Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 12, 1896, Page 3

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j aia | | | | i The Electric Hendlight oa Crooked Roads, Enginemen and railway officials Speak in grateful terms of the electric headlight. Beyond the main function ¥ this light—to illumine the road bed i front of the engine—it throws out skyward a shining beam that gives early notice to stationmen, wayfarers, runners of other train and casual tramps of the approach of the train bearing it. The runner using this light cannot see through a hill or a building any better than without it, but as it shines above it makes its whereabouts manifest several miles in advance, so that other trains can know that the electrically lighted locomotive is approaching. ‘The angle of the re- flector can easily be adjusted so as to throw the beam upward, and the illu- mination of the particles of dust or moisture in the atmosphere makes a pencil of light which may be seen overhead at a g distance. This is of immense service on tracks contain- ing many curves, at many points of which the ordinary headlight remains invisible when the locomotive is only a few yards away. An incident oc- curred retently in Ohio which illus- trates the value of this feature of the light. An engineman running empty at night, and with the tender foremost, forgot about a passenger train that was due. He would have run into the train on a bridge a few miles off, but he saw the rays of the electric head- light in the sky before the train was in sight—that is, before it had reached a point where it would have been in sight by daylight, or where the lamp could be seen. The careless engine- man at once stopped and succeeded in getting on a sidetrack before the pas- senger train reached him. Many en- ginement, especially those on the roads of the Western p ‘ies, assert that so much does the electric headlight lessen the strain to which they are subjected and increase their confidence while pushing their .locomotives that they would pay for the lamps themselves rather than be without them. Trial by Telephone, Montclair, N. J., has a merchant who is a very practical and wideawake man. He was cited to appear in court to answer a charge of obstructing the sidewalk in front of his place of busi- ness. He was very, very busy, too busy, in fact, to go to court, so he rang up the recorder on the telephone aded guilty. “lined $10,” said All right,” was the mer- reply. “I’ll send up the money right away. Good-by.” This looks like the thin end of the wedge. It is evi- dent that the witnesses can be exam- ined over the telephone, and possibly jurymen may come to hear cases in the same manner. Under the influence of a wider sense of the possibilities of the telephone a busy merchant might sit in his office, and, equipped with a telephone hood, hear a divorce case, while he dictates letters to his type- writer and talks polities with his cus- tomers. chant Winter Time Table. St. Paul, Dee. 1—No trains were taken off by the Great Northern railway in making up its winter schedule, but changes were made in the leaving time of several of them, the important being the Paclfic coast , which leaves here at 1 p. m., two hours earlier than heretofore, giving closer connections with Eastern lines than ever before, and reaching Montana and coast points in daylight. His Winning Suit. Mrs. Kirtland—Ancd why do you think, Mr. Dunley, that the world is better now and more beautiful than it was thirty-five years ago? Mr. Dunley (who is after her sweet daughter)—Because—because you were not in it then. Papa Kirtland’s objections to the young man ve been overriden.— Cleveland Leader. A Great Career Before Him, “Do you regard Rogers as a safe mar to hold office?’ “Perfectly. Why, he doesn’t know enough about figuring to multiply six by eight. Such a thing as doctoring “the books or cheating the public would be out of the question with him.”— Cleveland Leader. A Puzzle, Doctor—Don’t you find your glasses enable you to see everything clearly? Patient—All but one thing, doctor. Doctor—And what is that? Patient—How you have the gall to send in so monstrous a bill. Why He Was Arrested, First Prisoner—So the detectives found you out, did they? Second Prisoner—No, they found me in.—Somerville Journal. is a disease which afflicts over 75 per cent. of the American people. It is a dangerous disease because it not only poisons the blood but causes heaviness, oppression,and dulls the intellect. Then follow chronic headache, loss of appe- tite, slow digestion, nervousness, bad breath, dingy complexion and low spirits, It will eventually bring on liver and kidney disease in some incur- able form. But sufferers from this dreaded malady are speedily Car by Warner’s SAFE Cure and Warner's Leading physicians the SAFE Pills. éiworld over, have acknowledged this st, and thousands of people through- Dur the land have testified to it, = orner’s SAFE Cure puts a stop to backaches, headaches, constipation, loss of appe- tite, dyspepsia, tired feelings and sleep- lessness. It builds up the exhausted system, It is a sure cure for liver and kidney complaint in any form, and the only remedy that has ever been able to cure Bright's disease. If you are feeling the need of sucha remedy, you cannot do better than try this king of remedies, the great BACK To ITS BED’ THE CHIPPEWA RIVER IS GETTING OVER ITS SPREE, ' The Water at Chippewa Falls Re- cedes Four Feet, and It Is Con- fidently Expected That the River Will Cause No Further Trouble— Flooded Buildings Ready for Oc- cupancy, Chippewa Falls, Wis., Dec. 4.