Newspaper Page Text
Hood’s Cures
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Son of John L, M#Afurray
Of Ravcnswood, W. Va.
A Father’s Gratitude
Impels Him to Tell How His
Son Was Saved
White Swelling and Scrofula Cured.
“ I write this simply because I feel It a duty
to humanity, so that others affected as my son
was may knowhow to be cured. Whea
he was 7 years old a white swelling came on
his right leg below the knee, drawing his leg
up at right angles, and causing him intense
suffering. He could not walk and I considered
him
A Confirmed Cripple.
The swelling was lanced and discharged freely.
At length we decided to take him to Cincin¬
nati for a surgical operation. He was bo weak
and poor we gave him Hood's Sarsaparilla to
build up his strength. To our great sur¬
prise, Hood’s Sarsaparilla not only gave
strength but caused the sore, after discharging
HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
several pieces of bone, to entirely heal up. His
leg straightened out, and he now runs every¬
where, as lively as any boy.” J. L. McMur-
RAT, Notary Public, Ravenswood, W. Va.
flood’s Pills ore the best after-dinner Pills, as¬
sist digestion, cure headache. Try a box.
‘August Flower”
My wife suffered with indigestion
and dyspepsia for years. Life be¬
came a burden to her. Physicians
failed to give relief. After reading
one of your books, I purchased a
bottle of August Flower. It worked
like a charm. My wife received im¬
mediate relief after taking the first
dose. She was completely cured—
now weighs 165 pounds, and can eat
anything she desires without any
deleterious results as was formerly
the case. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Wash¬
ington House, Washington, Va. <D
AN ASTONISHING
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
McELHEE’8
OF
CARDUI
It Strengthens the Weak, Quidts th#
Nerves, Relieves Monthly
Suffering and Cures
FEMALE DISEASES.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT.
B1.00 PER BOTTLE.
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CLEVELAND’S CABINET.
His Official Family Announced
Before the Inauguration.
Biographical idential Sketches of the Pres¬
Advisers.
In defiance of numerous precedents in the
case Mr. Cleveland removed the ban of
secrecy which usually makes the composi¬
tion of the Presidential cabinet a mystery
until the inauguration, and as fast as he had
chosen his advisers and their acceptances of
the positions were receive! official an¬
nouncement of the fact was made from the
“Little Wijite House’' at Lakewood, N. J.
The list of appointments as thus given out,
supplemented by a biographical sketch of
each cabinet minister, is as follows:
of Secretary Illinois. of State—Walter Q. Gresham,
lisle, Secretary Kentucky. of the Treasury—John G. Car-
of
New Postmaster-General—Wilson York. S. Bissell, ol
New Secretary York. of War—Daniel S. Lamont, of
tert, Secretary of of the Navy—Hilary A. Her-
Alabama.
Massachusetts. Attorney-General—Richard Oiney, of
Georgia. Secretary of the Interior—Hoke Smith, of
Morton, Secretary Nebraska. of Agriculture—J. Sterling
of
Secretary of State.
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WALTER Q. GRESHAM.
Judge Walter Quintin Gresham, who will
occupy a seat in the Cleveland Cabinet as
Secretary 1832, of State, was born on March 17,
in a queer old farmhouse near Lanes-
ville, Harrison County, Ind. His father,
William Gresham, was Sheriff of a back-
woods county, and when Walter was two
vears old the father was shot while attempt¬
ing to arrest an outlaw by the name of
Spies. J udge Gresham was then next to the
youngest of five small children. His mother
was poor and owned a small farm. She
together, managed by hard work to keep the family
and and, as a boy, Walter followed the
plow studied by night. When sixteen
years of age he obtained a clerkshln in the
County Auditor’s office, and with the
money earned defrayed his expenses at
school and at Bloomington University.
