St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 22, Number 51, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 10 July 1897 — Page 3
Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O? Ask your grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O. the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink without injury as well as the adult. Al] who try it like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha and .lava, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. Onefourth of the price of coffee. 15c and 25c per package, sold hr all grocers. The Bi ggcs <. The biggest edible oysters in the world are found at Port Lincoln. In South Australia. They are as large as a dinner-plate, and of the same shape. They are sometimes more titan a foot across the shell and the oyster fits his shell so well that he dot's not leave much margin. It is a new sensa- : tion for a stranger, when invited to i luncheon at Adelaide, to have one oys- . ter set before him fried in butter or eggs and breadcrumbs. ■ 100 Doses in ai Is peculiar to and true only of Hood’s Sarsapa- DUtllv | rilla, and is proof of its superior strength and economy. There is more curative power in a bottle ot Hood’s Sarsaparilla than in any other. This fact, with its unequalled record of cures, proves the 'best medicine for all blood diseases is HOOd’S B parma The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. 81. Hnnd’c Pillc cure Liver ills; easy to iivou «m 3 take, easy to operate. 25c. j biEAuiy ' ® ver 7 ingredient in Hires Rootbeer is health BleMll giving. The blood is improved, the nerves sooth cd, the stomach I^H gHfl benefited by this delicious‘lHffl| : beverage. iMk I HIRES I W Rootbeer B KI Quenches the thirst, tickles W K the palate ; full of snap, sparkle W V and effervescence. A temper- fl U ance drink for everybody. ® ■ Made only by The Charles K. Hire® Co.. Philadelphia, fl A package makes fire gallons. DAD WAY’S n PILLS, Purely Vegetable. Mild and Reliable. Cure all ms- ; ORDERS or THS STOMACH. LIVER. BOWKLS. BICK HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS, INDHiKSTION, TOKI’IO LIVER. DIZZY FEELINGS, DYSPEPSIA. One or two of Radway’s Pills, taken dally by those gubjecl to bilious pains and torpidity of the Liver, will keep the system regular and secure healthy digestion. OBSERVE the foUowing symptoms resulting from Diseases of the Digestive Organs: Constipation. Inward piles, fullness Os the blood In the head, acidity of ttie stomach nao- ‘ lea. heartburn, disgust of food, fullness or weight In ■ the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or flutterlug of the heart, choking or suffocating sensations when In a fylng isisture. dimness of vision, dizziness on rising J suddenly, dots or webs before the sight, fever and dull , paluln Ilie head, deficiency of i>erspiration, yellowness ; of t-be skin and eyes, pain In the side, chest, limbs, and L sudden lluslws of heal, burning tn the flesh. A lew doses of RAHWAY'S PILLS will free the system of all the above named disorders. Pv*oe„ 25 cents per box. Sold Dy all druggists. <7^- EARN « BICYCLE jr Jh 600 Second Hand Wheel*. Ail /ll Hake*. Good a* nev .$5 m Jr ®4»- B'" I,IKh WzrflV model!, folly guaranteed rl< A JKfzfl V to <25. Special (learR Shipped ony1 r 5 S wfcere on approval « 2/ • V We-will jrve r renponnible art. ■l/ A ’p S AJr toeaeh town ft*** of b«»*ple 1 fl// wheel to introd ore them. Our repotatinn in well known through- ! out tbeoou-uixy. Well eat enee for oar apeelal offer i L 8. MEAD CYCLE CO.. Wabash Avenue. Chicago. IU. ’U^cetcrn Wheel 'Works t/tj* MAKERS-Xlo Cfy/CA GO ft I /HOfS CATAL9GVE FREE PATENTS. TRADE-MARKS. Examination and sdvtce as tn patentability of Inven- I firms Send for InWHTOS*’ (JUIDB. OB How TO GW A I Paibst. Patrick u'ParrelL Wustiingtou, i»„C. PENSIONS, PATENTS. CLAIMS, i JOHN W MO RR IS, WASHINGTON. 0 G. Late Principal Examiner V. B. Pension Bureau, j 3 yrs. in lost war, 15adjudicating claims, atty, siuoe