—The situation at Chippewa Falls is more hopeful. The water has receded about six inches, and it is believed that it may not rise higher, although the city has twice been fooled within the past forty-eight hours by exactly the same conditions. Last night the water re- ceded eight inches, but after that it came up rapidly, until it had gone two feet above high water mark. To-day’s bright prospects may be but a repeti- tion of those of last night and the night before, and many expect the water will still be creeping up Bridge street into the residence portion of the city. The gorge in the channel of the river has been added to all day and it seems a veritable mountain, which tons of dynamite cannot affect. If the water is succeeding in cutting a passage through this mass of frozen snow and ice a further rise may not be experi- enced, but it is doubtful if a sufficient volume can find its way under it to save the city from further destruction. | An immense amount of anchor ice is | piled up in the river at the foot of Bridge street, indicating that the gorge has anchored on the bottom and that the water is no longer finding its way beneath it. The fact that the river has fallen fifteen inches at Eau Claire seemed to warrant this belief, but, nevertheless, the water did not con- tinue to rise in this city after that hour. It may be possible that the water found another means of passing down the river, but the citizens will not feel absolutely safe until it has been demonstrated by several days’ ob- servation that the river has reached its maximum height. The situation in Chippewa Falls was interesting in the extreme to-day. The City Was Panic-Stricken and men with blanched faces rushed back and forth scarcely conscious of their actions. The alarm may be un- founded, nevertheless it exists, and the condition of the river seems to augur ill for the entire city. Wild re- ports reach town of the havoc wrought by the stream above, and a terrible catastrophe may overtake the city at any moment. No one knows just what is in store, and this condition of un- certainty adds more to the excitement of the moment than the actual destruc- tion of property by the river possibly could. One rumor that the river would cut a passage for itself through the high banks north of the city gave rise to a great deal*of apprehension. The river's course is seriously obstructed by the gorge, which has now reached to within a short distance of the dam, and the probable turning of the course of the stream upon the city seems so plausible that every one at once be- came paniestricken. Hundreds of teams started in at daylight to move the effects of the merchants out of the way of possible danger, and Bridge and Central streets were choked with teams loaded down with merchandise. In many instances these wagons were filled to such an extent that the con- tents spilled over the sides and ends and the scene was one of Indescribable Confusion. Both the Lumbermen’s and First Na- tional banks moved to-day and the higher portion of the city was fairly congested with the enormous amount of material that has been stored there for safety. Spring street is impassable between Bridge and Bay streets, and the water is climbing steadily toward the basement of the city hall. Cellars on the high ground in that vicinity were rising fast, and the water in | many instances trickled into the street, indicating that a great height would be attained shortly. It is impossible to see how any of the lower porti¢n’of the city can escape, for the coming of the water seems as sure as it is deliberate, and the valley may be con.pletely inun- dated if the rise contirues. A busy scene continued to be en- acted in the city all day and all sorts of vehicles were converted to us for the occasion. No reports of additional damage come in from the country, and it is thought that the flood may have spent its force so far as the outlaying districts are concerned. The critical condition here, however, continues to excite great fears, and the develop- ments of the next twenty-four hours will be closely watched. Chippewa Falls, Wis.. Dec. 5.