St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 18, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 17 November 1894 — Page 3

eases, or drains upon the system, excesses, or abuses, bad habits, or early vices, are treated through correspondence at their homes, with uniferm success, by the Specialists of the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. A book ~ of 136 large pages, devoted to the ~ consideration of the maladies above - hinted at, may be had, mailed se__curely sealed from observation, in a ik ‘plaz'n envelope, by sending 1o cents In one-cent stamps (for postage on Book), to the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, at the above f . mentioned Hotel. For more than | a quarter of a century, physicians i connected with this widely cele- | brated Institution, have made the | treatment of the delicate diseases | above referred to, their sole study | and practice. Thousands, have con- | sulted them. This vast experience : has naturally resulted in improved | methods and means of cure. E A Young Financier. i A certain city man, in order to im- | press business methods on his son' early in iife, told the youngster that if pe would sece that the gas b 1l was paid before a certain day each quar- l ter, he could have the discount for | himself. | The boy tcok very kindly to the | idea, and captured the discount every | time the bill came in. To his fathers ! surprise, however, the gas bill began | to inemea eat a remarkable rate. He | foumd eme night that his son was burn- | ing gms all over the top of the house | fram 10 o’clock until # the next morn- | lnfi. The youn ster had become a Na- | poleen of finance, and had discovered | the faet that the bigger the bill the bigger the discount | Nothing in Clubs. ’ Ope of the conditions of member- | ship of a New York club is that each | member must give at least one hour a | week to doing some good a: tion. { Sna.m LMER'SP ‘, ¥ €\ R o o g QN 4s‘ ’ | R ) C T ! Rool HE grEAT KIDNEY LIVER ax 2 BRARSER Dissolves &Gravel Gall stene, brick dust in urine, painin urethra, straining after urination, painin the back and hips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. Bright’s Disease | Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Root g cures urinary troubles and kidney difficulties, | Liver Complaint Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, bilious. | ness, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout. ‘ Catarrhot Bladder | Inflammation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling, | frequent calls, pass bleod, mucus or pus. | At Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO Size, | “Invalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. __ DR. KiLMER & Co.. BINGHAMTON, N. o ? = i 9% Sad g & ) | 2% M) | & e, LD, ; © N Lydia | 1 : E. ! = 4+ Pinkham’s | ST 7 e § AL el Vegetable | Q) ;&s\m W Compound | il e ; g CURES Irregularity, j - Buppressed or Painful Menstruations, Weake. | ness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, | Flooding, Nervous i’rostmtion, iieadacho,= General Debility, Kidney Complaints in either sex. Hvery time it will relieve Backache, Faintness, r Extreme Lassitude, “ don’tcare’’ and ““ want to be left alone ”’ feeling, excitability, irrita~ bility, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the *blues.” These are | sure indications of Female Weakness, some dezangement of the Uterus, or : Womb Troubles. i Every woman, married or single, should | own and read “ Woman’s Beauty, Peril, Duty,” an illustrated book of 30 pages, con- | taining important information that every waman should know about herself. We | send it free to any reader of this paper. | All dmg?stl sell the Pinkham medicines. Address in | sonfidence, LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED. Co., LYNN, MABS, | " Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills, 25 cents. | Mrs. “'Al;;lnw’; _é()r\'rxxr.\;;; SyYrup for f‘]xildrn; | teething: sottens the gums, reauces inflammation, | allays pain, eures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. i £ ',-' ‘-’:‘ > 4 s ':3.5 NeZNTOYE el =2OV AT == W S P O B el FOR DURABILITY,ECONOMY AND FOR GENERAL BLACKING IS UNEOUALLED. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3.000 TONS. : WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE | $ RQT AT R Suiasiz stovm o] FQR AN AFTER DINNER'SHINE, ORTO TOQUCH UP SFOTS WITH A CLOTH. %-IAEKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXES. ONLY PERFECT_ PASTE. MOrse Bros,Pror's. CANTON,MASS.

| ! { }REPORT IS A ROAST. OPINION OF THE STRIKE COMI MISSION MADE PUBLIC. | Clear Statement of the Facts and a Thoughtful Review of the Conditions | that Created Them—FPullman Company Severely Criticised—Cleveland Justified. , General Managers Hit. f i The report of the United States Strike !(‘.ommissimwrs appointed by DPresident | Cleveland July 26, 1894, to invosfiig;ne‘

Hypochondrical, despondent, nerv-

- ous, ‘‘tired out” men ~those who suffer from >" backa'che, weariness, loss of en- > ergy, impaired memory, dizzi- l ness, melancholy and! discourage- i ment, the re- | sult of ex- ’ hausting dis- |

| “‘:!’ \:T e | N"\ V| JARROLL D. WRIGHT.

