Newspaper Page Text
The Portrait of Queen Marguerite.
Formerly the pencils of Latour, the
paint brushes of Largilliere and of Wat
teau, took the responsibility of leaving
to posterity a charming image of the
Princesses of their time. To-day it is
the pens of literary gentlemen, who, re
maining inactive in a political point of
view, exercise themselves in tracing
delicate sketches and paint with art the
most royal of beauties, to wit: the Queen
of Italy.
In times gone by, not very long ago—
she was then her Royal Highness—she
would appear fresh and blonde as a tea
rose, dressed in white, her delicate
shoulders bent by the weight of pearls, a
fringe of diamonds in her hair, sparkling
with youth, brilliancy, candor, and wit,
happy to be admired and still happier to
do good. The crown was only lacking.
As the artist hesitated to give the last
touch to his masterpiece, fortune seemed
to wait before placing the emblem of
royalty on this young brow.
She was the Marguerite of Marguerites,
to-day she is Queen Marguerite in all
the bloom of her beauty ; her form has
become more round without losing any
of its elegance; her hand is always as
delicate; her feet still plays with the
same facility in the small shoe ; there is
as much suavity in her blue eyes, but it
is bathed in more depth. The rose tint
of her eyelids shows that grief has con
secrated this ideal of a sovereign. The
Queen has wept. What is a Queen who
knows not tears? They owe them to
their people, as the Kings do their
heart’s blood, and who knows if
they have not the same weight in the
Councils of Providence ?
Never was a Queen Marguerite more
worthy of the name of a flower and of a
precious stone. She continues the
illustrious and radiant necklace of pearls
begun by Marguerite de Provence and
continued to shine with special luster in
Marguerite de Navare:
_ “ Cetto belle ame ai hardic
• Qui pleura tant aprea I’avie.”
When the Queen travels by sea, the
whole crew, from the Commanding
Admiral to the smallest sailor boy, wears
the Marguerite boutonniere, a humble
homage which profoundly touches her.
“I love to see my name,” said she one
day, “written on the hearts of so many
of my good people.”
Naples, her favorite city, the beautiful
city of the Vesuvius, whose name has
been to the Prince, is one immense
bouquet of Marguerites when she makes
hor appearance there; thousands of those
stars with white petals cover the streets,
ornament the windows. When the
Prince of Naples was born the city
wished to offer the cradle to the mother.
It was all engraved in rose coral, and
the Queen received {his jewel filled with
a snow of marguerites.— 'Translated, from
the Paris Ek/aro,
A Kiss on the Sly.
There is to be found much refresh
ment in a well-proportioned kiss. This
much everybody acknowledges, though
only a frank few have the courage to ac
knowledge it openly. As it is a curious
fact, yet unexplained by the philoso
phers, that the slyer the kiss is the more
is in it of refreshment.
A kiss that is paid as a forfeit before a
whole room full of people is prosaic, not
to say embarrassing. The girl laughs,
which spoils the romance, and the fellow,
ten -to one. blushes—neither of them
thinking much of it, and they are both
apt pretty soon to forget all about it.
But let the same fellow kiss the same
girl when nobody is looking, and the situ
ation is as different as possible. That
sort of a kiss, fired off in a hurry behind
the door or in a conservatory, is like ah
electric shock, and is as sweet as cream.
The taste of it sort of holds on and con
stantly suggests the propriety—or im
propriety, as the case may be—of trying
it again. And the laughing and blush
ing are exactly reversed. The fellow
laughs without spoiling the romance a
bit, and the girl blushes like a pink
carnation.
It is queer that the very same thing
should, under such slightly al ered cir
cumstances, be so rjntii ely .different, nor
is it any the less queer because the dif
ference has existed from the earlies' age
of the world. —Philadelphia Pries.
A Paris Wit’s Performance.
One of Yivier’s favorite performances:
Having marked down bis prey, an elderly
citizen who has ordered a glass of beer
and is preparing to assimilate it on the
asphalt in front of a cafe, Vivier ap
proaches and salutes him profoundly,
then with mingled volubility and
brusqueness thus addresses him : .
“ Monsieur, I am one of the inspectors
of the new Department of Chemical
Analysis, established for the purpose of
detecting adulteration in articles of daily
consumption. I have been detailed to
the subject of beer. My face being
know to the proprietors of the establish
ment, if I were to order anything they
might take the alarm and serve me quite
a different article and thus baffle me,
Permit me, therefore, to taste your beer.”
