St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 21, Number 46, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 6 June 1896 — Page 3

| ———————— X-Ra VA Os testand trial prove Hood’s Sarsaparilla to be unequalled for purifying the blood because Sarsaparilla Isthe One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl. Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25'cents.

All About Western Farm Lui*d& The “Corn Belt” is the name of an illustrated monthly newspaper published by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. It aims to give information in an fnteresting way about the farm lands of the West. Send 25c¢ in postage stamps to the Corn Belt, 209 Adams street, Chicago, and the paper will be sent to your address for one year. Not one of the members of the colonial or revolutionary societies traces his descent back to an army teamster. The teamster, nevertheless, is just as necessary to an army as an artilleryman, and when it comes to language the driver of six regimental mules could cause a great silence to settle down upon Flanders.—St. Louis GlobeDemocrat. e ————————————————————— AN INVITATION. It Gives Us Pleasure to Publish the following Announcement. All women suffering from any form of illness peculiar to their sex are requested to communicate promptly with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All jettersarere & ceived, opened, read and an 'f swered by women enly. " A woman can o freely talk of "\ her. private [Ty illness to a woman ; : )& ‘ thus- has o % QA been estab- ‘ : } lished the ’ § !y i eternal s Ny confi- “ B i dence be- . # tween Mrs . \ e Pinlkham ; B and the L & women of = J&&% America. Z This con- ; ( / §” fidence has ino P> duced more than N (/. s 100,000 women to XA, write Mrs. Pinkham for advice during the last few months. Think what a volume of experience she has to draw from! No physician living ever treated so many cases of female ills, and from this vast experience surely it is more than possible she has gained the very knowledge that will help your case. She is glad to have you write or call upon her. You will find her a woman fullof sympathy, with a great desire to assist those who aresick. If her medicine is not what you need, she will frankly tell you so, and there are nine chances out of ten that she will tell Yyou exactly what to do for relief. She asks nothing in return except your good will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surely, any ailing woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. Never in the history of medicine has the demand for one particular remedy | for female diseascs equalled that at- : tained by Lydia E. Pinikham's Vegetable Compound, and never in the ; history of Mrs. Pinkham's wonderful Compound has the demand for it been | 8o great as it is to-day. ; T R 7 < LY S e - % P . L) ', < o 'RIDANS PV Iy e ARt '~L=~‘ff‘ Harry M. Cenrad, of No. 1744 Twelfth street, Washington, D. C,, gays: “T can speak in the highest ‘ praise of Ripans Tabules. I have ! been for years troubled with night ‘ mare (an erroneous expression, but | one that thousands are familiar | witl), and have suffered a thousand | deaths, being caused directly by a torpid liver, thence stagnation of the blood. A short while after | . retiring I would experience the most terrible sensation that human | can fall heir to, such as having . heavy weights upon you, secing 'l horrible animals, burglars, ete., 1 and being unable to get out of (t their reach. I have tried everything | ! on the market that I could think | ] wonuld be of any benefit, but never | ‘ struck the right remedy until I | tried Ripans Tabules, and since | that time nightmare with me is a | thing of the past. lam fully con | vinced that Ripans Tabules are a % good thing for suffering humanity, 'i and I feel that I could not exist ! without them. And I will further ? say for the benefit of others (know li ing there are thousands suffering “ in the same manner), profit by my | experience and try them; you will ‘ never regret it.” l Ripans f.l:nbmm are sold by drugglsts. or by mall it | %hegricc 4;.,:3 cents a box) tagent to The Ripaus v‘.i':'_-m‘;; i eal Company, No. 10 Spruca Street, Xew York. Sampie wial, 10 cents.

1f you accept a substitute, ‘ you must not fuss because | its not as good as genuine HIRES Rootbeer. | 3ade onls br The Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphla. A 25c. package makes 5 8”92&-&1’{??”", b OL D E Y ES MADE NEW—Away with spectacles, By mail 10c. Lock Box 788, N. York | st ek S - We sell the best Wheels at the lowest | Blc BIBS Frviing Seten sare, i, Sewig )Inrhlnef. Bng:l,u. Wug'om, 1i..-no.:ifi Saddies, Blacksmith Farm & Carpenters Tools, Engines, Bollers, Lathes, Stoves, Wire Fenee, Guns, Pianos grg-ns, Watches, Cash Dravers, lgltvr Presses, 'l'm»rk- Ete. ork for Agents. Cataloguefree, CILICAGO SCALE C), Cilage,

