St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 28, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 2 February 1895 — Page 3

Purify Your Blood Strengthen and invigorate your nerves and muscles, tone your stomach and digestive organs, and build up your whole system by the use of Hood's Sarsaparilla if you would avoid the grip, pneumonia, HOOD’S SarsaM par ilia diphtheria and typhoid fl fl fever. Those diseases fl. seek for their most ready victims persons who are weak, tired, debilitated and all run down, owing to impure and impoverished blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla purifies and vitalizes the blood and thus wards oil' disease. Hood’s Pilis cure nausea, sick headache. A Cheap Trip South. Tickets will be sold at one fare round trip to points in Tennessee. Kentucky. Alabama, .Mississippi. Louisiana and Florida, on the line of the Louisville A Nashville, and Nashville. Chattanooga & St. Louis Kailroads, on January S, February 5, Mnrcli 5, April 2 and 30. 1595. Ask your ticket agent about it. and if he cannot sell you excursion tickets write to C. I’. Atmore. General Passenger Agent, Louisville. Ky.. or Geo. L. Cross, N. W. I’. A., Chicag >, lil. Princes and Princesses. The English like to read about princes and princesses, to gossip about their doings, and to utilize them for ceremonials, but their positive liking for them has narrow limits. They will not allow them any political influence; they are desperately jealous of their claim to appointments, even in the army, though princes fill these fairly well; and they will not, when they can help it, vote them any money to live on. It will by ami by be simply impossible even to ask parliaments for grants. The real English feeling, we should have said, is limited to the sovereign and to those who must succeed her, the throne rather than the royal family being the true object of the nation's regard.—! he Spectator. A Cleveland contractor has undertaken to move a stone house weighing 5,500 tons, basement and all, a distance of GO feet. mothers, Watch Your Daughters. “ Nature has provided a time foi purification, and if the channels are obstructed, the entire system is poisoned, and misery comes. “ Irregularities from any cause,

f at any age, arc ' sure indications of organic trouble. With irregularities come disturbances of the stomach and kidneys, violent headaches, ' shooting pains,

extreme lassitude, waxy complexion. “Remove the trouble at once, or a who'e life will be sacrificed. “Lydia E Pinkham s Vegetable Compound will accomplish the work speedily. “It is the most effective remedy for irregular or suspended action known to the world.” — Mrs. Chas. I lines, Box 212, Duncannon, Pa. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KEHBEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty- miles of Boston. Send postal card 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. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. I Dose, one .tablespoonful.in water at bed- i time. Sold by all Druggists. ; + tvfevrd from catarrh 0/ the worst kind ever fir. a bop, and I never -''t for cure, but Ely’s (ream Balm xrms to do even that, ^^a Many acquaintances ha / get jgE| used it wth excellent results. —< ‘ car Ostrum. 4, U'arren Ave ittc, Chicago, 111. CATARRH ELVS (KE VH BALM Opens and c eansns the Xara! rassag- s Allays Pain and Inflammation. Be ds the Spres. Protects the Membrane Irani Collin restored the Senses ol lastc and Snail . i. .. Balm is quicit y absorbed and giies redei at once. A particle Is app led into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents, at druggists or by mail ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Si reel. X. York. Mrs. Winslow's Soothxno Syhut for Childrsn tcefiing: aolt-ns the gums, reauees inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a Lottie. BEST POLISH EH THE WORLD. HSWW cM I Mm DO NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and pAfots which stain the hands, injure the Iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Pasto Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TCNSj