—The river rose four inches to-day and the water gorge at the Chippewa Lumber and Boom company’s mill indicates ae height of twenty-five feet. In the spring freshet of 1880, when the Chip- pewa did untold destruction to prop- erty here, a height of twenty-eight feet was recorded. It is believed this mark will be passed before the water re- cedes this winter. Lieut. Col. W. H. Jones, of the United States engineers, came over from St. Paul to-day, and with a party of Chippewa Falls and | Eau Claire property owners inspected the river between this city and Eau Claire. After his trip Col. Jones gave out the following statement: “I don’t see any reason for serious apprehension at present. The normal river is falling rapidly. Most of the water is passing beneath the gorge and going out at:Eau Claire. ‘The small rise that is reported hewe is the back- water that cannot get out under the gorge and represents a very small per- centage of the flow. The river is prac- tically at the same stage at Eau Claire as it is here. There is a reasonable pre- sumption that the worst is over on the foregoing considerations.” Col. Jones will discourage the fur- ther use of dynamite in the river, as a sufficient quantity of it was used to indicate that no permanent’ results could be attained. Chippewa Falls is in a state of nervous anxiety, although the fears at first created by the unusu- al spectacle of the river filling sudden- ly with ice are being somewhat al- layed and the citizens are awaiting de- velopments with all the fortitude they can summon. It may be that Chippe- wa Falls will be compelled to accom- modate its unwelcome visitor the bal- ance of the winter, for the ice forma- tion about the buildings is certain to , it now is. / business the same as formerly. remain even after the water recedes. The river above the city "Is Constantly Falling, and it is believed that the waters can- not rise to a much greater height above the present level. Conservative ob- servers think that the river may reach a height of thirty feet before it stops, and from that stage it may slowly re- cede to its normal point. The same condition of uncertainty that charac- terized the food during the first great rise still obtains, and no one is compe- tent to predict the end. A delegation of fifty Eau Claire citizens, accompan- ied by Mayor Day and three aldermen, visited the scene of the flood this morn- ing and accompanied Col. Jones on his trip down the river. The visitors are old wealthy property owners of the Sawdust City, and their possessions stand in the shadow of the gorge which has formed in the river. No en- couragement resulted from the trip and the delegation came back to town fully appreciating the gravity of the situation. The big mill of the Chippewa Log- ging and Boom company is In a serious position, and any sudden break of the ice would seriously endanger the wag- on bridge between Chippewa Falls and South Chippewa Falls. The town is in no apparent danger, even though there were a break in the gorge formed several miles above, being pro- tected by having the current running directly away from the town toward the bluffs on the other side of the river. Looking up or down the river from the wagon bridge an unbroken | thass of the broken white ice can be seen, with here and there a dark clump of logs frozen in the gorge. At the lower end of the gorge near Eau | Claire is banked a mass of logs con- taining 20,000,000 feet of lumber, and this large amount of lumber it is de- sired to save by holding it right where The ice and flood have not encroached on the banks of the river ; as much as feared, and the damage is much less in the country than had at first been supposed. Chippewa Falls, Wis., Dec. 6.—The water has receded thirty seven inches, and many of the buildings lately un- der the flood are being repaired.’ Some of them have been crushed in and wild rents in the walls are visible where the ice pushed through. It is the general belief that the worst of the flood has gone by, although the immense gorge, white and stern, still holds the bed of the river in its icy grip and shows no more signs of re- lenting than it did yesterday. Mayor Lindley, Col. Jones and a party of local business men inspected the gorge again to-day, and on returning the mayor gave out the following state- ment: “We were all quite firmly convinced that the receding of the water is per- manent and that the gorge will not be- come any more menacing than it is at present. It is quite evident that the water has cut a large passage beneath the gorge, and Col. Jones thinks that the snow and ice may disappear grad- ually until all danger is passed. We have nature to thank for the happy relief, and if this weather continues for a week the gorge will be rendered as harmless as it was threatening. Anchor ice is still ceming down in large quantities, but it is passing be- neath the gorge and not adhering to it as it did yesterday. The condition has undergone a complete change and such a sudden and satisfactory termination of what threatened to be a great dis- aster was hardly looked for by the most sal.guine.” Nevertheless many feel that the dan- ger to the city’s property has not wholly passed away. In case of a