St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 21, Number 15, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 2 November 1895 — Page 2

CAPITAL CITY CHAT? NEWS AND COMMENT IN AND ABOUT WASHINGTON. Russia's Secret Treaty Is DoubtedCongress Likely to Tackle the Currency Question Cleveland and Cuba Reed as a Presidential Candidate. Report Is Premature. Washington cortespondence: Wil 1 L E the n ew 8 that conies byway

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external pressure. Again, it seems impossible beiausr Japan has not yet evacuated the Liao Tung peninsula, and has three months to do so after the payment of the first installment of the war indemnity, which will not be due until about the Ist of January. It is not very probable that Russia will show her hand and attempt to oc upv the territory until Japan has oiicuati d it. There is nothing strange ahowv story that the Russiui war th'et ha*\v(t Vladivostok. If it does not get away Vtmn there pretty soon the ships will be all in and be utterly helpless until next spring. The ice begins to form in that bay about Uw Ist of November and it often lasts until the middle of May. The freshest and most accurate politic-' al news from China comes byway of St.

Petersburg, and it can generally be relied upon. That which comes byway of England cannot be relied upon. The Russians just now have access to the authorities in Pekin which is denied to the representatives of other governments, and the min- | ister cables long dis- ; patches full of in- ’ teresting informa-

tion to the foreign office in St. Petersburg every day. He has practically camped in the Tsuug Li Yamen. The British minister at Pekin does not enjoy the same facilities for gaining information, and when he- does get it and telegraphs it to the foreign office in London it is generally suppressed, because just now all of the events in China are unfavorable to British interests, ami the government does not, consider it wise or cheerful to communicate them to the public. That the Russians are getting on very well with the Chinese may be inferred by the fact that the emperor has conferred the order of the double dragon upon M. Shishkin, assistant minister of foreign affairs at St. Petersburg, ami upon Count Kaplist ami M. Lissowski, the chief and vice chief of the bureau of Asiatic affairs in the foreign office. This is a very unusual distinction ami carries great significance. Such honors have been conferred upon very few foreigners, possibly five or six. including “Chinese” (Jordon, who assisted in putting down the TaiPing rebellion: Anson Burlit.game, t^e American who first introduced China to the world; Sir Robert Hart, who has for twenty-live years been .collecting the import duties for the Chinese Governmegt. and one or two others. Never before, I 1 e licve, has the honor been confined upon active officials of another gover intent, e■: <•< pting kings ami regents. Work Ahead for Congress. Without any doubt the currency quettion will bo thrust upon Cong ess again during the coining winter. Mr. Clevef w FLa $ ^7 THOMAS It. UEED. land set out long ago to break >he "imd less chain,” am! whether the country i s with him or not, Mr. Cleveland has a fashion of going ahead With ,v.e thing » be has set his heart on. There will bi some foreign questions, too. and on these the President will have the first wotd. The President is said to be eager to find a leader who will rise to the height of a great occasion and sound the watchword of no party in the face of a possible foreign foe. In vice, of them issues. great interest ( enters in the men who tire the acknowledged leaders of tin i IC publican party. Cleveland and tuba. it is impossible to obtain at Washing ton either confirmation or denial of the re port that President Cleveland, while io Allanta, suggested a postponement of th.' day set apart by the managers of the ex position for expression of sympathy wit ; Cuba. It is known, however, that for some time Senor de Lome, the Spanish Minister, has been protesting to the Set rotary of State against the use of an organization which has received the offi 1 cial sanction of the United States Govern । merit, as is the ease with the Atlanta ex- ( position, for the purpose of pro-Cuban ] agitation. Senor de Lome lias expressed 1 the view that with private meetings of eit- j izens for such purpose the Government j may have nothing to do in a free country I like this, but has argued that the case is quite a different one where the exposition is concerned. The Government made an application for an off-sial display then'

