St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 23, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 22 December 1894 — Page 3

e—— latense Headaches i “For four years I have been a constant sufferer. My head ached from morning till night. After trying everythiog I could think of, the

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weight of my hair was the cause of my trou- ’ ble, and I had it cut off, but this gave me no relief. heading about a lady similarly afflicted who was cured by Hood’'s Sarsaparilla, I began i to take it. Before I had taken cne bottle I ' P Qarsd Hood's*==Cures ‘ felt greatly improved, and at the end of thres bottles was entirely well. I now weigh 240 pounds, which is a gain of ten pounds in the last three months.” MRS. MARY A. WHITE, Franklin, Indiana. Get only HOOD'S. Hood’s Pilis do not weaken, but aid digestion and tone the stomach. Try them. 25c. S e—- % Beware the Street Car Strap. . A Pittsburger went to his physician -a few days ago complaining of a dull ~ ache in his left arm. He had never had rheumatism, but thought his pain must come from that malady. After aescribing it, the doctor said: “You ride to and from your office in the c&ble car, ' don’t you?’ “Yes.” “You seldom get a seat?’ “True enough.” “You have formed the habit or holding to the strap with your left hand?” “Since you mention it, I know that is so, though I had not thought of it.” *That is the cause of the pain you feel. For an hour a day, more or less, vour left arm is held in an unnatural upraised position, and it has begun to tell upon you, You can relieve the ache with this ointment which I shall give you, but a cure can only be effected by ceasing to support yourself by hanging to a strap.”—New York Sun. |

¢My Siclk Sisters, “ Let me tell you something. “For years I have been almost a constant sufferer from female trouble in all its dreadful forms : — “Shooting pains all over my

et Rt | f %‘&t o 3 B, (T o ¥ iy 13 > £l MRS. HARRIET WAMPLER

man{rdoctors in different parts of the U.S, but Lydia E. Pinklam's Vegetable Com{wuna’ has done more ~ for me than all the doctors. === feel it my duty to tell you these facts that you also may be cured. My heart is full of gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham.” — Mrs. Harriet Wampler, 507 Kasota Block, Minneapolis, Minn. Mrs. Pinkham’s Compound is our one unfailing remedy. The Greatest Medical Discovery ’ of the Age. . KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, ; i DONALD KEMKEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., | Has discovered in one of our common | fiasture weeds a remedy that cures every ! ind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula | . down toa common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred | cases, and never failed exceptin 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 for book. | A benefit in, always experienced from | the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is war- | ranted when the right quantity is taken, | When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing | througli them; the same with the Liver or | Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being ; stopped, and always disappears in a weei | after taking it. Read the label. } If the stemach 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 tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. " DIRECTIONS for using 53 o] CREAM EALM.— Apply gfm BAUA o | ey a moment draw a r:’vfiu,l 6&4\;* - kbc/‘“;:!.// ’ breath through the nose. f% Q\'\‘"/’;‘, Use three times a day, as- e Wi | tere m:nls |;)lr.~_fsrt‘red,l and Bt ‘\C(QT‘?‘E_; { before retiring. Py \ ELY’S CREARM BALM | Opens and c'eanses the Nasal Passag:s, Allays Pain | and Inflammation, Hoals the Sores, Protects tha | Membrane trom Colds, Restores the Sen<es of | aste { and Smeli. The Balm i 8 quick:y absoibed and gives | reiief at once, i A particle 1 applied into each nostril and is agres- ‘ able. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. i ELY BROT HE)&S‘__AH‘} Warren Strect, New ‘Yv‘rkm { _:‘mxmsqgegnfle:&grrmu. : KIDUER'@ F};’ESTiLLE&{:&?:;??.CIS:};;-N'.&o.. ] SR T e larlestown, Mass | 2B S AT U g ) R s 8T 'é?:a);a‘.él;}" N A ] £LN e~y | B T s N | NT e e s | e T N N e | FOR DURABILITY,ECONOMY AND FOR | GENERAL BLACKING IS UNEQUALLED. ' HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3.000 TONS. WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE 1 | IR STOUEDOISH| m’%@ ;3o ;'K .‘3’\;'\4;{ ;*.v}l- i FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINE,ORTO' | TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH. %}EKES NO DUST, IN 5&10 CENT TiN BOXES. ONLY PERFECT PASTE. MOrse Bros,ProP’s. CANTON,MASS.

