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Weakness.
thu-ed? Do you wish your strength renewed?
I ry a bottle of Dr. Bull's Sarsaparid 1 It will
greatly .
a*s st your recovery. Moon will you
then experience a feeling of new life and re-
turning ertion power. N » longer well the lecst ex¬
Daunt gne fatigue and e»use your heart lo
ile unnaturally. No more will that
teelrng of d zziness oppress you when you sud-
aenly get up from your chair. No longer will
indigestion and urinary disorders c ontinue to
break down your const tution. Every func-
* Wi ^ resume its natural ac tivity and you
will cn soon enjoy orious feeling self
a g of con¬
trol and confidence. No longer nervous, afraid
and imaginative of gloomy disaster. Ambi¬
tion will take fhe place of discouragement and
you will he baj py in health and kindly Lope.—
Caldwell Post.
If some one should discover a country where
people world can't remember, is tin re any one in the
who would rot try to go there?
Many nelsons are broken down from over¬
work or household. cares. Brown’s Iron Bit-
tera rebuilds the system, aids digestion, re¬
moves excess of bile, an t cures malaria. A
splendid tonic for women and children.
The Pullman Palace Car Company now
operates 2,050 sleeping and drawing room cars
over 126,<)37 miles of railroad in this county
Itig Inducement for Druggists.
The druggists throughout the country are
tallize! making a sj ccialty of handling Hawkes’ Crys¬
Lenses. They write that they make
more money, in proportion, out of this line
than anything else they carry in stor k. These
fine glasses liuve been advertised extensively
for many years, and have received the en¬
dorsement and approval of thousands of the
best citizens of the United States. They are
eagerly sought after by spectacle-wearers
eral everywhere, and it will pay druggists and gen¬
merchants to put in a stock of these goods.
Exclusive sale is given to one firm iu each town.
The trade can be built up, and the entire
spectacle business of a large section can be
monopolized catur with these goods. Factory, De¬
lanta, St., and salesroom, Whitehall St., At¬
Ga. For terms and price^address A.
K. -Hawkes, 13 Whitehall St., Atlanta.
The little crown prince of Siam has won a
prize in a story competition.
The least exercise tired me out. I could not
get up from my chair without feeling dizzy.
My food and drink distressed me. My diges¬
tion was poor and my kidneys weak. Dr.
Hull’s Sarsaparilla gave me hack my health
and strength. I recommend it to all my
friends.—C'fnrence Overton, LaFayeitc, It id.
An honest man pays up. The other kind
has to pay down.
Do You Ever Speculate?
dress Any person sending us their name and ad¬
will receive information that will lead
to a fortune. Benj. Lewis & (Jo., Security
Building, Kansas City, Mo.
Lee Wa’s Chinese Headache Cure. Harm¬
less in effect, quick and positive in action.
Sent, prepaid on r<ceipt of $1 per bottle
Adeler&C'o.,522Wyandotto st.,KansasCity,Mo
Malaria
Isbclicved to be caused by poisonous miasms arlv
tag from low, marshy land, or from decaying vegeta¬
ble matter, and which, breathed into the lungs,
enter and poison the blood. If a healthy condition
of the blood Is maintained by taking Hood's Sarsa-
parilla one is much less liable to malaria, and Hood’s
Sarsaparilla has cured many severe cases of this dls-
tresslng affection oven In the advauced stages when
the terrible chills and fever prevailed. Try it.
And if you decide to lake Hood’s Sarasapariila do
not be Induced to buy auy substitute.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I, HOOD & GO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maas.
IOO Doses One Dollar
CN August Flower”
For Dyspepsia.
A. Bellanger, Propr., Stove Foun¬
dry, Montagny, Quebec, writes: “I
have used August Flower for Dys-
pepsia. • T It . gave me great , reliei. _i* r T I
recommend it to all Dyspeptics as a
very good remedy.”
-
Ed. Bergeron. General Dealer,
Lauzoil, Levis, Quebec, writes: ‘ I
have used August blower Wltll the
best possible results for Dyspepsia.”
-
L. A. » Barrington, T1 • , Bugineer r , •____ 1
alia.
General Smith, Sydney, Australia,
writes: ‘‘August Flower has effected
a complete cure in my case. It act¬
ed like a miracle.
Geo. Gates, Corinth, Miss.,writes:
“ I consider your August Flower the
best remedy in the world for Dys¬
pepsia. I was almost dead with
that disease, but used several bottles
of August Flower, and now con¬
sider myself a well man. I sincerely
recommend this medicine to suffer¬
ing humanity the world over.” ®
G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer,
Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A.
