St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 21, Number 12, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 October 1895 — Page 3
RR R R SO G LS TR A P SSR R e it Will Pa To make some provision for your physical health at this season, because a cold or cough, an attick of pneumonia or typhoid fever now may make you an invalid all winter. First of all be sure that your blood fs pure, for health depends upon pure blood. A few botties of Hood's Sarsapa- 1 rilla will be a paying investment now. It \ will give you pure, rich blood and invigorate your whole systemn. Remember Hood’s S illa | arsapariila Is the One True Blood DPurifier. j el e e 9 e i steless s ! Hood's Pills 3, " natt 52 | e i e e e 157 Avt 4 T D, o A ia4 s How He Took Exercise, | Poor Harry Shelman, the long-haired | poet, who dressed his entire person !ui resewmble Buffalo Bill, and who was, in | fact, startlingly like the greatest of | scouts, used to tell of a literary friend I of his who had a novel method of taking | exercise. His workshop was on the | top floor of his house, far from the | neise of the street, and he used o] write about fifteen hours a day. e | was not a Howells or a Bronson How- | « ard, whose working hours never exceed ! four in any one day. He worked; he | labored: he toiled. e had no time for | a bicycle and could not afford a horse. | He hated walking. Run he could not. | Still he must have exercise. He kept his dictionary in the basement and his | thesaurus in the kitechen. As he used | both very often it was necessary to make many trips downstairs and up | again, and in that way he Kept himself | in splendid physical condition. A visftor once saw him dashing downstairs like a madman aund soaring up again Hke a kite, and was distressed till in- | formed by John's wife that John Wi | simmply hunting for a word and had found it. The difference in valuation of prep- | erty at the last census was very re markable. In some States the asscess ment was no more than 25 per cent, of the real value of the property, while in other cases it is believed to have been as high as the selling price. eet e . A -Pt
“I have a dear | kW en 3 little babe s and 8m weil. Ithank Mrs, | & Pinkham for this, | % and £o could other | Pmotherless women, | I was a vietim of Foo | male troubles. ' N lLydia E. Pink- | Y 8 han's Vegetable | : Compound | cure* ac." el v TMnra! k] aard IKincuxer, | BT 351 Snediker | STt Ave., Brook- ‘
BT Pet ol STV TN oigte Bye “'"—:_“——'—'—:——W"w ? The Greatest Mcdical Discovery | of the Age. * KENNEDY'S i & i MEDICAL BISGOVERY ¥ : & il f i /CHRY BACQ DONALD KENKEDY, OF ROXEURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common fiasture weeds a remedy that cures every tind of Humor, from the worst Screfula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder bumor). Hehas now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twentv miles of Boston. Send postai card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war- | ranted when the right quantity is talken, When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needies 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 necsgssary. E_.lt ! the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tabiespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. | --;nr\n'-vv\nx;fi!m»hn'&'c-mn'\'ymfi‘:‘g ‘ World's Fair! HIGHEST AWARD. ; MPERIAL/: } 3 g g | 5 34wl digesti | Tryitwhen e digestiony is W I FGOD: is WEAK and no FoU! .." e 2 seems to notirish. Tryit: i - - . . j ‘c g“‘:;“ scems impossibletoy > B on 4 ; +} $ ekeep FOOD &t stomachis g Sold by DRUGGISTS EVERYWIHERE ! ¥ | John Carle & Sons, New York, 2 i M R M Wg B g T P B MT Uy R MBy E gR AR my @ N POEE | R TREATED FREE. | By &Y Positively CULED Tdy o B R T o o %3? - ;"".l many t‘:f -!~.n‘.'l cases pronounced hopeless. From firgt dose svinn toms rapidly disappear and t=n days at iegst two thirds of 21l srviptoms are removed. BOQOK of testimonial ~f,lli'il-.1.lmll|:1l.~ cures rent MILYEK, Ten Days Trea'ment Furnisied Free by Mail, | OR.H. H GREEN & SOHS SPECIALISTS ATLAXTA SEGRSA | 95 as P. Bin , Washin Lo PATENTS Droms . oimeson, ashineson, | talned. Writefor iuventor's Gulde.
