St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 7, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 September 1894 — Page 3

A Good Appetite la essential to good heal th, and when the natural desire for food is gone strength will soon fail. For loss of appetite, indi- ! gestion, sick headache, and'other trou- 1 Mood’s M bles of a dyspeptic nature, Hood’s Sar-« Lil saparilla is the rem-_ _ _ _ edy which most cer- ; tainly cures. It quickly tones the stomach and makes one “real hungry.” Hood’s Pills are purely vegetable. 25c. Harvest Excursions. Ft Paul,, Minn.. Aux- 20,—Harvest excursions ai largely reduced rates for the round trip to Minnesota, Dakota, and Montana points are announced by the Great Northern Railway for Eopt. 11 and 25 and Oct 9. It Is of No'Use to say that there Is “Something Just as Good as Ripans Tubules for disorders of j the stomach and liver." It is not so. This j standard remedy will relieve and cure you. One tabule gives relief. Stalactite Caves in Utah. Two of tho most wonderful stalactite caves in tho world are in Utah—ono fivo-sswm south of Toquerville and the other twenty-five miles west of St. ^George.. They are not large enough to be called caverns, but are simply wonderful because of the immense number of stalactites which depend from the ro fs. The one near Toquerville is known as “la Virgin,” and the other by the name of the “Black Warrior.” The Virgin was discovered a few years ago by the contractor of an irrigating company, who was engaged in driving a tunnel through a mountain called l a Virgin Bench Wh n the light was first let into this wonderful underground chamber the effect is said to have been startlin r. the roof, sides and door glittering with cubes and points of crystal alum and the roof studded with midions of rain-colored stalactites. The Black Warrior cave is a counterpart of the A irgin and was discovered by miners at a p int where their tunnel was three hundred and sixtyfive feet beneath the surface. The greatest daily change of tempo ature to be found on the earth's surface is in Arizona. Thera is frequently a change of 80 degrees in twelve hours.

T Wonder Why ' So many women will cont * nue to W suffer when . he] p 1 « hcht. • / /Wr Queer|l - " I w \ \ jPg&g avoid / / \ society \ and are reluctant f * to make the least ing sense of bearing down and perhaps leucorrhoea. Yet they would like to be well. Oh ! why don’t they believe : — Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the most marvelous cure for all this trouble. Thousands of American women are living testimonials of this great truth. Ibß# For headache (whether sick or nervous) toothache, neuralgia. rheumatism, lumbago, palua and weakness iu the back. spine or kidnevs pains around tbe liver, pleurisy, swelling of the ioTnts and rams of all kinds, the app’ication ot Ridways Ready Rell f will afford immediate ease, and its continued use tor a few days effects a permanent cure. A CURE FOR ALL Summer Complaints. DYSENTERY. DIARRHOEA. CHOLERA MORBUS. Internally- -A half to a teaapoonful in half a tumbler of water wid in a few minutes cure C. amps Spasms. Srur Stomach. Nausea, Vomiting. Heartburn, sick Headache, Flatulency and all Bowel pains. There is not a remedial agent in the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, aided by RADWAVS FILLS, so quickly as Railway's Ready Relief. Fifty cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. W. L. Douglas C? ISTHEBEST. VnVk NOSQUEAKIN&, $5. CORDOVAN, i FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALE ■BSw- POLICE, 3 Soles. ,50.12. V/OPKINgm Em yrftj sax 1 "' EXTRA FINE. -ZfcSh ^2.*IZSBOYSSCHOOLSHQE3. -LADIES • SEND FOR CATALOGUE Tl W-L.* DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. You can save money by wearing the W. L. Douglas 83.00 Shoe. Because, wo are 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 prices and 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 any other make. Take no substitute. X£ your dealer cannot supply you, we con. XT SHOCKING! A mild, con- | Nj tinuous current of electricity cures. Get a catalogue by writing THE OWEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 209 State Street, Chicago, 111. jELY’S CREAM BALM CURES gy ~~ ""I***' head ti y as r Ot[price SOCENTS^ ALL DRUGGiSTS^^^ Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething; softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. m „ CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. B^l ■w Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use PS in time. Sold by druggists.