The stupefied victim offers no resist
ance, and Yivier drains the glass at a
draught, and sets it down, remarking :
“ Excellent! excellent! You can drink
that beer with impunity ! I thank you
in the name of science and the munic
ipality for your unselfish co-operation.
Good"afternoon! Waiter, another beer
for this gentleman 1” and vanishes.
Noble Nature.
There sure persons sufficiently enlarged
to receive blame without pain, and yet
not be able to resist the excitement of
praise. Nobility of soul, magnanimity,
ward off or counteract the pain that in
smaller souls results from blame; but
the same traits render their pessessor
more quick to the apprehension of a
kind word, more grateful for a loving
expression, more appreciative of appre
ciation. Why should it be thought an
evidence of greatness to receive lx>th
praise and blame with equal stolidity?
Must our emotional natures die in the
process of our upward growth? Will
they not rather become quickened to
keener enjoyment continually ? So
would our susceptibility of pain become
correspondingly quickened, but that our
expanding reason nullifies its effect. —
Helen Williamß.
Arrr* all the arguments about cheapness
aud quality it appears that Dr. Bull’s Cough
Bjrup is the best remedy for the cure of Coughs
aud Colds ever offered to the public. The price
is only 25 cents a bottle and every druggist in
the land pells and reoommcnds it,
{ EXCITEMENT IN ROCHESTER.
The Commotion Canoed by the Statement
-of a Pbyaldan.
An unmnal article from the Rochester, N. Y.,
Democrat and Chronicle , was published in this
paper recently and has been a subject of much
conversation, both in professional circles and
on the street. Apparently it caused even more
commotion in Rochester, as 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 Bince which was duly published, detailing
his remarkable experience and rescue from
what seemed to be certain death. It would be
impossible to enumerate the personal enquiries
which have been made at our office as to the
validity of the article, but they have been so
numerous that further investigation of the
subject was deemed an editorial necessity.
With this end in view a representative of this
paper called on Dr. Henion, at his residence on
Bt. Paul street, when the following interview
occurred : “That article of yours, Doctor, has
created quite a whirlwind. Are the statements
about the terrible .condition you were in, and
the way you were rescued such as you can sus
tain?”
“ Every one of them and many additional
ones. Few people ever get so near the grave as
I did and then return, and I am not surprised
that the public think it marvelous. It was
marvelous.”
“How in the world did you, a physician,
come to be brought so low f 3 '
“By neglecting the first and most simple
symptoms. I did not think I was sick. It is
true I had frequent headaches ; felt tired most
of the time ; could eat nothing one day and was
ravenous the next; felt dull indefinite pains
and my stomach was out of order, but I did not
think it meant anything serious.”
“But have these common ailments anything
to do with the fearful Bright’s diseases which
took so firm a hold on you?”
“ Anything ? Why, they are the sure indica
tions of the first stages of that dreadful, mal
ady. The fact is, few people know or realize
what ails them, and I am sorry to say that too
few physicians do either.”
“That is a strange statement, Doctor.”
“But it is a true one. The medical profession
have been treating symptoms instead of dis
eases for yearß, and it is high time it ceased.
We doctors have been clipping off the twigs
when we should strike at the root. The symp
toms I have just mentioned or any unusual ac
tion or irritation of the water channels indicate
the approach of Bright’s disease even more
than a cough announces the coming of con
sumption. We do not treat the cough, but try
to help tire lungs. We should not waste otrr
time trying to relieve the headache, stomach,
pains about the body or other symptoms, but
go directly to the kidneys, the source of most
of these ailments.”
“ This, then, is what you meant when you
said that more than one-half of the deaths
which occur arise from Bright’s disease, is it
Doctor ?”
“Precisely. Thousands of so-called diseases
are torturing people to-day, when in reality it
is Bright’s disease in someone of its many
forms. It is a Hvdraheaded monster, and the
slightest Bymptoms should strike terror to every
one who has them. I can look back and recail
hundreds of deaths which physicians declared
at the time weretsaused by paralysis, apoplexy,
heart disease, puemonia, malarial fever and
other common complaints which I see now were
caused by Bright’s disease.”
“And did all these cases have simple symp
toms at first?”
“Every one of them, and might have been
cured as I was by the timely use of the same
remedy—Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure.
I am getting my eyes thoroughly opened in this
matter and think I am helping others to see the
facts and their possible danger also. Why,
there are no end of truths bearing on this sub
ject. If you want to know more about it go
and see Mr. Warner himself. He was sick the
same as I, and is the healthiest man in Roches
ter to-day. He has made a study of this sub
ject and can give you more facts than I can.
