St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 43, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 18 May 1895 — Page 7
Spring Makes Me Tired
To many people Spring and its duties tnean an aching head, tired limbs, and throbbing nerves. Just as the miider weather comes, the strength begins to wane and “that tired feeling’’ is the complaint of all. The reason for this condition is found in the deficient quality of the blood. During the winter, owing to various causes, the blood becomes loaded with impurities and loses its richness and vitality. Consequently, as soon as the bracing effect of cold air is lost, there is languor and lack of energy. The cure will be found in purifying and en- ■ riching the blood. ' j Hood's Sarsaparilla is the greatest and best spring medicine because it is t the greatest and best blood purifier. It [ overcomes that tired feeling because it 1
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the Public Eye To-day.
The Orang-Outang. The nest of a orang-outang taken from a tree at. Borneo has been placed In the Natural History Museum at Berlin. The nest, which was situated about thirty feet from the ground, in the crutch of a tree forty-five feet high and about one foot in diameter, measures four and one-half feet long, and one foot to two and one-half feet wide, by about seven inches high. It is made of branches locked and twined together, and is large enough for a fullygrown orang-outang to lie in it at full length. Suffering Moses. Mrs. Moses —I have quite made up my mind, John, to join the suffragists. Mr. Moses—Heavens, and I’ll be the sufferer! —Boston Courier.
BEAUTY IS POWER. Perfection of Form, Feature, and Mind Render Women All-powerful. [SPECIAL TO OUS LADY BEALLR3) Yet blended with those perfections must be perfect health. Women are to-
day stronger in their I character, better in I »their nature, truer in I their love, warmer in 1
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ency, cures ieucorrnoea, — the great forerunner of serious womb trouble, relieves backache, strengthens the muscles of the womb, and restores it to its normal condition, regulates menstruations, removes inflammation, ulceration, and tumors of the womb, etc. It is a remedy of a woman for women. Millions of women owe the health they enjoy, an 1 the influence they exert, to Mrs.'Pinkham; and the success of her Vegetable Compound has never been equalled in the field of medicine for the relief and cure of all kinds of female complaints. So say the druggists. Here is another one of thousands who speaks that others may know the truth - “ For five years I suffered with falling of the womb, and all the dreadful aches and pains that accompany the disease. I tried several doctors and different medicines, until I lost all faith in everything. I had not tried your Compound. I
watched your advertisements from day to p day, and each day became 0 more hopeful, c At last I re- | solved to try it. 1 have taken seven bottles, । and have gained (
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forty pounds. My pains have all left me, and I am a well woman. I do all
my own work, and can walk two miles - without feeling tired. Your Compound has been worth its weight in gold to me. I cannot praise it enough.” Mattt.da Eunam, Columbia, Lancaster Co., Pa. WALTER BAKER & CO. _The Largest Manufacturers of GA PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS ANO CHOCOLAIES thi * Continent, have received HIGHEST AWARDS \ from the great I Industrial and Food ■ UM EXPOSITIONS H win Europe and America. JumA I fr L: Unlike the Dutch l*roce««, ne Alka- , ,*,■,)b Jlies or other Chemicals or Dyes are 11’fd in nnv of their preparations. Their delicious BREAK EAST COCOA Is absolutely jure and solubla, and oostz less than or.s cent a cup. BOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
s j makespure, rich blood. It gives strength I to nerves and muscles because it en- ■ j dows the blood with new powers of > ( nourishment. It creates an ap-petite, tones and strengthens the stomach and digestive organs, and thus builds up the whole system and prepares it to meet the change to warmer weather. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a medicine upon which you may depend. It is the only true blood purifier prominently before the public eye to-day. It has a record of cures unequaled in the history of medicine. Il is the medicine of which so many people write, “Hood's Sarsaparilla does all that it is claimed to do.’’ You can take Hood's Sarsaparilla with the confident expectation that it will give you pure blood and renewed health. Take it now.
How the Elk Changes His Antlers. Those who take an Interest in the study of natural history may be pleased to know that the stag elk in the deer glen in the park undergoes a decided ' change at about this time of the year. He is shorn of the royal antlers that 1 make him the pride of the glen. ' With the loss of the antlers the stag 1 changes his disposition entirely and becomes as docile and tractable as a lamb. He will show an inclination to court public petting rather than avoid it. He will remain in this condition of j temper until the beginning of March, when he will show a disposition to lurk in sequestered spots of the glen and timidly avoid the presence of all, 1 even of his kind. During this period, on the spot whore El.rx ....H ... . ...