ERRORS IN THE BILL MANY MISTAKES DISCOVERED IN THE TARIFF BILL. I No Approprlttlou to Put the Income Tax ■ Into Effect—Treasury Asked for 8500,000 | —Diamonds Unintentionally Placed oi ; the Free List. Big Tariff Blunders. In addition to the long list of errors found in tho Gorman tariff bill, the : surprising discove y has been made by } the Treasury Department officials that no appropriation has boon made for putting- into effect the income tax provisions. The coi ectors of internal revenue can do nothing unSer these i circumstances in the direction of pre- ! paring to collect the tax. The trofisury officials claim to be blameless^ for • they forwarded to the Appropriations j Committee more than a month ago an < estimate for an initial appropriation of i $500,000 to be used during the current | fiscal year in carrying out tho income I tax provisions of the tariff bill if it should become a law. Tho omission cannot be rectified at this session of Congee s. Scattered over twenty-or.e different ! pages of tho new tariff bill there have i I een discovered so far a total of thirty- ' ono errors, tho greater part of which i have no elect on the bill. There j are thiee serious errors, though, not counting the section that authorizes । tho payment of a rebate on the tax I paid on alcohol u-od in tho arts and sciences. Nono of tho error- can lo corrected without a joint resolution of | the two ho. ses, for the “law”print of the bill roust bo an exact copy, wording and spelling, pu ct nation, and everything else contained in the en- ' rolled bill, which is the copy that be- । comes part of the archives of tho government. By the omiss on of a comma the j Senate has lifted bodily from the free ■ list the products o coal tar, not colors ordyea. Among tho p: o luctso! coal tar I the. more imp or tant are dead oil. pitch, and benzole. These siicu d have come ; in.freo, but by tho omission of the comma they are a’l t an-ferred to the dutiable list. Another error is uno over which there has boeii s me dispute, but according to tariff experts it , operates t) put diamonds in tin-free | list. The use of the so i icolon in stead of the colon is used by exports t > indicate that dia r.onds themselves, as a c’as , not. ret. in addition to those tor u e in certain 1 trades, as was intende’ ire admitted free. It is aid that some of tho largest importers of pro -ions stones in i New York, aware of this error, have ordered largo invoices of diamonds before the error can I e corrected. Paragraph 21 of tho chemii-ul scln dule makes sulphate of magnesia, cr epsom salts, dutiable at I 5 of a cent a i ound. This was an item add d by the Senate which ( initted to str ke from tho free li t paragraph 512, whi h reads "Mag nesia, sulphate of. or epsom ra ts. । The two purugi'uph - aco. ^LVpL’Q'itio ll Error, th- I’xitw’ 1 ... Sff.-w-rr’ list a paragraph reading: “Fruit plant . tropic il and -. i:, - op.mi. for the purpore of propagation < r en tivation. insP ai of tli cinimn aft r the word fruit thei-i- shon d have been a hypho the article interoh dtw be ad milted free Icing fruit-plants. 'The error wa-c rn cmlby a oint roxßition on May !», PS I, b-lit p t .that ; ~n . hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of tro; ie il fruits wer ■ brought in absolutely free Os duty. A serlo s error in the McKinley act wa- corrected in like manner, the mistake being the misplacement o a parenthesis. '1 he paragraph as it ap pcared in tho law read: "( übles, cordage, an.l twine ex ept binding twice composed in whole or in ] art of istle, or Tampico fiber, si al gras-, or >unn D cents per pound.” Tho only w rd» tl.at should ha e bco i inel “ru in pai renthos.-s wore "except binding t wine,” which made a very material change in tho <on 1 . netion ‘ - f the parag: aph. The e >rrection was made Feb. Is, i'ul, the law. however, having been i . for^e aim e Oct. 1, Is on. WHEELMEN MEET. National Kicinj Tournament of the I. of A. W. Held in Denver.