CHICORA GOES DOWN. ■ I ' LOST WITH ALL HANDS IN LAKE MICHIGAN. Owners of the Vessel Identify Debris I Thrown Up by the Waves and Give Up Hojic for the Safety of the Bout —Probably Crashed by Ice. Twenty-six Men Drowned. Wreckage, identified as belonging to ! the missing Graham & Morton proptHer i Chicora, was discovered in the ice off South Haven. Mich., proving without a | question that the famous passenger boat, i once the pride of Lake Michigan, has gone to the bottom. This settles the awful | doubt that has been hanging over the fate of the vessel since she was first reported lost. By'the sinking of the Chicora twenty-six lives were undoubtedly I lost. The Chicora carried, including Cap- ■ tain Stines, a crew of twenty-five, and I there is said to have been one passenger, I Mr. Pearl, of the drug firm of Howard A Pearl, St. Joseph. The list of those lost, so far as known, is as follows: James IL Clark, clerk, St. Joseph. Jesse Davis, porter, Benton Harbor. Grant A. Downey, oiler, Detroit. Jolin Hodges, watchman, Baltimore. Nate Lynch, cook, St. Joseph. Robert McClure, chief engineer, Detroit. James Malone, pantryman, Chicago Joseph Marks, wheelman, Benton Harbor. Ai STEAMER CHICORA. | M. AV. Morgan, head waiter, Benton l Harbor. Joseph Pearl, passenger, St. Joseph. Thomas Robertson, watchman. C. D. Simons, first mate, Benton Harbor. Ed Stines, captain, St. Joseph. Ben Stines, second mate. St. Joseph, son of the captain. A. Wirtz, second engineer, Detroit. Eight deck-hands, names unknown. Two firemen, names unknown. One coal passer, name unknown. Captain Stines. Mate C. D. Simons, Engineer McClure, Nate lynch, the cook, and Clerk James K. Clarke have families. The rest of the men are single. The anxious eyes of Lighthouse Keeper Charles Donoghue, at South Huven, which have Tor days been looking to the west over the ice-bound lake for signs of the missing propelller Chicora, with her human freight, wore rewarded on Wednesday afternoon, by discerning several miles out specks that through the glass were soon seen to be picct s of wreckage. They were only specks, but to the I mariner's quick eye they told of the un- । questionable loss of a vessel and all on board. The wreckage was about two miles out from shore, most of it directly opposite the harbor. The ice appeared to extend half a mile further out into the lake. Mariners at once organized a relief party to go out and investigate the wreckage. Captain Matthews, of the United States life-saving service, led the I party of searchers that braved the wintry I wind, blowing in their faces at a rate of | upward of thirty miles an hour. The trip ! out from land was a perilous one, for the । 1 ice. while driven into a compact mass ■ ■ by the gale of the last two days, was still , ! dangerous, and in places uncertain on | account of its roughness and the liability , of its breaking up. 1 ’ Wreckage Found in the lee. | After the two miles, which seemed to : , be ten. had been covered Capt. Matthews ; and his party came to a mass of wreeki age imbedded in the ice. but apparently of : a boat that had but recently met with I disaster. There were a number of pieces i that appeared to belong to the upper | works of some large vessel, probabl.v a propeller or steamer of some large lino. Much of the wreckage was under the ice or water, which made it difficult to । reach in order to closely describe. The : men hunted around for pieces of the ' pilot-house, by which the name of the | vessel could be learned, but they were unsuccessful. Portions of the wreckage ! were secured and carried back to the ; land, where experienced seamen who knew the Graham & Morton vessel idenl tiffed them as belonging to the Chicora. Among most of the sennmn I ho opinion is that Ilie ('bitorn Ims foundered. ’l'he ; discovery of Ilie wrevkage proves that she lias at least lost tier upper works, and । those who know the vessel say Hint a I storm severe enough to carry these off i would be more than any vessel could ! ' stand, even though sho be so stanch as i : flic Chicora. They also state that, the I twenty-six mon supposed to bo on board | are undoubtedly lost. If they did not go I down with thb vessel it would be impossi- > i ble for them to have escaped in the tooth . I of the gale with the lake full of ice. Mr. 1 ! Morton, of the Graham & Morton Transportation Company, and ('Jerk Hancock, , who arrived at South Haven late at ! night, examined the wreckage, which they n think without doubt belongs to the Chi- ’■ j cora. Both expressed the belief that the ■ Chicora is still afloat and perhaps disI abled, and has lost a part of her upper i I works. | | | | Helped to Dissect Her Husband? | : Airs. Dr. S. J. Kenfield arrived at | : Fort Scott from Denver the other evenS ing and identified the body of G. W. | । Kenfield. who died suddenly in a chair | ! in his room at the Interstate Hotel, as | that of her husband, who was formerly 1 -I a druggist at Galesburg, 111. She as- - j sisted in a post-mortem examination a J of his remains to-night, and found the i । cause of his death to be a disorder of I the stomach, which produced heart > । failure.—Kansas City Times.