Go, too, and see Dr. Lattimore, the chemist, at
the University. If you want facts there are
any quantity of them showing the alarming in
crease of Bright’s disease, its simple and decep
tive symptoms, and that there is but one way
by which it can be escaped.”
Fully satisfied of the truth and force of the
Doctor’s words, the reporter bade him good
day and called on Mr. Warner at his establish
ment on Exchange Btreet. At first Mr.'-Warner
waß inclined to be reticent, but learning that
the information desired was about the alarming
increase of Bright's disease, his manner changed
instantly and he spoke very earnestly:
“It is true that Bright’s disease has increased
wonderfully, and we find, by reliable statistics,
that in the past ten years its growth has been
250 per cent. Look at the prominent men it has
carried off: Everett, Sumner, Chase, Wilson,
Carpenter, Bishop, Haven and others. This is
terrible and shows a greater growth than that
of any other known complaint. It must be
plain to every one that something must be done
to check this increase or there is no knowing
where it may end.”
“Do you think many people are afflicted with
it to-day who do not realize it, Mr. Warner?”'
“ Hundreds of thousands. I have a striking
example of this truth which has just come to
my notice. A prominent professor in a New
Orleans medical college was lecturing before his
class on the subject of Bright’s disease. He
had various fluids under microscopic analysis
and was showing the students what the indica
tions of this terrible malady were. In order to
draw the contrast between healthy and un
healthy fluids he had provided a vial the con
tents of which were drawn from his own per-
Bon. ‘And now, gentlemen,’ he said, ‘as we
have seen the unhealthy indications, I will show
you how it appears in a state of perfect health,’
and he submitted his own fluid to the usual test.
As he watched the results his countenance sud
denly changed—his color and command both
left him and in a trembling voice he said
‘Gentlemen, I have made a painful discovery ;
T have Bright’s disease of the kidneys,’ and in
less than a year he was dead.”
“ You believe then that it has no symptoms
of its own, and is frequently unknown -even by
tho person who is afflicted with it ?”
“It has no symptoms of its own and very
often none at all. Usually no two people have
the same symptoms, and frequently death is
the first symptom. The slightest indications of
any kidney difficulty should be enough to strike
terror to any oue. I know what lam talking
about for I have been through all the stages of
kidney disease.”
“Youknowof Dr. Henion’s case?”
“Yes, I have both road and heard of it.”
“It is very wouderful is it not?”
“Avery promineut case, bnt 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 the experi
ence of hundreds of prominent persons who
were given up to die by both their physicians
and friends.”
“Yon speak of your own experience, what
was it?”
“A fearfnl one. I had felt languid and un
fitted for bnsiuess for years. But I did cot
know what ailed me. When, however, I found
it was kidney difficulty I thought there was lit
tle hope and so did the doctors. I have since
learned that one of the physicians of this citv
pointed me out to a gentleman on the street
one day, saying : ‘ there goes a man who will be
dead within a year.’ I believe his words would
have proven true if I had not fortunately se
cured and used the remedy now known as War
ner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure.”
.“And t-bia caused yon to manufacture it?”
“ No, it canned me to investigate. I went to
the principal cities with Dr. Craig, the discov
erer, and saw the physicians prescribing and
using it and saw that Dr. Craig was nnable
with his facilities, to supply the medicine to
thousands who wanted it. I therefore deter
mined, as a duty I owed hnmanity and the
suffering, to bring it within their reach, and
now it is known in every part of America, is
sold in every drag store, and has become a
household necessity.”
The reporter left Mr. Warner, much im
pressed with (he earnestness and sincerity of
his statements, and next paid a visit to Dr. 8.
A. Lattimore ut his residence on Prince street.
Dr. Lattimore, although busily engaged upon
some matters connected with the State Board
of Health, of which he is one of the analysts,
courteously answered the questions that were
propounded to him : *
“Did you make a chemical analysis of the
case of Mr. H. H. Warner, some three years
ago, Doctor?*’
“Yea, sir.”
“ What did this analysis show you?”
“The presence of albumen and the tube casts
in great abundance.”
‘ ‘And what did the symptoms indicate ?”
“A serious disease of the kidneys.”
“Did you think Mr. Warner could recover?”
“ No. sir. I did not think it possible. It was
seldom, indeed, that so pronounced a case had,
up to that time, ever been cured.”
“Do you know anything about the remedy
which cured hurt?”
“Yes, I have it and upon
critical examination, find it entirely free from
any poisonous or deleterious substances.”
We publish the foregoing statement in view
of the commotion which the publicity of Dr.
