St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 11, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 29 September 1894 — Page 3
That Tired Feeling
“ I cordially recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all who may be suffering with indigestion or Impure blood, no appetite, Run Down feeling, or generally ‘ out of order. It will k surely help any who give It a fair trial, if b there is any help for F them. I have found It ; 'of great benefit for j Rheumatism.
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We have used Hood's Sarsaparilla two years j and have no sick headache spells, pains or tired i Hood’s^Cures feeling." W. N. Barnes, Hartford City, Ind. ! Hood's Pills give universal satisfaction. Effective Spur. In the ea"ly days of the California Legislature there was a member from Mariposa of whom it was said, “Just i get him mad and he'll make a good speech, but not unless you do.” Cn one occasion he rose to express his mind in regard to a certain subject. I but the only words which oauio to his / lips were. “.Mr. Speaker ” When he had repeated them three times, , several voices si ggested scornfully, । “Git out.”’ This was all that the member from j Mariposa needed. His eyes flashed and his cheek reddened as he thun- > -dered. “The gentleman may cry ‘Git out!’ but the member from Mariposa i will not git out. My speech is already i begun. Is lie so dear or peace so ■ sweet as to be purchased at the price | of silence in this assembly? No, siree! s . I knew not what course others may 1 ' take, but as for me, I’ll finish my i ' speech or I’ll know the reason whv!” ’ And after bestowing a comprehen- | sive glance upon his audience the 1 member from Mariposa oi.ee more said “Mr. Speaker,” and then proceeded to make a really able and effective speech, which was loudly applauded at its close. Hearing-Down Feeling. The portrait presented here is j that of Mrs. J. M. Bender, who lives on the old York Road at Nicetown, Pa. She has been for many years in very poor health.
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Eains all over her body, and serious idney trouble. Her blood was in such a bad ! state that physicians said she had dropsy. Nearly discouraged, she | tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and to her great surprise it made her a well woman. She now wishes to tell women all over the world to take the Vegetable Compound and be well. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card tor book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonfuljn water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists.
Since 1861 I have been a great sufferer from cat irrh. I tried Ely’s Cream Balm, and to all appearances am cured. Terrible headaches from uhich 1 had long suffered are g nc. - IV. J. Hitchcock, Laie Major United States Volunteers and A. A. General, Buffalo, X. V.
ELY’S CREATE BALM Opens and e’eansos the Na^al Passages. Allays Pain and Inflammation Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and smell. The Balm is QUickiy absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street, New York. SHOCKING! A mild, conXN vJ tinuous current of electricity cures. Get a catalogue by writing THE OWEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 20S State Street, Chicago, Ixj. For Durability,Economy and for General blacking is unsqualled. Has An Annual Sale of 3.000 tons. WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE WWW® FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINE, ORTO TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH. MAKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXES. IHEONLY PERFECT PASTE. Morse Bro strop’s. Canton,Mass.
DEATH IN THE IM . ( ■ — Awful Loss of Life Reported in lowa and Minnesota. TRAIL OF A TORNADO. Whole Towns Are Wiped Out of Existence. Number of Injured Sahl to Kun Into the Hundreds—Entire Counties Laid Waste by Wind and Hail—Several Villages Effaced from the Map—No Estimate of tin* Aggregate Froparty Loss Is Made, but It Will Ite Something Enormous.
