Newspaper Page Text
■
!
Xs a oertain indication of impure and tmpov- j
wished blood. If your blood could al
ways be rich and pure, full of the red
corpuscles upon which its vitality de
pends, you would never be weak,' or
Nervous ! Bails, pimples, scrofula, salt
rheum, would never trouble you. But
our mode of living, shut in all winter in
poorly ventilated homes and shops, de
pletes the blood and there is loss of appe
tite and weakness. Hood’s Sarsaparilla
is the standard remedy for this condition.
It purifies, vitalizes and enriches the
blood, overcomes that tired feeling, j
builds up tho nerves and gives perfect i
health. Bead this:
* Our daughter, Blanche, when four years of
age haft a humor break out on her hands
and face, which our physician pro¬
nounoed eczema. If the cold air reached
her look face almost or hands purple, they and would headed swell blisters up, j
would form and break,
Hood’s arsaparilla
Is the Only
True Hmssaa oed Purifier
Prominently in the Public Eye Today.
The Greatest Hedical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS, i
Has discovered ia one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He has tried it in^over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He has now in
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty miles
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, and a perfec t euro is warranted
when Uyi right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowols. This is cause 1 by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Bead the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever neoessary. Eat
the best you can get, and enough of it.
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
WALTER RAKER & GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On thi* Continent, havo received
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the great
Inisiria! and Food
EXPOSITIONS
Upi HI Europe and America.
Unlike the Dutch Process, no Alka*
lies or other Chemicals or Dyes are
BREAKFAST' used in any of their fs preparations. absolutely
Their delicious COCOA
pure and soluDie, ana costs less than one cent a cup.
60LD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
Tha Aermotor all Steel Feed Cutter Worth
$40 for $1 0
2 1
i ..•tfl S)
I S=: to
&
We will furnish this feed cutter, one only cash, to one *71
ton not later than July 1, 1895, for $10.00 of the and tender
4retoes of ton neighbors and be responsible acquaintances ahd influential
known personally by him to buy men
tn their localities who need and After are likely to some¬
thing in our lint this year. July 1, money attention sent will in
an ht this offer inquiries will be returned letters to sender concerning and no this offer. It is
literally paid to or The feed cutter delivered t. b.
note or never. is o.
Chicago. If shipped frem _ breach houses
beet freight willf
This.n »teel fnw« Hid ’MM 28-Inch v,ry ,Shericr
law which vre put out »t fc ,15.00 last year, but now
•all only »t ,38 00, i, Juitlr on# of tha iao.t popular
articles m ever made. AERMOTOR CO. Chlcago.
<>uo^M^fpi.Ke FLoWEit SUED Freex
LamwSftoifrieud., of ITo/naa.whea JGC. to sea-iH^and cover postage and paek-^
get 6coHec-i
_w^_TCi^co. ^chho
------
II ■ « a *ii a |
JlUlillU NnfSPP tfl *U fill! IslIII fVlPn lilUIi
SK ” W«id’« Fob at Chicago. AU sires, from 4b.
Discharging a watery fluid, and the burning
and itubing would drive her nearly wild,
Unlaw we encased her Uttle hands she
would tear patches of *kin from her face
and hands. We tried many dootor* and
many remedies and at last gave the case
up as hopeless. But our daughter Cora
tried Hood’s Sarsaparilla, to sure ascrof
ulous lump near the left breast whioh
oaused her much pain and after taking 4
bottles it disappeared. Blanche, who Is
now eleven, had spent seven years of suf
fering, so I conolud#4 give her Hood’s
Sarsaparilla. She took 6 bottles and her
face is smooth and soft as a baby’s, the
color of a rose petal. Her hands are soft
and white, blue and where four and months oalloused ago nearly they
were red
like leather. I cannot axpresa my
gratitude by pan ox mouth. It seems a
miracle and our friends are surprised."
Mbs. kxr&K L. Clabk, 401 East Fourth
Street, Minnesota.
The heaviest of the foreign woeds are the
pomegranate and the lignum vitae.
Th<? Skill and Knowledge
Essential to the production of the most perfect
and popular laxative remedy known have en¬
abled the California Fi£ Syrup Co. to achieve a
great success in the reputation of its remedy.
Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the uni
ver.-al laxative. For sale by all druggists.