O S R D B A Al ] DEBS GOES TO JAIL. RAILWAY UNIDON OFFICERS ARE GUILTY OF CONTEMPT. Leader Sentenced to Six and His Associates to Three Months — Judge Woods Says the Defendants Violated the Injunction Issued Last Summer. May Take an Appeal, Judge Woods, in the Circunit Court of the United States, at Chicago, found all the respondents in the contempt proceedings instituted by the IFederal Government and the receivers of the Santa Fe Railroad Company against leading officers of the American Railway Union guilty as }clmrged and entered the following sentences: | Eugene V. Debs, president, six months in the county jail. ‘ George W. loward, vice president, ; three months in the county jail. | Sylvester Keliher, secretary, three | months in the county jail. AN R \ \\ Y X “ WA '/ “ « i » : ;z,f , S ' k R & « i d = s %/‘: > S , A- /I.‘ ‘e’ ) # // W R / /o—’ / g OF / o Mz EUGENE V. DEBS. L. W. Rogers, editor of official organ and director, three menths in the county jail. M. J. Elliott, director, three months in the county jail. James Hogan, director, three months in the county jail. | L. M. Goodwin, director, three months BALo v . e

only thing that gave me any relief was to keep my head bound with a cloth to keep the air from satriking it. The nasal passages of my head and my throat were very sore and gave me intense lpaln, expectorating much corrupt matter. I was told that the

in the county jail. | John MecVean, member, sentence suspended. By agreement of counsel the eourt ( granted the convicted managers of lnstl summer's great strike ten days before the g sentences should be executed. In the | meantime the attorneys for the rospun»f dents will prepare for carrying the case | up to the Supreme Court of the United : States, by appeal, if possible, or by habeas ; corpus. The latter course will probably | be pursued. ! To hear Judge Wood deliver his opinion | the court-room on the fourth floor of the ! Llonadnock Building was filled with |

body, sick headache, spinal weakness, faintness, dizziness, depression, and everything that was horrid. “] tried

E—_— [ DR ] "‘?"-',’:‘fly' i W’P" P 4 %‘“l\‘ ‘\ 7 R N GEO. W. HOWARD.

court. On the bench with Judge Woods sat Judge Jenkins. Judge Woods read but a small portion of his exhaustive opinion, which covers 83 pages of typewritten manuseript and contains more than 25,000 words, It required more than two hours for him to | read the opinion minus the omissions. In | brief the decision finds the defendants! f guilty of contempt in conspiring to hinder : and prevent the transmission of United | States mails and interstate commerce. | Mr. Debs is regarded as the ringleader | and is more heavily punished. The acts! of the defendauts are characterized as a | “willful disebedience of the injunctions issued by the covrt.” | This is the concluding chapter for the | time being at least in the history of the | great railroad strike of last summer. 3 It is not likely that Debs and his asso- | ciates were either unprepared for the sen- | tence passed upon them or were inelined to regard it as severe. When an injune- | - tion was issued through the United States ' courts last summer restraining the lead- } ers of the strike from interference with | interstate commerce and that injunction was not oheved, the subsequent move in- | - volving the arrest of the strike leaders for | - contempt of court was an outcome easily | foreseen both by the public and by the | strikers themiselves. "; | It is in his decision as to certain! | weighty points involved that Judge | l Woods' ruling will be most likely to create | | discussion. The Judge's lengthy presen- | tation of the case revolves upon two cen- | tral topies—the validity of the injunection | ~and the actual culpability of the de-| fendants in the violation of the injunction ‘ issued against them. As to the v:xlidityi of the injunction Judge Woods defines the | interruption of interstate commerce as clearly within the jurisdiction of a I'ederal Circuit Court. The acts of the de-| fendants he defines as unlawful, and the | opponents of “government by injunction | | Wil QUUOLLIEss Cu.d Yaraty acongion to e ] quire why, if the acts were unlawtul, tng | positive statutory remedy for the redress | of those acts of lawlessness should nnt% have been employed instead of the instru- | }mnnt of the injunction. The principle | that an injunetion cannot be brought in | ) restraint of an act already declared crim- | inal by law is one that appears again in% i this connection, as it has throughout the i late labor troubles, and it takes an addi- | ' ional emphasis from Judge Woods' care- | l ful iteration that the same act may con- | stitute both a contempt and a crime, and | that both are punishable separately. [ The defendants did not appear particu- | larly crushed by the punishment. Debs | bowed his tall, gaunt form and whis- 1 pered a few words to his sister, who sat near, and they both laughed heartily. It is thought that Charles E. Wise, of Delphi, Ind., who has been missing since | Aug. 29, was at Clarksville, Mo., two | days after that for his money. A I)¢)|b" found at that time has been partly iden- | tified as his, and the corpse will be ex- | humed to make the identification more ! complete. l While on a drunken stampede through ] l the town of Maxey, Ga., Linn and Harry | Williams, Riordan and Monecrief fell outl over some old matter of difference. The ! Williams boys were pitted against the other two and shot them dead.. f

