St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 30, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 16 February 1895 — Page 3
mmw:mm“xwm:am:mwxm e T % o »_‘! F R e ‘y/f" N B 3 &, 1) s st B ,;?{i ':% :;, P s‘j 2 ¥ ( & o .gr' \ A Jj*fi\ £ i P ~ PN \?~\ w{t:\ il T A | gl = Ny | }}f ;."-;Qfl;;'.‘,{-, =7 R D I A I o Zomn ASGNNIRY S TN RN | 7 Nt N\ 2o SR | ¢ D7 A\ | Ay, Frank Mcdllaster l e ; All Run Do § wn | Hearty and Well Bince Taking | Hood’s Sarsaparilia. § *I became enfeebled and run down from 172 to ! 132 pounds. I then commenced taking | Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and now I am hearty ’ and well, can work hard and eat my meals | with relish, which I could not do previous- | ly. Formerly my food distressed me, now | I can eat heartily. ! I Hood’s Mas Cured Me, | built up my systemn, given me renewed health, and increased my weight to 158 pounds, 1 | -¥9 P L Sars ; l Hood gsyie | praise Hood's Sarsaparilia highly to all.” | FRANE MCALUASTER, Rich Hill, Mo. { - Hood’s Piilscure all liver ills, biliousness, § ~ jaundice, Indigestion, sick headache E I e s o IR, B oTR ‘“'MW‘“«M‘ I o ‘M».»«: { B e .;\: W o s %W”mfl; v e fi‘:fie’sw NSOT 1s now claim- | L A Miho, like the wise man iL | 00, never went to college. Not | =+ long ago, I surprised a man on his' .‘.fknees in a hotel corridor. Inguiring the cause of his apparently meaningless attitude, I was informed that he was Prof. Wilkins, the mousge man, who was at that moment looking for | small game. When [ interviewed Wil- | Kins he informed me that he was a professor of rodentology, and I found that his mind really had a scientific turn. On the register of a hotel in a Western | town I read, “Prof. Pekkins and staff.” ! A geological survey was in progress. | Probably, I reflected, Prof. Pekkins ‘ was conducting it. That night, through | the transom es my door, I heard an un- ? usually penetrating voice instrueting a “class’” on the subject of soap—a par- ! ticular kind of soap. It was Pekkins — { professor saponology! lis agents con | stituted the staff. Just across the street lives Prof. Null, tonsorial artist. _ € Working Girls, g “Are you troubled with Back- | ache, Faintness, Dizziness, Irreg- | ularity ? ; “ Are your cheeks pale? ; - “ Your eyes dull, and step heavy? |
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~ ten! Standing all day, week in | - and week out, you have slowly | - drifted into woman'’s great encmy, | displacement of the womb. ; = “That or some other derange- | ment of the organ, causing irregue B 1 : lant‘ii and other troubles. ; “ Take warning intime! Zydia | - E Pinkhamn's Vegetable Compound | is the surest and safest remeay in | the world for you.” — Miss Sallie | Palmer, Juniata St.. Nicetown, Pa. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. EFERIUMERVIQ RENNNDIY 'S MEDICAL DISERYERY HLUIURL BiguU Ll ARAIR FEREEDY 0T PAVDURY piice | BS.‘:M.H l;!_sf.i‘:;!."fj Ui ::L.g.-,;’q.;,f’; E;’;_a?:?h, Has discovered in cnz of our common rgsture weeds a remedy that cures every tind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. 1 - He hastried it in over eleven hundred | gases, and never failed exceptin two cases | - {both thunder humor), Hehasnow in his ! - possessicn over two hundred certificates ? ;g__g;»_ljt;S_\(alue, all within twenty miles of | BETITSTDotte, and a perfect cure is war¥anted when the right quantity is taken. | When the lungs are affected it causes | shooting pains, like necdles 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. l 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. | Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists.
DIRECTIONS for using CREAM BALM.— Apply l a particle of the Balm well up into the nostriis. After ‘ a moment draw sironj breath through Uwe nose. Use three times a day, after meals preferred, anl before retiring.