Returning to Corydon he studied law in
the office of Judge W. A. Porter. When
mitted twenty-two years of age he was ad¬
to the bar. In politics
he was Party a Whig, and joined the Republi¬
can when it was organized. His
partner which was a delegate to the convention
nominated John C. Fremont in 1856,
and young Greshan stumped the State for
the Pathfinder. In 1869 Gresham was elect¬
ed on the Republican ticket to the Legisla¬
ture. When the war broke out his constitu¬
ents wished him to return to the Legislature
but Gresham wouldn’t have it, and enlisted
as a private in the Thirty-eighth Regiment.
Almost immediately he was made its Lieu¬
tenant Colonel. At Leggett’s Hill, before
Atlanta, he was shot in the knee, and he has
never since that time recovered from the
effects of the wound. After the
surrender of Vicksburg Grant and Sherman
recommended that he be made a Brigadier-
General, and shortly after he received his
commission. In 1865 he was brevetted a
Major-General. After being mustered out
he started to practice law at New Albany,
Ind. Two positions were offered him under
General Grant as President and he refused
both. He ran for Congress twice and was
defeated by Michael C. Kerr. In 1869 he
for was Indiana appointed United Utates District Judge
and accepted. He was Post¬
master-General under President Arthur.
At the close of President Arthur’s
term he was made Secretary of the Treas¬
ury, but only held the position for a short
time. Subsequently he became United
In States 1868 Judge he for the Seventh Judicial Court.
made some remarkable decisons
in the celebrated Wabash cases. He was a
candidate for the Republican nomination for
President in 1884 and again in 1888. He
seceded from his party m the last compaign
and announced his intention of voting for
Grover Cleveland.
Secretary of the Treasury.
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JOHN G. CARLISLE.
John Griffin Carlisle, who resigned his
seat in the Senate in order to accept the po¬
sition of Secretary of the Treasury, is a na¬
tive of Campbell (now Kenton) County,
Kentucky, where he was born on September
5,1835. He received his schooling from the
common schools of the county and subse¬
quently became a school teacher at Coving¬
ton. He began the study of law, and in 185S,
at the age of twenty-three, practice he was admitted
to the bar. He began at Covington
and met with almost immediate success.
When the war opened he was a member of
the Kentucky Le:islature. After the war
he served in the State Senate and as Lieu¬
tenant-Governor. la 1876 hs was elected to
represent the Covington District in Con¬
gress and was re-elected biennially thereaf¬
ter up to 1893, when, on May 17, he was
cho-en to complete the term of James B.Beck,
deceased, in the United States Senate. As a
member of Congress he ranked high as an
authority on fiscal an i economic subjects.
He served as Speaker of the Forty-eighth,
Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses. He
was a recognized leader in the Senate, where
in debate he was ready and sometimes ag¬
gressive. When speaking ha was deliberate
and undemonstrative. He was a careful
student and a hard worker.
Postmaster-General.
Wilson Shannon Bissell, who succeeds Mr.
IVanamaker as Postmaster-General, is a Buf¬
falo lawyer. He was born in New London, N.
Y., December 31,1847, and when he was six
years old his parents removed to Buffalo. He
studied in the schools of that city, and then
entered Yale At the age of twenty-two he
had graduated and was studying law with
A. P. Lansing, who subsequently formed a
partnership with Mr. Cleveland and Oscar
Folsom. In 1S72 Mr. Bissell formed a part¬
nership with Lyman K. Bass, and a year
later the firm became Bass, Cleveland &
Bissell. The firm dissolved on the removal
of Mr. Bass to Colorado and the election of
Mr. Cleveland as Governor. Mr. Bissell re¬
organized the firm with new partners and
built up a large practice. He is regarded as
an able railroad lawyer. He has been Presi¬
dent of two or three small railroads in the
western part of New York State and Penn¬
sylvania. He is also a director in a number
of corporations. He is a man of strong con-
is v.ctions, President but is uniformly Buffalo good naturea. He
of the Clu b, a nd Mr.