by the President under the provisions of section 6, chapter 1,063, of the laws of the United States passed Oect. 1, 1888, and is composed of Carroll D. Wright, United States Commissioner of Labor; John D. Kernan, of New York: and Nicholas E. Worthington, of Peoria, 111. By its report on the circumstances attending the strike of Pullman ewmployes | and the great strike on the railroads centering in Chicago declared by the Ameri;can Railway Union, together with the recommendations made as a result of its ‘ investigations of these remarkable labor | disturbances, the strike commission has ‘ added a notable and valuable work to I the growing literature dealing with the !pr:wtioal side of the relations between t labor and capital. Tlts showing of tlu-; arrogant and unjust attitude of the Pull- ; ! man corporation toward its employes, of | the illegal and dangerous methods of thoe | l(u‘renoml Managers' Association and u'.'! ' the errors and weakness of the labor or- ; | ganizations opposed to these great aggre- | gations of capital presents in a clear l light the real causes leading to the as- | | tonishing occurrences which culminated ! ! in riot and bloodshed and a general mus- | | ter of the soldiery of the nation and the ! | State in Chicago last July. g ‘ The conditions prevailing in the town | ‘ of Pullman are set forth at some leng‘h, } ' and the conclusion is reached that the |

% “enable the manage- | ment at all times to ' assert with great vigor its assumed ,right to fix wages and rents absolute--Iy, and to repress .that sort of independence which leads to labor organizations and their attempts at mediation, arbitration, strikes, ete.” On the part of the American Railway

Union there is found a failure to guard I against the possibility of disorder and vio- | lence among its members. Such an or- | BaAllzarion, in the opinion of the com- | mission, must oppose all strikes except as a last resort against unbearable )grievam‘es and must advocate conciliation and arbitration; also, through wise leadership, it must aim to secure legal standing and the assistance of wise laws sustained by public opinion. Os the General Managers’ Association, which dealt with the great railroad | strike, the commission “questions wheth- |

&’ 1 I 74 N\ —~, - ,/ ? AR 'f?’//-" 7% {/(;, N\ ; ‘ \.\\ TN RN X \ N | N.E. WORTHINGTON. )

z fusal,” says the report, “of the General ; Managers' Association to recognize and | deal with such a combination of labor as | the American Railway Union seems ar- | rogant and absurd when we consider its | standing before the law, its assumptions g and its past and obviously contemplated | future action.” The reduction of wages at Pullman to offset losses are found to have thrown by fa = the greater burden on labor, though | during the time of reductions no salaries of officers, managers or superintendents | were reduced-—employes who manifestly ! could have sustained a reduction much | better than the workmen in the shops. | The refusal to cut down the high rents ! in Pullman is regarded as unfair and un- | wise, considering the reductions in wages | of those paying the rents. Failure to | make any concession and the discharge | -of members of the committee calling on | the Pullman officials for increased jay precipitated the strike. The orderly «W«awkmmmmmntS 0 O WTTTT T oy { When the great railroad strike was on | the General Managers’ Association, like the Pullman corporation, refused to con- | | sider the matter of arbitration. The | | commission is of the opinion that *‘a dis- | i ferent policy would have prevented the | loss of life and great loss of property and | | wages occasioned by the strike.” The | { commission would have labor organiza- ’, ‘tions recognized and made responsible. | ' While declining to take up the guestion of Government ownership of railways l as a remedy for railway strikes, it points out that if railway combinations continue it will not be long before the Gov- ‘ ernment will have to seriously consider | Government ownership and Government regulation will have to be increased. Finally, the commission’s recommendations are that a permanent Uni- | ted States strike commission be formed, and that power be given to the IFederal courts to enforce the findings of the commission. In the case of public corporations, like railroads, it is the commission’s opinion that there would be no difficulty and no hardship in compelling the acceptance of terms of settlement as agreed on by the commission. Besides this recommendation it is urged on States to establish systems of conciliation and arbitration similar to that in Massachusetts and to render illegal contracts requiring men not to join labor organizations or to leave them as conditions of employment. The commission further urges employers everywhere to recognize labor unions and to treat with them and to raise wages voluntarily when trade conditions will permit.