HE national raeing tourrawent of t h e Lea eu o of Au erican \\ heelmen, held in Den- . i ver, was inaugu- ; rated in the pres- { ence of lO.OiiO peo- : pie. The first; ehampionbhiD race 1 A । Twelve men sta t- ; led. I’aid, the win-i re - , is from Buffalo. Tho f. urth 1

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event, the one mile open, created , the greatest enthusiasm of the! day. Sanner took the leal at the two-thirds and held it n itil two hundred feet from the tape. Here' Sanger, Titus. Brown and Bald were all lapped. Brown t nishcd ahead of Titus and Sanger. The win- • ner is a Cleveland man. In the two mile handicap, Barnett, of Lincoln, Neb., who had a handicap of 1, 0 i yards, passed the lealer of the second ' mile and won bv 100 feet. In the five । mile cham; ion hip, Titus won and beat I : the world's record for live miles in | competition, making the distance in 1 12:19 1-5. The previous record was । 12:27 2-5. | Wonderful rs was the first day's rid-• ing, the second day's races were a total J eclifse. Two important records fell j the first day and four fell the second; day. The day was fine for i acing, and j the crowd in attendance large. The ' high atmosphere had a terrible effect on the men. They gasped for breath i when they came off iheir wheels. 1 Western men are a little di appointed that their racers did not win mo.e prizes, but are jubilant over the per- i formancesof Barnett of Lincoln. Neb., in t he two-mile handicap, and the good showing of /i< gler, of ( alifornia7and ' the Illinois men. Anderson and Gardner, and also Weiler, of Salt Lake, and Maxwell, of Winfield, Kan. | The revolt in Venezuela is at an end. j

PULLMAN IS Hi । Refuses to Aid Starving Rasidents of His “Model Town"—Altgeld's Appeal. Sixteen hundred families without food. Sixteen hundred families without income. Sixteeti hundred families

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without resources of any kind. Sixteen hundred families well-nigh without hope. That is what Gov. Altgeld says he found in and about the model town of Pull-, man when he ] aid i it an official visit' j at the request of a Committee of the locked-out Pullman workmen. T h e Governor has is-

sued a pi oclamation addressed “To the 1 eopl© ot tho state of Illinois, and os- [ ve(Ha»ly tuose of vhioagfo,” uppealmg for aid for the destitute of Pullman, whom he claims are in a terrible i condition. Governor Altgeld also sent out a quite lengthy telegram to Pullman calling attention to the situation and asking him to do something to I help the sufferers. Pullman replied at length making reference to ’Gov. I Altge d s declination of es ort of Vice ; President Wickes, which fact Pullman i regretted. Pullman then continues: 1 uavu tho best reason for believing mat i the bust.and of the woman, whois pub- j llshod as representing bar family toyou | yesterday as In need ot help, drew more i than $1,300 of his savings from the bank : on July 2. for the purpose, as ho Baid, of buy hi < lota While It. has not been represented to the officers of this company that I there is any such extended distress at Pullman as represented for the first time by t he extraordinary method of tho published telegram to you. I do not doubt there are many cases of need caused by tho refusal of employes for more than two and a half months to earn wages to tho amount ot more than $300,000, ard such cases uro Increased and made more severe by the persistence of some six hundred and fifty of our employes, of whom about three hundred and fifty live in Pullman, refusing to apply for their old places. As to those who uro not at work, canceling their rents lx not a question to which attention should be given at the present juncture. If their pressing needs are as you suppose them to be. Regarding your suggestion that the work be divided in order to give at least half time for all.the policy of tho company is to employ only as many men as it is possible t<> fnrn'sh work for on full ttme." To this tho Governor replied: “I see your company refuses to do anything toward telieving the situatio t at Pullman. If you will mak t tho round I made, meet, tho e people face to face and talk to the n von will loconvinced that none of them had sl/0 hor any other sum.a few weeks ago. As you have iofuso i t । do a ty thing to relieve the suffering in tho ease J am compelled to appo il to the humanity of the people of Illinois to d<> so. ” AGAINST ANARCHISTS. Tho Srnmte’n Swooplnu Hill K^ntrlctlng f in nVrat ton. The Sona'o bid for tho exclusion nt anarchists from this country and their deportation in cate they should enter it is । ne that will meet with general j uppr.na. I here has b -cn no law to ’ prevo -.t the ianding of anarchists, amt 1 should tho gate- Io loft open the I «trfiiffent nieH»u«oa ru»aiuUL adopted in *«’ ♦, rlct ton <»f nnarehv i- provides that ncTaibm' n-mrchM shall bo p-r nittml to land ' in the United States’ that in the eve ‘‘ lof one landin he shul be deport <1 t > the country where. ! U . came at theexpenso of the imparting . -el: that in th<> case of a foreign r tried for any । ci ime or misdemeanor it shal Ikj the । province of tho court t , investigate his chnraet* r. and if tlw court i- sat- : istied that ho is not a man of txvd | character, or that he is n t well disi poseil to tho „■ ■ 0,l or ;or and hapruncss Os societ . he shall I e .emrt-d to the | conutry w'.<-n,-< h - came nt tho exI penso of the 1 nil.- : >t H . should ho | return ho - aj’ I , arrested and sentonced toe ntinoment in th- pen;teni tiary fora peril d not exie’ding four I year-, ami a" rwa d he ;gi n depa tjed It further i> iv<l - or the apj 1 ointment ; t foreign port- of i sp*ct- | ors to exrim ue p. s-engers embarking for the United State-, i nd an appropriation o - 0.0 <> i- ma ;o or the pur--1 ' sc. .1 i, • a•tl a: an alien has deciare I hi- ir t -nt o ,f , .oming a citiI zen siia 1 no: ja <• t Pim from pioce’d- । ings under the a t. USE OF FEDERAL TROOPS LEGAL rrMliieiitCoolfvofth. Xiiicrli in Bar kssoiiation mi tile Strike Kot*. rue Am dean l’ar Association, of which Judge Thom is M. Co lev. of Ann Arbor, .Mich., is I'resid mt held