, the late antlers were, a pair of protuberances will make their appearance covered with a soft, dark, velvety skin. । I hose will attain a considerable growth in a few days. The carotid arteries of those protuberances will enlarge with them in order to supply a sufficiency ; of nourishment. When the new ant- I lers have attained their full growth. ! Which will be in ton weeks after the old , I ones have been shed, the bony rings . at tile base through which the antlers j j pass will begin to thicken, and gradu- ' edges of rocks or other hard sub- | stances. I As soon as the full size of the antler is attained the docile disposition of the elk will disappear, ami ho will become once more for the year the tierce king of the glen. The age of the elk, according to writers on natural history, is computed by the number of points on the antlei s. lAt tin- present time he has six. Ihe i । next set will bear seven, showing that ■ seven summers have passed since the । I date of his birth. The American Girl's Vault. , The American girl bas learned to feel - that in Edward W. Bok site has a strong I champion. But Mr. Bok, although he " is ever ready to advocate her cause, is ‘ not blind to her faults. Il nfesscs ‘ that she has one glaring one at least, . , and of this he writes as follows tn the I Ladles' Home Journal: “If one wishes I to be candid, ami really criticise the American girl, not for a score of tan- • cied faults which are not hers, but for f a fault which is peculiarly hers, it - J that she fritters away a deal of time on ! many things, and does not give enough a .wile to any one thing. ( >n*‘ advantage 3 which this fault has is that she can 5 overcome it. And she should. She ’ should learn the art of application. ; Whatever she starts out to do let her ’ ido it well. If she wants to play let her j 'earn to play, not indifferently, but - { well. If her taste is for china paintin : let her concentrate her mind to that, • and learn to paint well. If she is fond I of needlework let her train herself to 'be an expert of the needle. If la v ten I dem ies lead her to I.Homages le her | take up that tongue the study ot wlnch [ attracts her most. But it she takes I up French let her content herself with French, and not study French one day and German the next. Nor should she i forget that to know the English lan ) gunge well is her first duty.
not know ’ W themselves; / and often when their influence is doing the most good, break down. They drift gradually and unconsciously into that tempestuous sea of woman's diseases. Then they should remember that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound restores natural cheerfulness, destroys despond-
c B* .......... . , Stockings. Stockings are first mentioned in literature as being already worn about the year 1100. They are alluded to as a great invention and far superior to the former practice of wrapping the feet in clot-li bandages. Hold the Fort Against a bilious attack by calling to your aid that puissant ally. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. The foe will then be driven back utterly defeated. Dyspepsia, sick headache, malarial, kidney, nervous and rheumatic trouble and constipation yield to the action, of this most beneficent of remedies. Take It regularly awl you ’aid soon experience its go«d effects. We pray the most for what we do not need. They Call It Overwork. Business requires a clear head; yet how few business men —with all their sense—realize what is the trouble with their heads. They call it overwork, worry, anything but. what it really is—indigestion. This stealthiest of ailments usually comes disguised as something else. Wouldn’t you be convinced if a box of Mipans Tabules cleared your head and ] brightened up the business outlook?
I DOING WELL. He Was Not Making Money, but Lor ing It Slower. Jack Negly was one of the mountaineers of the Cumberland whom I had known better perhaps than any of them, for Jack had borrowed a few (dollars from me to buy a yoke of steers with, and the number of times he came to me to get the debt renewed brought me into very close acquaintance with , him. He was a farmer in a small way, and he was never known to be out of debt. He was a renter and at least every other season he was occupying a different farm. By my advice he had moved the year before into an entirely new field, at least a dozen miles from his usual haunts, and 1 had not seen him for several moths. When I did see him, at last, it was by accident, ns business culled mo Into his neighborhood. As I rode past his place he hailed me from the cornfield and came out to the fence. 'Hello, ’ 1 exclaimed, “is this your farm?’’ “Yes, and I jist come over to tell you,t Colonel, that I’ll be ready to pay parti of that claim uv your’n before long.”® “You must be doing well?” “I think I’m doin’ fust rate, and I ’nS| powerful obhreged to you. Colonel, for headin' me this way.” "I’m always glad to help if I can.” ' “I knowed that, Colonel, nnd that’s why I come away over here so fer frum home. Hit's kinder strange to me, but cz long ez I'm doin' ez well ez I am agoin’ to stand hit.” "Are you making any money?” Jim's face brightened perceptibly. “No, I ain’t. Colonel,” he replletl hopefnllt, but I m losin' it slower’u I ever done in my life afore.”
