St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 19, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 24 November 1894 — Page 3
Pains in the Back "I had been afflicted for several years with ■what the doctors called Diabetes, “ nc l suf- । sered terribly. The pain in my back was ago- ;
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Mr. John Branston me - my whole life I never met anything that did mo so much good as Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 'Experience teaches a dear school, but fools ■will learn by no othtr.’ 1 was o ice foolish enough to listen to a druggist who claimed to have something superior to Hood’s, an I took another medicine. If I had thiown my dollar in the street I would have been a gainer." John Branston. care of John Greetham, Wellington, Ohio. Hood’s s ^” Cures Hood’s Pills cure Constipat'nn by restor- I Ing tiie peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. Mines of Sn ip. The wonderful n itural soap mines at. ■ Owens’ Lake, California are ace amt- | ed for by ti e following theory x^hich l has been advanced by a well-known! Western scientist: The water of the lake contains a strong solution o b th ! borax and so a. In the water a curi-i j ous spe ies of grdb breed by millions. ; These grabs go through their various ! transformations and finally emerge as short-winged heavy-bodied flies, very, fat and oil . They lie but a few days, dying and falling into the lake in such numbers as to be fre .uently washed ashore in layers more than a foot thick. The oil .’ substance of the dead flies blends with the alkali of the borax and soda, and the result is a layer cf pure soap, c rresponding in thickne s to the drift strata of the dead tiies, a foot d ep of the flies making a layer of soap nearl • an inch thick. These strata, repeated year after year, have f rmed the celes brated “Soap hanks o Owens’ 1 ake,” where a large force of men have been constantly employed for a number of years. • Young dirts btijjer From the same causes which make so many women miserable. This being the case, what is your duty, most loving mother ? You know that irregularity, suspension, or
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table Compound should be given at once. It is the most effective remedy for irregularity or suspended action known to medicine. Twenty years of unparalleled success and 20 thousand women confirm its power over all those dreaded diseases peculiar to women. All druggists have it for you. Accept the truth and be well. The Greatest Medical Discover} 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, ail within, twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for 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. 1 his 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 I feelings at first. 1 No change ui aicwJV. . J _ I the best you can get, and enough or??. c Dose, one tablespoonfuljn water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. §=77=?;==^^^^^^ JF this should I | ... meet the 8 I 8 Ml i OF ANYONE B H s troubled with Dropsy, Bright’s Disease, Seminal Weakness, Gravel, Reten- I] S tion of Urine, Diseases of the < Bladder, Liver or Kidneys. jl They are strongly advised to take a few d I) ' ... doses of . . . U 8 Dr. J. H. McLEAN’S 18 . | LIVER and KIDNEY | J BALM. U Justly celebrated as the standard liver fl L and kidney remedy of America. Jr J SI.OO A BOTTLE SI.OO L’.
HOME AND THE FARM. I I DEPARTMENT MADE UP FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. The Creamery Has Elevated the Standard ! ( of Butter — Wise Words for .Farmers’ ■ Wives—Rotation in Crops—More Subsolling Needed-Agricultural Notes. An Idea as to “Store Butter. It is a fact generally overlooked that even lowa with its senii-w.ekly butter train servii e, ships out less than 40 per cent, of its total manufacture. The oflicial returns show th st fur every pound -ent outside the State much more than a pound is consumed within the State. Now this home market is still too much in the hands of Ilie private dairy-j man. In a large shaieot this State— ! and of everyoth r State the quality of butter consumed at home is still in the d graded slate of the year “before the war.” The creamery has elevated the standaid of shipping butter, has enhanced the price, lias put western butter clear to the top in the general markets but this work has nut taken hold of too , acl as neraHv as H- rhnirm rr in Waterlo •. our people have learned that Putter of standard quality is better for table Use than the hodgeI podge