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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 24 Aug. 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1895-08-24/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
I • **MOON AHOY!\ As logideut of like Recent Trip el Lis Cruiser yen Francisco. Regarding the seamanship of one of the members of ,the Massachusetts Naval Reser% 0, The incident oc- curred during the recent trip on the cruiser San Francisco, and, volumi- nous as was the commendatery re- port of their doings which was Bent to the navy department, the Boston Home Journal says, it did not in- clude this incident: On the second night that the re- serves were at sea one of the amateur tare was on the watch. lie was a Boston man. The night was @leer and beautiful. Myriads of stars twinkled in the heavens, but there was no moon Suddenly the reserve sang out: \Light ahoy!\ \Where away?\ said tho officer of the dock. \Far far away,\ replied the would- be man -o' -war's -man. When the officer had recovered from the shock occasioned by this unseamanlike answer he looked over the rail in the direction pointed out by the man from Boston. Then he had another fit. The stern discipline which prevails on a cruiser at sea did not allow him to swear, but there was a world of meaning in the way in which he growled out: \What's the matter with you; can't you recognize the rising moon when you see it?\ \Moon! moon!\ stammered the • embryo seadog. -I beg your pardon, sir.\ Then he shouted, as if making amends for his error: \Moon ahoy!\ . A Glossily Spectra Disease is ever, but in no form is It more to be dreaded than in that of the formidable mala- dies which attack the kidneys and bladder. Bright's disease, diabetes and gravel may alike be prevented. if inactivity of the kidneys is rectitied in time with Hostetters'a Stomach Bittern, sovereign also In cases of rheumatism. dyspepsia, constipation, malaria, biliousness and nervousness. A Victim of Bad Gas. \What are you doing?\ said the clerk in the hotel. \Do you want to asphyxiate yourself and die on our hands?\ \What's the matter with you?\ \You've gone and blown out the gas.\ \Nuthin` uv the kind. I'm en- titled to the use of this gas. hain't I?\ \Yes.\ \Well. I can't get any satisfaction by lighting it. The only way I kin git my money's worth is to sit here and smell it...\ Special Excursion to Boston. The Knights Templar conclave will be held in Boston from Aug. 26th to 30th Inclusive. . Tickets will be on sale via the Nickel Plate road from Aug. 19th to 25th inclusive. Rates always the lowest; through trains; drawing -room sleeping -ears; unexcelled dining -cars; side trips to Chautauqua Lake, Niag- ara Falls, and Saratoga without addi- tional expense. For additional infor- mation call on or address J. Y. Cala- han, General Agent, Ill Adams street, Chicago, A Golden Eut• for English. Auntie—Do you find your lessons hard? Little Nephew Some of them is; but mpellin' and pronunciation is easy. \They are?\ \Yes'm. All you has to do is to pronounce words the way they isn't spelled, and spell 'em some way they Isn't pronounced.\ REV. H. P. CARSON, Scotland, Irak . says \Twebottlen of Hall's Catarrh Cure completely •ed my little girt' hold by Druggists 7'5,2 Our total product of zinc lb Ist•O eel 63,683 short tons It the Baby is Cutting Teeth. Be one and tin th•t old net tried remedy. Yea WINSIA,M. • SOOTHING STlit rf,,r Children Teething. Green crockedolit is or \eats -eye,\ is found in New Magic, Health once Impaired is not easily regained yet itsrio.e. (linker Toni, hes ett•Ined t hese rout's Is many cases. Good fur et cry weskit.. and distrust The gold mania in now at its height in the north ot Ireland. It Is more than wonderfni how patient!y peoplr with rids. (let peace. &all comfort by removin g them with litederrorns. The Cheater inyaterise were first per- formed in 1270. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly :med. 'Ills many, who live bet- ter than ',there and enjoy life more, with key expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to Pie necils of pleeical being, will attest the value to health :I the pure liquid sative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its exce ll ene e je due to its presenting in the form mest aceeptable end plea* ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fever anti permanently curing constipation. ,It has Fiven satisf'setion to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, beenuse it nett; on the Kid- neya, Liver and Bowela without weak- ening the,.. and it is perfectly free from every (dirt -Monet& etibetanee. Syrup if :iv is for sale by all drug- gists in TO(' and $1 bottles, but it is man- ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, wieep name is printed on every peckatee, also the nettle, Syrup of Figis and being well informed, you Will 004 acoept any subetitute if offered. CRIME AT LEMONT DARK DEEDS ALONG CHICAGO'S GREAT CANAL IIII.LAGE RULED HT THE LOW AND LAWLESS ELEMI. sTs. 