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WILSON S. BISSELL.
Cleveland is very fond or him. vv nen air.
Cleveland was married Mr. Bissell acted as
best maD.
Secretary of War.
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DANIEL SCOTT LAMONT.
Daniel Scott Lamont, who is to be Presi¬
dent-elect Cleveland’s Secretary of War, is
now forty-one years old. He was N. Y. born For at
Cortlandville, thirty-five Cortland County, time his
years, up to a short ago,
father was a storekeeper in a Cortland
County town called McGrawville. Mr. La-
mont’s first work was performed time as his
father’s clerk, and at the same he at¬
tended school. He entered Union College in
1872, and even before his graduation was
something of a politician. When he was
nineteen he was Deputy Clerk in the Assem¬
bly, and at twenty, which was in 1871, he
was a delegate to the Democratic State Con¬
vention at Rochester. When Lamont was
twenty-one he was nominated by the Demo¬
crats lor County Clerk of Cortland County,
but lost. In 1874 he ran for Assembly and
lost by a few votes only. He then became
Deputy Clerk of the Assembly at Mr. Til-
den’s request. Subsequently he was ap¬
pointed Chief Clerk of the State organized Depart¬
ment. When Governor Tilden
the party in the State he called upon young
Lamont, among others, for assistance. In
1875, during the State campaigtf, he was
Secretary of the State Committee. He was
actively engage 1 in every campaign Grover up to
the time he went to Washington as When
Cleveland’s Private Secretary.
Cleveland was Governor, Mr. Lamont ac¬
cepted the post of Military Secretary of the
Staff, and the position carried with it the
title of Colonel. When in 1889 Mr. Cleve¬
land retired to private life Mr. Lamont ac¬
cepted an offer from William C. Whitney
and Oliver H. Payne and became associated
with them in the projects of the Metropoli -
tan Traction Company. Mr. Lamont is of
i quiet disposition. He is slow when talking
tnd of modest demeanor. He married Miss
J ulia Kenney of Cortland in 1874, and they
aave three children.
Secretary ot the Navy,
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HILARY A. HERBERT.
‘He, Hilary A. Herbert was born at Laurens-
* S. C., on March 12, 1834. He removed
to Greenville, Ala., in 1846, and was educr-
ted University at the University Virginia. of He Alabama and the by
of is a lawyer
profession, having been admitted to the bar
just before the war. He has served sixteen
years in Congress. During much of his Con¬
gressional career he Naval has been a member ol
the Committee on Affairs, having
been made Chairman of that Committee
about the beginning of Mr. Cleveland’s
former term. During this time he has
worked zealously for the interest of the Navy,
which has earned for him the title of the
Congressional time the Civil Secretary War broke of the Navy. Mr. Herbert At the
out
entered the Confederate service as a captain
and was soon promoted to the Colonency of
disabled the Eighth Alabama Volunteers. the Wilderness, He was in
at the battle of
1S64. At the close of the war he resumed
bis law practice, and in 1872 removed to
In Montgomery, 1876 he which has since been his and home.
was elected to Congress re¬
elected in 1878, 1880, 1882, 1884, 1885, 1888
and 1890. He is a widower, with three chil¬
dren—a married daughter, a younger
daughter circles, who is popular in Washington so¬
ciety is shorter and a son at school. His left
arm than his right, the result of
injuries In received Washington in the battle of the Wilder¬
ness. Mr. Herbert lives at
the Metropolitan Hotel.
Secretary ot Interior.
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HOKE SMITH.
Hoke Smith, of Georgia, name! as Secre¬
tary of the Interior, is thirty-eight years
old and was born in North Carolina. Hi*
father was H. H. Smith, and the new comer
was named Hoke after his mother, who wai
a Miss Hoke. The Hokes are an eminent
Southern family, and are represented ■ He in
North Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee.
began to practice law in Atlanta in 1876,
gnd he stands well in the profession. Mr,
Smith is over six feet tall and weighs about
250 pounds. He has regular features and a
deathly dication pale comp exioD, which is not knows an in-
of bad health for he scarcely
what it is to be ill. la some wavs he bears
a forcible resemblance to Mr.' Cleveland.