TO IRRIGATE 300,000 ACRES. An Immense Canal to Bo Constructed in Northern Nebraska. One of the most stupendous industrial projects ever set on foot in Western America is now taking definite shape in O'Neill, Neb. A company composed of many of the leading business men of O'Neill has been organized for the purpose of constructing an immense irrigating ditch over 200 miles long, which will water over 300,000 acres of land and open up to settlement, cultivation and prosperity an area of country larger than Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island. The cost of the undertaking is estimated at from $1,000,000 to $2,500,000. To secure the capital necessary to undertake this great work the company is making contracts with the owners of real estate along the main line and its laterals stipulating for the payment of $8 per aero in ten yearly installments for the construction of said canal and an annual water rental of $1 per acre for the use of the water. It is believed the coming summer will see this great river of liquid prosperity pouring on its way to the homes and homesteaders of Northern Nebraska and ushering in an era of prosperity and progress throughout all the region along its line. Eiki many other of the world's great projects a rigorous necessity was its mother. The settlement of Northern Nebraska began fifteen years ago. In an incredibly short space of time several towns sprang up and thousands of acres, were give n ovor to—thr» tuHimfiow Up to 1890 prosperity smiled u, on the hardy settlers. The fertile fields yielded an abundance of crops, the cattle fattened ami it seemed to them that no fairer region ever blossomed under the rays of the summer's sun. But during the last five years a great cloud of adversity has been projected across the landscape of those fair Nebraska fields and a succession of crop failures has followed year after year. Tho farmers and business men became discouraged and at legth turned toward their streams for salvation. The Niobrara River, which runs 3(H) miles from east to west, was selected as tho means of bringing into new life their barren fields. 'l'he plan of the present company is to tap this stream at a point south of Rushville, Neb., and send its waters through an irrigation canal, which will run almost parallel to it. throwing out its laterals right and left to carry their blessings to regions which have suiTered bo long from drought. MAN OF STRONG WILL. Senator Chandler, of New Hampshire, Nominated to Succeed Himself. William E. ('handler, of New Hampshire. who has been nominated to succeed himself in the United States Senate for the term of six vears. is - ft * a/ ® A / / // '\i./ \ / / // WM. E. CHANDLER. the best liked and most bitterly hated of men at Washington. As a ’ friend he clings close as a brother, as an enemy, ho leaves no stone unturned to promote that which he considers right. He was born in Concord, in 1835. After acquiring a common school education he attended the Harvard law school, and was admitted to practice in 1855. For I many years lie was prominent in State ! politics, and in 1881 President Garfield appointed him Solicitor General, but the Senate rejected him. From 1882 to 1881 ho was Secretary of the Navy. Since ISS7 he has served in the Unied States ! Senate. KNUTE NELSON WINS. — Chosen by the Minnesota Legislature I to Succeed Senator Washburn. Knnte Nelson, three times a member ; of the national House of Representatives ; and twice chosen Governor of Minne- I

sota, was elected ' United States Sena- । tor for the term bo- | ginning March 4, I 1805. Tii e vote stood: Nelson, 102; WasbbnriL 3G; Donnelly. 13; Comstock, 9; Mitchell, 4; McCleary, 2; Lii d, L Knnte Nelson was born near Bergen, Norway, Fe b . 2 , 1842, and came to A ;i: cri •■: i -n,—