-W—---wW--WI.I M
THE
KING
OF ALL
COUGH CUBES;
DOCTOR
ACKERS
ENGLISH
REMEDY
SOLD IN
ENGLAND
for Is* lHd„ and in
AMERICA
for 25 cents a bottle.
[IT TASTES C OOP
<3 i »
-T \
I? w
JycV C Il
% w
i
v'l
Y B ARE BEARING THE MARKETon Watches;
we have forced the prices of watches down at
least 20 per cent.; as a result of this we are
making immense salts.
The * Stevens Watch” is extensively known
as the best time-keeper in the market—it is
unequaled for accuracy and durability. Find
out about our improved watch before pur¬
chasing. J. P. Stevens & Bro., 47 Whitehall St,,
Atlanta. Ga. Send for catalogue.
apM
Ni eWa&J 3; ^<3
L\>
IU
Si
ONE EXJOYS
Both the method and results when
and Syrup refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is pleasant
to taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels colds, head¬
and cures habitual
only constipation. remedy Syrup of Figs is the
of its kind ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its to the stomach, prompt in
action and truly beneficial its
effects, healthy prepared only from the most
and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular Syrup remedy known. sale in 50c
of Figs is for
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK, N.Y.
BLUE.
ttsssm
ML
m —: 0 : —
u JEWELER, V
I 73 Whitehall St.
■f ATLANTA, - GA bV
iv.-f- I Best Goods, Lowest n
Prices*
5 1 -60- *50
m m ill |Ladies
3 r*i.75 i^.oo
m m #5-1 % Boys
m *1,75
'\ 1
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
_ SB.OO Genuine flanit-sewed, elegant and
o an
s stylish ®.“!“ dress Shoe which commends itself.
s 4'e 3*shVat°a&pmarp«ce a l for S styie'ln^ , du^binty Ue ^ Shoe
U is the standard dress
§te.30 Policeman's Shoe Is especially adapted
S 3.00 tor l.udieg ,y the only kaud-sewefl Shoe
*0.50 Uougola Shoe for Ladies, Is a new do-
a. still rotain their excellence for style, etc.
All goods warranted and stamped wRh name on
bottom. If advertised local agent cannot supply you,
SSSLuH&SidS? W. advertteed P rlc0
L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
WANTED— Shoe dealer in every city and
tow All 0 not occupied advertised to inke local cxclusiv, e ug Lgency.
agents in paper . Wend
l»*r illustrated catalogue.
THE NEW WEBSTER
JUST PUBLISHED-ENTIRELY NEW.
WEBSTER’S
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY;
A GRAND INVESTMENT
for (ho Family, the School, or the Library.
Revision has been in progress for over 10 Years.
More than IOO editorial laborers employed.
$300,000 Critical expended before first copy was printed.
examination invited. Get the Best.
Soldbyall Booksellers. Illustrated pamphlet free.
G. & C. MERBIAM & CO., Publishers,
Springfield, Mass., U. S. A.
Caution! —There havo recently been issued
several cheap rerirints of tho 1847 edition of
since Webster's superannuated. Unabridged Dictionary, an edition long
These books are given
various names,—“Webster’s Unabridged,” “The
Great Dictionary,” Webster’s Dictionary,” “Waster’s Big
“Webster’s Encyclopedic Dictiona¬
ry,” etc., etc.
Many announcements concerning them are
very Z. is 44 misleading, as tho body of each, from A to
mado by years photographing old, and printed from cheap plates
the old pages.
VASELINE
FOR A ON E-DOLLAR BILL sent us by mall
we will deliver, tree or all charges, to any per son In
the Unit d States, ail of the following articles, , cars-
fully packea:
One two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - 10 eta.
One two-ounce bottle of Vaseline Pomade, - 15 «
One jar of Vaseline Cold Cream,..... 15“
One Or ke of Vaseline Camphor Ice, - - - - 10 “
One Cake of Vaseline Soap, nnscented, - - 10“
One Cake of Vaseline Soap; exquisitely scented,28 “
One two-ounce bott.e of White Vaseline, - - 23 “
(frfor postage fhe •1.10
named. On ctomps any single article at price
no account be persuaded to accept from
|tour unless druggist any Vaseline or preparation therefrom
labelled u-Uh our name, been use you trill cer¬
tainly receive an imitation which has Httle or no valus
Chwebreo(h Ilf*. €■., 21 State St., N. V.
OR. SCHEftCK’S
0 SEAWEED
TONIC
Is a Positive Cure for
DYSPEPSIA
And all Disorders of the Digest¬
ive Organs. It is likewise a
corroborative, or strengthen¬
ing Medicine, and may be
taken with great benefit in all
cases of Debility. For Sale bf
all Druggists. Price, $1.00 per tettlo. Dr. Schenck’i
New Book on Lungs. Liver and Stomach mailed free.