B How Old are You? ® s You need not answer th© question, madam, . Kg"M for in your case age is not counted by years. It will always be true that "a woman is as old as she looks." Nothing sets the seal of age so deeply upon woman’s beauty as gra^ hair. It is natural, therefore, that every woman is anxious to preserve her hair in all its original abundance and beauty; or, that being denied ^X the crowning gift of beautiful hair, she longs to possess it. Nothing is easier than to attain to this gift or to preserve it, if already possessed. Ayer’s Hair Vigor restores gray pO or faded hair to its original color. It does this by simply aiding nature, by supplying the Oy nutrition necessary to health and growth, There is no better preparation for the hair ® than W ® AYER’S HAIR VIGOR, ©
Domestic Architecture. In planning a house with a tower on ■ the corner, the difficulty in the tiesign is ’ to keep it from having a club house j appearance. In a corner house it is ’ sometimes desirable to have a bay so : situated that a view may be had on two ! sides of the house from one. window, and in this case the. only way to top it ' out is to make a tower of it, i Z' ! /jwiw sr I z । ' * bn J | th ps n ■“ H „u». 4 \I t» | The accompanying design is of a tenroom house, with a circular bay on the corner, forming a tower. There are four rooms on the first floor, four chambers on the second, and two servants’ rooms in the attic. The exterior is of light buff brick, witli a sea-green slate roof and pearl white trimmings. Current Condensations. Paper bouts will soon l»e put on the market by a Dover, N. 11., firm. Twelve people sat down at an Etna, I N. H., dinner table recently whose uni- : ted ages were 950 years. Marseilles has just ooinj>h»t<‘d its I drainage system, on the model of tluii of Paris, at a cost of 33,000,000 francs. i Every person under 21 years of age i needs nine hours' rest out of twentyi four. So says Dr. Cold, an eminent i German physician. I About 2,(KNf sailing vessels of all I kinds disappear in the sea every year, ‘ carrying down 12.000 human beings, and involving a loss of about SIO,OOO, ; 000. A flawless stone weighing eight tons, two and a half feet at the Itase and twenty-two feet long, was taken from a quarry in Dureka, Vt., the other day. Violins are very suweiitible to change i of the weather. The strings of a violin i always become more taut, and thus ; give a sharper tone, when a storm is coming on. It is estimated that 25.000 horsi s : will lie shipped from this country to | England during the present year. The ; demand for them is due to the fact ' that ekH'tric motors have not been geu- | erally intixxlueed on the street railJ ways there. A hunting party organised by the Grand Duke Serge Michailoviteh in tile Kuban district of the CaiKasus brings to light the fact that the woixled and secluded parts of that region are still inhabited by panthers and other wild Is lists. A piece of pianoforte wire wently tested at the Watertown arsenal show । ed the extraordinary strength of 200 i tons per square inch. The wire was ; one-twelfth of an inch io diameter: ; large sizes gave a tensile strength of j 135 tons and upward ]ht square inch, j The metal contained O.<S5 i»er cent, of , cxinduned cnrlion. j ,ae White Man's Grave is a ghastly I name, well deserved by the Sierra I Leone coast, but. according to Lieuten I amt Colonel ’l'n»tter. who has been settling the Anglo-Ereneh Ismndary in that region, the Hinterland of Sierra Leone is more like the white man's j paradise. This Hinterland is a fertile ; district, with plenty of water, capable ; of producing almost anything, suitable | for cattle raising and healthy for Euroj ppans—quite unlike the eoa«t line. I The Loudon Si»eetator is becoming ; alarmed at rhe growing sentiment against immigration in this coußtry, and wonders what is to become of the surplus population of Europe if we : erect an effective dam against it. “It is more than probable.” the Spectator j says, “that within twenty years immigration as we now know it will be prohilflted all over the world, and that Great Britain. Germany and Italy will be compelled to meet the problem of growing populations without any relief from departures to other climates, a change which will almost compel some grand altera’ion in the social systems of Europe.”
THE ANNEXATION OF HAWAII. <£ A pi* s * ■ 'l 1 i jr l 17^'- 1 r i '> ID Uncle Sam—“ I think 1 will take a little hand in this game myself.”
