St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 21, Number 14, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 26 October 1895 — Page 7
and Are inseparably connected. The former depend simply, solely, solidly upon the latter. If it is pure they are properly fed and there is no ‘“‘nervousness.” If it is'mpure thay are {ed on refuse and the horrors of nervous prostration result. Feed the nerves on pure blood. Make pure blood and keep it pure by taking Hood’s s - arsaparilia The One True Blood Purifier. * “the o HOOd’S Pllls i&]lll('nll:t::t(lll“xlrlmr p'l.’l’ic?’ud Peculiarity of the Mocking Bird. The most remarkable thing about a mocking bird is its way of laying out a range. In the autumn it goes Seuth and establishes itself on a piece of ground that will yield berries and other food enough to last until the following spring. The tract is determined respecting boundarfes with as much aecaracy as a mining prospector would use in staking out a ¢laim. Perhaps it may be only tifty yards square, and it may have a length and breadth of as much as 100 yards. The space depends mainly upon the food supply in sight, but the mocking bird is a great glutton | and wastes ten times the quantity that would be necessary to keep him alive. Having laid out his range, the ewner will defend it with his life, and no other fruit-eating bird is allowed to enter it Yankee “Cuteness.” The Yankee has always had the rep utation of being an ingenious fellow. He has been credited with doing a great many things he never did, and he has done a good many things hie has never been credited with. But it recently de volved upon a real Vermont Yankee to buy a second-hand hearse and turn it into a peddler's cart. He fixed it over a little, boarded up the sides, and “daubed” a little red paint in several places to take off the funereal air, He also took off the plumes, and built a canopy over the driver's seat. The District of Columblia, not includ fng the Government buildings and public works, has an assessed valuation of $£09,401,787. S ——— S —————— Matilda Enham, Columbia, Pa., says :
S Ik iw V § '5 1 -^t I 9 ts \^>,‘ ’ . I? CaJ
solong I thought I never could get well.” | The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S | MEDIGAL DISCOVERY 1 - CONALD KENNEDY, OF RCXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common fiarztmc weeds a remedy that cures every ind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down toa common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He hasnow in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for beok. A benefit is aiways 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 lp;x>.~mg through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a weex 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. Dose, ¢ne tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. | e e e D World's Fair! HIGHEST AWARD. § | HGRANUM ¢ 5 gt i 14‘.1\}3 Q"‘t:’ | Elsunqummm ly amosty | r hia N ingiclee | :valuable FOOD =2 sicks| ” . sz 1% 2 | ¢room, where cither little A Ao s 3| "mA " AN ! conc or adult needs deli-3 ? = . . s < | ¢ caic, nourishing diet 117 5 Sold by DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE 13 | & John Carle & Sons, New York. 5 1 ~m‘“‘¢ll'\l"x'-c'-l“l‘l‘.'l‘;»‘l1‘|‘1-i'-'l"n'l"l \ “‘%‘e l s A'; 5 - :w: _ ~’ fi:@t fi‘m/ P ‘ bz CURES VirtKE ALL ELSE FAILS. 2y % Dest Cough Syrup. Tustes Good. Use P (4 n t‘mg. j';’:rl hy(:.l-uz;zlsu. ~ B RAkGC Lao N
e o e Bl RSI o BT DA MR TA T SR RN RBl T SV B T WAL RN A | é.a ? \ P W ! . *“ My sister was afllicted Ei. “Aftlicted for seven years, with a severse case of scrof- with what appeared to be a ula. Our doctor recommended cancer in the {face, other Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as being Cul‘ed treatment being of no benefit, ‘ the best blood-purifier within I tried Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. his (‘,pr',l:i':ni‘c. We gave her these The result 1\ that in one year, this medicine, and a complete all trace of cancer has been cure was the result.”—Wu, two removed.”” — Mrs. JouN B. Q. JExxINS, Deweese, Nyb, . Rivers, Manchester, N. H. IT WILL CURE YOU TOOG. RTR MRS, ) .
