Newspaper Page Text
AneedotM of the Late Johns Hopkins.
He left $9,000,000, a moiety of which
was divided between eighteen relatives,
and the bulk retained for a university
and several hospitals. The nephenv whs
was often at variance with him reeeiv<M
almost twice as much as his brothers
who never contradicted him. Mr. Hop
kins never married. The daughters of
Epaminondas were that hero’ll famous
victories. The children of Johns Hop
kins are the splendid institutions lie has
left to learning, to mercy and to sci
ence. There never was a stronger man.
He started life with S4OO, and built up,
bv his own exertions, a colossal flrtuife.
From the beginning he declared that he
had a mission from God to increase his
store, and that the golden flood that
poured into his coffers did not belong to
him or to the hundreds who sought to
borrow or beg it from him. He declared
that a supernatural power prevented him
from taking money from his pocket to
bestow foolish alms, and that seme day
the world would know that he was not the!
grasping, avaricious and narrow-minded
man he was accounted. He nevertheless
helped secretly many worthy persons,
and after his death it was discovered
that not a few merchants had been
saved by him from financial embarrass-"
ment and sorrow.
An uncanny old tramp used to station
himself under a giant oak that stood sen
try by the lodge of “Clifton.” This
made Mr. Hopkins nervous and became
a mortal offense. He told one of his
nephews of it and said he did not know
how to abate the nuisance. “ Why not
pay him, uncle, and send him away?”
queried the young man. “Pay him
money 1” Mr. Hopkins shrieked, while
his long arms flew about like windmills;
“pay him money ! God forbid ! When
I do that there will be a hundred vaga
bonds here instead of one!” “Well,
then,” added the nephew, “if I wire
you, Uncle John, I would kick him
out.” “I cannot do that,” the old man
pleaded, “I am afraid !” “Wliat!” the
nephew retorted, “are you afraid of
such a cur as that ?” “ No, no !” Mr.
Hopkins whispered hoarsely, “ I am not
afraid of him, but afraid of God. Did
you never read in tire Bible how Dives
treated Lazarus ? Would you have me
repeat the story and burn in hell forev
er ?” That ended it.
On one of the last days of his earthly
existence Mr. Hopkins called his de
voted gardener to him and said : “I am
beginning to hate this place, because it
does not bring in money. I hate every
thing that does not bring in money.
Did you ever feed hogs ? Have you not
observed that the strong animals bear
away the ears of corn and that the weak
er ones pursue them squealingly, in
hopes that all or some of the treasure
will be lost or dropped ?” The gardener
replied that the sketch was a true one.
“ Well, then,” said Mr. Hopkins, “I
am that strong hog. I have that big
ear of corn, and every piggish rascal in
Baltimore is intent upon stealing it or
wresting it from me! Sir,” he said,
turned brusquely to the gardener, “do
you think a very rich man is happy ?”
The gardener answered : “The extreme
of poverty is a sad thing. The extreme
of wealth, no doubt, bears with it many
tribulations.” Mr. Hopkins rejoined :
“You are right, my friend ; next to the
hell of being utterly bereft of money is
the purgatory of possessing a vast
amount of it. I have a mission, and un
der its shadow I have accumulated
wealth, but not happiness. ”
In the Matter of Stockings.
The United States Supreme Court has
rendered a decision of considerable im
portance involving the customs duties
on woolen stockings. The practice of
weighing stockings and charging for them
by the pound, as they do sausage, has
long been repulsive to the refined sensi
bilities of the aesthetic portion of the
people, and the Supreme Court has
struck a popular chord in holding that
the pound charge is illegal and that
stockings shall be admitted at the duty of
thirty-five per cent, ad valorem only.
The ground of the decision is that stock
ings are in a sense works of art, and that
it lias been the purpose of the legislation
on tariff to encourage art by admitting
its productions at the lowest rate of duty.