coin mod ity known as “store ! butter,” and consequently the home demand has been enormous and local creameries suffered nothing from the freight blockade last summer, lor the butter was all wanted at home. The fact that any creamery sells at home is proof that the home market is Hilly equal to, or letter, than the distant market. Now every step toward broadening the, home market for creamer, butter is a bene lit to the creameries and to the patrons. There comes up the question of how to do it it is more convenient to hand a customer a ball of dairy butter than to d g out to ill! orders from a tub of creamery butter. It may be well for creamerymen to print enough for this trade and compete against the “ball butter” with lucious creamery butter in tidy, Compact print or “brick ” This his been tried with satisfaction In several * rses: in other cases small jars small enough tor family use have been used, the creamery filling them and Belling them unbroken. As a rule, some merchant in the town should do the retailing.—Creamery Journal. Words for Farmers' Wives. A clever physician once prescribed a new and becoming dress as the best remedy he knew for a nervous, careworn woman, writes Helen Jay in an article devoted entirely to “The Work of a farmer's Wife” in the Ladies’ Home . ourual. History says that a cure was elected. At any i rate, we know that there is much I truth in the saying of the French * a woman is just as old as she appears “'--t- JMUUK «UU OLIOUK IUW IOOK young and strong. There is another way in which the lai mer's w fe mi Jure* herself physically, and that is by drinking so much cold water when doing her work. She becomes overheated in theihot kitchen, baking, ironing, or washing, and goes from | that warm room into her cold dairy, where the temperature is several dcgrees lower, tocool oil for a lew minutes, as she says. While resting there she drinks a glass of cold water and then goes back again to h rw*>ik. She goes from the stove to the cellar without a thought of the risk she is running. This criminal carelessness on her part causes many of the rheui rnatic fevers so preva cut upon our ! farms, and it it does nothing else it rums the finest skin. No .surface can be exposed to such ext ernes without . Injury, an i a face that is first almost blistered with heat and then chilled with a current of cold air is apt to grow wrinkled and coarse, if it is not disfigured by eruptions. Instead of doing so much work in the hot kitchen, the wide, cool piazzas, which as a general thing, run around one side of the farm house, should be utilized for domestic purposes. The ironing and past of the baking can be done here very eariy by using a small oil stove: and the vegetables will be quite as thoroughly prepared for cooking if the housewife sits comfortable in the coolest corn r, instead of wearily bending ever a table m a close room, made almost unendurable by the heat from a large stove. Rotation in Crops. The operations necessary for the cultivation of one kind of crop are preparabio'h^lUT Lq form an excellent Even without the application outuitil.zers, with a perfect knowledge of the chemistry which will supply exactly the missing soil elements H may be possible to produce from the same ground in one season. As a rule, long rooted plants should be followed by those whi h root nearer the surface, and plants cultivated for their seeds should be followed by those cultivated for their foliage. The former exhaust the inorganic matter from the soil to a greater degree than the latter. All experiments should be conducted on this general principle. Countless tons of plant food are shipped from our fertile fields every year; ons crop feeds upon what another may discard or may have supplied. and a diversified system is the only one by which to make farm operations profitable. We should readily iee and appreciate the advantages of rotation. Care of House Palms, A New York women who has kept ler bay-window filled with the same palms for fifteen years, tells the Exening Sun that their long life is onb a matter of proper care. .She has the advantage of electrical light and steam heat, making a better atmosphere for palms than do gas and the furnace, but beyond this it is
nizing in the ex " j treme. Hood’s! Sarsaparilla and i Hood's Pills cured | me. Now I can go ! to church and attend other meet- | ings with pleas- | X ure. I always keep - J Hood's Tills by !
retention, severe head- । aches, waxy complexion, depression, weakness, loss of appetite and intcrest means - ■ trouble.
