St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 22, Number 36, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 27 March 1897 — Page 3
1,340,000 CONSTANT WEARERS. DOUGLAS SHOE U BEST IN THE WORLD.
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Jtrockten, Man. JONES SCALE MEAN® GUARANTEED A CCURACY--DURABILITY Xiowe^t JONES ... BINGHAMTON, N. Y. ■ DR. TAFT’S ASTHMALENE ASTHMA cured Seuayour address. We will mall a trial bottle k W v k DR. TAFT BROS., 45 tlm St., Rochester. N V. I ULL UnWA FJOUQ For Sale on crop payment. $t per t BlUhh tNnmd acre cash, balance 1 , crop ye arlvj tuny^paid for. J. MulbalL Waukegan.lll yy Merit Wins. The invention of Alabastine marked a new era in. wall coatings, and from^the standpoint of the building owner was a most important discovery. It has from a small beginning branched out into every country of the civilized world. The name “kalsomine” has beoome^so offensive to property owners that manufacturers of cheap kalsomine preparations are now calling them by some other name, and attempting to sell on the Alabastine company's reputation. Through extensive advertising and personal use, the merits of the durable Alabastine are so thoroughly known that the people insist on getting these goods and will take no chance of spoiling their walls for a possible saving of at the most but a few cents. Thus it is again demonstrated that merit wins, and that manufacturers of first-class articles will be supported by the people. A Strange Freak of Nature. We hope to sell 1,000.000 packages Golden Kind Watermelon, the most wonderful freak of nature—smooth, shiny, yellow rind, crimson flesh, deli - cious! It's sensational. Took 500 first prizes in 1896. You must have it to be in the swim. Melons go like wild tire at SI.OO apiece. We paid S3OO for one melon! SIOO prizes for earliest melon —ripened in 1896 in 41 days. Lots of money made in earliest vegetables. Salzer’s seeds produce them. Thirtyfive earliest sorts, postpaid. sl. Send This Notice and 15 Cents for a Package of Golden Kind and wonderful seed book. 146 big pages, to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. C. N. U. A French breakfast takes at least two —usually three. It Is the chief meal. It Is better to ask a man to breakfast than dinner —especially’ if he is married. Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free." Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous. The most extensive cemetery in the world is that at Koine, in which over 6,000,000 human be-fngs have been interred. No-to-Bac for Fifty cents. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To Bac regulate or remove your desire fur tobacci? Saves money,make- health ami in inhood. Cure tmaraneed. 50c and sl, all druggist'. .fenny Lind's daughter, Mrs. Raymond Maude, has written a memoir of her mother. Use Instead or unwholesome cosmetics, (Henn's Sulphur -oap. which inirlfles and beautifies the skin. Hill s Hair and Whisker Pye. black or brown, 50c. The cornerstone of discontent is ingratitude. Wars billons or costive, eat a Cascaret, candy cathartic, cure guaranteed, 10 -, 25c. CAscarets sttmu.ate 'lver, kidneys and bowels. Nev er sicken, weaken or gripe. 10c.
tA WOMAN’S BODY. What Its Neglect Leads to. Mrs. Chas. King’s Experience. _ A woman’s body is the repository of tlio most delicate mechanism in the whole Jrealm of creation, and yet most women will let it get out of order and keep out of order, just as if it’were of no consequence. Their backs ache and heads throb and hey have wandering pains, now here and icre. They experience extreme lassitude, >n’t-care and want-to-be-left-alone feeling, dlity, irritability, nervousness, sleeplcssnd the blues, yet they will go about their antil they can scarcely stand on their poor n feet, and do nothing to help themselves. These are the positive fore-runners of serious womb complications, and unless given immediate attention,will re^Hn untold misery, if not death. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will, beyond the question of a doubt, relieve all this trouble before it becomes serious, and it has cured many after their troubles had become chronic. The Compound should be taken immediately upon the appearance of any ot these symptoms above enumerated. It is a vegetable tonic which invigorates and stimulates the entire female organism, and will produce the same beneficial results in the case of any sick woman as it did with Mrs. Chas. Kino, 1815 Rosewood St., Philadelphia, Pa., whose letter we attach: “ I write these few lines, thanking you for restoring my health. For twelve years I suffered with pains impossible to describe. I had bearing-down feelings, backache, burning sensation in my stomach, chills, headach^and always had black specks before my eyes. I was afraid to stay alone, for I sometimes had four and five fainting spells a day. I had several doctors and tried many patent medicines. Two years ago I was so bad that I had to go to bed and have a trained nurse. Through her, I commenced to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I never had anything give me the relief that it has. I have taken eight bottles, and am now enjoying the best of health again. I can truthfully say it has cured me.”