R ——— o —————— e —————————————— i L ——— ROUNDS A CENTURY. TENNESSEE CELEBRATES AD MISSION TO STATEHOOD. e S Inaugural of the Centennial Exposition Is Also Performed—lmposing Parade at Nashville — President Thomas Raises a Flag, Centennial Is Celebrated. The 100th anniversary of Tennessee’s admission to the Union as a State was celebrated in Nashville on a most elaborate scale. Thousands of visitors from all the cities and towns in the State were in attendance, besides hundreds from various other States, including the Governors and State oflicials. It is estimated that in spite of a heavy rain from 10,000 to 15,000 people took part in the great parade. There were scores of carriages with national, State and municipal dignitaries, attended at the front and rear by bands of music; 3,000 State and IFederal soldiers, including four companies of cavalry, each 100 strong; the officers and assistants of the centennial, the entire Woman's Board, the Ladies’ Hermitage Association, the Tennessee Historical Society, scores of secret orders, traveling men's associations, postoffice employes, trades and labor societies, Confederate veterans, 1,000 wheelmen, 2,500 citizens on horseback, scores of organizations, 2.300 colored people representing the societies of that race. At the grounds 10,000 children paraded and welcomed the vast procession while cannons roared. There was a proclamation and flag rais- | ing by John W. Thomas, president of the | exposition, followed by elaborate anni- | versary exercises. The principal address | was by J. M. Dickinson, who spoke for an || hour. He gave an elaborate history of Tennessce, and traced its progress to the present under the heads of religion, edueation, patriotism, law and order, Demoeratic government, emaneipation, the war and recuperation. Exposition to Be Held in 1807, ‘ The celebration of Monday and Tues- | day commemorates the centennial of Ten- | nessee's appearance among the States ufé the Union, but the exposition in memory | of the event will not really open un!il! May 1, 1807. It will be the first indus- | trial exposition ever held by any State in commemoration of its birth, and, judging ‘ by the work already done and the p‘.:ms% for the future, it will be large enough | and beautiful enough to give it a high | position among American fairs, For three i

\ 1~ nar q v "ot e : S Na . 4 2 lie S S =Ly -B—- --£ i . ‘-"‘“ ’ b a- et {)iji~ W l’. i e . ; * o1 s i ‘ B 2 o ! LT NEH i * LSI blie, @W £ ALY l ARENEIED 7o | N -e, s| B TR S T R . T . Lo —— Wo R i ®‘ = F ‘xv‘« oo ‘.!‘ o /‘—'——\ & «""""':. = i ‘Q_ H oBN TR “ s e Po ~odgwn S 0 % 18 i"~' s ob S .’ ~ iy :’*""& NN A 3 ’x;n . 00l T se] < ; SAN 5 e e 2 & y N\ [=Ta < Al \Q' 2y \ -, w L ! vr& e 1 ETor »».-5 : ety LRt ’ f » \*.:ifr‘* t{t““‘-.‘d ', -a 'r- \r( ~ -gy . R \ o - .-\- i m‘:o |h i ’. + <h‘ AUQITORIUM - L SRR L L B g et ek T | - N + TR DR - a8 o T .u.; R bR eAN =Y ; .S;J:‘_;& NDRTT T R e ai‘h# iol ATV A B e} TR e, ) :--_7‘:_;: % ‘,}- ey, T - s Vet ‘ AR ".k,‘r“.’; \ 3"7-‘l' :‘;"‘3 . r /SRS - Lt " e W L i ~ T TS i . ;'u it e o ' 3 Pl AR~ ««m-_-;fi—r'-—“'?— o Ulm NI |- | EessamiE =a=s) 4 ':."‘:4)':." l.'-; =- x ¥;\ . "“: S — | i e m N e IRt i s - s . . Ry AT ‘a_'b N AT r _.“.‘ oy \ » ~ j”‘t i b s ‘kffii".‘; ;.“ '«;'v; e e WOMANS + e TR O TR AN POR T ATV e . BuiLomng A e SOME OF TIIE TENNESSEE CENTENNIAL BUILDINGS. |