e e e e ; labee bl ; . The best remedy l DR. j. C. AYER S for all diseases f' The Only of the blood. % The best record. ; SARSAPARILIJA Halft & century ! Permitted at World's Fair, of genuine cures. ! — I
e e e eet e e A o SEEKING THE ""MESSIAH.” Huudreds with Illls Stand All Night in the Cold in Denver. A Denver, Cglo, dispatch says: It was fortunate for the unfortunate that Sunday intervened to stop the laying on of hands by Irancis Schlatter, the New Mexico “Messiah.,” He has rigidly observed the Sabbath by going to St Patrick’s Catholic Church, a small and unpretentious edifice on the north side, within a stone’s throw from the Ifox residence, where he is staying. 1t was expected that a erowd of large proportions would attend this morning for the sake of seeing and touching the garments of the healer, owing to the report that almost fabulous ctures have lbevn effected in persons who have merely looked at the face of the strange ’m:ln. The storm Kkept persons away | from the church. | The fact that there would be no treat. | ment to-day had been widely advertis- ' ed and the crowds that lingered in the keen wind of last night melted away [ before the full brunt of the storm breke “over the city at midnight. Flve inches of snow covered the ground this morn. | ing, and had there been one of the ((E‘Q £o ' Y BPR A g\\@: ko sy \VeN ¥R . SRR N /i W }.{ il % \ \\\}\ W i :. 4 ¥ # t/ {; ¢ JJ/ &\ 0_ ‘\§‘ i //"' y /& “‘?‘\' ! ['.'fl/.l 4%' 3 ‘ ¥ - 2&\ w\‘ i q fj{ ;‘ 3 ',-f /: -‘ ; [ fi%. ! /;,/'!. -;‘ - I A 7 ’ AR (ST B B Dad ' i'., !I};[‘ . ~‘A;, g ! ',.”, A \}\ ’ }:’l:"/.‘k ;'74; . f”fi :lfi'\\ g £ (R gl B . LR S L i WA R 7 B b : VBl N7 | £ lIA B s 4\ ‘7 }/ i e Rag 2 ! il ";%"3;‘5 . | JA T AR e | oR S | ‘ 1/ 1! S N Vi ?: i’ N ?‘“‘ A i L{-';,':" ‘- ,’;é “*’% T ‘t\j ¥ 4 e B AR { "i:"‘.x"‘ 'i "i//v:"; ’ St e 7 ety e :93 ‘ g S’ ‘ FRAMCE S 3 Al " The Now Mexico “Messiah,” who s making marvellous cures in Denver usual receptions there would have been hundreds of sulferers from the tempera ture, which dropped beiow the freez- | ing point. ’ ; That the prospeci of intense cold and ' dire distress does not sevve ag a deter- t okl I proyen by the fact that at 104 L o'clock to-nieht persons are begluning ; to flock to the vicinity of the house, so | ias to be in lne early Momday. The ! enthusiasm ean betier be understood | W n the sudden el * is Known, Fariy houy q4O e 1l thie well-dr d are visible g ng tho | for st iu the line. and to-day quite | a number of really wealthy persons es- | sayved to claim the atiention of the healer. e was deaf to all importu | nitles, and announced that be wounld | not give audience to. any one w ‘_ sought reliel by the Influence of pal cian wealth, | Many citlzens have tried to induce | Schlatter to receive in Colizseum liz a large down-town hillding, swhich has been offered te him by liberal persons | wio have faith in his alleged divine j power. He refuses to entertain suel offers, and maintains that “his IFather” | told him to dwell with the poer, and perform “'His works” in their midst | Theosoph:sts and Christian Sciencee | people are claiming the healer for thelr | own and the result has been to pro | i voke the liveliest sort of discussion. ‘ The. Rev., Myron W. Reed, a well | known liberal Jergyman, visited g Schlatter this afternoon and was ac § corded a long interview in c¢ompauy | with one of the judges of the Distriet I | Court. IHe came away impressed with i ' the power of Schlatter, but said he ; - was puzzled to account for his marvel- t - ous faculty, § } Schlatter will remain here for another | ' month, and on Nov. 16 will leave for ’ (Chicago. Tlle says the Father has fixed | the date and that he will never revisit | the same places. He is absolutely pen { liless but will not acdept™ even the | 3 tllest favors, ¢ ‘. Oley N 3 lerald. i In consequence of the discovery of l “argon,” “helium,” and other like sub } tances, it is believed that still greater discoverie are about to be made. Sonmu i expect that the apparent diversity of ' metals Is a result merely of 4if‘z\«.:'m!‘ | combinations of a very few gimpl i | substauces or possibly of only one. It | { 18 on this line that researches are likely ', to be conducted for some time to come, ;