OUT IN A SNOWSTORM. Ch 'Htiun Fnilenvorcrw Cnssht In u Midanmmcr Hlizxard. Out of the frying pan into the ice box. Tha is the kitchen allegory which tells of the pilgrimage of tile Christina Knileav >rers. Gaily the train loads of tourists left Chicngo for their long westward journey. It wa* hot when they left-—jj-relig’ousiy hot hut tin \ didn't mind tiint. Clad in linen confs, duck troiiMTs and shirt waists and carrying fans and fortified by n eopiotts supply of Bible texts and hymn Isioks, they felt themselves ready for every emergency of the way. I But the g.rl- didn’t know and the fx.ys wouldn't ietni. Mountain visions did not i trouble their serenity, and the red fire । that signale ! tile approach of the glorious i Fourth melted nil their mnnoriw of kiksv | storms. I ,, <ii«urv mid profit, gospel mwt- > ings '<nd excursion* made up the sum of ; all that wi* spread out Iwfore them Hut ■ up in the mountains of Colormfoold Borens I was makim.' frost and showing tnnt ne | knew just the proper antidote for too . much enthnsianm. The t<mq*rnture was sere;: degree* below the freezing point. 1 and the native* were planning to <eie ‘ brut,' the national holiday with the big , gest snowball game of the year The stat I Ues of George Washington were dad in icicb a. and hot scotch un* scoring a vic lory over the festive gin Rieke' The excursionists left Denver with the thennomrfer nt N’ Four hours later they w«'re htiddl’ng in the corners of the curs trying to keep warm. They had : gone the f<s>li*h virgin* one is'tter Not ■ only had the' faihal to have their lamp* trimmed and burning they had actually left tbian •' home The general ixmdition the wi’otherl throbuhou' the ^tnte I.a* l>cm very ua- ! usnnl fi»r tin* summer time, e'en in the, higher altitudes of the ILs kc Mountains. , Snow was reportisl feom various parts, and at Telluride there was a fall of eight inch** of flukes, v Idle tn** were broken by the weight <f congealed .s.ldnews Many of the excursionists wen treat.sl to tbe miHMinl spedaeb’ of bucking snow I on th- Pike's Peak eogw.c in .inly. MANY SLAIN OR HURT. Fourth of Joly Firework. Do Their Usunl Bloody Work. The three day observnne* of the nn . tion's holiday was tin idenl Independ erne day for the American small boy He began on Saturday, continued inter mittenth on Sunday, and made as much as ]H«s*ible of hi* fast waning opportnnit' on Monday. He put torp<al<>es on the ear tracks and shot off bunches of firecrackers under boxes and old tin runs for the first * two day*. M‘ nday he touched off cannon . crackers, l ied pistols and discharged ! miniature bombs nt the risk of life ami I limb and property. Ilie strain of forty eight hours’ excitement and noise had its . effect upon the juvenile, however, and the delayed "Fourth,’' it is said, was quieter ; through -nt the country than sucii occa- ' sions liiur bei'ii for years past. Ihe cas ' unities of the day were not as numerous j as in previous years. In Chicago only I thirty-five alarms were received during ! the day, fewer than ever liefore record- • ed. the number last year being comnderablv over UN’. Five persons were killed, four others seriously injured and a number of others slightly hurt. The premature ex ilosion of a bottle filled with gunpowder u>m»ed one fatality. Another vie tim met death from a bullet fired by a youth in telebration of the day. Ono boy in his fright fell from a window on account of the firing of a cannon cracker and was killed. The accidental expk^ion of fireworks cost the life of one man. and the bursting of a toy cannon ended the earthly career of a 12-year-old boy. Fatal accidents elsewhere were also comparatively few. The minor casualties covered a wide range of eases, but were principally due to the careless use of large firecra-kers, which in many ciim*s inflicted painful, if not serious, injuries. The small boy was not always to blame in the matter, as much of the recklessness was manifested by his elders. TORNADO STRIKES A GROVE. Panic and Dentil Among Picnickers Near Huron, Ohio. Ruggles Beach, four miles east of Huron. Ohio, was th< scene of a severe storm Monday afternoon. A cyclone cut a swath through the large oak grove, felling large numbers of trees, twisting them off like pipe stems. Frank (’handler had both legs crushed at the hips by falling trees, both his horses also being killed. A dozen horses were killed and a large number of buggies and carriages smashed into kindling wood. The grove contained several thousand people, who were driven into a panic by the storm. GUILTY OF BAD FAITH. State Department's Sharp Tone Toward Great Britain, The Washington corresixmdent of the I Ixmdon Chronicle asserts that recent official «»rr< sixmdence includes a dispatch sent by Secretary Sherman to Ambassa- | dor Hay, dated May 10, for submission to • Lord Salisbury, insinuating that En-