GRANT'S LOST MATCHBOX. Made of Two Empty Shells and Has a History that Nobody Knows. A matchbox that money couldn’t buy is in the possession of Policeman Gould, of San I'rancisco. The matchbox is not worth, intrinsically, any - | more than thousands to be found in 11 any large jewelry store, but its owner - | will never part with it if he can help > [it. It was given him by the late Gen--1 | eral U. 8. Grant. l When the ex Pr sddent visited the 3 | m— e e ¥|l WS = . W | WA R .' W~ 2 \ \\ %’ 4 ’, \\ I S \ = ‘ l y X == | R == | WA E“: 2= o g | e i ! GENERAL GRANT'S MATCHBOX, i fl':l«"!li(' coast in 1879 he had for h':c.: | bodyguard Officer Gould, who attended the distinguished visitor faithfully. ‘ One night, after a trip over the city in a carriage, Oficer Gould found on the seat of the carriage a2 matehbox made : out of two ritle-shells. Five ordinary : | matches were in the case, which was | made on the principle of a telescope, ' one shell fitting over the other, Both : shells had been exploded, as the dent | of the firing pin was plainly visible | The larger shell bore the mark “F. 8S 5 No. 12" on the end, while the smaller one, which acted as the cap, was un J marked. The matchbox measured two and a half inches when closed ] Gould knew that the uniqte mateh box must be the property of General Grant, and hastened after him to return | it. The General was In his room hy the time Gould reached his apartinents The orderly carried a message into the room, and in a few minutes the Gen- | eral appeared OtHeer Gould held out | the mawch sufe and told the General | that he had found it in the carriage. | General Grant looked at it in silence | | for a minute, and in his kindly manner, sald: “You may keep it. Some day yvou may learn the history of the shells from wihich [ have made th malcun Good-nlg Llie GG al & cntered his i 3 word, Officer Gould has nover learned the history of the shells, but he treas i ures the souvenir just as mnch. ;j Current Condensations, ' E An authority an hyvpnotism says that hysterical persons ar ry diff ' fnfluenc 'hiev are so wedded to the own fancies ental and ph) ii-th they prove very obstinate hypnotic tients Even if an Influence i gain it passes off very quickly The length of etther :!:._. W nisd 4 be easily and ¢ irately ! the !.-';‘V wil sfmiple rule dav of eleven 111 o ind A\t a funeral near Parsons, Ka: hearse, the remains were pl i l spring wagon {) 1 ke = £ f haopa thired or » i { the coffin and there reinained. W the cemetery was iecached aill efforts to drive the bees from the ¢pflin we r | ithout avail, and the pallbearers were | forced to take charge of the cofiin with , bees swarming about thewm. and | before the remains were deposited in ;;!,»» grave every pallbearer suffered, | being stung in more than one place on { the face and hands. The bees clung so | tens rionsly to the coffin that many of g them were buried with the body of !.'e-} ilm)‘. | f On July 14, 1865, Edward \\'}x‘\ntv;w:'.! e w cecompanied by 1 ! Francis Douglas, Rev. Charies Hudson Douglas Robert Hadow, and three i guides, Michael Croz, Peter Taugwal | der, and Peoter Taugwalder, Jr. In de scending Hadow lost his nerve and his %!'»; ting, and Hudson, Croz, and Doug ;fl-» who were fastened to the same | rope, were di d with him Whym per and the two other guides clung | desperately to the rocks and withstood i the shock of the tighiening rope. but ' safety rope broke, and }}, i=on, i Hadow, Croz and Douglas fell 4.6830 : feet down the precipice and were dash e to pieces.