■ and has given It n certain recognftSiw in the eyes of the world. It is also knows that President Cleveland does in a mild way deprecate the holding of srinysathy meetings in this country. Thi® ia wU because he lacks sympathy with Cuba as an individual on his own accouat, but because he does not think any good parjxwse is to be served hy carrying on an agitation which may have an undue effect upon (‘ongress. Reetlfts Horoscope. 1 homas 15. Reed is now aduiitTeiUy the leading Eastern candidate for the Republican nomination for PrendeM. Here at the capital no one is disposed Io dray i that the big man from Maine i« at the 1 present moment the greatest figure »sr the | contest. There is st the Kame lime wri- I ous doubt whether he wilt Iw iu the front ■ of the column next spring. That Kill to ’ a great extent depend upon biujseW. No ! man in the United States has a dis i iicult role to play than that which will ! fail to Mr. Reed’s lot during the ewnnztg ' six months. No nism will be more close- i ly watched or severely serntinixed than i lie. He, as Speaker, may be diametrical- | ly opposed to many matters which Mr. ; Cleveland may favor. And i< is not at ‘ all unlikely that the President may win i to some of his projects the support in- j tluential members of Ute t^toidliou. kJn'H ' Mr. Reed would find hunncir£*tiwrva she * upper and the nether miffstoxe, with Ike J reduction pressure screws u«rLiu» xntu ’ matically. Grover'® Loyal Hrolhev. The President's clerical bmtfier is* a ! peck of trouble. Forty-three of the j eighty-eight members of thv Pwsby- • terian Church at Chaumont. ?*. V.. of which he is the pastor, have petitwaed I the Presbytery to dissolve the patOi»ral i

of Hong Kong and London about a secret treaty recently concluded between China and Russia for a railway through the Liao Tung peninsula and the i occupation of Port Arthur must be regarded as prema(ui -. for it is believed impossible that the emperor of China should have made this great sacrifice without

M FELIX. FAURE President of Franc?, Whos? MjaUiiry II is B?-n till uttered by an Adv-ei se Vote in tl:« Vbaaabcr of Deputies. i j Irv 1 ? 1 ft 4-. > i \4 । ■ M ' siOk \ * V/ Z V / i {

CZAR OF HUB3IA.

relations, on the ground that lie has <’• i strok'd his usefulness and uunic himself i unpopular with the Isolde of the iMri-h by off. nsive partisanship in pdiric. Chnumont is a little village of ouly a Lv . hundred inhabitants up in St. I.mm'nce County, near the shores of Kile On tarin. There is said to be only one It • । rat in Parson Cleveland’s rongreg.cion. The It publican memb a s are in tm- 'i.CM of expressing tbemscb.i s fr. dj »u p-Ji leal maturs. ami their <wiau ..t* n-_.iv ing the personnel and policy of (hr tional .idministration have u<< s’oa.v bier, favorable. William has ah a) > been loyal to Grover, and rese«G aith vigor any uufricmllv critieism made the Republicans of Cbamnwat. Ilin dis i position io do so has resulted ia alienating more than half the congregation, called a church meeting .- " and passed resolution* ’ •' sign his pnstoi ate ' ' , 1 do, and now it" '''y“ R ‘ a '' ' '' termiocii to get nd id him <':nc U'wigfi: t ; i .■ matter into the Presbytery . lire jwdi tion was referred to a ipvrial « oj.mdttie. ; which is to make an investigatiim ami re port. GET OUT UNDER f IRE. G rave Charges of Kraad Cans. u Cab - uct Crisis in Fwutcr. Prance is again without . P>iuv. President Faure has accepted tin* resignations of the ministry headed be Id ' Ribot, which were offered beew^e •’ i government defeat in the Pha-T:’er .f Deputies during the delate ea the ninth of France railway scandal. The crisis was precipitated by M. RoMMf. ahw was active in exposing the Variama Canal scandal, he moving that the re- ; port of ExjHTt Flory, the official awraut- i ant . n the finances of the rsihvsy. be made pill.tie. Tliis v. ; r xaed ; by Premier Ribot, but was carried by a j vote of 275 t<> UMi. A..cd radical ' the members of the th<a left ’.he ■ chamber, which thcrcapavi adj<vuruc4 for ’ a week. The defeat of th ■ r.iiver^wwci is not surprising in view >f the iswcepu 5 charges made against scuator?. depot tea j and even ministers involved first in the ; Panama syndicate and more svceatlr in , the south, of France railway sesmlals. ' 'I lie charges culminated recently in the [ sentence to imprisonment for j year of j M. Edmond Magnicr, formerly scaader ; of the Var and editor-in -chief the i Evenement, who is said to have received ! X 7.500 francs as part of the profits of the J syndicate referred to. It will be recalled thut the fall’ of the ' I>upuy cabinet, which resulted is the res- ■ ignation of President (’astaar-Perier. ' grew out of a debate co the govemuscm i railways. The government held that its i guaranty of interest to the milway* : pired in 1914, but the council es state, to i which the dispute was appeated, decided ; that the guaranty was perpotmd. The ‘ Chamber of Deputies censured the jdu | istry for having submitted the I to the council of state and the cabinet i ( resigned, the president folloniug. thf- i । next day. ; A. K. Ward, the ahs«n»di?gg sojnagrr ; and treasurer of the Memphis Barrel and i Heading Company, has been indicted for j forgery. lie is now thought to be in Hou- i d eras. 1