sud- den thaw che gorge is liable to let go suddenly and no one cares to think what would ensue in that event. There are half a dozen gorges above Chippe- wa Falls with which the city must reckon sooner or later, although it is possible that they will not start to inove before spring. Business here is still torn up, and merchants will not begin to settle down to active life again for some days. Some who abandoned buildings where basements only were affected by the flood, are moving back, although the majority will remain at their present locations and take no chances with the gorge. The best means of removing it has been widely discussed by citizens, al- though no plausible plan has yet been evolved. It is the opinion of a great many that federal aid must be enlisted , as it is believed that neither Chippewa Falls nor Eau Claire can stand the cost of clearing a channel for the water. Chippewa Falls, Wis., Dec. 8.—Sight- seers to the number of 2,000 visited Chippewa Falls for the purpose of viewing the immense gorge of ice that has choked the. river and given this town such prominence during the last week. The visitors came from all the towns on the Central road between this city and Medford, and Minneapolis and St. Paul, few of whom appreciated the full significance of the ice formation in the bed of the river. Only streaks of jagged ice clinging to the fronts and sides of buildings mark the height to which the water of the river rose, for during the night the flood receded rap- idly and a fall of four feet is recorded on the gauge. Near the C. L. & Co. mill the town is comparatively dry within ten feet of the river's bank, although three feet of snow and ice cover that portion of the flooded district which the street laborers have not yet reached. Seores of laborers have been put to work and most of the streets are in shape for travel, and a greater portion of the store buildings were again ready for occupancy. It is confidently be- lieved by close observers of the situa- tion that the river will cause no fur- ther apprehension this. winter,/and the more hopeful predict that the ice will go out gradually, giving the stream a clear course by spring. The supply of anchor ice from above the city seems inexhaustible. Tons of the slushy stuff is still pouring over the dam, but it must certainly be flowing with the current beneath the gorge, as the ice near the city remains unchanged. Maj. Jones, U. S. A., left Chippewa Falls to-day, stating as his opinion that the danger of the flood is at an end. There is a great deal of good feeling in the city at the happy ter- mination of affairs, and it is the gen- eral belief that the damage that has been caused property will be much smaller than was at first apprehended. It is impossible to get an estimate of the cost of the flood, but business men generally refuse to give out any esti- mate of their losses. No one, however, has been so seriously affected that it will prevent him frora remaining in j attentively. THEIR WORK BEGUN: LAWMAKERS CONVENE IN THE CAP- ITOL AT WASHINTON. The First Day Is Devoted to the Reading of President Cleveland's Message, Which Is Attentively Listened to in Both Houses— Scenes of the Opening Day's Ses- sion, * Washington, Dee. 9, — The United States senate began the secona session of the Fifty-fourth congress with crowded galleries and with that ac- companiment of activity ara of greet- ing that usually attends the reassem- bling of congress. But the upper branch of the house never puts aside its dignity and the meeting developed no demonstrations of dramatic inci- dents. The reading of the president’s message was the feature of the pro- ceedings, and beyond this, no attempt was made to enter upon the business of the session. To many of the foreign representatives occupying the diplo- matic gallery, the message had a spe- cial interest and significance owing to the part they had taken in the con- spicuous foreign events to which the president referred. Sir Julian Paunce- fote, the British ambassador, and the new Turkish minister, Moustapha Bey, were present. Senor DuPuy de Lome, the Spanish minister, was not in attendance dur- ing the day, but two of the secretaries of the Spanish legation carefully noted the references to the Cuban conflict. Minister Hatch of Hawaii, and Mr. Cooper, the Hawaiian minister of for- eign affairs, were listeners, although the message contained no message to the Hawaiian islands. The diplomatic gallery was vacant as soon as the foreign questions referred to in the message had been read. On j the floor of the senate printed copies of the message were distributed, and these gave the senators opportunity to read the salient features, but they nevertheless listened to the message The reading of the mes- sage covered one hour and fifty min- utes, and at its conclusion the senate adjourned. in the House. While the scene attending the open- ing of the house were both brilliant and interesting in the crowds that thronged the