St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 26, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 19 January 1895 — Page 3
At Every Twinge Os Rheumatism you should remember that relief is at hand in Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Rheumatism is caused by lactic acid in the blood, which settles in the joints. Hood’s Sarsaparilla purities the blood ami reWood’s Sarsn--1 parilla moves this taint. 11S Therefore Hood's Sar- wk saparilla cures rheuniatism when all other remedies have failed. Give it a fair trial. “I suffered intensely with rheumatism, but Hood’s Sarsaparilla has perfectly cured me.” Harry F. Pittarp,Winterville, Ga. Hood’s Pills are the best family cathartic. Nothing to Furnish but a Coffin. The grand council of the Swiss canton of Neuenberg has decided that funerals shall hereafter be paid for by the public. The canton in the future is to defray all expenses except that of the coffin, which the family or relatives will provide. It’ necessary, however, the coltin will be supplied also. The expense of cremating bodies, however, must be borne by the friends or family. Under this arrangement such distinction — common enough in many parts of Europe—as ‘‘first-class” and ‘‘second class” funerals will be impos Bible. Phrenological Item. The brain of man is the most highly convoluted of that of any animal in the world. The lower the animal in the scale of intelligence the smoother the brain. Ailing Women, Why I)o You Hesitate? “ All I have to say is, any woman who continues to suffer with any of those trying diseases peculiar to our sex is largely responsible for her own suffering, for if she will only ap-
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Vegetable Compound is a miracle. I have seen it cure womb troubles when all the wisest doctors failed. “My sisters, don't hesitate. Write at once; relief is waiting for you.” — Mrs. Jennie Street, San Francisco, Cal. Get Lydia E. Pinkham's J ?gctable Compound from your druggist. It will save you. Twenty years of unparalleled success. 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 everv 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 for bcok. 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 dietever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. % % CUT.es AND PREVENTS Colds. Coughs. Sore Throat. Influenza. Bronchitis. Pneumonia. Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, inflammations. RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA. Frostbites, Chilblains, Toothache, Headache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to I twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR alter read- I Ina tills advertisement need any one SUFFER I WITH pain. a. lia.lt i o a t£a»r>oonfnl in half a tumbl rot’ | water win in few minutCH cure Cramps, ' »• HH. HUevlt-H,-nvsH, tsick Headachv.'DUrrh'wu. Djaenlery, Colic, Flatulency, and all internal pains. mere is not a remedial agent in the worn* that will cure Fever and Ague and all other malarious, bilious and other fevers, aided bv RADWAY'S FI DES, so quick Iv as Radway's Ready Relief. F ifty cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. RADWAY & CO., NEW YORK.
One of my children had , a very bad discharge I front the nose. Physi- I clans prescribed with- | out benefit. After using Ply's Cream Palm a short time the disease was cured.—A.o. Cary, Corning, N. Y.
ELY’S CREAM BALJVS Opens and c eanses the Na* al Passage s. Allays Pain and Inflammation, H« als the Sores, Protects the Kembranc irom Coids. Restores the Senses or I asp' a . ; smell. The Balm is quick y absoibcd and giv& relict at on e. A particle is apnlied into each nostril and i - agree able. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail. I LY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street. New York. MU SMITH salesman for Liqnor Trade unll ILU C.l\ HI j CHCOCK &CO , Evansville,lnd PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and Ad.ice as to Paten tab-iity < f In Ventioh Send f.>r Inventors’ Guide, or H)w to Get a Patent. Paxbick O’Fabbelx, Waahin<.un, D. Q 1
• 1 ROB AN IOWA TRAIN. J —_ , DARING ACT OF TWO BANDITS NEAR OTTUMWA. Bind the Vlcrk* and Take 111 of Value iu Sight, Ftobubly More than SSOOO Hobbes fhouuht to Be Local Ite, peradoeN. Rob the Express Car. Probably the most daring train robbery ever committed in lowa was perpetrated early Saturday evening, almost under the very eyes of the Ottumwa authorities. It was one of the most consummate in boldness and successful in execution in the annals of train robbery. No. 4 mail express train on the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Road was the train selected, and the Adams Express ('ompany is the loser of a good sum of money, the exact amount of which cannot be definitely ascertained. It is thought, however, to be more than SB,OOO. No. 4 is the Burlington through train j from Denier to Chicago. Its ex press ’ business is largely local, but many times j it carries large sums of money. If this train was rich in big amounts no one knew it, but the daring highwaymen evidently suspected so, and almost in broad daylight relieved the