\ INSECT SECRET'OK&»?@; The Great Vesicating Power of Some Parts of the Blister Beetle. .| The strongly vesicating power of | certain parts of the apparatus of the Dlister beetle of course suggested that the function of cantharidin in the . | economy of the insect might be con .| ed in some way with the reproductive || process, says Knowledge. But that such Is not necessarily the case evidently follows from the faet @ Insect possesses the property to a greats er or less degree in all its cluding those In whieh it is sexu immature. Even the eggs are posPR sessed of ‘the Dlistering power, thou this perhaps is 0o more than might be expected, since the ovaries are strongly impregnated with cantharidin, o In 1883 Beauregard took a portion o a freshly lald hatch of eggs, and, working them up into a paste with a little water, applied the little plaster so formed to his arm. After four hours the smarting produced was sufficiently intense to lezd him to stop the experiment. He therefore removed the plaster, and a few minutes after an enop. mous blister appeared on the spot,: attesting the strong vesicating prope of the freshly laid eggs. i In the larvae the property found to be much less intense. Jen larvae, several days old, were crushed Sy ami o i and made into a plaster, which was¥ applied as before. Even after eight hwurs nothing more than a considera- | ble inflammation was developed, and | no blister appeared. When, however, a larger application of the crushed made, a blister was produced after the lapse of the same time. ~ > Te A WOMAN'S HEART. ONE DISEASE THAT BAFFLES ! THE PHYSICIAN. | Tia Story of a Woman Who Suffered | forNin€ Years—How She ‘Was Cured. ! (From the Newark, N. J., Evening News.) ' Valvular disease of the heart has al- | wars been considered incarable. The sols | lowing interview, therefore, will interest | the medical profession, since it deseribes the suceessful use of a new troumwnt'lor this disease, The Qnm-m is Mrs. Geo, | Archer, of Clifton, N. J,, and this publi. | eation by the News is the first mention of | the case made by any xwwspns‘m. All { physicians consulted pronounced the pa- | tient suffering with valvular disease of | the heart, and treated her swithout the | slizhtest relief. - Mrs. Archer said: “I { could not walk across the floor; neither { could 1 go up stairs without stopping to ! [ let the {f\in in my chest and left arm { cease, felt an awful constriction about i my arm and chest as thongh I were tied | with ropes. Then there was a terrible | hoise at my right ear, like the labored | ’ breathing of some great animal. 1 have ; | often turned expecting to see some creai ture at my side. i { “Last July,” continued Mrs. Archer, “I i | was at Springfield, Mass., visiting, and | . my moether showed me an aceonnt in the ; . Springtield Examiner, telling of the won. | | derful cures effected by the use of Dr.§ - Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. My | - mother urged me to try the pills, and on | '.\m'\-miwr. 20th last 1 bought a box and began taking them, and I Lave been takCing them ever sinoe, except for n short in. ; terval., The first box did not sews $0 Len-, - efit me, but 1 persevered, encournged J p the requests otm:{sku#gg“ Astor hegtil- - ning on the secoud LOX, ¥my awonder, the noise at my right sar coused en ely. I 8 kept rulrht on, and the distress tha® T asd |7 to feel in my chest and arm graduaily dis- § appeared. The blood has returned to my | face, lips and ears, which werc entirely | dv\’pid of color, and 1 feel well and strong | again, { “My son, too, had heen troubled with § fns!ritjs. and I induced him to try lhni ink Pills, with great benefit. 1 feel that ! everybady ought to know of my wonder- g lul cure, and 1 bLloss God that | !un‘ni found something that has given me this | great relief.” i Dr. Willinms® Pink Pills are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all fnmm'n{; weakness arising from.a watery condition { of tho blood or shattered nerves, two | fruitful causes of most every il that flesh i is heir to. These pills are also a specifie for the troubles peculiar to females, sneh % as suppressions, all forms of wenknoss, | chronic constipation, bearing down paing, | ete, and in the case of men will Kive ! speedy relief and effect o permanent cure | in all cases arising from mental worry, | overwork, or excesses of whatever na- ! ture. The pills are sold by all dealers, or | will be sent post paid on rec ipt of {H"it‘t‘,s (D 0 cents a box, or 6 boxes for 2501 they are never seld in bulk, or by the 100) ‘ by addressing Dr. Williams’ Mediciue Compauny, Schenectady, N. Y. i : i The Lucky Nickel Has Begun \\'l‘“.; IF'ortune has been showering heri favors upon the family of Ameos Miller, I of Whitneyville, recently, and they i | claim it is all due to a nickel. The day | on which Mr. Miller left home to go to sea he gave his wife a nickel to ln-ns.-i ure up for luck for the family, and this ! Is the result in one short week: H!s% eldest daughter has been engaged to teach school, the next one was v:l!led' to a good situation, a Japanese hen! hatehied,a brood of chicks which flreg; full of fight, someone shot the family | cat, and the vessel in which Mr. Miller | - sailed arrived in Salem one hour ahead{ of the storm which split another vessell. whisch aniled at the same timo # ' stem to stern.—hennvévee suarsns - ®IOO Reward, SIOO. i | The readers of this paper will be gleased' to learn that there is at least one dreaded ! diseasa that science has been able to ecure.| in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. | Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive ecure | | known to the medical fraternity., Catarrh | . being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment, Hall's Catarrh Cure {g taken internally, acting directly upon tha blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thoreby destroying the foundation of the disexse, and giving the patient strensth by building up tha | constitution and assisting nature in é‘oi its | . work., The proprietors have so much fn}ltfix in its curative powers that they offer One Hundreq | Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, Send | for list of testimonials, 4 Addr 33, F.J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0, ! gasold by Druggists, Tse, : Appalling. A Irench statistician says that the number of men and women in I“I‘:lflce; is more nearly equal than in any ot i country of the world, there being only J 1,007 women to 1,000 men. In Switzar: | | land there are 1,064 men to 1,000 wom: | en, and in Greece only 963. The con ditions in Hong Kong, according te this authority, are “appalling,” therh being only 366 women to 1,000 men, & That the new E;iscopal hymnal dig{| . appoints twenty where it pleases tog| | cLurchmen. 18 |