Address. Dr. J. H. SCHENCK & SON. Philadelphia.
Home ■ I thoroughly ssssi^isssstssisss: taught by MAIL.
Bryant’s Circulars free.
College. 457 Main sc. Buffalo. K. 7.
- beautiful actr jes.
stamp for postage.
Francisco, C«i.
ALLIANCE NOTES.
NEWS OF THE ORDER FROM
ALL SECTIONS.
Items of Interest to Alliance-
men Everywhere.
Minnesota has an Alliance called “the
McKinley Bill Killers’ Alliance.”
***
The Alliance legislature of South Caro¬
lina will hereafter exact a royalty of f l
rivers, per ton instead on phosphate rock, mined in the
of $1 as heretofore. There
is a vague report that a valuable phos¬
phate mine was discovered in the Oke-
feenokee swamp before its recent sale;
but as this property has now passed out
of the hands of the state, there is no
chance of Georgia ever getting a royalty
thereon .—Southern Alliance Farmer.
***
California is pushing ahead in the mat¬
ter of organizing sub-Alliances in every
county of the state. The Pacific Rural
Press , of San Francisco, so long the able
ollicial />rgan of the grange, has also
espoused the Alliance cause, giving it ss
fine department and becoming its officii r-
and fraternal organ. One feature is com¬
mendable and explains why the work
goes on so bravely, and that is, the good
women They are placed in active position».
and door-keepers, are not only secretaries, chaplains
but organizers and
lecturers. State Organizer J. B. Rigdon
organized thirteen sub-Alliances in twelve
days.
* *
*
The Southern Alliance Farmer , in an¬
nouncing had that the control of that paper
passed into the hands of Harry Brown
and T. L. Gantt, and that the latter had
been made an editorial co-worker, says:
Land, transportation and finance are
the three living issues of the day. Aliens
should not and must not be allowed to
own our lands. Our flag should float
over the domains of American citizens,
not of foreign lords. The lines of trans¬
portation must submit to a complete and
just government control, or the govern¬
ment must own them. The finances of
the country must be run in the interest
of the people, and not in the interest of
banks and bondholders.
Y
* *
Bevier (Mo.) Appeal asks: “Are you
interested in the work of the Alliance?
Do you believe in the demands of the
order as amended at the Ocala conven¬
tion? If you do, it is your duty to sup
port papers that openly and boldly advo¬
cate those principles, and help spread
the light by getting your friends and
neighbors to support them also. If you
patronize papers whose chief mission is
to bind you to the truth and teach you
that you must trample on the grandest
and noblest principles if the welfare of
your party demands it, you are an in¬
grate, a tra tor to the cause, false to
your family and your country.
*
* *
The Atlanta Evening Journal of Tues¬
day, says: “Senator Gordon will soon b3
a member of the Alliance. He would
have been regularly initiated into the
mysteries of the order long before this
had it not been that he was unavoidably
absent. He returned a few r days ago
from New York and informed the officers
of the Edgewood Alliance, of which he
has been elected a member, that he was
ready to be initiated. There is some
provision of the order which requires
members to be initiated only at regular
meetings. the The next regular meeting of
Edgewood Alliance will be held on
the sixth of March, and then Senator
Gordon will present himself for initia¬
tion. The meeting will doubtless be a
most interesting and largely attended
one.”
*
* *
The rot being dished up to the people
about loans on land by those who oppose
the Alliance demands, is disgustingly
false in statement and dishonest in pur¬
pose. The constant reference to the Ar¬
gentine troubles as arising from land
currency is without a scintilla of fact
behind it. The assignats of the first
French republic were but the shadow 7 of
substantial currency, as they xvere
really government issues of money
redeemable from the sale of lands,
but they lacked the authority of a stable
government. They were promises of the
government to be paid from the pro¬
ceeds of lands declared to be confiscated,
and presented no guarantee that those
lands would be of sufficient value to re¬
deem the entire issue. The value of the
assignats, w 7 as further affected by the fact
that the claim of government to every
rood of the land was litigious, and that at
the time of their issue, and all during
the time they passed current, the nations
of Europe were combined in the field to
overthrow the authority under which
they were issued; that they were value¬
less as money is amply proven by after
facts, the principal of which is that they
were never in recognized time by the national
authority of peace. This alone
is indorsement of the judgment of the
people who refused to receive them in
exchange for the products of their labor.
For shame, that opponents can devise no
better argument than these false state¬
ments of history !—National Economist.