Henion’s article has caused and to meet the
protestations which have been made. The
standing of Dr. Henion, Mr. Warner, and Dr.
Lattimore in the community is beyond ques
tion and the statements they make’cannot for
a moment be doubted. They conclusively show
that Bright’s disease of the kidneys isione of
the mo.-'t deceptive and dangerous of all dis
eases, that it is exceedingly common, alarm
ingly increasing, and that it can be cured.
Can a Lady Bea Cook?
There are many varied opinions about
this question. We ourselves maintain
that every human being ought to be
properly instructed “what to eat and
dflnk,” and take an interest iu this mat
ter. The higher the person, the more
they should know, and the more ration
ally should they live. Therefore, the
better educated a lady, the more should
she know liow to order the dinner, how
to preside over her household, and not
have to fly to the caterer every time her
husband brings a few friends to take a
little dinner with him. If the art were
well understood, it is astonishing with
how little fnss a very nice dinner may
be provided. The lady who can afford
to keep a good cook need only to direct
her arrangements. But direct them she
must if she is to deserve the name of the
head of the house. The lady who can
only afford an ordinary servant, may
have to supervise the very preparations ;
but there is many a lady who has to do
it hers if, because the keeping of a serv
ant takes a part of her income she can
not afford to lose. With proper arrange
ments it is an easy thing to be a cook,
and prepare a family’s dinner within an
hour or an hour and a half, while neither
destroying your liandfc nor your clothes,
not being overlieated or put out of tem
per. What a lady requires is such cook
ing arrangements and utensils as will
help her to prepare food cleanly and ex
peditiously, and such a knowledge of
the art of cooking that she will know
well how to use her materials. Natur
ally she must take to her occupatiou
with a will, and be ready to do her best.
There is no necessity for dirt and smoke
and grease being about. Cooking can
be done without them in cleanly uteijsils,
doing once for all away with all black
pots and pans, and establishing the rule
that nothing can be clean enough for
cooking. American stoves fill up too
much, and their wide openings are un
necessary. That stove is best which
acts like a hot plate, and gives heat
through the top plate without blacken
ing the cooking utensils. There is no
necessity for smut and dirt. Our cook
ing utensils are not sufficiently looked
after, and we are satisfied to use them
when they are long beyond use. Clean
utensils are the first requsite of cooking
and we must learn that they have to be
replaced every now and then, and that
it must be done. Further, the choice of
our cooking utensils is a great question,
and on this point there is much to be
said. — Exchange.
A seven year old boy at Bergen Point,
N. J., thus described his danger and
escape : “I was a-tummiu atoss the
tack, when I seen the ingin a-tummin.
I knowed I couldn’t git atoss quick
enough, so I started to lun. I lunned
up the tack a little ways and tumbled.
I heard the ingin a-tummin, and I shut
m y e .yes, and put my face close agin the
ground, and it went over me, and I got
up and lunned down the bank.”
Voice of the People.
It. V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y.:
I had a serious disease of the lungs, and was
for a time confined to my bed*fmd under the
care of a physician. His prescriptions did not
help me. I grew worse, coughing very se
verely. I commenced taking your “ Golden
Medical Discovery,” aud it cured me. Yours
respectfully.
JUDITH BURNETT, Hillsdale, Mich.
The great hit of the recent congress of
Free Thinkers at Paris was the speech of
an illustrious orator who, having inserted
his left hand into the breast of his coat,
made a passionate gesture with the right,
and bellowed: “ Gentlemen, I am an
atheist—thank God ! ”
“ Made New Again.”
Mrs. Wm. D. Ryckman, St. Catherines, Ont.,
says : “R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.: I have
used your ‘Favorite Prescription,’ ‘Golden
Medical Discovery,’ and ‘Pleasant Purgative
Pellets,’ for the last three months and find
myself—(what shall I say)—‘mode new again ’
are the only words that express it. I was re
duced to a skeleton, could not walk across the
floor without fainting, could keep nothing in
the shape of food on my stomach. Myself and
friends had given up all hope, my immediate
death seemed certain. 1 now live (to the sur
prise of everybody) and am able to do my own
work.”
Signos Loßin, of Milan, has offered
20,000 francs to the municipal authorities
for the purpose of maintaining a mor
tuary aud post mortem room wherein
the bodies of all persons dying of un
explained causes shall undergo a rigid
examination before being cremated.
Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets” are
perfect preventives of constipation. Inclosed
in glass bottles, always fresh. By all druggists.
A Sharp Parson.