necessary to keep them moist at the root and out of the cold air. Twice a week she tills the top of each pot with water, once a fortnight, with a flower sprayer, she cleans the leaves, which must drip dry When housed for the winter, near the window for sunlight to reach them, she never allows a draft to blow on the palms, and except on the balmiest days, no * window is opened to dust until they are removed to a place of safety, If in spite cf this care they droop, the r 1 florist is sent for, and if he finds L moisture and drainage good, he will 11 look for worms, winch are a palm’s 1 greatest enemies, but can be cut. out | without great detriment to the plant * ( lean water, an even, warm temperature and sunlight will suffice for health of any house palm.—Country Gentleman More SiibKomn? Needed. There will doubtless be one good result from the severe drought which mod naris of the country have suffeied the past season. It will direct the attention of farmers to the neces^L sity of subsoiling. Even in the dry. est sections rainfall enough comes each season to make the crop if the Waler ean >o huHbuudcd Ulllll LutiP of —ueexb This can be done by uClidking up me num buewu, .«■> w vutiTrtw^- , to hold a greater ouanity of moisture. * This will do no good, however, unless there is outlet beneath for the surplus water to pass away. Stagnant water is death to the roots of most, kinds of vegetable crops. When a field is underdrained one thor ugh subsoiling will keep the oil deep and moist for many years. The frost pen- [ etrates a drained soil, ami this keeps | its particles from running together in ] a solid mass, as soil does when water ’ is allowed to become stagnant in iu ti |fc Making the Ilogs Useful. The old negro who said of the hog: i “He do no work —he just lik gentleman.” ought to see the way that some farmers make even his swineship of service. At Hood Stock Farm, m ar Lowell, the oiher day. we^ saw some of the large Berkshire boars industriously rooting over piles of horse manure thrown into the pens In which they were kept. This is* good for the manure pile. It mixes It thoroughly and makes it ferment more easily without danger of tire-T fanging. But the best service is to the animals. A boar hog should not I c fat. if he is he vs ill be unfit for breeding. The exercise which he gets by rooting over manure piles for i scattered grain is ust what is needed to make him a sure stock getter.— American Cultivator. otes. Sweet potatoes contain a largo proportion of sugar, and are more fattening than corn! The smallest si/e are c |Ual to the best tor stock j A Vermont farmer who raised bls own cow feed, except cotton se d meal, and kept a strict ’ c.i '.vu .’.tv-.'-v; v pA.'. p.julicF'’ In Europe the farmers often spread manure oxer the land to a depth of ■> inches. 1 hey are never afraid of ‘ burning up” the crops with manure, especially when the manure is well rotted and fine. From many careful experiments it has been determined that rhe force necessary to draw a given load, on a good broken stone road, is less than one third of that retired to draw the same load on a common earth load. An unsightly fence lessens the value of a farm by giving it a run-down appearance, Such a fence is not only u>e.ess, but serves as a harboring place for insects, and collects seeds ot weed to be distributed over the farm next sea-on. Beehives should be kept in a dry place and where the temperature will be even. Cold does not kill bees as ■ uiekiy as dampness. They create a lar. e proportion of animal heat in the hive, and should not be in a location that is too warm. The feet of horses need frequent examination. When the feet are sore or are injured in any manner the usefulness of the animal ceases. To preserve the feet ^ome attention is . necessary in keeping the stables dry and clean, and this should not be left entirely to an assistant*. The ( hinese Son ol‘ Heaven. In Pekin is t he residence of a mon- : arch who is still the Son of Heaven to 3a0,0uG,000 human beings, whom a bare score of living foreigners have ( even seen, and who at the end oi the nineteenth century leads an existence befitting the Veiled Prophet of ra-san. He is Vicegerent ox—prisoner s iHC. •> oo 1. and * palace no man is admitted, and the* imperial person and harem are sur- i rounded by a vast body of eunuchs 1 estimated at from 8,000 to 10,000. ‘ When the Emperor goes out nobody ' is allowed on the streets, which are J very likely paved for the occasion, while the houses are barricaded or 1 closed with mats. The ceremonial functions of his life are manifold and engrossing, and hi- education in the native classics is ■ not neglected. Kuang Heu, the present, Emperor, takes a deep interest in everything English, and re- ■ ceives daily lessons in our language from two ( hinese students, who, unlike the Ministers, are allowed to sit ‘ in his presence; but with the sad routine of ins o Ecial life, rig dly prescribed by an adamantine etiquette, and the tempcat ions of the harem, it is unlikely that an Emperor of China can develop force of character or learn lessons < f statecraft. Should a stron? sovereign emancipate himself from tne petrified traditions of the palace, the phantom of imperial power would, it is said, collapse.—• The National Review. Every person interested in scan, dal has been the subject of it.