It struck me as rather odd nt first, but upon more mature reflection 1 concluded that Jim might have reason for his hopefulness. Detroit Free Press. A PECULIAR CASE. PHYSICIANS PUZZLED BY THE EXPERIENCE OF MRS. BOWEN. The Episcopal Hospital Said She Hud Consumption. 'from the Hecord, Philadephia, Pa.) Last July tlie Episcopal Hospital nd-
mitted a woman whose pale and cmcinted face and racking cough proclaimed her the victim of consumption. Shu gave her name ns Airs. Sallie G. Bowen, wife of Wm. G. Bowen, residence, IS 111 Meighau street, Philadelphia. The ease "as diagnosed ami she was told plainly I that she was in an advanced stage of . eonstimption. The examining physician even showed her the sunken place in her breast where the cavity in her lung was supposed te exist. She went home to her family a broken, disheartened womati with death st; ring her in the face. That was the beginning of the story; the end "an toldc^t?** • TmWcfl who tm longer it 1 wa* '■wii--.I [ session of me, my breast was sore to the I slightest touch, nnd my limbs were like i cold clay. The hardest rubbing with the I coarsest ton el would not create the slightest flush, nnd the least exertion would so exhaust me that 1 could barely
Igasp for water. "I went to the hospital in July and they 1 diagnosed my case as nl»ove stated. It. * I was when the clouds were the darkest < i that the first glint of sunshine came, Mr. I Sheltnerdine, a friend, who lives around ] I nt hll Clementine street, said to me one 1 day: 'Mrs. Bowen, did yon ever try Dr. ( Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People.' 1 had never henrd of the mdiciue, but in 1 my condition could not turn a dent car to anything that offered relief. It was after 1 considerable thought and investigation that I cemhided to discontinue all the medicine 1 was taking, im hiding • ■< • 1 liver oil, mid depend entirely upon 1 ink । Pills. I began to take the pills, nt first with but little encouragement. The first , sign of improvement was a warmth and a tingling sensation in my limbs. Finally the cough disappeared, my chest lost its soreness and I began to gain flesh until 1 was fifteen pounds heavier. All this I owe to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I 1 cannot praise them too highly. Mrs. Bowen is a kindly faced lady of ’ middle ago, a church member well known ■ 1 mid highly esln med. She looks today . I well mid strong, and it seems almost impossible that she was ever given up by 1 ■ eminent physicians as mi incurable con--1 sumptive. Yet such is the case bey olid > I all dispute. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all 1 the elements necessary to give new life ' I and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for s"le by nil druggists, or may be hnd by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine f ’onq'any. Selien- ' ectady, X. Y.. for 50 cents per box, or six t boxes for $2.50. A n Opt iJllist. Mrs. Beacon—Have you found mar < riage a failure? ' Mrs. Wabash No o; at least not of late years. New York World. 1 You Don’t Havc to Swear Off, s says the St Louis Journal of Agriculture In mi'e.lit..rial about No To-Bac. the famous n* 1 bam. hill'll . lire "We know of many cas. » V cared by No To Bae, one. a prominent St. Louis iwliiteet, smoked mid chewed for *’ twenty years: two boxes cured Ulm so that 1- even the smell of tobacco makes him Sick. No-To-r.se sold and guaranteed by Druggists everywhere. No cure no pay. Book free.
< . SV 'UH ‘ ’ • Sterling Remedy Co., New York or Chicago. — Warned in Time. A young Sunday scltool teacher in one of the down-town churches has successfully cultivated the acquaintance of the little ragamuffins of the district, and has organized a class of seven bright but untutored boys. Last Sunday she secured an addition, and mentioned to the class that an eighth member would be present next Sunday. The boys protested earnestly that they didn't want a new boy, but the teacher was inflexible. Then, one after an other, the boys remarked: “He can't sit 'sid ■ 11 >' mo," and the 'cacher added: “Well, he can sit by me.” Titis settled the dispute until after Sunday school was over, and one little fellow lingered to catch the teacher’s eye. Putting his mouth close to her ear he whispered: “You'll soon get tired of him. He’s got fleas.”- -Philadelphia Record. The lowest sick rate in the English navy service in 1893 was on the southeast coast of America station, and the highest on the China station.