messenger of all 1 the packages in th-' safe that looked like money. Chillicothe, the place where the rob- ! hers boarded the train, is a little village eight miles west of Ottumwa. When the train arrived there two men jumped on the front platform of the express car. and Mere the same men, it is believed, whom the agent says he saw at that place early in the afternoon. The train leaves Chillicothe nt 6:30, and arrives at Ottumwa just twenty minutes Inter, a i>or- ; tion of this time being consumed by stopping at the Milwaukee junction. I’he robbers evidently knew the custom of the train, us the consummation of their plan , evidences. When the train left Chillicothe Messenger John S. Page Mas sitting near the safe, and his assistant Mas chatting care lessly Mith Baggageman Ed Wright. Sud denly the front door of the express ear. which is usually locked. Mas thrown open , ■ and two masked mm, each with two revolvers, called on the men to throw up J their hands. W hile one man covered the | trainmen the other quickly bound and ! gagged them and threw them in me cor- [ ner. Then they coolly rifled the safe. ' | placed the contents in n big sack and 1 waited ten minutes for the train to whis j I tie for the stop at the junction. Jump Off with the Booty. While Mailing Postal Clerk John I'm phreys came in from the mail ar and Mas treated like the rest of his fellows. When the train slackened its speed at the junction the robbers jump'd off Mith their booty, crossing the Des Moines River on the ice to the island, m hi- h has been the rendezvous of highway men and tough characters from time immemorial. The mail clerk released the express im s seiiger irom his thongs, and when the train pulled into the station at Ottumwa he hail unloosed all his comrades, ami the word Mas given quickly to the sheriff and police. Sheriff Stodgbill, Chief of Police Vnu derveer and ou« posse started out on an i 1 I'ngtfne for <’l'iHicothe. Ih-tcitive Jim ; I HaivU-^u. who’shot the Bandit nt Batavia । two wet ks 1. g^.- headed another posse to trail the robbi rs if possible to their hiding place. The robbers wore no hats, but 1 hoods with masks seemingly attached. Both had brown overcoats mid one More ’ gray jeans trousers, while the other hud | encased his legs in overalls. It is the belief of the railroad men that i they belong to a gang of moonshiners. I counterfeiters ami desperadoes generally I who inhabit some of the abandoned mines in the eastern edge of Monroe County, and that they Mere met on the other side I of the river by their pals who had horses in waiting ami they easih escaped. NORTHWESTERN OHIO SHAKEN. Nitroglycerine Magazine Explodes and Wrecks Houses at Gibsonburg. The nitroglycerine magazine of the Ohio ami Indiana Torpedo Company, located twelve utiles west of l-'reraont. Ohio, and about one and a halt miles east , of Gibsonburg, blew up Sunday morning ' about 3 o’clock. The magazine contain ed 1.500 quarts of the explosive, Minch ; was t<> be used in shooting oil Mi Ils in the oil fields surrounding, and went off with terrific force, the shock being felt plainly for miles around in all ot tne neighboring towns m ith moj o or less force. In Fremont the people were awakened and half scared to death by the shaking of the houses and doors and rattling of windows. At the central telephone of tice all <>f the annunciators Mere dropped. No one Mas injured at the scene and no ' one appears to bo reported missing, mid if anyone was there when the explosion 1 occurred nothing is left to toll the tale . I unless covered up by the falling simw. The magazine rested on a bed of lime I stone, and only a small hole shows where 1 it formerly stood. An oil stove Mas burnI ing at the time to thaw out frozen explo- ; 1 gives, and the cause is attributed to this. • Gibsonburg, in close proximity, suffer- j 1 ed the worst from the shock. Doors Mere } blown from their fastenings, windows । blown in, chimneys tumbled down. plateglass fronts shivered, while the houses rocked and creaked, moved by the upheaval. People were terrified and huddled together. The damage to the com- . \ voy " p-rimpH r.-u.-ti sim.<><«>. v.bn.. is, I < iibsonburg it cannot yet be m < urmely estimated. Mayor Sutro, of San Francisco. an- 1 nounces that he will call a mass-meeting ; to protest against the action of Acting United States Attorney Knight in re- ' j fusing to issue a warrant for the arrest ' of (’. P. Huntington, charged with violating the interstate commerce law by isI ! suing a pass to Frank M. Stone. At the I I meeting expressions of opinion on the apI pointment of Mose Gunst as police comI missioner Mill also be made. I , August. Samuelson, formerly chef at the Brown Palace Hotel, Denver, commitn i ted suicide by cutting hie throat. He had „ been jilted by a woman for whom he de- " sorted his wife and children. Before । committing suicide he draped his and the j woman’s picture in black. y Thomas Walsh, a collector of the Pa- ! cifie Express Company, confesses at Salt 1 Lake that he stole nearly $2,000 from the । company last August. ’ I As a result of eating poisoned cheese •t twenty-seven people of East Bradford, * Pa., were sick.
