St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 22, Number 49, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 26 June 1897 — Page 3

Shake Into lour unites Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes tight-fltting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mall for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. The past year was a fairly pros^er®us one for the Gloucester fishing interests, the value of the total catch being $9,000,000, and the codfish receipts over forty-four million pounds. A essential f° r health ****** an< | physical strength. I A Wnen the blood is weak, cv thin and impure the appetite fails. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a wonderful medicine" for creating an appetite. It purifies and enriches the blood, tones the stomach, gives strength to the nerves and health to the whole system. It is Just the medicine needed now. Remember HOOd’S B par%a Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Sold by ail druggists. Be sure to get Hood’s. Hmvl’r D«l!c aretast less, mild, eilecIlUtiU q ve< AU druggists. 25c.

IF U AKI NG and health making arc inchided in the making of HIRES R°°tbeer. The preparation of this great temperance drink is an event W ® of importance in a million well regulated homes. 1 HIRES f him Rootbeer 1K BIS ’S full of good health. Mf 1 '''l® Invigorating, appetizw satisfying- Tut EXi some up to-day and [ A . have it ready to put ■S ' down whenever you’re 'iJ 1 -1 thirsty. H’ Wi Made only by The Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphia. A packbßEEctWW a » c makes 5 gallons. Sold everywhere. A Radway’s Jy Ready p, Relief. \X/f I His li/c ~ \ /// V f ' long friend. '-fsL It is the only FAIN RFMLW i, EDY that!n—^^Jstautly stops \\ ro,,st / excruciating _—n pains, allays z \—■ I —“'A 75 I 1 'n A umma - a 3 G £ tiou, and IV . lyH-^\\\ $ ( gestion. tOU ' ’’ Internally a teaspoonful in water will in a few minutcscure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Slimmer Complaint, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency and all internal pains. There is not a remedial agent in the world that will cure fever and ague and all other inaUrious, bilious and other fevers (aided bv RADWAY’S PILLS), so quickly as RADWAY’S READY RELIEF. Price 50 cents per bottle. Sold by Druggists. RAHWAY A- CO- New York. . ■ ?- v- , A --w v-- || Spocis! Otter I M $47.50. MmBS This organ has 5 octaves. 2 full rerr- 8 isters, 122 reeds, 11 stops, 2 couplers, g 2 knees wells, handsome oak or wal- S KHK nut case. This special price can M only be appreciate! wren you re- B member it is a high grade organ, and g SwMml fully guaranteed by us. it excels 3 manyJdS organs in every respect. S Easy payments if desired. If your JS HSI dealer can't supply you. address g SM Dept. 77 LYON & HEART,Chicago, g Complete catalogue of Parlor and M , ' Church organs sent free fa »nPRI APrMTCiu w ry city and town. NEW LUUXL Abtnldand PH U TICAL GOODS. Large trout. Exc uvive te r.tory. F, C. 1,0031 Lx CO.HI’ANY. I.rand Rapids, Michigan. H. B. WILLSON & CO., Wash H A 6*5 B J^inifton, D.O. No charge HU patent ■ BQ I 9 w I ■^obtained. M*.ra;e book free.

( Sweetness and Light. 6 ) Put n pill in tho pulpit if you want practical j) < x preaching for tho physical mxn ; then put tho z'-^N pill in the pillory if it does not practise what it preaches. There’s a whole gospel in Ayer’s ® Sugar Coated Pills; a “ gospel of sweetness z^n and light." People used to value their physic, ns they did their religion, by its bitterness. (t(O The more bitter the dose the better the doctor. Wx xj z Wo’vo got over that. Wo take “sugar in ours”— v’ y gospel or physic—now-a-days. It’s possible to • please and to purge at the same time. There _ may bo power in a pleasant pill. That is the Q gospel of I ) Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. Hore pill particulars in Ayer’s Curebook, roofages. /riiX Sent free. J. C.’Ayer Co., Lowell, Mast. X

Concerning the Temperature. It was along toward the shank of the season when the frost is on the punkin and the fodder is glad Whitcomb Riley wrote poetry about it, and there was a biting keenness In the early morning air which did not need the thin, clear ice on the little tumbling stream by the roadside to emphasize it. I was riding down the mountain which drops into Tennessee from Kentucky near where those two States meet Virginia and was feeling pretty comfortable bundled up in a heavy coat and with thick gloves on. as I let my horse spin along, now knocking the frost crystals from an overhanging bough and again dashing out into zV 'fy'l THE MEETING.