To resolve to do a crime makes one a crimi¬
nal already._____
l)r. Kilmer’s Swamp- Boor cure
all Kulnev and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. V.
We should not he too much elated over
prosperity. ______
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With local applications,^ ^disease, they cannotre^oh
consUtutional and in order to oure
it you must take internal remedies. Hall s
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di¬
rectly on the blood and mucous surface. It Hall s
Catarrh prescribed Cure by is not of aquack the best medtplne. physiolans in was this
one prescription.
country for years, fl-nd is a regular known,
It is composed of tlie best tonics com¬
bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di¬
rectly on the mucous surfaces. The is perfect what
com Wnation of the two’Ingredients results in curing
produces such wonderful testimonials free. ca¬
tarrh. Send for & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
F. J. Cheney 75c.
Sold by druggists, price
Net Sick Enough for the Doctor,
but a little out of sorts. Ripaus Tabules
would serve in your case. It is well to have
them on hand for just such occasions.
After six years’ suffering, I was cured by
Piso’s Cure.— Mary Thomson, 29 1-2 Ohio
Ave„ Allegheny, Pa„ March 19, ’94.
.Mr-. Winslo w’s Soothing Syrup for children
leething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
(f filleted wll li sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
What It Was.
The Patagonian Giant—Der Ossified
Girl’s got au offer of one hundred per
month from der Chicago museum.
The Obese Lady (enviously)—I’ll
bet, if it isn’t one of her fakes, she’s
being kidded by some one.
The Patagonian Giant (earnestly)—
No; it’s a bona fide offer!— New York
World.
'MIIIRI
LSi,
m | » I The The tw, Door fear of of Life. ■ pain it.
Wm 1 I 1 madwoman’s a breast l ld ''j? 6 with dis
I may. There is
M no reason should why
childbirth
be fraught with
danger and distress.
It is a natural function, and should be
that women should be tortured in this
way
Taken during gestation robs childbirth Dr. Pierce’s of
Favorite Prescription and child, by
its dangers to both mother
preparing the system for delivery, thereby and ab
shortening labor, lessening pam
breviating the period or confinement.
W. $3 L. shoe; Douglas
IS THE BEST.
FIT FOB A KINO.
i \ FRENCH CORDOVAN, A ENXUELLEO CALF.
\*4.*3.sp Fine Calf &Kmqmoh
$3.sp POLICE, 3 soles.
S 2.$I79 BOYS'SCH(XH.SHQ£i
• ladies*
.<BK
WSSBaSBM*
BCOC KTOH_MA3 S.
Over Ons Million People wear the
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
Ali our shoes are equally satisfactory
They They equal give the best value shoes lor in the money.
Their custom style end fit.
Tha wearing uniform,—stamped qualities are unsurpassed.
Front prices Si to are S.3 saved other makes. on role.
over
If your dealer cannot supply you wc-can.
SULLIVAN
A CRICHTON’S A
\sTYS} . -y , -- _
,
| Th i>. . Business ColIw«* in America
r.-ir P-nra-n^ T-meehon.
p.’ibTan_& t.rieh.an, Sil
Y^LlOiiILII /Nil CQMCy WANTED ai*iAr«da«
wholesale r
M permapppt W n? 1
^*j^g8gSB B-Mftisg-B 8tn5BmBigB|pB fia
^ pnff-Tfrifiniaii-ir a^ p
CUBA’S [.AST HOPE
IS SHATTERED BY THE CAPTURE
OF HER MILITARY LEADERS.
General Maceo Reported to Have Es¬
caped, However.
Advices from Havana state that Ma
ceo is captured and Cuba’s last hope is
gone. Crombet has been killed.
Without these two loaders all is chaos
in insurgent ranks, and liberty’s most
ardent friends admit that the Cuban
cause is lost.
The Spanish authorities are posting
bulletins, and the loyalists in Havana
are celebrating the ending of tho rev¬
olution. Without Crombet and Maoco
there oan be no real war.
Oh Saturday the Cuban party and
the Spanish soldiers met at Palmarito.
The rebel forces numbered two thou¬
sand men, while that of the Spaniards
was three thousand. A desperate bat¬
tle followed, and, according to offieial
reports, lasted two hours. At the end
of that time the rebels retreated, were
pursued by the Spanish troops and
Maceo was captured. His secretary
was also taken and nil the personal
and private papers of General Maceo
were confiscated.
