St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 21, Number 41, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 2 May 1896 — Page 3
A S —————————————————————— A WOMAN TO WOMAN. YWomen are being taught by bitter experience that many physicians cannot successfully handle their peculiar ailments known as female diseases. Doctors are willing and anxious to help them, but they are the wrong sex to work understandingly. When the woman of to-day exma periences such symps > toms as backache, e nervousness, lassio & tude, y %), 1y whites, - J' P/ Iy . (R 1- B P ArreguN 2 jar or s') N pain- \ SRt § B e e, L ALER NS SN i o SRR SR >N /‘W/ 4 e*\ ful mene \ RN struation, e l SR ¥FE| pains in 3 ! y groins, ' bearing-down sensation, palpitation, ‘‘all gone” feeling and blues, she at once 1 takes Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ~ Compound, feeling sure of obtaining immediate relief. Should her symptoms be new to her, ghe writes to a woman, Mrs. Pinkham, { Lynn, Mass., who promptly explains | her case, and tells her free how to get !' well. 3 Indeed, so many women are now | appealing to Mrs. Pinkham for advice, ! that a scoreoflady secretariesare kept | constantly at work answering the great l volume of correspendence which comes | in every day. Each letter isanswered l carefully and accurately, as Mrs. Pink- l ham fully realizes that a life may de- | pend upon her reply, and into many ! and many a home has she shed tko | rays of happiness. ! b e 5 amit : ) I VLt SRR ? S RAE R RA S | =\ .; ‘!l R, | 3 /o,’ vy AGy : BN | 2 @ /}'(-;’fl ‘ fi‘\%{}\‘» X CF NTR ST /R B ’r/ D, N W | Iy N ik 4 ¢ d ’l.‘4“ . ./#‘ Q\\ I ‘. /«' “} :‘:»w. \ & \3 i : __( ,:;,.;,g\',ys_(” ) WY mb’: | L) S | - {7 ,/,"/,413] ; i L i S l ok e G i | l 5 | Gladness Comes VVith a better understanding of the | transient nature of the many phys- | fcal ills which vanish beifore proper es- | forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— | rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge that so many forms of | sickness are not due to any actual dis- | ease, but simply to a constipated condition of the system, which the pleasant | family laxative, Syrupof Figs, prompt- | ly removes. That is why it is the only | remedy with millions of families, andis | everywhere esteemed so highly by all | who value good health. Its beneticial | effects are due to the fuct, that it is the | one remedy which promotes internal | cleanliness, without debilitating the ‘organs on which iy agts. It is therefore | all important, in order to get its beneficial effects, {o rote when yot pub- | chase, that you have the genuine article, which is manufactured by the California | Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep- | utable druggists. + Ifin the &njoyment of good health, end the system is regular, then laxatives or other remedies are not needed. | If afflicted.with any actual disease, one | may be commended tothe most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with | the well-informed evervwhere, Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely used and gives most general satisfaction. R.T, FELIX GOURAUD'S ORTENTAL DCREA.\E, ORMAGICAL BEAUTIFIER, £ e Removes Tan, Pimples, Freck=2 MSS R\ les, Moth Patches, Rash and oRo e Y) Skin diseases, and every blemE <§ 78 o ish on I!w~.z:t.