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V . ........ V known to have boon kille 1 outright, and at. 'east a many more were dangerously, several of them fatally, injured, and the number of those less seriously hurt will exce d 100. Tile towns of Eminotsburgh, Britt, Cerro Gordo, and Algona. lowa, and Spring Valley and Leroy, Minn., were visited, and the count y around them was laid waste. The telegraph wires are down so I adly that full accounts of the awful disaster cannot yet bo obtained. but t o dead, numerically, so far as is known are as follows. Near Algona. lowa .....26 In Mitohcll County. lowa ....!(> North of Wesley. lowa. is Near Oeage, lowa 6 Cylinder, lowa ................................ « Cerro Gordo County. lowa. 5 Spring Valley, Miuu 3 Leroy. Miun 4 Near Britt, lowa 7 Total 78 Starting abi ut ten miles southeast of Spencer in Northwestern lowa the | storm of wind at 8 o’clock began its |
She had : falling of the j womb, caus- _ ing that bear--1 mg down feeling and other forms of female weakness, with headI ache, severe backache,
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work of destruction Taking everything b-fore it.it swept across the State just north of Emmetsburg and Algona, wiping out the town of Cylinder. but mostly injuring tho country districts. After pass ng Mx-on City and ruining the count y northwest of I Osage it bore off to tho n rthetu-t. crossing the Minnesota line, and soon after P> o'clock wrecked tho town of Leroy, where a tad lire added to the destruction. Spring Valley' wa; right in the path of the , cyclone and suffered severely. Turn- | ing again to the east tho towns of Ho- i mer and Lowt her were badly damaged, j and at one time reported comp etely j wiped off the face of the earth. After crossing tho Missis-ippi and doing considerable damage to farm buildings near Marshland, Wis.. the ?to:m seemed to have spent its fono. A; smaller st< rm did some damage at Dodge Center, which wa< not in the path of the mam cyclone. The j ath < f the ■ torm was not wide, but it had all the characteristics of the deadly t made and the dimensions of a cyclone. Country the Heaviest Loner, While the loss of lib is great, it might have been much greater ha i there been many towns in the path of the storm. As it wa- only a few villages weie struck. The greate-t destruction of life was in the vic nity of Mason City, Iowa: Wesley, lowa- Fertile. Osage, and Britt. At Lowthe •, lowa, where the town was reduced to kindling, no fatalities are reported, but seventeen persons were injured, some 1 of whom will die. In Minnesota, the storm seemed to i start at Le Hoy, after traveling in the air for several miles. Five persons i were killed at this place. At Chat- I field, Minn., a dance was in progress in tho opera-house when the storm descended upon the town. The building was bL wn down an 1 many persons : were hmt. Sixty hou es in all wo:e demolished and 10 ) per.-ons were injured. The cyclone appea ed in lowa at about K o’clock in the evening, and was accompanied by violent lightning and ! thunder. Alter the death-laden wind j came a flooding rain, which rendered i the destruction more complete. There appeared to be three clouds, ore above , the other, all whirling iu opposite directions,and when they came in contact > everything in their path was swept i away. Tho storm was eccentric, as in I many cases houses were completely dei m dished while structures directly adjoining were unscathed. The storm lasted about two hours, and traveled over a strip of territory 120 miles in length and from a quarter of a mile to ten miles wide. With the exception of a call from Thompson, lowa, for medical assistance i to care for tho wounded, there were no appeals for aid, and the more fortui nate in the scourged district announce i that they will care for the survivors. The devastated district is visited by i thousands of spectators from far and near, who charter every conceivable ! conveyance in which to make the jouri noy. T-he picture of desolation pre- | sented will never be forgotten by those [ who saw it. That tho wind could do
what has been done in the way of destruction would not be believed were it not that the ocular proof is at hand. Forests of considerable area anil heavy growth have been leveled as completely a- though mown wit h a giant scythe. In some instances barbed wire fences, that offer the least possible resistance to wind, were blown away as clearly as though a fence had never existed in the locality. Boards have been picked up in which grain 1 of sand are so deeply and thickly embedded as to give them the appearance of the sandpaper of commerce. In many instances the bodies of the dead have the skin so thoroughly penetrate I by the flinty grains of sand as to bo almost unrecognizable. Every train into the district on Sat- ! turday took its quota of coffins to every station, and, as they were piled up awaiting transportation, a grewson:o sight was presented. Sunday was a day of funerals throughout the devastat d districts. In Kossuth county, lowa, alone there were nineteen, followed on Monday by nearly fifty. The money loss in that county will foot up $260,0 0, and scores of people there and elsewhere are left destitute. The same condition exists at Leroy and Spring A alley, Minn.