- the open, where a grand view of mountain forest and stream spread far below, glistening in the crisp sunlight. At one point where rhe road wound in to the west side of the mo-umtain making it deeidely shady and cool, I saw a mountaineer coming toward me on a sorrv mountain nag wjthci.it other captrris'oning than the bridle, the makeup of which was rope fca 1 head-stall and papaw bark for reins. As he came nearer I could not help noticing his attire, which consisted of cotitonade trousers six inches too short, a hickory shirt wide open at the neck and buttonless, a dilapidated straw hat, laare hands and feet, and every square inch of visible flesh on him as rosy as a fever patient's, with an ev«ra bloom on cheeks and nose. He was a young fellow of 20, evidently careless and happy, for lie was Whistling, though no tune, for the imiantaineer as a rule knows so few tunes that he must improvise. As we approached. I smiled out of my co nfortable coverings and mod led. ‘'Good morning,” 1 said. “How d'y’ do?” he responded, pulling over to give me all tlie room in the road. "It’s a cctd morning, isn't it?” He drew his shirt sleevo across his rosy noise with a short sniffle. “Not so goshderned, I reckon: and then ag'in,” he hesitated, "come to think uv it, it ain’t so rotten hot, nuther.” That was the extent of our greeting and the ships that pass in the mmintaias went on their way. but 1 have never forgotten the greeting 1 received from that one. New York Tribune. Current Condensation*. The Nile has a fall of only six melies in I,OCO miles. Over 1,000,000 Germans live in large American cities. One-seventh of the land owners iu Great Britain are women. In one summer the descendants of a fly will number 2,080,320. The will-o’-the-wisp is caused by decay of the vegetable mailer. “A legal fence” has been defim d in | Kentucky as one that is “pig tight, I horse high and bull strong." j Men attending the pans in salt works are never known to have cholera, smallpox, scarlet fever or influenza. What is believed to be the largest I shad ever taken in the waters near the I head of Delaware Bay measured 27 inches in length. -1 inches in thickness and 19 inches at its greatest circumference. Its weight was ten pounds. It is stated that the collection of postage stamps has brought into existence a professional stamp repairer, who for a small fee, “never exceeding 25 cents,” will dexteriously repair torn or mutilated stamps. His spwialty is restoring the margin to envelope stamps that have been cut to shape and have thus lost much of their philatelic value. One of those hard, practical New England women that occur in magazines oftener than in life, called on an artist, at his invitation. She looked faithfully over his pictures and studies, though there were many o r them, betokening great industry, amt after ; the inspection was finished she said, in a severe tone: “Yes, it's very pretty, but 1 should think you'd get dreadfulily tired of doing such things. Don't ! yen ever want to go out and work?"