. L x T=B B ] CATARRKH ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and c eanses the ‘ Nasal Passages. Allays Pain apd Intlammetion, Heals | tiie Sores. Protects the Membrane trom Colds. Re- | gtores the Senses of Taste and Smeli. Ihe Balm 18 quickiy absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 52 cents, at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 5 Warren Street, New York. | ¥ N geo 3To post Bilis, distribute Circulars, WA ‘T‘ED bang un display eards and introduca R Pttt A our Electric Goedsin special localities, g 3/4‘}_o—-’-.23?'3:\ Workers make from §159 1o 8200 b &5 every 80 daysin the year. Agents 5y growing rich,—the gick getiing well, P e Ne company, firm, or individual on il [M——2e Karth ever before offered such oppor- : . B tunity. A chance of s lifetime. 5 ELEOT RU-BEMEDIAL ASSOUIATION, ; 825827 Bycamore Bt., Cinclnnati, Oblo Mrs. Winslow’s SoorHING SYRUP for Childrea teething: softens t!_nedmm_s. reauces inflammatica, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cenisa bottle,
ey } . . iBOND BILL IS BEATEN CLEVELAND’S FINANCIAL MEASJ URE DEFEATED. | By the Close Vote of 181 to 154 the f Ifouse Refuses to Indorse the Pres- !‘ ident’s Plan fer the Relief of the i National Treasury. : f L.ost in the House. l The last hope of financial legislation [ for the relief of the treasury at the pres- { ent session of Congress went by the ibom‘d when the Ilouse of Representaitiws Thursday afternoon, by a vote of 134 to 161, rejected the administration ! Lill to authorize an issue of $500,000,000 g gold bonds. The bill was beaten before Lit reached its last parliamentary stage. i This result was reached after three days ‘of spivited and at tinwes heated debate, { and at the end of a seven-hour session. i From 11 until 3:30 o'cloek, when the bill ! with the pending substiintes was reported fto the House from the commiitee of the i whole, amiendments were offered {n rapid | suceession, most of which were voted | down as fast as they were offered, Many l | of them were designed to lond down the !bill, and the votes thereon were in no | sense test votes, The Bell amendment, for instance, to make the bonds payable in gold and silver, was defeated by the decisive vote of 76 to 106, while the bill ety WL S AL SRS AR MR e W MR R LY sl the bil was reported to the House. | Whe uestion came up on the | third reading and engrossment of the bill { the whole opposition concentrated. While ' the vote was being taken, which result- ' ed in the refusal of the House to order the ’ third reading, the intervest centered in the | i vote of Mr. Reed. He sat quietly in his { seat during the first call, and did not an- - swer te his name, but on the second eall |he voted for the bLill. As soon as the re- - enlt was announced Mr. Iteed offered an | i explanation of the attitude of himself and { those of Lis colleagues who had voted fov | i the bill, but objections were made. Ho‘i ‘ afterward explained, however, that he { had submitted a proposition (his own sub- ; stitute) whichi he considered would moeet | the sitaation. The Democrats had rei jected thig, and then he and many of his i colleagues, although opposed to features { of the bill, had voted for it in the hope i that it wQuld pass and be amended in the Senate. Mr. Springer then moved to veconsider the vote by which the third { reading was refused, but this miotion was | laid on the table, 135 to 123, and«the bill Cwas killed. i Os those who voted for the bill ninetyi two were Democrats and forty-two Re- ' publicans. The negative vote was given i’l:y ninety-seven Democrats, fifty-six Re- ' publicans and eight Populists. | 3s i | . JUDGE HOWELL E. JACKSON, » s it s ! ‘ . Who Will Soon Retire from the Snpreme Bench, i A Dbill has been introduced’ into thoe | United States Senate looking to the re- | tirement of Howell 12, Jackson as asso- | ciate justice of the Supreme Court of the ' - United States, on the ground of ilinocss, | and Judge Jackson will probably soor | sever his connection with ihas veneh, | LT 10, 3 achauila REeeTn nt I'aris, ? Henry County, Tenn., April 8, 1832. Hav- | ing received an academie education, lu‘! lontored the West Tennessee College at | ' Jackson, from which institution he grad- | ,vutnd in 1849. In the following yeanr he | o RdY e TR "';“: \ B 2 obd \ Wt @ g\«\ N :"3?‘ \‘\ o ‘:‘.\ .