Killed nmfflnjured. Following is ti e list, as nearly correct 1 as cun Ixi obtained, of those killed and (inured by the tornado: Ni:xk ALWN.'Ja. Killed: Robert Stevenson, chill of ( harles Leo, Mrs. ।Go >rge W. Beavers, daughter of George W. Bea era, child of George 1 Holman, Dingman, Sw. eper, Mrs. Sweeper, infant child < f Swe< pen's, uni known man and wife, infant chi'd of Ulauseden. Inji red: Mrs. Hob rt St vonson, Carl Parryck, Mrs. Gari Barryek, Charles l ee, Mrq Charles Loe, five lee children. George W. Beavers, Mrs. Myron Schenck and chi'd, Mrs. L. Schenck. Horace Schenck, George Holman, four children and wife. Near Wesley. lowa— Killed: M. Cader, Mrs. M. Casior. J. W. Dingman. infant of Mr. and Mrs. Eden, infar tof Mr. and Mrs. Rockow, I red French, M. Schweppe, two children of Fred French, two chi dren of Thomas Tweed, two children of M. S heppe, ■ Mrs. Tweed. IN.H'UED.—JostorI amp, Mrs. Jost r Camp, four children of Jester Camp, - - Eden, Mrs. Eden, four e didron of Mr. and Mrs Eden, Thomas Tweed. Mrs. Thomas Tweed. Mrs. E. Tweed. C ree children of Thomas Tweed, four children of Mrs. E. Tweed. At Britt, I a.— Killed: Jacobson, - Griggs, Mrs. Si mil ton, Mrs. Stuggart. child of Mrs. Sim- i ilton, two children of Mrs. StuggarL Injvred: Bingham, wife and three children, Dann, wife and throe children, F. Daughtman and | wife, A. Dockman and wife, W. Foy
aHE fearful cyclone — which swept over a portion of Souther 11 Minne so t a an d I Northern lowa Friday night is now j known to have I eonl the mi st disastrous | } of any storm which I •I has visited the I Northwest in many I years. From best adv ices obtainable at the time this is written seventyeight persons are
ami sister, Christ Han- n, -Mutz, wife and child, H. I*. Madson, Arteccourse and wife. Smith and three children. similton and c ild. North <erro a. .rix>, low a. Killed: D. T. Haddon, Mrs. D. T. i Hadden, Ellery Met archer, .loh t Patt r.-on, Peter Peterson. Inured: Mis- Maggie Baker, Miss Edith Bentley, Alice MeKercher. Hare d McKercher, .lames O’Neill, Sr. osauf, lew \. Kh.led: Mr-. Phils. Herbert. Harry Herbert. Ruth Herl Lert. Mrs. Patrick 1 o..organ, Anna i Perry, In i red: Jacob Finley, Pen- ' jamin Eestern Mrs. Ben amin Ke-t---ern. Dennis Lonergan, Joseph Lonergan. Katie I onergan, William Perrv. * ylinder, low A. — -Killed: Alexan lor Goulden, Mrs. A. Goulden, two children of Alex. Goulden. Suexo Valley, Minx. — Killed: N. I’(due. Mrs. N. Dodge, child of F.ank Mashek. The Injired: Mr.-. Wiliam Boree, Lucy Boree. Charles Dodge. Mrs. Harper, Jesse Harri-. j Harper. I ark King. Mr. and Mr.-. C. G. King, John Ne--, Mrs. John Ness. John Nes- child . Mr-. Frank Mashck, Mrs. I Louis Ro-e. Lena R se. Nellie Rumsey. Mrs. William Strong. Sallie William-;. Leroy, M inn.—Killed: Mrs. Dunton, Henry Finley. - Gilbert-on, Jee Ne.-on. IN.H uro: Charles Blair, Carl Carson, Horace Chamberlain. Mrs. Horace Chamberlain, Henry Colton, Mrs. Henrv Colton, Arthur Maxfield, Nels Weigan. Prey t<» 11. i m 1 The most disastrous fire in the history of Port and, Ore., broke out Sunday afternoon in the deck of the Pacific ’ Coast Elevator Company, and raged for three hours, destroying property vaiI t ed at over $1,500,L00. The tire department was scattered about the city. lookin r after the small fires, when the alarm from the elevator win rung in. When the engines arrived the tire win beyond control ami in half an hour from the time it ; started the docks so half a mile were entire Nothing could be done but to let the fire burn itself out. '1 he Pacific Elevator Company's maintbui ding, the coal b inkers of Hie North Pacific Terminal < 'ompany, and the Oregon Railway and Navigati n Company’s wharf. 400 feet i n length, were distt oyed. The elevator contained nearly 500,000 i I ushel; of wheat The new plant of । tho Po; tland General Electric Company, just arrived from 1 vun. Mass., was standing in the yards of the terminal company on the’ cars, not having been unloaded. The machinery was of the most expensi.e kind, the most of l which was destroyed, and the remain- > > der badly damaged. Two hundred । freight cars, .-0 of which were loaded l were destroyed. The Oregon Railway ■ and Navigation dt cka held 1,500 t ns ’ . of freight, consisting t f wood, salmon < general merchandi e, and cement all ; | of which was destroyed with the dock 'I here were st red on the dock about ■ I 12.000 cases of salmon from the lower 1 j Columbia River and P uget Sound, j ! awaiting shipment for the East. It - j was valued at about $-10,000, aud was • partly insured. ) — — j A sharp tongue never needs filing.