. ofall in v & Report Rc^kl gakw * Powder - ABSOWTEEIf PURE
Disease. dileaS^bv of ^‘ltutlonal h»I». aw’ nu mote wisely understood, it w m bo accounted a crime to neglect it ' Iron. Among the recent scientific agricuL ui ml suggestions is one for improving chalky soils by using sulphiMe of Iron as a manure. It Is stated that Just as a preparation of Iron is prescribed to the human subject when the blood Is poor, so poor and barren soils may be greatly improved by sulphate of Iron. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price 73 cents. The Salvation Army War Cry has a circulation ot 52,000,000 copies, printed in forty languages. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an A No. 1 Asthma medicine.—VV.lt. Wn t - IANS, Antioch, Ills., April 11, ism.
That lump in B man’s stomach ■ which makes him I irritable and misera- I ble and unfit for business or pleasure is caused bj’ indigestion. Indigestion, i like charity, covers ’ a multitude of sins. The trouble may be in stomach, liver, bowels. Wherever it is. it is caused by the presence of poisonous. refuse matter which Nature has
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ueeu uname to nd I herself of, unaided. In such cases, wise ^people send down a little health officer, personified by one of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, to search out the trouble anil remove its cause.
SheiimaiUm M*—-L-t-
f Beecham’s pills are for billiousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, tor-
pid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples I loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things for everybody to learn is that constipation w causes more than half the sickness tn the world,especially of women; and itcan all be prevented. Go by the book .free at your druggist's,or write II F-AllcnCo. .xfijCana’. St., New York. Pills, io« and 254 a box. Anneal *<!«• iu :• than €.'«) OTO box#*. RW CURES AND PREVENTS Colds. Coughs. Sore Throat. Influenza. Bronchitis, Pneumonia. Swelling of thn Joints, Lumbago. Inflammations, RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA. Frostbites, Chilblains, Toothache, Headache, Asthma, 1 DIFFICULT BREATHING. CUBES THE WORST FAINS In from one to twenty miDuten. XOL ONE Hol R‘SfApo ISK this advertisement need any one bl Ft UK KTII PAIN. A halt to a teaspoonful in half a tumbV r or water will In a few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms. Sour Stomach, Heartburn. Neivous-n.-ss. Sleeplessness, bick Headache, Diarrhoea. Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all internal luere is not a remedial sent iu ti.e world that will cure I ■ -wt and Arnie and m ' Urt myrtoni ’ fevers aid d by KAOWAIi S I’l U.w, »o quickly as Kadway s Ready Heller. Fifty cents per bottle, sold by all llruggists. KADW AY & CO.. NEW YORK.
For Twenty Years Scott’s Emulsion has been endorsed by physicians of the i whole world. There is no secret about its ingredients. Physicians prescribe Scott’s Emulsion 1- _ Illi I because they know what great nourishing and curative propw erties it contains. They know it is what it is represented S to be ; namely, a perfect emulsion of the best Norway R liver Oil with the hypophosphites of limo and soda. J Tor Coughs, Colds, Sora Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia, Weak Babies, Thin Children, Rickets, Mari asmus, Loss of Flesh, General Debility, and all conditions of Wasting. Tho only genuine Scott’s Emulsion is put in salmon* colored wrapper. Refuse inferior substitutes ! | Send for pamphlet on ScotC s Emulsion^ FREE.. I SooU & Bow ne, N. Y,
To Teachers and Others. S' S'factoAr rates l ” 5 m CC °» ln,nodated at Bati «- Win s find ,n tfi» Yh B i terQ tFip this ft.! nnd their opportunity Tho wav’t^/el’ ' VU l lkee “ n ‘l St ’ paul Rail ' " ay (nrst-ctass in every respect) will run Chicago to Denver For full particulnrs write to or call on F. A. ¥ ,,,e r« A»stetant General Fassseng.r Agent, Chicago, 111 Millions of Packages. TJ 1 ® R^iuk Sun Stove Polish factory packages of stove polish in IbJL These packages, placed so as to touch end to end, would reach 1,000 “‘b’S- The factory at Canton, Mass., covers four acres, and turns out the enormous product of ten tons per day. Most of the material used is mined by natives in Ceylon, India, and brought by sailing vessels to New York. The Rising Sun Stove Polish has the enormous sale of 3,000 tons per year, but Morse Bros, have recently added to their business the Sun Paste Stove Polish in answer to the demand for a perfect stove paste. I his Sun Paste is already meetI sa l p -_ The Rising Sun Stove j 1 ohsh in cakes is recommended Tor genI era! blacking of a stove and for economy and the Sun Paste Stove Polish in tin boxes for a quick after-dinuer shine — l.ynn Item. Hpworth League, Chattanooga. t The route to Chattanooga over the Louisville & Nashville Railroad is via Mammoth Cave, America’s Greatest Natural Wonder. Specially low rates imide for hotel and Cave fees to holders of Ep- ! "m rth J^kue tickets. Through Nash- i ville, the location of Vanderbilt I niversi- I ty. the pride of the Methodist Church i and along the line between Nashville and
Chattanooga where many of the most ’ f ,l,n ous battles of the war were fought Send for maps of the route from Cincin- I nati, IxHifsville, Evansville and St. Louis and particulars ns to rates, etc., to C p' 1 Atmore. General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky or J. k. Ridgely. N. W. P. A Chicago, 111. ’ B t r vv tor Cliliarea inflammation. i Busts ram. cures wlua colic, a cents s Lottie.