'He Illostee Halls Thrive ou Every Street —The Mayor Defies Decency and Threatens to Run the Respectable Residents Out of Town. HE growth of Chi- cago's great ship canal, which will one day connect Lake Michigan with the Mississippi, Is marred with an ap- palling record of crime, casualty and disease. Murder and , robbery have come , to be of almost daily occurrence in the drainage district at Lemont, fifteen miles west of Chicago. During one week five suspicious deaths were report- ed by the authorities. How many unfor- tunates were knocked in the head and thrown into the canal can only be con- jectured from the frequency with which a battered and bloated corpse is tossed up by the muddy waters. While the'rec- ord of casualties is sickeningly long, perhaps it is no greater than is common to vast engineering undertakings in which ponderous machinery and blast- ing explosives are employed. Of the disease induced by unsanitary conditions, impure water supply and fil- thy quarters for workmen. Chicago is likely to be forced to take cognizance this summer. All conditions in the dis- trict are ripe for epidemic, and mean- while the sanitary trustees are squab- bling among themselves over patron- age, while Dr. W. R. Martin, medical inspector of the district, has ii?.en too sick for months to attend to his re- sponsible office. But it is.of the orgy of crime this ar- ticle treats. Dr. Lewis J. Mitchell, the coroner's physician, says it is a common thing for him to be called to perform a post-mortem on a body the skull of which has been smashed in and the body burled to escape official Investi- gation. Of course It is only by chance or render him blissfully unconscious of his surroundings. The Cook County News is published in Lemont. It has fearlessly given space to accounts of all the outrages against law and decency occurring in the town. It has been the custom of the town au- thorities to distribute the town printing equally between the News and the other paper of the town. But the policy of the News In expos- ing the corruption existing In the town has not met with the favor of the au- thorities. July 10, in the meeting of the board of trustees, it was moved by Trus- tee Fiehback (who keeps a saloon) and seconded by Markiewlez. that all print- ing for the village hereafter be attended to hp the committee on licenses. The motion was carried. Of this Mayor McCarthy said the' other day: \That's all right; we'll teach the fellow who runs that paper what to do. They re- ferred the matter of printing to the committee on licenses. Well. I'm that committee. See? I'm the whole thing. He's getting his living out of the pious Clancy crowd. Why, he's only been here two months, and I'll make him walk turkey fashion.\ A moventent is on foot to have the village charter of Lemont revoked. The reform element is quietly studying the law in regard to the same, and hopes to be able to make a move in that di- rection while the present legislature Is in session. The motto of the Citizens' League of the town is: \Woe to him that 'stab- lisheth a town with blood or buildeth a city with iniquity!\ The officers of the council of the town are angry and excited. A considerable portion of them derive their revenue from the criminal element of the town. The members of the Citizens' League are calm and determined. Rev. J. Franklin Clancy Is the leadef of the reform movement, the front of a cause which will probably provoke fur- ther bloodshed In Lemont befose the town is finally purged of its crimital of- ficers and residents, including the odor- iferous executive. The other evening a meeting of the Old Citizens' Association was called, and to it were invited those who have been prominent in the recent reform work, chief aestong whom are Rev. Mr. ClancY and J. T. Derby, an old lawyer, who knows Lemont like a book, and on whose cool, careful judgment and thor- ough knowledge of law much reliance is placed. It was thought best to revive that the coroner hears of such a case and exhumes the body. For every one thus discovered, probably ten vielent deaths are concealed. Investigation never extends beyond the coroner's in- quest, and a verdict that \the deceased came to his death at the hands of par- ties unknown.