PR T el PREACHER TO PRISN e ,:‘-‘*’f‘ HINSHAW' FOUND GUIES OF MURDERING HIS Wik o Jury Out Only Two Hours 9 len It ! Brings in a Verdict — Dy ”3,,‘ nt Killed His Wife and Said a hFslar Did It, X Sentenced for Life, | Rev. William E. Hinshaw is ghilty of the murder of his wife and will fend the remainder of his life in prison, {PUgI is the verdict of the Danville, In#Ggury after being out two bhours and tyenty minutes. Jan. 10 last Willilam E. Hinshawy was found on the rosd in front of his hofse in Belleville, Hendricks County, witlf seventeen razor cuts on his person and liwo ‘ pistol wounds. IHe said robbers hig entered the house and shot his wife§ He had engaged in a deadly encoun with them and they had inflicted the winds before ledving. He directed thasefwho found him to hunt his wife, and siF was found unconscious with a bullet 3 her ‘head, She lived sixteen hours, bugfnever spoke. Hinshaw lay in bed for tgQ da and was then well. IHis story wigerbe lieved at first, then suspicion De@n to grow that the burglar SRRSO sonable. In the snew on the grow i tracks could be seen, but no trackgof a burglar. His conduet was flippant ¥BM he continued to preach., He was paalar with the women snd it was commog talk he was a very light-hearted widowersk The grand jury convencd and he was in@ieted, arrested, and lay in jail since May, Hil, friends gathered around him and @sited I him constig in Jxl' Sept, 4 his tria! commenced. The trial | has svered four weeks, one wipk o'% which time was lost throngh the sigkness 1 of & juror., The trial has been mdpt “it- | terly o sted, there being expert] testi- ! mony of the highest order on the plint of | whether the y conid have galked | and talked as roceiving thef fatal | wound in tiwe !} d Doth sides hhd ex- | nert te thix ] i irgued Give davs agd one- | holf most es vely aud the short | { {ll as howed that the | jury det every point as they went | along., The ! meets pubiic approval, | W he ¢ refused o gaon the i stand ir S hehalf there was noth- | DT : f vinee most {d"‘p‘;!' : i g i though a banged | d ) t they expected out of | this i w s attorneys will file | ! AN trinl, which, if i i : chinpge of venue MILES GETS THE COMMAND. Vormal Order Issued by Segretary J.amont Aasipgning That Duty. - i 1t ned am order \ ; i detailing Leneral M i b ty i : imngton A8 geoperal { t 3 sy rai JLUgdr, Bow on &1 ' Washingion, to the com- | mand t rtmnent of the Kast, with headquariers in New York | Colonel 1 s M. Vincenty who has been Lieutenant General Schofield’s chief | of staff, has been assigned to €B2y in the ‘ iS¥3 2 N ¥ i
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i s i ei e e e e e ' office of the adjutaut general in charge of the information burean. Colenel Samuel | Beck. who has been General Miles' ad- | jutant general at New York, is ordered ’ to Washington to fill the place gt head- | g(gz:fn':vr:a vacated by Colonel Vincent. | . Lieutenant Ceolonel Henry C. Corbin, who ‘ | has been the ranking assistant adjutant ' general at the department, is transferred | to New York, to become adjutant general -of the department of the East. ‘ l EXPOSITION IN FULL BLAST. ‘ !Atlantn Peop e Ready to Care for Al ! [ Who V.sit It. ‘ t The Atlanta Exposition is now in full i [ swing. the exhibits are in shape and the | | city has made arrangements necessary for ' the comfort of visitors. Reperts to the lccmmittw on public comforx shgw that " at the Lotels rates range fram SIB6O to §5 a day on the American plan, and§from 73 cents to &5 a day on the Europegn plan. | Many private houses, however, age open ! to the public, and in the best part¥ o she | city there are