*
* *
The National Farmers’ Alliance at its
annual session at Omaha, Nebraska,
adopted the following resolutions:
7 hat we most emphatically declare
against the present system of government
as manipulated by the congress of the
L T nited States and the members of the
legislatures fore, of the several States; there¬
We declare in favor of bolding a con¬
vention on February 22d, 1892, to fix a
date and place for the holding of a con¬
vention to nominate candidates for the
office of president and vice-president of
the Vnited States.
We declare that in the convention to
be held on February 22, 1S92, that rep¬
resentation shall be one delegate from
each State in the Union.
That we favor the abolition of national
banks, and that the surplus funds be
loaned to individuals upon land security
at a low rate of interest.
That we demand the foreclosure of
mortgages that the government holds on
railroads.
That the President and Vice President
of the United States should be elected by
popular vote, instead of by an eiectoiial
college. Alliance
That the shall lake no part as
partisans in a political struggle by affiliat¬
ing with republicans or democra’s.
That we favor the free and unlimited
coinage of silver.
That the volume of currency be in¬
creased to $50 per eiptia.
That ail paper money be placed on an
equality with gold.
That we as land-owners pledge our¬
selves to demand that the government
allow us to borrow money from the
United States at fhe same rate of in¬
terest as do the banks.
That senators of the United States
shall be elected by vote of the people,
***
TIIE FARMERS’ ALLIANCE.
Texas is fairly alive with Alliances and
Alliancemen, and the very best, most in¬
telligent men, who were formerly, as
democrats or republicans, active against
each other, are uniting in every township
to form a party of the people.
These Alliances are virtually school
houses in which the correct principles of
political economy are being taught.
They are the well-springs of regenera¬
tion from political serfdom for the bene¬
fit of the Goulds, Quays Belmonts and
others, who can see nothing in the people
but beings to be found by legislation
that they may be bled and impoverished
at the leisure of the money leaders.
The Wall street machinery, now in the
one-man control of Jay Gould, during the
month withholding of November, 1890, by simply
$75,000,000 from business
uses, caused a depression in securities of
$500,000,000. Jay Gould, after a year of
quiet, got $75,000,000 where he could
dam it and prevent it flowing into the
market. The men found themselves as
an army with supply trains cut off. Fail¬
ure after failure; down went banks, busi¬
ness men and depositors by the thusands
—not alone iu New York, but iu every
city touched by the financial wires of
man’s This dependence is upon man.
called “operating” the market.
This is the direct result of so shortening
the volume of money that two or three
men can corner and control it.
The Wall street operators lose millions,
and to keep up the fever, the govern¬
ment pours millions of dollars into the
tariffs laps of aud gamblers, and in turn slaps the
the taxes upon the farmers.
The wealth producers are ground still
bodies, deeper in the soil waiting for their
aud the wealth absorbers go on
skinning each other, controlling cau¬
cuses, political parties and legislation.
The Barings fail for $100,000,000, and
banks rush to their rescue. A farmer
fails to produce enough from his land to
meet the interest on his mortgage, and
the law steps in and confiscates his home,
and he steps out a heart-broken man with
a heart-broken family.
Texas is an empire of itself. We pray
God that its Alliances may be even more
numerous than are its school houses, and
th it in each one may be taught - the
principles of financial reform, and thus
the punishment of robbers and the pie-
vention of panics.
The payment of the entire bonded
debt of the government in full legal ten¬
der greenback money.
7 he abolition of a system that permits
a government to pay interest money on
what it has the pewer to create.
The free and unlimited coinage of sil¬
ver as full legal tegal tender.
Carrying on the public improvements
not by taxation, but by the letting of
work to those who will receive their pay
in full legal tender greenback money,
never to be retired through the hocus
pocus drawing plan of converting it into interest¬
United States bonds, or any
other bonds on which the government
can guarantee or pay interest,
On with the Farmers’ Alliance! They
are the day star of our redemption from
bondage. All we can do to help on this
work is a labor of duty and of love for
humanity, and it will he done persist¬
ently .—Advance Thought.
FISHING IN THE AHCTIO.
When the Fish Are Pulled Out They
Instantly Freeze Solid.
Wherever there is a level field of this
season’s ice, inclosed by lines of hum¬
mocks, the fish are sure to be plenty.
Such a field as this, about half a mile
long, practically afforded a living to most
of the people in the village during the
season of 1883, because that year the ice
was very unfavorable for sealing, and
food was very scarce in the village,
writes * correspondent of Forest and
Stream.
The fishing children, is carried on mostly by the
women and though one or
two old men generally go out, and one
or two of the younger men, when they
cannot the house, go sealing will and food fishing is wanted at
join the party.