Recently the same Court decided that a
plain porcelain plate is dutiable at the
rate of fifty per cent., while a plate of
the same material on which a picture has
been painted shall be admitted at the
rate of ten per cent. Consistency, there
fore, demanded that the stocking, which
is a work of art., should pay a less rate of
duty than a man’s wool hat.. The Court
states that its members have ob
served that stockings are elaborately
embroidered in colors, ornamented with
flowers and stripes, arranged in a manner
truly artistic. Where the elderly gentle
men of the Bench observed these things
is not stated, but as the windows of the
Court-room overlook the back yard of a
Treasury clerk’s boarding house it is
presumed they got their information
from the appearance of the clothes-line
on wash-days. However that may be,
the fact of the artistic ornamentation of
stookings is clearly affirmed The Court
further states that because of the pound
duty on stockings the fashion of weariug
long stockings has been threatened; that
a lady correspondent in New York chron
icles the arrival of an importation of
stockings for ladies’ wear winch are not
longer than the men’s wear. There is no
eight-to-seven business about this deci
sion. The justices may divide on such
minor questions as the election of a Pres
ident, but they are solid in regarding
stookings as works of art entitled to what
ever encouragement a low rate of duty
can give.— Milwaukee ( BYs.) Rrpub
lican.
Recreation.
In • lector* by Dr. Romanes, of Lon
don, before the National Health Society,
the physiology of recreation was brietly
described as consisting merely in a re
building np, reforming or recreation of
organs and tissues that have become
partly disintegrated by. the exhausting
effects of work. It tans appears that
the one essential principle of all recrea
tion most be variety—that is, the sub
stitution of one set of activities for an
other, and, consequently, the successive
affording of rest to bodily structures as
they become successively exhausted;
and so the undergraduate finds recrea
tion m rowing, because it gives his brain
time to recover its exhausted energies,
while the historian and the man of sci
ence find mutual relief to their respect
ive faculties m each other’s labor*
(}*! J j?
An employe of the Italian Lotto ad
ministration has published an,, interest
ing pamphlet respecting the lotto play
ing in Italy, to which rich stud ppor,
learned and unlearned, are addicted with
equal passion, and which contributes a
considerable to ihkGovernment rgyeque.
Not countirfg'The Island of Sardinia, the
lottery in 1879 brought no less than
67,513,269 lire into the treasury. The
total amount df prizes was
lire. The sixty-seven chief provincial
towns, with 629 lottery offices and a
population of 4> 4,019,520 inhabitants,
caused the enorniofis sum of 43,-
031,814 lire to flow into the treasury.
The rural districts, with 1,102 offices
and 22,145,074 inhabitants, contributed
24,451,454 lire; in other words, the pop
ulation of the chief provincial towns paid
a voluntary tax of 10 lire 71 centesiaii
per capita, tiie^raldi^c^^y
able to read and write, and a population
of 10,533,884 souls, spent 21,689,808 lire
for lottery, placing, i. e., 2.06 lire per
capita, and" the remaining ones 2.22 lire
for each inhabitant. People play more
where the game is facilitated by a large
number of lottery offices.
Twenty-four provinces with 1,279 offi
ces expended 52,228,277 lire ; the other
43 provinces with 452 offices only 15,-
285,011 lire, making an average of 4 lire
17 centesimi for the former and 1 lire 12
centesimi a head for the latter. In those
provinces which pay a larger quota of
taxes the inhabitants are more given to
playing. Asa curious and at the same
time regrettable fact be it mentioned
that the city of Turin, with 39 per cent,
of persons unable to read and write,
pays on an average 10.73 lire a head to
the lotto administration; Milan, with an
equal percentage, 9.41 lire; Venice,
47 per cent., 14.70 lire; Genoa, with 68
per cent., 8.06 lire ; Rome, with 60 per
cent., 19.91 lire ; Florence, with 65 per
cent., 16.33 lire; Bologna, with 68 per
cent., 6.70, and Naples, with 69 per
cent., 19.91 lire. — Wiener AUyemcine
Zeitung .
A Bea Waif.
Avery curious anecdote is told con
cerning Admiral Bythesea, V. C., C. 8.,
who retired from the service, after hav
ing for many years filled the post of Cor
suiting Naval Officer to the Government
of India. It is stated P-r.i the Admiral
was picked up, when an infant, far out
at sea, lashed to a bale of goods. A
l iy—presumably his mother—was with
him, but she was dead, and there was no
evidence of any kind by which the name
of the waifs could be traced. The offi
cers of the man-of-war which picked up
the poor little infant did all they could
by advertisement and inquiry to dis
cover his relatives, and, finding all their
attempts futile, they determined to
adopt the child, to which they gave the
name of “By the Sea.” He was sent to
a naval school, and, when old enough,
joined the navy. By a happy coinci
dence the first ship in which he served
was the one which had saved his life as
an infant. He took to his profession,
and during the Crimean war distin
giushcfj. himself at the Island of Wardo,
where he earned the Victoria Cross and
the decoration of C. B. Later on his
services in India gave him the Compan
ionship of the Order of the Indian Em
pire, and he retired from the service
with the rank of Admiral—a consumma
tion little dreamed of by the kind-heart
ed officers who rescued and educated
him.