ee e 2 e e B el years the plans have been under discus- | sion, and work upon the grounds and buildings has been in progress since the latter part of 18005, Tt is estimated that the entire cost of construction and preparation of the grounds will amount to £1,000,000, to | which the salary list and other necessary expenses will add some SHOO,OOO more, DUEL IN LEBANCN STREETS. Wallace Riley Killed by Thomas Allen in a Quarrel Over Their Children. At Lebanon, Ind., Wallace Riley, for many years a prominent resident, was | killed instantly by Thomas Allen, a stock | buyer. Allen's son, aged 17, had hw‘n? keeping company with Riley's daughter, | aged 24. On account of the difference in the ages of the young people both ' fpthers gbjected to their n_m;rin;:v. but | tgé 50%130 steceeded In Securing & mar- | riage license and were married. Immedi- | ately after the marriage they left for | Putnam County, and remained there un- | til a telegram advising them of the tra- | gedy called them home. Riley denounced the elder Allen as helping on the marringe. The men met on the streets Saturday afterncon. Riley said: “Defend yourself! One of us is going to die!” Riley pulled his revolver. Allen said he was anarmed. and the two repaired to Hooton’s hardware establishment in search | for a weapon for Allen. They were " finally separated before any blood was | shed. 1 Monday morning Riley was on the | streets early, and was loud in his claims that he was after Allen. Riley was just | coming out of the postofiice room when | Allen drove up in his carriage, nligh!mH and passed in. After getting his mail he ! started to leave the postoffice, when Riley accosted him with drawn weapon. Like a flash Allen drew his pistol and the firing began. Riley fired two shots and Allen | four. When the smoke cleared away | Riley was lying in the postoffice door, and Allen’s son, who witnessed the ;.fTr;\_vz from his father's earriage, had received a severe wound in the right side. Allen was arrested. Both men are wealthy and influential. Prince Krapotkin, revolutionary exile and nihilist, leads a patriarchal existence among the Kentish laborers with whom he has made his home. He has a kindly, thoughtful, bearded face, a figure bent with the “literary stoop.” thin, nervous hiands, and the courtesy to be found only in the best class of Russian society. The grandfather of the Rothschilds is said to have owned scarcely a penny in 21800.

I e e e e DEAIH OF KATE FIELD. . ) e e Brilliant Newspaper Writer Expires in the Hawaiian Islands. “Kate Field died of pneumonia” was the brief cable message received in Chicago from ex-Minister Thurston announcing the death of perhaps the best-known | woman connected with American newspapers. Miss Field went to the Hawaiian | Islands several months ago in search of | health. Miss Field was born in St. Louls in 1840. She was the daughter of Joseph N. Field, an KEnglishman, who was brought to this country by his parents, who were exiled from Ireland. She res ___________,__A._.,__..__.____,_________._-«————-—-—“—“'—' uv'!".’ e . Ui o at (- o A A Y ~‘*%f RO .‘\l"\;“\.\\“ 4’;'".)_ Y \ TR i R T A N ( \ A “;):"." \\:\"j g ‘\‘7\ : "b," ‘*‘ J ... FS A R ) } g (LN X i , “ Fle A AN Y v (BRSNS ¥ v ,1’ _ & ~J'E.',v ~t; A i ..r Wy 25 ‘& gl "ol .\ QAL G P W .I;,\ A ’,rl'} ~"?l \\} Vi : 47 ki ; KATE FIELD. . ceived her early education in the schools of St. Louis, and later entered a seminary in Massachusetts, After her graduation she visited Europe, and while there she became acquainted with George Eliot and the Brownings. Miss IMield's first newspaper work consisted in contributions to the St. Louis Journal and the St. Louis Times. After that she had been a constant writer for a number of papers. She went to Honolulu to study the habits of the inhabitants of Hawaii, Her letters from that island have given information which the people of this country have sought eagerly, especinlly as regards the trouble in Hawail. OLD TIPPECANOE IN BRONZE. Statue of William Henry Harrison Unveiled in Cincinnati, On Decoration Day there was unveiled in Cineinnati an equestian statue of the ninth President of the United States,