TRAPPED IN A STORM. FOUR CHILDREN CRUSHED TO DEATH IN A BARN. Cyclone Finds Victims at Illinois State Home for Feeble-Minded—Louisville Suffers Severely—Spalding Freed of One Charge—Treaty Must Wait. Death in Ils Wake. Death rode on the wind which passed over Lincoln, HL, Friday. In a terrific storm a barn on t'he grounds of the State holm* for feeble minded children was erushi'd like an eggshell, and when a rescuing party cleared away the ruins lour dead and three injured boys were found, besides two attendants, one of whom and possibly both will die. The dead are: Sylvester Baker, Coatesville, HL; Ca®sie Lebanon, ward of Mrs. .1. K. Carter ami J. C. Cooper, Chicago; Cornelius Mackenzie, Chicago; James O’Brien. Chicago. The injured are: Robert Ascott. Chicago; Heinrich Berger, Chicago; Milton Garrow. Ottawa; Ix^imul Gleason, attendant; AV. E. C. AVitham. Gray's Lake; Jacob Wihmrt, farm superintendent, fatally hurt. Great Damage Done. Factory roofs and chimneys were blown away, houses were damagixl and trees dismantled. The center of the storm, however, was almut the asylum, just west of the city. The roof of the north wing of the main Imildh.g was injured and a chimney on the custodial building was blown ove r. It was at the farm, however, that the greatest damage was ih.ne. There ar® sixty boys employed, m ;i< r the direction of Supcrintemk irt Jacob XVilmert, to care for the (XiO acres owned by the State. Besides tlusc. othi r boys arc hired to assist on <xtra work. Friday a party of twenty-six, averaging 14 years of age, were taken down to pick [teas, under charge of Att<i:dai.l Lemuel Gleason. The day w: s intern- ly hot and when the work was done Gl< ~sou took the boys io Salt ere< k and treated them to a swim. As they stared bm i: ti e smrm cloud was sten. awl the a:t< i d..n; I nrr. -d the boys into the farm barn. Tais was the biggest barn in Logan County. It was 175 feet long by 2S fe< t wide, ami wav erected four years ago at a cost of S3,IKK). Falls Without Warning. Scarcely had the boys entered than the storm centered its fury o: the structure. Without warning t..v timbers gave way .and the barn fell, crushing its human occupants. The storm continued for thirty minutes, L: : bi owe it «,-v ov<-r the work of rescue was I ( gun and four bodies brought from the ruins. The final! -ml -s to the S'ate i> s4.s<io upon the different b;:;.o.i,gs and grounds, but the !i ss off, r( s ; tn <, —large om sin the park b> mg <.ut by the roots — cannot be < stm.ntcd. SPALDING NOT GUILTY. Former Chicago Banker Acqtiitted of (barge of 11 to bezz. Ie men t. Chara s W. Spahhng. former treasurer of the I’ulvcrsity <d liiimus and president of the late Gbe Savings k of <’iiicago, sliptH'd thrsmy;. one of the loopholes of th(' law Friday a: ii es . ped a sentence to the pi-nitendary <>i a technicality. Charged with rhe t-u . zzh :i <nt of eight bond's bt'ong.ug io i.. 0 endowment fund of the university and valued at 87,.-(io. he wxis acquitted on th<- grounds that he had been impropi riy indicted, and that while he might 'have b< -n f -an : guilty qf an improper use of tiie funds intrusted to his care, he was m t guilty of emkzzliwnit. Spalding is still in the county jail. He lias missed only one ot the tw» nty-nme chances that ihnnu vd to brand bun as a criminal. T here are t weiity-i-ight ibd'ietmenis stil: ha; over has head, charging him w.'h e mln zz. .eimnt of university funds r.ud receiving deposits at the (111- - Savings Hank after t b- aim- rnsolvent. Attorm y D( n-en int< mis to make the former I at.ker run the full length of the gatin'n-t of the law before the prosecution el.-all cease. NO ACTION ON TREATY. Annexation Cannot Be Settled This fess on of Congress. Senator Davis, eiminmin of the Senate Committee on i - ;e.cn Relations, said Friday tl-at he uo -d : make an effort to pin -s ;ae Hawa ai!- treaty to fin-al co-n---sid\ ration in the Sir. u during the present s< i: (if ('< ::gr( vs "While," iie said, "lae oj.p sition to the raGficationof tm-treaty is m; formidable as to numbers, it Las alrtmiy been made evident that it iv. i 'm qmte dct<rmim-d, and this fact, cotiphd with tm- impossibility of holding a qmirum jt r any length of time after the passage ,-f the tariff bill, has already forced the cmi Tisicn that an effort to secure imimiiiaie action would be futile; L- i.' -- it wid not lie made. YVe shall, however, be able to get the treaty report, fl to the Senate. We shall also have it formally taken up so as to have it Well to the f'otri at the bigin’i-ig of the next session.” DAMAGE AT LOUISVILLE. Storm AVrecks Many Buildings and Hurts Fifteen Foop’e. A thumb r. rain ami trail storm, resf-m---bling io many resp-.-cs a c.vbim-. swept ovi r Lmiisville. K; . ;,t 5:2S --'Cock Friday morning . lasted until C o'clock. From 5:28 o'clo k to 5:32 the wind blew fifty-five miles an i.w r. demolished several frail stnwtur>-s. r-nroofed scores of resiib iii'i’s ami bm ii.-s, houses, smasllieil windows, lore down wires, uprooted trees and easist d tlrousaml' of people to get from tin ir beds into the debrb-strewn streets. Fifteen persons were injured, but no one fatally. The property damage is e-stima-ted at s4.e , tl'<i. East of the city wheat fields wore ruined and cattle killed by falling trees. In New Albany two Catholic churches an: tw< i.ty o-ther buildings were unroofed. The storm was the worst experienced since the cvclone of 1890. An extraordinarily severe sondT-rx-o was imposed recently on a lawyer convicted of forgery, conspiracy and perjury at Liverpool by Justice Wills. The man, who is 3G years of age, was sentenced to penal servitude for life. His frauds were particularly hcart,cs« ones cm poor people. The whaleback steami r City of Everett sailed from San Francisco for India with a cargo comprising 2.G00 tons of corn for the famiue-s'tricken natives of that country. Cash contributions of $200,000 were also tak 41.