7 ** That ?Bearmg- | Down | , Feeling and dizzy, faint, | gasping attacks ~ left me as soon i as 1 began to , take Lydia E, | , LPinkham's Vegetable Compound, I { was sick with | womb troubles |
Neither * Kiss Nor Cuss.” As 1 have observed in previous let | ters, the Japanese people are easy i | rule. They are very obedient to au | | thority. 'They have not only been in a state of suhjiction for centuries, but { each child from the moment its intelligence begins to develop is taught respect for and submission to the head | of the family. This respect becomes { reverence when applied to the Kmperor, who is the head of all families, ‘| and is shared by whoever represents | him. The people are mnot litiglous. They usually settle their affairs among themselves. Nor are they quarrelsome. They seldom lose their tempers. You never sees n fight upon the streets. They are the most amiable nation on the earth and there are no profnnel words in their language, But at the same time they are often exasperating, ‘ and an honest Yankee remarked the | other day that he would much preferl to live in a country “where people kiss and cuss” rather than In Japan, where‘ they do neither. They are great! thieves, and the most prevalent erimes are burglary, larceny and obtalning' money under false pretenses, Very few Japaunese firms have regular solicitors, and they will not go to law unless compelled to do so by unscrupulous opponents.—~Willilam E. Curtis, in Chicago Record. Customs in Bogota, > United States Minister MceKinney, of Bogota. says that the customs of the people in Colombia are very unique. “All the women smoke cigarettes, nndl the men smoke cigarettes and cigars. We buy a good ¢igar in Bogota for 31.544" per hundred. 1 undertook once to’ smoke a pipe, but it ereated such a sen- | sation on the streets that now, when i i Indulge in such a Juxury, 1 stay in myi I own rooms where no one will see me. 1 think 1 must have been the first person ‘ l to smoke a pipe in the place. Another i thing which is interesting is that no la- ‘ ‘(lh-s appear alone on the street after | ‘(!;n'k. although hundreds of nien \\'th Ibe out walking, The young women are ’ most carefully guarded. When a young ! 3"““ is courting a girl In Bogota he ‘ etands by the hour outside of t!m‘ | barred window of hier parlor while sht'} l remains on the inside. llf they are en- ! giuged he b= allowed to see hor In the ! ! presence of her family. 1f he wants to | { take hier to the theater he must hire al ;im) and take her father, her mother, ! ! her sisters, her brothers and her ecous. | ! Ins and her aunts, if she has any. That | might not suit the young Americans, i butin Bogota it is a very rigid custom.” | i Rea Gardons, § ‘ Area glass or water glass Is simply | fa sort of rough wooden box, without o cover perhaps a foot to twenty inches Bqunre, the bottom congisting of a piece Pof clear glass, 1t is grasped firmly by | | the edge and held so that the bottom Is | just below the surface of the \v:n-';i" By its use the rippling movement of e waler s Y M Al on i on “abled to ook steadily downward, appar i ently to the sea floor itself, and to see Z--x--s'_\' smali object guite as plainiy j fix we soe the things :.ahnll( us in the up i { per alr. Our first glimpse gave us the fimpression that the glngs was possessed Pof magical power and we gnzed spoell bound into the new world of grace and ! beauty revealed to us by s small transparent square., Gardens they are, 5 10 be sure. Searce a tree or shrub or ! ¢ flower that our land gardens boast but | P {5 here reproduced in colors varied and beautiful and forms of sirviest grace.— | Chautaaguan ; v Mile. Rothschild's Gardens, : t One of the most beautiful gardens in | the world belongs to Mile. A. de Roths- | child. The fabulons amount of $600,. | 000 has been expended upon it, and It | is said to contain only the cholcest and | ravest of plants, grasses and flowers f Some time ago a very beautiful and | expensive stone summer house was | built in the garden, over which t}w': most heautiful and delicate roses have | been trained, forming a perfveet bower | of exceptional beauty. This garden ‘ probably boasts 2s fine a collection of | ' roses as ean be had. The fortunate ! possessor of all this loveliness ?x:ls‘: bought many houses at this charming | ' place, though she only resides there ! ! during the summer months. i i ! Too Mueh Justice., | Charles Gords and Michael Gulgen, two tailors, were arrested on