gland has t>een guilty of bad faith in carrying out the terms of the Paris seal awnr-L The <x>rre»q>om!ent say*. “T^ere k no doubt that the publication of th’* dispatch will cause re«entmen' in Ergland. It was really the work of Mr Foter and Mr Hamlin, jointly. 1 learn that th” administration is very proud of the dispatch, and believt«s it will be nxviref' in thi United State* with the same pecudnr appro’al as greeted Mr Glney'* Vem'znela dispatch. Lird Salis bury har not yet replied “A later dispatch of the same series eonip "in* that while America maintainl ed a fleet of five vessel* to prevent illegal sealing in Behring Sea England had ; only two. one of these Iwing a mere : yacht." ALTGELD AND THE ISSUES, El*Oo*l’rnnr of Illinois Addresses n Brooklyn Meeting. John P. AUgeld. former Governor of 1 Illinois, spoke to an attentive audience of ulwot 2.5*«i persons Munday morning in the Rrooklvn Academy of Music. The i meting was held under the auspice* of the 1 ►emncTutie Ix’ngue of King* County, and was ostensibly a Fourth of July < debra tion. For those I irtnoen'ts who w ould temporize, who would ignore the silver quwstitMi. and run tlw campaign on pun-ly locsd issues, Altgeld has but one epithet, । “Traitor*!*' "Tin- Benedict Arnold of 17H1," he said In his peroration, "sh’ep* ion Enj®?» soil I* l she Benedict Arn olds of <fe press 'll time m- ke then gm ' es i lieside ■P'*’ For those who. L„, their hsnd to the plow , would lure *b*' *”k<* of a tenqsuary lo cal ti^Pßb. he has the hitti res! eon I tempt. ‘‘Txihbyists and corruptionist* who } liobnuch legislature* or |Hillute the , stream of justice are not Dcmo< nits.” he said. “Sa calhsJ leaders who use their | |wMitiuiM in their part) to assist cor|s> rations tn getting an unfair advantage over tiie public tire not DennxTats.' HOT WAVE IS FATAL. Mnn.r Stricken liosn During the Dags of the Torrid Visitation. A iremndous death roll from the ex cessive lent during th«- past week has , been placed ou the record. In Chicago , during the first six days of the hot wu'e thirty-seven persons sm< umbed and 119 were prostrated. Monday there were twelve deaths in Cincinnati and seventy prostrations, while in Detroit and vicinity on the same day the unmerciful rays <>f i the sun brought death to five. There were many prostrations and several f deaths in other cities. Following is the recorded tem[HTature • Monday at the plats'* named: Pittsburg W- Huston fM Parkersburg 96 Albany, X. Y ‘<<4 Indianapolis 94 New York *2 i Cincinnati 92 Dodge I’ity, Kan...l*6 ■ Cairo IM Concordia 94 j St. Ixiuls 90 Pueblo 94 I Detroit l*i North Platte '.<2 । Omaha I*> Cleveland I*4 | Oswego, N. Y 94 St. Paul 86 | Montreal 92 New Orleans 90 Galveston KX Abilene. Texas ... 94 Oklahoma 92 Vicksburg 92 I Little Kock 98 Nashville lai I Memphis 96 Charlotte. N. C ...92 1 Jacksonville. F1a..86 Montgomery 92 NThtSecretary of the Interior Bliss has as the assistants in his department four exCongressmeu and an ex-Mayor. Neither the Chinese nor the i’ortu ; guese minister bus made a protest against । tlie Hawaiian treaty of annexation. The congressional district represented 1 by Jerry Simpson is. in point of popula tion, the largest in the I nited States. The resignation of Magrane Cox, United States minister to Honduras and Salva dor. has been received at the State De partinent. A bell haF been purchased by the family of the late Secretary of the Treasury Daniel Manning for the I nited States cruiser which bears his name. Senator Spooner presented a petition tn the Senate signed by I(l.3,**<>(> citizens of Chicago, protesting against the proposed increase of the tax on beer. Senator Frye of Maine has invited President McKinley and Senator Mark Hanna to visit hini during the summer and enjoy Hie fishing of the famous lake region of Maine. (’ongresslnan Sulloway of New Hampshire is a nernD'r of the Salvation Army and his wife was formerly an army "lassie.” He has frequently been seen in Salvation 2rmy parades, both in Massachusetts and in M ashingtou.