‘fi \{lf 2 \\‘\\ { & ) \ ;&‘n\\ ‘ Y ‘fi <o \‘ ‘t*' W ! . A "T?f.::‘*“ i ./// B :'E\’.'fl‘\,{'\‘vi‘;\ ik fi‘& R ""«%.Q.!";iti,"".‘ ! TQN NN R | \ & \”‘ \ \\\\:\«'}‘l> i § } S \) | JUDGE JACKSON. | entered the University of Virginia and completed the course there. He studied | law and was duly admitted to the bar, first practicing in Jackson. Then, in 1858, he removed to Memphis. He was | :‘l‘{:-'gli:w'li receiver of “u\]j\,? 'l‘vn‘.x\ sSseée ‘ under the Confederate Sequestration act | at the beginning of hostilities in '6l. As- | ter the war he returned to Memphis and | to the study of his profession. In the] 70’s ke returned to his old home in Jack- | son. In 1880 he was elected to the Legis- : lature and in 1881 became United States | Senator. In 1886 he was appointed cir- ! cuit judge of the United, States from the ‘ sixth judicial district. He became asso- | ciate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States in 1893, filling the vacancy caused by the death of Judge L. Q. C. CROP. Quantity and Value of tl‘le Wheat and Cora Crops Last Year. The corn crop in the United States last year was worth $554,719,162, which is | the smallest valuation since 1883. The ;u\'qrago for the ten years from 1870 to | 1879, nclusive, was $504,571,048, for the ten years from 1880 to 1889 it was $668,- | 042,820, and for the five years from 1890 |to 1804 it was $675,872520. The wheat crop last year was worth only $225,902,0235, whicb, with the exception of 1893, when it was still lower, was less than that of any year since 1870. The average value of the wheat. crop from 1870 {o 1870 was $327,407,258, more than SIOO,000,000 more than the total for last year. The average from 1880 to 1889 was $371,- | 809,504, more than $150,000,000 above the total of last year, while for the last five years the average was $321,8806,335. These figures will surprise people. That the low price of wheat was nst due to overproduction in this country is shown by the fact that the entire crop in the United States in ISBH4 was only 460,207,416 bushels, while the average for the previcus five years was 476,678,- { 028 Dbushels. The total for 1802 was | 515,049,000 bushels, and for 1891 it was l 611,780,000 bushels. The average value | of wheat a bushel last year was 49.1 ¢ centg, while the average for the previous !fi\'o years was 067.50 zents; for the ten I vears from 1880 to 1889 it was 82.7 cents, and for the ten years froim 1870 to 1879 it was $1.049. The statistics of the crop by States, { which have just been compiled by the | Agrienltural Department, furnish a very
R, RN Ry UL g : Does your back | and side ache | sometimes ter- | ribly? “Are | |y Vs b NES | ' faint and dizzy, | ' - . ¥ i with pain 1n | the lower part i of your stom- f ach? oM Bb, lis- !
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T S '[intercstiug | 38 shows the greatestis ¥ e eing | States in the Union #RGS - ty and { value of the crop last yen l e | OLIO e SRR 2 | Indiana ... ..5.48, 0800 | #076,260 ! Minnesoth ..o ,;% %;‘4-.;, e :H:m' ‘ ! IKansas ineoid i I Jz{‘gl, | North Dakota <BB6 0,900 (8 28065437 | linols .. oo SHUTESE 0,637 | (..“.Eil\:N!ifl. "h e “n‘“" : o , j;.j%; | Missouri ... ... .08 58 SSESEEERIDN NG | Michigan ...y *h S - 5920,670 ‘ Penusylvania .. 15’, 8,700 7] 4 r:;%” '7:‘ | An inspection of this fahie g WS the | value of having a wheat field BgE® 8 mar- | ket. Althongh North Dukot sised 823, | 000 bushels more than THNOIE S Jatter | State got $5H00,000 R ;. | Although Califernia paised = SOOO,OOO - bushels less than either, she SolEer harCvest for $2,400,000 more thauddiingis, | nearly §3,000,000 more than 25 " | kot and ouly about ”,H,, M,, { Minnesota, where ,k 4 was 5 produced. fl‘g ,g» { The following table sho % tates | | producing the lurgost _w st ) | year and the quantity and yalge each: | State. Bushels. -VER& [ Tllinofs 1. 0044, .169,121.{9’:.5 ERER a3 { Missouri ......116,011,654 SENEROUS | Dlßdinßn s !)8,888,37%«' 5, g U 0 | [Towa ...on ooy, 81,344,080 CSERESOG. | ‘ Qhio. cls i e 71,973, ‘ R Wozas Lol GD345676 8 Tennesses ..... (8,000,310 SGUENEES | Kentueky ... .. 67,802,307 JUSESAL | Sonie peculiarities will” % in | i this table alzo, Town got i corn than Indiana, although she prggesed , 15,000,000 bushels less, Texas gdi®&- | { 660,000 more than lowa, althougisbe | ! produced 12,000,000 bushels loss, RntS,- | { 000,000 more than Jndiana, althoughslio’ ; | produced 27,000.000 bushels loss, %' : ’ seld her ereop for $£12.,000,000 more 3 ; Tenpessce, although there was o @it | ence of only 1,300,600 bushels in % | quantity. ' 1 ; IN COUNCIL AND COURT. |’~ | ‘ i ‘ The Brooklyn Trolley Magnates Afl‘i ‘ ‘ Btill Isampered oa All Sides, ; ‘