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kkutbmbmon. witTTTTT mother, his father having died when be was 3 years of age.and after living one year inChicago set 11 din Dane t'onnty. W isconsin. lie graduated front the Albion (Wis.) Acad- i emj. As a private and afterward a non- 1 commissioned officer he served through . the war in Company B of the Fourth Wisconsin Infantry. lie was admitted to the bar in 1867, and served in the Wisconsin Legislature in 1868 and 1869. Removing to Alexandria. Minn., he served ns county attorney in 1872, 1873 and 1871 and was in the State Senate in 1875 and 1876. Ho was a Presidential elector in 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress by 12,060 plurality, to the For-ty-ninth Congress by 12,00!) plurality, and to the Fiftieth Congress by 41,(K0 i majority. In 1892 he was elected Governor by 14,620 plurality and re-elected : last fall by a plurality of over 60,000. : An Expensive Fire. A Moorestown (I’a.) man stored S3OO j in bills in a stovepipe for safekeeping. | Ils wife, knowing nothing of it, started a fire in the stove. An Old Church. The First Dutch Reformed Church of Brooklyn is celebrating the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its or- • gauization. The less praying you do for the poor the better they will like it.

. 1 How the Worm Turned. Int Pompous ai w surgeon was 4o * ret>l - u »ing depot in England <fl^n Hmo" n "’ nbpr ° f la(,s tfUui X£ Sl,iUing - The abl "P f - ‘lißjitono Der ° f the <loctor so flutblo t 1 ° n ° nervous recruit he was 0? Xnm’ Ul T^^ fh ' St qUestio1 * a « t, .m?. nanie and I^ace of birth. udcr y “W? p° U ans ' vcr? ” roared the d Sti'l ' Xhats J' oll1 ’ name, I say?” the panic-stricken lad only Med at the questioner. the fellow is stono d.o / ® x , clanued th e doctor, ami, takit tr L t S Watcb ' he k to the left o 11 of rhe recruit, saying, “Can vo i * ;jr that ticking?” ^injoj 11 'Hie youth shook his head. the watch was applied to the other । “ with the same effect, and then the , '* oi began to shower his indignation 1 <he head of the future soldier. 0 “Whatdoyou mean by enlisting when •u're stone deaf? Why. you can't J on hear the ticking of a rxatcli when * is held within an inch of jour car!” irriien the worm turned. |‘lah! yah! She no goiu'!" roared the j^KC’.ed boy. l|WUen the doctor beH tho watch to