The Doctors Are Right. All the progressive doctors now days pronounce against the use of alcohol as a medicine as well as a drink. The human body has no use for rum in any • form or for any reason. The same with coffee. Society can afford to bold a ' jubilee when we are aid of both of them. Stimulants are always bad—never good. In place of coffee use Graln-O, made from pure grains. It looks like coffee —■rich, brown and luscious. No sense of being dosed and drugged. A hot cup of Grain-O warms, enlivens,feeds, nourishes; but it doesn’t excite you or set the nerves twanging. Old coffee and tea drinkers will soon prefer Grain-O for its taste as well as for Its good effects. Packages 15 or *25 cents. Ask your grocer for it.
Chivalry Counted. Judge Phillips, of the United States District Court, has sentenced Earl Bell ; of Chillicothe, Mo., to six months in I jail for passing a counterfeit Wil at a < voting contest to determine the most luxiutiful woman in Chillicothe. Hell bought tickets with the bad bill aird his sweetheart won. In delivering the 5 sentence Judge Phillips said: "'The crime of which you have been convicted warrants a very severe punishment, but out of respect for your chivalry' I will sentence you to only six months in jail.” A Californian’s E ghouse. Gumbull Gimp, of Eureka. Cal., has 1 built for himself what he calls a jaghouse. It is a shed laick of his dwelling. and is filled with cheap furniture. When he comes home In a contentious frame of mind be smashes things generally, and argues with a phonograph which he has wound up for that purpose. Mr. Gimp finds the luxury an inexpensive one. and eminently satis- j factory to Mrs. Gimp. Shake Into lour nnoea Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet It cures i*ainful, 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-fitting or new sho's 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 1 package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmstexl, Le Roy, N. Y. Courtesy. Courtesy Is one of the first lessons taught to the children of China. Almost every Chinese child, rich r poor, is taught how to address his parents, hl* siqieriors, his fellows, and his inferiors. Except among the very poor ewt Classi's, a considerable portion of each day Is devoted by the child to the study of etiquette. T<> Cob a«lo Hprings ami Pueblo— Burlington Route via Denver. A through deeping car to Colorado springs and Pueblo, via Denver, is attach e«l to Burlington Route daily train leaving Chu iiLo 10:30 i>. m. Office, 211 Clark street. Bubles get sick by eating too much and by eating too little. There are two sick babies in nearly every locality; one sick from gluttony and the other starvation. If their food could be equally divided laith might get well.
Pertinent Questions. 4. Why Will a Woman Throw Away Her Good x Looks and Comfort? t — A yX Why wHI a woman drag out a \ sickly, half-hearted existence _ and “i® B three-quarters vt the j O y of living, when she has health almost within her grasp ? Z T ® if she does not value her good , ooks. does she not value her \ L-==- comfort ? Why. my sister, will you suf- \ | er Juli pain in the small of A \ X yonr back, those bearing-down, \ \ \ V dragging sensations in the loins, W that terrible fullness in the lower y bowel, caused by constipation pro- \ >f ceeding from the womb lying over and \ !I pressing on the rectum ? Do you know \ I that these are signs of displacement, and \ I that you will never be well while that X \ X lasts ? \ 2 What a woman needs who is thus asfected is to strengthen the ligaments so they will keep her organs in place. There is nothing better for this purpose than Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. The great volume of testimony which is constantly rolling in, proves that the Compound is constantly curing thousands of just such cases. The following letter from Mrs. Marlow- is only one of many thousands which Mrs. Pinkham has received this year from those she has relieved—surely such testimony is convincing: “My trouble commenced after the birth of my last child. I did not know what was the matter with me. My husband went to our family physician and described my symptoms, and he said I had displacement and falling of the womb. He sent me some medicine, but it did little good. I let it go on about two years, and every time I did any hard work my womb would come down. Finally a lady friend advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham 5 * Vegetable Compound, which I did. The first bottle helped me so much, I continued to take it right along. My back was almost the same as no back. I could not lift scarcely any weight. My life was just a drag to me. To-day I am well of my womb trouble, anti have a good, strong back, thanks ta Mrs. ?inkham’s Vegetable Compound.’’—Mrs. L. Marlow. Milford, 111 “Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, but Quick Witted People Use SAPOLIO