its seventeenth annua’. meet in j al Sarat ga. N. Y. The Pit sid -nt being absent, by rea-on of illness, h s a tdress was read by the acting president, J ud g e Samuel F. Hunt, of Cincinnati. It was : very lengthy and ’ e'mmnnic del the !mb s t noteworthy ~chan.es in statutory ..r ' I

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thomas m. cooley points of general interest which have been made in several i Slates and by Congress during ’ the preceding year. In part it dealt with the "protest” of Gov. Altgeld, of Illinois, against the use of I I nitod States treops in quelling the ' recent riot, showing that Altgekfs poi sition was entirely wrong and that of I ! the government perfectly lawful. The i speaker condemned the Coxey demonst at ions and the sympathetic strike, . as well as Gov. Altgeld's position re- | ; arding the use of Federal troops. i Religious warfare at Ottawa, 111., I j has .eon settled, permission havin' been granted the Salvation Army to I hold meetings. ' lone highwayman held up a train I ne. r Lufkin, Tex., and shot and killed > Dr, Dreweney and robbed the body, i afterwards relieving others tn the train of their money and watches. A GRAND JURY at Lincoln, Neb., has held to trial George Davis, the n gro suspected of causing the wreck on the i Santa I e road by which a do en lives : were lost. Rather than be cen-ured f. r reck- . less driving, Joan C. Peck, a member i of the Philadelphia. fire department, killed him elf. i 1