|s own ti.c and found that it had in ®ed stopped, his feelings were too w.verful to b > expressed. — Poor liKleed! ii ।. as for persons troubled ivitli constipation *l’ poor Indeed. True they act upon the wcls, lr.it this they do with violence, and b’eir operation tends to weaken the intes"'ies, and is prejudicial to the stomach. Hos,i: tier's Stomach Hitters Is nn cHcetual iaxive, but it neither gripes nor enfeebles. "Erthcrmore. it promotes digestion and a 1' gulnr action of the liver and the kidneys. I ,e is an eflcient barrier against and remedy ■ 1* r malarial complaints and rheumatism, f " fl is of great benefit to the weak, nervous 1,1 il aged. As a medicinal stimulant it cani ai t be surpassed. Physicians cordially recI ni intend It, and Its professional indorsement i 01 fnlly borne out by popular experience. : Is ipetlte mid sleep are both improved by A is agreeable invigorant mid alterative. tl Indian Corn in Europe. in almost every country of Europe lize is given a distim iive and errones name. In Germany and Austria it "'(culled Turkish wheat; in Lorrttine it designTfli-Tt tv—^j.ii corn; in Tuscany is Sicilian corn; in I’luvenee it is irbary corn; lite Turks call it Egyp ‘ n corn, and in Egypt it is known as rian dourra. Sj The Nicaragua Canal. The project of the Nicaragua Canal has Mt debated in the I'. S. Senate very j be 'orously. One thing should be rememi red about that climate, it is death to nl।be » s t every foreigner who goes there, and ! 1,1 >orers especially succumb. It is said I nt the Panama Railroad cost a life for ' cry tie. What nn idea of pains ami : c ' hea is in this sentence, it is mostly due ’ Il< carelessness. Every laborer provided ' tli St. Jm obs Oil would be nnned I w ninst these troubles. Men's muscles । ere are cramped with rhetinuitie pain I d they ache all over. That’'; just tho I ■“ ndition where this sovereign remedy can 1 ‘’’i its best work. The fearful malady is । "’wry much like the break-bone fever in ' '4 tain parts of America. . Jfi great many errors in the ancient nuscripts were perpetuated by a rule j^Bhe monastic orders, that a copy must ! J exactly followed by the scribe; even | 1 icti he perceived a mistake, he must i 1 t correct it. SIOO Reward, 8100. I 'he reader of this paper will be pleased to ru that there is at least on dreaded dl-ease I J it science has been able to cure in all its * ige.,, and that I■ < atarrh. H:Hrs < atarrh Cure t ! “the only positive cure Known to the medical ternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dlse, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s fltarrh Care is taken internally, a ting directly f the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, f ereby de raying the foundation of tile dls--1 se. and giving the patient strength by building •’ the constitution and assisting nature In doing 11 work. 'Die proprietors have so much faith lii ‘ curative powers that they offer One Hundred I 1 >llars for any case that If fails to cure. Send , 1 r list of testlinonials. । f< Address, F. .1. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. *~Sold by Druggists, 75c. Justice Doesn’t Miscarry. Whenevm’ a murder is committed in , rgentina it is customary to put every I ’ issible witness in prison and keep him । b crc until the real cnlpriV is convicted, tl — “A God-Send to Humanity” ■ what Win. Snyder, District Court । lerk and U. S. Commissioner, of Car- ! r. Colo., says No-to-bac is, in writing the Sterling Remedy Co., of Chicago, : ’ ( ’ter taking one and a half boxes of I a o-to-bac which he purchased of his ! , ’Uggist, and being absolutely cured of | d io tobacco habit. Mr. Snyder says he i iw has no desire for the filthy weed. u Fine Distinction. The customs authorities of Boston ive decided that works of Zola are . (moral. Iml nm obsi ime. 1,000 Bu. Potatoes Per Acre. Wonderful yields in potatoes, oats, P’n, farm ami vegetable seeds. Cut Bout and send 5c postage to the -■A-: —Salzoi*——Co.. I a C.rossu. ~ for their great seed book and de of Giant Spurry. CNU w People Over Sixty. Ifance has more persons over GO ■rs of age than any other country, y eland conies next. Ii ■ j Won’t Ai.low Yourself to trifle with I Cold, and so encourage the development a |Bome latent Pulmonary and Bronchial o Sense, which often ends fatally. You had «l<•r c ire your Cough or Cold by promptly Korting to Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, an -time remedy for all Coughs, Lung and ■■ Iroat affections. I Dirty Little Brats. I Egyptian children are never washed u itil they are 1 year old. Not Sick Enough for Hie Doctor, b it a little out of sorts. Ripans Tabules j v ould serve in your case. It is well to । a ive them on hand for just such occas- ! ■< ns. i JHe vas madly, passionately In love—won bIF tho matchless beauty of her complexEn. Glenn’s Sulphur Soap had im,_arted the charm.

!>T. JACO3S OIL. is the Perfect CURE fori NEURALGIA Without relapse, coi-l^psEc mishaps or perhaps.