H H. HOLMES ON TRIAL. Notorious Criminal Arraigned fo' the Murder of Pitzel. 11. H. Holmes, who, according to hi^ _ own remarkable confessions, stands a '3 the head of modern criminals, was pu JO on trial in Philadelphia Monday mornino.for the murder of Benjamin F. PitzcreG Holmes sprang a sensation at the opeu|C ing of the trial by rec,nesting his conns®;' to withdraw after they had made an iIF 1 । s * 4 I /' J - tX. I • z \l l II ’I. HOLMES. 5 effectual att< mpt to secure a postp«*?£ • meat. The prisoner is conduct I ou’H »ca s<\ • •vSo yuany nHusrs Invo been worn by ft pe • man. on trial d iriug the course Ms c spot tacoTr career that his baptisj lal • name, Herman Mudgett, has almost bi en

i lost sight of N< ' so his manif llex- ' ploits in half a dozen of the big citieii of this countr; . which have been marv|4ed at wherever men <an read. Wild MH j weird, a s the . ■ nt. ss.d .• >ry ofj his life, in whi -h lie a. euses himself of] of- • fences which would long sine* have given tt less skillful erimitut! Ips quiiltus, Holm. - ha- been careful It shift !the main rcsp-uisibility for the various iliur 1 dm with which lie admits hiving t|eiP!i ■ c iCi oi ted t > other sh ' ilders. Thus Aur , ing the thirty eight years of a life^vvoted almost entirely to 1< v breaking this is his fir- < xperiencc a- 1 felotsym trial for his Hfe. The anth.cities have . recognized that this is no d> ttmon ■ rfmI Utrtl, but O' ev. imuht be ■ J ',sl a t^ch- , tiica! ra.l r expert artist i,i crimbA P . 'I; < " their .b terminal.m, in the cv< nt of sn u-in^ ])i s conviction for a copitnl offense, io • railroad" lam to the ; gallows, i 77 s ^77’^777 l! /'>*<'< < 7 J ■ ■ —. St. Louis is a candidate foi .he honor of being awarded the nation.il con-en ; tiOHS. The Rev. Myron W. Reed, st I >en^' rinsists that illegal voters sho dd be i down at the polls. Senator Hill at Elyria. C llio. -ih l ''.' ; from tT..m the same piatform tilth tpmi gressman Tom L. .Johnson. Cov. Wm. A. McCorkle, of West. Virginia. has announced himself candidate i for Senator Faulkner's seat. The Lincoln County Citizen of Huutington, W. \ a.. nominates W. ; 1. Harvey ! lor the head of the Populist Presidential i ticket. Senators Gorman and Gibson declare : Maryland has been made sate for the Dem leratic ticket in spite of the split in the party. Anything to beat Chicago! That’s tho inly motive that New York has for enterj ing into the competition forth? national i Republican convention. At Columbia. S. C., the Con d itudmial convention decided new counties sffimld have taxable property worth yk’.t titty tit to and not exceed 4KU square milts ini'area. ExCoilgressman Breckinridge spjke at ; Frankfort, Ky., and was received! with , enthusiasm. lie did not refer t* hitfprob- ! able candidacy for re-election to| Con- • gress. One of the admirers of Col. Bradley, > Republican candidate for Governor of Kentucky, threatened to put a 'bullet through a picture of Gen. Harditf dis- . played at one of Bradley's meetings], ; Boston has been made the headquarters i of the secretary of the National Advisory I (Council of the A. P. A. 1