A Chicago clergyman explained to the
committee of deacons that the widow
was so pretty no man could help flirting
with her, and each of the committee
quietly called round to see if he told
the truth, and then not one of ’em
dared to rise np in meeting, with her
present, and say the clergyman wasn’t
right. By sharp management even a
jury of deacons can be handled.
Invaluable In the Family.
Charleston, S. C., Jau. 18, 1881.
H. H. Warner A Cos.: Sirs —Yonr Safe Kid
ney aud Liver Cure is invaluable in my family
and I would not be without it E. A. Eason
Because he is a thin cur. When?
What ? O, yes, why is a lean dog like a
philosopher?— Audrew's Queen .
The Gander and the Pickerel.
One would hardly believe that a goose
could be broken of the habit of going
into the water, but a case of this kind
bas occurred at Chilton. A boy owned
a large gander, and he thought it \yould
be a good joke to tie a fish line to the leg
of the gander, with a hook properly
baited, and watcli the result. So he
fixed the gander with a line on one leg
about two feet long, at the end of which
was a pickerel hook and a frog for bait.
The gander was driven into the mill
pond, where he swam around for a half
hour, turning flip flaps, and diving for
feed. Suddenly the gander felt a pull
at his leg, and he looked as surprised as
the “Lone Fisherman ” when lie caught
a whale. The gander seemed to think
there was something the matter with
him, and he looked down at his feet un
der water to try and see into it. The
pickerel began to yank, and the gander
made up his mind that lie was not well,
and wanted to go home. He started for
the shore, but the pickerel on the hook
wanted to go the other way, and it was
nip and tuck for a time. The gander, to
those on shore who were watching,
seemed frightened, and at times would
act as though saying his prayers and
asking for mercy, and then he would get
mad and try and fly ashore, when the
pickerel would pull him back. They
say it was a fine study to the ex
pression of the features of the gander.
He seemed to realize that a change was
about to come over him, and* while he
hoped for the best he seemed to be pre
pared for the worst. After half an hour
of the hardest work he had ever done,
the gander came ashore and dragged a
six pound pickerel up the bank, and the
boys came and took off the pickerel and
put on another frog, and tried to induce
the gander to go and take another swim,
but lie wouldn’t have it. They couldn’t
drive him in. He looked at them, as he
ran through between their legs as though
saying: “Boys, this may be fun for you,
but you have crushed a noble nature.
Not any more pickerel in mine, if you
please,” and he flew off towards the
barn squawking as though his heart
would break.— Peck's Sun.
Mrs. Trulyrural has been in the
city with her daughter to arrange for
the vocal instruction of the young lady.
She has not yet engaged a teacher, and
is now in terrible state of perplexity.
“The first professor said,” she explained
to Mr. T. on her return, “that Aim'ra
sings too much with her borax. If she
keeps on she will get digestion on the
lungs. He said lie ought to try the
abominable breathing and practice sol
fudgery. Then the next teacher told
me that she ought to sing more with her
diagram and not smother her voice in the
sarcophagus. Then the next he poked a
looking glass down her throat and said
that the phalanx was too small and the
typhoid bone and the polyglotis were in
a bad "way, and I never knew that
Almira had so many things down her
throat, and I’m afraid to let her sing
any more for fear it’ll kill the poor
girl.” And that was the end of “voice
building” in the Trulyrural
Musical Herald.
Notice.
From the 10th of October. 1881,
the Ist of July, 1882, genuine Rock
Spring Water will be supplied te cus
tomers by Ellis & Cos., of Bailey Springs,
Ala., at the following rates:
Ten gallons in anti-corrosive can. .$6.00
Same can refilled at. 4.00
Five gallons in anti-corrosive can., 8.26
Same can refilled at 2.60
Nine gallons in glass bottles 7.60
Reasonable freight and express rates
are given by all railroads. This water
has been known for nearly fifty years
as a sure cure for Dyspepsia, a sure cure
for diseases of the Kidney and Bladder,
a sure cure for all curable cases of
Dropsy, a sure cure for Scrofulous cases
of the Bones or Skin, and a certain de
stroyer of the terrible thirst for intoxi
cating drink that overcomes so many
worthy resolutions. Deprive a drunk
ard of his dram for three days and
meanwhile give him plenty of Rock
Spring Water, and he won’t want the
whisky. Don’t you think it’s worth
trying? If you do, drop a postal to
Ellis & Cos. It will cost only a cent,
Cor . Thomas A. Scott, of Pliiladel
phia, has contributed $7,000 toward
building an Episcopal church at Clifton,
Pa.
“The God* Help
those who help themselves,” and Nature inya
riaby helps those who take Warner’s Safe Kid
ney and Liver Cure.