A bR | MAKES LIFE A BURDEN. The Austrilian Tick a Terror to Travel= ers in the Antipodes. 2 On each of three visits I kave made recently tothe bush I have unwitfingg brought home with me specimens of these pests, says a writer in the Sydney ngvertiser. One was ind :striously boring into the ear of my little daughter before it was noticed, and was half hidden bafure the irritation which it set ug led to its being dislodged A second fastened upon the back of the hand of my wife, and a third fastened on to my hand, and in each case inflanmation had set up as the rédu't of the boring of the i.sect. All these | Specimens were minute black insects, resembling splinters of wood, On Saturday, after returning from a visit to the bush, I discovered an altogether different specimen of the tick, ' which had commenced operations upon g\y head and at the back of m, ear. This fellow h?l 8o firmly att:ched himself to my skin that it was necessary to use force to remove him. i{e was of a light brown, was of the shape and about the same size as the common house bug, and his le?s were | armed with barbs, which fully accounted for the tenacity which he po= sessed. _ i I narrate my experiences for the sake ! of putting visitors, and especially children, upon their guard against the ven- | omous tick,§-0 that at the first indication of tbe peculiar irritation it sets up the insect may be dislodged. I make it a rule to have in a handy place a pair of twee ers and a phial of common turpentine. With the oil I saturate the “sec'ion” which has been taken up by thetick—turpentine destroys the tick and is an antidote to the venom—- | and the tweezers I use to drag out the | trespasser. Should a dog be attacked | by ticks. he sometimes suffers from ! paralysis of the part attacked by the insects. i Pernicious Literature, | The “Penny Dreadful”is not un- | known, as it seems, in Germany, where | it bears the characteristic title of | ““hudder Romance.” It is not sold in | the shoeps, but is carried about from | street to strect and village to village t;by an army of col orteurs. The Ber- | lin Tagliche Rundschau asserts that | there are no fewer than “41,000 ‘Shud- | der Romance’ colporteurs,” who earn { their bread by the sale of the weekly | numbers of these novels in Cermany | and Austria. It estimates the regular | subscribers at about 20,000,000, These [ novels of crime and horrer are not g complete in one number, like those in | our comparati.ely innocent penny nov- | elettes, but usually run to about 159 | weekly numbers, and rarsly cenclude f in less space than 100 numbers, | |e e T l To “Suffer and Be Strong”— | In other words, to exhibit fortitude when en- } during bodily pain, is, of course, pralse- | worthy, but sufferers from rheumatism wounld | undoubtedly forego the praise which the exerl cise of this Spartan virtue calls forth, to ob- | tain prompt and easy relief. It is at their very i threshold in the shape of Hostetter's Stomach | Bitters, which arrests this formidable disease at the outset, and acts as an efficient anodyne l upon the afflicted nervous system. Take time ’ by the forelock if you Teel rheumatic twinges, | and give them a quieiude at once. Rheuma- | *lem {u. reader, you may perhaps not be aware, liable to attack the heart. Many & man and woman with a heart thus attacked has promptly “shufiied off this mortal coil.” The Bitters is also an excellent remedy for kidney trouble, malaria, constipation, debility, neuraigis, ’ sleeplessness, and dyspepsia. | Street Car Ambulances. The St. Louis authorities have adopted a plan of conveying patients from the dispensar, to the city hospita! by means of an electric railway ambulance. A street car with electriec motor attachments has been fitted up as an ambulance. It is intended to run the car to all parts of the city in response to ambulance calls. The car will be permitted to make an average speed of twelve miles an heur. - Brare ov Onlo, Crry oF ToLEDO, | ; Lucas CounTy, g Fraxyk J. CHENEY makes oath that he i{s the senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHRNEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State afaresald, and that said firmy will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every casa of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CaTARRH CURE. j FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to befors me and subscribed in my presence, this tth day of December, A. D, 1836, ~ A, W. GLEASON, J‘ SEAL, ; Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure {s taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimounials, free, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O, | A@~Sold by druggists, 75¢. | What Is In 1t? { Abner Dorsett, a negro living in Hickory Mountain township, North Carolina, has a head which measures | thirty-two inches in circumference. | i Harvest Excursions. i On November 20, December 4 and 18 the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway will sell tickets at half rates (plas £2.00) for the round trip to points south of Boonville, in Missouri, and to all poiuts in Kansas and Texas Limit 20 days for return: stopover privileres allowed. For further information address H. A. Cherrier, Room | 12, The Rookery, Chicago. liL | | _Arcric explorers who have found ' themselves in the midst of an auroraT describe iv as producing a cooiingy prickly sensation and a very exhilarating efiect. | With Emphasis we say that Ripans Tabules, the best and standard remedy for stomach and liver troubles, will cnre your headache or billous attack. One tabulegives relief. SEXD your full name and address to Dobbins’ soap Mfg. Co., Philadelphia. Pa.. by return mail, and get, free of all cost, a coupon worth several dollars, if used by you to its full advantage. Don’t delay. | This {s worthy attention. ** | It is alleged that in the Ukwine, in Rus:ia, women do all the courting, and propo-e to the men they desire to | marry. | 1T IS WELL TO GET CLEAR OGF A CQLD the first week, but it is much better and safer to rid yourself of it the first forty-eizht hours —the proper remedy for the purpose | being Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant. | SOME people seem to stop being religious the moment they can’t have their own way. i SHR was a dear, sweet girl, with a complexion of angelic loveliness, such as all young ladies possess who use Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. | IF you want your life to be a success, never take a stand against the truth. ; P 180’8 Cure for Consumption cured a case of Pneumonia after the family doct r gave up all hope. —M. F. McDowes, Conowingo, Md. ONE ton of coal yields 10,000 feet of gas.

