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|MR. AND MHB._ BOWSER.
I'A DOUBLE EXPERIENCE WITH Tl?r,
TOOTHACHE.
iMrs. B. Describes Her Sufferings
and Mr. B.’s Lack of Sympathy
—The Tables Turned.
About a month ago I woke up one
J morning with the toothache. It had
I been annoying me for an hour before
1 Mr. Bowser caught on. Then he said :
“Toothache, eh? Weil, I don’t pity
I you a uit. This comes of cracking wal
nuts in your teeth and chewing so much
-of that everlasting gum.”
“I never cracked a walnut, and I don’t
chew gum once a year.”
h “Well, it’s some carelessness of yours,
rest assured of that, and you must suffer
for it.”
| He went off whistling and singing and
II went to bed to suffer.
That tooth ached for three days and
three nights in spite of all remedies.
During the day Mr. Bowser would re-
. mark:
“Aches yet, does it? I believe you
arc pretending a great deal, so as to get
my sympathy. If you’d get up and go
I Around and throw off the idea that your
[ tooth ached the pain would all go away.
? Four-fifths of human aches come from
| imagination.”
“But it does ache so bad!”
I “That is, you imagine it does. I could
go to bed and imagine my leg was off, and
I have no doubt that I should suffer aw
‘ ful pains. Well, I can’t do anything for
you. If you will let your imagination
i run away with your sense I can’t help
it.”
The ache hung on so long that I finally
went to the dentist and had the tooth
pulled. This was unknown to Mr. Bow
ser, and when he came home that even
ing and found me singing to the baby he (
laughed long and loud and added :
“Didn’t 1 tell you so! No doubt you
had a little bit of toothache to start with
—just a little bit—and imagination did
the rest. If I had gone to work and
called you my poor, dear, stricken, suf
sering darling you’d have had every
tooth jumping out of your head. It’s ;
mighty lucky for you that you married a
man with something besides sawdust un-
| der his scalp.”
[ My revenge came sooner than could
;* have been anticipated. It wasn’t two
I weeks before Mr. Bowser awoke me one
, night at midnight by exclaiming:
“Mrs. Bowser, are you dead, or havu
you bcccome stone-deaf?”
“What is it, dear, burglars or fire?”
“Burglars or fire be hanged ! I’ve been
suffering with the toothache for the last I
three hours, and you’ve laid there and
snored away as if you didn’t care a cent
whether I lived or died 1”
“But what can I do? This is the re
sult of some carelessness of yours. Have
you cracked any walnuts in your teeth
lately?”
He sat up in bed and held his jaw and
glared at me so fiercely that 1 was quite
alarmed and went for the medicine-case.
I gave him some peppermint essence on
cotton; then some oil of cloves on a rag;
then some camphor on the end of a tooth
pick.. It was no use.
“I don’t believe I shall live to sjc-e day
light!”' he moaned, as he fell out of bed
and began to dress.
“Oh, yes, you w ill. Are you sure youi
toothaches?”
He looked around after his revolver,
but I had slipped it under the bureau.
“I had it, you know,or thought I had,
but I guess it was all imagination. Mr.
Bowser, just imagine you haven't a tooth
in your head.”
“And you just imagine that you are an
old buzzard waiting to pick my bones!"
he roared as he danced around.
We tied a bag of hot ashes on his face,
and we put on pain-killer and almost
everything else in the house, and none of
us slept another wink. When morning
came the ache was no better, and I coldly
observed:
“Well, of course you don't want to
keep the house upset any longer. You’d
better go down and have it pulled.”
“W-what!”
“Just run down and have the dentist
draw it out. It will hurt awfully, of
course, but you ate a man and can stand
it!”
“I’ll die first!"
“Oh, well, if you will permit your im
agination to make you believe that you
have toothache, don't blame me.”
I felt awfully sorry for him, for he suf
fered dreadfully for the next two days.
Then he suddenly decided to have the
tooth pulled, and asked me in a tone he
tried to make careless:
.“Mrs. Bowser, don’t, you want to go
down to the dentist's with me?"
“Why, does your tooth still ache?”
“Still ache! Great Scotts, but it has
never let up for an instant!”
“1 am sorry you were so careless. Men
never know how to take care of their
health. Can’t be imagination, can it ?”
He gave me a look of boiler plated re
proach, clapped on his hat and was off
without another word. He returned in
a couple of hours, and 1 knew from his
general demeanor that he had been to the
dentist, and that II- aching molar had
come home in his pocket.
“Well, are you better?” i queried.