THE highest award. V *lne”o l, l>er^ > '*,"**“ St ’‘ en » tl » and ^MI J ' Ab °™ Nearest enviable 0 /^Mia has the highest award for h“5 recei ved the i ents, most ^ h ’ P urost ingrediever -wher‘others. luS J? comnetition with years, at thn exhibitions of lormer industrial fairs Ji var A oaß State and hibited, j u Sns’bn he ^ U baa b ^n exed the Ro V M Bak awardest honors^ 1 owderthe high- «•• - awa d a were m.. 1,1 b akmg powder the chemical i b y th® oX Pert3 of tiral Departmentof'w° f | | he A-l'i,'nl-official reoor^»?»w f “^ngtou. The ing 1 owdX th- J lO teß,a of thobakdepartmet bv thia a-certainin/ J S P'citlc purpose of which 1» "as the bent, and tl“lt av • made l nibl ^» shows La Ii o I ’V U 7' ^^’‘gih of the Royal to ’•u cubic inches of carbonic gas per ounce of powder, of the enmiu of tor- ! tar bakiusr <••• wn«.r» oxmeite t at the i FaS l “° nox t high Ist it/ strength tlidJL toßted contained but LU cubic in<W 9 of Ravening gas. The other •xiwaers gave an average of 111. The R yal, therefore, was found of 23 per cent, greater L avening strength than its nearest competitor, and 44 per cent above the average of all the other tests. Its superiority in other respects, however, in the quality of the food it ' makes ^s to fineness, delicacy and 1 wholesomeness, could n >t be measured by figures. It is these high qualities, known and appreciated by the women of the conn- । try for so many years, that have cans d the sales of the Royal Basing Powdbr. 1 as shown by statistics to exceed the sales of all other baking powders combined. The Art of Music. The Shah of Per sia, when visiting the late Emjieror of Germany some years ago, was taken to the opera, and during the course of the pern rmance was asked hi w ho iked the music, lie confessed that the majority of it was pretty crude, but that one piece the orchestra l.ad just been playing was simply superb. The Emperor a: once gave ordt rs for the repetition of the piece, “No," said the Shah: “that's not it" Another one was played. “No." returned the ro\al visitor, “it's not that, either.” Presently the orchestra began to tune their instruments. ' That sit cried the Shah, enthusi-n-tically. *That s the pie< e 1 was trying to Pdi y t a a bi ut!" So, for the ediheation of this barbaric ruler, and the anguish of the rest of the aud;c:.c •, the orchestra tuned and untuned and retuned their instminents in the most heart-rendering fashion: and the Shah loaned I ack in his chair, while his face wore a look of unspeakable enjoyment. “HmII tn the < hleirThis Is half the title of an old aonc. The balance la. "Who in (Humph advances." The public, the prea^ and the medical profession' chant thia ref tala *» eepectal’” tO 1 TsSTT. Otters, chief emonw Atuetl a^ J "' rae,ll< ' 1 ' * a '* prevsntivea for malao» J^»Dp*’lcn. dvaperaia liver complaint. nerv< turf»» nnquist alecp. rheumatic twinirea. ■nA the trvuldc* incident to *4 vanced Ills alao unlver-ally’■ccognlacd as a relUb'c Unlc and appet r. r. As a family medh inc p: 11 1 ' ar! s «uit »bl ■ eiscrgenciea It has no cqnal. The r. rrum. the feeble aeek its aid. and the happiest tesnlts follow. The convalescent the a*»d and the tntlrm derive infinite benefit from lie use. Against the tn- । ftneurf* of impure air. bad water, nnaccuatom< r >1 overwork and sxposure it la a genurue preventive. Koine Things lot- a Hoy to Learn. To walk. To swim. T<» make a fire. To txs punctual. To throw might. To hang up his hat. To close a door quietly. To wipe his boots on the mat To rea l aloud wh n roqu >tod. To help hi- mother < r his sister. To go up or down stairs quietly. To remove hi- hat up n entering a hou^e. To tr at the girl- so well that they will all wish ne was their brother. Everybody is Goins South Nowadays. The only section of the country where the farmers have made any money the past year is in the S >u:lr. If you wl-h to rb«n» you should godown now and see for yourself ।