\', and F =~ 4 R E; 2&; e, - } Wil 4T years, m‘,\-.i\ is 8o | ;mffig— x ) 4 G // harmless we taste it E'=oo g > /' to be sure it is prop=O gy erly made, Accept c4a Fe no counterfeit of @ ‘fl similar name. Dr, £ 3 S L. A. Sayre said toa X & v lady of the bhaut-ten T (a patient):“ Asyou o S lal{i,"s will use them, | o : 3 l I recommend *Gou- | s 2 raud’s Cream’ as the | - W least harmful of ail | ? ! the Skin prepara 4 tions,” For sale by 3 8 \ all lrr\:w;;i:zs et Fancy- Goceds Deal | ers In the United States, Canadas and Europe, FERD. T. HOPKINS, Prop'r, 37 Greet Jones Street, N. Y. o » - There is just a littleap- | petizing bite to HIRES | Rootbeer; just a smack | of life and good flavor | done up in temperance ! 2. ¢ ’ -~ i style. PBest by any test. ; Made only by The Charles E. Hires Co.. Philatelnhia i 40. peckage makes d gallons. Bold everywhera,
e- e e - e T = :::’ e ~ Dy » %t)' -1\" . g .","( { ‘!‘\\\\%q ‘/ \ : FALAN k. é:fl\ o~ /4 CV%%Zif{:p ; a— = oe e e e e .4\. I%\‘:‘s?%:\‘\s\9%’ Y o s 8 SR, { N SN “1 write =S SR to let yvou know Sey 3 | howpleased I am with NN . | f\';mr sarsaparilla. 1 é‘_‘is:%-\:i—:"}i: elt very weak and tired Sy J i R last month, and went,as \ I e usual.to get——'s sarsa- ;%i‘ AR e parilla, and did not know ;g»;\;‘-._—_,—’_.-_—::’—;,'wé but [ had ——'s until 1 got ESe——— home, when I found I had f\%,__.-?_—.::;,,x 3 yours. And pleased 1 am NS that I got yours, for it made N t;éfféi L“J/ a¥»s e e + me rugged and strong sooner SN lzg(;:?%,‘, thin ——'s, and so strong SN that [ set to work, alone,to turn NiSV—=| a house round. I moverd this § | house its full length, and then ) \ 16 feet back. Quite an Inuer- f taking for one man. But it was your sarsaparilla that gave Ime { Strength to do it. 1 shall always ¢ A \ take it in future.”—THOS. WARD, - Hill St., Oliphant, Pa., Dec. 28, 1895. 1 . e A - f \ & \ = ! WEICHTY WORDS Ve L FOK §, B\ yer's Sarsapariiia. '«
R TERE R == Nt GUNS AT GOLDEN GATE. San Francisco Is to Be Made Img pregnable. . The defenses about the Golden Gate . | promise to place San Francisco in the . | .:st of the most stroilgly fortified places »| in the world. The Fort Winfield Scott . | parapets are now armed,with thirtytwo 10-inch Rodman guns and fourteen . | 8-inch converted rifles. But the plans - | designed by the army engineers pro- - | vide for, cutting down the walls of the | fort and changing the entire character of what will be left by the construction eL e e 7 . Qi \‘\ Sl 3 R S g I . N )W Sl LY NN £ ) [SR SR 7 ‘ 7 -?v.-_— l"" (‘i\\} LR J {fl\ = f‘\\\ww :;\\s§2 A MODERN 12-INCH BREECII-LOADER. of massive parapets of solid masonry and the use of turrets, mounting the same with big disappearing guns of the most approved type, and thus making | it one of the most formidable defeusive ) works in existence. ‘ The modern mortar is rifled and has | & range of five miles, throwing a pro"jw'tilc weighing from 80 to 1,000 | pounds, with a charge of 80 pounds of 5 powder. It is provided with recoil ! eylinders like the heavy artillery. l‘z:wh | motar stands on a separate revolving l}»lutt‘m'm. which allows the motar to i peint in any direction, and the gun may i be deflected to an angle of 45 degrees.— | San Prancisco Chrouicle. I Current Condensations, 1 In Russia women, before they can ap- | pear on a cycle In the streets, have to | obtain a permit from the police. | The world-famous Sevres pottery facgtm;\' has practically since its founda- ’, tion been a state subsidized institution. ! Nijni Novgorod's exhibition next year { |istobea national one of Russian prod- | ucts alone. It will be opened soon as- , ter the Czar's coronation at Moscow. E A new porch is.to be erected at one | of the entrances to Hawarden Church |by Mr. Gladstone's son Henry. A niche ’ubm'v