“Better of what?”
“Why, the toothache, of course.”
“Humph! Who’s said anything about
my having the toothache? Mrs, Bowser,
I don’t want to believe that you drink,
but your conduct for the last two or three
weeks has been strange—very strange!”
Detroit b'rec
A bald eagle killed recently near Santa
Hoss, Cal., measured seventy-eight inches
from tip to tip of hi- w ings.and its talons,
when opened, measured seven and a
quarter inches.
Truth, like timber, may be driven out
k of sight by the violence of the streams,
| but will soon float again on the top.
Au Important Review.
The Great British naval review will be
held at Spithead, in the presence of
Queen Victoria on July 23, and will be
immediately followed by the maneuvers.
Nearly thirty iron-clads, fifteen or twenty
large cruisers, sixty gun boats and eighty
torpedo boats are expected to take part
in the review’. After the review, this |
force will split up into two portions, j
One portion, consisting of about one- I
thiid of the strength of the whole, will
be detached and will proceed southwards, !
possibly as far as a Spanish port. The
other portion, will then be distributed
along the south coasts of England, Ire
land and in the channel. This force will
include all the torpedo boats, and all the
coast defense vessels. After a lapse of a
few days, a period of imaginary warfare
will follow. One officer, ignorant of
what during his absenqp may have been
done to frustrate him, will come from the
southward as the enemy; and, aided by a
squadron, of fast cruisers, will endeavor
to do one or all of the following things,
namely: 1. Hoodwink the defense, and
gain an entrance to the Irish Sea. 2.
Enter the channel unobserved, and so
make his way eastwards until, having
made the Downs, he will be supposed to
have the Thames open to him. 3. Seize
the channel. 4. Enter any harbor be
tween glacksod Bay, in the northwest of
Ireland, and the South Foreland.
Health Le-son.
“A large proportion of intemperance in
the use of stimulants,” philosophized a
physician in a free lecture in the Buffalo
Express, “may be laid to light breakfasts
eaten by most people. Breakfast is the
most important meal of the day, and suf
ficient importance is not attached to it in
the majority of households. After the
long fast enforced between supper or late
dinner and 7 or 8 o’clock in the morning,
a person in good health should feel'hun
gry, and it is at this hour of the day that
the heartiest meal may be eaten with the
least probability of bad results.
- — -- - 1 ■
A Short Inscription.
A certain gentleman had a mother-in
law with whom he did not live on a very
peaceful footing. They were continually
quarreling. Finally she died, and the
son-in-law, a few days afterward, met
Jones, who is somewhat of a literary
character.
“Suppose you have heard of my mis
fortune?” said the distressed son-in-law.
“Yes, I read the news.”
“Well, 1 want you to get me a nice
epitaph for her, something short.”
“Yes,” replied the friend, “the shorter
the better. How would ‘At Last’ do?”
Clear the Way
Without less of time, when the intestinal canal
is blocked up by reason of constipation,chronic
or temporary. It should be borne in mind that
this ailment is prone to become Jesting and ob
stinate, and other and worse complaints.
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is the pi eeise rem
edy t<> remove the obstruction effectually, but
without drenching or weakening the blockad
ed I owels, a consequence always to bo appre
hended from the us® of violent laxatives,
which are a-mo’S.g the most pernicious of the
cheap nostrums swallowed by the credulous
and misinformed. The fiat of experience, and
o’ tile medical fraternity. Not only asa source
of relief and p, Final.ent’rt gularity to the tow
els, li\@r and stomach, but as a means • f rem
edying and preven Ing kidney and bladder
tioubles, and fever and ague, it is without a
peer.
The export of wheat from the Atlantic and
Pacific ports, is 3,060,000 bushels weekly.
For the Ladies.
Laughter is the poor man’s plaster.
Making every burden light;
Turning sadness into k a mess.
Darkest hour to May dawn bright.
Tifi the deepest and the cheapest
Cure for ills of this description.
But for those that, woman’s neir to.
Use Dr. Pierce's “Favorite Prescription.”
Cures all weakne-sas and irregularities, “bear
ing down" .-•n-ations, "internal fever," bloat
ing, displacements, inflammation, morning
sickness and tendency to cancerous disease.
ITlce reduced to one dollar. By druggists.
Dakota leads all other states or territories
in the size of her Indian population.