The battle was a hard fought desperately one,
and the insurgents battled
against odds. The Spanish SQldiers
resisted with remarkable courage the
onslaught of the rebels. In the battle,
a hand-to-hand conflict, a nuihber of
Cuban officers were killed.
The News in Washington.
Official intelligence reoeived at
Washington Monday morning from
Havana confirms the news relative to
the battle of the 10th instant between
the Spanish troops and Cuban insur¬
gents at Palmarito. The United States
Press dispatch states that Thomas
Sainz, General Maceo’s secretary, was
wounded. The official dispatch surrendered. from
Havana says also that he
It is also reported that out of tho
twenty-four men who landed with
Maceo some days ago eleven were
killed and wounded, but no mention is
made of the capture of Maeeo.
A newspaper telegram from Havana
reports that Maceo was captured, and
that in the Palmarito battle the insur¬
gent forces numbered 2,000 and the
Spanish 3,000. A dispatch received
from Captain General Callejo merely
mentions the killing and wounding of
eleven of Maceo’s followers,
nothing is said of any loss to
Spanish troops, nor that any consider¬
able force was engaged. On the con¬
trary, there are strong grounds for
statement that they could not have ex¬
ceeded a few hundred at the utmost.
The Ilerald's Santiago de Cuba dis¬
patch says: “The battle in which the
Maceo expedition was defeated at Pal¬
marito last week was a one-sided af¬
fair, as the insurgents were greatly
outnumbered. Maceo cut his way
through and fled to join Perez. The
Spaniards captured his mule, rifle, re¬
volver, saddlebags and silk hammock
and some important correspondence.
One box of ammunition was seized and
Crombet’s body was burned at Feli
cini, after an official idontifiaation.”
COOK COUNTY' DEMOCRATS
Call a Convention for May 4tli to
Select Delegate*.
The central committee of the Cook
county, Ill., democracy held a meet¬
ing at Chicago Monday night and is¬
sued a call for a convention of the city
and county / democrats on May 4th, for
tfae purp 8e of e]ecting Agates to
tbe state monetary convention of the
party, to be held in June.
» » anticipated that the convention
wl ll be one of the liveliest affairs of
the kind ever witnessed in Chicago,
for the reason that the gold and silver
champions will there engage in a trial
test of arms before going to
s pr i ng field to fight the battle to a fin
j jj In fact,there will be a lively cam
p.ig» (»» a. primaries
are held, for both wings of the party
will make a desperate effort to secure
control of the Cook county delega
tiou. The free silver wing has the ad¬
vantage of having the general and ex¬
eentiye committee in its favor and the
f t y machinery f at its back, The
ead „ in the B lver movement claim
that they will name three-fourths of
the delegates to Springfield, and, if
necessary, will enforce the unit rule
and cast the 337 votes of Cook county
in favor of a 16 to 1 free silver plat¬
form.
On the other hand, the gold stan¬
dard and anti-free silver men are not
idle. They are not saying so much as
the “white wings,” but they will not
be asleep at the primaries, and hope
to secure a majority of delegates who
will, at least, oppose placing the party
on record at the present time.
In the meantime, the silver men
propose to inaugurate a series of mass
meeting, at which “silver” tongued or
ators will descant on the necessity of
free coinage. For the next three weeks
the town will again enjoy a political
campaign, with the republicans as sim¬
ple spectators.
ULTIMATUM OF JAPAN.
-
China i9 G,ven ° n,y °" e Day in WhlCb
to Give an Answer.
A Centra! News (London) dispatch
from Shanghai says a telegram from
Peking says that Japan has presented
her ultimatum, giving China one day
™ ^ich to accept or refuse it. Japan
has reduced the sum demanded for in
demnity by 1,000,000 yen. The
ernment is divided as to the accept
isKMaSratt* ance of the Japanese proposals. The
ing0 ;,. ti» po.u.oo■.cuicL
CHOKER 19 RE-ELECTED.
Boutko Cockrau Turned Down as »
Tammany Sache m.
The 106th annual election of the
Tammany Society or Columbian Order
was held at New York Monday evening
in the large hall of the wigwam and
nearly five hundred of the faithful
members of the ancient organization
paid a poll tax of $1 eaoh in order to
vote the regular and only tioket that
was printed.