His fame has been won as a politician and
not as a lawyer. He is the owner of the At-
lanta Journal, an afternoon newspaper, but
does not claim to be an editor. The income
from his law business is estimated to be from
f30,000 to f35,000 a year. He is known
throughout Georgia and in Alabama as an
anti-corporation lawyer, and the big suits
against railroad companies which he has
won for his clients are numbered in the hun¬
dreds. Mr. Smith married in 1S83 the daugh-
ter of Howell Cobb, ex-Governor of Georgia,
a Confederate Treasury General, who wa 9 Pierce. Secretary
of the under President He
has three children
Attorney-General.
Richard Olnev was born in Oxford,
Mass., September 15. 1835, and He is a member
of the Massachusetts bar. was gradu¬
ated from He Brown University Harvard in the class of
’56. studied law at the Law
School, Benjamin and entered the law offices of Judge
F. Thomas, in Boston, in 1859. He
advanced rapidly in his profession and was
for many years counsel for the Eastern
Railroad Company, and after the consoli¬
dation was retained as counsel for the Bos¬
ton & Maine, a position which he now holds.
He is also counsel for the Atchison, Topeka
& Santa Fe and Chicago, Burlington &
was never actively engaged in politics. He
has on several occasions refused to accept
public preference to confine himself to his
jaw practice. He has at least twice refused
to accept a place on the bench of the Su-
preme Court of his State, Governor Russell
having the been desirous to appoint Mr. him when
last vacancy occurred. Oiney served
one term in the lower branch of the Massa-
chusetts Legislature in 1874, and once ac¬
cepted the Democratic nomination for At¬
torney-General of the State, although it
was only an honorary nomination. When
the vacancy occurred in the office of Chief
Justice of the United States, Mr. Olney’s
name was presented to President Cleveland,
but the appointment went to Melville M.
Secretary of Agriculture.
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J. STERLING MORTON,
J. Sterling Morton was born in Adams,
Jefferson County, N. Y., April 23, 1832.
While ye. a boy his parents removed to
Michigan, Albion where he attended the school Uni¬ at
and subsequently at the State
Union versity at Ann New Arbor. York, He went later to
ated in College, 1854. the of where he gradu¬
At age twenty-two he
married Miss Caroline Jay French, and
started almost immediately with his bride
for the West. He located first at Bellevue,
but shortly afterward removed to Nebraska
City, where he became the editor of the Ne-
braska City News, which position he held
fora number of years. . \\
MILLIONAIRE MACKAY SHOT,
He Narrowly Escapes Death at the
Hands of an Assassin.
A San Francisco special says: John
W. Mackay, the many times millionaire,
mining Postal man and financial backer of the
Company, Telegraph and Commercial Cable
was shot in the back Friday
and badly wounded. The assailant then
shot himself in the breast and is reported
dying wound in is the hospital. Mr. Mackav’s
The not thought to be who dangerous.
name of the man attempted
to kill John Mackay is W. C. Rippey.
He was undoubtedly insane. He had in
his pocket a letter addressed to a morn-
ing paper, in which the writer stated
that he was seven ty-three years of age.
It was signed “W. C. Rippey.” There
was also upon him an envelope bearing
the name of Dr. L. L. Lincoln. On the
back of the envelope were the words:
The end is not yet.” Upon a sheet of
paper, under the heading, “Food for Re¬
flection” were the words: “Paid $150,-
forehead 000 for one sapphire, to place on the
of his wife—a sufficient amount
to have saved at least five hundred of his
victims from suicidal graves. Just think
of it. Inscribe it upon his tomb.”