Mondav | | for beating an Italian in a Mulberry | street saloon with billiard cues. After { El'wl;m;: their prisoners up the police- [ men returned to get the Italian ak :li | witness. At sight of them the Italian ljmnpml from the window of his rooil | ' into the yard, a distance of fifteen feet. and escaped. The policemen expliained ‘ I to the Ttalian's friends that they simply wanted the fugitive as complainant. i “That's what he's afraid of” said | | ane of the men. “He was complainant | ‘ recently in a similar case, and he \‘\.';nsg | locked up in the house of detention as | t a witness for four months. His as-| imi!:xm got out on ball. Thats \\’ll}'f ? he's got enough of American justice.” | ; —New York Herald. ! On Water. | A novel kind of theater is said to be ! : in course of consiruction at Buenos | i Ayres. It is designed to hold five thou- i | scand persons, and its approaches are ! ! so arranged ihat carriages can set down f | their passengers at the level of the“ ’:r:uul tier as well as 9a the gretind’ l floor. At short notice the pit and s;;nlls? !q';:n be converted into a eircus or I':l('.' t ing track; or, if desired, a mini:lt.urel ’l;xlu- can be provided in this space for ! { swimming or other aquatic vnwrmm-§ ments. The modern term “Palace of | l Varieties” would seem to be very :11.-? ll)l'npi‘i:lh' to this new building, l It is believed that the value of the' personal property of this country i equals, if not exceeds, that of the real estate. , Soitetimes a woman who is wronged punishes the man who wronged Ler tc' such an extent that he becomes the in. Jured party. 3
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Bal Baking ANV .= Powder | | ABSOLUTELY PURE
T e S —— SILK-MAKING IN OREGON. New Enterprise that Bids Fair to Be Successful in the Northwest. W. 8. Bun, an intelligent and welleducated Japanese, who speaks linglish fluently, is the pioncer in what he ' believes can be made one of the leadIng industries of this region, to wit: silk culture. He owns 2 ranch of ten acres back of Portland heights, near Mount Zion, all of which is planted with young mulberry trees, growing vigorously and rflpf‘dly. He is getting a big colony of silk worms under way, and has already manufactured a quantity of silk, which he proposes to exhibit at the coming fall exposition. Mr. Ban believes that he has. fully | ‘~~= : ated that silk culture is a sue- ‘ ~as here, and is enthusiastic over ..c pefult of his experiment. He lives at 44§ Everett street, where he manufactures the raw silk on hand machines. He exhibited some of his products to a reporter yesterday, and explained how he eame to undertake the experiment. ‘ “I am the first to undertake silk cul- | ture here,” said he. “I obtained a pret- ’ ty thorough knowledge of the industry | ' in Japan, and when I came here it ‘stmck me that this vicinity had every : requisite for silk culture, except thc! !worms and the mulberry trees. I was | - advised not to attempt the experiment, ' !as it would surely resuit in failure. iHoWevcr, I was centident that my ad- ‘ visers knew rather less about the mat- ; i ter than I, so two years ago I imported { 1,000 mulberry trees from Japan nnd’ planted them at the proper distance | ‘apart on my ten-acre ranch. 1 found | the sofl and the climate to be very suit- 2 énb!n. and the trees took root, without | § the loss of one. Seeing that the trees | i Were successtul, I got a lot of silk worm | ceggs from Japan in IS4 All were . spoiled on the voyage. 1t is very difi- | L eult to bring pecfect eggs from such a distance, as any considerable variation | in temperature on the voyage is ruin | ' to them. | l “*However, 1 trie:d acain last Febrn- | ' ary with better suceess, and, after keep- § 'ing the egygs in a uniform temperatuve | ‘of 73 or T 4 degrees from April 29 to | 'May 71 bad the pleasure of swin:* ' about 2,000 hatel. Six days later 50,- | : 000 more hatched., The worms did fine- I ‘ ly, and at the expiration of forty-three | days went into thelr cocoous. I have ' sinee hatohed 8 sceond crop of eggs, - whigtwere native to Portland. | : gu satistied that silk culture will | F O Ay beconme a great industry in this | (r&(’t n giving m lavment to many pro pitdav o wonld otherwise be idle. It is useless for anyone to say now that (i | caunot be made a success liere, for I | have demonstrated the contrary. It! : will afford employment to fm‘mers'i | wives, and many other women will find | it @ means of gaining a comfortable in- ! ' come, as the work is so light and health- | ful and pleasant as to be well adapted Pto women and children. l ! “This sample of raw silk, which I | { propose to exhibit with other skeins of | { Iny manufacture here, is as fine as any ' that was ever made anywhaere.”