome, ■ two ( reeks, shot and instantly killed J Frank Hawkins. A reward or SSOO was offered for his body. Thomas McCloskey, a printer, fell from a bridge at Albany, N. Y.. and was killed. lie bad attempted to pick up a purse dropped by a little girl.

shSvels the crops. THROUGHOUT THE WEST INTENSE HEAT PREVAILS. — Country Scorched by a Sun of Tropica Fierce^e<i-Mer c ury Basses the Century Mark, *adln Some Cases Goes ns High as 110 —Hain Sorely Needed. I Lose Will Be Millions. A hotwind from the south swept all over IlHinois, lowa, Minnesota and other W est®i n States all day Wednesday, sending! the mercury up beyond ail records.! In nearly all cases the century mark ^vas passed, even on the conservative governmental signal service thermometers. Private instruments in some places are reported as high as 'IOB in the shade. The heat lasted al| day and into the night. Vegetation #as dried up and the corn crop in many’districts has reached a condition where even rain will not save it. The following reports are gleaned from tho prods dispatches: St Lffels—9B degrees in tho shade. Quincy, Ill.—The mercury marked 101 degnTCs in the shade. Abinj»^ n > Hl.—Tho thermometer registert' 1 195 degrees in tho shade. Marsh /own, lowa—The thermometer re% as high as 108 degrees in tho —tv* ■ temperature was 10 > de^^shado. Great damage will j be dor., f crsps. Iloscc^^ A4'is. A high, scorching wind bMpocen blowing h^re. The corn in this section is a total failure. New Hampton, lowa A Hot south wind bl^w all day, scorching vegetation likq the blast from a furnace. Holland, Mich.—Tl o heat has been intense here for several days, th * thermometer registei ing 10J decrees in tho shade. Kansas City, Mo. Intense heat prevails. No rain has fallen for two weeks, and the corn crop in s >me places has been ruined. Dubuque, lowa Wednesday was tho hottest day in tho year, Khi degrees in the shade. Wind, as if from a furnace, blew a gale. Waterloo. lowa Therm, meters registered 106 degrees in the shade A terribly hot wind prevailed, doing much damage to tho corn. Minneapolis, Minn The Mississippi River to at present tho lowest hero it ha^ been f< r many years Thermometer showed 90.2 degrees Bloonington. Hl- Wednesday was the hottest day of a l this unprecedentedly warm summer. Tho mercury stood above lOe mot of the day. Sioux City. lowa The thermometer went up to 107 decrees at the weather bureau. Hot south winds blew, and Itumeiw damage was d- ne to tho corn. Emporia, Kas Not a drop of rain has 'alien here during the last thirtyone day- 'll e result is ibat the corn crop tn this vicinity is ruined b yond recovery St. J»».,ph, Mo Th« thernK m. ter registered 10'. Hot winds blow u gale from the south, withering tho c*,rn and doingJhntr.ens,' damage L* v» getables . * 40^Ya<i? n -t D F, r •’ - days ’he temi e at urv ha< h at 1 n d-grees. Wednesday it re”.-, t re i ib» degrees The hot winds hav sc- relied tho gr >wIng crops beyond r< *, cry. < oncordm Ka-. \t this p,nnt the therm motor r'*ac! ' l P ♦ degree*, tho highest sinc<» the United States Signal Office was e-tablishcd here m 1"5. Corn is greatly dam iged. Hastings, Nek 110 degrees in tho •hade. Tho high wind prevailing has completely ruined the pn sjs’, t* for o rn In Central Nebraska and no amount of rain would be of any avail now. In iependence. lowa A hot wave jia-sed over this se lion, making it tho warmest ever known. The thernmmoter stood 110 degree <in the shade for six hours. Crop, are materially injuied. Des Moines, lowa The heat hero Wednesday greatest in ten years accarding to official rec rds. Agricultural lowa is in a deplorable "ondition. Many farmers are unable to t nd feed for their cuttie. as the pastures are all h ire, and tor water thev have to drive them ten and ft teen miles in pla ’es to retch the rivers, as all tho wells ar - . dry. It has not rained in many parts < I tse State for six weeks. Tho corn er >p is almost beyond redemption. SLAYER OF CARNOT. Youdj Italian Inar hiwt Who Stabbed the l’re«i lent of Lnuirp. Caserio Sant > Heronymo has sufficiently recovered from the blows he received at the time he murdered President £arno‘ ( to b' recognizable

ami a photograph of his features lias been taken by the French authorities. He is 21 years of age ani is considered much more intelligent than the ordinary anarchist. By birth he gis an Italian. His Sparents were poor Sand unabl' t > furvnish him with in'structors. except for a short time. He