LOST APPETITE. COULD NOT EAT THE MOST TEMPTING DISHES. Many Days Without Any Food at All —Can Eat Four Square Meals a Day Now—The Cause of the Chancre. from the Lea er, Cleveland. Ohio. For the restoration of an appetite which has been impaired or lost through sickness, no remedy can compare in effectiveness with Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Among the many who can offer testimony to this particular property of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills is (Jeorge Marshall Jr., who lives at No. 19 Norwich street, Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Marshall is a news agent on the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Kailroad, and his territory extends from Cleveland to Toledo. Like thousands of others who owe their health and vigor to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, Mr. Marshall 'never hesitates to sing their praises. In his case it was necessary to use only a few boxes of the pills to restore him to the full possession of bodily health. His^digestive organs had become almost useless through a long and serious iliums, but in-a surprisingly brief period, through the agency of this won-, derful medicine, they were capable of again performing their functions in a regular manner. In narrating his experience Mr. Marshall said: “Last spring I was taken sick with inflammatory rheumatism, and my entire system was affected. To relieve the suffering it was necessary to paint me with I iodine. After three months’ treatment I became convalescent, but the attack had sapped my strength amPleft mo extremely weak and feeble. I could scarcely lift an arm or a leg. This weakness permeated my entire system, and applied as well to I my stomach and digestive apparatus ns to my limbs. I soon discovered that 1 had lost, my appetite almost as completely as though I never had one. 1 had no desire whatever to partake of any nourishment, nnd the natural result was that my convalescence was extremely slow, and my parents feared that 1 was going to suffer a relapse or fall prey.to another ailment on account of my debilitated condition. “Many a day 1 would not take any nourishment, and whenever 1 did the quantity was too insignificant to materially hasten my improvement. 1 became alarmed, as did my parents, and one day my mother suggested the purchase of some of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for me. They had been recommended to her by it neighbor who regarded them as nothing short of miraculous, and dwelt so enthusiastically on their excellent qualities that mother was persuaded to try them. 1 hero is not much more to tell now, for 1 don't look like a man who cannot eat three or four sqfiare meals a day, do I? “Three boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills fixed me up sound ns a-dollar. and they will do the same for anyone else, I ntiT sure. It was not long after I began to use the pills that I could feel myself improving. My strength begun to return and so did my appetite, and I was on the road again in a short lime. That is my experience, and I am glad to give it for thp benefit of others who may have lost their appetites through sickness.” Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pule People contain, in a condensed form, ail the elements necessary to give new life nnd richness to the blood and restore shat tered nerves. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as sup pressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness, in men they effect a radical cure in all uses arising from mental worry, overwork or ex< ossfs of whatever nn tine. Pink Pills are sold m b .x< - • never in loose bulk) at 50 cents a box or six box es for $2.50. and may bejiad of nil drug gists, ordiiect by mail from D WII a ni' Mediciih' Company, Schcms’tady, N. Y Bomb hi the Rags. A small metallic object was found among some rags hi a paper mill at Westbrook, Me., ami the workman who was sorting them tried to open it with a penknife, it proved to be a Japan esc bomb, and in the explosion which followed the unfortunate man lost three fingers and a thumb. State of Ohio, Citv of Toledo, I I,t cas Coin iv. i"• Frank J. Chen ey makes oath that ho i 'JI*' 1 *' senior partner of the firm of F. ,1 (ir ? * ' *“ Co., doing business in the ( It) of l ob ■ and State aforesaid, ami that sa',' V’.l’L ? 