prominent ritizmm,! lawyers, friends m" the defendants, and two women, one of them a sister of Mr. :‘ Debs. All. of the| counsel in the (‘aso,! save Mr. Miller furi tbe Santa e re-| ceivers, and Mr, Ir-; vin for the respondents, were present. ‘ vacept fi irector Goodwin, were in

| TR F U TAU BT FHURITF LI ’ 1§ IN all receipts for cooking | o requiring a leavening agent | [® the ROYAL BAKING | ,} L TOWDIR because it is an I ‘f) absolutely pure cream of tartar | : ! < powder and of 33 per cent. | : g 3 greater leavening strength than | other powders, will give the 3 & best results. It will make the food lighter, sweeter, of finer l @ flavor and more wholesome. ‘} ’ P ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. W ere RN R BRI

| “It is not often a man is a witness {0 burning streets in a town, but I had {that pleasure a few days ago,” said . {'W. Douglass, of El Paso. “The citi- { %ens of the villageof Las Cruces, N. M., j&re in the habit of grading their streets | with the accumulations of barnyards. é ‘hey had done this till the sand, (dust, and manure had become thorF hly mixed, the manure predomin- | ating. It seldom rains in that part of | the country, and the manure was Jry (a8 powder. From some cause it caught fire In the western part of the vil- : @ just as one of New Mexico's | typical sandstorms was rising. The End soon became a strong gale and f fire spread rapidly. In less than iwenty minutes the whirling wind had earried the fire Into all parts of the main streets which had been graded with stable stuff. Dense clouds of smoke rolled over the buildings and out ou the plains. The whole heavens | were darkened, and it was a grand sight to see great columns of smoke. fire, sand, and dust surging, whirling, and darting away toward the mountains. Had the town not been built of mud it would certainly have been destroyed. The storm swent the streets of all barnyard grading material, and the Las Cruees villagers will have to re grade as material accumulates.”—Bt, Louis Globe Democrat, [ ilitary Forces of European Powers l ~ln his answer to some eriticisms adglressed him by some deputies at the pISER sfttlugs of the Vienna delega‘Vil, the Minister of War of Austria Rilipared the military forces of that gL e with those of other powers 1 ! o me feak " Mows: The peace footing oF the army ' 8, In Germany, 554,452 men, or 11 per | ent. of the population; in France, | 000 men, or wore than 13 per cent.; | B Htaly, 275,000 men, or more than ‘.Di per cent. o Russia, 207000 men, m'! pearly O per cent.; in Austro-Hungary, | 42,000 men, or 8 per cent. of the popu 1 lation. The different war budgets were | In 1883: Germauny, $120,000.000, or 10 | per cent. of the whole budget of the | gtate; Haly, $50,000,000, or 11 per cont.; |§ Rassia, $140,000,000, or 24 per cent.; | France, $130000,000, or 18 per cent.; | Austro-Hungary, only STSOO,OOO, or ; 14 per cent. of the whole budzet of the | empire. Haops Springs Eternal In the buman breast. Despite repea’ ed disappointments, the divine spark rekindles after each. Thongh there may not be a eflver lining to every cloud, the vepors which obscure the aky oft walt aside and disclose the full splen- i «for of the noonday sun. Thua is hope justi- | fled. Invallds who seek the aid from Hostet- | ter's Stomach Bitters in the hope o something , betler than a mere modifleation of the evils % from which they suffer, will find *2at it justi- | fies their expectation. Chills an tever, rheu- i matism, dyspepsia, liver and kidreey troable, | rervousness