0 c. s. u unoxYMa

was fond of reading, however, and his mind was ea ly attracted to anarchistic ; literature. In 1892 ho was sentence.! to a term of imprisonment at Mi an, for distributing anarchist pamphlets among the troops there. The next vear he went to France, settling rear Lyons. It is general y thought that he had accomplices, though he insists that he a ted alone. Spaths from the Wires. Cholera has broken out at Dantzic, in Northern Prussia. Phil Darling was drowned at Da- ! vid City, Neb., while bathing. Two UNKNOWN men were struck by a train and killed at Altoona, Pa. A STATUE of Gen. John A. Logan was unveiled at Hot Springs, S. D. A receiver has been appointed for the Lansing (Mich.) Lumber Company. Hans Tolfsen, aged 70. was killed at Moline, H'., by falling from a haymow. _ ।

Highest of all in leavening strength.—Latest U.S. Got. Food Report. Powder ABSOLUTELY pure Economy requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW YORK.

TIMBER IN TENNESSEE. One Keglon Where Forests Have Not Been Stripped. Tennessee is one of the few States that have not been stripped of their timber without concern for future | needs and climatic conditions. About i 50 per cent, of tho lar.d in Tennessee iis still wooded. There are 20.8-0.00 > i acres in the State altogether, of which 1 j nearly 13.000,000 are timbered Onlv 1 I three States in the South have a great- i er timber acreage—North Ca olin i : and South Carolina and Georgia. As the altitude of tho forests of Tennes- ' see varies from “00 to 6,000 feet above tho sea's level, woods of every kind known to the United States are to be found there. In value the oak has tho first place, but the ash. of which there aro two varieties the white and the blue is hardly less important. Evon In 'lennessee the forests of ash are now found only in districts remote from the railroads, but so rapid is the ' growth of this tree that it is being p anted as an investment. A farmer who set cut a gro\e of ash trees covering ten acres, twelve years ago, now has 12,0 Ml trees, s inches in diameter on an average, and 35 feet high. There were no expenses of cultivating, and tho ten acres of 12,000 trees are worth at tho present time between $7,003 and s\ooO. Resides oak and ash, Tennesseo pos.esses three varieties of elm. two of gum. two of fir, three of hickory, two of locust, three of maple, two ' of pine, three of poplar, and two of walnut. Among other trees found in abundance are the beech, biich, buckeye. red cedar, wild cherrv, cottonwood, cypres-, dogwood, "basswood, mulberry, tupelo, sycamore, and tho sas-afras. Os oaks there are no less than twelve varieties. Cedar, unfortunately. is going very fast. Bucket factories in the State use 5,000,000 feet of this timlier every year. Telegraph wmpanie- so it almost exclusively for p<des. Nearly 1,00,000 feet goes each yea’- to St. Is iiis. where it is made into fence rails. The rapidity with which the cedar is l>eing cons lined has < p ned the eyes of some of tho fries.ds of tHo forests in Tennessee, and a warning has been sounded. Ou the N»fe Shir. Everybody ka<>w« this is * good place to be, oat everybody doe« not take measures to be thcre.”'n vfflclent preventive places us on the safe «ide of incipient disease, and there Is no one more reliable than Hostetter'• Slomacb Ji t ters In caa« « w hen- the kidneys are inactive, which is but the preliminary to various destructive maladie.'< which, disregarded, have a fatal » rmiuatlnn Blight's dl’iease. diabetes, dropsy, crdcrua are but the outgrowths of negleete I l:sa tiun of the kldaeys and Gladder. They should be checked at the outset with the Bitters, which will prevent their progress by arousing the renal organs to activity, and thus place those who resort to tills -avltur medicine On the safe side. This preservative of safety also conquers oonstip&tlon, liver complaint, malarial fever, nervousue-s and dyspepsia rill- Gohl of the Worht. It Is raid that a i the go'd in the world, not counting that in virgin state, would not make a block < f more than 513 cubic yards. A tube of the above dimensions could be put in a room twenty-four fe> t each way. Salt in t ic Sea. In a ton of Dt al Sea water there is D7 pounds of salt; Rod Sea, lU: Mediterranean, 85: Atlante 81: English < hannel, 72; Biitie, 18; Black Sea, Iki, and Uaspian Sea, 11. He was madly, passionately In love —won by the matcliie— beauty of her complexion. Glenn’s tulphur Soap had Im, arted the charm. There is a certain freemasonry among great minds, by which they recog. 'ze each other in the clearly ringing interchange o' a few sentences. Don't risk much on the opinion of him who lias nothing to lose. Eve and suspicion were twins. ALL THE STRENGTH

and shape to carry about with you. Then, when you feel bilious or constipated. have a fit of indigestion alter dinner, or feel a cold coming on. they're always ready for you. Thev re the smallest, the pleasantest to take, and the most thoroughly natural remedy. With Sick or Bilious Headaches. Sour Stomach, Dyspepsia, Jaundice. Dizziness, and all derangements of the Liver. Stomach, and Bowels, they give you a lasting cure. Headache: obstruction of nose; discharges falling into throat; eyes weak; ringing in ears; offensive breath: smell and taste impaired. and general debility —these are some of the symptoms of Catarrh. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Keniedy has cured thousands of the worst cases, — will cure you.