SAVED FROM INSANITY. Hood’s Sareanarilla Proved to Be the Ki or hr Kind of Medicine, The horrors which accompany a shattered nervous system are known only to lose who suffer. No one else can com-pre-hend them. AV oak nerves, imsuffieientJ nourished owing to impure blood, lead 11 nervous prostration and insanity. Dood’s Sarsaparilla purifies and enriches the blood, strengthens the nerves and restores physical, men-tal, nervous and digestive strength. Just read this letter: 4 "Kalamazoo, Mich.. April G, 1597. C- I. Hood & Co.. Lowell. Mass.: _ ‘I was sick for six months and in a terrible condition. When I was not confined to my bed I was hardly able to get around. ! 1 was all run down and lost flesh so -that ' I weighed only lira pounds. I could not I Bleep and I had very bad spcdls with my heart. My stomach was also in a bad condition, and my head felt so that at times l could not see across the room. I was told that I had nervous prostration aud that my blood was bad. 1 tried m< dicines with only temporary relief. One day I was told to take Hood’s Sarsapariila and I got swx Imtiles. I began taking it and soon commenced to improve. This encouraged me to continue. I had found the right kind of medicine. I am now completely cured. I have gained in flesh and weigh 158 pounds. I can tat att^ sleep well. I recommend Hood’s Sarflßuirilla to all sufferers and believe it Jked me from the insane asylum." Mrs. ^F. Firrar, 1023 North Burdick street, jB Liternrx.JA plomats. ^'here Is a formidable list of literary monos this country who have had wtees in its foreign service. The list V?ts Ivegnn by Thomas Paine and BenMmin Franklin, and it might well h^ave included Thomas Jefferstm in the naimlver. Among them were Wa-shiug-ton Irving, who idcinititicd hims» If most of all with the country to which he was sent; Nathaniel Howthorne iu his English consutsliip. Bayard Taylor at S-i. Petersburg. Ix*w Wallaet' at Con^fantinople, George Baneroft, John Isflhrop Motley, Ja.im-s Russell L-owcll and Jehu Hay. at London: Wili am D. Howells, at Venice, Bret Harte, at Glasgow; John Bigelow, in France, an 1 Charl s DeKay, in Germany. Tin" ■ are the more eminent exa-mpb s, an f the list might be further ext<n hdby a do< -r study. Then- was The-,h re 8. Fay. who had a eer- :d ruble' n put iti a as a novelist in his day. log time serving as minister to Switzerktr. 1. At In me Martin Van Bujxui hud a m v-'!>:.4ii his cabim t in James K. PaiiM iig. ar. 1 George Bun Toft was Sc reiary of the Navy under Pn -'.d’ nt P-Ik. Andrew D. White, just app< h r 1 mmister t > < Jrmuwiy. is one of th- mos: eminent of American s holiars ami authois. G<xl • y' s Magazine. The Finest Parlor Organs at Almost a Nominal Price. On another page will be found a disI play advertisement cffirmg the famous parlor organs of Lyon A ILaly, Chi- - eago, for 817.59. Th< se are very fine instruments in every nspei i. N t long ego such a price would have bet n considered Imp. ssible, and to-day it is a g« -zd S2O les than the real value of the crjiins but Lyon A ILaly have un- <■ ollied opportunities f r marketing productions. Lyon A Healy instHpn, nts are known the world over uni it is Lyon A Healy’. ; "l:<-y to give thAr Customers the beneilis < f their enormous fa> fl.m s. Write to them today if you are at all interest* 1 in an organ-you will never iit i ; Ike purchase. They also soil other style- of organs from the cheapest to the finest pipe organs. Laundress Took the Hint. The private soldiers' washing at a home station is usually d< Be by the married soldiers' wives, who are expected to sew on mis.-ing buttons ami do general repairs. Patrick McGimtis Lad a good deal of trouble with his laundress. Stu day after Sunday had his shirt come l ack with the collar button off or else hanging by a thread. He had spoken to her on the subject, and she had promised to sc-c to ii. Lu: still the buttOMs w< re always missing. (tm* Sunday he got out of patimw e whcii a missing button had made him Late for church parade. "Bad luck to the woman!" he exclaimed. "Eegorra. I'll give her a hint this time, anyhow!" He then took the li I of a tin blacking box about three inches in diameter, driii- d two holes in it with a fork and s >wed it o» the