1 thesumof ONI;IHNI>HIT> i; ,J \hf mr < a<'h and every case of Catarrh “ at cannot be cured bv the use of JI a i i's <-riAUKH I ( nr. UJ me use ot hai l fha>k j chknEV. Sworn to be', e Ht><l subscribed In my pres euee tills a 4a) ot December. A. D. isw). > A. W. GEE YSON. t B ’ ) Aotary Publie. nail s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, ami । ts dlrectl) on the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. Send for testimonials, irrty F. .1 CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. fySold by Druggists, w. Beatrice Haraden. author of “Ships that Pass in the Night,” has completely recovered from her long illness, and han finished reading the proofs of her new volume of stories, which will soon be Issued. Whiskers that are prematurely gray or faded should be coloreri to prevent the look of age, and Buckingham's Dye excels all otlicrs in coloring brown or black. We will forfeit $1,006 if any of our published testimonials are proven to be not genuine. THE PISO CO.. Warren. Pa. . ~
For 14 years this shoe,by merit alone, has distanced all competitors. Indorsed by over 1000.000 wearers as k the best in style, tit a and durability of 9 any shoe ever offerJ ed »t >3 00/ 5 It made in all I the latest SHAPES J and atylea nnd of | every variety of leather. I One dealer in a town Riven exclusive sale and advertised in local paper on receipt of reason* > able order. 'Write for catalogue to W. L. DOLGLAS,
DEATH BY TORNADO. CHILDREN KILLED IN A DEMOLISHED GEORGIA SCHOOL. Ei K bt Bodies Taken from the Windwrecked Ruins of an Academy at Arlington—Many Fatally injuredEntire State Ravaged by Hurricane. Storm in the Couth. A cyclone cut a path of death throughthe little town of Arlington, Ga., Monday. It left eight children dead in the ruins of Arlington Academy. Many others and one of the many teachers will die. Thirty-five children and the teachers went down in the wreck. Men who were removing the ruins became sick at heart. The horror came upon the town at 8:30 in the morning and without a warning. There was a sudden roar, which passed away as quickly as it came, and the harvest of death had been reaped. No larger than a bed blanket was the cloud in which the cyclone was hid. It rushed diYXUi. from the northwest, missed the-Hisiness section by a bare block, tore through the residences of W. D. ('owdry and Dr. W. E. Saunders, demolished them nnd then took the little neademy and twisted it into fragments. Luckily nobody was in either of the two residem o. and so the death list is confined to the academy pupils. _ Persons who heard laid saw the death cloud were startled. Nobody dreamed, however, that it had caused a horror until a scream came from the direction of the academy. The town is a little one, nnd it did not take long for the news to spread that there was a diyasb r Men left their work and women their homes. Nearly everybody luid a child in the school, and when the white-faced men and weeping and screaming women saw what had happened the scene was hi ni trending. Children, wounded and bleeding and unable to walk, were creeping and < ritwling and staggering out from under the wrecked building. Others, alivi but helplessly fast ened down by broken beams and flooring, were piteously pleading for nssistame. while others, silent and mangled, told a tale all too terrible for tlie parents who looked upon the work ol the small cloud. Rescue work was so m begun. Men nnd Women, too, tore nt the twisted timbers, sobbing and screaming. ( n■< ismmilly mi ture wks' kind to a molher mid she was tenderly carried awn) ciicon-. ums Other tow ns were asked tc -ci aid. and d"< ters enme from far and dear. Ail th t wapossible was done for tin m .iwlcd little ones, while the dead w< r< b -rue tu I nies of sorrow. Nearl) i iiry I. nsclm. I is stricken, and in ever) qmt vere w .nien wringing their hand- - Idling men and children w i eping In . -i -i>tm little chum was either dead oi d) iin . The llc.ltlcmv . which ’ ,x C . r’v in the path of (he death cio-.c "u- a ..cw fw story structure It was L nt<; a great leap, nnd the u<rk >f .b th w, ; .