hurdreds of roomigs P i vate houses to be had for T 5 centsiwees. come of these houses being l%’é\“fl on I’cach Tree street, the fashioni e}" | oughfare of Atlanta. Railroad fi' I are adeqguate and special rates aga given ! to the exposition, ! Sceks Death in the Lake. ; l J. P. Tillotson, a member-of the Chi- | ¢ cago Board of Trade, committed suicide { Wednesday afternoon by throwing himlsw‘l!' into Lake Michigan at the foot (;fl il.".'fl. street. Financial losses, the result ' i of an unsueccessful speculation in wheat, i are said to be the cause of his self-de- ‘ i structien. Policemen from the Cottage ; Crove avenune station recovered the body [ ¢ within a short time and tried to restore l E life, but were unable to do so. Mr. Tililuf:un was :!.': vears old and leaves “g | widow, to whom he was married only gix i ¢ months ago. { ! Miss Elizabeth IMouston Wickes, a nxo- ! i :;i(»t‘v oirl, d;m;im»x'_uf the late Mr. ang : i.nh'::. Chambers Wickes, and niece ¢f | [ Judge P. L. Wickes, of the Supreme ! bench of Baltimore city, will make h(rrg ‘da-hut at the Academy of Musie, Balti- | more, with the Digby Bell Opera Com- | pany. % The marriage of Gen. Justus Mclinstry, :l;.:(.“.i 81, wim‘ was the iron provost ! marshal of St. Louis during the war, and Miss Adelaide J. Dickinson, aged 39, and i wealthy, took place at the Church of the l Holy Communion in that city, i
Higliest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report ‘ D~t/a | Baking | R TO e G \ _3 ‘ | LBESOLUTELY PUBE |
e e et e e et e eee e e e e Feteeeeeeaee Wretched Vanity. \ - Twenty years ago a poor woman was left a widow in the city of New York | with two children. She was h:»m';:l.i energetie aud an expert laundress. She ‘ succeeded in keeping a comfortable | home for her children and in edneating | them. Ifer ambition was not that they should be honest, energetic workinz | people, but a “lady and a gentleman.” Emma, the daughter, was sent to 1 private school, taught superficial ac- | complishments, and to play on the piano and dance. She made her way. through some of her school acguaint- | ances, into families who woull not | Thave recognized the poor washerwom- | lan, and wore gandy clothes and cheap | Jewelry which her mother slaved to ! WM ~ She married a salesman i lin a retail s op, g man vwoak !n bod? ST L I e SOty salary she wasted on finery for hersclf and her chil- | dren, and when he lost his situaiion a year ago she came back with them to ! the mother whom she had so long deelared was too “vulgar” to acknowledge before the world. Tom, her brother. was a keen-witted young fellow, whose only ambition was lto be “swell.” He had a place as copying clerl in 2 shop on the Bowery, lost ’lt at the beginning of the hard times two years ago, and remained idle, de- | ‘ pendent on his mother. When her em ! ployers offered to give him a situation % a8 a4 messengdr or porter, he haughtily i refused It, as he “had not come into { the world to do menial work."” i Last spring the old washerwoman, ! worn out at last, fell ill, and fom found g himself starving. He picked a wom i an's pocket on a ferryvboat, was caughi | in the act. tried and seuatenced to six }munlh;‘ impriscniment, His defense % was that hie was starving. % *You could have sold the CX nsive ,!«"u-?h.\-«' Fou wear, or that searft pin,” { sald his lawyer. { *“No, sir,” Tom replied; I may be un i fortunate, bat I shall always dress and { behave like the contleman that 1 am.” { There is a sad, if not a shameful fu ture for the boy or girl who has never learned at home that humbie inddépen | dence is better than polite shiftlessness y And added to this it can be truly said i that many & mother who has been in different to the cavdinal virtues, and | has taught here ehildren only the graces | of false gentility, Las had bitter reason { to regret the results that bave foilowed gln-:' unwise teachings. - Youth's Com- { panion. ’ A Dime in His Windpipe.