\ Mysterious disappearances are of such common occurrence at to cause no comment. Paymasters, sub -contractors and other Merl with money by the dozen have dropped out of sight and mind during the three years of work on the canal When a sanitary trustee goes down to the chanqel to inspect the work on the sections he takes a railroad ticket, 25 eento in change for dinner, and a re- volver lila valuables and good clothes he leaves at home Criless he is a brave man he does net stay in the district af- ter dark, ant little short of a chance to get an increase in the tax levy would persuade him to remain over night. REV CLANCY During the earlier day. of work on the canal he tined to take an affectionate farewell of hie wife and .•hIldren herons going down, hut as he Is a ell vereed in the Ilse of firearms. i,.. 1 ,, f return- ing alive is coming to be more confl- dent All along the line of the channel are saloons which sell aft per lea of firewater tasting like a compound of blue vitriol and gunpowder At lesst one of the trustiness said the other day a ma bad fold him so. (Inc drink of this concoetion will either send a man on the \warpath the old organisation, as much time would be wasted in effecting a new one. Those invited signed. the charter of the old, and work will be commenced at once. The disgraceful attack made up- on reporters at the telegraph office by Mayor McCarthy, after the meeting was over, is a sample of the opposition the League will have to encounter. 'the several reporters had gathered what they could from outsiders as to the plans maturing in the locked room. and were In the Alton depot, some writing, some dictating, when the mayor, beside himself with rage, burst into the inner office, followed by Chief of Police Frel- liehowskl. He stamped around, disar- ranging the office, swearing, and snatch- ing the manuscript, he tore it across the middle and flung it into the air, shout- ing: \Why don't you tell the truth? I'll fix this f , r you!\ The operatsr stopped, having lost the thread of the story, and McCarthy said: \I'll write a story for you. and tell the truth,\ and dictated genie self-gratulatory phreees, ordering the operator to send that and nothing else. He then snatched the ropy of an- other reporter, edited that to suit him- self, and said it might go. Turning his attention to a Joliet man, he cursed him and ordered him never to set foot in Le- mont again. Then, issuing the mandate that no reporter must ever send any- thing about Lemont without first sub- mitting it to him, he departed. It took 8.1171, time to restore order in the office. The telegraph company was at once notified of the intrusion and the de- struction of telegrams, but has not yet determined on its course.' J. H. MEAD, Many Poisoned by lee Cream. Jacob Witte!, le farmer living at Chat- field. Ohio, the other night gave a party to his neighbors. There were about fifty persons present. Ire -cream was liber- ally served. The next morning every peraon who had attended the party was taken violently III. Some , if the guests had renialned over at the itrigel resi- dents. for the night Some of those were muttering so much that they eta rted for their homes. Many were afterward found by the roadside, unable to pro - ester further Arming the most serious rages now are those of Vidillarn !lurch- haeher and family. S Kilier, Ilona anti Mery Helmer. ii Honor. Pante' Schwab ! arid sister. and E Klrl,lq They are ' suffering Intensely, but will likely re- I cov e r Mtge] F11.4.1 family were the most I serlowdy affected. The doctor of Chat- I field has had more than he could at- tend to Miss Mary Simpson Is a deputy itheria In San Franciseo, ADVICE TO WIVES. GIVE YOUR HUSBAND A HOLI- DAY AND AVOID BOREDOM. &arsenal of the Honeymoon Always 11'41•1611,10 HI the HOltiarotillor phy in Blue Slimily One Duty of Wives. HERE WERE three women and one man sitting on the gallery in the dusk. \Really said the woman In the shirt waist, \if one wasn't golug away there would be nothing to talk would he demonetizaebdo..u , t. Conversation \Yes agreed the man, \the ratio is 16 to 1 in favor of the free soinage of passes to the summer resorts.\ \The queer part,\ observed the wom- an in white duck, \is that we all say we would rather stay at home and we are only going for the benefit of the children. By the way, did you ever think what an admirable excuse chil- dren are for everything? All that you da or leave undone you can lay on them.