For the first time in many moons
new material was drawn upon in the
election of sachems and officers of the
society. Eight of the sachems who
were elected a year ago were displaced.
They are: W. Bourke Cockrau, J.
Sergeant Oram, William H. Clark, J.
Edward Simmons, Henry D. Purroy,
John J. Gorman, John McQuade and
Bernard F. Martin. They are suc¬
ceeded by the following new sachems:
William Snlzer, Patrick Keenan, Dan¬
iel E. Sickles, William Sohmer, Henry
D. Hotchkiss, John H. Patrick, Au¬
gustus W. Peters and Amos J. Cum¬
mings. re-elected
The sachems who wero
are: Richard Croker, Hugh J. Grant,
Thomas L. Feitrier, George B. Mc¬
Clellan and Charles Weldo. Others
on the ticket who were re-elected are:
John B. MoGoldrick, secretary ; Peter
F. Meyer, treasurer; William H.
Dobbs, sagamore; Daniel M. Done
gan, wiekinkie.
OIL STILL CLIMBING.
Prices on the Pittsburg Exchange
Given a Further Impetus.
A Pittsburg, Pa., special says oil
continued its upward climb Monday
morning and no one seems willing to
predict when the return trip will be¬
gin. The Standard puts its price up
25 cents, to $2, which gave prices on
the exchange a lively impetus. May
options opened at 2.05 bid, an advance
of 6 cents over the closing on Satur¬
day. The first sales were at 2.15 and
the price kept going up until at about
10:15 o’clock when 10,000 barrels sold
at 2.25, the highest point yet reached.
Sales of cash oil were reported at
2.21 and at 10 :40 o’clock was quoted
at 2.17 3-4 bid. The normal difference
between cash oil and May options
should be about 2 oents.
The market stood at 2.23 1-2 at
noon and soon afterwards it went
down to 2.21 bid. There was little
trading, not over twenty thousand
barrels being sold here, the first half
of tho day, and about 60,000 barrels
at Oil City. There is a general feel¬
ing that the upward tendency will
continue.
APPROVED HIS SENTIMENTS.
The l’resident’s Letter Pleases Some
of Chicago’s Citizens.
The citizens of Chicago who invited
President Cleveland to be their guest
and participate in a sound money de¬
monstration expressed their approval
of the sentiments expressed in the
president’s letter declining the invita¬
tion. Henry S. Robbins, one of the
committee which went to Washington,
said that letter was the first big gun
of the presidential campaign, and that
a sound money league would be the
result. He advocated using tho letter
as a campaign document for all to
read.
NEVADA’S BIINT SHORTAGE.
Arrest of John Jones, Melter and Re¬
finer, for Complicity.
John T. Jones, assistant melter and
refiner at the Carson City, Nev., mint,
has been arrested, charged with com¬
plicity in the shortage. Bonds were
fixed at $25,000. The warrant charges
Jones with complicity in the mint
shortage, which is $77,000 of fine gold.
His bonds were immediately furnished
by ex-Goveruor Coloord, Superintend¬
ent II. M. L. H. Bell, prominent Car
son merchants and capitalists.
HE LIVES “AT LARGE.”
President Cleveland Solves the Dom¬
iciliary Question.
Commissioner Miller, head of the
internal revenue bureau, was at the
white house Saturday and passed some
time with President Cleveland. It is
stated that during the interview tjie
president solved all questions as to the
particular domicile he should claim in
making his income tax return—New
York, Buzzard’s Bay or Washington,
by making his return “at large,” and
handing it to the commissioner of in¬
ternal revenue in person.
MACEO ON DECK.
A Big and Decisive Onslaught Ex¬
pected in Cuba.
News from Cuba received Sunday is
to the effect that there is a big upris¬
ing in tho province of Puerto Prin¬
cipe; that all laborers, sugar field
hands and sympathizers are in arms
and that a battle is at hand that will
probably decide the fate of Cuba. The
uprising in Puerto Principe is general
and will seriously affect results. Maceo
is on the island, hastening to the
front with 11,000 men.
I’hospliate Mines Close Down.