Delicate Children. Nursing
Mothers. Overworked Men, and for all diseases
where the tissues are wasting away from the
inability to digest ordinary food, or from over
work of the brain or body, all such should
take Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil
with Hypophosphites. “I us>d the Emuleion
on a lady who was delicate, and threatened
with Bronchitis. It put her in such good hi altb
and flesh, that I must say it is the best Emul
sion I ever used.” —L. P- Waddell, M. D.,
Hugh's Mills, S. C.
The most forcible stump orators is the
farmer whose plow strikes a snag.
Money Makers
Don’t let golden opp u tunities pass unim
proved; there are ti i-.es in the lives o m m
when more mon ,‘y <an le trade rapidly and
easily, than oi herwise can be ea tied by years
< f labor. Write Ha letc & Co.. Portland.
Maine, who will send you, free, full particu
lar about work ’hat you can do and live at
home, wherever you are located, at a profit of
at least from $5 to $•-’’> daily . Some have made
over SSO in a single day. Allis new. You are
started free. Capital not required. Either
sex; all ages.
The tota 1 of cattle, hor-. and-he^pin the
U. S., are 46,000.000, 45.003.00) an I 44,000.000.
« « * Delicate Di-ea-es. affecting male or
female, however in luc ‘<l. speedily and perma
nently cured. Illustrated bo >k for 10 cents in
stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Associa
tion, 663 Main Street. Buffalo. N.Y.
Thom is Jefferson brought the tomato from
France, knowing it could be grown in America.
From the Tnr Heel Country.
Knott, Henn '-ee & Co., Brind eton, N. C.’
writes that Huckleberry Cordial -<■ :s better
wth < vei-y satisfaction for bowel troubles
■ <ikl children teething, and commend it to
every mother, the physician of the home.
The -aymgs of many great men W, u d fill
volumes. Theiractsa postal card would cover
Posterity vs. Ancestry.
Itis no longer questioned, but admitted, that
the blood of man is improving. Children of to
>iay are better formed, have b tte muscle and
' idler minds than our ancestors T cause of
h - 'act is due more to the genera use of Dr.
Harter's Iron Tonic than any other source-
Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Piso's
Hemedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50e.
A Noted Frenchman.
Os Gen. Boulanger’s personal appear
ance a correspondent says: The moment
he entered the room one saw clearly how
mistaken is the common conception of
his personality. He is a shortman, rather
stoutly built, with brown hair, brown
beard, rather a red face, above all things,
quiet looking almost to commonplaceness.
His mother was an English woman, his
aunt is living at Lewes, England. He
wore the ordinary French civilian’s dress
of black frock CQat and trousers, with
only the single red spot in his button
hole. In manners Gen. Boulanger is not
more striking than in appearance. He
speaks slowly, like most soldiers, but
without gesture and without much force
either of voice or language. Gen. Bou
langer has fought his way from grade to
grade and from decoration to decoration.
He was shot through the chest at Tur
bigo in 1859, he was speared in the hip
at Trai-dan in 1861, he was shot in the
shoulder at Villiers on Nov. 30, 1870,
and his elbow was broken by a ball in
January, 1871.
A veteran, Mr. George McKona, Ashburn
ham, Mass., writes: "While suffering with
chronic rheumatism (result of Andersonville),
I used St. Jacobs Oil which gave immediate
relief.” Sold by Druggists and Dealers.
The wife of an English clergyman has es
tablished in London a place for the distribu
tion of clothing, which she denominates “The
Ciotheries.” During the last year no less
than 30,000 garments have been received and
distributed among the worthy poor.
Carl Otto Scboenrich, Captain Oriole Yacht
Club, Baltimore, Md., writes: “The Club, dur
ing practice cruise, used St. Jacobs Oil and it
cured several cases of -prains and bruises.”
Sold by Druggists and Dealers everywhere.
You have no doubt read the incident, of the
man in the sleeping-car, who, when a baby’s
crying disturbed his slumbers, growled out to
the porter: “Where is that child’s mother?”
and how the porter answered: “In the ex
press-car, forward, in her coffin.”
I Had a Dreadful Cough,
And raided a considerable amountof blood and
matter: besides. 1 wa- very thin, and so weak
I could scarce ygo abou the house. This was
the ca-e of a man with consumption arising
from liver complaint. He recovered his health
completely by the use of Dr. Pierce’s “Golden
Me deal Di covery.” Thousands of others bear
similar testimony.
The trade dollar redemption is at an end,
only one-third has been redeemed.
Whatever name or designation is given to
lever and Ague orotht r intermittent diseases,
it is safe to say that Malaria or a disordered
state of the liver is at fault. Eliminate the
impurities from the system and a sure and
prompt cure is the result. I rickP Ash Bit
tersis the safest and most effective remedy
for all biliary troubles, kidney diseases, and
like complaint q tLat has tv. r been brought
I before the public. A trial is its b st recom
mendation.