m . mo > ■ a a a marvelous cure rar AMTI IM |1 PKWKE.'NESS ; II IU s l» I II 8 - can be given secretly at Mll II B gjbome. It te harm less. IB I 1 I I “a li druggists. or write Renova Chemical Co., 6© Broadv (lV New Vork. FULL INFORMATION GLADLY MAILED FREE. “LSI CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. EJ teg Best Cough Bynip. Tastes Good. Ifc in time. Sold bv druggists. Iww
KMMMMHHBaaaHMaMMMaauMMBBUnanaBneaHi Two Mighty Continent*, North and South America, besides Guatemala, the West Indies, Australia, ami eves Europe, are the fields of usefulness in which Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters has demoustrat- ! ed its value as an antidote to malaria, and j as a remedy for dyspepsia, constipation, I rheumatism, neuralgia, biliousness, nervousI ness, and loss of appetite and sleep, rhe i inhabitants, the medical men of these coua- | tries, have spoken in no uncertain tones conj cerning the efficacy of the great household I remedy. No Chance for the Little Man. All hand’s bad been telling long stories of what they bad done or woul^ do in the event of a smash-up on the j raihvay, with the exception of one lit- ■ tie man, who had listened attentively to the narratives and taken them all in without a word.
"Ever been in an accident?” asked the patriarch of the party, noticing the little man’s silence. “No,” replied the little man, quietly. I "Then you have no idea of what yon ; would do in a fracas?” continued the ! patriarch. I “No, I haven’t,” replied the little I man, sadly. “With all you big heroes I blocking up the doors and windows in your hurry to get out I don’t know I what show a man have.” " And then there was a deep silence, so deep you might have heard a couga, drop, and the little man was troubled no more about the possibility of acct . dents.—Answers. Over a Ton a Day. Last year 425 tons of steel were used by the Winchester Repeating Anns Co., New Haven Ct., in the manufacture or rifft's and shot guns. This enormous amount represents a consumption of over a ton a day. This information may surprise people who are not familiar witk the ^reat demand for Winchester gnna, ' but it will not anyone who has used a j Winchester, for they appreciate the excellence and popularity of this make of j gun. Winchester guns and Winchester ammunition are unequalled for their many point* of superiority. Uniformity and reliability are watchwords with the Winchesters, and the results their guns and ammunition give show the great car* taken in manufacturing them. Send for a large illustrated catalogue free. An Old Custom. In the Louvre, at Paris, there 1« aa interesting old vase of Etruscan manufacture, the age of which is computed 1 at about two thousand five hundred I years. It Is interesting as bearing a group of children in relief who are engaged in blowing soap bubbles from Pija's. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, Is taken Internally. Price 75 cents. The receptacles for dead children in Spain are coffins of pink, blue or gray tint, which are carried open to the grave. | Every man having a beard should keep : it nn even and natural color, and if it is not so already, use Buckingham’s Dye | and appear tidy. i Trying to use gnunl language, often turns out about as it did with the man who sat on a limb and sawed it off. We will forfeit ?1,000 if any of our pub--1 iished testimonials are proven to be not genuine. THE PISO CO.. Warren. Pa. To have a bad habit is to have a hard master. Mtn. Win«low’» Soothtwo Stbup for Children teething. the u um«, rcanceH inflammation, allay* pain, curea wind colic. A ceiitw a bottle.
«CURE YOtJRSELFT I rh Big G for unnatural nscbaigee. inflammatk» 0 . Irritations or 11 Icerat loiS •f mucous mem bra net Painless, and not Urit , gent or poisonous. Hold by Dragglata, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, tor fl or 3 bottles, $2.75. _ vircuiar eeut on request C- N. U. xo. 28 -9? WHEN YVIiITIH& TO ADVERTISERS please say you wj tJae a4vertUouM»ct La this paver.