hr F "" I PRESIDENT ALLOWS TARIFF BILL TO BECOME LAW. Though Hn Could Not Cons'stantly Indorse It, He Believes It Improves Existing Conditions—Doest Not Go Far Enough — His Letter. Why He Didn’t Sign. While President Cleveland did not sign tho new tariff law he was prevailed on by party chieftains to write a letter which is to \ oiee his feelings. The letter, which was addressed to (.'en. Catchings of the Rules Committee of the House, was of course meant for publication. To address it to Gen. Catchings was a mere convenience and a copy went to the press association by the same hand which bore the original missive to Catchings. The President objects to the bill for the reason that ho" regards it as not beingj in line with honest tariff reform,: and because it contains inconsisteiicies that should not be found in ariy tariff law. He speaks of the vicisw tLl des of the bill during its ^progress through the two ; * Bs. and to the bad treatment : "Kfj.ived from pretended friends, opresses the Q-lniou that not- ' Ihese it s a vast im- ' ;.^Minont. on exist ng condit ons. “It is nwouly a barrier,” says the Prcsi- ! denW“againßt a return to mad protection, but fuinlshei vantage ground from which must bo waged aggressive operations against protected mon poly and government favoritism.” Following is the missive: Executive Mansion, 1 Washington, D. C. i The Hon. T. C. Catchings: My I)eak Slß—Sluce the conversation I hail with you and Mr. ( lark, of Alabama, a few da vs ano In regard to my action upon the tariff bill now before ine. 1 have glv.n the subket further and most serious consideration Tho result is 1 am more settled than ever in the determination to allow the bill to become a law without my signature. When tho formulation of legislation which it, was hoped would embody Democratic ideas of tariff reform was lately entered upon by the Congress nothing was further from my anticipation than a result which I could not promixly and enthusiastically Indorse. It in therefore wit li a feeling of the utmost disapiiotnttnent that 1 submit to a denial of this prh Hege. Ido Dot cGim to be hotter than the masses ot my I atty nor do 1 wish to avi 11 any re-spon-iDillty which on account of the passage of this law I ought to bear ns a member ot tho Democratto organization, neither will 1 permit myself to be separated from my party to sneb an extent as might be implied bv iny veto of tariff legislation which, though disappointing. is still chargeable to Democratic effort. But there are provisions In thia bill which arc uot in line with honest tstiff reform, and it cm tains Inconsistencies and crudities which ought not to appear in tarU laai or laws of anv kind. Beside* there were, M you smi 1 well know- Incidents accosnpaaylng tbe pa*sage of the bill through t’ongrtsa which made every sincere reformer unhappy, while influences sutrounded it In Its latter »taget< ami inttrfered with its final construction which might not to bo recognize*! or tolerated In Democratic tariff reform councils. Improves Existing Conditions. Andyet. notwithstanding all Its vicissitudes and *u 'he bad treatment It received at the bandsof pretended friends, it presents a vast Improvement to existing conditions. It will certainly lighten many tariff burdens that now rest hjn'iiy Upon the people It Is not only a bazrHr against the return of mad protection, but it furnishes a vantage ground from which must further aggressive operations against protected monopoly and governmental ^*’^l /-’-i , i j,< Laux *■ d tile <>f t!i<' niar>< th. >. «< ^ " I '’ ln 'J'ls bill as the frvasti^- A; ‘re not h|t n ,|,. i | to in their bon'’of n I •" ■ The Irusts and combinations the cmntnuuIsm of pelf whose ma -hlmittons have pre. vented u» from reaching the success we de serve, should not be forgotten or forgiven. We shall rreover from our asionl-hment at their exhibition of power, and If then the question 1a force 1 ui on us whether they shall submit to the free legislatD- will of the people’s repreneutatDe- 1 or-hall diet itc the law* which the people must obey we will a<v 11 and settle that issue as one involving the Integrity sad safety of American institutions. 