We learn that Ellis & C >.. proprietors
of Bailey Springs, are making prepara
tions to entertain an unusually large
number of visitors this summer. They
are receiving communications from all
over the South inquiring rates and con
tracts for board. This is only therrdue,
for not only are they successful hotel
keepers, but their place is in every
way worthy of patronage. It is one of
the coolest, shadiest, breeziest places in
the South ; the locality aud surround
ings are delightful; the buildings are
roomy, airy, and conveniently arranged;
the accommodations, fare and attention
are first class, and Shoal Creek is the
most romantic stream and the best fish
ing water yorr ever saw. Add to this
the unrivalled power of the old Rock
Spring in the cure of dropsy, scrofula,
dyspepsia and diseases of the blood, skin
and kidneys, and the sum of attraction
is irresistible. If you have ever been
there you know this is true. If you
have not, try it just once. You will
never regret it. .Address Ellis <fe Cos.,
Bailey Springs* Ala.
Borrowing and loaning stocks—When
a party has sold stock short and not
bought it in by the time delivery must
be made, he “borrows” the stock for
the purpose of making a delivery, pay
ing the owner the market price at the
time, and agreeing to return it at the
same price on demand or at a fixed time,
the lender of the stock paying the bor
rower an agreed rate of interest on the
money, or the borrower paying the lend
er an agreed premium for the use of the
stock, as the case may be.
Honored and Blest.
When a board of eminent physicians and
chemists announced the discovery that by
combining some well ten own valuable reme
dies, the most wonderful medicine was pro
duced, which would cure such a wide range
of diseases that most all other remedies
could be dispenced with, many were skep
tical : but proof of its merits by actual trial
has dispelled all doubt, and to-day the dis
coverers of that great medicine, Hop Bitters,
are honored and blessed by all as benefac
tors.—Democrat.
M. BnoNDEAtr gives the following re
cipe for purifying and bleaching sponges:
The sponges are first washed in teped
water, and then in hydrochloric acid,
which frees the pores from the carbonate
of lime. To bleach them they are im
mersed for twenty-four hours in a solu
tion composed of five parts of hydro
chloric acid to 100 parts of water, ‘with
the addition of six pints of hyposulphate
of soda. In this way sponges 'may be
bleached more effectually and rapidly
than with sulphurous acid.
Look Out lor %H<tdeu t
of weather, amt guard again- 1 mein by sudug
VYeruer’B Safa kidney au<l laver Cure.
FACTS FOR Ti\t (TRIOFS.
Coal-scuttles are now manufactured
of rubber.
A n elephant drinks about forty-live
gallons of water a diy. ,
The people of Ceylon worship thejj
tooth of an elephant; those of Majabaifl
the tooth of a monkey.
It is calculated that sixty tons of steel j
are annually consumed in the man€faets£j
nre of steel pens.
Bees have very little power of com
municating with "each other. F. Miller
gives curious instances of the inability
of the bees to invent for themselves a
natural language.
A quantity of flour was exposed by a
French experimenter to a pressure of
300 tons, reducing it to one-fourth its
original bulk. A portion of it was then
placed in cans and sealed, the same be
ing done with some unpressed flour: A
year afterward the cans were opened,
when the unpressed flour was found to
be spoiled, whild the pressed was in ex
cellent pDejilst^ation.
A web affords an excellent
barometer. An old sportsman of Cold
wafer, Mich., claims that one preserved
;in his house has proved almost invaria
bly correct. When rain and wind are
expected, the spider shortens the threads
which suspend the web. When reef*
are let out, fine weather may be certain,
but if the spider remains inert, r<pn will
probably follow within a short time.
Twelve years after the landing of the
Pilgrims at Plymouth there was not a
plow in the vicinity of Boston, and the
farhaers broke up the land with hoes or
other hand implements. In 1637 there
were but thirty-seven plows in the
■whole State, and at a later period it was
the custom for one owning a plow to do
nearly if not all the plowing for a town.