be Louisville and Nashville Kailr -id and connections will sell t ckets t<> all points South for trains of net her 2, N rem 1 e: C>, an 1 December 4. at one f ire r- .ind trip. Ask your ticket a^ent about an I if he can not sell you excursion tickets write t > G P. Atm re. General Passenger Agent. Louisville. K .. or Gea L Cross, N W. p. A . < hieago. 11l “Hmnpty-lluinpty” a Classic. It is not generally known that “Humpty Dumpty” was not originally a nursery rhyme, but a political satire at the expense of Ki g Jam - 11. of England—Humpty Dumpt. bei g, of cour-e. James him-.'lf. the wall the 1 • thron . and the king, whose men and i horses are in ' ala brought into roqiiisitioK Loui. Nl\. of trance. It wh- ori Anally written in Frenc-is; and , later t ie i.uatrain had the honor of be- j ing turned into Latin e’egiac vetso by Dr. Henry Drury. A Bright Eye is a st^n of good health, and if the stom- ! “Ch la not iu the best of conditions the ’ eyei will show it Kipans Tabules wi.i । make the stomach right and keep the eyes j bright and clear. Health in a Coal Mine. i A physiciad as erts that disea-e is I no more demolishing in its raids . among the workers in coal pits than it j is amon? the agriculturists and laborers "if one can bo guided by I , statistics the coal-dust atmosphere in I which their lite is pass, d has no : element of any serious evil to them. 1 It may not be pleasant, but it is not ! unhealthful‘ indeed, the actual death- , rate of these miners is not abnormally I . i high, even when it includes the fatal : wholesale disasters which occur from . time to time in t e pits. nE Price ut Dobbins’ Electric Soap has just bee a reduced in order to put it in Hie reach of ov ery one. Quality same as for ■ 3) years. Insist upon your grocer keepi Ing It Premiums given for wrappers. Try it. 1 Dirty Little Brats. j The ancient Egyptians con idered it i unhealthy to wash a child until it was at I least a year old. 1
NOT A WISE MAN. The Clergyman Invested in a Foil Parrot and Was Sorry. Tb Ju.' parrota aro v ery curious birds, neh powers of mimicry are undisat the bbi h ° 'h'*- thinks ho can swear be madn 1 Wltb lm P uait y and yet not oe made to suffer by Mr. Poll i, not the wisest man in the world, as is tb ° ox P G rienco of a clergyformmdv in^^ in a that waa to V ! th ° louae of a man known .P artd ? a l a rty choice in his Sy U ^ o £'- th " bl '' d P'ajol f..m^\ 8 miai ^ er was entertaining some Ut dlnnor > whe n the bird de® su G.Hr d Yb unex P e eted fondness for insulting the guests, and refeired in a barcastle manner to the largo amount 01 iood they wore devouring. Finally the parson was nettled extremely, grasped the sinful bird by the neck and whirled him around and around. There, shut up!” exclaimed the clergyman. The bird, once more in the cage, shook itself until all the feathers came Lack into their usual plaoes. The poll lookod at tho eh>>>l ov . rather frowningly. and shoureer "My, how the wind blow through my whiskers!” There is another poll that should be placed in the same class with the min- । ister's. There were five cats in the : house, and Polly does not like any of them. Several mornings ago the "occupants of the d( micile were aroused i by the loud meows" of one of the cats. Going down stairs, they found ’that P Uy had hold of the cat's tail. ’I he feline animal was suffering, and at the ; same time making strenuous efforts to scratch out the bird's eyes. “Pelly, Polly, let go and you'll geta cracker!” exclaimed the swo t-faced | matron. The I ird gurgled out. still holding on to the tail, “Don t want crackers! \\ ant this pussyM tail, and I'm going to have it!" Snakes. Field-snakes entered