Tit of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report -ta & j ABSOLUTELY PURE
old | ink New Application. i use/Beamers have for some time carrying petroleum and sian«but it has remained for a man to bring the tank into io kvasses on sb re. Ho intends mnef sweet, sticky stuff in same way that crude oil is • i dss' Or i n £ in biff tanks in his ; । is neede t r shipment, hC kt p imped into barre's ,y a . ”h essuro pump. The molasses is ttgathered from the x arious >Ugar Jtatious and tra .sported iu tank car
A journal says the foundation °*uS£^lste is good flour. The best flour is the cheapest in the^pXPit govs farth* r and works To make a bucket of paste ,u ^s^Bfe^ur pounds of sifted wheat xxuxte^lu”i r in enough lukewarm aUr **Hl-but ivy . -FeeiLpn the baiters >rtio th. Then our in boiling he water briskly until the batter BW€ and has a cooked appe trance. Whi ready to u-o thin down with cold ler until it can b « spread on the par easily.—St. Louis Republic. Yore^erve a Goo I Shaking,
L And chillMl fever will give it if you don t i r I M SO to f ■■■? ; »ors 61 « “ J ~ j ml < । witnpgllsh manulacturers ui iron 1 and all In foreign markets. ' of alites of consumption can, if taken In the cajr stages of the disease, be cured. This a- seem like a bold assertion to those uiiUr only with the means generally »ae for its treatment; as, nasty codliver , an d its filthy emulsions, extract i of malvhiskey. different preparations of bypoptohites and such hkc palliatives. AltJjijh by many believed to be incurahie. UtL is the evidence o£ hundreds of U-XJig to the .fact the* In ell its No* every case, but a large per eases, and we believe, fully ^3 t, eeni. ar*' cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden ' Di-covery, even after the disease i ^jAfogressed so far as to induce repeated I U-Angs from the lungs, severe lingering i ceil with copious expectoration (includitigjbercular matter', great loss of flesh ancßctreme emaciation and weakness. Ih ou doubt that hundreds of such cases repted to us aS cured by " Golden Medicaliscovery ” were genuine cases of that drel and fatal di ase? You need not take ourord for it. They have, in nearly every imdice. been so pronounced by the best au?most experienced home physicians, wh have no interest whatever iu misresesenting them, and who were often stiigly prejudiced and advised against a ial of ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery,” bf who have been forced to confess that
it urpasses. in curative power over this fill malady, all other medicines with xv ch they are acquainted. Nasty codIhr oil and its filthy “emulsions” and natures, had been tried in nearly all these cat. and had either utterly failed to benefit had only seemed to benefit a little for abort time. Extract of malt, whiskey, as various preparations of the hvpophospltes had also been faithfully tried in vain. “he photographs of a large number of tbse cured of consumption, bronchitis, Herring coughs, asthma, chronic nasal ctrirrh and kindred maladies, have been skilfully reproduced in a book of 160 pajes xx-hich will be mailed to you, on recept of address and six cents in stamps. Ysu can then write those cured and learn thir experience. Address for Book. World’s Dispensary StiDiCAL Association. Buffalo, N. Y’.
CUBES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs. Sore Throat, Influenza. Bronchitis, Pneumonia. Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, Headache, Asthma, •^PiCULT BREATHING. v? < 1 vILo 111 fj h Uitfll i aiii >.• *s;i v - • twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading this advertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbbr of water will in a few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn. Nesvousn* ss. Sleeplessness. Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all Internal pains. lucre is not a remedial agent in the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other malario >. bilious and other fevers, aid d by KA i» WAY’S Pl LLS, so Quickly as Kadway’s Ready’ Relief. Fifty cents per bottle, sold by all Druggists. ' RAD WAY & CO.. Mil 1 . YORK. XT AX SHOCKI NG ! ' A mild, conj (3 tinuous current of electricity cures. Get a catalogue by writing THE OWEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. 209 State Street, Chicago. 111. PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and Advice as to Patentab’dty t f Invention Send tor Ln-enters’Guide, or How to Get a Patent. O'Fahkell. Washington. D. C. Mrs. Winslow’s Sootiung Syrup for Children teething; suit ns the gums, reances inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2a cents a bottle.