VYER four w“.% have passed sin“_ the inaugu otion @ 1 the Drooklyu trollg W strike,.and the 5,00 moen who went ogt | for something better. ‘than starvation wages are still out’ apd are as defit ed as ever, sure, the conifianies have seneceelied in socuring lelp from !
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{ all over the couniry by offering steady | work and big wages, but the uew men { are inexperienced and incompetent, and ! hundreds of carg have been damaged and i people killed and injured through their | carelessness and ignorance. Monday a ! crowd of 12,000, composed of strikers and § | their friends, assembled at the City Hall. I | They were kept moving by the police, but | ' the best of order was maintained. The } t strikers accomplished their objoct—to | L show the Common Councii, then in ges- l | sion, and the city officials their strength. jln the evening another great meeting | { was held, which was addressed by promi- j I nent mon. ; £he Brookivo Board of Aldermen passs ed 0 resolution revoking the permission | #ranted to the Brooklyn City and Atlan- ! 'tic Avenue Railroad Companies to op- | { erate surrace ears. This resolution | ' v!::g{';:u.‘\' the ('uj’.\; anies named with non- ] | performance of contract since the strike | i was begun, and with endangering !I:c; lives of citizens by the employment of in- | experienced motormen and eonductors. | The aciion of the Counecil cansed great | rejoicing among the strikers. A he aring | was had in Albany, on the application ! to the atiorney general asking him to au- | tlhiorize the bringing of an action to an- | { nul the charter of the Brooklyn Heights ’ i Railroad Company. Several aflidavits | | and argumeuts were presented for both sides. - ,I Telegraphic Brevities. ' Raiph O. Ruby, American vice and dep- | | uty censul at Belfaasr, Ireland, is dead. ’ : The tin-plate plant of the Oliver Iron | | and Steel Company at Pittsburg, I‘u.,g | started up. } { George Chapin, of the Chiecaco liquor | firm of Chapin & Gore, dicd at Santa | Barbara, Cal. i | Gov. Mc¢Kinley announces he is lot a : candidate for Senator Brice's seat, leavs ] | ing a clear field to oraker. . | J. E. Holman, of Xokomo, Ind., Lias | mysteriously disappgared in Indianapolis | | and his relatives fear foul play. i | The residence of B. I'. Davis at 1’31“! | waod, Ind., was destroyed by fire. Tho { f family barely escaped with their lives. l | Kafiirs attacked the I'ortuguese camp | at Maraqueen; killing seven or more | whites, but losing 200 men themselves. ! Jack Smith, alins Gen. Johnson, alias Mason, leader of the Bull Hill miners during tae Cripple Creek war, is in jail 1 at Gunuison, Cole. Henry Carpenter, supposed to have been drowned in Lake Stewart, near Lol g T The injunction to restrain Col. Booné | and associates frem fighting the lion Parncll and the grizzly bear Sigkiyou was | heard at Fort Worth, Tex., and made perpetual, Otto Thiele, aged 10 years, a pressman, Las been arrested in St. Louis as the fifth member of the Davis gang of counterfeiters recently broken up by United States oflicers. Archbishop Kain of Bt. Louis has authorized the Cathelic Beciety of Queen's Daughters to co-operate with the Young Woman's Christian Temperance Union in temperance work. I'rank P. Montrose, an ex-convict and expert diamond thief, was arrested at Bt. L.ouis as he stepped from a Louigville and Nashville train at the union station. He is wanted at Terre Haute, All the cases against ex-State Boiler Inspector K. H. Hegwer of Colorado, against whom were charges of certif- | cates for beilers which Lie had not examined, have been nolled by the distriet attorney. The Hershey Lumber Company, stillwater, Minn.,, has begun suit against | Charles T. Goodrich, a lumber tallyman, and ethers for fraudulently obtaining | over 1,000,000 feet of logs in the sum- | mers of 1892 and 1893. Oscar A. Idgerly, a spiritualist lec- | turer of note from Newbury, DMiass., married Miss Lillian Hayes, a St, Paul (Minn.) society woman, in Anderson, | Ind., the matter being kept secret, it in | said, from the bride’s friends.