A Wonderful Machine and Offer.
To introduce them w ■ give away 1,000 Self
operating Washing Machines. No labor or
Washboard. Best in the world. If you want
one, write The National Co.. 21 Dey St.. N. Y.
Daughters, Wives and Mothers.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free,
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica. N.Y
The Oft Told Story
Os the peculiar medicinal merits of Hood’s Sarsa
parilla is fully confirmed by the voluntary testi
mony of thousands who have tried It. Peculiar in
the combination, proportion and preparation of its
Ingredients, Hood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures
where other preparations entirely fail. Peculiar in
the unequaled good name it has made at home,
which is a "tower of strength abroad,” j eeullar
in the phenomenal sales it has attained, Hood’s
Sarsaparilla is the most popular medicine before the
public to-day for purifying the blood, giving strength
and creatin; an appetite.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1: six for $5- Prepared only
by C. L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowsll, Mats.
100 Doses One Dollar
ONLY TRUE
/gFIRON
£3 tonic
Will purify the BLOOD regulate
■l*l the LIVER and KIDNEYS and
Restore the HEALTH andVIG
OR of YOUTH Dyspepsia,Want
of Appetite, Indigestion,Lack of
Strength and Tired Feeling üb
eolutoly cured: Bor es, mua.
clas and nerves receive new
force. Enlivens the mind
and supplies Brain Power.
e jwl n.BMr.ri. Suffering from complaints
fl H i Em IQ peculiar to their tex will find
ImMUFSEbO in DR. HARTER S IRON
TONIC a safe and speedycure. Gives a clear, heal
thy complexion. Frequent attempts at counterfeit
ing only add to the popularity of the original. Do
not experiment—get the Original and Best,
/ Dr. HARTER'S LIVER PILLS k
■ Cure Constipation. Liver Comnlaint and Sickß
■ Headache. Sample Dose and Dream Book!
Vmailed on receipt of two cents in postage, f
‘HE DR.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY,
St. Louis.. Ms.
LOCATE
In a Live town. Cash bonus paid to
all kinds of manufacturing enterprises.
Live me* in all kinds of businesses
wanted. Address, Bank of Valley,
Valley, Dougins Co . Nebraska.
f’k JONES~
E.l W P . A X Sthe FREIGHT
JfSfcu tr/ Ton Matos Scales,
j * ron * J *' rr "' Bearing'*', Brail
Tare Bean; and Beam Box fvr
sgo
v ® T#r ’ Scale. For free pn.je Itat
J~'*7 Vasarii A. * leedop thia paper and add re is
f X.l JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
w w BINGHAMTON. N. Y,
WEAK MEM, WEAK WOMEN,
Dr. HAIIUI's BLOOD (.KAM'LES are
marwlout. the skksaHOS of the hour. Thousands
have used them and not one but Is enthusiastic over
their wonderful properties. 25 cents: 5 boxes.fi.
Os Druggists or ly mail, postage prepaid. Ail in'
valtds should send account of case, symptoms,. tc.
with order and we will Do YOC Gt>Oi> Address
Dr. WJL ML HAIKI), Unehington, j.
SJEJoSSa day. Samples worth $1.30 FREK
Au L' lues not u>‘aer the horse s leeu Address
w Bk.wstekS Safstv Rkis Hom.ek, Holly Ahcij
PATENTS sro< .U
tiialon. I>. ( . bend for our lx>ok id instructions.
0i E On V‘ p No - " Stove for MO.Oi)
Ul3s J* catalogue. A P.
VIVI Sl.wart AOo.ntl Wluteiia.lSt.. Atlaula Ua
The best and surest Remedy for Cure of
all diseases caused by any derangement of
the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation,
Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds
yield readily to the beneficent influence of
?aim?
It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the
system, restores and preserves health.
It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to
prove beneficial, both to old and young,
s a Blood Purifier it is superior to all
others. Sold everywhere at f 1.00 a bottle.
oaell awn
Thu Great Nursery of
PERCHERON HORSES.
IX 200 Imported Brood Mares
Os Choicest Families.
LARGE NUMBERS,
Ail Ages, both Sexes,
IWvOflk INSTOCK.