SCENES IN THE OVERFLOWED DISTRICT ALONG THE MISSISSIPPI. 4 la tiw --r - .to JrO **■ ’ "e-i ~ " k '“ - - ' \Z- ■ IL a ' .7 s - ■
. _ done evi n before the danger was realised. The structure was <mia~hed into kindling | wood, and the broken timbers and dead bodies were mixed together in sickening con fusion. The cyclone formed < u the western gnlfq rind was delict ted mlnnd by the Appafachicehi river valley. Tearing up th“ valley, wrecking buildings all along the way, it split at the junction of the Chattahoochee and the Flint rivers, ascending both valleys and sueeuhjg in broken parts over tlie <■ mntry in whi b He« AHtncmn. Blakely and other points hi aid from. As the greater part of the .. entry traversed is removed from eommtiiiicati<m the damage can only be snrn.i<i d fr< m that reported. It may involve hundreds of lives if the record is maintained. Another storm swept from the I rda Atlantic coast, northw. stu ard. but no disasters have been reported from its path. Told io a Few Lines. Col. John t hnreldll, owner of the celebrated Churchill 1 towns, died at Louisville. Ky., aged 78. John Biddulph Martin, who married Mrs. Victoria < 'laflin Woodhull, died at Las Palmas, in the<’anary Islands. The marriage of Miss Anna L. Busch, daughter of Adolphus Busch, the multimillionaire brewer, and Edward Faust, Jr., son of Tony Faust, restaurateur, was solemnized at the Church of the Messiah, St. Louis. It was the notable sociable event of the season in St. Louis. James M. Hagar, lawyer and ship-build-er, died at his home in Richmond, Me., aged 75 years, from injuries received in being knocked down by a delivery wagon in Boston two weeks ago. He was interested in the development of railroads and other enterprises in the South and West. A terrible tragedy was enacted near the little village of Orrick, in Ray County, Mo. Bee Rainwater, a farmer of morose and jealous disposition, cruelly murdered his w ife, his mother-in-law, Mrs. William Artman; Gentry Rainwater, his daughter, and Jolin Thurman, a step-brother, ami then blew out his own brains.
tariff debate begun. Bingley Explains His Bill and Gen. Wheeler Denounces It. ■ g- 016 first day of the tariff debate in the tvas rather tame, from both a speca,u^ an oratorical standpoi’it. The Dining of the debate was delayed over ico° UIS the full reading of the bill ’ a Pfigcs, and this, to begin w ith, had somewhat depressing influence. Only ’<mr speeches were made at the day sesYy 11 ,' ^ r ’ Uhigley, the chairman of the Ln 81 .- ,ln ^ ^ eans Committee, opened in an ' l 8 speech for the majority. “In re- ’ tariff -” he said, "the committee Kid ^ M ^ eavor< ‘d to discard mere theories h«L , a,ne a Practical remedy, at least in J’ for ‘he ills which have for so many 0.,* . overshadowed the country. 18 n contl >tion, nnd not a theory. 11 V . confron ‘B us- Our problem is to adequate revenue from duties on । ■D Its to carry on the government, nnd QPosing duties to secure this result so to MJUst them as io secure to our own people I »• t ,r °’hiction and manufacture of such , HAicles as we can produce or make for <.uWudves without natural disadvantage, MBHW&Jirovide more abundant opport uwßies for olH’ labor. No economic policy W1 prove a success unless it shall in o manner contribute to opening up ^^doyment to the masses of our people । li 1 good wages. When this is aceomplish--1 <. and thus the purchasing power of the ’Wises restored, then, and not until then, JK prices cease to feel the depressing of underconsumption and the prosPcrif, of our people rise to the standard of 1892.” In closing Mr. Dingley said: It must be obvious from any point of view that prompt action by the two houses of ‘"'•R’ess Indispensable td secure tho revenue which the impending bill Is intended to yield. The exigency is nn unusual one. I rhe people, without regard to party ntlillaj lio , ‘ s . are asking for action. Business awaits । our final decision. With this great quesI t ion of adequate revenue to carry on the । governinont settled favorably by such nn nd- । Justment of duties as will restore to our own people what has been surrendered to ■ otlicrs dining tlie Inst four years, with re- : stowi confidence In (he future, there Is reai s,n to believe Hint gradually and surely j | there win come back to us the grent prosperity which We enjoyed in the decade prior i to is’.i.'t. and which tlie greatest of living English statisticians so strikingly eulogized w ben he said In isirj that "it would be inil‘"oi'>i.. to find in history any parallel to the i progress of the 1 nlted States in (then) the i Inst ten years.” (•en. \\ heeler of Alabama opened for i the opposition. Mr. Wheeler began with the statement that the bill had bm n secretly prepared l>; the eleven Republican i members of the ('ommittee on Ways and I Means, and framed almost in the language of the petitions presented by pTW Ic. teu interests, sin >■ the star chamber measure came to light on lust Monday, ho • I i'L tlo - 'll'. ; I■le;* --S of the < Olin- ' try had deiiotim cd it in uinm nsured terms. I he bill ini rensed tin- duty on many arti- • :< s far ub .ve the Mt Kinley rates am) in «<mn> iii-taint s ex, ceded the M< Kinley r> t -by from 5n P«t per < .nt. Nearly , i evetv parngrnph was changed from tho 1 i ad utlotein rates umler the Wilson bill to i cither the st>ei itie or compound rates, the ;