The town often paid a bounty to one who
would buy and keep a plow in repair
and do the work in this way.
The swiftest bird, probably, is the
eagle of the sea, or frigate-bird, often
measuring sixteen feet from tip to tip.
It hovers at an elevation of 10,000 feet
when a storm sweeps over the ocean. If
it wishes to travel, says a French nat
uralist, it can almost annihilate space.
It can breakfast in Africa and dine in
America. This bird reposes on its great
motionless wings, literally “sleeping on
the bosom of the air. ”
Thebe are in our land 25,520,582
males and 24,632,284 females. The na
tives number 43,475,506, and the foreign
born, 6,677,360. There are 43,404,877
white and 6,577,151 colored persons.
Beside those on reservations under Gov
ernment care there are 65,122 Indians
and half-breeds. The “myriads of Chi
nese” number 105,463, and there are
2,550 other Asiatics. For every 100,000
males there are 96,519 famales against
97,801 in 1870.
Croton Aqueduct, by which New
York city is supplied with water, w<;s at
the time of its completion, and in fact
still is, regarded as one of the wonders
of the world. Its length is 38.1 miles,
and it is built, most of this distance of
brick, stone and cement, inclosed over
and under, 6 feet 3 inches wide at the
bottom, 7 feet 8 inches at tha and 8
feet 5 inches high. It is carried over
Harlem river on a magnificent bridge,
1,4b0 feet long, and 114 feet above high
water mark.
THE SABBATH DAY.
[Detroit Free Press, j
A <*ood square sermon, with roast
duck for dinner, is my idea of the sev
enth day.— Plato
I have never been fishing on Sunday,
but I think Sunday evening the best in
the week for going to see your girl.
Cato.
Sweet Sabbath day of rest! Also for
riding out. Also, for a good dimmer.
Also, for cutting the children's hair.
Count me in.— Confucius.
Sunday is always welcome to me, for
on that day I sew on loose buttons, wash
my feet and reflect that lam one weok
nearer the grave.— Diogenes.
In the old Puritan days a young man
caught waiting at the church door to see
his girl home would have been set down
as one shade worse than a sheep-stealer.
.The man who can see sermons in run
ning brooks is most apt to go and look
for them on Sundays when trout are bit
ing.—-New Orleans Picayune.
That mischievous “If at first you
don’t succeed, try, try again,” is the
motto of every office seeker in the
country.
A Fool Once More.
“For ten years my wife was eon lined to
her bed with such a complication of ail
ments that no doctor could tell what was the
matter or care her, and I used uj a small
fortune in humbug stuff. Six months ago I
saw a IT. S flag with Hop Bitters on it, nun
I thought [ would be a fool opee more. J
tried it, but my folly proved to be wisdom.
Two bottles cured her, she now a-s well
and strong as any man’s wife, audit cost me
only two dollars. Such folly pays.—H. W.,
Detroit, Mich.—Free Press.
“Good morning, Patrick; you have
got anew coat at last, but it seems to
fit you rather too much. ” “ Ocli, there’s
nothing surprising in that; sure, I wasn’t
there when I was measured for it.”
Kxdxky-Wobt always relieve* and cures the
worst cases of piles and constipation.
The man who drives the heaviest
wagon lias the best show on the road.
Everybody Las to turn out for him.
“Roafh on Bats.”
Ask Druggists for it. It clears out rats, mice,
roadies, bed-bugs, flies, vermin, insects. 16c.
RESCUED FBOU I)F IT&
Wiiliaia J. Coughlin, of Somerville, Mm*., *ay: "In
she fall of 1?76 I was ni-a wish bleedings df the ..mg*,
followed by a severe cough. I lost my appetite
lash, and was confined to my bed. Ia H 77 I was ad
mitted to the hospital. The doctors at.d I had,*
air long as big as half a dollar. At one time
went around that ! was lead. I gave Bp bopgjp be
friend old me of Is*. Witijarr gru's ila:
Lcsqs. liti bottle, w-hert," to uiy ; *:<}-
toeuced ! j feel better, ••<# toil** 1 feel ih-u ,igi
'hree Tears past. I mils tfc* tropa- ever*dHpl
*ith -1 -sed #ingi Bull t**e Da. ttgj&fta
•• i*: f. * Jicrtitfs inaeediiv ckT-'i.