Each fisherman is provided with a
long-handled ice pick, which he fre¬
quently leaves sticking in the snow near
the strips fishing ground, a long line made of
of whalebone, reeled lengthwise on
a slender woodeu shuttle about 18 inches
and long, and provided w-ith a copper sinker
ivory, tw armed 7 o pear-shaped “jigs” of walrus
with four barbless hooks of
copper, and a scoop or dipper made of
reindeer antlers, with a wooden handle
about two feet long. Haidly an Esqui¬
maux, and especially no Esquimaux boy,
stirs out ol the house in the winter
without one of these scoops in his hand.
To every party of two or three there will
also be a good-sized bag of sealskin,
generally made of a piece of an old kayak
cover, for bringing home the fish. Ar¬
riving at the fishing ground, each pro¬
ceeds to pick a hole through the ice,
which is about four feet thick, clearing
out the chips with the scoop. The
“jigs” are then let down through the
hole, and enough tine unreeled to keep
them just clear of the bottom, where the
fish are playing about. The reel is held
in the right hand and serves as a short
rod, while the scoop is held in the left
hand and used to keep the hole clear of
the scum of new ice, which, of course,
is constantly forming. The line is kept
in constant motion, jerked up quickly a
short distance and then allowed to drop
b3ck, so that the little fish that are nos¬
ing about the white hooked “jigs,” after the
manner of codfish, are about the
jaw or in the belly.
As soon as a fisherman feels a fish on
his hook he catches up a bight of the
line with his scoop and another bel w
this with his reel, and thus reels up the
line on these two sticks in loose coils until
the fish is brought to the surface, when
a skillful toss throws him off the barbless
hook on the ice, where he gives one con¬
vulsive flap and instantly freezes solid.
The elastic whalebone line is thrown off
the sticks without tangling and paid out
through If fish the hole again for another trial.
are not found plenty at the first
hole, the fisherman shifts his ground un¬
til he “strikes a school.” They are
sometimes so plenty that they may be
hauled up. One woman will bring in
upwards of a bushel of little fish—they
are long—from generally about five or six inches
fishing lasts a single day’s fishing. This
until the middle of May,
when the ice begins to soften. A good
many are also caught along the shores in
November in about a foot of water, when
there are no tide cracks in the ice. At
this season the Esquimaux use a little
rod about two feet long, with a short line
and a little ivory squid, at which the
fish bite.
In remote parts of" France tSe rural post¬
men fear are being refusing attacked to go on their wolves. routes Near for
of by
Metz the wolves are very ravenous, and six¬
teen of the bloodthirsty animals have been
killed.
EXCITEMENT IN ROCHESTER.
The Commotion Cnaaed by tbe Statement
f of a Physician.
An unusual article from the Rochester,
N. Y., Demo’crat and Chronicle, was re¬
cently republished of in this paper and was a
subject caused much comment. That the ar¬
ticle even more commotion in Roch¬
ester, the following from the same paper
shows:
Dr. J. B. Henion, who is well known not
only in Rochester but in nearly every part
of America, sent an extended article to this
paper a few days since, which was duly pub¬
lished, detailing his remarkable experience
and rescue from what seemed to be a certain
death. It would be impossible to enumerate
the personal office enquiries which have been made
at our as to the validity of the article,
but they have been so numerous that fur¬
ther investigation of the subject was deemed
necessary.
With this end in view a representative of
this paper called on Dr. Henion, at his resi¬
curred: dence, when “That the article following interview oc¬
of yours, Doctor, has
created quite a whirlwind. Are the state¬
ments about the terrible condition you were
iu and the way you were rescued such as you
can sustain?”
“Everyone I of them and many additional
ones. the first and was brought so low by neglecting
not think I most simple It symptoms. I did
was sick. is true I had frequent
headaches; nothing felt tired most of the time; could
eat one day and was ravenous the
next; felt dull pains and my stomach was out
of order, but I did not think it meant any¬
thing serious.
“The medical profession has been treating
symptoms instead of disease for years, and
it is high ttfne it ceased. The symptoms I
have just mentioned, or any unusual action
or irritation of the water channels indicate
the approach of kidney disease more than a
cough We announces the the coming of consumption.
do not treat cough, but try to help
the lungs. We should riot waste our time
trying to relieve the headaches, pains about
the body or other symptoms, but go directly
to the kidneys, the source of most of these
ailments.”
“This, then, is what than you meant when you
said that more one-half the deaths
which Doctor. occur 9 ” arise from Bright’s disease, is it
* ‘.Precisely. Thousands of diseases are tor¬
Bright’s turing people disease to-day, in which in reality are
some of its many forms.