The University of Chicago has recent
ly conferred the degree of Doctor of
Music upon Prof. H. B. Palmer.
•n Thirty Days* Trial.
The Yoltaio Belt 00., Marshall, Mich., will
•end their Eleotro-Voltaio Belts Mid other
Electric Appliances on trial for thirty davs to
any person afflicted with Nervous Debility,
Lost Vitality, and kindred troubles, guarantee
ing oompiete restoration of vigor and manhood.
Address as above without delay.
P. B.—No risk it inourred, as thirty days*
trial is allowed.
A GOOD Investment. Buy a twenty-five cent package
of Foutz’s Horse and Cattle Powders to prevent disease
in your Horses and Cattle.
HENRY’S CARBOLIC MAX.YD
la the BEST SALVE for Cuts, Bruise*, Sore*, doers,
Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns,
tnd all kinds of Skin Eruptions, Freckle* and Pimple*.
Oet nENRY’S CARBOLIC SALVE, a* all others are
counterfeits. Price 25 ceat*.
DR.. OREEN'N OXYGENATED BITTERS
Is the best remedy for Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Malaria,
Indigestion and Diseases of the Blood, Kidneys, Liver,
Skin, etc.
DURNO’S CATARRH SNCFP cure* all affection* of th*
cnucaous membrane of the head and throat.
DR. MOTT’S LIVER PILLS are th* b**t Cathartic
Regulator*.
THE Human Family are constant'y using Bitters and
Tonics to build up and strengthen the system. Domestic
animals, whose lives and habits more nearly resemble
man’s should be subjected to the same treatment. ■Foutz’s
Horse and Cattle Powders will accomplish all that is
claimed for them.
OneJJollar
TMiMtsurr r*r*m a* w*st at Mtuu*
f oricin*l and okoi*ly-**l*ct*d reading natter, pnntwd
•Ron large. plain typ*. I**n*d W**kly. and Ballad ta
s*r sJdnrfM in U United State*. po*t*c* paid, f*>
Oae D*U*raYear. Bv*ry mw *ub*crlb get* a
Jhmd w sampl* gw. Address
cHicAao jLEggiaK. w—. m.
$777 kJfttruKT “
CK t n eoft per dav at home. Samples worth S5 free.
10 *Xidie*# Stusos * Cos., Portland, Maine.
D! BULLS
COUGH
SYRUP
BlfUsS
The name of HoateUer’a Stomach Bitters h heard in
every dwelling, It finds a place In every household, and
its praises are sounded throughout the whole Western
Hemisphere, as a general lnvlgorant, a cure tor sick head
ache, a specific for flatulenoy ani sour stomach, an appe
tizing stomachic, an excellent blood depnrent and certain
lemedy for Intermittent fever and kindred diseases.
For sale by all Druggists and Dealers
# generally.
PRINT YOUR NAME ou your Clothes, Cards,
Books, Ac., with Rubber - tamp and Indelible Ink. By
mail complete for C>oc.; two for sl. Stamps taken. Agents
wanted. Samples free. J. N. Klipstein, Bucliauan, Va.
SCUT THIS OUT IS
Send stamp for our Lists of FINE GUNS. Now
Closing off some high cost, second-hand and shop-worn
Breech loaders of Scott’s, Greener’s and other noted
makes. Bargains! New Breech Loaders, $lB up. Send
stamp for our Lists of Guns and Rifles.
WM, REAR A SONS,
Fanuel Ilall Sq . ISoiton, Masa^ff
ATCHES.
fcMhj \ -ll all styles, Gold, Silver and Nlckle, Chain*,*#.
i! sent br mail or C. O. D. to be examined.
vi •jfM Write for Catalogue to STANDARD AMEE
ICAN WATCH CO., PITTBUUGH, FA.
BEST IN THErwORLD!
Delivered on Trial, FREE OF CHARGE!
■WIIjSOILT’S OSCXZ j Xj^.T , ll<T3-
Shuttle Sewing Machine!
BUY NO OTHER!
LASTS A LIFE TIME. Warranted 5 Years.
SEND FOR CIRCULAR “I.”
AGENTS V/ANTED in Uncccupied territory.
Address WILSON SEWING MACHINE CO.
255 & 257 Wabash Ave,, Chicago.
/pj YTTVTfN aevoiver*. Catalog!* fret, laarei*.