\ r my part,\ said the woman in the blue dimity, \I always make it a rule to travel every now and then for my husband's health.\ \Eh how is that?\ inquired the man who does not always find it easy to keep up with the subtleties of feminine logic. \Well responded the blue dimity, \you know he can't get away from his business but very seldom. After I have been at home for a good while I find we are boring each other dreadfully. We are both polite and we suppress our feelings as well as we can, but the fact remains that we know just the same things. I have heard all his stories. He is a gentleman to the death, but I can detect by the artificial ring in his laugh that he doesn't think my Jokes as funny as he did the second or third time he heard them. Then I know it is time for me to take a trip some- where.\ \Dear me,\ murmured the woman in white, and the man absently lit him- self another cigarette. \Yes went on the blue dimity, \and when I come back I have a new lot of stories and fresh jokes, and we are so glad to see each other we positively en- core our honeymoon.\ \How very odd,\ gasper' the woman In the shirt waist. \Not a bit,\ good-naturedly replied the blue dinict s y. \Did you never,\ she asked ruinously, \suspect that your husband got tired of you and the chil- dren and the whole domestic parapher- nalia?\ \Good gracious, no,\ was the re- sponse. \Why he's the best man in the world. He puts the children to bed anti does the marketing, and doesn't seem to mind now -thotrgh he used to --getting up to look under the bed for robbers and putting the cat out.\ \Exactly said the blue dimity, \and don't you know there are times when he Is tired and worn out and nervous, when he wishes he could go back to his bachelor days; when he would like to eat what he likes without anybody reminding him that It will disagree with him, when he would like to smoke as many cigars as he wants to. and to feel that he can Come home at any hour In the morning without a reproachful figure asking in a freezing voice, 'Is that you, John\ \ \Were you ever a man?\ asked he of the cigarette, with deep feeling in his voice. \No. I never was,\ said the blue dimity; \and I ans not an Imitation man in bloomers, either. Furthermore I am not speaking for the fellotve who neglect their wives and play up to the limit at the club. I am talking of the good, domesticated Derbies, who never get an evening out without being chaperoned by their wives or children. en my opinion its every woman's duty to give her husband a holiday now and th q .. C women looked at the blue dimity In allenee a moment, then they said: \But our husbands write us how lonesoThe they are when we are sone!\ \Poeh'\ said the blue dimity, \would you ,liaemirage politeness'' After a woman is 20 she should take her com- pliment at their face value \ \You are very odd,\ they repeated again. hut the man presned her hand as he bid her good night \would you mind repeating this tr my wife'\ be asked. Orandmies ironeraL A Rail eyed schoolboy approached the master and begged leave of absence for the afternoon. in order to run the er- rands of his sick grandmother. The master. pitying the helplessness of the Infirm ohl woman, granted his request. Some time after the boy,again asked permission to be absent, as his grand- mother was dying, and. needless to say, his petition was a second time granted. A few days later the poor boy, with tear. ill his t‘ es, begged leave to at- tend his grandmother's funeral, and for the third time he wan excused attend- ance at school. About 6 p. m, the same day an irate female viciously rang the door hell and indignently demanded of the schoolmaster whv the boy was de- tained at school every afternoon \My dear woman,\ exclaimed the astonished eetiagogee. \I thought ) ou were dead and hut set Your grandam] has gms to your ftineral\' Think'st thou loth depend on time I It dote: but itch in ri our epochs. --Byron. Highest of all in Le f ivening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov't Repo4 Baking Powder ARSOLUTIENN PURE • Miulster• Views on Admtising. \Successful business men are those who advertise well,\ said Rev. George Stanley Burntield during a recent discourse at the North Pres- byterian church, Philadelphia. \It is incumbent upon all who are engaged in the public enterprises of God or man,\ continued the preach- er, -to impress the thousands by ad- vertising to the best advantage.