It is a Hydra-headed monster, and the slight¬
est symptoms should strike terror to every
one who has theta. I can look back and re¬
call hundreds of. deaths which physicians de¬
clared at the time were caused by paralysis,
apoplexy, heart disease, pneumonia, malarial
fever and other common complaints which 1
see now were caused by Bright’s disease.”
“And did all these cases have 6impla symp¬
toms at first?”
“Every one of them, and might have been
cured as I was by the timely use of the same
remedy. I am getting my eyes thoroughly
opened in this matter the facts and think their I am help¬
ing others to see and possible
danger also.”
Mr. Warner, who was visited at his estab-
ment on N. St. Paul street, spoke very ear¬
nestly:
“It is true that Bright’s disease had in¬
creased wonderfully, and we find, by reliable
statistics, that from ’70 to ’SO its growth was
over 250 per cent. Look at the prominent
men it has carried off, and is taking off every
year, for while many are dying apparently
of paralysis of kidney and apoplexy, disorder, they which are really
victims causes
heart disease, paralysis, apoplexy, etc.
Nearly every week the papers record the
death of some Recently, prominent man from this
scourge. however, the increase
has been checked, and I attribute this to the
general use of my remedy.” people
“Do you think many are afflicted
with it to-day who do not realize it, Mr.
Warner?”
“A prominent professor in a New Orleans
medical college was lecturing before his class
the subject of Bright’s disease. He had
various fluids under students microscopic what analysis, the in¬
and was showing the malady ‘And
dications of this terrible were.
now, gentlemen,’ indications, he said, ‘as I will we show have seen
'the unhealthy In state of perfect health,’ you
how it appears a
and he submitted his own fluid to the usual
test. As he watched the results his couute-
ance suddenly changed—his color trembling and com¬
mand both left him, and in a
voice he said: ‘Gentlemen, I have made a
painful discovery; I have Bright’s disease of
the kidneys;’ and in less than a year h9 was
dead. The slightest indications of any kid¬
ney difficulty should be enough to strike
terror to any one.”
“You know of Dr. Henion’s case?”
“Yes, I have both read and heard of it.”
“It is very wonderful is it not?”
“No more so than a great many others that
have come to my notice as having been cured
by the same means.”
“You believe then that Bright’s disease
can be cured.”
“I know it can. I know it from my own
and the experience of thousands of promi¬
nent persons who were given up to die by
both their physicians ana friends.”
“You speak of your own experience, what
was it?”
“A fearful one. I had felt languid But I and did
unfitted for business for years.
not know what ailed me. When, however, I
found it was kidney difficulty I thought I there
was little hope and so did the doctors. have
since learned that one of the gentleman physicians of
this city pointed me saying: out to ‘there a on
the street one day, goes I believe a man
who will be dead within a year.’
his words would have proved true if I had
net fortunately used the remedy now known
as Warner’s Safe Cure.”
•‘Did you make a chemical analysis of the
case of Mr. H. H. Warner some three years
ago, Doctor? was asked Dr. S. A. Baltimore,
one of th9 analysts of the State Board o£
Health.”
“Yes, sir.”
‘*What did this analysis show you?”
“A serious disease of the kidneys.”
“Did you think Mr. Warner could re¬
cover?”
“No, sir, I did not think it possible.”
“Do you know anything about the remedy
which cured him?”
“I have chemically analyzed it and find it
pure and harmless.”
The standing of Dr. Henion, Mr. Warner
and Dr. Lattimore in the community is be¬
yond question, and the statements they make
cannot for a moment b3 doubted. Dr.
Henion’s experience shows that Bright’s dis¬
ease of the kidneys is one of the most de¬
is ceptive exceedingly and dangerous of all diseases, that it
common, but that it can be
cured if taken iu time.
Visitor—M iss Devereaux is quite mu¬
sical. Host—Yes, very much so. Vis¬
itor—Docs she sing in English? Host—
She does; and I’m very sorry she doesn't
sing in Kalamazoo, or some other far
away place.— Exchange.
“Suggest a motto for my new businc ; s
venture, will you, Miss Agnes?” “What
is the business?” “A dairy farm.” “Then
suppose you take ‘let well alone .’”—The
Jester.
A man who has practiced medicine for 40
what years ought to know salt from sugar; read
he says:
Messrs. F. J. Cheney Tolf.do, O., Jan. 10, 1887.
have & Co.—Gentlemen:—I
been in the general practice of medicine
for most 40 years, and would say that in all
my practice and experience have never seen a
preparation that I could prescribe with as
m uch confidence of success as I can Hall’s (Ja-
tarrii Cure, manufactured by you. Have ive-
fc'cribed it a great many times and its eftem is
wonderful, and would say in conclusion that
1 have yet to find a case of Catarrh that it
would not cure, if they would take it accord¬
ing to direction®.