Tot Pitsburg, after carrying a siver {dime in his windpipe for vearly two | years, coughed it up the other night. | Last December a year ago his child, | while sitting on his knee, playfully | placed a ¢ime with which she had been | playing in her father’'s mouth. Hinch- | cliff, by a movenent of the head, acel- | dentally swallowed the coin. Doctors |- told him he need not be worried, as the | dime would dissolve and pass away. They refused to perform an operatien. Hincheliff was subject to viclent fits of | coughing after swallowing the money, and he was awakened from sleep by | such a fit the other evening. Jumping | out of bed, he coughed up the dime. I 3 surface had been corroded. Hincheliff is carrying the piece as a souvenir. i
Steam'= Up! The Moorings Cast Off. Majesticaily the great ocean greyhound leaves the dock and steam:s down the river | outward bound. But are you, wy dear sir, | prepared for the seasickness almost always | incident to a transstlantic trip, with the | tnfailible siomachic, Hostetter's Stomach | Bitters? If noi, expect to saffer without aid. | . The Bitters is the stanch friend of all who | travel by sea or land, emigrants, tourists, commercial travelers, mariners. It ecom- ! | pletely remedies nausea, bilionsness, dys- | pepsia, rheumatic twinges and inactiviiy of : the kidneys. \rtesian Wells for South Dakota. | | The government has sent artesian | , a 01l machinery to the Rosebud roserva- ; tion arnd will at once put down a well i to determine whether the artesian basin extends to that peint. If successful in this 2 number of wells will be sunk on the various reservations. There is no denbt that m a few vears the surface | of the interior of the State will be dotted with these spouters and no country on the globe will equal South Da- | l!:m;x for successful irrization and bounf tiful crops. i Kate Kieid in Denver. | Denver, Sept. 10.—My journey from Chicago was over the Chicago, BDurlington and Quiney Railroad, one of the best managed systems in the country. 1 shounld | say, judging by the civility of the employes, the comfort I experienced, the | excellence of its roadbed, and the punc- | tuality of arrvival. |1 aetuanlly reached | Denver ahead of time. The Burlington | Route is also the bLiest (o St Paul, Miu- | peapolis, Omaha and Kansas City. | W e | A DPead Knsy Job. i «YWhat is Smith doing now?” “He is traveling with a circus.” | l «pretty hard vork. S tiite” ! l #Np hie has po oz 10 do except to ! |s!i<'l; hid hesd o the lon's niouth | twice a day " | | L . ~ i ‘ - i I fiatl’s Catarrh Cure, 5 |ls taken Internaily. ivice 35 cents. | | : , ! Daints: Old Hillogabalus. ' | [Helfoxabains geperaly supped on the | !hi';li}is £ QUO thrishes. i W think Piso’s Cure for Consmeption is | the oly madivine or Coughs.—dJ ETNIE | PiNCKALD, Springieid, His, Oct. 1, 1594, | s ? Hope is the health of the spirit. ~ Mrs. Winslow's SooTaiva SYRUP for Children | teetling: 80:t -Us the guitis, reaiices inflammation, sliays pain, curcs wind cciic. 2 cents 8 bottle. |