I William Henry Harrizon, The movement 1 for this memorial began five vears ago with the organization of a Harrison me- § morial association, composed of some of 1 { the leading ecitizens of the Queen Citr. | | The association secured some funds by { subscription, supplemented by a bill in §tho State Legislature anthorizing a tay !l levy that warranted the expenditure es ‘ $25,0000, The association was afterward | merged into the Harrison statue commis%sinn. which carried the work to completion after much aggravating delay. The ismtuo as it stands has cost about $28.- { 000, but the extra amount has been pro- | vided for. The statue is the work of Re:ltiss«\ of Cincinnati, who designed the { ! - / A7 | S g!v A ‘[ ;‘1 :‘ -’ ) ¥ | “ \ f (\ () A i e i ; : ey A j WEBAKARSSON § o o s S = =\\ e | i ‘:.E.fl:‘ L .“._'.“ g :~; =3 .. . 7 e ‘ e AR ; et = | BTATUE OF WILLIAM H. HARRISON. | equestrian statue of Gen. Grant at Chicago and the McPherson statue at Washington. It is in bronze and represents thg hero of Tippecance in the military aeci contrements of the period in whieh his { reputation as a fighter was made. ‘ Money in Her Heels. | The greatest fortunes made upon the Stage have been acquired in comedy cand vaudeville, Loie Fuller is better | heeled than Janauschek. i Ferrel, a high authority, believes that | upper air currents, proeceeding from " the equator to the pole and produced | by the heat in the tropical regions, are | defeated by the rotation of the earth | S 0 as to flow almost easterly !z certain | latitudes. | He—Hear the duet Mr. and Mrs. Ba- | con are playing. She—l hear Mrs, Ba- : ‘ con playing the piano; that's all. “Well, | Bacon is playing the hose in the yard.” | —Yonkers Statesman,

| BUFFERED FoR IS CoUNTRY TR T | CRIPPLEp TOF A VETERAN | T " =%D HAND AND FooT, o L SRR G . - 1 Chen m& —-—--—.._. F i %" Stricken with Lo- { Sk & 'l;lth-l‘!orod Nignht ana A o Tear-How a New Light M ,‘.&m- Life, . Charles A, o ole, Chicago, 111. ar of th ,hbcfir”' & veteran of the Vests Side citd on, and a %rominent N. Y., fift, ~!o:.n'r Was born in Brooklyn, Loy of scarcely foo ci™® 850, and when a et Wi fobrleen eGI rmanent homoo I 8 city has been his aent bome. . SRS na | Rogers, havjanation of the civil war Ar, July, 1865, founa ceived his discharge in hard service ¢ his health so broken by a W ¢, insufficient food, exposure and malurig in the desolate swamp lands °’m%?' \ina and Mississippi, that he was sl m“m¥ anfitted for o satisfactory peri »“?ce of the exacting duties of his M n]’] notwithstanding his great rwh‘ll' Will. Indeed, the first winter of:0 wmum from the ficld was an exv’ l‘k. flm'"ere and trymfi one for him, { e ered from chronic diarrhoea, maaohgzel‘ and ahnr][_», shooting pains in ihat & and lower limbs, These pains, St the, he attributed to rheumatism, ¢ disease scon proved to be locomotor ataxia (a congestion of the white matter of the spinal cord). In spite of tontinued edpeltment b{ some of Chicago's leading and most skillful physicians, the malady increased rather than abated, until by rapid stages he came to use first a cane, then crutches and finally an invalid's wheel chair, which to this day is his only means of locomotion, as he has not been able to walk since 1878. Despite this terrible affliction, which would unnerve alfnost any man, he preserves a cheerful disposition, bearing his sufferings : g : with a resignation amounting to heroism. For years, at every change in the weather, or _ex}msure to the slightest draft, excruciat n(i:, sharp, darting pains that eannot be described would occur, lasting often from ten to fifteen days at a time without a moment's cessation. The agony he suffered at these tunes was almost unendurable. No sleep could come to his relief, day or night, and his case was a most desperate and deplorable one. Bo the gears went on until the winter of 1802, when he was attacked with la rippe, which was so prevalent at that !:jmo. This complaint, added to his other malady, well pigh crazed him. He could neither eat not sleep, and the best of medical talent that friends could suggest or moncz procure seemed powesless to help him, but on the contrary appeared to aggravate his disease. At this unfortunate fl‘nncmre a new light eame into his life. Mrs. Rogers, his estimable wife, having read in the Inter Oecean of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, urged