shirr, which ho sent, to be wash-r-d. Win n his washing came Lack lie found hit- la undress had taken the bint. She rad made a button hole to fit it! Two Bad Habits. Taking strong coffee to cure a head ad e is like taking whisky to cure the sh: kincss which is one of the effects of whisky. It seems to do it. but the rcsul is deceptive. The cure lu -omes a new cause and yon are worse off the t btddre. Bolter Stop coff 1 altogether anj jise Grain-O, Hie now so id drink, Wj brt'iu; coffee i- not a food at all. but onl I a n'rve-foollng toxic srimnLard. Cr- m-O is a preparation of pure grains, pili itable, nutritious ami absolutely haimloss. It is thoroughly satisfying, four times cheaper than coffee, accejit&blp to the most sensitive stomach and fref from the constituents which make coffee a damaging beverage. Drinkers of Grain-O are never kept awake of nights-not by that anyway. Ask your gro-er for a 15c. or 25c. package. Throwing the Lasso. The Mexican vtitoi' ro beats the world as a thrower of the lasso. One of his tricks is to stick a. lot of brig-handled knives in the ground close together within the limits of a narrow circle, and bet with outsiders that he can ride past at race-ihorse speed and pick up with a rope any onie of the knives designa.ted. Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Is taken Internally. ITice 75 cents. In tropical forests so large a proportion of the plants are of the sensitive variety that sometimes the path ut a traveler may be traced by the wilted foliage. — — I Mrs. WinsloW, Soothing Sthc, for <Uildrsn j teething; BOlteng the gums, rraueeei mflainnia.-cn, ) ' aliajspain, cures wiua colic, 25 cents a bottle. j

Washing Blankets. Blankets which have been used all winter, no matter how white they may look, are never clean, and should not be put away for the summer without being washed. Many housekeepers satisfy themselves by shaking and airing their blankets, rather than risk spoiling them in washing. But this is an error, for if the work is properly done no shrinking will take place, and the softness and color may be retained for years. The most necessary thing in washing blankets is to have plenty of soft water and good soap. Inferior soap is the real cause of the damage done woolen goods in washing. When ready to begin the work shake the blankets free of dust, fill a tub nearly full of soft hot water. Dissolve a third iof a cake of Ivory soap iu it. But in one blanket at a time. Dip up and down and wash gently, with the hands. Never rub soap on the blankets, or wash them on the washboard. -After the blankets are clean rinse them in warm water until free of suds. Add a little bluing to the last water. Shake and sponge them, and hang on the line r*ntil dry; then take down, fold and pack in a box and set away in a cool room. Blankets thus washed will retain their original freshness, as well as wear three times as long as if put away soiled year after year. ELIZA R. PARKER. From Mouth to Mouth. The Eskimo traditions are told over and over again. Everyone knows them word for -word, and should Hie relater omit or add a single syllable, he would bo corKected instnntly by soune one of his audience. The narrator of the story sits a t one side of the room, and, covering his head, turuis his face towards the wall away from the audaence before lie begins. Would Arm the World. If all guns made by the Winchester Repeating Arms Go., Nc>v Haven. Ct., could be collected, there would be mo-re than enough to equip the standing armies of the world. There are over 2,000,000 Winchester guns in use to-day and the number is rapidly increasing. The popularity of Winchester rifles and repeating shot guns is deserved, for they always give entire satisfaction, and for strong and accurate shooting they are unsurpassed. These guns are made in all desirable calibers and styles. Every gun lias to pass the most severe tests before it leave* the works, which insures its being perfect. When buying n gun the Winchester is the make to take, for it can always be relied upon. Si nd for a large illustrated catalogue free. Mrs. Newrocks I like our new butler very much. Mr. Newrocks —So do I; but sometimes I'm afraid he has a poor opinioUjof us. I'ldladelphia Press.