and debliity are thoroughly, not ! parily, remedied by the Dittera. Loss of flesh, ; appetite. and sleep is counterscted by this | helpful tonic as by no other medicinal agent and to the o'd. infirm, and convalescent it l affords speedily appreciable lLenefit. A wine- ! glasaful three times a day. Seals, Young seals do not know how to gwim. They have to become gradually { accustomed to the water, either by en- | tering it to paddle about of themselves or by being carried into it in the moth- ! e=ig jaws. They have great fear of the f waves that break into foam, and, as ’&‘?::. they see one approaching, they tea o flight in terror, and do not turn aroun il they have ascended to a very m the sea. At the end of fifty or sixty daysthey-uuite | in small bands and form a school of na- | tation. Tobacco the Universa! Plant. The tobacco plant has become thoroughly naturalized in every part of the world, and in many places of Asia and Africa has become so completely domesticated that several writers have contended that it is aboriginal in one or the other of those continents. In Excess. An act wras passed in the reign of I3d;s_;ard 1111. enjoining carters, ploughmen and farm laborers generally not to eat or drink to excess.

. SHY. JACOIESS OXia SRI pnre Ly Ie . RUS o LUREY | 131 IY To make vou EASEEEE ——— B W REEW WELL ACAIN OF PAINS RHEUMATIC, NEURALGIC, LUMBAGIC AND SCIATIC. 1

e ——————————————————————— Sea Aiv va. Living Skeletons. | Maecdonald Gordon, of Healey, Australia, weighed but thirty-four pounds, although six feet in height and broad in proportion. Some London speculators heard of the freak and resolved to | put the “bloomin’ living skeleton” on exhibition in the British capital. They sent a man to the Autipodes to bring the skinny Mac at any reasonable figure, but when he arrived they were on the point of arresting the agent for fraud—the “living skeleton™ weighed 141 pounds! The sea air and change of food had ruined the speculation.— St. Louis Republie. e e The Modern Mother Has found that her little ones are improved more by the pleasant laxative, Syrup of Figs, when in need of the laxative effect of a gentle remedy, than by any other, and that it is more acceptabl: to them. Children enjoy it, and it benefits ttom. The true remedy, Syrup of Fiys, is manufactured by the Calie fornia Fig Syrup Co. only. Knows the Bible by Heart. There is now at La Rochelle, France, an old man of the name of Jules Zostot, who possesses a marvelous memory. He knows by heart all the verses in the Bible. You can ask him at random any of these verses, no matter if it begins with a sentence or is a continuation of the preceding verse--his memory Is never defective—and he will recite the lines. Some members of the La Rochelle synod have eaused him to mo with success through a most diflienlt experiment on the subject. A Harp Covan distresses the patient and racks both Lengs and nm:&- ‘?:- J‘J& e o FSRR R ok the | §f P otennnn= and Bronechlisl organa i ! IT is not what you put into your| pocket. but what you take out, that . will make you rich. ! | The Average Man l ? whe suffers from headaches and hillousness | ve=ds a medicine to keop his stomach and | | iiver in good working order. For such peo- ! | pte lipans Tabules fill the bilL Onc tabule i | gives rellef ’ E That even those with defective sight can see ' business is improving.” | ' A PEARL-LIKE purity of color, closely { resembling the enchantment of early twi- ‘ { light: thus was her complexion made ra- : f diant by Glean's Sulpbur Soap '