1 love th -principles of true Democracy beciuse the* are founded In patriotlam and up- * n Jiislh band hlii’.e- to >:ird all Interests. I am proud of my party organization because it Is conservatively sturdy ami persistent in the enforcement of < s principles Therefore 1 do not despair of the efforts made by the Hottas of Represee.tativ s to supidenient the bill air ady passe I by furtln i legislation ami to have engralted tii■ n it such modifications as will more nearly meet Democratic hopes and aspirations. Free Khw Materials Necessary. 1 can’t be mistaken as to the necessity of free raw materials ns the foumlstion of logical and sensible tar ff reform. Iho extent to which this is recognized in the I glslation already secured is one of its encouraging amt redeeming features, but It Is vexatious to recall that while fr< e coal ami Iren ore have been denied, a letter of the Secretary ot the Treasury discloses the fact that both might Lave been made free by the annual eurrend.rof only about * .i»o of unnecessary revenue. I atu sure that there is a common habit of underestimating the Importance ot free rawmaterials in tariff legislatton and of regardlog them as only related to concessions to be made to our manti faetureis. i he truth is, their influence is so far-reaching that. It disregarded. a complete and beneficent scheme of tariff reform cannot be successfully Inaugurated When we give to our manufacturers free raw materials we unshackle American enterprise and ingenuity, and these will open the doors of foreign markets to the reception of our wares and give opportunity for the continuous and remunerative employment of American labor. With materials cheapened by their freedom from tariff charges tbe cost of their product must be < orrespondlngly cheapened. Thereupon justice and fairness to the consumer wtrMd demand that the manufacturers be obligeiQo subn it to such a readjustment and mbdifleation of the tariff upon their finishedgoocteis would secure to tbe people the benefit OiKh" reduced cost ot their manufacture and 2jßeld the consumer against the exactions of i«ra!liate profits. It w ill thus ne seen that free raw materials and t just and fearless regulation and reduction of the tar<ff to meet the changed conditions would carry to every humble home in the land the blessings, of increased comfort and cheaper living. The millions of our countrymen who have fought bravely and well for tariff reform should be exhorted to continue the struggle, boldly challenging to open warfare and constantly guarding against treachery and halfbeartedness In their camp. Tariff reform will not be settled until it is honestly and fairly settled in the Interest and to the benefit of a patient and long-suffering people. Yours very truly, Gboveb Cleveland. Telegraphic Clicks. William McCormick, 21. deputy postmaster at Woods worth, Ohio, was drowned at Lake Brady. The Illinois Central Railway Com- : pany ha* bought the Chesapeake, Ohio and Southwestern system. S. B. Morsf. consul general to Paris, has been sued at Indianapolis. Ind., for an unpaid laundry bill of $3.71. A WAGON was st ruck by a train near Paris, Tenn., and the two Misses Ray. a Mr. Ray and two Misses Harman j were killed. Fritz Brinkman, a Nebraska farmer I who had lost his crops by the drought, ! committed suicide at Mankato, Mien., i by hanging. Mrs. A. G. Lemoine has been ar- | rested at New York on a charge of j passing a bogi s cheek. She lias ie I CQnt.y lost $20,000 on horse races.