\ There are some who hold that the Christian church and Christianity should not seek publicity through the press. From these I dissent. Through the press I have the power to proclaim the truth and to reach the public in a way which is possible by no other method. Soine will al- ways adhere to the old way and old styles, and remain satistied.btit there are modern and better methods. My opipipn is that every legitietate means should be used to spread thee' . knowledge of the gospel of God. \Suppose that we are able to pre- sent something which is palatable and for which men hunger, how shall it be possible for them to know it unless we advertise? In men the faculty of I curiosity is • largely developed, and the intelligent usepf the newspapers Is a certain method of reaching , them.\ Regarding the business men, Dr. I Burnfield asserted that the most suc- cessful are those who cater to the wants of the best class, keep the best goods. who are holiest and who ad- vertise. _ Origin of Closure Rule. This word closure, about which we 1 are hearing so much, came into legis- lative use in the British house of commons in 1887, and is applied to a rule which cuts oil debate and pre- vents further discussion or motion by the minority, bringing tho question to a direct and conclusive vote. The French word cloture is often em- ployed to express the same thing. It is really an ernphatie and decisive way of saying: •'tome, we have talked enough about this matter; we must decide now.\ The Greatest Market for Stamps. It may not be eenerally known that Paris is the great postage stamp market of the world. There is a regular bourse held every Thursday and Sunday in a corner of the Champs lElysees, where hundreds of men, women and boys congregate with their postage stamp albums and packages of stamps for sale or ex- change. It is said that thousands of francs change hands there every market day. — — Choice of Routs. To Knights Templar errIllifflVe, Bo.ton, via the Nickel Hate road. enitire , ing Chautau- qua Lake. Nia4ara Palle. Thousand Iolanda, Rapids of time St Lan renew Saratoga, PalTadee of the Hudson. Hoosac Tunnel. and ride through the Berkshire Hills by daylight i,•1,ets ,,n sale Aug. litth to in -in -it,' Lowest rates, ,tuick time and service unexcelled, in luding allies sleeping and dining ears. Addrens J Y Calabar,. General Agent, III Adam+ street Chicitgo. for further Information. roo Valuable. -I'd like the job of puttin' in your coal, ma'am, but I can't take it.\ ••Why not?\ \'Cos I'm a poor man. an' I itint got no finaneial influence. It 'ud be impossible fer time to give yet- suf- ficient bond to secure you aein my abscontlin' with some of yer coal \ And he wandered on toward the next door bell. Whig. Were Tesmst•rs. Whigs were originally teamsters In Scotland, who used the term while - gam to encourage their horses. Op- ponents of the government in the pee toration period were derided as favoring the Scotch eovenanters, and hence were called whiggams, after- wards whiga The Latest Sensation. surprisingly low rates offered by the Nickel Plate road to Roston and re- turn art ount Knights Templar con- clave and a choice of forty route.. Tickets on sale Aug 19th to 25th inclu- sive: longsat return limit, Service strict- ly first tinge bleeping car space re- served in advance. For further Infor- mation address J Y. Calahan, General Agent, ill Adams street, Chicago. To tarry tits Crops. ST. JOSPreii,Mo , Aug. 10. -As an PO. dence of the preparations being made by the railroadn to carry the crops in, - this xect ion. It is announeed that the Grand Inland read will shortly reopen o all the stat ins celled% were closed or account of 'lie crop failure last year. Milli I.In A Nlid'igern n v•tiol..7 woman of negro lb... 'I ha t 0/ rt. ri tort for apiece in the s. hoo!.. l'ros OH Se. (vent of her ,s ilegernases Camphor lee with I:tyro•liellI. Ti,,',,' T or,tri oat att onk tremor,. t t or...111.nd* Rneesing was once 1,11glit ti. I o a een of good luck. l'iso's care h rhot , 4)11 his no erinel as n , dlifti rt.r. M X r, WM' , iiiitta se„, .1 ilii 1111. 1.111gr,`,1 , 1 I t4 t country .0 et \Maneon•• Magic Corn Satre.\ Wary•nfait., r,,....••• r•thn.14.1 Ask yont dn, gg I. i, it uu.P.,,, I.` 04r1 t utile - cost &Inuit I - Burner is the Os The Saunterer has a washerwomaa who in an interesting creature in her way. This story has nothing to do, however, with her duties at the tub. The other morning the Saunterer happened to meet Katy on the street. \Good morning, Katy,\ said the Saunterer. Katy made a courtesy. ..The top o' the inornin' to ye,\ she answered. ••Where have you been this morn- ing, Katy?\ .\ro the ciinitery, yer honor, and oh' it would amuse yer to see how the place has growed.