I effect of which was to increase enormous- , ly the duty upon cheaper articles that are i purchased by those who work and lessen I the tariff upon the expensive articles that cutmuryhased only by the rich. By trans■*Terring an enormous quantity of wool I from class 3 to class 1 the duty on raw wools was increased far beyond any bill ever presented to an American Congress. Wo<Us that paid 52 per . ent under the McKinJsy lull would now, he said, pay an equivalent ad valorem of ..between 2<hi and lit'O per cent and possibly more. The dutyfon corduroys used by the poor was inerramed to about 123 per cent, absolutely prohibitory. The bill restored the dutyupon burlaps made from jute used for bagging grain ami fertilizers, while the only burlap of Ikis description made in this country was made in prisons. Carpets of jute, purchase | by the poor, had been raised, he said, to an equivalent of 150 per cent, while those used by the rich were taxed 55 per cent. The tax upon waterproof cloth had. he continued, been increased from the McKinley rate of 40 per cent to about 120 per cent. Managing Editor A. M. Lawrence and Reporter L. 1.. Lovings of the San Francisco Examiner will have to apply to the United States Supreme Court before they can regain their liberty. 'Die men were ordered to jail by the State Senate for refusing to tell where they got the inforniation w hich led to charges of bribery preferred by the Examiner against members of the Legislature. In discussing the law on criminal procedure the lowa Senate cut out unanimously the provision recommended by the code commissioners, making it a crime punishable by imprisonment of from six months to three years for persons engaged in such enterprises as Kelley’s industrial army, which crossed the State in the spring of 1894. The Savage Arms Company of New York City have made a contract with the Hawaiiait Government to furnish the troops of that country with the best grad© of Savage military rifles.
nr- T ^ AT , COFFEE. • Goodman, Williams County, 111. writes us: “From one package Salzer’s German Coffee Berry 1 grew 300 pounds of better coffee than I can buy in stores at 30 cents a pound ” A package of this and big seed cata- I l° eU , e J S S<?nt you by John A - Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., upon receipt oi lu stamps and this notice. C, n. Buttcr Made in a Minute. A machine has been Invented, and Is In use In Switzerland, by which milk new from the cow can be turned into butter in one minute’s time. Not only so, but the milk goes through a process at the same time which is believed to completely sterilize it—that is, free it from all microbes or bacteria, either of an innocent or obnoxious kind. The butter is therefore perfectly pure a consideration to which the researches of medical science give more and more Importance. A mosaic map of Palestine, 30 feet long by 15 Inroad, has been discovered at a village between Salt and Kerak, east of the Jordan. The pavement is believed to belong to the fifth' century after CbrisL On Time, And very easily, too. That’s what any one •hould be In treating one's self for inaction of the kidneys and bladder. The diuretic which experience Indicates as supplying the requisite stimulation to the organs without exciting, them. Is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. Don't delay; kidney inaction and diseases are not far apart. For fever and ague, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism and nerve debility, also, use the Bitters. Morocco’s sultan has engaged an Aberdeen man to play the bagpipes at his court. Lane's Family Medicine Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on s the liver and kidneys. j Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. The German Empress is the latest re- : cruit to the royal army of cyclists. Mm. Winslow's Soothing Strcf for Children ♦eethina. •oltens the gums. Frances inflammation allays tain, cures wind colic. 25cents a bcttle. Jvrr try a 10c box of Casrarets, candy cathartic, finest liver and bowel regulator mate.