set e . E " Highest of all in Leavening Power.~«Latest U. S, Gov’t Report ’ i B O Re\A7 D, 2 ”‘!‘3 T B B PR, i 3 “i* £ 4&3: %%E % ‘ f’é 56 = i& b ’53,;1 | |Be q B " 1 B A\ e ""@* HEARR T B Q e A QYL | | QY v=mms A QWOVIGLCur | i | . ARCOLUTELY BURE | b _‘__fi_.“_ o
" 1 Boniface. 4 The name of “Boniface,” as applied ito hotel-keepers, is derived from a | good, devout and hospitable man | whom St. Augustine created a saint, ™ e e
| Subsequently he became the patron | saint of Germany, and it was in that { country, according to some writers, | that hotel or tavern keepers, as well a8 those private citizens who at times “kept open house,” as the saying fs, | Were dubbed Bonifaces. Dante refers (to Boniface; so likewise do -Shalk. Speare, Bacon and Lamb, ' B eb et et ~_Luther’s Efrthiplace in Ruins. _ Eisleben, the birthplace of Martin Luther, is sinking into the moor upon -which it is built. Measures have been seriously thinking of abaudoning the s}”"*":fi\flfji‘{t’w” s RS § ~ Back with Rich Trophies, . Last spring we made notice In these | columns that Mr. Hemvy A Salzer, of the John A. Salzer Seed Company, La Crosse, Wis, America’s leading Seed Growers and Merchants, was in Burope In search of rare seeds and novelties for the American farmer and ! citizen. ! Judging from their new catalosue, f his trip was an eminently successful | one. It is brim ftull of rare things. OFf } especial merit we name the Bismarek | Apple, bearing the second vear; !h:‘f Giant Flowering Star Phlox: the Ger- ! man Coffee Berry; and for the farmer | the Vietoria Rape; Germanica Veteh: j the Lathyrus silvestris; the Qiant Spurry and Giant Incarnate uhm-r;‘; acallne; and dozens of other rare | inzgs. ‘ 5 I his wide awake firm is in the van, | i fd their catalogue, which s seat for | ! ents postage, would be cheap at $1 |
E—- — “®servations and caleulations have L leMr. A, Mallack to conelude that ind@u do not see well, especially at a ance. Their composite eye, howv has an advantage over the simple “' Like u Sieve, P chlef function of the kidneys 1s to | ’:\w from the blood, In its pnssagci ifgh them, certaln impuritics and wat- | emparticles which make their final oxlt} §zh the bladder. The retention of these, | falisequence of fnactivity of the kidneys, fsbductive of Bright's disease, dropsy, dites, albuminurin and other maladies W fatal tendency. Hostetter's Stomach B¥s, a highly sanctioned diuretic and bl depurent, Impels the kidneva when ¥ofve 1o renew their sifting function, and ¥ from the vital curvent impurities fich Infest it and threaten their own exfence a8 organs of the body. Caterrh of ‘' "“blfldflor. gravel and rotention of thoe ) tgm'u also maladies arvested or averted { i fhis benlen promoter and restorative of | s nic action., Milarig. rhonmaticss sans. |
; bt NoB s 2, Frincid SRR E 16y AL AN LaiEl, LU !lfitflun. blliousness and dyspepsia also i to the Ritters, which Is aiso speedily zkflclal to the weak and nervous. | #a-drinking prevails to a very large et among persous of literary habits, not only a pleasaut brain bracer, i is harmless as well. { re of Ointments for Catarrh that [ Contain Mercury, gcrcm'y will surely destroy the sense of ¢ Band completely derange tio whole system | g entering It throngh tho mucous surtaces, sarticlos should never be used except on l1 lons from reputablo