- . . Y ro< „._Latesl U.S.Gov’t Report ABSOLUTELY PURE

A Monkey’s Strategy. While traveling in Europa several I years ago, said Benjamin Sutton, of I ; Troy, New York, I came across a m m J who w< s exhibiting a performing monkey. The beast was as dexterous a th es as could be imagined, and his ; master told me that every day he st le enough food for his subsi tence. He j told me t > watch 1 im for a few n inI ute ’. I did ao, and presently his keeper • led him to a>p t close to where a date I seller was sitting cn the ground, with i his basket beside him. Here his mas- ■ ter put him through a number of I trick-, and although I could see the j monkey was eying the fruit, he did • j not m ke any demonstration toward > । taking it. In the midst of one of his ; I feats he suddenly started up from the > | ground, ad, uttering a cry of pain or t . rage, fixed his eyes full < n the face of ! j the date seller. Then, without moving - I the rest of his body, he stole as many - dates as he could hold in one of his t “hind ’ aids.” The date seller, being - i thus stared out of countenance, and - having his atlention diverted by ihis I extraordinary movement, knew noth- > ing of the theft until told of it by a ’ bystander. Avoiding Pain and Peril. Defensive measures against the foe are ever adopted by a wise commander. You can be 1 commander of the situation and strike a decisive blow at the start at that dangerous and : relentless enemy, rheumatism, if attacked by , it. by ret o rting in time to Hostetter’s Stomach i Bitters, which checks permanently the progress of a malady, among tbe most obstinate, i ‘ painful and possibly dangerous, against which , medical skill and the resources of materia , medica are arrayed. No evidence is more concurrent and convincing than that which proves that the Bitters neutralizes the rheumatic poison and checks Its farther development in the । system. For malarial and kidney trouble, dys- i pepsia, want of vitality, nervousness, liver 1 complaint and constipation, Hostetter’s Stom- ’ ach Bitters is the leading remedy. Enduring. Whether it be vegetable cr animal, । yellow is more permanent than any ■ other color. Tae yellow of a Hower’s ' petals is th j only hue known to botan- > ists that is not faded or entirely dis- - charge! upon being exposed to the' ‘ fumes of sulphurous acid. Take the- । viola tricolor -heart's ease—as an illus-. ; tration. If exposed but a moment to these fumes the purple tint immediate-! ly tales its flight, and in the wallflower , the yellow shines a-i brightly as ever s after all other co’ors have fled, t J "Mud More Valuable than Gold” « Is tbe truthful, startling title ot u beautiful souvenir book just received describing a the wonderful Magnetic Mineral Mud “ Huths in Warren County, near Attica. Ind. Tbe Indiana Springs tompany has spent a 5150.003 la developing and beautifying this noted resort, un i it is to-d y the only o place In the Drifted Slates where It is posslblo to get a Magnetic Mineral Mud and n Lfthla Water Bath and drink the Puritan J aliout Bor »<n l.lthla Water remedies, some of the cures wrought uem,* marvelous. We certainly think it Is to the j interest of every sufferer to write and get ;l u copy of this handsomely printed and j beautifully illustrated souvenir, which wlli be mailed for the asking. r Address H. I. Kramer, General Mana--1 ger. Magnetic Mineral Mud Baths, Warren County, Ind., or 10 Spruce street. New York, or 45 Randolph street. Chicago. i The cocoa palm is the most useful -• tree on < arth. The nuts furnish water, j so. d, milk, and wine, and the buds a . good substitute for cabbage, the shells ■ utensils, and the fiber clothing and J textile fabrics, its juices ink, and its ( leaves pen and paper. The I'armer’s Bank. ' His best bank is a fine meadow, a big l potato patch, a forty in World’s Fair w.nter wheat, and twenty acres in 1 monster rye. The best meadow is made by sewing Salzer’s extra grass ■ mixtures this fall: it yields from 3to 5 tons magnificent hay per acre. The Salzer Seed Co., LaCiosse, WD., who are the largest farm and vegetable seed growers in the World—will send you a package of new wheat anl rye, and catalogue, upon receipt of 4 cents postage. c A New Arrangement. St. Paul, Minn., Aug. 20. —The new traf- : tie arrnngemeut between the Great Northern and Oregon Railway and Navigation 1 Ca is one of tho most import mt of the year. It gives the Great Northern tiie most direct entrance of any road into Portland and to Willamette Valley points. It also becomes the short line into the Palouse and Walia Walla districts of Washington, the Creur d’Alene, Moscow, and Snake River districts of Tdaha The cheetah, or hunting leopard, of India is throa and one-half feet high, j and is hooded like a hawk when taken I out to the chase. I Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally. Price 75 centa A man is frequently known by the , company he keeps out of.

BURNING, . itching, scaly, crusty Skin ) Diseases, such as defy the ) ordinary blood medicines, h are cured completely by Dr. ' Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- . covery. For Scrofula in all m its various forms, the worst 7 Scrofulous Sores and Swell- ' ings, great eating Ulcers, and every blood-taint and disorder, this is a direct remedy. It thoroughly purifies and I enriches your blood. Alexander, N. C. I Dr. R. V. Pierce : Dear Sir | —Your “Golden Medical Discovery ” has proved a bless- , ing to me. It was recom- ; mended to me by Rev. P. A. Kuykendall. I have been a

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sufferer with old sores on my legs for four years. I used three bottles of it, fu !d “7 aro sound and well and my health is better than it has been for some time. I had the best doctors of this country treat my case and they failed to effect a cure. Yours respectfully,