John W. Mackay made a great fortune
in western mines. His wealth is esti¬
mated at thirty million or more. He left
the west several years ago and located m
New York He is one of the leading
capitahsts of the country and his mvest-
ments are everywhere. He is a large
owner m the Mackay-Bennett Cable and
the Postal Telegraph companies
Mackay’s wound proves to be only a
severe flesh wound. Rippey has been
identified as a man once wealthy, but
who squandered his fortune in mining
stock gambling. He had no acquaintance
with Mackay at any time in his life, and
Mackay was in no manner connected
with his misfortunes. His brain ha 9
been turned for several years.
PREPARING FOR WAR.
Orangemen Staying Rifles to Resist
the Home Rnle Parliament.
A London cablegram of Wednesday
Bays: It is reported from Belfast,Ireland,
that Orange societies in the north of
Ireland are preparing for forcible resist-
ance to the home rule parliament, should
one be established. It is being arranged
that all Irish opponents of home rule
shall simultaneously withdraw their de¬
posits from the posteffice savings banks
and purchase arms to be used in case phys¬
ical force should become necessary to pre¬
vent the assertion of Irish home rule in
Ulster. Inquiries are already being made
with the view to oontracts for a supply
of the latest improved weapons, and an
Orange club at Dungannon has received
an offer from a Birmingham factory of
one thousand Martini rifles. Excitement
is running very high ataong Ulster loyal¬
ists, and many of them declare that in
event of the enactment of the home rule
bill, civil war will inevitably ensue.
ENDORSING THE APPEAL.
An Address to the American Friends
Of Home Rule.
A New York .pecial »y.: Tbe Nation-
al T eaeration Ol America, on Friday,
issued the following address: *
“To friends of Home Bole in America : The
appeal British made parliament by the asking Irish national aid to enable party in the
them
to secure a final victory for home rule in Ire-
land deserves a hearty response from every
friend of liberty in America who will assist in
National winning this final battle for home rule. The
Federation of America earnestly en¬
dorses the declaration and the appeal of the
national party and asks every man worthy of
association in the cause to do bis duty now.
All contributions through this office wifi be
promptly forwarded.
Worn Out Every Pay
With hard work, business anxietv, mental
desk application, exposure, close confinement at the
or the loom, thousands who fail to recu-
perate their waning strength “give in” before
V i«£’ the 8UI St protector ag?in*t the host of
ailments which travel in the wake of declin-
ing strength. Indigestion, malaria, rheu-
mafic, nervous, liver and bowel trouble give in
to the Bitte
w S?g5j|VtSd?r 1 _ , tougbt . . . unaer NhiSSSm . apoieou ... at \ aterioo. , .. ,, nnn
A True Lady.
Wildness . thing which , . cannot
is a giris
afford. Delicacy is a thing which cannot
be lost or found' No art can restore the
grape its bloom. Familiarity without
confidence, without regard, is destruc¬
tive to all that makes women exalting
and ennobling. It is the first duty of a
woman to be a lady. Good breeding is
good sense. Bid manners in a woman
are immorality. Awkardness may be
ineradicable. BashfulDess is constitu-
tional. Ignorance of etiquette is the
Tesu it of circumstances. All can be con-
doned, aud not banish men and women
from the amenities of their kind.
But self-possessed, unshrinking and
aggressive coarsness of demeanor
may be reckoned as a «.te prison of-
fense , and certainly merits that mild
form of restraint called imprisonment for
life. It is a shame for women to be lec-
! tured the ’ It is bitter
0I1 lr manner s. a
! 6datne . that ,~ they need it. Do not . , be
re¬
strained—carry yourself so lofty that men
will look up to you for reward,not at you
! \ D rebuke. The natural sentiment of man
i teward woman is reverence. He loses a
i large means of grace when he is obliged
to account her a being to be trained in
| propriety. A man’s ideal is not wounded
when woman fails in wordly wisdom;
but if in grace, in tact, in sentiment, in
delicacy, in kindness, she should be
fouud wanting, he receives an inward
hurt. —Gail Hamilton.