galleries and the con- spicuous personages present the pro- ceedings themselves were dull and spiritless, being distinctively routine. The house, met, the chaplain invoked the divine blessing on the work of the session, the roll was called, a commit- tee, consisting of Mr. Cannon (Ill), Mr. Payne (N. Y.) and Mr. Turner (Ga.) was appointed to wait on the president and the latter's annual com- munication was read. The reading consumed about two hours. It was Mr. Cleveland’s farewell message and there was much curiosity as to his views, on Cuba, especially, but there was no demonstration either of ap- proval or dissent throughout its read- ing. The haliday nature of the day was saddened by the announcement of the death of ex-Speaker Crisp, which Mr. Turner (Ga.) formally made to his associates. Out of respect to the memory of the distinguished Georgian the house, after adopting appropriate resolutions, immediately adjourned. ONLY $421,718,970. Estimate of the Appropriations for the Year. Washington, Dec. 9.—Secretary Car- lisle has transmitted to the speaker of the house of representatives the esti- mates of appropriations required for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1898S. They are recapitulated by titles as fol- lows, cents being omitted: Legislative establishment, $4,379,- 820; executive establishment, $19,865, 952; judicial establishment, $907,120; foreign intercourse, $2,082,728; mili- tary estblishment, $24,292,636; naval establishment. $32,434,778; Tudian af- fairs, $7,279,525; pensions, $141,328,- 580; public works, $31,437,061; postal service, $1,288,334; miscellaneous, $36,- 344,216; permanent annual appropria- tions, $120,078,229; otal, $421,718,970. The estimates for the present fiscal year amounted to $418,091,073, and the appropriations for the present fiscal year, including deficiencies and mis- cellaneous, amounted to $482,421,605. WILL DRILL IN PAREE. Eau Claire Knights Will Show the Effete Europeans How to Drill. Eau Claire, Wis., Dec. 9.—John Bar Glen division, K. of P., of this city, which won the world’s championship in the competitive drill at Minneapolis last fall, will enter the list at the Paris exposition in 1900. The members have again gone into training and will keep at it until the time arrives to go to Europe. « Each member pays into the treasury every week a stipulated sum, this, in addition to the moneys raised by a series of entertainments, will de- fray the expenses of the trip. Miss Taylor Acqguitted. St. Paul, Dec. 9.—“We, the jury in the case of the state vs. Rebecca Tay- lor, charged with criminal libel, find the defendant not guilty, as charged in the complaint.” The jury in the zbove entitled 2c- tion, after spending three days in listen- ing to evidence and the arguments of counsel, and after deliberating four hours, returned a verdict at 10:30 last night, acquitting Miss Taylor of hav- ing libelled Judge James Shoonmaker, when she published in her paper that he was arrested in Minneapolis in 1889 and forfeited bail, 4 A Drayman Poisoned. ‘Tyndall, S. D., Dee. 9.—Fred Sturte- vant, a drayman, died yesterday of ac- cidental poisoning. Poison in Flour. Milwaukee, Dec. 9. — Positive proof was secured by detectives to-day that Baker Figlesthaler’s flour was doctored with an ounce of arsenic and an ar- rest will probably be made before many hours. No deaths have occurred. H. H, Rand in Charge. Washington, Dec. 9.-H. H. Rand of Milwaukee, the right-hand man of Na- tional Committeeman Payne, will be in charge of the permanent national committee headquarters in Washing- ten, Damp Walls in Winter. When the snow prevents the fowls from going outside, the floor of the house becomes filthy and the walls be- come damp. The only remedy is to clean frequently and keep the floor well covered with litter. Damp walls require ventilation, and this must be done by léaving doors and windows open, keeping the hens inside by the aid of wire. If the walls are lined with tarred paper on the inside, they will become damp, and on a cold night will show white frosting; hence, as we stated before, the paper should be on the outside. A stable lantern hung up in the house, and a ventilator open at the highest point will dry the walls, but the ventilator must be closed when the sun goes down. A lump of stone lime will absorb moisture, and greatly aid in keeping the house dry. Water- ing pans (which allow of evaporation of water), exhalations of the fowls, and the moisture in the atmosphere, are all sources of dampness which can- not well be avoided when fowls are confined. Mrs. Winslow’s Socthing Syrup Forchilu.en teathing, softens the sums, reduces mflam- mation, allays pam, curee wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Foewarned. Walker—I come, sir, to ask for your daughter’s hand. Mr. Windy—Well, young man, before going any further, I may as well in- form you that her hand is the least ex- pensive thing about her.