I To the Younger Cooks, | | the beginners in the art of bread and 1 cake making, there is no aid so § ® great, no assistant so helpful, as the ® . ©• | Royal Baking Powder. | 0 It is the perfect leavening agent g and makes perfect food. Do not i. make a mistake by experimenting ©’ ® with any other. 1 W/sxxrx— ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., ICB WALL ST., N£W-YORK Dross. ~ ’ ——— —

J > 1 Tho suffering caused among women by unhenlihful dress cannot be estimated. Many have become lifelong invalids through their compliance with ' life have been sacrificed to the insatiable. Many seem to think they have a right to treat their bodies as they please; but they forget that their bodies are not their own. The Creator, who formed them, has claims upon them that they cannot lightly throw off. Every needless transgression of our being is virtually a transgression of the law of God, and is a sin in the sight of heaven. The Creator knew how to form the human body. He did not need to consult the inantua makers in regard to their ideas of beauty. God, who created everything that is lovely and glorious in nature, understood how to make the human form beautiful and healthy. The modern iinproveuicuts upon His plan are an insult to the Creator. They deform that which Ue has made perfect. Tn Olden Times People overlooked the importance of permanently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action; but now that It is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally injure the system. A Pope's Wit. Pius the Ninth was not without a certain sense of humor. Oue day, while sitting for his portrait to Healy, the painter, speaking of a monk who had left the church and married, he observed. not without malice: “He has taken his punishment into his own hands." How f Made $1,200 By not sowing Salzer’s seeds! That is what a jolly farm, : • ■ : -i lilli our sanctum. How is that? Why, says he, Salzer's seeds not only grow but they produce enormously. Had I planted a few acres more of his oats, wheat, corn, potatoes, grass and clover seeds, 1 would have had to '’ouble the capacity of my barns; that would have cost me $1,200. It is a fact that if you want big, rousing farm, grass and vegetable crops, you must sow Salzer's seeds. If You Will Cut This Ont and Send It with 7c postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Company. La Crosse, Wis., you will get free a sample of G»*sss and Clover Mixture and their catalogue. CNU We cannot get rid of a fault by refusing to look at it. I coui.d not get along without Piso's Cure for Consumption. It always cures, Mrs. E. C. Moulton, Needham, Mass., Oct. 22,1894.

GOLDEN—MEDICAL DISCOVERY Many years ago Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., compounded this medicine of vegetable ingredients which had an especial effect upon the stomach and liver, rousing the organs to healthful activity as well as purifying and enriching the blood. By such means the stomach and the nerves are supplied with pure blood; they will not do duty without it any more than a locomotive can run without coal. You can not get a lasting cure of Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, by taking artificially digested foods or pepsin—the stomach must do its own work in its own way. Do not put your nerves to sleep with socalled celery mixtures, it is better to go to the seat of the difficulty and feed the nerve cells on the food they require. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness and Nervous Affections, such as sleeplessness and weak, nervous feelings are completely cured by the “ Discovery. ” It puts on healthy flesh, 1 brings refreshing sleep and invigorates the whole system. Mrs. K. Henke, of Ao. B^6 North Halsted St.,

s: "J regard my improveMrs. Henke. bowels regular and sleep I

Chicago, 111., writes me n t a s simply wonderful. Since taking Dr. Fierce’s Golden Medical discovery in connection with his ‘Pleasant Pellets ’ I have gain- J ed in every respect, ! particularly in flesh and strength. My liver was dreadfully enlarged and I suffered greatly from dyspepsia. No physician could give relief. Now, after two months I am entirely relieved of my disease. My appetite is excellent; food well digested; much improved.”