the door will be kept empty for ;Une or two figures. Boston is a great musical as well as fhm-llm'(uul center. One of its papers | says of a sermon: “The spritual lesson ,3 it bore was pointed and enforced by an E(‘loquvntly rendered soprano solo just | at its close.” Emory Stockwell, of Stamford, Conn,, while driving with a friend from Adams, Miss, to Savoy, saw a black bear in the read standing on his hind legs, about three miles from Adams, where { the road passes through a thick wood. i They stopped their horse, or rather 5 the horse refused to go with the bear in f the road within ten-rods of him. W Lile | they were planning what to do a team | fv:mw from the opposite direction and i ' the bear, seeing he was being surround- | ed, jumped into the woods and went } away. | .% % | | A curlosity in clubs is being started i by certain Manchester men, who trave 1] ' daily to and from homes in 1.‘\t“':."1:.1,; ' §t. Anne's and Blackpool, England. In | virtue of an arrangement with the Lan- ! cashire and Yorkshire company, car i :Ll'::l;if‘.\' will be specially fitted up, and 3 the only charge beyond the usual cost ‘ 'of a season ticket will be one of 3 gul- | | neas a year. The carriages, which will | be run twice a day-—to Manchester in | the morning and back at night—are | now approaching completion. South- | port is watching the experiment with l the full intention of starting a railwage| club of its own, if the I‘.Lu'lqm""x pion- | eers are successful, i A busy wife, tired of hearing ‘;.»r% husband declare that women had not! | ing to do, made up a little statepent of E the way she had spent her time for ont year. she had two children and tw { | servants. Here are a few only of the | | items which silenced the husband once | | for all: Number of lunches put up, 1, 5 157: meals ordered, 963; desserts pre- | { pared, 172; lamps filled and Ll‘ilil'i:;mi,i 328: rooms dusted (a nine-room house), f { 2959;: dressed children, 786 times; vis- ‘ ‘; its received, 879; visits paid, 167; books | :’ rchd, 88; papers read, 553; stories read ‘!! aloud, 234; games played, 329: church | | sorvicos attended, 125: articles mended, | 1.236: articles of clothing made, 120 ‘ fancy articles made, 50; letters written, | | 429; hours at the piano, 90%%; hours in | Runday school work, 208; sick days, 44; | {:‘.zm:suzzwxzts attended, 10, % el
F Ty L L RSP SP e TRIAL CF JACKSON. .| Alleged Murderer of Pearl FEFER Fighting for His Life. , The end is drawing near in the Pearl | Bryan murder case—that case 80 full of | guilty romance, of mystery and of pathos. -R e-
Seldom has a tFase= dy so engrossed the minds of the publie as this horrible drama of the bleak hills of the Kentucky Highlands, where in the murky gloom of a cold January night the unfortunate vietim of her own love %:md a man's fiendish ¥scheming was be\(hwulw]. No adornment is needed for the story of the crime; it stands
: '(’?3"""4}{:" b i"f , (RN ) /\7, e’ ._g‘; & - \ ‘MQL‘.‘, AN ,;-- ‘i\\ : 277NN it RN ‘\\\ T AN NN RS . \ \\‘ JUDGE IIELM.