physicians, as the t £ tqy will do Es te?fqld tiv_(ufie. ggml )0}: Assibly desive 1o len, all’s Catarrh 'éi'??’i‘?’fh et ed gyllg 3 Cheney & Co., ToleC 'f;:_y 2ins nod mercury, and IS taken inferi3actiug direatly upon the blood and mu. conrfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Céh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It iy talinternally, and tnads in Toledo, Ohio, by ¥.heney & Co. Testimonials freo. 2d by Druggists, 75¢, per botile, § t spent his boyhood in his fath- | erm, and his youth in a theological | €9%. He was designed for the , Chi' but preferred the army. ' ‘_»..m. e 2
' A Pertinent Paragraph. é .“; country, if right, should be kept | Tlgg wrong, should be put right,” is a | ' pol} maxim which, paraphrs 1, ap- | pligother conditions of life, thus- our ! - he®iE right, should be Lept right: if | wishould be put right, especially in | bolments, such as pains and aches, | WHSE Jacobs Uil promptly enres. | Matof work should heed to give it o | chffo cure and it will give them a , | chdge go to work cured. Another | 2442 “Te doeth best who doeth well.” . Wdoourse, you want to be weil from ’ all %of aches, and the best thing to do | is f.§%hewm'(~n‘ remedy. e who does o , " e, oL Wne £ . e 004 displayed in her Ii i “ily a one %? “ 0 condj%on fa- ’ i :fi' efiopment of some latent l dis@}iée, easter takes full possession , of the 8y er cure your Cold at onco witn Dir. e’s Expectorant, a good | remedy forpat-ails and Lung aifec- | tions. i | 3 R [ | Layers ofy on a cut will stop I_‘ M W AR BE .
bleeding. 1,000 Btatoes Per Acre. Wonderful's in potatoes, oats, corn, farm #getable seeds. Cut this out an@ be postage to the John A. Balzed Co., La Crosse. Wis., for theat sced book and sumple of Giakrry. CNU | | L S ~-~~-~]'—‘o'é‘,L. I A e
P EGR E%E”F}‘)}U‘%‘ E MAN & IlWal Before the Day of ThelUsS& {0 Say “Woman’s [or\Never Done.” |
Y e e L To Save the Plant. Edelweiss ig rapidly disappearing in many parts of Tyrol. To save it the landtag has lately imposed a fine for ! ST e b Bbl LN L e RS
o P e WO Plallt with the roots. \ i e t The Modesrn Invatid Has tastes medicinally, in keeping with i other luxuries. A remedy must be : pleasantly acceptable in form, purely wholesome In composition truly bene- | ficlal In effect and enth'efy free from | every objectionable quality. If really 11 he consults a physiclan; if constigated he uses the gentle family laxative yrup of ligs, Not Yet Awhile. | If the United States had as great a | relative population as Japan it would .‘ h&?@ ‘‘f Wfiofl‘bfi 900,000,000 people. | 202 Bu. Danvers Yellow Onfons Were grown by John L. Rath, East Saginaw, from one pound of seed. This tremendous yield, at the rate of 1,048 bushels per acre, Mr. Rath fAys was only possible because he used Salzer's seeds. We understand that Mr. Salzer's seeds are the earliest in the world, especially his beets, carrots, cabbage, cucumbers, onions, peas, corn, radishes, 1’ tomatoes, ete., and that he sells to mar- / | ket gardeners and farmers at lowest { wholesale prices. ’ { If You Will Cut This Out and Send 7t | } with §1 money order to the John Al | Salzer Seed Company, La Crosse, Wis., ;‘ f you will get free thirty-five pu(-i;uf:(*si - ecarliest vegetable seeds and their won- | - derful catalogue, or for 13 cents in | stamps a package above Prize Danvors | Onious and their catalogue free. CNU | | Gailic Emissaries, P All French ambassadors draw 88,000 | a year, i Wouid Have to Learn Over Again. ;