Lightning's Power. \ | Professor Hoppe reports in the “Archiv fur Post and Telegraphie,” a new ! example of the mechanical power of |- a lightning discharge. In a storm that | raged at Klausihal, in the Hartz moun- ‘ tains, a boit entering a house struck =z ! wooden post on whose fop two metaliic \ n2ils one-sixth of an inch in diameter | were melted. No forge conld have eof- l fected this; to bring it about, an elee- | L tric current of 200 amperes intensity \ and 20,000 voits tension must have pass- i -ed through the nails. Supposing that | | the action of the lightnig lasted a sec- | (ond, the dynamic power thus devel- | foped was equal to 5,000 horse power, ! . but if, as is much more probable, the | ! discharge lasted only one-tenth of a\ secoud, we get a rate of work that does rot fail short of 50,000 horse power. Q' That Joyful Feeling, - With the exhilarating sense of re- - newed health and strength and internal cleanliness, which follows the use of Syrup of ligs, is unknown to the few ! who have not progressed beyond the cld | time medicines and the ckeap lubsti-l tutes sometimes offered but never accepted by the weil-informed. Causes of Duels in Italy. ! In Italy in the last ten years 947 duels have been fought over newspaper articles, 720 on account of rivalry in love, ! 377 for political differences, 289 for in- ’ sulting words and the smalest number, | 19, for disputes at cards. According to ] the figures, journalisis are most apt to } fight, and actors least of those who | fougzht at all, but there is not a single | banker or capitalist in the list. g The same eTect produced by costly sul- ' phur baths are accomplished by Gienn's | Sulphur Soap. ! “Hili's Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black | or Brown. Hoe¢. i A dude in Philadelphia was turned | mit of the club to which he belonged ' because he pald his tatlor’s bill two | days after he got the clothes. If the hair is falling out and turning ; gray, the glands of the skin need stimulating and color-feod, and the best remedy l ind stimulant is Hali's Hair Renewer. I Connt your chickens after they are | hatehed, and lock the door of the hen- ! roost. 1 CGreat oaks from little acorns grow, if | @ hog-doesu’t eat them, FITS.-Alilitsstopped free by Dr, Kline's Great Neive b esto ov. No Firs after first day’s use. hMar Velous cures. Ireatise 2nd $2.00 trisl bottls free to 1t cuses. vend to Lr. hiine, &1 Arch St., Phila, Pa.
] § 3 G $ THE KING CURE over avw ror __ AN Z IREIFETURI ATISSNRA, & > NEURAICGIA, TFaycs s SCOIATICA s ieid 18iE M»‘QMMMNMN@MWMt R e A Ry y . S oaly & / ‘-: . [ question of time /2'&,}.’\,;3 about your using Pearline. So it 7/ /\Q [ seems to us. It seems as if every i 1 . . ‘l-_, N bright woman must see, sooner or /U&l) S . . 4 »',v/ g P W\Q later, how much easier and quicker and i i/ . % - . f;:( f ’%,//E(!( better and more economical is t 7 g ; 5 = 2 T s N/ @Peaflmes way than any e T '/ other known way of washing. ' !;’ You can't think of any drawback or objection tof |, Y it that hasn't been met.and disproved, a thou- fgtl O sand times over. Millions of . i aal3 e Al woinen are usxng ! H'i \ Pe«irl'LnC. now, ASK Ssome ; one of them who! !;f‘ (\ uses it rightly, how much she i aal , i - Tl s saves by it. Manu-! [ <4 facturedonlyby Jas. Pyle, N. Y. e h@ 43 < %\ ® RS AW RN a NoS RN “°yr o _m_.,fi,,,,__A____ A C " The Best Is Aye the Cheapest. . s * Avoid Imitations of and Substitutes for |t e eSI S e ‘ CEDRIVDHU amfiwma 1 g ". & = = 9 t s A =3 8 o ' Whitc Washing. & 8 . = WP N e e Peß ey @ & E'\f,’ = T‘WE‘ QE‘C