| Dr. J. H. McLean’s | [Liver and Kidney Balm] The Peerless Remedy for 8 $ Brights Disease, Diabetes, Biliousness, Torpid Liver, Etc. Sold by Druggists Everywhere. Chie Dollar a Bottle. 8 | Manufactured by THE DR. J. H. McLEAN MEDICINE CO., St. Louis. Mo J I \wj/S/S/S/SZS/S/S/W/S/S/S/A'S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/S/J/S/S/S.f/S/S,S/S/S/S/S.tf/f/S&

Do Animals Love Fun? There seems no reason to doubt ttj Monkeys are full of frolic for its own sake, and enjoj- themselves most of all when playing mischievous jokes. A terrier performed it; tricks so consciously that when no one praised it for them, it used to become quite sulky. A flock of geese have been j known to cause a number of pigs to run the gauntlet between them, merely hcar the s ;uyßinv of Um porkers ai ; tliey WUl'B Uttnß^By B* o t’irda. TLete i was a soldier's nurse that was wont to ibe fastened by a river's bank r aad. thfi , creature had the ill habit of kicking a# । passing men, in order to make them J fall into the water. The jackdaw will watch boys at their games with evident appreciation of the fun, and the amount of roguishness in kittens is perfectly notorious. To Cleanse the System i Effectually, yet gently, when costive or I bilious, or when the blood is impure sluggisl^, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity witltoUM irritating or weakening them, to mdpSl headaches, colds or fevers use Syrup of Figs. Many Naturally Blind. The cave animals of North America, । according to Professor A. S. Packard, ■of Brown University, comprise 17a : species of blind creatures, nearly all os which are mostly white in color. •‘Valley, Plain and Peak.” Au art book of Northwestern scenes,; from photographs, over 110 views, with de-; scrlptive matter, elegantly printed, sent), with other publications ot much interest to Investors and homesoekeri, for 10 cents In postage. Containing much more infori mutio i and artistic beauty than many one- । dollar publications Address F I. Whit* | ney, G. P. & T. A., Great Northern Rail- ' way. St. Paul. Minn. Not Cool Tiger Feed. Rudyard Kipling says that man-eats ing ligers in India soon become mangy and that indulgence in that kind o( food has the added advantage of mak* ( ing the tiger toothless. Hall’s Catarrh Cure : Is taken Internally. Price 75 cents. ; Anna's Diadem. , The diadem of the Russian Empress , Anna cot.tains 253 G large diamond* and a ruby valued at stiOo.ooo. > KI I MFR'q^ — S^P Roo'f* KIDNEtLIVERS b WS?E» Rheumatism Lumbago, pain in joints or back, brick dust urine, frequent calls, irritation, inflammation, | gravel, ulceration or catarrh of tho bladder. Disordered Liver Biliousness, headache, indigestion or gout, SWAMP-KOOT invigorates, cures kidney difficulties, Bright’S disease, urinary trouble* Impure Blood Scrofula, malaria, general weakness or debility, I Sw amp-Root builds up quickly a. run down j constitution and makes the weak strong. Al Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO Size, "Invalids’ Guide to Health’’ free- Consultation free. Dr. Kii.mf.ii & Co.. Binghamton. N. Y. 7KEE!S a e^ 7l’P rec ’ a ti D K the fact that thousands of ladies of the U. S. have not used my Face Bleach, on account of price, which is $2 per bottle, and in order that all mav give It a fair trial, X will send a Sample Bottle, safely parked, all < barges prepaid, cn receipt of 25c. FACS Ss BLEACH removes and cures absolutely all SBS freckles, pimples, moth, blackheads, sallowue&s, acne, ecxema, wriukles, orronghne«of skin, and beautifies the completion. Address M— S RUPPERT. o«nt>^—6-E tA,h St N Y Citv. $4 A PAYS FOR ■9 ■ iniOO highgrade A- - ■ B papers in Illinois, era O or we can insert „ llE>I | It 3 times in 1,375 country papers for SEND FOR CATALOGUE. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 93 South Jefferson Street, - Chicago, 111. PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and Advice a< to Patentability of In-vi-iuimi. Send for Inv ( ntors’ Guide, or How toOet a Patent. Patrick O'Fakrell, Washington. D. O. Sure relief > cvmil KioDEmasTiuwissiJs: bar. estown, Mau C. N. U. No. 31—94 AVHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, “ please say you saw the advertisement ; in tins paper.

and virtue has \ sometimes “ dried / out,” when you get pills in leaky wooden or pasteboard boxes. For that reason, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are sealed up in little glass vials, just the size