“1 believe it would be harder to learn to use the weed again than it was the first time, I shall always be ready to say a good word for No-to-bae; I have no more desire for tobaceo,” is the text of a letter written to the Sterling Remedy Co., of Chicago, by D. J. McMullen, of Larkin, Kansas, after taking No-to- | bae, purchased of his druggist, and bei ing cured of the tobaecco habit. i A Bright Eye | is the sign of good health and an alert | mind. Strange that it should almost ali ways depend on the state of the digestion, but it does. A Ripans Tabule taken after | meals gives the little artificial help most grown people need. ‘ I caxxor speak too highly of Piso’s Curo for (‘unsumplion.wM RS. FRANK Mosss, 215 W. 224 St., New York, Oct, 90 1e0! ! Anrvs of snowy whiteness; neck pure as alabaster; complexicn liko the blush of a | rose. bho patronized Gienn's Sulphur soap, |
Dr. PIERCE’S
PLEASANT . | ! < CURE= SICK HEADACHE, | BILIOUSNESS, ; CONSTIPATION, | INDIGESTION, ' DYSPEPSIA, POOR APPETITE, | and all derangements of the | Stomach, Liver and DBowels. . Os all druggists. | ONCE USED_ s, ALWAYS IN FAVCR. |
j^twei \J \«.as» ,\ UT®«‘V* /. «\X*Xi !#iHEtB«J«f -c' ’ .'C^ l
' YOUNG SPIRITS, j -
.■■ ■ \ '■. ■ •' . ■' ■ ' '—■ f ; I ■ ■ /,, | ■■ ■■ J■_ y • wLt-
I a vigorous body and robust strength {ollow good healtl, But all fail when the vital powers are weakened. Nervous, debility and loss of mauly power resuit { from bad habits,contracted by the young through ignorance of thieir ruinous consequences. Low epirits, melancholia, | impaired nictuory,
o T GllO derangements of body | and mind, result from such pernicious prac- | tices. All these are permanently cured by ,‘ imiproved methods of treatment without {hie 1‘ patient leaving home, ! A medical treatise written in plain but | chaste language, treating of the nature, ‘ symptoms and curability of such diseases, | sent securely sealed in a plain envelope, on | receipt of this notice, with 1o cents in stamps, | for postage, Address, WORLD’S DIspEN. | SARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buftalo, N. Y. l
D DAVR B A 5-LINE ei Bt & PAYS FOR Ady, 4Ltimes e~ by +7 inlCO highgrade ? Y f papersin Illinois, % 4iy ll.:un?anteed circuoY &/ lation 100,000— ! orwe can ‘nsort tt 3 times in 1,375 country paperstor. i v 5 e = 5 SEND FOR CATALOGUE. ,‘ | CHICAGO NE WSPAPER UNION, ‘1 93 South Jeflferson Street, = Chicageo, 111, |
s Wflflf?mfl’m '.&m’.mawl BEST POLISH IN THE WORLD, | MAIDSIN - | LSol S _;_" i 4 7 > Isl i i"};‘&, i a.‘ T ;’i b ’£‘s‘ a 5 B ::;3: SN VWA =" N £O] I DIOVE DAt e | | Eiedn AA S N ISH |RI e '= e g |DO NOT BE DECEIVED —Laabes SR | { with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which; { stain the hands, injure the iron, and burm! red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is B liant, Odorless, and Duralle, Each pac ! contains six ounces; when moistene | & make several boxes of Paste Polish, HAS AN ANHUAL SALE oF 3,00 NS, ¥ SO SR o o eCE gP,