ply to Mrs. Pinkham, relief will follow at once. “ This I : know absolutely from my own personal experience. 11 er
: 6 The Rise if the B Buckwheft Cake g | The leaven of es tcrday ruins the cake of to-day. - ^5 Don’t spoil goa buckwheat with dying raisingbatter —fresh c( es wan t Royal Baking Powder. Grandma *° ra ^ se to-day’s buckwheats with the sourif left ove r of yesterday 1 Dear old lady, she wi op to the good old times. But these are days ^°Y al Bakin g Powder—freshness into freshi< raise? freshness. ^<4 AruUhU the buckwheat cake of to-day is CU P S of Buckwheat, one CU P °f whealtAr, two tablespoons of Royal ^7 Baking PowJ.l one half teaspoonful of salt, all sifted well ngether. Mix with milk into a 3^7 thin batter anAake at once on a hot griddle. Do not forget tht no baking powder can be subr stitutei for tW “Royal ’’ in making pure, sweet, dubious, wholesome food. B i S fbF.J ROYAL BAKING HWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
liaising Vegetables I ndet <•!«*<». Notwithstanding the -m ml feeling that vegetables < an be brought up from the far South at so little vst that it Is I not profitable to raise them under glas« In the North, some f< w find that this is anything but a fact. W W Rawson, of Arlington. Mio- . he square feet of ground under glass. espvi-hiHy devoted to growing lettuce mid < m um bets. The seed is s .wn In August He has had nt one time 15 d"Z< t. lettuce ready to cut. He Ims eight Itous, * used expressly for growing lettuce to a head It takes about eight weeks l«>foro they arc ready for market, He oommeuoes to cut in Oclolht. continuing through November, Imevmber mid January. lly having this sti< < e-sjon of houses he can cut about dozen a week, lie lujs had from lu.ihsi to 15<*»t cueumlM ts ready to cut in a single day. Some parts of the year the lettmenml < m nXj bet s can be produced under l >-d«s! , sash, so that he has these Vegvt ^e* at ; command the vqholo s,asou through > sfr Raw-on L; ■ for Ufteen years, and n» In* tomium - to enlarge his plant from year to year It is evident that the business must be profitable when cot,.in- ud intelligently, ns this Otic seems to be Mgcls*"'’ Monthly. Very Much off Color Are people wtie are tre wj!, itrvle liv« r complaint. I'.; <• In t!.e LS g, - tlie ctillclv ami wen the eyeballs. mit u.—> munifests its presem c by in .aslto ss in the aide and beneath the right shoulder blade, furred ton^ e. nattsen. sb k hcada< be and an unpleasant breath. It is us u/y He. •mpnnled I by costiveness and dyspepsia. 1- the ailment Itself, and Its various mauif« stations. Hostetter's Stomach B.t’•r- Is a-; ~ > u ,1 ! tomplete remedy. This -tnml- rI medicine also prevents and cures chilis ami fever, rheumatism, nervousness and tbe Inflrmitles Incident to declining years It builds up an enfeebled physique and fortiftes it against disease. Appetite ami nightly s.umber are promoted by it. and it is a protector t;g lust the effects of a wetting. < ' merwork, «• posure and unwholesome food or water. Pigeon Adopted bv a Hen. An Augusta. Ha.. y< ith who spends lis time when out of school looking after his chickens, of which he raises a number of broods every year. Lad a singular experience last spring. One of his favorite hens came oil the nest with only one little chick. This one -. on died, and about the same time a pigeon was noticed in the yard with a broken wing. The bereaved lien immediately assumed the care of the disabled birth which, strange to say. at once accepted the guardianship of the hen and remained under her care until its wing was well again. when it resumed its former way of living. C atarrh Cannot Be Cured ivlth LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh i- a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take intern;.