~ _ ■ARMS awe the mob. If !< OHIO LYNCHERS MEET WITH DEADLY BULLETS. >8 I- Rioters Break Into the Jail at Tiffin mid 'lwo Are Shot Down by Guards—- , The Offensive Prisoner Had Murp. dered a Marsha!. Troops Called Out. ’ Martial law reigned in Titlin, Ohio, Sunday night. The gleam of musket and bayonet was seen glancing back the moonbeams on the streets surrounding tho । county jail. Morris Degau, one of the rioters, assaulted a militiaman guarding the jail and was taken in custody by the police, who were followed to the station by a howling, hooting mob. The jail doors are wrecks, having been battered from their hinges by an armed nmb. Two men lie dead with bullet wounds in head and body, one police officer is at home with probably fatal injuries, two others are injured and a young man has a bullet through his hand. 'lhe attempt to lynch Leander J. Martin, alms Miller, murderer of t'itvMarKlml A„K„ S( Shultz, autieiimtod -ime the 2L"s "“r'*’ 1,1 d ‘“ d enr, ‘cst nt O Cloak Sunday morning, ami result- > "Fd in the instant death of MtitHder and l Matz, members of the mob which attacked the jail. The rioters exceeded 350 men and most of them were under the influence of liquor at the time. " The mob came from an entirely unexpeeled source. Six men gathered on the J lawn about fifty feet from tho jail an d in a moment about thirty others joined them. J hen a sharp whistle was heard and out | , ot an alley on the opposite side of the street and a little to the west rushed fully 3<>(l more, the leaders carrying a rope and several sledgehammers with which to accomplish their work. A squad of policemen who had slationed themselves on the steps, were whisked to one side as if they were so many si raws. A rush was made for the jail. Tho men were wi)hout reason and made no demand for the keys. A powerful teamster wielded the sledge. Tho door was broken in splinters in a short time. With each blow the furx el the crowd increased. When the entrance was gained there was a wild rush and tho hallway was tilled with excited men. Sheriff \an Nest and three men stood in the opposite end. He appealed to them most bravely and strongly several times, asking them for God's sake to disperse. It did no good, for the men only grew fiercer. The entrance to iho corridor is first protected by a heavy sheet-iron door. The lock was broken off with a few blows and then there remained the heavy grating. Guards Open Fire. Then it was that the guards, who were in that portion, began to fire. At first they shot over the rioters' heads. A guard afterward said the men swore to kill every person inside, and to show their purpose they began to fire at them. Tho

guards said no shot was tired by them until the attacking party had tired through the grating first. Henry Mutchler, the first man tiled, was the one who carried the rope. He was shot through the left temple, the ball coming out on the right side, and ho died instantly. Then Christ Matz received a bullet through his heart. He was picked up dead. Tho killing of the two men caused a cessation of the attack. Then the mob --XKowuiit .ijmimiimg the jail and sent nn'ssi'iigers to all the stone quarries in the city and vicinity, but all returned without any explosives. While this was going on Sheriff Can Nest placed Miller in charge of Captain Falkner and Officer Sweeney, who drove him at a breakneck speed to Fremont, eighteen miles away, and placed him in the Sandusky County jail. It was found necessary to call out the local militia, and as the day advanced and the news si read to the rural districts Governor McKinley was appealed to for troops, and ordered the two companies from Kenton, one from Fostoria and another from < lyde to go to Tiffin at once, once. Os? The Treasury shows an available cash balance of 51^2.15.3,G , J.8 and a gold reserve of $93,291,087. Yancey Lewis, of Ardmore, I. T., is appointed United States .Judge of the Central District of the Territory, to succeed : Judge Stuart. In the presence of a gathering that filled the edifice Rev. T. DeY»itt Talmage was installed as co-pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. It is expected that appointments will be made soon to fill the vacant positions of solicitor of the Treasury and United States Judge in Alaska. The State Department has received from Ambassador I'ateimtro. of France, the invitation of the French republic to take part in the French exposition of 1900, which is to usher in the twentieth century. Attorney General Harmon made his initial appearance in his official capacity before the United States Supreme Court Wednesday, making the opening argument in the Greer County case, involving tho question of the boundary line between the State of Texas and the territory of Oklahoma. In his motion for the advancement of the Judge Long pension case on the docket of the United States Supreme Court the Attorney General indicates briefly the position his office will take in the matter. He says: ”M here the matter is one that involves future recurring payments of money there seems no good reason why succeeding incumbents of the office, charged with a present responsibility, should be concluded by the decisions of their predecessors." The Fostoffice Department has compiled the receipts of the thirty leading cities of the United States for the third quarter of the year 1895. The receipts were 87,400,449, against $0,733,719 for the same quarter in 1894, an increase of 8.9 per cent. 'The Detroit Dry Dock Company, which the Naval Bureau chiefs recommended be awarded the contract for building two of the six new gunboats, now wishes to withdraw that part of its proposition which looked to the assembling of tho parts for the ships at Seattle on the Pacific coast.