Going to California? The Burlington Route is the only railway running “personally conducted" Excursions viu Denver to Colorado springs, -alt Lake, Ogden, Sacramento, ban Franclsco, Stockton, AL reed Fresno. Bakers.--rrran tourist sleephu^au^irouglm^th-^ out change. Leave Chicago every Wednesday. Write or call < n T. A. Grady. Excursion Manager, 211 Clark st, Chicago. DABWS ft PILLS, I For the cure of al disorders of the Stomach. Liver, K>wplb, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, I.ops of Appetite, Headache. Constipation, CostivenessJ Indigestion, Bi'iousness, Fever. Inflammat on of the I Bowels. Piles, and a'l deranieuien’s o[ the Internal) Viscera. Purely vegetab e, containing no mercury, ; minerals or deleterious drugs. OBSERVE the following symptoms re-uiting from Disease; of tho digestive organs: Constipation, inward plles,| fullness of the blood in the head, acidity of th» stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, fullness or weight in the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering of the heart, choking or suffocating sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of vision, dizziness on rising suddenly, dots or web* before the sight feve and dull pain in ths heal,l deficiency es perspiration, yellowness of the skin! and eyes, pain in the side, chest, limbs, and sudden flushes of heat burning m the flesh. A few d<>ses of RADA'AY's PILLS will free the' system of all the above named disorders. Price 25 cents per box. Sold by all druggists. RADWAY & CO., New Yorii. W. L. Douglas 13 THE BEST. 3H FIT FOR A KING. cordovan; X FRENCH AEKAMEUXDCAIF. F|NE CALf lKamgab ja $3 - 6 - POLICE^ SCLE3. BoYs'ScHcaLSncEa. ■LADIES' 1 ^yiwSßmaawihafrß brocktotlmSW. Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for tho money. They equal custom shoes in style end fit. Thoir wearing qualities ere unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—stamped on nolle. From St to $3 saved ever other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. ^9 W FACE TO FACE. The pleasure of a confidential chat is doubled by the sweet breath that goes with a well-ordered system. And that 13 always insured by Ripans • Tabules. Sweet breath, bright eye, clear complexion, Ripans • Tabules. “S^PouijmrALiimo FOK positiAely tho work of the kind ever n»ub1895 /’fhcrw ndvertise t!io finest fbut they Fare not got it^L Jf you want finmethin< thatlsjuxt you fnd it advertised here or <ivcn bettor, you wi'l g-t it by seuidlna* your oiler to me 1 PROVE AEL I ( eSfflsSSsnߣBß CLAIM. Gco. P. rilling St. Son,li’hii* pli W adclphia, Pa , write:— '' ''t 51 all - Jof beauty and vithonts Jtfihowa tmspArlngpalLfi aid bristles with para.” J: contains t-8 pages, best pane.*, fa j colors, photo engravings cf the large?! poultry fat min too Nc rth- ■ west. Aho other fine engravings, besides illustrations of 415 of ! the leading varieties of Pure Bred Fowls, with full description ’ and prices of them, and egg. Gives recaps for the besteggfbo4> Condition Powder, sure remedies f r all known diseascsof fowls, I best plans with illustrations t > build cheapr.nd convenient I ooh I try House?. S. nt t > anv address for 1 5 ecnU. postpaid. Ad leaf I C.C. SHOEMAKER, Box 23 Freeport, 111. U. S„ AJ FOR Adv. 4 timeg rL S■l in ICO high grade a _ — _ H g M papers in Illinois, g ■ n wv W ! y <lo^l or we < an insert _ H R ■ Q ■ ya y y SEND F< CA TAtOOUE. CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION, 93 South Jefferson Street, - Chicago, 111. Ph?/?;?! P f” 1 ri "’- ai ' : dbntc Clrenlsti, 8 hsnc up d;p P‘ av cards and Introd i«« our Elec; ric Goods in special loead* os. Workers make from $ 150 to ! P* «very BO days in the year. Age ita svo 5^ B*3 growing rich,—the sick pettin; well. Vo company, firm, or individual oa >llEarth ever before offered such opportunirv. A chance of a lifetime. ELEC r>iU-KKMEI>IAL ASSOCIATION, K25—3Q7 Sycamore Cincinnati, Ohio PATEBTS. TIIOMARKS. I Examination and Advice as to Paten tabi lity of InI vention. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or Ho.v to Get < a Patent. Patbicx O'Fabbbi.i,, Washington. D. Q, < • N. U. No. 5-95 WHEX WRITING TO ADVERTISED I ’ please say you saw the advertisement in this paper. M CURLS WHERE ALL ELS'e EAILSTjg Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. J^se In tims. Sold by druggists hSH|