that be should try them. He confessed, however, to having little or no faith in ;n{ w’g‘li!c«! patent medicine, but her solicitations finally prevailed and he commenced using them by taking one at a ‘ dose. In three or four davs he begzan to erave food, which he had not done for ! many years before. He inereased the size g of the doses to two pills at a time, and in | less than two weeks wanted, as he expresses it, three square meals a day. Gradually Lot perceptibly his general | health improved, his bowels became regu i lar nffl the horrible pains with which he | had been afflicted, began slowly but sureIy todiminish in their inteasity, until now | J\OI have greatly subsided and he fecls like gnother man | While it is troe that Mr. Rogers is far | front being woll and robust, yet e gen eral Bealth is so much '.u:g-rv-n-! «uat he i iy encouraged and daily returns a to & kind Provideuce for the rews #0 fortunately furnished bim f% Rogers recides at POl Jackson bouvand, on the corner of Western ave- | gue. In one of the pleasanise t spots on | the West Side. As for Mrs R gers be: seif. who was the first to auggest the use | of the Piuk Pilla, and other members of | the househald, who are thoroughly famil- | iar with ail the details of tie case "“ v 1 caunot but marvel at the effica y of the 5 rewedy and do not undersiand whyr such | aa apparently siuple medicine shouid pro- i duce sueh wonderiul results, exceeding by i far their most sanguine expwctal ns i Having read the foregolng, 1 bereby | certify that the facw in my case are as | stated therein. A i {Signed) CHAS A. ROGERS i Rwurn to and subseribed bofore me this | twenfy-ninth day of October, 1835 | " A F. PORTMAN, s Notary Publie. | Dr. Willilams' Pink Pills contain, {o a | l“'x‘-l\‘:t':i‘lfli f'\riii, all ‘L(.‘ ements neces | gary to give new Use and richuess 10 the ; biood and restore shatiercd perves. They | 1 Be o ol A . ! are an unfailing speadc for puch disenses | as locomotor ataxia, partia paralysis, St : | Vitus' dance, seiatlea, neuraigia, rheuma- | tism, nervous headache, the ;:‘T“.rr edect | | of 1a grippe, palpitation of the heart, ote. | | o1 & BT%s Ay da g | | Pink F‘.i‘.* are sold by alldealers, or will be | | sent post paid on recaipt of price, 50 cents | | & box, or six boxes for §2.50, by address- | i Ing Dr. Williama' Med. Co., Schenectady, § NX7 i i { ; Ty . eof soveral gnecies of ser- | | The young of several species of ser i;‘wn’.n letreat down the throat of 131«-! | mother when pressed by sudden dan- | ger. 1 ! el ; i When the Summer Breeze Blows through the trees, most of us who can set off for a country jaunt. Fewer cross the Atlantic. Whether it is business or pleasure calls one from home, llostetter's Btomach Bitters Is the best o mpaniment of a voyage or an outing. Yachtsmen, sea captains, commercial travelers and emigrants coneur in this opinlon. The Bitters Is pnrivaled for bilious, malarial, dyspeptic or liver disorder. The w?.i:; et of a beautiful woman can be heard farther than the loudest call of duty.—Anonyinous. World's Columbian Exposition Will be of value to the world by illustrating the improvements in the me- { chanical arts, and eminent physicians | W ill tell you that the progress in medi- | cinal agents has been of equal import- ‘ ance, and as a strengthening laxative ‘ that Syrup of I'igs is far in advance of | all others. : Hall’s Catarrh Cure, Is taken internally. I'rice 75 cents. l There are some people who are the | lords and masters of their money, but most people are the servants of it A pearl-like purity of color, closely resembling the enchantment of early twi- { light; thus was her complexion made ra diant by Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Fools may ask more in an hour than wise len can answer in Seven years. | Se s | s People with hair that is continually fall- ; ing out, or those that are bald, can stop | the falling, and get a good growth of hair | by using Haul's Hair Renewer. I Nothing cemes out of the sack but wkat was in {t. I never used so quick a cure as Piso’s { Cure for Consumption.—J. B. Palmer, Box 1171, Seattle, Wash., Nov. 25, 1895. FITS.—AII Fitsstopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Hestos er. No Fits after firsh G2y's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $£2.00 triz -u»tu’v treePw kit cases. Send to Lr. Klipe, yst Arch Bt., Phila, Pa.