CoyEe R N < . s . o B.V &fi Ek bageo .f‘ Shest! . o o . W I ACnaguheii -\ o S with oA § " R eW I WP SS g PR A YA CeT PAo 3 ¢== 4 A y:fi gg«" ¥ LET 4 e| 3 N WY . ST pe RS : g 2 S BTR T Esra Rt & @ A g =Y B _E it D RSR .g e s = CICR R EY [ irih eo i S Sl R g P i e 2 L iSR e e LeSes Rg e o W ErA BES Le e & All washing is not white washing, Eiuateie 45" SECESMEE NSy o — & s all soap is not Santa Claus. et il HIE S rop RN E R e pis m T R e e & That bath-brick tint when seen in :fi I e s e & clothes, always e that they E2BB Jdhowa, AgiESi ot amn = £ are strangers to ta Claus Soap. E-Sosaat daes - Es=22s = X Try it. Sold everywhere. Made by €= e % THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, - CHICAGO. 5e0003220200000080080002003008C2E2000G0C
BEST IN THE WORLD. r’{u"* i N B earSIREAURT / [«ETov Forisil R TOY durabity and tox \, Cheapness s prepa - A Talen 1S truly unrwahed. r~ i THE RISING SUN l\ - cakes_ for gcgcnl N R bk‘i\_:%‘ POLiSH for a quick \”ESQSS LM‘:(:RSR 5 after -dinner shine, TIN THE WO applied and pole == ished with a cloth, ‘!‘Limrsc Bres., Props., Canton, Masa.. U.R- A,
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‘ Miss Lucy W. Lewis, of Ran- | dolph, Mass., a well-known and i highly respected lady, writes under % date of Jan. 22, 1805: ““I can speak | omnly in praise of ‘Ripans Tabules.! { lam troubled by what my physician has called Nervous Dyspepsia. My work, ‘hat of a school teacher, often brings on a state of intense | nervousness, which prevents = ’a ~V‘T.v 2 ’)l"?‘; (24 S <‘_'A 2 _«,‘l . heaflaches. “mave found that by watching my feelings, and taking a Tabule with meals—as I feel myself ! becoming tired and nervous—l get | relief at the time and prevent I further trouble. I have derived i much benefit during the timme I have used them, and do not intend to be without them.” JRipaus Tabules zw: sold by drugzis's. or by muw Iheg;lce (50 cents a box) 1s sent to Tue Bipans Chea | cal Company, No. 10 Spruce Street, New York. Sampie ‘ vial. 10 cents. THE BEST TEST S | 1S USE. | Below are a few condensed extracis from leticrs re- . eelved: i “Used for my own babe. and can truly say that it is ol egrant, palatable, nourishing. and easily digested.”—J. | W. LI3ETNER, M. D., Napoleen, Mo. | “lam feeding my baby by the ‘Special Directions.” It | has worked like a charm.”—X=as R. S TusMAN, Boston i Highlands, Mass. | Another physician writes, i : = - g = hiter Trial of Ridge’s Food: f “Jt meets my most sanguine expectations. 1 expect i te use it whenaver occasion cffers.” i *“Everybuody thinks he is a month clder thaa hs is‘% . preat, fat, strong, healthy Loy, . A great many o ray irlends are trying to Induce me te chauge, bui if my i baby ibrives on RiDGE's ¥ooD, that is encugh.” —-SiRS | LorNA G. VosE, Lynn, Mass. ‘T have used RinGß's FooD the past six menths, and | find it fus? 28 recommmended. In fact. would ot be ; without I.""—Mlss DoRrA S. Davis, Rackford, IML I Send to WOOLRICH & €O, Yalmor, Masa, { for “Healthful Hinis” SEN? FREE. - ——— BT S S | T Bs§_ CURES WiLRE ALL PLSE FALS. GOO | {3 Best Cough Syrup. Tectes Good. Use sis | " in tima. Bold by drnggisis. oY 0 R SEgT etn TA e R SISt e e : = |-GeN e e L R i C.N. U, No. 41-95 | ‘\‘{!lEN WRITING TO ADYVERTISERS ! piease goy you saw the advertisemaons in this paper.