IVDieusTTOK, dypepßi* nenront prostration
end all forms of general debility relieved by
taking Mxxsmas’s Peptojozkd Bsw lowo, the
only preparation of beef sontainine ite enfire
nutritious properties. It jantaixw blood-mak
ing. force generating and life-*u#tabuing prop
erties; is invaluable in all enfeebled conditions,
whether the result of exhaustion, n*cui,proir
tration- overwork, or acute disease, particularly
tf resulting from pulmonary oompiaintiy Ofct
well, Haxard A 00., proprietor* Hew Xor*
A Constant Lover*
Jeremy Bentham, of a iife
long attachment to a the lox
is a figure that takes us a little
lie wrote to her, reminding her of a
which she had given him on the
Itowff at Bo wood. “From that day not a
single one has passed (not to mention
nights) in which you have not engrossed
mire of my thoughts than you could
have wished.” Sir John Bowring says
that the old man was much mortified by
the coldness of the answer which he
received.
IpERRY liAVIEb
m/"~- -a * SAFE AND SURE
wb-qgSj REMEDY FOR
p®| Rheumatism,
■jgl neuralgia,
Diarrhoea,
I I OysantoF
I Tmltath
JBSBSw Headache.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS
CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED!
il 11 i ? ?
wm.HULL and
FOR THEH M |
LuraJALoAm
Cures Consumption, (Jobls, Piieiiiiiouio, In
fiiienv.o, lroic!iij!l Diflieultics, Brouehil is,
Hoarseness, Aslhnia, Croup, Wiiooping
Cough, nml all Diseases of the Hrenihing
Orsnip. Ii soothes ami h.enis the Memhi’iiiie
oil he Lunas, indu uteri anil poispned by tin;
ilisease. and prevents {lh- ii(ulil sweats and
lightness across Hit eliesi wliieli aceoinpany
it. Con aiiiipl ion is not ail ineiirabie malady.
HALL’S BALSAM wilt mire yon, even
hnuuh profession;!! aid fniis.
A ©KJfTS WANTED tar th* Bfoatfoadristeat Sell
j!\_ lag riotaiia! Book audßlbt**. Frloes reduced 28 :>
tent. Katicnal Publishing C#., Philadelphia, iv
s? /* / • a week la yor ew town. T*rrcc "aa ..
frefo. Add *tt K. Kxudeir t 00-., t
f r mrm
OnMUUtIVi Ivu eatfrtns from geaereJ debility to each an extent that my labor woe exceedingly bur
inKß*te sse. AtimUodoi % month did not tire mo much relief, bat on ths contrary, was followed of
fee reeled piartttwa end ejnking chlile. At thie time I began the nse of yonr Ikon Tonio, from which Ira-
AUSfd eimoei immediate ahd wonderful nenlte. Theold energy returned and I found that niy nature 1 fore*
m aot Mrmkaentb abated. I have need thro* bottlea of tho Tonio. Sinoe using it.l have done twice the !a
jfcof inell SW did In th* sam* tlm* during my lilnocs. and with doable the ease. With tho tranquil nerr*
;id vikof *1 leody, has MP also a eloarneaaol thoWgnt never before enjoyed. Ifthe Tonic has not done the
YWaTm/Vnot Whei. I give D the credit, J. P. Watsox, Pattor Christian Church, Troy, O.
1 MThm IrM Tonia to \
lisaxs&j* iC2:\
|mn Bark, and Ptioa- 1
m photos. momooimtodW
I %oith tho rp*tnblo 1
I dromatlM. If *er I
V •’*•*!/ pnrpooc tohoroa
W Tonic to nocooourp.f
lUirMTIjUI IT m DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., 18. 21* MQBTU HAII STREET, ST. 18615*
BaSPai
*1 VMlia©—reh is
\ Vassliae Cold Cre-m,
VaseUn® Camphor T*^
; ssassy.ttßu
r TASSJNI COiMFICTIOKI
s. An agreeable fora of t/J&>
MTTry the*. 25 and 60 cent bum of all ear good* ing Vaseline intern ally.