SJ 1. J Or.at Wcet. Gun Works. Piitphnr-h. T.
fijrT’CYA Week. si3aday at home easily mado. Coatly
tw 4 free. Addres* Teoe <fc Cos., Augusta, Me
THE OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THE
CUITEAU.TRIAL
This is the only complete and fully illustrated “ Life
and Trial of Guitenu. It contains all the testimony of
the experts and otlicii noted witnesses; nil (tie speeches
made by the cunning assassin in his great efforts t-> e cape
the gallows by feigning insanity. Beware of catchpenny
books. Millions of people are waiting for this work
AGK.Vi S WASH ED. Circulars free. Extra terms
;o agents.
Address National Publishing Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
MILL and FACTORY SUPPLIES
OF ALL KINDS. BELTING. HQSi
and PACKING, OiLS, PUSSP3 SLI
KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS
GOODS, STEAM GAUGES, ENGINi
GOVERNORS, *o. * Sand tor Price
List. W. H. DILLINGHAM & CO.
143 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY.
SHYER WATCHES FIE!
Every week Solid Silver Hunting-case Watches are
given away with '1 lie l!o,ra’ Ilium jrton. The
names of those who get watches are published each week.
It is the Best Boys’Paper in the World, Send 5 cent*
for a sample copy to-*
CHAMPION PI BLISIIIXO f 0.,
CCCnC Fresh, cheap. A 1.,u 5 i.'Hi'i Min t:i.-i I’iaul,-
Ou>’ U J fata, free, .1. A. KAI,7. Kit. La' to-se, Wis
AnilllH Morphine HahltCnred lit !G
to 20 day*, h'opoy tilM’ured.
VI B VlfS Da. J. EjTKi'Ufcbis, Lebanon, Ohio.
AOF.NTS WANTED for the East and Fastest Sell
ing Tictonal Book and Bibles. Prices reduced-V, pet
cent. National Publishing Cos., Philadelphia. Pa.
Puri
Blood, and will completely ebango tho blood In the
entire system In three months. Any person who
will take one pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks may be
restored to sound health, if such a thing bo possible.
Bold everywhere sent by mail for 8 letter stamp*.
I. 8. JOHNSON ds CO., Boston, Alnsa.,
formerly Bangor, Me,
A MONTH-AGENTS WANTED-80 be*
s. S. selling article* In the world; 1 sample free.
H 7 /WiY"Address Jay liromoa, Detroit, MJch.
F .
>Bsswv & , £Atjo>%CvT''%j
M £OR 'o AT A 40 GJJ E3-A
Baa? PRICE S2O. SSSWJ
B Tbi N.Y. Stager Sewing Uaafclae U
BralV gpr the heat ever made —*ewi faat, rua*
JUf uij, very haadaema, ,ulet, durabln,
limp'.e. eonvealeat, and pewerfak
Warranted 3 years. Sent anywhere os
fy 1A I ft day* trial. Pag if it please a.
4,000, <M>0 *f tbi* Bedel machine
hare been Mid. Aik for circular* and
* ■ testimonial*. Lew prices to elub*. No
rlak t* try a*. Thensead* de every year, and thank ma
for the *lO te *BO eared in hnylag direct. Cat thia
•at, end when yon or a friend need a Sewing Machine bo
•are to addreao SmTati* * o*.. 4T Third Ar.,Ckleago.lH
GENTLEMEN: l .. suSerio. lrcm t.ceriil fl.bilily to soeb ao mat tar l' v,, ‘ r * br
densome to me. A vacation of a month did cot give me much relief, but on the contrary, was io yg-
Increased prostration and sinking chills. At this time I began the use of your Ikon Tonic, trom w j orce
alized almost immediate and wonderful results. Theoid energy retained and I found thela
was not permanently abated. I have used three bottle3 of the Tonic. Since using it lbave aooo * nerT
bor that I ever did in the same time during my iliness, and with double the ease- ”45“ • done the
and vigor of body, has come also a clearness of thought before enjoyed. If the Tonic hvs n q.
work, I know njd. what. I give it t
la Toni*.
HARBFAOVQIEB 3Y THE DR, HARTER MEDICINE CO., HO. 213 NORTH MAIJI STHfet.;
RUYDIft E. PINKHAM, OF LYHN, MMS.,
j.
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LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
Is a Positive Cure
far all those Painful Complaints and Weaknesses
so common to our best female population.
It will cure entirely the worst form of Female Com.
plaints, all ovarian troubles. Inflammation and TTloera
tion, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent
Spinal Weakness, and. is particularly adapted to the
Change of life.
It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uterus In
nn early stage of development. Tho tendency to c v
cerous humors there is checked very speedily by its usa
It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving
for stimulants, and relieves weakness of fhe stomach.