forth as strange, as weird and as intricate | as any novelist’'s conception. Not yet are all the features in the case made clear; but the trial of Scott Jackson, which is . . 1 now progressing in the Campbell County court rt Newport, Ky., will lift fully the veil of mystery. And following his triad for the butchery of Pear! Bryan will come . . y . that of his accomplice, Alonzo W alling, Interest in the trial of Jackson is Very deep and very general and the court ,-uom‘_' ' : <3 a ic ove % in which Judge Helm presides, is eve ry L Fiy : i e :";' + ; bl ¥ Cgo,” | =gt ;‘ ;.'z "? F . ,"~ <\ o g dge (W Nrg R eRN ST Nflm PRy o 8R L iS o e TR Y T SO heT ReA Rs Rl LA RYT ROESY GUITAR R A {lO R s eT oA eT S D T "Qi B k T *"H - *] 2 . % s i Al Lo W S - At Sa S e el7 . ey ot UAR Vo FORY N ¥ o et ST ST, Te . T T it no_ - ‘N“’_g:"‘g\‘ :' . SN OTR s, g S = - =5 B e oMR o - o‘"'\,%‘ CAMPBELL COUNTY COURTHOUSE. Where the Trial 1s Being Held. day crowded with people, anxious to see the prisoner and take in every detail of the proceedings, Judge Helm and Sheriff Plummer decided to admit only 200 speetators to the court room at one time. Tickets are given out for each half day, and no one will be given tickets twiee during the trial. Ia this way the sheriff hopes to discourage traflic in tickets, which, if placed on sale, would undoubtedly demand a high price. A theory which finds many supporters is that Jackson will take the stand and admit he was instrumental in bringing about Miss Bryan's death: that he was a mutual friend of the vietim and Wil Wood, and that at their request he agreed to perform the operation and requested Walling to assist him. This they attempted to do and made a mistake which resulted in death, but the erime was committed in Cineinnati, and with a view to AN I S b Y 3 4 ~ : el \ 9 o~ L - (2 R e 8 A « Q.s,f;“ oy 2 ‘ 4 "’;’ e " grv‘:v’.' ", i ot \ 4 1 5 oTR N g it 4 % Y O A NS | el \ Ko \ ~. ks | o, . * o - \ s & M’ b 1 A . 3 i - ;‘ ! R ;l‘ A 9 [ i ! i L::g—;::A i ' i 2 | JACKSON AXD HIS ATTONNEYS, i concealing the vietim's identity the VV' wis tnken to Fort 1 it ! 1 head | severd e O 10 1 as m Rt : ‘!!*("': ied a conviet Ihentueky | bility of the defendant es ¢ punish- | i be guilty. f | Witnesses were examined Saturday to | gv\.lzv; ~—:;':.(',5~ itif) ¢ 3 } & ¥ :-\. § | found near Fort Thomas tof Pearl | oo o g 1 i it $: ! ‘ i 5 8] g - Wis i F Phand 1 ' s Finv 4 ¢ 3 i l;:.:. t Cross-examine Witlesses I'he | ! hed npurs i focd 4} ad 1 it i i { \AI i «i: sense § il X 1 X A . :_\,l ; | by some drug s irs before it SI i al} Fo £ 1 . : “ 1 i o { i i ii i i . il i i der durainee,. were not ; ary and will | EL3 jit e45 ) Ot E | LITTLE RUTH CLEVELAND. | | ' Though the President's Daughter She i ‘ Had Common Mcasles, é ; Doubtless, every plain, ordinary citizen | ! from one end of the country to the other , i has had the measles at some ting " other. The malady 18 no respecter of persons. It invades the mansion of the rich as well as the lowly cot of the poor: : S : ,~.ae < e : R TN { 7= e i ,/";;'f' T ".." A | ,‘//‘ffiifi'f W AR i (: [‘_‘-;' -, &_}; < N » BRRL e&’ S G = \.\&3 7 AR N s, SRS ig‘\\' N 2 TAR N7 Ly DU S ePR 1/ ! (—A y”’é‘éfi?‘\ P S § o ew, it e { g S oS L N Y \ ‘ F =2==7 /5\ N\ \ o l"i S y 1 \ r] & RUTH CLEVELARD. | the pilace of the king s well as the b | of the peasant. It entered the home «,f‘ President Cleveland and two of his little i tots were sirickon, I~ln' ::.‘ i'l'\'<€' dent's second oldest daughter, was attacked first. Ivery precaution was taken to keep it from the other children. Ruta | and Marion, but ;fz'.\ifl\n every ¢ffort *\}“\)i former, the first born of the President, also fell a vietim. “‘\li"fw}'»"f wonderful result Tesla, the New York scientist, has obtained is that by the "‘"“‘"f 2 new type of fluorescernit screen, devised in his laboratorv, he has been able to greatly increase the _'\'““7(l'!‘,ness of the o«tlines in a shadow on the screen and to actually see the human heart. Paderewski, the pianist, has placed in !l_w hands of William Mason, of New York, and Col. I_IA .. Higginson, of Boston, as trustees, .S‘l"l.“tifl for the purpose of wtnM‘.slmn;:_tru-zm:ul prizes for composs¢rs of American birth e | 1 { L e