-! remedies. Hail's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, am! I- a rcjnilar prescript:■ >n. It is .amipoked of O>. V»e 1 tonic- known. combined with I the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the nmcous surfaces. The perfect combination of tin two ingredients i- what produces such wonderful result:- in curing Catarrh. Send for tes- | timonlal •, free. E. .1. CHENEY & co., I'rops., Toledo, O. , Sold by Druggists, price 75e. Wonderful Cliff Dwellings. The most wonderful cliff dwellings in the United States are those of the Mancos, in a southern Colorado canyon. Some of these caves are 500 to GOO feet from the bottom of the perpendicular sides of tlie canyon wall, and how meir occupants gained ingress is mystery. S..ND your full name and address to Dobbins’ Soap Mfg. Co., Philadelphia, Pa., by return mail, and get. free of all c. st, a coupon w orth sex oral dollars, if used by you to its full advantage. Don't delay. This is worthy attention. A Idfe of Its Own. । The hair appears to have a life of its i own. Many well-authenticated inI stances are known of the hair of dead , bodies increasing Ln length after inter- | ment.
H«»nn|»t«’'" l ipcricm v of I'ovi rt). I WlHwßuonaparto reached Paris on May Sfl7®2, there was a poor outlook for n Ipplinnt bankrupt In funds and j ’ nearlnu in reputation; but he was un ’ dnunti. and bk application was made witb<4 *be lose of a moment. A new mlnl-4' wor bad been appointed but nirw days before there wore six champ* in that office during as many monti. nml the assistant now In rhnrp of the artillery svotneil favoi able * the request. For a moment he ‘ thomat of n-storlng the suppliant to hie I^ltivn, but events Mere marchlnu too Mifily. nml deuuiti<l« more urgent jostld aside the claims of an obscure { lleutjmnt with a idindy character Bonaparte at once grayped the fact that j ho Cijild win falx cause only by patience । or ‘e hn|nirtimlty. and began t<> con i »tfiT ln>w he could arrange for a pro i longed stay in the capital lib scanty i resources Mere nheaily exnusted, but ; be found Bourrleiine, a former school- i follow at Brienne, in equal straits, wait . ' Ing litr- I itussir f u r >.><ohing to turn up. over their mcnls iM"a cheap reatau met i»n the Hue St Ilftnore they dis 1' cuss-a| various menus of gaining a livelihood and seriously contemplated , a partnership In subletting apartments. I But Bourrleiine very quickly obtained ! the post of secretary in the embassy of Stuttgart. s.> that his comrade mus left to make his struggle alone by paMning ’ what few arthHvs of value he possess ’ ed. Prof. Sloane’s "Napoleon” in the i e’entory. Tn Olden Time* People overlooked the Importance of permanently benetlclul effects and M ere satbffed with transient action; but now that it Is generally known that Syrup of Figs M ill permanently cure habitual constipation, well informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for i a time, but finally injure tin- system. Vtilue of Bull Benrings. An experiment with ball bearings was recently made in Canada. A street car. fitted Mith ball bearings, was drawn a distance of several hundred feet by men pulling on three strands Jof ordinary sewing thread. A carriage manufacturer put another style of ball j bearings on the axles of a coach ordi- . l wily pulled by four horses. A trained > dog was hitched to the pole, and he ■ drew the coach around the yard with ; little effort. The combination of pneu- . matic tires and ball bearings w ould evii dently relieve much of the strain nowput on horses draw ing heavy vehicles. ■ and here is a tip for an enterprising I carriage builder. Going to California? | The Burlington Route is the only railJ"ay running “personally conducted” E.x||cursions via Denver to i olorado Springs, IjEalt Lake, Ogden, Sacramento, San 1 rannclsco. Stockton, Merced Fresno. Raker-.-field and L -s Angelos nt the lowest ratoc I'l'uilinan tourist sleeping car through wlthI but change. Leave Chicago every Wednesday. W'rlte ’or call on T. A. Grady, Excursion Manager, 211 Clark st, Chicago. . f _— — —— .' Take Frequent Baths. Aeration of the blood takes place to . seme extent through the skin. In man the skin gives off a thirtieth to a six tleth part of file earbone aeitl gas given ! out by the lungs. Sooner or Later a neglected Cold w ill develop a constant cough, shortness of 1 breath, failing strength, and wasting of flesh, all symptomatic of some serious Lung [ affection, which may be avoided or palliated by using in time Dr. D. Jayne's Expec- ’ torant. The men who succeed best in public life are those who take the risk of standing by their own convictions.— Garfield.