A Favorite Breed,
First Boy—“Is that a good watch¬
dog?”
Second Boy—“No.”
“Good bird-dog?”
“Nope.”
“Good for rabbits?”
“Nope.”
“Knows some tricks, maybe?”
“Nixie.”
“What is he good for?”
“Nawthin, only to take prizes at dog
shows.—Street & Smith’s Good News.
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ONE BNJOYS
n ottl a it method ,i j and . resultB When ,
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Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; it is pleasant.
to the taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels aud colds, head¬
cures habitual
constipation. only Syrup of Figs is the
duced, remedy pleasing of its kind ever pro¬
to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its to and the truly stomach, prompt in
action beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy excellent and agreeable substances, its
many all and have qualities made it commend it
to the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known.
is for sale in 50 c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any have reliable druggist who
may not it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. l)o not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N.Y.
D elicate mio»:
Or Debilitated Women, .hould use
BRADFIELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR,
Every ingredient possesses sunerb Tonic
properties and exerts a wonderful infiu-
ence in toning up and strengthening he-
channels system, by driving through the proDe*-
all impurities. Health and
strength guaranteed to result from its use
<««*» « My wife, who was bedridden for oi K h.
^uing months, after using Sradfteld>a
w ? <di*’’ <or f ° r two momlls 13
j. M. Johnson, Malvern, Ark.
gold ° D ” y E Dni^'C ru S= loU 0 f LA at t < *i » • 00“ per At!anta bottle, ’ Ga -
Unlike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
— or—
Other Chemicals
are used in the
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
»1 ■M lllBreakfastCocoa fM g j 5 \ which is absolutely
i | : fV Va pure and soluble.
i I s ift f ' ' j | j the It has strength more than of Cocoa three mixed times
.w. i i«\vith Starch, Arrowroot or
Sugar, and is far more eco¬
nomical, costing _ less than cent
one a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and easily
digested. _
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
~/Z-
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TAKE f | L
-tHEBEST CURE.
Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore
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It any one doubts that
blood h I we can cure the rn j*tob-
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S A SPECIALTY. I o^-“Sn“' 1 iit nT ol-
financial backing
tiOO.OOO. When mercurr,
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thing that will cure permanently. Positive proof sent
sealed,fr©o. coo* rxmpt co.,Chicago,in.
ARE YOU PRETTY?
Are ron happy and healthy ? That I waa \*vi
neither—you may §ee by THIS'JW// * '
Am Iao now ? You may easily j udge by ~-
TKXS* If you are ill, tired oat, have de
afectfi \icr of figure or compiexion, write me at on
advice, photos, Journal—FREE. (Postage 2 c
»E<3. Woman's Own Journal, San Francisco, Cal
BOYS! Here's a snap. Setd
■ 10 cts. with name and address of
7 6 boys who read stories and get
Boys’ World regularly for 6 rnos.
Seven complete stories In Feb. No.
Sampl- copy for stamp. Borg’ World, Lyon, Mass,
Help in (he House.
In families where there are many indi¬
viduals who do not aid in the house¬
work, and in all families where there are
many little children, the wife and moth¬
er should have “help” if it can be had.
If the expense can be saved from dress,
dress more plainly by all means. “Is
the life more than meat, and the body
tban raiment?” If it can be saved from
cigars, tobacco or the “occasional g’ass,”
cr from clubs, secret societies and the¬
atres, let the man by all means save it
there, and scorn to feed needless indul¬
gences with his wife’s flesh and blood.
And if it can be saved out of a bank ac¬
count, save it from that, and instead of
treasure locked up in a vault, have a
beaming, smiling, hopeful treasure of
womanhood at the fireside—all of which
a wife “tired to death” cannot be,
though she have the affecion of a Ruth
and the devotion of a Hannah.