largely into popular medicines a hundred years a ro. and for m my years viper's fatwas used as an e nbrocation. Even to the present day. in country parts there may be found peop’e who believe that snake oi is go d for a bruise, .ust as there are Thousands who aro firmly coin inced that ee skins will cure rheumatism. The Modern Beauty Thrives on good foot! and sunshine, with plenty of exercise in the open air. Iler form glow- with health, an 1 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. As the alcohol ingested escapes from the body in an unaltered state, it cannot, of course, l e looked upon as pos essing any alimentary value. Accord ng to Dr. E. Smith, alcohol does not increase the production of heat in the body as a chemical agent, but by the jH>wer it possesses of stimulating the activity of the vital functions. The Friend. I ouch Is the name glv«n Dr. J. IL McLean's Slrougtboulng Cordial and Bio d Purifier. It gives strength to the tottering ! limbs, it whips up the flagging heart. It rest >rs« warmth to tbo body just snatched from Ihn Icy grasp of dfa’h. It Infuses life Into the half empty veins, ami new vital force into tbo limp an I exhausted nerves. Probably Mistaken. A Frederick, Md., man has an old boiler which he claims belonged to the first boat propelled by steam. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken intern ally, Price 75 ceute Big Warehouse. * The largest tobacco warehouse in the woi Id is a: 1 ouisvillo, Ky., and it will hold about 7,000 hogsheadi. ••How SEitAime!” exclaimed a young gentleman as an angelic creature swept by. he heavenly glow on her cheeks was due 1 • the use of Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. G'>od s use and go >d breeding are fruits that grow on the same bush.
iI'EAJiLVESS in women, that nervous, aching, worn-out feeling, conies to an end with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It restores your strength; it puts new life into you; it brings you back into the world again. It is a powerful general, as well as uterine, tonic I and nervine, especially ' adapted to woman's delicate wants. It regulates I and promotes all the nat--1 ural functions, and builds / up, invigorates, and cures. Creston, Imca.
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Dr. R. V. Pierce: Sir—My wife improved In health gradually from the time she commenced taking “Favorite Prescription” until now. She has been doing her own housework for the past four months. When she began taking it, she was scarcely able to be on her feet, site suffered so from uterine debility. I can heartily recommend it for such cases # FREE Ir”pX*. FACE BLEACH A pprecisling the f act th si thousands of ladies tke U. S. have not used my Face Bleach,on account of price, which is $2 par bottle, and In order that all ie»v give It a fair trial, I “c Will “ n d a Sample Bottle,safely packed, all charges prepaid, cn receipt cf 55c. FA€K BLEACH removw and cures absolutely all freckles, pimples, meth, blackheads, aa’dow. ness, acne, ecuma, wrinkles, or roughness of in, and beautifies the ccivp’.exku. Addreal Mme. A. RUPPERT. Dopt. E. 6 E. 14th St.. N.Y. City. KioDEffmsii^ m ie.tow u, aus 4
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PATENTS. TRADE MARKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentability of Invention. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or How to Get a Patent. Patrick O’Eabbku^ Washington. L>. C. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sykit for Children teething; Buttons the sums, reduces inflammation, allavs pain. cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. WKtHE AU ELSE FAILS. kg Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use time. Sold by druggists. wFW
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