HARDENING OF THE LIVER. । HOW A PITTSFIELD, ILL., GENTLEMAN OVERCAME IT This Condition Often Induces Paralysis and Should Have the Best of Treatment. From the Democrat, Pittsfield, lit. Mr. Valentine Smith, a farmer living in this county, whose postothce address is Pittsfield, ill., for the good of humanity in general, and especially for the benefit of any who may be afflicted as he was, wishes to make the following statement with reference to the great benefit he has received from using l>r. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People: His statement is as follows: “About a year ago 1 was living in the Mississippi bottom near the river, and I had become 1 very much broken in health, suffering | greatly from a distention or hardening of ; tiie lower part of the abdomen or bowels, j besides being troubled with my kidneys I and other complications, which rendered i my case, as 1 had supposed, ilmost help- I less. ’ 1 had been in this condition, al-_ though of course not as bad as I was a year ago, for something over six years, and haj! about given up all hope of ever being a well man again, when, by the I and advertisements 1 erU ri'. ‘ to the wonderful inn? \7T d y^ I,r Williams' Pink ‘ 1 a . ’’ t eople, 1 was induced to gne them a trial. After taking two boxes 1 began to feel greatly relieved, and by the time I had used up fire or six boxes I was completely cured and have been, comparatively speaking, a well man ever since. During all the time that I suffered , with this dreadful disease, which I am unable to name. I passed many sleepless | nights and was in great distress almost ; continually and was able to do but little ■ , work. Now I sleep and oat well. and. I although I am sixty-one years of age, I am able to do a good day’s work on the farm, having put in and tended eight acres ! of corn this season, besides doing a large । amount of other work on the farm. In short. 1 think your medicine a great blessing to humanity and can cheerfully recoinmend it to all suffering as I was. I had i been in this condition six or seven years, | and had given everything I could hear of. i ' doctors included, a fair trial, but coni-’ ' get no relief. <t •A AI.ENTINL SMITH.' | Subscribed and sworn i >j>e’ore me this 4th dav of June. I’. LSIl.i. M I NNIL < '< >Lli Y, Notary Public. Or. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are considered an unfailing specific for i such diseases ss locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dr.nce. sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, ; the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale ami sallow complexions, ! that tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration; ail diseases resulting from , vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They 1 are also a specific for troubles peculiar to ' females, such as suppressions, irregulari- ■ : ties, and all forms of weakness. In men Ley effect a radical cure in all cases I Jrising from mental worry, overwork, or excesses of whatever nature. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by ail dealers, ; or will be sent post paid on receipt of i price (50 cents a box or six boxes for . 82.50 they are never sold in bulk or bv I

the I<Hi), by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. THE EVILS OF OVER-EATING. Unices Neutralized by Exercise High Feeding Is Extremely Harmful. 1 assert that it is the duty of the good ' housewife to keep down the appetite ’ of her husband, writes the Rev. F. S. ' Root in the Ladies' Home Journal. Particularly is this necessary in the cases! ot ui’ll to-do professional and business ! men. In the families of mechanics! earning low wages such a warning is almost wholly unnecessary, but it may be sa.d of most men in good circum- ! Starn es that they eat too freely of rich food. If men would begin careful ami systematical physical culture in early youth and continue the practice through life, good health would be the result. ' Beyond the age of 40—at a period when ' so many are physically lazy—the su- ! perior value of exercise is apparent: but ordinarily, this is just the time 1 when the hygiene of athletics is neglected. There is no reason why a ! punching bag. rowing.machine, pulley 1 weights and other apparatus should j be relegated to college boys and clerks. | ! But having done a good deal of work m his time it is almost impossible to I peisuade a business or professional ! man. iiumng forty, t o give anv sort! of attention to physical cußu re f f such : training has been previously neg\ ected I Hence. I say it is the duty of a woman\ to keep from her husband all rich compounds that will ultimately ruin his digestion. High feeding is occasionally neutralized by hard exercise; but In the absence of the latter it is mischievous in the extreme. If your husband will stand the treatment, begin by switching off from the heavy breakfast of steak, hot rolls, potatoes, etc., and set before him eggs on toast, oatmeal and coffee. The I’cess Boys. The boy s that write for the paper- - They're the best of '<-ni all. I guess: For most of 'em come front the country. Where they're pullin' the old hand press! An' they never forget the raisin’. An' they're livin' the world to bless; For most of 'em come from the country. Where they're pullin' the old hand press! —Atlanta Constitution. The word scold was formerly applied to a quarrelsome person of either sex. but as women are notoriously more ■ given to scolding than men. it has come I to be limited to the fairer and more linguistically gifted half of the human I ■ race. '