\\__\ Is bomgectote;- tth".l"lh Refined Gola B & mm ort. This unspeakable boon fs ary unfortunates for whose ailmenty Hostetter’'s Stomach Bitters g a Promptly peipry) remedy. The dyspepetic, :‘t;h&‘;lmlflc. the nervous, persons troubled o t‘;:l::e;is ::alcll;xl;“.t?nd telv'er. stbould g’mprehensive and gengu [;eer(?;;ce;l:gs ?t ;Etl: Otes appetite and nightly slumber, e In the Boston Museum of Fine Arts there ape many casts of works of sculpture Whick are dusted in a novel manHer. A large air bump is mounted on & truck ang is rolleq around to the vari%US rooms, One man operates this Pump, the other applies a fine jet of air to the sculptures, blowing off the dust, This blowpipe is connected to the Pump by means of a pole and rubber tube, Spring Medicine Your blood in Spring is almost C(‘Hain‘ to . be full of impurities—tha accumulation | of the winter months. Bad ventilation | of sleeping rooms, impure air in d\\‘.(-.l - ings, factories and shops, over-eating, heavy, improper fools, failure of the kidneys and liver properly to do extra work thus thrust upon them, are the prime causes of this conditicn. It is of th.e utmost importance that you Purif Now, as when wa m r weather comes and the tonic effeet of cold, bracing air is gcne, your, weak, thin, impure bleod Will not furnish necessary sir:ngth That tire 1 feeling, loss of appetite, will Glen the way forserious disease, ruined health, or breaking out of humors and Impurities. To make pure, rich, red | blood Hood’s Sarsapariila stands une- | qualed. Thousands testify to its merits. Millios take it as their Spring Medicine. Get Hood’s, because i o ~ Sarsaparilla ; i Is the One True Blood Purifier. Alldrugg!sts sl. | | Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass g | . are the only nills tn talks L Tlood’s Pills 27 the only piis to tak | Surerelief | r_ rice &5 cis ASTHMAL - KIDOER'S PASTILLES.! . Riowell &Co § mfi«%wh“»fi—“* | 3 SPALDING'S BAsSERAL ' - \, ,\‘ | LAY DL B Jemm, 2 o 3
E ST IPLSHSTISRERESESISSHY ¥ il B /] 1-- T D ) % i — IS b " .‘\\:(\;flz | : " % - /J Ba" e 7| <L #, ’ ? A s a " 1 ( // -~ B R\ e / f Y/ f 2 "%'?‘ H 001 Y ‘/fi-fl/ T . 9;; - ) , J < : ‘ il 'Ys ! < Ty ’ : (‘4 j “' | AN AN L & e / »1‘:"‘-1 & ‘ \§\"§ 2/ x //% . Qe W BT El T ) B | & " l» bl il "3‘4: ]A | 41 lj/ i) ‘ ? [ W LN ’g' w1 AN\ ,}//,'/,"}’///s‘.!_‘, j ) Q@ N\ A\YW7ar 1 Btluls 47y & | A\ RBI i ‘ ol o AN T 3 The coming Artist who knows enough % to paint a popular subject. o ¥ | T 8 1) ~ CJ ißattleAx,. : | 2 T > ; " J:' .‘ T . ;,A" s o | - oA S TR | < o TN B ; 1 Q ~"‘C’“'—U ‘,3 .{3 ( f /] B 3 PLUG 3 L/ 4 ' ® You get 55 oz, of “Battle Ax” & & for 10 cents. You only get 3% oz. ‘ ®of other brands of no better quality & for 10 cents. In other words, if you @& © buy “Battle Ax” you get 2 oz. & more of high grade tobacco for the & ‘ '/ & same money. %zn you afford to | R resist this fact? We say NO— & | & unless you have “ Money to Burn.” ¥ | &S eSO SSSRSHIPFFEESESE | B@o@@@@@@@@@@B@@@@@@@@@@@% | Ao o L @ | Try Walter Baker & Co.’s Cocoa azfi.d 2 Chocolate and you will understand wiy g% ¢ theirbusiness established in 5780; hzj.s fl;auzm G : ished ever since. Look out for imitations. % : Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., Dorchester, Tff??,; ;gi 8 AR ARARIRRRIANRCIIEARAGODD