It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous frostratlon,
General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indi
gestion.
That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight
and backache, is always permanently cured by its use.
It will at all times and under all circumstances act la
harmony with the laws that govern the female system.
For the cure of Kidney Con.plaints of either scX this
Compound is unsurpassed.
LYDIA E. PINKBAM’S VEGETABLE COM
POUND is prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue,
Lynn, Mass. Price gl. Six bottles for $5. Sentry mail
in the form of pills, also in the form of lozenges, on
receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Pinkhem
freely answers all letters of inquiry. Bend for pamph
let. Address as above. Mention this Paper.
No family should be without LYDIA E. HNKHA3T3
LIVER PILLS. They cure constipation,
and torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box.
Sold by all Druggists.
YOUNG MEN LrS.S‘l.d“”oSX;
ttioo, address VALENTINE BROS.-, Janesville, Wis.
/■ a week in your own town. Terms and $5 outfil
5)00 free. Add ess H. Hallett A Cos., Portland, Ms.
♦
If you are
Interested
In the inquiry—Which is the
best Liniment for Man and
Beast?—this is the answer, at
tested bv two generations: the
MEXICAN MDSTANU LINI
MENT, The reason is sim
ple. It penetrates every sore,
wound, or lameness, to the
very bone, and drives out all
inflammatory and morbid mat
ter. It “ goes to the root” oi
the trouble, uud never fails tc
cure in double quick time.
Diary Fr©e
J 3 B etc. Bent to sny address
hi receipt of two ’niri'p-Cenl Mampi. Address
CHARLES E. HIKES, 43 N. Delaware Ave., T’hil*.
UT> UL 1 A MCSICAL JOURNAL.. Ad-
L’ 1 k-lDiii dress F. BREHM, Erie, Pa.
WANTED 5© grlrls; good tvagrs; ia,v weekly.
Ligtit, stendj; win k glren. to be mad" al
>i rue. Work called Can’ and delivered free. C.lola*
S£tt li. : n|g 4 o , I}~ Hontli St.. lioolon. Mass
}MT\m 120 English Needles
I • LIJjJJJJIJtJi Assorted sizes, large Eves, easy to
■ 1 thread, Silver Steel, will not bend,
eyes drilled and burnished, will not cut tne thread.
Sample package by mail, 33c. ; ?, packages, 50c. Tou
can make money with them. Circulars of the goods Free.
AGEWTB WANTED. New Englnud Novelty
.Vft’t’g Cos., 34 Portland St., Boston.
n mnvrmn R. 8. <fc A. P. Lacy, Patent Solicitors,
I J i ' ' j R ' ‘A* Washington, D. C. Our valuabl*
j A ■j* A Hand Books, “ Patents,” and “ Hints
JAX JUJ.I U and Ricipes ” sent free.
DllTIlIM!
JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT will
positively prevent this terrible disease, and will posi
tively cure nine cases out of ten. Information that
will save many lives, sent free by mail. Don't delay a
moment. Prevention is better than cure. I. S. John
•ONjSt Cos., Boston, Mass., formerly Bangor, Maine.
CONSUMPTION CAN BE COKEDt
.HALLS
umBALSAM
Cure* Coneumptlen, Colds, rnsnmynla. Is*
fluouza, Branchial Difficulties, Bronchitis,
Hoarseness, Asthma, Croup, Whooping
i Conch, and all Diseases of tho Breathing
Organs. It soothes nod heals the Nlembrans
of tho Lunge, inflamed and poisoned by tns
disease, and prevents tho night sweats sud
! tightness across the chest which accompany
, u. Ceastimption is not an tncarablv inalnd).
HALL’S BALSAM will euro you, eves
though professional aid falls.
wrjmmmvujKL. .'.'gi'ffltßyiw"i!*.rwßi 'i' '■ "if _
1 Publishers’ Union, Atlanta, Ga..„, Four.—
TBIITU 18 KIOHTT. The " *®4
< IKUI Sl n'.y" Prof. MAKTINBZ tfc. oral / 4gSSk\
Biuiu Beer taJ Wi*d rill for 30 Mill with a**, / ’
oa’.or of e;M, b3 lack of hair, aasd • ooaaae*/ wEV
■ rtorv&e ©f your futiar* tuabaad or vtfa, p.yehciogM*ny ( fag. g
pr.dicted, with time, tiaa od pUn of maotisc. c
l>u et uuntri. il.iioy rMnU *• all wo. Eaueiwt- igW
iUnn Prof. L Kartina*. M Kaafr A !■■■ ** wNW
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