— Family Weighs Nearly a Tom Theophilus Bland, of Pitt County, ! North Caro ina, has seven sons, each, of whom weighs over 200 pounds. iHe Modern Beauty Thrives on good food and sunshine, with plenty ot exercise in the open air. Her form glows with health, and her face blooms with its beauty. If her system needs the cleansing action of a laxative remedy, she uses the gentle and pleasant liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs. Something more than gray hairs is required in old age in o: der that it be reverenced. j “Twinkle, twinkle, little star,” you ara indeed beautiful, but not half so lovely a» ’ the bloom on tho cheeks of all young ladiea j 1 vNho use Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. Roof : T««F^ T KIDNEniVER<sS B W’ Biliousness Headache, foul breath, sour stomach, heart. . burn, pain in chest, dyspepsia, constipation. Poor Digestion Distress after eating, pain and bloating in tha stomach, shortness of breath, pain in the heart. Loss of Appetite A splendid feeling to-day and a depressed one j to-gnorrow, nothing seems to taste good, tired, sleepless and all unstrung, weakness, debility. Swamp-Root builds up quickly a rundown constitution and makes the weak strong. At Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO alze.l "Invalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. MY Snapshot Cate r-A ’ Do x auun why. to ho sure ? • Mamma uses them for dyspepsia. I Papa swallows one when he thinks i he has eaten a little too much. Mamma says that My brother Jack Always wants one When he comes home . ery late ut night. i Grandpapa Takes them for something That he calls constipation. He always takes two, and He says that They are very good indeed. They don’t taste good, though, But they can be swallowed without tasting Mamma gives the baby A quarter of one —for wind on its stomach. Aunt Jane, She is an old maid, rou know. Takes them for headache. -She dissolves hers in water And drinks it. You just ought to see the Face she makes up : —hut it cures her headache. 1 put one under my tongue; Then I fill my mouth just full of water. And take one big swallow, And it is gone —always. What do I take them for? Do you see how red My cheeks are ? Well! That is what I take them for, mamma says. CAWSOT SEE HOW YOB DO ” IT AHO PAY FREIGHT. wl^ V 3 wtr 2 drawer walnut cr oak*l» w proved High Arm Singer sew ing machine I y < Hr* finely finished, r.kkel plated, adapted to light i g an< * heavy work; guaranteed for 10 Yr.n: with I L TOT /V1 Automatic Bobbin Winder, Belt-Threading €yli»- * _ Shuttle, Re’.t-Setting Needle and a complete . g*r*«** >set of Steel Attnebments; shipped any where OM 30 Day’s Triai. J'o money required in advance. i T 5,000 now fn use. World’s Fair Medal swarded machine and attachtnents. Buy from factory and save dealer’s snd agent’s profits. CpCp This Oat and eend to-day for machine or larpe free I "li, catalogue, testimonials and Glimpses of the World’s Fair. OXFORD MFC. CO.3U TSU&tn. C»ICAEO,IU. FREES Ruppert’s FACE BLEACH A ppreciatin* the fact that thousands of ladle, a lhe U. S. have not used my Face Bleach, on VJSjfcaHW account of price, which is »2 per bottle, and LT 1“ or der that all may give It a fair trial, X Wn will send a Sample Bottle, safely parked, alt AM > ^’''hsrges prepaid, on receipt of 25c. FACE BLEACH removesand cures absolutely all nSB freckles, pimples, moth, blackheads, sallowv Dess, acne, eczema, wrinkles, or roughness of a skin, and beautifies the complexion. Addresg Mmn. A, RUPPERT. Dept. E. 6 E. 14th St.. N. Y. City. PATENTS. TRACE-BARKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentability of Invention. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or How to Get a Patent. Patbick OTambll, Washington. D. C. <h < n pays for BL I 9 I^IOO high grade SU 818 Papers in Illinois, gja jH yj I y % 1111 ^peVX S r ,U . 1 ’i J; . 5 .. COUn,ry I U V SEND FOR CATALOGUE. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, ©3 South Jefferson Street, - Chicago, HL C- N - P- No. 35-94 ~ W H F N WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, 1’ I. P leas e s=xy you saw the advertisement Lu tins paper.