■ OMpin^ 1 -4 ~J ■3 s
Market Gardeners Grow Kii h! There is lots of money made in early vegetables. F.veryboily admits that the very earliest vegetables are produced fn-m Salzer’s Northern Grown >eeds. Think of having radishes in fourteen days; lettuce in twenty days; potatoes in'forty davs; peas in fortysix days, and splendid cabbage in fiftyfive days from day of sowing seed! If You Will Cut Thia Out un<! Scud It with SI m >ney order to the John A. Salzer Seed Company. LaCrosse, Wis., you will get free thirty five packages | earliest vegetable seeds and their great Fi rd catalogue, or for six cents postage a package of rourfirn l>ay Paris P.adish Si vil and their sei d catalogue. C. N. U. I*, itngi' Stamp Perforation. In perforating postage stamps a die plate Is placed ladow the needles of a machine carrying 3<hi needles. As about 150.000.000 holes are punched per day the wear on the die plate is ex cesslve; brass plates wear out in a day and even steel plates are rapidly de--troyed Tin* use of aluminium bronze 1 caused the die plates to last for i without renewal \ re X on tr-Sf rXr W Imo Xrwteim^ ? i . -i. kn< -s is us tty inn to manv pooplr .•, -ea si< knvss. It comes from a derauge- : meiit of tlie stomach. One of Ripaiis Ta- - bales is an Insurance against it, and a box of th< sn should be in every traveler’s outfit. The Prophet’s Name. Whenever a .strict Mohammedan pn>- < nounces the name of the prophet, he j piously kisses his thumb nails, presses , them to bls forehead, and says, "The j prophet of God, to whom be all glory!” We think Pi.so’s (’uro for Consumption is : the only medicine for Coughs. Jennie I’im K AKO, .springfield, Ills., Oct. 1, 18V4. A work of real merit finds favor at last. A. B. Alcott. Mb jji) o# whb LEAVES ITS MARK —every one of the painful irregularities i and weaknesses that prey upon women. . They fade the face, waste the figure, ruin ' the temper, wither you up, make you aid l before your time. Get well : That’s the way to look well. Cure the disorders and ailments that beset you, with Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- | tion. ; It regulates and promotes all the proper j functions, improves digestion, enriches the ; blood, dispels aches and pains, melancholy and nervousness, brings refreshing sleep, and restores health and strength. It’s a powerful general, as well as uterine, tonic and tiervine, imparting vigor and strength I to the entire system. I Mrs. Anna Ulrich, of Ftm Creek, Buffalo Co.,
JYeb.. writes: “I enjoy good healtli thanks to I)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and 'Golden Medical Discovery.’ I was under doctors’ care for two years with womb disease, and gradually wasting in strength all » the time. I was so weak I that I could sit up in bed I only a few moments, for two years. I commenced taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and Ills‘Golden Medical Discovery.’ and by the time , I had taken one-half doz- ' en bottles I was up and going wherever I pleased, and have had good health and been very strong
J Mrs. Ulrich.