—Port- { land Oregonian. i e i Washtub Used as a Boat. g A Portland, Mo, man recently distin- ! gnished himself by rowing a distance of six miles in an ordinary washtub. : It was just large enough to enable bim ' to eurl nis legs up in and sit upon a ' small cushion of shavings. Jln order ; to prevent capsizing It was necessary i for the navigator to sit nearly rigid. ; When sculling he could not look over { his shoulder to see where he was going, | for fear of tipping over, so he carried i a smal mirror, which enabled him to :\ the route ahead without turning. { He also carried a small sail about a : yard square. This he used a portion ot ! the time, but his main relinnce was on ! the small oar with which he scuiled. : v ! Like a Venomounus Serpent Hidden in the grass, malaria but yaits our ; approach. to spring at and i"":"¥A l\ fangs upen Us. Ther« is, however, a certain antidoge to its venom which renders It poweriess soc) evil. Hostetter's Stomach Ditters Is ! thig acknowigidged and world-faumed speciiic, a it is, h®&ides this, a thorough curative . foff rucimatisuy, dyspepsia, liver complaint, | ‘ copdtipation, la grippe and nervousness. in ‘ | (i;lescence and age it Is very sor\'lco-“ | alfs | ! T We Write Many Letters. l Statistiecs prove that mnearly two- ! thirds of the letiers carried by the pos- | tal service of the world are written, ! sent to, and read by English speaklng people. ’ Hall's Catarrh Cure, : 1s taken Internally. i’rice 75 cents. i 2 i Experiments have shown that mild ; currents of electricity may have a ben- | { eficial effect on the growth of plants, ! | but, of course, a heavy charge will kill | ; a plant just as lightning will kill a tree. E There is no excuse for any man to ap- " pear in society with a grizziy beard since | i the intrecduction of Buckingham’s Drye, | 5‘ which colors natural brown or black. ; ; He is armed without that is innocent : ' within; be this thy sereen and this thy | ' wall of brass.——Horace. { 1 covrLp not get along without Piso’s | Cure for Consumptten. [t always cures. | ' Mrs. E. C. MouLToN, Needham, Mass., | | Oct. 22,1594, ~ Music washes away from the soul { the dust of every-day life.—Auerbach. | We are never so happy or unfortunate I as we think ouraelves. j
Awful Accusation. A terrible accusation was that contained in a complaint sworn out yesterday by Jacob Gorgoschillitz against | George, Steve, Frank and Jack ‘"hida, |as well as little George, of the samo‘ family, says the St. Paul Globe. Mr. Gorgoschillitz states, swears and avers that the foregoing five and seveml‘ | Thidas “did, on or about the Tth day of September, 1805, speak, utter, enunci-‘ l ate, use and employ, with felonious and unauthorized reference to himself, the l said Jacob Gorgoschillitz, certain and\ divers words and expressions which ! would tend to promote an assault, namely, to wit, that the said five Thidas did, one and all, describe and npostrophize the sald Gorgosechillltz as bologna \ sausage.” The warrant was at once placed in the hands of every detective of Chief O'Connor's force. J ! That Joryful Feeling, | With the exhilarating sense of re- : ' newed health and strength and internal | i cleanliness, which follows the use of | | Syrup of Figs, Is unknown to the few l f who have not progressed beyond the old i | time medicines and the cheap substl-l { tutes sometimes offered but never ae- | Z cepted by the well-infornicd. : E Almost every ship has lightning rods, | | simply intended to conduet lighming; | into the water rather than down the ‘ masts into the hull | e i Red, angry, sleep-destroying eruptions ?gield to the action of Glenn’s Sulpbur | Soap. { “Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black | ‘ or Brown, Toe¢. I | Eat little at dinner, less at supper, ‘ ' sleep aloft, and you will live long. ; | _FITS.—AII Fitsstopped free by Dr. Kline's Great NTrvo Yesto or, ‘\(( Fits aftor first d;y“s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and S.OO irial voitle free to Fli cases. Bend to Dr. Kline, 881 Arch St Pinla, Pa. i Mrs. Winslow's BooTaiNg “yrup for (‘hildrea Seetiing: sorteny tr;e‘{ums. reqices luflsn':matmn. allays pain, cures wind colic. 2 ceuts a bottle.