A special from Ocala, Fla., says:
Tho associated phosphate companies,
of which Ed W. Holder is president,
sixteen in number and nine co-opera
tive companies with several volunteer
pbORpbat© Companies Lav© sblltdown
their mines indefinitely. This act will
throw 1,000 negroes and 100 white men
on * 0 f employment. The yearly out
p U t of the mines is 275,000 tons. The
canse 0 f this action is that the cost of
mining rock is greater than the price
received for it.
Ose, although advanced in years,
muy not always chide his juniors, un¬
less he desist in vicious example to hi*
fellows.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Camphor placed next to fnrs will
make their color lighter.
In blackening the kitchen stove,
results are reached if the
blacking is wet with coffee instead of
water,
Mnd stains may be removed from
velvet l>y washing with water to which
hus been added a spoonful of ox gall
and a little spirits of wine.
Try some way of amusing your child
if he ories during his bath—a cork
which will bob about with every
movement of the water, or an egg with
the contents blown out.
Do not neglect wounds (no matter
how slight) from dull or rusty instru¬
ments that might produce lockjaw.
They should be immediately soaked in
hot brine; and the smoke from burn¬
ing wooleu rags will also prove benefi¬
cial.
A new style of bottle for poisons
has the neck on one side, and is of
such a shape that it will not stand up.
Lying on a table the word “poison”
and the label would always be tu view,
and by reason of its peculiar form it
would not be mistaken for the ordi¬
nary bottle.
It ia a mistake to make a large tea
biscuit. Properly speaking, a tea bis¬
cuit should not be more than two
inches in diameter and proportionately
thick when baked. This gives a deli¬
cate, moist, flaky biscuit, which will be
cooked through before the outside
crust has become hard or over brown.
Keep Turpentine In the House.
It is the simple thing just at hand
that we most often forget to use. Ev¬
ery house should have a bottle of tur¬
pentine on the shelf. A few drops of
it on a lump of sugar is good for worms
in children and good for kidney trou¬
bles in grown persons, Mixed with
lard or camphorated oil, it is a good
liniment for all kinds of rheumatic
paius and figures largely in all patent
pain medicines. It will take paint out
of carpets, ink stains out of white
muslin when added to soap. A few
drops added to the boiler of clothes
will help to whiten them, moths will
flee from it, cockroaches disappear af¬
ter a few vigorous doses of it, and ants
are easily exterminated by its use.
Jwde*
HtoVlfcStpf Govern^ leaven^~>d Repo r.
nig™, e$t 3. Absolutely Pure
Barber or Bootblack?
“Beg pardon," said tho garrulous
passenger, “but I think I heard you
addressed as professor. Might I in¬
quire what chair you hold?”
“The chair right next the door,”
answered the professor. “I run a shop
of my own .”—Indianapolis Journal.
Mmiklna a Foreign Clime
In search of pleasure or business, should be
preceded by the purchase of nature’s great
iuvigorator, Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters, the
beHt and mott genial medicinal safeguard
in existence. Mariners, miners, commercial
travelers, tourists, and all who travel by land
or -ca, spunk of ft In the highest terms. Ma¬
lar a, biliousness, constipation, kidney indigestion, trouble
rheumatism, nervousness and
are remedied by It.
The weight of an opinion is often reckoned
by the inward character.
MORPHINE|IN I SUFFERING. 20 DAYS.
HABIT CURED. NO
Patients sleep at nl«lit and every city. day Not are
able to KO about anywhere in the
confined to bed a single required day. till No pay cured in arid ad
vancc. Not one cent write ut
satisfied. and Pome further to see particulars. me nr me Don't once nnSs
i or terms
this opportunity. Georgia.
B. A. SYMS, M. I>., Atlanta,
IB7 Alexander Street.
r LIVER
PIUS
-AND
G'Tonic Pellets.
1EATMENT M£££
At all ores, or b i mail *J5c. double bo* ; 6 doable bo*9i
*1.00. IHtOVVN 1 IP’ii <‘0.. »w York Cltv.
HAVE YOU FIVE OR MORE COWS?
If so a V Baby ’’ Cn am Separator will earn ltoooet for
you every year. Why continue an inferior system
another only profitable rear at leaturt to great of a Agriculture. lots? Dairying Property ia now the
flucted It alway* well, and muet yon. gpa- You
need Separator, paye and you need the pay JBiEST,—tho
a
.an “Baby.” upward. Bend All styles for and 1885 capacltlee. Catalogue. Prices, $7ft.