/ ■ ’d
Iv
\W.\' U" ■
300 to 400 LHPORTED AXNVALLY
from Franee, all recorded with extended pedigrees in the
Percheron Stud Books. The Poreheron is the only draft
breed of France possessing a stud book that has the
lupport and endorsement of the French Government,
lend for 120-page Catalogue, illustrations by Rom
tkmheur. M. W. DUNHAM,
' Wayne, DuPage Co., Illinois.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Great Medical Work for Young
and Middle-Aged Men.
KNOW THYSELF.JOW
TJUBLISHED by the PEABODY MEDI
r CAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bullfinch St.,
Bowton, Mass. WM. H. PARKER, M. !>.,
Consulting Physician. More than one million copies
■old. it treats upon Nervous and Physical Debility,
Premature Decline, Exhausted Vitality, Impaired
Vigor, and Impurities of the Blood, and the untold
miseries consequent thereon. Contains 300 pages,
substantial emboss d binding, full gilt. Warranted
tlie best popular medical treatise published in the
English language. Price only $1 by mall, postpaid,
and concealed in a plain wrapper. Illustrative
sampleJree if you send now. Address as above.
Name this paper. *
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE. C-SU/
The bent S 3 Shoe in the , D /
world. Best material,stylish,
perfect fit;Congress, Button _■*•/ d
or Lace ;all styles toe. Equal s /J/ , /j
any $5 or Sb Shoe. Costa fs/o
nothingto examine them JWNgy n.
at your dealer’s. I send , v - cjj
information free C-vcs K&S-r
how to obtain these
celebrated $3 Shoes /
if your dealer does y ■ P cWj
no ‘ ( —-J GbV ' J
them. EST TA N
w. l.
DOUGLAS’ SEWED.
82.50 Shoe squats $3 Shoes advertised by other
firms. Boys al, wear W. L. Douglas’ 82 Shoe. Be
ware of fraud. None genuine unless name and price
are stamped on bottom of each Shoe.
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton. Masi.
MEMORY
i>ii-4<jov i ire v.
Wholly unlike artificial «y a tenie.
Any book learned i n olle reading.
by J l ?, r - lt . T " sln ' Kiehard Proctor
nt vri.l ntlßt ' HdU-- '• • W Astor. Judah P. Benjamin,
I r. Minor, eve. class of lo.) Columbia lavr students,
*7” £**“•;» an eachl at i .de, 310 University of Penn ,
PRri?.' Vo? ?? eg , p ' o< Peetus post free.
PKOh, LOi.sEl Ir„ ■>;{? F fth Ave.. New York.
J. P. STEVENS & BRO.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
4«nd for Catalogue.
jSp®g ROOT BEER
ling wiiolesome pf/erage. Sold by druggists; mailed
for 25c. O. E. HIREN, 48 N. Dela. Ave., Phila., Pa.
BUSINESS
schools in the Country. Send for Circulars,
MEXICAN WAR PENSIONS
Apply t< F. REGISTER, Alt’y, 324 S Fifth St Ph.i '
h Bl|T3 ' I ill Blustraied Book
■
Bf a I B S I jI ] 11 H -V JL BOCK, P.O.
iAfcaeAl Box 466, Atlanta. Ga,
Can get the most Practical Business Fdn
Z "‘ i-rihlaiuitli’r. School ol l?u„
' -Xt? » B s '' Atla “ u - G*. Send
—1 ' Ht J A *i»H'.nien of pHnmauship.
QTOCKM. IO i’O 1,060 SHARI s.
K-Z Bought, Sold and Carried on Marvin
bend for our list of Stock Privileges.
’■ 1 <*' k- CO., S 8 B.:<-al>way X y
PATENTS SS M.
SgSLICKEW
■ ''■* iTh»FIBH BRA ND SLICKER it warranted waternroot, »>>l *”»• *',“* r >a
LC /V Fj T» TS KTt th » •tnrm. Thu n. w FoMMKI. St ICKER H a < n i'"S .'. rua
’Ort nr. A ™ i<-av«r»tUa»nti.»»»ddia. Kru»>e nt Imllatlona. Nu, f” ''u ts _„
B„_—__s i?. »* " |Rr«ad“ trad»-aart. !l!u»tratvd fre< A J T“»"<
SALE OF LOTS!
East Sheffield Land Company.
Beginning Thursday, 9th June, 1887,
ON THE PROPERTY ADJOINING SHEF
FIELD, ALA.
The East Sheffield Land Co. owns about 1,200
acres of land, laid off into lots and blocks, and
which immediately adjoin the Sheffield prop,
erty on the East.