]’ Be quick, a mouse is at the cheese! Just so - -3: * JX EI RAI^GIA. J )X“.’ ST. JACOBS OIL,? • w Zjg^ANDY CATHARTIC vakcaftg&aJ ^^^CURt COnSTIPATIOH^^ i 25 ♦ 50 < DRUGGISTS ( [ ' IRd AI HTPI V miRIUTCPD ,0 rare an T case of constipation. Cascarets arc f lie Ideal Laxa- > 11 ADuubu lub I UUnilnn I DDL/ fj TP , never crip or cripe.but ranse easy natnralresnlts* Sam-i , 0 pie and booklet free.*Ad. MTRHNG * O-. ndeago.y» w t r t a b_ _*l r J* “IF AT FIRST YOU DON’T' SUCCEED, TRY SAPOLIO /Th ,L^ / / J V\Uli 3aM|^gg^^SSggg|jg7 / ~—* 1 'lwi i / V'T^ lOA » I 10/ A Journeyman barber in Cincinnati, a specially intelligent man and a favorite with his patrons, says of RIPANS Tabu les " I want to say that for eight months I have taken three a day. and have not been to see a doctor once since I commenced to take them. Before I would have to have a big tube put down my throat and have my stomach flushed (Il believe that is what they call it) three times every week by a doctor that charged me 50 cents for every time. Os course, that gave me relief, but the trouble always came, back again, and I can teiJ you it was no fun to be pumped out about every two davs. The doctor said I had catarrh < f the stomach. W hatever it was, iudon’t bother me now. For fouA’years I was troubled, so that I used to lose about three days out of every month.’’ When this^barber observes that a customer has a feverish breath, he occasionally presents him with a Tabule, and if taken it* removes the difficulty forthwith. i .
Vin A bookie*, handsomely illustrated, ] U H* L* describing Nebraska, her farms. a El ai hi ;ll id the opportunities there for A K’&JJU ounz menu and farm renters to become farm owners. Mailed without charge on applicati n to P. S. Eustis. General Fa-sen-ger Agent, C. B. & Q. R» K», Chicago, 111. TJtTFXr KIGHT- '•'■bi mamifa -I no- sootMWf J will clean, keep pipes and chimneys tree from soot. bUOTENE COMPANY, CoKPUS CUKIbTI, TEXAS; shpAi CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAUST” ra kA Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. use , Intima Sold by druggists.
Spring Is made a ne- BkM I ■ • cessity by the |Vt G M I Cl fl 6 impure condition of the blood after winter s hearty foods and breathing vitiated, air in home, office, schoolroom or shop. M hen weak, thin or impure, the blood cannot nourish the body as it should. The demand for cleansing and invigorating is grandly met by Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which gives the blood just the quality and vitality needed to maintain health, properly digest food, build up t and steady the nerves and overcome ‘‘that tired feeling. It is the ideal Spring Medicine. Get only Hood’s Sarsaparilla^"^ j Prepare,! by C. 1. HW Si Co., Ix>w«n, ■ Hood’s Pilis yesa.— W If Ml POMMEL I The Best I I/* < IZ'E2O r-nir ria -y - i -tti tt ~»i» mi iu n i I - Ke^ps both rMer an! saddle perdry In the hardest storms. Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for fcS* ’897 Fish Brand Pommel Slicker— w'F* it is entirely new. If not for sale in your town, wet- f-.r c.ital-.g-ue to A. J. TOWER. Boston, Mass. 1)04 K ET KIXETOSCOPES.- Living Pictures. People act as If alive. New goods our own mumlecture now ready. Far superior to anything yet produced. Kissing scene, dancing girl, lovers' ijuarrel. prize fight. wanted. Sample by mail, 1 o cents. Tug Eiuson FuoKooKsru Co.. 235. Bth St.,FhlladeldhlaJhg
«CURE YOURSELF! Use Big O for unnatural iisebarges, inflammations, rritations or ulcerations if mucous membranes. Painless, a 1 not astrin- , gent or poisonous. Sold by Oruggista, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, for SI.OO, or 3 Cottles, 52.T5. Circular sent on request. C. N. IT. No. 18 -97 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS please say you saw the adverUseinwrt Ln this paper.