—,—,_—_ R R AR, e——— The Greatest Medical Discovery ‘of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common Easture weeds a remedy that cures every ind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always 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 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 dizt ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tnblechn nful in water at bede SOM by sRSRIS. - . B oy TR }LA A RSR TRV i -.R-s— N o GURES WHERE M,li,”‘m . 4 - Jough 8 . Good. Uso ’ B‘“&L‘ifi,& ’gg,?,,a “ ; ’_‘; ‘ Ne e N Re A

mm_._;:';_____———_:———m—, I P e R T e ‘ ———(% =y —— Il LS, Z7 B \\“!u g /). . .‘/‘."‘ ;;\w ‘ 7 A ,ség%l . i ARt 1] [ THsd) i S /‘o?,,”e;'.g;';f"' TN | /;””'\h\ W\ U\ T | | | TR ‘@p’?,.i«-'-.:-‘.-::\'%\:s\.‘s'-,a'.‘ G 5 il Z=\ 2 gi_;/\z X -“:‘\"‘Q\ r;:\\\:é; 9 ‘-tfg ED\ T 2 sCU R T 4 e\ | ||\ Wz .\&\l\ eAN 1Y [ ’ 5~ \NINZ i = NN | O =\ | SAN r ST T /) | i Q;c*MF‘: 75 RS S B cAEsEd | & ) gS=LANNGAR ST NS B {ill e N e eel R ' =:§; RSN ‘«4?’% =G eke 1 I e AAN T\ | l , i = A B e EsE e A ‘ i e 85e] yy . - aa) [l & =y | i s TAg’S Y i il ““ * ; : i | Ql A Bicycle Built for Two.” . @ | Lfi i ™ N @ K \ *:.#AW By W ? ol _ 2-— . Vi La A ! S ATS ‘5 ;;,t“g S oy .%&é‘l ‘ e H 3 S 0 -l I L ‘ ? il | [ Five cents” worth of ”j. ? i 'y | @ “BATTLE AX"” will serve two.ié} [ 4 ' r il ||l chewers just about as long as 5 cents M' i 8 worth of other brands will serve one || i 11111 ‘ ' o . [l man., This is because a 5 cent piece ]| | i ‘ r* i ’of “BATTLE AX"” is almost as i; ' i - @ large as the 10 cent piece of other .| high grade brands | | - Ign grade pbrands, | i : s - d " 1 s :_'V_‘.;;f;:;—i:_____*j | I'o develop muscle, x / if that 1s what you're doing 3 “\ —-, the washing for, perhaps the ‘ old way of washing with | - soap—rubbing the clothes // up and down over a board i ea —may be pretty good. It can’t ! be healthy, though, to breathe ‘ \ that tainted, fetid steam, and ’\ \ you'd better take your exercise ; / in ways that are pleasanter. | But if you're washing clothes to get i them clean, and want to do this dis- | agreeable work easily, quickly, and safely—|do it with Pearline. And one of the strongest points about | Pearline’s washing is its saving—its economy. 6 { o e 0,,'/ /o | mmfl ISEZEIINTE g st :.__.:'ff:/::b;'—f’:::_,f_.f e e Y “He that Works Easily Works SucP 1 ’ » cessfully.” 'Tis Very Easy to Clean House With ' N s s}‘ { = 4 § o st s S etk = : e : 3 v e EOETH B Sy JNIVERSALLY USED AND ee,’."* S ]BN @ BURNS, BRUISES, COLDS, B> 19 S _;: s{ k 3 « CATARRH, SORE THROAT, ' & TYERER Y 30 , PAIN, PILES AND i b o& & B & i\'L}]'LA}m;llA\Tm;;. . l | USE POND’S EXTRAST OINTMENT FOR FILES, GERUINE IN OUR B\ & e O £ S g BOTTLES ONLY, BUFF @& o .o 4 B . P WRAPPERS. SEE OUR [ )i ey Fod BR 00 € NAME, POND'S EXTRACT bR /A T TR R e B €O, NEW YORK AND [ifemn & i B R Y Bl s LONDON. .e ; i.-‘ :, ‘4\\\\\ \\“\ _, Al g e N C_:s*\_‘“\;.o‘“f\

RTRP B S RS BRPPE TD S R S S ey (hA, by ARyiHIE aee Wy Fi Such Serrie. Al when you know that Dobbins’ Floating-Borax So? t: lbcolutel'y‘sure? Your nfmeor has it or will get 1 you In wrappers only. Mrs. Winslow’s SoorriNag Syrup for Childrem teething; sottens the dznms. requces inflammation,’ allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. e ——————— i Nature s E ! Beauty Spots | Are nowhere so prominent as in the East, . The Lake Shore ; i & Michigan Southern . Railway i will take you there without fatigye or §! annoyance. Visit Chautay ua:fi;i:f- i ara, the Adirondacks, Catszill.s, e V! George, Thousand Islands, the Hudson or Sea Shore resorts, An ideal va- ; cation, Refreshing rest, with variety f, of choice enough to satisfy every one. || Booklet, giving complete informa- | tion as to routes, rates, etc., FREE | \ C. K. WILBER, Western P. A, CHICAGO . .\¥ -oy ey - i laféesiselleré t’n‘t’h‘oj;;""l:d? Samples & pricesfree; write Binder Twingsesiarsisrss wirew 2 Vlll to 118 Michigan Av., Chicagos C. N. U. No. 2396 \Vlfl:‘i’ WRITING TO ADVERTISERS please say you saw the advertisemeng In this paper.