There are three Railroads on the property of
the East Sheffield Co., besides a Street Railroad
running dummy engines, and extending from
Sheffield to Tuscumbia, through East Sheffield.
Property admirably and conveniently located,
and tno Company desire to sell cheap lots to
actual residents, who will have suburban homes
m clos • and quick communication with Shef
field by street car line.
Terms of sale, one-fourth cash, and balance
in one, two and three years, at six per cent.
One-half the purchase price returned to ah
buyers who improve the lots bought in twelve
months from date of sale, and one-fourth re
turned to those who improve in eighteen months
from date of sale.
Donations of land made to Churches, Schools
and Manufacturing enterprises.
For further information, Pamphlet and Map,
write to
EAST SHEFFIELD LAND CO.,
SHEFFIELD, ALA.
WHAT
AILS
YOU?
Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, life
less, and indescribably miserable, both physi
cally and mentally; experience a sense of
fullness or bloating after eating, or of “gone
ness,” or emptiness of stomach in the morn
ing, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in
mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent
headaches, blurred eyesight, “floating specks’*
before the eyes, nervous prostration or ex
haustion, irritability of temper, hot flushes,
alternating with chilly sensations, sharp,
biting, transient pains here and there, cold
feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or
disturbed and unrefreshing ’sleep, constant,
indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend
ing calamity?
If you have all, or any considerable number
of these symptoms, you are suffering from
that most common of American maladies—
Bilious Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated
with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more
complicated your disease has become, the
greater the number and diversity of symp
toms. No matter what stage it has reached,
Dr. Pierce’s Golden medical Discovery
will subdue it, if taken according to direc
tions for a reasonable length of time. If not
cured, complications multiply and Consump
tion of the Lungs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease,
Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other grave
maladies are quite liable to set in and, sooner
or later, induce a fatal termination.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden medical Dis
covery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and
through that great blood-purifying organ,
cleanses the system of all blood-taints and im
purities, from whatever cause arising. It is
equally efficacious in acting upon the Kid
j neys, and other excretory organs, cleansing,
strengthening, and healing their diseases. As
: an appetizing, restorative tonic, it promotes
I digestion and nutrition, thereby building up
, both flesh and strength. In malarial districts,
I this wonderful medicine has gained great
j celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills and
I Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden medical Dis
covery
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to tJie
worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, “Fever-sores,”
Scaly or Hough Skin, in short, all diseases
caused by bad blood are conquered by this
powerful, purifying, and invigorating medi
cine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under
its benign influence. Especially has it mani
fested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema,
Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrof
ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint Disease,
“ White Swellings,” Goitre, or Thick Neck,
and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in
stamps for a large Treatise, with colored
plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount
for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections.
“FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce’s
Golden medical Discovery, and good
digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital
strength and bodily health will be established.
CONSUMPTION,
which is Scrofula ortho Lungs, is arrested
and cured by this remedy, if taken in the
earlier stages of the disease. From its mar
velous power over this terribly fatal disease,
when first offering this now world-famed rem
edy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought seriously
of calling it his “Consumption Cure,” but
abandoned that name as too restrictive for
a medicine which, from its wonderful com
bination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative,
or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, and
nutritive properties, is unequaled, not only
as a remedy for Consumption, but for all
Chronic Diseases of the
Liver, Blood, and Lungs.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short
ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bron
chitis. Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred
affections, it is an efficient remedy.
Sold by Druggists, at $1.06, of Six Bottles
for $5.00. ’
Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’s
book on Consumption. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
One Agent ( Merchant only) wanted in every town for
Your “Tansill s Ptineh” i.eUrr sat-isf”
to my customer., than aiiv sc. cigar I have ImuJlea-
I sell more ol them than of all other brands put Wj
gether. They are pronounced equal to the " bit
cigar sold here.
Chas. a. Chase. Druggist, San Diego, Cat
Address R. w. TANSILL & CO., Chicago.
LEA’S Springs, Granger Co.,E. Tenn.
Superior natural Mineral Waters, Mount»m and
ocenery. Convenient, healthy location. Select.
Doara. Address H. J. ProprieWJ>
ft _ to Sol lies a Heirs. Send
fi f ’ r Circulars. COL. L. Bl>>
e wllvlUlia HAM Ml ,
A Olli M Habit Cured. Treatment sentontri®!-
Wr IU fij Humane Remedy Co., lutFayette. Ina.
J Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is the l||!
oest. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. sgU
HSold by druggists or sent by mail. Jss
50c. E. T. Hazeltine. Warren, Pa. 30
A. N. U Tw