SILENT SUFFERERS. Women do not Like to Tell a Doctor Details of Their Private Uis. g The reason why so many women suffer HMaFyj '/ / f in silence from the multiple disorders conV^'jvC v 'A-'- *' \ with their sexual system is that ■ShI ,/ *L O they cannot bear to broach the subject \ i / \ a m an, even if he is a physician. yjffigyj? X& 'j*BSSr A’o one can blame a modest, sensitive woman for this reticence. It is unnecesNg" ,c * sar y * n these times, however, for a woman | F | i Xw^ 1 makes to all afflicted women a most generous \ ' I / \\ offer. Mrs. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass., bids every \hl \ \ - Hi woman who suffers to write to her and confide j V / | \ ever . v symptom that annoys her, and she will give / A / I I her advice without charge, and that advice is //“ i\ / I I based upon the greatest experience ever possessed I ' / 11 by man or woman in this country, and extends over 11 Ila period of twenty-three years, and thousands upon M ' * thousandsof cases. AVhysufferinsilenceanylonger, my sister, when you can get help for the asking? Don’t fear to tell her every thing. The ease of Mrs. Colony, whose letter to Mrs. Pinkham we publish, is an illustration of the good to be received from Mrs. Pinkham’s advice; here is a w oman who was sick for years and could get no relief—at last in despair she wrote to Mrs. Pinkham —received in return a prompt, sympathetic and interested reply. Note the result and go and do likewise. “ I was troubled with such an aching in my back and hips, and I felt so tired all the time, and had for four years. For the last year it was all I could do to drag around. I would have such a ringing in my head by spells that it seemed as though I would grow crazy. I ached from my shoulders to my feet and was very nervous. I was also troubled with a white discharge. I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., received a prompt reply and followed her advice, and now I have no backache and begin to feel as one ought; in fact. I never felt better in ten years than Ido now. I thank God that I went doctoring with Mrs. Pinkham when I did, for if I had not I know I would have been in my grave.”, —Mrs. Nellie E. Colony, Nahma, Mich. “Say Aye ‘No’ and Ye’il Ne’er Be Married.” Don’t Refuse Ail Our Advice to Use QA P % I IO

XZ^^Standard $l9O to all alike. —,^ —• Practically tested by " test riders, rough riders j i ]• '' ; and fair riders. iW7 Cc- , i lumbras have not Deed ; I found wanting in speed, strength an d beauty. 5% Nickel StcelTubing, litWV * • potent Hush joints and J l4\lV ; ‘ o* rctl Regent spokes ■■ ; • ar c come of the new i features. POPE MIG. CO., '■' ' ' Hartford Cena. •X: i Catalog. free from any 1 /» i* dialer; by mail'oror.e2-ceat I f i cS s,cn! rO*fe r J. HA RTFORD BICYCLES. S6O, $55, SSO, S4O. j ri 01 ; UKUUK I’till inturmAtiufi (in jnaiu vrapperi m.tiled it nSrciißlS“fill USE LAILS. .. ej I Best. Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. esc | ICT in time. Sold by druggists. |g^