| e i—. . S —— bL AN S— £ T S ST f n | \ DO YOU EXPECT i s 10 Become a Mother? | \ ~%i Ry A If so, then permit us to D oo 0 ItWA say that Dr. Pierce's | o BEIMER, W Favorite Prescrip- i \} e T N tion is indeed, { 5 - ~»/ ‘\ a true : | ~ ;;‘ i/ [ >4 “ Mother's Priend,” | il /‘..-‘\«:?"), } : ll\ FOR IT MAKES | I N R ,L’\?{ :Childbirth Easy | 1 e c?\};i\i by preparing the : e~ gystem for parturi- | tion, thus assisting Nature and shortening | ‘‘Labor.” The painful ordeal of childbirth 1 is robbed of its terrors, and the dangers | thereof greatly lessened, to both motherand | child. The period of confinement is also | greatly shortened, the mother strengthened | and built up, and an abundant secretion of | nourishment for the child promoted. ' 1 Send 10 cents fora large Bock (168 pages), . giving all particulars. Address, WoRrLD'S | DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 663 i Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. | PAINLESS CHILDBIRTH. | Mrs. FRED HUNT, of Glenville, N. V., | says: ‘I read about Dr. Pierce’s Fa- | vorite Prescription being so good for a wo- | man with child, so I o , | got two bottles last ASN ; September, and De- (D Ao TR I - cember 13th I had a FASSFESE N 2, twelve ‘g%uud Daby X 8 S Y girl. en I was W : confined I was not QEgr ; sick in any way. 1 HE& o ! did not suffer any ) ) | pain, and when the 63 : ‘. ! child was born I walk- . < ’: | ed into another room BN e P and weant to bed. I (BSEEEEANEE SR, . N L IANN A kecep your Extract of QU= _4\ i, Smart-Weed on hand \J\%‘: Y‘* all the time. It was ‘ \'"‘v_ o o very cold weather — : and our room was MRs. HUNT. | very cold but I did not take any cold, and | ' never had any after-pain or any other pain. | It was all due to God and Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and Compound Extract ot(] Smart-Weed. This is the eighth living child and the largest of them all. I suffered everything that flesh could suffer with the other babies. I always had a docter and then he could not help me very much, but this time my mother and my husband were alone with me. My baby was only seven days old when I got up and dressed and left my room and stayed up all day.”’ Mrs. Winslow’s SooTHING SYRUP for Children ‘cething; sottens the gums, reauces intlammation, «llays pain, cures wlmf colic. 25 centa a bottle. !