ever since—that was two years and a half ago." A book of i6S pages on “ Woman and Her Diseases” mailed sealed, on receipt of io cents in stamps for postage. Address, Wori.d’s Dispensary Medicat. Association, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
DH? A „ BILITY '^ coNo MY and for General blacking is unequalled^ Has An annual Sale of 3.oootoms, ALSO MANUFACTURE THS WiPWiWBP®® FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINE,ORTW TOUpn LIP SPO i S WITH A CLOTH Morse Bro strop’s. Canton,Masi HU SWALLOWS IT WHOLE. i! I '1 i! G . [ Xi Petter •»««i»t Three Ina You can carry six _ In your vest pocket. Taka one every night, After dinner, or at bed time. It beats Congress water all hollow. Or Kissengen. You always have it handy, The effect *s better, and When you travel it saves freight. I ain nn old traveler And I get things down fine. A • Ripans • Tabuie Is worth more Than any spring in existence —except a d<x>r spring— I hate a draught ' A SHOEMAKER’S POULTRY ALMANAC Contain* AO naye*; over ZOillustrAtHnsin c-^or^ !*’>*'• remeuica and reel pea for all knowM in poultry; aiau valuable bint* on |K>ub try raising. I u!’. in formation and price* <-n alj v * r i’ tiea. I ineat descriptive roultry At; TL- kevcr Sent postpaid for )scta.ti3 an/ WORLD’ S-FAIR if imoiucxr awjvkdi , •’'■jPfßlOß N'JTMUON-THE LIFE!' 4 «GREAT Has justly acquired the reputation of being The Salvator for I TSI VALi O S T he-Aged. Ax ixrr mpafable Alimext for the j Growth and Protection of ini ants anff <? H I LD R ELM I A superi- r nutritive in continued Fevers, And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases j 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 DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot, JOHN CARLS & SONS, New York. i W. L. Douglas ' ISTHEBEST. ^3 WE? FIT FOR A KING. z/*Xi3. CORDOVAN, FRENCH & ENAMELLED CALF. «4. s 3SPFINECALf&KANCAR!:i 4 3.50 POLICE, 3 SOLES. s2 ‘ WORK 'n- M ^S U- BOYS'SCH IQISHOES. -LADLESBROCKTON,MASS. Over One Million People weartho 1 W. L. Douglas $3 $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory ’ They give the best value for the n-oney. They equal custom Shoes in style ir.nd fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,-—stamped on sole. From $i to $3 saved over ether makes. I If your dealer cannot supply you we can. ...E\'EKY... Home-Seeker KIIOULO BEAU The pamphlet recently publisheil by the I'assangei Department ot the Illinois Central Kailroad, entitleq ( “Southern Home- eekers" Guide for 1894.” It contains over 50 excellent letters from Northern — farmers no - Xmtb and other authem tic and valuable intoim 0.. u. I“^—T?—? A'l'm"? I address the undersigned at Manchester,lowa: ' । I. F. MERRY. Assistant General Passenger Agent, &V V 5 h 3J To ro,t Circularfc nA 9 I han ~ U P d l *F’ay earda and introduei T '-V our Electric (Joo-is in special lochlllm, Wors'rg make from $ 1 50 to s2oo tSF ' SM3 E M every ISO data in the veur. Ag-entt K. ic growing rich,—the si-k getting well. --~ - --^1 coru P >D y' firm. o,r Individual oat Earth ever before » fL-red meh opporESSIHEai^sttsBSEQi tunDv. a chance rs a lifetime. ELEC 1 RO-KLyj IH.I E ABSO< 1 ITION, 625 — 82? Sycamore St., Cincinnati, Ohio U ytULarleatown. AUM Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Stbup for Children j teething: sottens the gums, reduces inflammation, I allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents! a bottle. I C. N. H. No. 3—93 I I V\FHEN WHITING TO ADVEKTISERS, tv please say you saw the ailverlisemenl ; in this paper. FfJ CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. EM fore Bett Cough Syrup. Tantea Good. Use pjl tn tlma Bold by druggists