- SORENESS, & STIFFNESS,
3 OF THINGS, USE (f@ e ee OV e e o ;;’f;} "; o Rhen £3B I firmly beiieve that Piso’s ,iw ‘ & 4 5 ”— B1 Curs kept me from having ’M'. o 5 = s =3 quick Consamption.” —Mr=, Hilt - o B 23 o BB 8 H D. DARLING, Beaver !t?j:_ <z 35 g7B Sy Meadow, N. ¥., Juao 18, 1835 {!l ld ' i - - = =y . il i FRpRQE i TR Efane e X a Wil AN LA RHE L e QHRIEELNE 524 © %E i it - — ' |l Cures Where Ail Else Fails. B=ST COUCH SYRUP. | il TA-TES GOOD. USE IN TIVE. SHOLD BY DRUGGISTS. 23 CT:. ik ‘l\tnzr__—:__—:—:—-———:__ _,_,——_:——___,——__T_,.__.._———————__—_—_._.——:-——::fiu‘ e 0= <=~ The cleaning of carpets I\~ . . . . | s= W without taking them up. That is a specialty = with Pearline. After a thorough 73 sweeping, you simply scrub them % . with Pearline and water. Then you - . . = E \\b,f/j wipe them oft with clean water, and A — sit down and enjoy their newS ness and freshness. 5 , You ought to be able to do a ¢RR s s ‘)‘\*\ q good deal of sitting down, if in o \ // all your washing and cleaning —/4 \\ /)\ you use Pearline, and so R e S2VE time and work. Use NS e o - it alone —no soap with it | © @ & /Vfl” - | | Sz ! OOot SOOI BOGEC IST IS oot ‘. ; 3~ S P S BB 3 el o Ui : . cu |, Fasss . B Sf Bz =é— 7 . :. 25, o 9?':4‘) = ' 'g’ ; D » . - 4’ ® s e b 4 £ ! g » i g o - & . Ej'i;' » - £ 3 ol - - , . when you buy inferior soap e instead of the genuine . o 5 o LA £ e * b & £z b ~ : B o SANTA CLAU = e A4 B g% » : g 275 e » . . & A& 8 The favorite of every woman who ever used it 8 & D either in the laundry or for all around the house &% 2 cleaning. Sold everywhere. Made only by - - - 8 THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicagg ‘ SN o.oocaoovooioaqc_co'ocac}cécoocc.aoa‘
m BEST I THE WOKLD. 721 SING FRS 7’(‘s&‘ oy o //‘ /(STeVE PoLisily/ \ For durabiity and tor \\ | cheapness Wis prena - \ ’ Y ration s truly uanvlied B T THE RISING SUN : gg& STOVE POLISH ia . Les or genera =S gcgs-“;g\-\f"\ %?ace‘:ing of & stove. % ——_#| THE SUN PASTE Ustiss=——""og"/ POLISH for a quick Balle SA g st '53 .%.’:“?_.C:,ngbp aftc;"- ?{.nnerd shlne‘:,. ~ A o a ie an = is?‘:%d with a cicr:?h. _Morso Bros., Props., Canton, Mass.. U.B- A,
z;'a;e-;'.,;} BRI S s o e L A 3 e ‘R.I.p.AN.S -e - vz . . og a e B RBT QY4600 Ay 2 3 = = <3 4 - 5 . - > TR S e PR e-, A =3 s 153 ;r,“.‘:»;:n) 2 ,_;;{'_,:,‘._‘ P e s I
i Under date of Oct. 4, 1893, Mr. W. B. Inglee, manager of the WhiteLall, N. Y., Chronicle, says: “I know of a case where the Ripans Tabules have ‘done wonders.’ Actually { saved a man’s life. Given up by all the doctors. Told to get ready to die. Had the worst form of dyspepsia. Couldn't retain any food on his stomach. Wasted away to nothing but skin and bones.” Ripans Tabules are sold by amgflm or by maii if ! the price (50 cents a box) is seni to Tho Ripans C hamii cal Company, No. 10 Spruce Street, New York. Sample | wéal, 10 ceats. | — LR el - g IS USE. ! llirl:j:w are a few condensed extracts from letters re- } eelved: “. “U'sed! for my own babe. and can truly eay that it u.’— ] axnut. palatable, nourishing, and eastly digested.”—J, I . LIGHTNER, M. D., Napoleon, Mo. “lam feeding my baby by the ‘Special Directions.’ I 8 i has worked like a chann.""—)‘[ns. R. S TueMaN, Boston, | Highlands, Mass, Another physician writes, . . ’ After Trial of Ridge’s Food: “It mneets my most sanguine expectations 1 expecs to use it whenrvq occasion cffers.” “Everybody thinks he !z a monuth older than he u——a ! great, fat. strong. healthy boy. . . A greatl many ' my friends are trying o induce me to change, but if my ~ baby thrives en RIpGE'sS Foup, that is enough.”"—Mas, | LENA G. Vosg, Lynn, Mass. . “1 bave used Rin<e’s FooD the past six months, and - find It just as recomnmended. Tn faet, would not be ~ without It.”-Mlss Doßa S. Davis, Rockford, 111 Send to WOOLRICH & €, Valmer, Mass, for “Heulthiful Hin's ™ SENT FREE. S €. N. U. Nn. '3—853 ‘vnli.\‘ WRITIXG T)O ADVIERTISERS please say you saw the advertisemmens in this paper.
0o TCOORO ST, JACOBS OIL ! WIPES CUT : l Pimtiy aad Efiecua!!y. g
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