’*A Bundle of Nerves.” This term Is often applied to people whose, nerves are abnormally sensitive. They! should strengthen them with Hostetter's? Stomach Bitters. After a course of that benign tonic, they will cease to be consciousthat they have nervous systems, ex<wpb through agreeable sensations. It win enable them to eat, sleep and digest well, the three media for increasing tone and vigor in the nerves, in common with the rest of the system. The mental worry begotten by nervous dyspepsia will also disappear. “Hullo” and "Hurrah.” Philology teaches us that names were not bom outright, but were the outcome of more or Imts slow growtli. Among exclamations in common use, “Hullo!” and “Hiirra.h!” have cnriouH origins attributed to them. It Is said that the people of Camwood Forest, mi Leicestershire, when they desire to hail a pe<rson in the distaaice, still call out not "hullo!” but "halloup!” a survival of the times when one cried to another, “A loup! a loup!” or as we should now, say, "Wolf! wolf!” “Hurrah!” again, according to one authority, is derived from the Slavonic huraj, “to I’aradi-se,” which signilh s that all soldiers who fell lighting valiantly went straight to heaven. There Is a Class of People Who are injured by the use of coffee. • Recently there has been placed in all . the grocery stores a new preparation r called GRAIN-O. made of pure grains, j that takes the place of coffee. The most delicate stomach receives it without distress. and but few can tell it from coffee. It does not cost over one-fourth as much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 15c. and 25c. per package. Try it. Ask for GRA IN-O. Overcome Difiiculties. Accustom yourself to master and overcome things of difficulty; for, If you observe, the left hand, for want of practice, is insdgndficant, ami not adapted to general business; yet 11 holds the bridle better than the right from constant use. People with hair that is continually falling out. or those that are bald, can stop - the falling, and get a good growth of hair by using Hall's Hair Renewer. You needn't pack up any worries. You can get them anywhere as you go along. I believe my prompt use of Pisc’x "c^rra prevented quick consumption.—Mrs. Lucy Wallace, Marquette. Kan., Dee. 12, ’95. Reflection Is a key that unlocks the treasures of the memory.

A BICYCLE # h\ 600 Second hand Abeels. All fIA Good as new. $5 tr, A& X<v sls* T'ow H;;h Grade V> ff\ /fW i/‘\X A mo ieh, f’ /y gnar.int^.L fl7 g / ! i \ 3 ’•> S* s - *l<«‘ - g // J ?■? V-1 j • ••» Sale. Shi; [ <:4 anyu fl wt- recn erproval. * ■?'*• -’ go *s r €•«(«>'We art. wL/ 7 ’' !$ /rW IA n it, eacS tr’.vn free D«e of cample A -J' i->.-.•: »■■ .!- 4.;rp <l,en;. O r -,. r ♦.!« r c v/ii; knnwn tbrr>tu< - c i .tl.oc nti - W rite «t cnee f< r our special offer I. S. Ml'. aii ( i t’f.H ('(>. W nt'A'H Atmu**. JIL $75 ~ SSO Jc«D 'Kcftcrntvhecl ’Works (-•C-a- MAK £ R 5 ^O-> ■ C/t/CAGO uc/NO/5 I CataL°GVE FREE I CURE V&URSELF! /cI’KES\ I Ise fiie <> f r unnatural y Xin 1w 5 iaya.X I diacharges, inflammati<’ns. r„ Guaranoed irrif it ' .si or ulcerutfOQS J/ not to acne tur*-. of mi; co uh meuibra n-'d. K-^jPrercnts contagion. P.duieys, and nut astriaI ^HTnEEvANSCHEM'CALCO. * ’’ r poisonous. V" \ CINCINNATI.[~I «old by I>raff<ists, \ X U.S. a. / j or sent in plain wrapper, X V- I exprean, prepaid, for '/oil T .'.?(•: lies. $2.75. ° w Circular sent on request. PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and advice as to Patentability of invent . ns. S< n 1 h>r i w (,i niK. ok How TO Gki < Faiim. fatrkk o’l arrell. Washiiigton, 17.C’. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON. OG. Late Principal Examiner U S. Pension Bureau. 3 yrs. in lust war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty, aiuca C. N. u. No. 26 97 WHEN WKSTTJci TO ADVERTISERS please say you saw tiie advertUemeufc Lu tills paper.