WRATkD SfEOAL AT TUK S*I2£LAI?ttIJ*S2IA EXPOSITION. Ml—Ml 11 ■■III 1111111 '' ir MIII"TB9MBC—MW3^
nmmAf* at wiS FAJUS WSJPfmgTI9M* GOJjBATJB JUf
D r mettaiirs •
Dr. MJKTTAUR ? B JfF ADA CHE PILLS cure most wonderfully in r. very
short time both SICiC and NERVOUS HEADACHE; and while acting on
the nervous system, cleanse the stomach of excess of bile, producing a
regular healthy action of the bowels.
••HEADACHE
A full sire box of these valuable PILLS, with fall directions for a com
plete core, mailed to any address on receipt of nine tiiree-cent postago
Stamps. For sale by aU druggists at 25c. Sole Proprietors,
BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, Baltimore, Md.
• • • • PILLS
>il \
;|t
ijU' ~
igQSTETTgttv
|fg CELEBRATES
STOMACH
Fitter 5
Feeble ami. Sickly Persons
Recoyer their vitality by pursuing a course
of Hostctter’s Stomach Bitters, the, ruost
popular in vigorant an i altera live medicine
iu use. General debility, fever and ague,
dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, and
other maladies are completely removed by
it. Ask those who have used it what it
has done for them.
For sale by al Druggists and Dealers
generally.
X>IST OF DISEASES
always curable;by using
MEXICAN
MUSTANG
LINIMENT.
OF HUMAN FLESH.
.Rheumatism,
Burns and Scalds,
Stings and Bites,
Cuts and Bruises,
Sprains Jt, Stitches,
Contracted Muscles
Stiff Joints,
Backache,
Eruptions,
Frost Bites,
and nil external diseases, and every hurt or accident
for general use in family, stable and stock yard It ia
THE BEST OF ALl*
LINIMENTS
m V* a| KSS Wanted to sell monuments and
jpl H grave stones on commission. A iib-
Kl a3 ™ I eral percentage to responsible par
ties furnishing good references. Address WATHAN’S
MARBLE WORKS, Lafayette place, New York City.
/mm/c.
L— 1 , , T , -f— - -
Bookwalter Engine.
Effectin, Simple, Durable and Cheap.
Compact. Substantial, Economical and Easily Maaae*&
GuararUetd to work t ceil and give full power claimed.
EVERY PLANTER
Who runs a Cotton k* or Corn iliU should hare one.
Steam power is much better and cheaper : i *n horse pewex
op* Jp w rmcKzn
5 Horse Rower Engine, - - . s24s
4* “ “ “1 - . - • 2 s<j
*Z" M ‘ * -
8* “ “ * 44 Q
Adibrees Maisufwrwrar* for descriptive pamphlet * * j
dM&UBA tMjrrm. a co„
OF ANIMALS.
Scratches,
Soi-cs nml Galls,
Spavin, Cracks,
j Screw Worm, drub,
Foot Rot, Hoof Ail,
J Lameness,
Swiitny, Founders,
Sprains, Strains,
Sore Feet,
[Stiffness,
(Bndomd ffi and reeem-l !
inndd by
cut prof assign, for a
iSywpepaitt. 6enrol a
Debility, Wotnulm Dio- J
eaeee, Want of Vital- |
i£y, Norvoum Fromtru- I
Hail, and Convalee- f
cenccfroinJFcvert,&c.i ’
&OMO
THE ONLY MEDICINE
IN' EITIIEII Liorih on DRY foru I
That Acts at the same time on
TEM ZIYEB, TEE BQWSLSA
AED TEE EIBEETS.
[WHY ARE WE SICK?
Because we allow these great organs to\
become clogged or torpid, and jMisonoat |
\huuiors are therefore forced into the blood \
! that should be expelled naturally.
I KIDNEY-WORT
WILL SURELY CURE I
[KIDNEY DISEASES,
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
[piles, constipation, urinary
2 DISEASES, FEMALE WEAKNESSES,
AND NERVOUS DISORDERS,
\by causing free action of these organs and
[ restoring their power to throw of disease.
j Why suffer Bilious pains and aclies!
pYhy tormented mth Piles, Constipation!
j Why frightened over disordered Kidneys!
] Why endure nervous or sick headaches!
| Use IiIDNEY-WOltTawo! rejoice in health. I
j It is put up in Dry Vegetable Form, in tin |
| cans one package of which makes six quarts of I
J medicine. Also in Liquid Form, very Concert. |
| irate d, for those that cannot readily prepare it. I
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