i '4oo—'o‘ooooo‘oOv‘ho‘“MbQ.'”No‘)“t‘fiw’m”’fl: Y WORLD’S-FAIR Lo ¥ IHIIGHIEST AWARD7 Q'*Qv‘:m’fl"” * " SUPERIOR NUTRITION — THE LIFE? * b N SN ERN f "’i ?..'w \‘ 3 'i- .}_ub(’(::‘ (P NZ S vg,‘,g;,!,,- !kl*\y- ; AN Ns R P\ S Rb 2 T g SRS L\@ R i NNEIDIC T NAar., | Has justly acquired the reputation of being ( E The Salvator for a > «* The-Aged. AN INCOMPARABLE ALLAENT for {h GrOwTH and PROTECTION of INFANTH and CTCHILDR E;il A superior nutritive in continued Fevers, And a reliable remocdial agent ! in all gastric and enteric diseasesg | oiten in instances of consultation ovcr§ -_". patients whose digestive organs were TEei duced to such a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was/ the only nourishment the stomach; would tolerate when LIFE sceined! depending on its retention ;— And as a FOCD it would be difficult to conceive of anything more palatable, c. 14 2. DD lOCOTT\ RN Phoahs o
| =old by DRKUUQUIS TS, Shipping Depot, j JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York, { owmomow»mwz ‘ i .»~.~_.~_—__.~w~~--._.~‘_.*.-...__.__..1 ‘ ¢ i»/r‘ § - ’ i u - -AA;';“\ 2 e : | AT | R e | L ey ) N e, ; "‘v"ff:; = '4‘ et s SR e Wg g Y N owm i ae | Rl SEe g(e BVi .;stu“rfif R R el i e g T ' X 5 MNSRATTIRR o e i) »g,f*, i e \(lfliw.\l- 31*1;'.5‘)") 'i“r- AT [hy SR \\‘\‘.\'*\u\,a‘ai ‘i'!}!l’ijv/ Wey Sy | B M\g‘,‘\‘\“\\‘ il :‘L S e IPR A A %‘,i! WGk M A TR RRS 4 1 4 8t R 2 EV3S, > b £°3 A P 4 e e e 151 i R SO s | B QF B e e ! po; 5% e * i A 8 S 5 N - BEST in the world, 3 centand ug for well filled p’kgs, Send names for Tt tiest Free Catalogne ever Printed, Big let of L:_.::{"I:‘ lAS FIRIEL with every order R, H. SHUMWIAY, Rockford, !, MENTION THIS PAPER wasy WRITING T 0 ADVESTIIZRS, ! g 2 = : "”“'" LAY LAS | A 6;} .{z_:a a @Q@@L P - e- & 7 IS THE BEST, N = Weß o 3 %@9{% FIT FOR AKING, [t;""‘ s 5, CORDOVAN, o T\ FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF, % 245359 Fing CauraKanearaa S 8 mo i Y S3.SOPOLICE,3sOLcs, Be "mR TN 062, W 0 RKINGMEYS Gidg |P 47 -EXTRA FINE- V 9. R e 52.%1.75 BOVS SCHOGLSHOER el oy "LADIES. CUTT R as2rnenTe G B weariool, AT ST SEND FOR CATALOGUE SEIOE W R e Cver Cne Million People wflear ita 57 A\niiotlac @2 0. 0 A ¥ ¢ W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shees Allour shoes are equaliy satisfactory They give the best vatuo for the monaw, They equal custom Shoes in style ard gt. Their wearing qualitles ere unsurpassed, The :;;:}c-:\‘, ars unii ;]:":rs,m«r“t?::?:pe'_" on gois, IR I D 23 sßaved over cther ma:ca. i your dezler cannot supply you we can, e;n T EXENT .7-.—‘ By AEFTER DINNER.
U e Pl e S eet T e B AR TL i 7-_#“ g:’{.‘:,' ,r_:'“;""h‘.(."){'c;‘}; i BT O UL S RSR it gl s e “fi"\“«;f"f“ Tt hn s bt 4 R A R D O R “s‘n{mi‘; |3 Sn g Y Tl |8 S T e G I N (P3B s L QAT I."'» ',;*,;4 ez VO% 37 S RS R A e ST E g AT £ pases AR AT SIS i i ":‘4,}: Bbt AR R S e e LS I T e f e Iy W ridls G LA B e A s~7 | ARN RN o T e TR R Fage gl RRR IRt "\':t"fiffrf/j’g‘s(::, Sl Sal 3 %““"“ o, paecrte - R B L S RO L 3 BT S Lomerir eSN OST 78 Big dinner last nights It was, indeed. Plenty to drink, too? Well, I chculd say so. Hecadache in congequence § Oh, no. How do you managre it 2
T b B DS T S g R § . ’ / Ripans e Tabule, ‘ Will that do it.? [ Every time, AR e Swaumor POULTRY ALMANAC AMMOTH Fogl Is positively the finest work of tho kind ever pube 1895 , ¢ lished. Oifiers advertise the finest (hut flw;v hary f /it uut_gut it), ltt‘yu‘urwn_nt s.mwrp!nr th?.H:'_ Ci?,i,l | ‘l;;. e You find it advertised here or evew
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