A new
THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO.,
Branch 015cm: Central OWctst
EL8IN. ILL. 74 COIITLANDT ST.. MEW YORK.
A GREAT COUGH REMEDY.
Perhaps you may think that Scott's Emulsion is
only useful to fatten babies, to round up the angles and
make comely and attractive, lean and angular women,
and fill out the hollow cheeks and stop the wasting of
the consumptive, and enrich and vitalize the blood of
the scrofulous and anaemic persons. It will do all this
—but it will do more. It will cure a
Hard, Stubborn Cough
"when the ordinary cough syrups and specifics entirely
fail. The cough that lingers after the Grip and Pneu¬
monia will be softened and cured by the balsamic heal¬
ing and strengthening influences of this beneficent
food-medicine, namely, Scott’s Emulsion of Coddiver
Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda.
Refuse substitutes. They are never as good.
Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists, 50c. and SU
A WAR ECHO.
KTBKT HONOHABLR VRTKBAH M
SBBVBS A VBNSION.
And the I.one Limb ia not the Only IUmb*
son for n Government Reward
Either.
(From Journal, tewiaton, Me.)
Samuel B. Jordan has just given the Jour¬
nal an account of hie life, whioh in view el
his extremely hard lot for tne past few years
will be read with interest.
“I am 48 years old and havo always lived
in New Portland. I enlisted in the army ia
1883 as a private in Company A, 2*th Ha
Volunteers. My army experience injured mj
health to some extent, although I worked at
blaoksmithing some part of the time, when
suddenly, several years ago, I was prostrated
with what able physicians pronounoed Lo¬
comotor Ataxia. At first I could gat around
somewhat, yet the disease progressed quite
rapidly until I had hardly any feeling in my
legs ahd feet, they felt like sticks of wood
and I grew so much worse that I oould not
move for three years without help, as my
neighbors and friends oeuld testify. I em¬
ployed several physiolans In my vicinity, and
elsewhere, ard -hey all told me that medi¬
cines would not help me, that they could do
nothing to effect a oure, and that in time I
should become entirely helpless. I beaaras
discouraged. I was a great care te my Wifs
and friends. Shortly after I met an old army
comrade, Mr. All. Parlin, a resident of Mad¬
ison, Maine, and he incidentally mentioned
how he had tried Dr. Williams’ Pink Pill* fer
a severe oaae of rheumatism and a spinal and
malarial trouble, that he had suffered with
oonse quent of his army life, and been greatly
benefited by their use. By his earnest pills. rec¬
ommendation I was induced to try the
After taking them for a time I began to feel
prickly sensations in my lege and a return of
strength so I oould move them a little. After
a few weeks I began to feel a marked im¬
provement in my condition. I soon was en¬
abled to walk around a little with the help I
of crutches. After taking for soma time
can uow walk without crutches, my general
health is much Improved and I have re¬
gained my old-time vigor. I oau walk
about and enjoy life onoe more, for which I
feel very thankful, and this happy result is
due to the use of Dr. Williams’ rink Pills."
Dr. Williams’ Pink pill* for Pale People
are not a patent medicine In the sense that
name implies. They used wore first such compounded In general
as a presort ption and ns
practioe by an eminent physioiau. 8o wise great
was their efficacy that it was deemed to
place them within the reach of all. They
ure now manufactured by the Dr. Williams'
Modieine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and
are sold in boxes (never in loose form by the
dozen tioned or against hundred, numerous and the imitations public are sold cau¬ in
this shape) at 60 oents a box or six boxes for
$2.SO, and may be had of alf druggists or dl
rect by mail from Dr. Williams Medicine
Company.
fiv\\
Mr heart Is vary sad to-nl«ht,
Uaroat Is ta the air,
I cannot toll Just what It Is,
Byepepsla or despair.
It Is dyspepsia,
and
A • Ripans • Tabule
trill dispel It.
How Is Now Consumption Cured!
Faotpfcla, roily detcrlbtax toe Treatment ,ent Free
oa application to
Robert hunter, m. d.,
117 Want 43th •(., Maw York.
"
1N.U. __ Kixteen. ’95