\—Boston Budget. Tobacco's Triumph. Every day we meet men who have uppareutly lost all interest in life, but the t hew and swum,.' all the time anti wonder y tic sun- shine is not bright and the sweet bird's song sounds discordant. Tobact o takes away the pleasures of lire and leaves Irritated nerve 'ea/ ters in return No-To-Bac Is the easy via.\ oak Guaranteed to cure and make you well and strong, by Druggists everywhere. A pistons sedation. \Let me see,\ said Brown to Jones, \isn't this Jones that we were just talking ab silt a relative of yours?\ -A distant relative,\ said Jones. \Very distant?\ \I should think so. He's A t ha old- est of twelve children and I'm the youngest.\—Youth's Companion. One' Matter Explained. Mrs. Wickwire—I don't believe a man's love is as steady as a woman's. Mr. VVickwire—Of course it isn't. When a man is really in love he can't think of anything else. But a woman can hold her attention to keeping her hat on straight even when her lover is kissing her for the first time. For Knights Templar. Low -rate excursion to Boston via Nickel Plate road. Tickets on sale Aug. 19th to 25th inclusive. Lowest rates; through trains, palace sleeping -cars: unexcelled service, including dining - cars and colored porters in charge of day coaches. For particulars address J. Y. Calahan, General Agent. ill Adams street, Chicago, Ill. 1 Without Doubt. \I think that fortune teller that I went to to -day must be insane.\ \Why do you think so?\ \She said I would marry shortly, but my husband would not be wealthy.\ Fasstopprd tree by Pr.Killne'snreas .. 4 . erre Restorer. rso Its art r r the ant day l a me. Marvelous cores Treatise &nil IT2trial loath- free to TA cases. Send to jr. lillite,9111 arida tit.. est. Coral. both white and red, is found on the Florida coast. -- FAIR SAILING through life for the peril= who keeps in health. With a torpid liver and the impure blood that follows it, you are an easy prey to all sorts of ailments. That \used tip\ feeling is the first warning that your liver isn't doing its work. That is the time to take Dr. Pierce's Gold- en Medical Discovery As an appetizing, restorative tonic, to repel disease and build up the needed flesh and strength, there's nothing to eqUal it. It rouses every organ into healthful action, purifies :Ind enriches the blood, braces tip the whole ystern, and restores health and vigor. -I HAIR BALSAM h a NT nd osann ti as n has, ftt'arer a hxamia.s.1 growth_ gas., nal. to hectare qr.,' Nair to it. Youthful Color. Carts walp dimwit* a bale IMIma. &'-..,'d mu Patents. Trade-Marks, itzsmIn•tion sod ati•l.• an to P•telitabty illi•en K•n.1 for \ Inventora'iluldo or iloo. inlet ▪ intent' ran= OILLITIL. LOIOl. D. EDUCATIONAL. AGIIDEJAY OF me SAGRE.D HEART The rourm or Inetr action In thit Academy, riondmetial by the Hoidens, of lie earred heart entbmwee lie whole r•ope of \blest. nerve •ry On nonetatnee • solid sad roared •41 , orat10•6. PrglprleeT of deportment, pee - simnel reartiota and the arteriole. of morality are olt Jetts .00 n.m In eHeeTITIOR Itelestil•• reatied• ford th• p,3 v11. •••ry futility for weftsi bodily star - 05 , ,h•ir health IP aS ehltorl oonstant oollettsdia lad to ''S neve they inr• alit•edod irlitt maairraai ma'.. Tall te.rn • pert Tuesday, Sept be re: further par- NIOUlars. a111reee THE A egad oelay 1111.art, Si. Jogyplik, MR. UNIVERSITY OF NOIRE DAME. THE FIFTY-•IICONO YEAS WILL OPEN TUESDAY SEPT. bd. 1505. Tull amen.. in 4 lassie. Pelt..'. Relemow.11.•mr. Civil aoi IN•rh,anleall implmeering. retery , 81 d 1411,v-141 , ..w•ao `It 1; .. e1.. ,, 1 • P RZrfor boy• unit. It I. roluos fn rornp , •.•••••• Ills *kola tient 424.taliltykom writ r..• • aprlira , 1 L, RSV ANISINH MOSIIIIIMIT. 8 . N•.tre 11.\ 111.i DR. WINCHELL'S TEETHING SYRUP is the iMitt titatlIvitto for ill dere/VMS In, it,,, to children. It ties the bowels ; assists ti-itti cures dial rlica tissentert in the moist ftdtter ; mires o ids er t liroat ,it. ce rtain Pre trill lye of •11111111irria quiets rind soothes ell pain Invigorates tie. sttettach anti 181A,ei8; 4 . 4111 , S - 1. all schlity , At o w li] ''it.' hi the bowels Rail %Ind ne l coei lett fahloio puirself and child with S leepless eihrlits t, hen it is within your retie!, to cure pair shim and %ASP your 4,,n strength. Dr../oqpie'm German Worm (Yokes deqtroy worm. & remove them free, the system'. Prepared by Emmert Proprietary Ce., Mews B. SOLD ST ALL DRUGGISTS- -- - \WINDSOR HOUSE BOQUET 1 1P! 172 4 011111=C111113LeXaMlIa 10c, CJICS-411.1 2 11.. \ BURLINGTON! \ LEADING 5 CENT CIGAR. LINCOdl ei lkERMA t.s. i r' 4 1 ; ' 1.;S 'a rt: th l r E i VAl. H. T. CLARKE DRUG CO.,