Yours truly,
L. L. (ionsccr?, M. D.,
We Office, 21»[Summit St.
will give $100 for any case of Catarrh
that cannot be cured with Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Taken in: erDally.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O.
fp” Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Fruits and Trees; Pdints for Tree Planters
This entire book is ably written and gives
trusty information for everyone growing fruit
of any sort or kind. Sent tree by Stark Bros.,
Louisiana, Mo .—Orange Judd Farmer.
For a disordered liver try Beecham’s
Pills.
FITS stopped free by Dil Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
Lottie free. Dr. Kline. 231 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
So¬ 1*1 iff ipf - vfg* Fsr »•§! i5 K jjjj 1
85 -3 ft tl SS S 3 p c a cxi cn £ * o » co QS II oS
eg li f! if £?8 Sr* 9? CL 9 * r « n BS
A Princely Donation.
The magnificent gift of Baron Hirseh
to the Hebrew emigrant charity and aid
fund of $2,400,000, has created much
comment and considerable interest in
philanthropic The deed circles.
of the munificent gift which
had been drawn up and signed by Baron
Hirseh, had been laid before the trustees,
as was a letter from the baron, instruct¬
ing them to draw upon him for the
amount on March 1. The gift is not
hnmpered by any restrictions whatever,
and will be immediately invested in this
country.
The income of the fund is expected to
be $10,000 a mouth, this being the sura
which has been paid by the transatlantic
donor in monthly remittances for over a
year. Baron Hirseh merely executes part
of his avowed intention of distributing
ihat portion of his fortune which he
wishes devoted to philanthropic purposes
during his lifetime. The income will be
pevoted entirely to the relief and educa¬
tion of Hebrew immigrants and their
chidren.
Girls do have some advantages, any¬
way! Of 500,000 girl babies born iu
Massachusetts, 364,222 reach the budding
age of fifteen. Of the same number of
boys, only 350,430 reach that age. In
the happy land of New Jersey, where
there are fewer factories and more
peaches and sw'eet potatoes, both babies
have a better chance and the figures staud
368,311 and 378,293.
Ladies needing a tonic, or children who
want Bitcers. building It pleasant up, should take Brown’s Iron
is to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion makes the Blood Jliiiousnesa rich and and Liver Complaints,
pore.
The man who spends much time in trying <o
please his enemies is one of the most foolish
of spendthrifts.
Dainty candies that children cry for are Dr.
Bull’s Worm Destroyers. They please the
children, but they kill the worms.
A pood illustration of faith, hope and chari¬
ty—the loan of an umbrella.
MOTHERS FRIEND
{U f
m M \ *P* lessenshto/
m E •
U jl . ; r
7 ai m
-pan •
WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD.
If a price can be placed on pain, “ Mother’s Friend ” is worth its weight in
My wife suffered more in ten minutes with either of her other two
children than she did altogether with her last, having previously used four
bottles of “Mother's Friend.” It is a blessing to any one expecting to be¬
come a mother. Geo. F. Lockwood, Carmi, III.
Write The Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta. Ga., for particulars, Sent by express, charges
on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. Sold by druggists.
A A &
50c. Apply Vlive^Relief Druggists 'into the or by Nostrils. mail. at once ELY - BROS., for It is Col<l (fuickly 50 Wanen in Head. Absorbed. SL, N. Y.| m
SEVEN SEVENTEEN ^SEVZMTY CURE Biliousness,
m > Sick Headache,
vp Malaria.
This Picture, Panel size, mailed for 4 cents.
J. F, SMITH & CO ■» BILE BEANS.
Makers of “ Bile Beans,”
255 & 257 Greenwich St., N. Y. City.
j.
4 1
IS 1 K
m§ tVr m •X Li
A
Arelote TofflliifdT - iT
Your health
is a citadel.
The winter’s
storms are the
coming' enemy. You know that this enemy will sit
down for five long months outside this citadel, and do its
best to break in and destroy. Is this citadel garrisoned
and provisioned? The garrison is your constitution. Is
it vigorous or depleted ? IIow long can it fight without
help? Have you made provision for the garrison by fur¬
nishing a supply of SCOTT’S EMULSION of
pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of
Lime and Soda ? It restores the flagging energies, in¬
creases the resisting powers against disease; cures Con -
sumption, Scrofula, Getteral Debility, and all Ancemic and
Wasting Diseases (especially in Children ), keeps coughs
and colds out, and so enables the constitution to hold the
fort of health. Palatable as Milk.
f
SPECIAL.—Scott’s Emulsion is non-sccrct, ana is prescribed by the Medical Pro¬
fession all over the world, because its ingredients ar» scientifically combined in such a
manner as to greatly increase their remedial value.