—Philadelphia North American. Practised What He Preached. Mother—Did you take that jam, Tom- my? > Tommy—I'm sure I don’t know. Mother—Trhomas, answer me! Tommy—How can I? You told me not to let my left hand know what my right hand doeth! Piso’s Cure for Consumption is the only cough medicine used in my house.—D. C. Albright, Mifflinburg, Pa., Dec. 11, '95. A Crusher. Tramp—Give us a nickel, will yer, lady? Lady—Aren’t you ashamed to strike a woman?—Yale Record. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund the money if it fails tocure. 25¢ A Slander, Boggs—If women were allowed to vote, the inspectors would never get through. Foggs—Why not? Boggs—An hour after one had cast her ballot she would sneak back and want to change it. The Universal Curse. Housewife—It is dreadful to think what whisky will bring a man to. Tramp—That’s so, mum. Afore I took t’ de road I never thought I would hev t’ eat sich things ez are bein’ handed out t’ me every day.— Judge. FITS stopped free and permanently cured, No Sts after first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Grer / Nerve rer, Free $2 trial bottle and treatise, Send to Dr. Kine, 931 Arch St., Philadephia, Pa. True to His Principles, Waiter—Have you a Welsh rarebit? Very nice, sir. Guest—I don’t doubt it; but the fact is, my good man, I’m a yegetarian.— Buffalo ‘Times. Of Course Not. Jones—Bicycling is ruinous business. Smith—I don’t find it so. What's your business? Jones—I’m an undertaker. Coe’ ugh Balsam Is the oldest and best. 1t will break up a Cold quicker than anything else. It is always reliable. Try it. Explained, “Uncle Simon, what is old-fashioned politencss*?” “It is a way people used to have of asking 2 man about his health, and then listening until he got through re- plying.’"—Chicago Record. Of the 673 who rode into “the valley of death” at Balaclava only 195 came back, and the survivors, all teld, do not exceed forty. Patents Issued. List of patents issued last week to Northwestern inventors: Oliver Crosby, St. Paul, Minn., loco- motive crane; Henry M. Grover, Anoka, Minn., potato digger; Rudolph Herbers, Beardsley, Minn., inside pipe cutter; Godfried Laube, Huron, 8. Dy trace holder; James I’. McCoy, Winona, Minn., cylinder cock; Duncan J. Me- Grégor, Duluth, Minn., snow plow and rutter; Andrew E. Veon, Brainerd, Minn., gun sight. T. D. Merwin, Patent Lawyer, 910 }Pioneer Press building, St. Paul, Minn., and Washington, D. C. Had No Chance. Mrs. Moulton—Oh, how did you like the play last week? Mrs. Flinders—Really, I don’t know. I didn’t have a chance to judge what it was like. Mrs. Moulton—Why, I supposed, of course, that you’d ben there. Mrs. Flinders—I was, but, you see, I was a member of a box party.—Cleve- land Leader. His Usual Style. Mr. Hilltop—Well, the sultan really seems to be carrying out his promises of reform. Mr. Birmingham—Oh, he always car- ries them out. “What's that?” “Yes, he always carries them out; but generally he carries them out and buries them.”—Pittsburg Chronicle- Telegraph. ‘The Modern Mother Has found that her little ones are im- proved more by the pleasant Syrup of Figs, when in need of the laxative ef- fect of a gentle remedy than by nuy other, and that it is ore acceptable to them. Children enjoy it and it benefits them. The true remedy, Syrup of ¥ | is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only. A ship called the Mary Rose, four cen- turies ago, had the “fighting top” now com- mon on all warships. In Hamburg a dog is taxed according to his size; a little tax for a little dog, and a big tax for a big dog. “Mend it or End it,” has been the rallying cry of reform, directed against abuses municipal or social. For the man who lets him- self be abused by a cough the ery should be modified to: Mend it, or it’ll end you. You can mend any cough with Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. GRAIN AND PROVISIONS Bought and sold for future delivery, 2c to Se per bu. deposit. Sample sales a BROS, Correspondence and 8 MASON 145 Van Buren Street, + Chieago, 1. 1S CHICACO BOARD OF TRADE. JOHN W.MORRIS, Washington, D.C. Pensa rote tes Claims: ‘yrsin last war, ISadjudicating claims, atty since, OPIUM“ DRUNKE |Oured im 16 to: Oured. DR. J.L. STEPHENS. i PATENTS, 232972" experience. Send sketch foraa vice, (L. Deane, late prin. examiner U.S Pat.Ollice) Deane & Weaver. McGill Bidg., Wush.D.C. CURED OR NO PAY. Mrs. B. BED-WETTIN M. ROWAN, Milwaukee, Wis. OPIU and WHISKY habits cured. Book seat FREE. Dr. B. W. WOOLLEY, ATLANTA, GA. szamicted “use } Thompson’s Eye Water. Mind this. It makes no RHEUMATISM =<... of the Muscles, Joints, and Bones is cured b; difference, age, is put up in low Labels. _ Label and our package. Important Notice! The only genuine ‘‘Baker’s Chocolate,”’ celebrated for more than a century as a de- licious, nutritious, and flesh-forming bever- Be sure that the Yellow WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Blue Wrappers and Yel- Trade-Mark are on every CATHARTIC

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