Zand NEURALGIASZf ®3ftBiHXS[IiHSSSiI®
I | Imperial Granum, as a prepared food, has attained the Acme of I eing a Standa-d Preparation, one of j the Batest and Best Known to the World, I I and it can be truly said that no prepara- I _ I tion offered for sale is more carefully prepared and thoroughly tested, or meets with I a more welcome reception and universal approval, or affords more relief to Invalids. to nursing mothers, infants and children, and aged i ersons. This has been confirmed by thousands of testimonials from Chemists, physicians, beads of families, and the pre-s. At the great World's Fair, Chicago, 1893, Imperial Granum * as granted the highest honors. Medal and Dinlotna, and was rec- I
omniended as a delicate and digestible I nutriment, eadly prepared and suitable I for use under all circumstances, and es- I peclally adapted In its properties for the I nourishment of invalids and children.— I New York Churchman. The "Cab” , English di cipline with the cat^Y--1 s ?>«cat'in the 1 I each State ha; nine tails of leather. • each with a knot and the law sentences the convict to so many lashes 1 upon the bare back, “well laid on," but the sheriff is the judge of what consti- ‘ tutes a proper aying on and his strokes a ! e usually gentle. It i- th* ir repetition that reddens the skin * f the victim an I it seldom happens that a -in-
glo blow is of sufficient force to leave a noticeable mark. A Child Enjoys The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing effe ts of Syiup of Fig- when in need of a laxative, and if the faiher or mother be costive or bilious the most gratifying results follow its use; so that it is the best family remedy known, and • very family should have a bottle on hand. Quite a Sizublo Keg. The dimensions of the celebrated Heidelburg tun have been exceeded by the “Blat er Cask," built for the Blatner Brewing Coin aiy of Munich, which is 1O;‘> feet in diameter and 51 feet deep. At the inauguration ball 2 * couples took part, and at one time . there were •> 0 people, exclusive of waiters, musicians, etc., on the floor of the ca- k. A Good Investment for 1895. Every one appreciates good value. The Youth’s Companion for 1895 offers the largest amount of entertaining and instructive reading for SI. 75, a year’s subscription. The prospectus for the next volume presents an Irresistible array of stories, articles on travel, health, science, anecdotes of famous people, and a great variety of wholesome reading for all the family. To now subscribers The Comp inion will be sent free until January, 1895, and a year from thatdate. Including the Thanksgiving. Christmas and Nexv Year’s Double Holiday Numbers. It comes every week, at a cost of $1.75 a year. Ina Youth's Companion Boston, Mass. Sf. XttCIII.K.i. I I get* for tho enemy's guns that the i Germans are arranging to throw the i li ht first on a mirror and thence on the enemy, thereby concealing its real sou ce. Beware of Olntm-nts for Catarrh that < ontaln Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system vbe entering* through the mucous surfaces. I wtvor be used e coept on prescri] i n* from reputable physicians, as th * damage they "ill do is tenfold to the good you can p< “siidv derive from them. Hall a Catarrh < are. manu acturc l by F. J. Cheuey A Co., Toled . <' , contains no mercury, and is taken internally, a< tia ^ directly upon the blood and mucous surfs es of the system. In bu*ing Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure yon get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio,
by F. J. Cheney A Co. Teetimonials fre*'. Ui'Sold by Druggists, price 750 per bottle. The largest plow in the world is oxvne I by Richard Gird, of San Bernardino county, Cal. This immense sod-turner stands eighteen feet high an i weighs 30,b0 J pounds. It runs by steam. Black Kings under the eyes a id sallow complexion show b.lliousne s This is one of the most disa^reeable of stomach disorders and if allowed to have its own xvay wifi result in great harm. Cure biliousness at once by j using Ripans Tubules. One tabule gives i relief It has been di covered that the weight re ;uired to crush a square inc i of brick varies from l,’_oo to 4.500 : pounds. _ i> The Lake Shore Limited taken rozu^larly on your Eastern trips, will prevent that tired feeling so often experienced by travelers. Leave* Chicago V:XXX p. m.; arrives New York VI:XXX p. in. C. K. Wilber, W. P. A. Can ba taken without shaking. Anatomists say that the average I weight of the circu ating blood of the body is about twenty-eight pounds. Send your full name and address to Dobbins’ Soap Mfg. Co, Philadelphia. Pa . by j cdui~on ’wail-.. WIL B et > f rec °f CGst ’ a I you to its iUH j !tt—— This is worthy it is said that about 10,000 gross of i pens are produce I from a ton of steel. I Instead of Trifling with a Bad ( old I ■ use Dr. D. Jayne’s E .pectorant. which will : loosen the phlegm, subdue inflammation, i i and certainly save your Lungs and Throat I much dangerous wear and tear. ; Not until we have begun to lay up | • treasure in heaven do we sincerely i ■ j want to go there. Only a trial of Piso's Cure for Consump- i tion is needed to convince you that it Is a । good remedy for Coughs, Asthma and ■ Bronchitis. J Look the world honestly in the fa e. j with an equal manly sympa hy for the j great and the small. 1 ' "My dear fellow, site is an angel. How i exquisitely lovely her complexion is. They J say she uses Glenn’s Sulphur Soap” 1 BACCHUS has drowned more men than Neplune.