o 2909000000409 00000000000000000000000000000000000000 690600 Loss of opportunity is life’s greatest loss, Think of suffering with NEURALGIA 3., !2. o 8 Years Years Years When the opportunity lies in a bottle of ST, JACOBS OIL, It cures. 0 040004000000060000000000000000000000000000000000000604 DOOO AL ESARAEAa s haaaa ooOL Lo el BLRBT2 T T N T T e
SEERTTVVVVVVIVVVVIVIVVVITP799O9O999O9OO9OO 9094 e TR —_— A Disappointing Haul. Some folks say, said a fisherman, that if the fish once gets into a pound net it never gets out until it is taken out, but as a mattar of fact fish often get out of pound nets. Itis common for sheepshead, bluefish, Spanish mackerel | 3 i and shad to get out of them. I’ve been | to a pound neton a Sunday and counted | 285 bluefish, and when the net was hauled on Monday found only four or five. The fish get in, and if they flnd; the opening and get started right they \ cam get out. They follow one another | like a flock of sheep. l s ! i Hall’s Catarrh Cure. ' Is a constitutional cure. ¥Price 75 cents. ‘ A \\'him;m—:\:x;mm Texas recently and round its neck was found tied a little bell, marked “Ralls County, Mo., 1860.” Do not wear impermeable and tightfitting hats that constrict the h}oad vessels of the scalp. Use Hall's Hair Renewer occasionally, and you will not be bald. I bel'eve my prompt use of Piso’s Cure prevented quick consumption.—Mrs, Lu- ( ey Wallace, Marquette, Kan., Dec. 12, '95. 1 For 31 years Dobbins’ Electric Soap- has been imitat- | ed by unscrupulous soap makers, WAhy? Because it | | 18 best of il und hias an lmmense sale, Be sure and | &et Dobbins' aud take no other. Your grocer bas it, | or will get it $ FITS. -All Fitsstopped frea by Dr. Kline's Great ! Nerve Heostorer. f\'unl’itn after first day’s use. Mar- | velous cures. Treatise and S.OO trial bottle free to { Fitcases. Send to Dr. Kline, 881 Arch St., Phila, Pa. ‘ z —_—e | | Mrs. Winslow’s SoorHixe Syrup for Children ; | teething: softens the gums, reauces inflammation, i allays pain, cures \\'lmfvu:w. % cents a bultle.'
80800 STEEL [T I TTIIT CABLED' i wes A —F FIELD Y picker BT AND HOG IRt FENcE. B F FENCE. ; Also CABLED POULTRY, GARPEN AND RABBIT FENCE. | g e manafacture s complets line of Sucoth Wire Tencing and susrantes every asticls to DE KALB FENCE CO., sui3sE 25 “Say Aye ‘No’ and Ye'll Ne'er Be Mar- . ried.” Don't Refuse All Our Advice to Use
0909090660000 0000090900000000000 00000000 & i i A R 4 | CURES AND PREVENTS ~ Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bronchitlg, ‘ Pneumonia, Swelling cf the Joints, : ! Lumbago, Inflammations, { - RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, | Frostbites, Chilblains, Toothacho,l i Headache, Asthma, i | DIFFICULT BREATHINC. | CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one & | twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reada | ing this advertisement nced any one SUFFE { WITH PAIN. | A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler o \, water will in l{ few minutes cure Cramps, ‘ Bpasms, Sour SBtomach, Heartburn, Nervous. | ness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, I.)l-arrhu:an { Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency, and all internal \ pains, | ’ I'here 18 not a remedial agmt in the world that! | will cure Fever and Ague and all other malarions, | bilious and other fevers, aided by RADWAY'S| | PILLS, s 0 quickly as Radway's Ready Relief | Fifty cents per bottle! Sold by Druggists ‘A Farm for Every Man... | Choice lands. suitable for stock raising, dairyingo | grain producing. Timber and mineral resources uuq { surlpu»ml. Within easy reach of raiiroads, schools: i and churches in NNP! q QTN along; | the line of the N__UP‘_PH. _ER_N__W_Ib____GUN”IN Wig- | consin Central Railroad. We will gladly furnlshg | general information and promptiy answer all in-| | quiries concerning them. Address for free ram# phlet. Frederick Abbot, Land Commissioncr, Wiscon.! sin Central R. R., Milwaukee, Wisconsin. ' o — sl £ = PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS.! R T e MM TSR . 