Ayer’S Cherry Pectoral “Five years ago my wife “My mother has been a was sick with bronchitis. great sufferer from asthma We tried different physicians, for ten years, and her recovbut her case was pronounced cured cry is almost without a par- 8 hopeless. A friend recom- allel, on account of tier mended Aver's Cherrv Pecto- ^.i_ .Advanced age—over seventy, ral. She ‘tried it, and, in a tneS© Shelias been cured by only a short time, she was entirely part of a bottle of Ayer’s cured.” — Felix Roihichild, +»*/« Cherry Pectoral.” —liraua Livermore, Ky. LWUi Banks, Tar Brook, N. S. IT WILL CURE YOU TOO.

KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and 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 the’needs 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 trulv benefidat properties of a la*. *V ve 5 eflPect «aHy cleaning the system dispelling colds, headaches ind few“i and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millionsaßd met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and iX is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs i.s for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, hut it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name. Syrup and being well inform^-^A * iU not accept any subst ituVC u offered. itecipe for a Quarrel with a Wife. Wan until she is at her toilet preparatory to going out. She will be sure to ask you if her bonnet is straight Remark that the lives of nine-tenths of the women are passed in thinking whether their bonnets are straight, and wind up the remark with, you never kuew but one who had any common sense about her. Wife will ask you who that was. Y'ou, with a sigh, reply. “Ah! you never mind." Wife will ask you why you did not marry her, then. You say, abstractedly, “Ah! why indeed?”. The climax is reached by this time, and a regular row is sure to follow. All for His Whisk# rs. A Minnesota man has sued a barber for SSOO damages for ruining his beard.

fl CRY HIR HEP RESULT OF A PROMPT REPLY. Two Open Letters that Should Suggest to Thousands of American Women V go and do Likewise. tsrrcr*! TO OUX LADT KBADZM.J Little Falls, May It. ’SM. “I am suffering, and need your aid. I have terrible pains in both sides of my womb, extending down the front of my limbs and lower part of my back, attended by backache and pains in. the back of the neck and ears. fes-iy Al VN g f Ok i | J The doctors cl have given me opiates to quiet the pain. I n have a LR-' nigh fever nearU few* ,y all th ~ time - • 1 a: ? nervoms, ” If > - and cannot . T „ stand. My doctor savs I must »„ , . place myself under yo«^ iT ^ 2 * 1 twenty-one years old, an! vwj stfffersomuch.” — Mas. Cuas. P The above letter was received by Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., May 15, 1894, which received a prompt reply. The following letter reached Mrs. Pinkham about five months later. Note the result. Little Falls, Mtxx, S^pt. 21, 1804. “I deem it my duty to announce tha fact to my fellow-sufferers of all female complaints, that Lydia E. Pinkham'a treatment and Vegetable Compound have entirely cured me of all tha pains and suffering I was enduring when I wrote you last May. I followed your advice to the letter, and the result is simply wonderful. May Heaven bless you and the good work you are doing for your sex!” — Mrs. Chas. Pabkeil. All the druggists in town say there is a tremendous demand for Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound; and it is doing lots of good among the women. If you are sick and in trouble write ta Mrs. Pinkham. Relief awaits you. TU CURES WHERE ALL ELS£ FAIkS- IS Best Cough Syrup. Tastes <Joc>t Ves in timo. Sold by drugpto?®. HH