A Word
To American Housewives.
&0 fat*/ ~
3-J yfdcA
Author of “Common Sense in the Household."
£ CO iBBBHBSISEESWI Syrup.IM We offer
The Best Cough
iTastes Sold by Good. Druggists. Use in time.BJ g)
CONSUMPTION you a ready
made medicine tor Coughs,
Bronchitis and other dis¬
eases of the Throat and
Lungs. Like other so called
Patent Medicines, it is well
advertised, and having merit
it has attained a wide sale
under the name of Piso’s
Cure for Consumption.
* ★ *r
I City Lucas of Toledo,)
L State Co., JS. S.
—1 .v’ of Ohio. )
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner
of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and
every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of
HALL’S CATARRH CURE
Sworn to before me, and subscribed in my presence,
this 6th day of December, A. D. 1889.
NOTARIAL SEAL ■p : A. W. GLEASON,
: LUCAS CO., O. : 8 Notary Public.
CATARRH HALL’S CURE a A If ARRI
IS TAKEN .fSm
INTERNALLY, and u
the acts Blood directly and
upon
mucous surfaces.
TBSTIMOKTIAIjS :
wonderfuL ” 6 Write h/mTbout burG * c^of
Ball’s Catarrh Cure Is Sold by all Dealers in Patent Medicines
PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE.
THE ONLY GENUINE HALL'S CATARRH CURE IS
manufactured by
F. J. CHENEY & CO.,
TOLEDO, O.
Testimonials sent free“ODlication. • BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE
I
V y
r
L
m
jJExcIueive srie to shoe dealersand general merchants where no agents. Writeforcata-
MUST HAVE
f ig a day. Write quick. gsoHasP, Phlla.. Pa.
America Good Enough.
Father public (looking schools up from of his Austria paP er they );~
“In the
now teach chess.” and stuaj . a
Boy—“I’d rather stay here
football.”—Street & Smith’s Good News.
Six Hundred Fine Her.ee ut Auction
Parmer, Nashville, Teun., for catalogue.
If you have no employment, or are bafn*
&s& 2 ws?jaate? ‘ssf
If afflicted wrrh sore eves use Dr- IsaacTliomp- bottle.
son’s Eye-water.Drugg reist» sell at 25c per
Onrold reliable eye-water cures weak or in-
A sewed shoe that will not rip; Calf, seamless, smooth inside,
more comfortable, stylish and durable than any other shoe ever sold at the
price. Every style. Equals custom-made shoes costing from $4 to $5.
Other Specialties as follows:
$ 4.00& $ 5.00 $ 2.00& *1.75
Fine Sewed Shoes. For Boys and Youths.
Farmers, Police, etc. *3.00 Sewed. Hand-
*2.50, *2.25, *2.504*2.00
* For Ladies.
2.00 *1.75
For Working Men. Misses.
BEWARE OF FRAUD.
ia“wl°£.T> . . . , UGlA.?’sfi , 4 _
0 B:
None genuine withont W. price L.
stamped Dougins name and Look for
it on bottom.
when you bay.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
£75 llS&Vr. 1 ? TttLSZS'
A. N. U Nine, 93.
It is now a “Nostrum,”
though at first it was com¬
pounded after a prescription
by a regular physician, with
no idea that it would ever
go on the market as a propr ie-
tary medicine. But after
compounding that prescrip¬
tion over a thousand times in
one year, we named it “Piso’s
Cure for Consumption,” and
began advertising it in a
small way. A medicine
known all over the world is
the result.
Why is It not just as good
as though costing fifty cents
to a dollar for a prescription
and an equal sum to have it
put up at a drug store?
IT IS A DUTY youoweyour-
self to get the best value for
JSKESY,- Douglas Sheet, SKBKln’viLT which
the best value the repre-
sent advertised, at prices
testify. as thousands can
DO YOU WEAR THEM?
«
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