7w O AR AL RST | Examination and adviee as to Patentability of l{n‘en-’ tions. bend for INVENTORS' GUIDE, OR HOW TO GET A! | PATENT. Patrick O’Farrell, \“'umhin[:t()u.Alb3.s}:‘i R KAC e cIVEA ER | 1) L e, SAR iy SR b A gl it SN ]| Vi ~ o o e-— "-,',,y‘
| WHE HANVE, 72, Mo, ‘ but selldirect tothe conm ! e ” > sumer at wholesale prices.| | SRR >hz{v anywhere for exami- | ¥ nation before sale. Every-| | : A thing warranted. §2°loo RER (el styles of Carriazes, 90! i (.; ~~ % fi!&vl';s Ha\rngsfi,‘u %yiu‘x | h T g RN, liding Saddles. Wrlle! :’ # "?""’»’"‘ for catalogue. - SN ELKHART ! . i<y Carriage & Harness Mig. Ca. | W.B. PratT, Secy Elkhart, ind. | e- - ' N.‘l’ OFIN W.FIOIL RIS, | “‘llbhingt‘é:‘l’ .0, : ssfully Prosecutes am i la%figgxecipal%xxmmqr U.S. Pension Burt | 3yrsic last war, 15adjudicating claims, atty since. i g Te e e ! e R E T s T ] RS N RIPANS | A e DAR L A egt SRS | ». Tes A5O Dok . ; Mr. H. F. Barnes, a reporter for { the Sunday Herald, published at i Canton, 0., under date of May 27, I 1895, writes to the Ripans Chemical Company that he knows a working- { man who has been benefited by { Ripans Tabules after a severe | attack of the Grippe, and he ap- | pends the following statement, | with permission to publish: “Testi- { monial of Thos. J. Meals, of the city { of Canton, Stark County, O.: 1 i had an attack of the grippe four | yearsago this spring that left me in i & bad way. My nervous system ! was broken down ond my digestlve apparatus in a condition that made me miserable for days. While able to work at my trade as shearman In a rolling mill, I suffered more i or less all the time with my stomach. Bitters and tonics were literally taken by the gallon, and every variety of pills and potions { that promised relief. I derived | some benefit from the use of some | of them if I continued taking them, | Dbutif I quita few days my old trouble would return. Noticing the advertisement of the Ripans Tabules, for impaired and bad { digestion, I concluded to invest | ina few of them, which lam | pleased to inform you have proven all or more than I expected of them. While I have taken but a few of ! them, they have done me more good { than all the other remedfes that I have tried. They relieve the belching and sour stomach almost ! atonce, and I feel better in every ! way since I commenced taking . them. The distressing headaches, which I always had preceding a fit | of indigestion, have entirely left i me. I will be glad to recommend the Tabules to anybody suffering { from stomach troubles. (Signed) “THOS.J. MEALS, | “tanton, 0. Ripanus Tabules are sold by drugglsts. or by mali it the price (50 cents a box) is sent to The Ripans Chemical Company, No. 10 Spruce Street, New York. Sample vial, 10 cents. e e- % i CN.U No. 18-98 +© <% e ————— - VA~»——“-\.‘l . O & _‘ \IY””N WRITING TO ADVERTISERS ¥ "~ i plcase say you saw the advertiseme@A 0, o i In this paper. @° > ‘.-;./ ¢ ‘ 3> e { o TosIERCEREREE, N .. W 0 " N 6 T T T T R e ey v BEL TR TR ! ok TO T cuReS HgflEA gks AILS. i O ofe Bost 2uln S¥rups Tektes Good. Use o ! =lO o)t in. 9. Bpid by druggists. o 2 Rt RN Rl 2 B (9] RIS . “3 S A 33\‘ 2