M Going to California? i The Burlington Route is the only rafle Way running &personally conducted” Exe' cursions via Denver to Colorado Springs, salt Lake, Ogden, facramento, fan Frane cisco, Stockton, Merced, Fresno, Bakeps—field and Los Angeles at the lowest rates Pullman tourist sleeping car through withe out change. c Leave Chicazo every Wednesday. Write or call on T. A Grady, Excursion Manager, 211 Clark st., Chicago. Roman Dudes of Old. Roman gentlemen wore a gold or fvory crescent in their shoes. eRS T e SEXD your full name and address to Dobbins’ Foap Mfg. Co., Philadelphia, Pa., by return mail, and get. free of all cost, a l coupon worth several dollars, if used by: you to its full advantage. Don’t delay. This 1s worthy attention. I cAN recommend Piso’s Cure for Tonsumi tion to sufferers from Asthma —B D, TowwsExDp, Ft. Howard, Wis, May 4, 'O4. ' e ———————————— e e—— * WORLD’S-FAIR «% IHIGHEST AWARD!? Re e e eS S S *** SUPERIOR NUTRITION — THE LIFE?” * @ 3»” - SR \\,:: ),\,‘~ 3 'Qfim" :'} e'\: F; o"‘ : e T e D 5~ ~GREBAT MMEDICIN AL Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for InNvaLlDs 8 A «* The-Aged. AN INCOMPARABLE ALIMENT for tha GROWTH and PROTECTION of INFANTS and 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 wou'd be difficult to conceive of anything more palatable, - Sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot, ' JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. ‘MMM“”'“Q.W ? % = | l S - F ! CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to . twenty minutea. Not one hour after reading | this advertisement need any one suffer with pain. ~ ACHES AND PAINS. } For headache (whether sick or nervous), toothsche, neuraleia, rheumatism. lumbago, pains | and weakness in the Lack, spine or kidneys | pains around the liver, s)lemlsy, swelling 0* { the joints and pains of all kinds, the applica- { tion o7 Radway's Ready Relief will afford im- . mediate ease, and its continued use for a few I Omys.cffoot a7 ermanent cure, &1t Tnetant'y stops the most excruciating pains, sllays inflammation and cures congestions. whether of the lungs, stomach. bowels, or other glands or mucouns membr.nes. RF ’ifty cents a bottle. Sold by Druggists. RADWAY & CO., NEW YORK. 79DV VV/DDIDVDIDDDDY : Dr. J. H. l'cLean’s + 8 ¢ ¢ STRENGTHENING - CORDIAL ¢ ' AND BLOOGD PURIFIER, A certain cure for weakness. nervous ' prostration and sick stomach. a2V D /13 BTN N e R NS S R S fi‘_ g SRS R XA~ I’2 SO .'. \ f‘::”“,- ?‘,g o 1;5 % - g(e RO &b BE S T \";’ e i b R e 5 Neh == Sy B S N ERES T :fi?’ &fi*" & R e s e et ;f‘,:lgi’ NNI ks T eSS e WCRA.—I wonder what Ripans e Tabules wre? I seethem advertised everywhese, DORA.—WeII, I czn te!l you. They are a housshcld nrcessitz. e oV EIEY ... SIHOULLD RIEAD The pamphlet recently published by the Passenges Department of the LilinoisCentrzl Railroad, entitled “southern lome- eekers' Guide for 1894.” It contains over 5 excellent letters from Northern farmers now located in the South and other authentic and valuable information. For a FREE COPY address the undersigned at Manchester, Iowa: J. F. MERRY, Assisiant General Passenger Agent. R 5 A 5-LINE pAYS FGR Ady. 4 timeg . in 100 highgrade o papersin Illinois, = guaranteed circu- i lation 100,000— B B or we can insert g N it 3 times in 1,375 country .y PRPEEE FOP. oo i ioiais - SEND FOR CATALOGUE. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 23 South Jefferson Street, = Chicago, JiL ST ” T 5 To re:flf ."i‘!n.k iiti-“—t;(:nc—vx‘_;r: Ami 2 e E Laoz up dispisy cards and introduce s S - B 4 our Electric Goods in special localities. RiF eW Ny ” 'f:(:‘.“"sff“i\t from 8150 o 200 3 ¥ > daysi he year. gent ,""s MEN '-Zl :r":rg“ r(ic!:.—-:fii ;i:‘l'g:'.rii:g‘ ::!\: S ~———""4384 No company, firm, or individasl ea B L e—— =W Farth ever before offered such opporSN SRS ey tuniiv. A chance of a lifetime, ELECIHO-RENMEDIAL ASSOCIATION, : 825327 Brecamore St., Cinclnneti, Chie : PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS 3 Bl .‘ - Examination and Advice as to Patentability of Invention. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or How to Get a l’a:ent;fil’g}jnx’c{ _O'k ARRELZ, 7\\’sshrinxrton; D.”C. C. N. U. No. 51—-904 \‘THE.\' WRITING TO ADYVERTISERS, please say you saw the advertisement in this paper. B RISO'SCURE-EORT & 9y CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. [ 5§ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use = - u time. Sold by druggis! - (S CONSUMPTION =@