fDWPEPSIA i and ’bow to lose it.” Our booklot will interest you—- : H you’re a dyai eptlc. M* nxo Fkkk for she askinit. WEAKT A CO.. I’hilasU-lpbia. I’uAa*i"a|vn I'homns f. Simpson, Washington, rfi I tR I N be. No att a fee until Patent ob- “ " ' ■ * tainod. Wrlteforlnveator’aGulde.
“A Good Tale Will Bear Telling Twice.” Use Sapoliol . . . Use . . . SAPOLIO _ ^As One Woman aJo Another: "• r "Every Monday morning for two years I ve used M ; SANTA CLAUS SOAP—always makes the □ 1 clothes pure and white without hard rubbing । J • have my washing done by nine o'clock. This » ' soap has never harmed the most delicate H colors in my summer dresses, so it must ^ rce h^om all acids. I do wish you » MwnEV' would send down to the Grocer ' -k and get a cake to try on your » next washing-day. You will J e find a P erfect Laundry Soap. J ' \'A Sold every where. Made only by J The N - K - Fairbank I Company, ':
BEST IN THE WORLD. Hi \ w, \\\\3 / @THE RISING SCN STOVE POLISH is cakes for geuerat blacking of a stove. THE SUN PASTS POLISH for a quick after-dinner ahme. applied and poU ished with a cloth. Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Mass., U.S. A. r KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement anti tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to thc'nccds of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in tho remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fever* ■ and permanently curing constipation.. It has given satisfaction to millionsand met with tho approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ; ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will no! accept any substitute if offered. II FRHKIIM ST.. SEW YORK. 27 KILBY ST. SCSTH. S HOME-SEEKER rec ■ ut, v pubhefted by ibe l’as euip-i pa>-tiu< ut ot the Hi nois ( tn.ral lUII- - •unto d "Sont tu-rn Home-Seeker jtGuld* for I 505." It contains ov< rAO eice 1 nt from northern ti m rs no v located in tre -outb, amioc . r a,.t h nd valnab e information. Fo.*» free copy add.' ss tbc m dersmned at jiancheßtor. lowa J. 1. .hi-KHV, Assistant Oen’l Passenger Agt.
tIEWIS’ 98^ LYE Lb Powdered and Perfumed. > (PATENTID.) . The«O'<'Hffe-U andpwi Lyemide. A U.Jike other Lye it being a linj /A powder and parsed in a < an wita nmo sab Ip Id. 1115 coutrDto are alwmjb n ady lo- u«e. Will make the t st j e fnmed H id • oip in -‘0 m iliit< s tciik'fUl boiling. It is t lih bet«l tor ch EDi i.g waste pipes, di intectibg xii ks cloH“ts, washing bottle^, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SALT KEG. CO. G<-n l Agts. UhiJa.. > :'• NS § OK with feffiSffißSffifßSl® c. N. U. >c. 10-05 XVHEN AVRITIMG Ti> AIIVEKTKERS 5 7 ple»as say you lho advertisement tn this paper. ES WfiLKt FAIIX- g agh Syrup. Tastes Good. Ima. Sold bT druggists.