all matters relating | to the famous Chicago strike has been submitted to the President. The re- ’ port is a voluminous | document of fifty- | three pages and is | devoted largely to | the findings of fact and the conclusions and recommendations of the commission. This commis- . sion was appointed

X 7" 72N i : | N L (\ | N7 ¢ N : J?l{%@D-KEBNAS..I

R T P T A NG JNCPm: e, er any legal authori- | ty, statutory or oth- | erwise, can be found to justify some of! the features of the association,” whivh; has all the effects of | a pool, the exten- | sion of whose pow- | er would be danger- l ' ous to the people, | and would lead to ! . the sericus consid- | eration of Gnveru-! ment ownership of | * railroads. “The re- |

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~ Hard Tax to Collect. | The Massachusetts tax assessors are 1 having difficu ty in their efforts to as- | se3s the tax on bicycles provided f ri by a recent law of that State. They | generally report that they have been able to get hold of har-.]l‘y half the wheels in u-e, and in some p'a escould not have made even that showing had it mot been for the wheelman’s directories, published before the tax law was passed. Many of the wheels a e owred by minors, whose properiy to the value of SI,OOO can le exempted, The Massachusetts assessors had a similar'y bothersome task some years ago in the taxation of hens, of whi h the | egislature subsequently relieved them, ————— ——————————————————————————— I Bibkles in a Blaze. ] The American Bible Society has suffered a heavy loss by the burning of the house in Yokohama, Japan, used as & depository for Bibles. The entire stock of boo s and sheets was much inj red by fire and wa‘er, bit the plates were fortunately stored elsewhere and thus are uninjired. The financial loss is covered by ins ran e, but there will inevitably be considerable delay in getting out new editions.

THE. . ; ) . $1.75 a Year. e .3 OV IH & Comes Every Week. Ly i For all the Family. f COMPANION mo y @ The Volume for 1895 promises special attractions to its readers. Full Prospectus, aanouncing ! Authors and Articles engaged for the next year, with Sample Copies, seat Free. ' Popular Arti opular Articles. Queen Victoria as a Mother, Describing the Royval Household, by Lady Jeune. What Can be Done for Consumptives, By a Pupil of Dr. Koch, Dr. Harold Ernst. Charles Dickens as His Children Knew Him, Reminiscences by His Son and Namesake. The Story of My First Voyage, By the Famous Writer of Sea Stories, W. Clark Russell. A Visit to Korean Cloisters, Experiences in this Interesting Country, The Hon. George Curzon, M.P. How Uncle Sam Collects the Tariff, A Description of the Work of the Custom-House, by Geo. J. Monson, And many others of Equal Value and Interest. . . Favorite Features for 1895. Eight Serial Storles, 200 Original Poems, Household Articles, 100 Adventure Stories, Opportunities for Boys, Weekk Health Articles, Weekly Editorials, The Best Illustrations, Charming Children’s Page, More than Two Thousand Articles of Miscellany, Anecdote, Humor, Adventure, Science. Double Holiday Numbers at Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's and Easter, Free to Each Subscriber. TH ls FREE TO JANUARY 1, 1895. WITH : New Subscribers who will cut out this slip and send it with name and address and %1.75 at once, will receive every issue of The Com- $ SLI P Yani‘np from the time the subscription is received to January 1, 1895, 175 "REE, and the paper for a full year from that date. 43 r Address THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.

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Worn by a Woman. Russia's Croess of St. George is given only so: bravery on the field of battle, but the order has one woman member, the ex (Jueen of Naples, who won it by her gallant defense of Gaeta, the last stronghold of the Bo.urbons in Italy. Reduced Rates. To Waco, Texas, for the Waco Cotton Palace. The Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ruilway Company will make a one fare ra e for the round trip. Tickets on sale November 13, 20 and 27, good to return until December & See your local ticket agent for particulars or address H A Cherrier, Room 12, The Kookery, Chicago, liiinols, CZAR ALEXANDER IIT. reigned for nearly fourteen vears, whieh, since the beginning of the seventeenth century, is the average length of a Russian reign.

ST. JACOBS OIL.

WALTER BAKER & GO, "PURE, HICH GRADE. ‘;2 COCOAS AND. CHOCOLATES A £On this Continent, have £ HIGHEST AWARDS ! %*\ Industrial and Food i (14N EXPOSITIONS i | 55 Europs and America. e

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