For Durability,Economy and for General blacking is uneou^lleh Has An annual Sale of 3.000 tons. I ALSO MANUFACTURE THE W WWW®
FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINE, ORTO TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENTIIN BOXES. The ONLY PERFECT PASTE. Morse Bro strop’s. Canton,Ma.ss. ^ I HIGHEST AWARD I ■ "SUPERIOR NUTRITION — 7HE LIFE!' 4 AXEDICINALz Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for Invzluios The-Aged.
An Incomparable Alimeist for the Growth and Protection of INFANTS and C I-I I LD R EM A superior nutritive in continued Fevers, And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases; often in instances of consultation over patients whose digestive organs were reduced to such a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was the only nourishment the stomach would tolerate when LIFE seemed depending on its retention ; — And as a FOOD it would be difficult to conceive of anything more palatable. Sold by DR UG G I STS. Shipping Depot, JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. It is the medicine above all others for catarrh, and is worth its tceight in gold. I can use Ely's Cream Balm with safety and it does all that ebiimrd for it. —B. IF. !fpc rry, Ila rtford,Conn, ELY’S CREAM BALM , Opens and e’eanses the Na»al Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Protects th. Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses ot J aat. and Smell. The Balm is quickly absorbed and give, relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril andisagre^ able. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street, New York. DON’T BE FOOLED. I You want some RTPANS TABULE3. Your druggist’s supply is exhausted. He lias something just as good."
Why does he say this 1 He thinks you a simpleton. He has a right to his opinion. But to express it So plainly Is brash. His opinion may be right, But his statement Is not true. Tell him so! Get what you ask for, r-otbtne! W. L. Dey cl as ' S 3 SHOE NO SQUEAKING $5. C ORDO'ZAN, FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF. M X^S.yFINECAIf&KWK^ O 1 $ 3.5 P FOLICE.3 scleh. A- BoysSohoclShqex L • LADIES • ■ ^.^9^2^75 BesTD 0 ^ 01 ^. SEND FOR CATALOGUE * 'W*L* DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. Yen can save money by wopring ilia W. L. Douglas 83.00 Shoe. i Because, we are the largest manufacturers of i this grade of shoes lutboworld.andguarantee thetw j value by stamping the name and price on tha I bottom, which protect you against high prices and I the middleman s profits. Our shoes equal custom I CP^BATE GLOTHIMIB Sold direct to consumers AT lowest pkicki ! ever before offered. Buy direct from 1mporters and manufactm er«. We ship TKiVH.TGE OF EXAMINATION. We “ ave ' on fro,n ^ to 50 per cent. A tailor ' 53.50. Fall or winter overcoats, t;. H-v/ combination Suits $2.18. semi to-day for FREE mammoth catalog. Address OXFORD MFC.CO.•ClothingßcpLT.ie 344 Wabash Ave.. Chicago, 111. ' FREE FACE SLEfICa Appreciating the fact that thousands of Inai—'P?? of the U. S. have not used my Face Bleach, on acCOUDt ° f prloe » whsch 13 t 2 per bottle, anj In order that all may give it a fair trial, I will send a Sample Bottle, safely packed, all charges prepaid, on receipt of 25c. FACS BLEACH removes and cures absolutely ail Bw frocklei, pimply moth, blackheads, sallow. H acne, ocxerra, wrinkles, or rougbneae of skin, and beautifies the complexion. Addrecg MmP. A. RUPPERT. Oeot. E. 6 E. 14th St.. N. Y. City Sure relief * CTDW t KIDDER’S j SBSSiiS£SS!StE§HS2S3£3^ Mam I . >. t . No. IT —94 WHEN WKIIING TO ADVERTISERS." V ? please suy you saw the advertisement in tills paper. 1 ‘ "cURUifWhtBE ALLELSE FAILS^hT bj Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