CAUTION.—Scott's Emulsion is put up in salmon-colored wrappers. I Be sure and
get Sold the genuine. Prepared only by Scott U liowne, Manufacturing Chemists , New York,
by all Druggists.
H iso .s UKMiiUV ) «Mi < ATAiJiiu.—Best. Easiest to use.
Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain, For
Cold in the liead it has no equal.
A A
It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the
nostrils. Price, 50c. Sold hy druggists or sent hy mail.
Addr ess. E. T. Hazki. tixk Warren, Pa.
,
_
CHICHESTER'S EnGLISH^^OWSS ^ ^^DlAMOND BRAND
J-adle*. the ORIGINAL AND GENUINE. The Diamond on!y Safe, 8ure,an1r«I;aMe Pi : l for sale. \
/ ask Druggist for Chichetter’s English Brand in lied and Gold metallic y
n/f JIJ boxes sealed frith blue ribbon. Take no other kind. Be/ute Substitutions ana Imitation*.
*4\-. . All pills in pasteboard boxe*, pink wrapper?, are daneerong counterfeit**. At Druggists, or send
{ *0'*- stamps for particulars, testimonials, and 4 *KeSlcf for I^ad!e*^ ,, in Utter, bj return Mail
\ W fl 10,000 Testimonials, flame Paper. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL Co., jHndifton Square,
■—r Sold by all Local 15ro«rl*t«. PBlLAOF.LPniA. PA.
KING COTTON
Buyor8e!l your Cotton op JONES
S2 jk a 11 #&5-Ton Cotton Scale.
not cheapest but best.
&£§ Nik. S 2 For terms address
'Sp U JONES BINGHAMTON. OF BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
PENSIONS _ cT!£t Is Passed.^,££ and PENSION Fathers Bill
$12 «n are ea-
titled to a mo
Blank, froe. t
BAGGY KNEES SS1S
Adopted by students at Harvard. business Amherst and other
Colleges, If also by for professional in and send men 25c. every¬
where. not sale your town tr
B. J. GKEELY, 715 Washington Street Boston.
a
I i NS I
%
J A
A
(is
l S;
"WHAT AN ASS AM II”
The ass thought himself as fine look¬
ing as his neighbor, the horse, until he,
one day, saw himself iu the looking-
glass, when he said “ What an ass am 11”
Are there not scores of people who
cannot see themselves as others see
them? They have bad blood, pim¬
ples, blotches, eruptions, and other kin¬
dred disfigurements. All these annoy¬
ing things could he entirely eradicated,
and the skin restored to “lily wiiite-
ness,” if that world-famed remedy, Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery,
were given a fair trial.
It cures all humors, from the ordi¬
nary blotch, pimple or eruption to the
wov-fc scrofula, or the most inveterate
blood-taints, no matter what their na¬
ture, or whether they be inherited or
acquired. The “Golden Medical Dis¬
covery” is the only blood - purifier
guaranteed to do just what it is rec¬
ommended to, or money refunded.
World’s Dispensary Medical As¬
sociation, Proprietors, No. C63 Main
Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
"Mother’s Friend" is the greatest
blessing I ever oflerod child-bearmg woman.
have been a. mid-wifc for many years. and
in each case where “ Mother's Friend "
had been used in has accomplished wonders
and relieved much suffering. It is the best
remedy for rising of the brew known, and
worth the price for that alone.
Mus. M. M. Bnusmn. Montgomery, Ala.
PROF. LOISETTE’S NEW
MEMORY BOOKS.
Criticisms on two recent Memory Systems. Read]
about April 1st. Full Tr.btes of Content* forwarded
only to those who send stamped directed envelope.
Also I'rospeetus POST FREE of the Boisettlan Art
of Never Forgetting. Address
Prof. LOISETTE, 287 Fifth Ave„ New York.
jfia &SS& 1|| 3 || g 1 8SS ggag| 3 cured •. n<A Whiskey at home Habits with-
1 i U a
p vtUzS n— r ■ mnm■ wn U.M.WOOLLEY.M.D.
'*£8? Atlanta, (ia. o ffice 10 4 % Whitehall St
the certain euro
jt^S I&MtUM Urdoalj by ths ™r/en We have year*, sold an nd Big it G has tor
ChttJal the best ef satis-
Cineinaati.tggPi faction.
Ohio. U *>• K - DYCHE & CO..
Izid£'***Ba(s^Eark181.00. Chicago, Ill.
Sold by Druggists.
«. „ Eight, 189L