The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189?, March 19, 1896, Image 6

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*1 (EART DISEASE, u. M 1 many other ailments when they have taken hold of the system, never gets better of Its own accord, but Constantly grotes worse. There are thousands who know they have a defective heart, but will not admit the fact. They don't want their friends to worry, and JDom’t ktune? trhat to taka for it, as they have been told time and acaln that heart disease was incurable. Such was the case of Mr. Silas Farley of Dyesvllle, Ohio who writes June 19, ISM, as follows: “I had hr art tUttra.tr for 2-1 yre.tr a. my heart hnrting me almost continually. The first IS years I doctored all the time, trying several physicians and remedies, until my last doctor told molt wasoniy a tqueolion of time as I could not be cured. I gradually grow worse, very weak, arid completely dis couraged, until 1 lived, propped half up in bed, because I row/fin’.* lie tienen nor sit up. Think ing my time had come I told my fam ily what I wanted done when I was gone. But on the first day of March on the recommendation of Mrs. Fannie Jones, of Anderson, Ind., I commenced taking iMr. Jttilctt' Setv Cure, for the Ueurt and wonderful to tell, in ten days I was working at light work and on March 10 com menced framing a barn, which is heuvy work, and 1 hav’nt lost a day since. lam SC years old, C ft. 4! lnches and weigh gjOllis. I believe I ant fully cured, and I am now only anxious that everyone shall know of your wonderful remedies." Dyesville, Ohio. Siuab Fabijit. / |>r. Miles Heart Cure Is sold on a positive • guarantee that the first tun lie will benefit. All druggists eeli it atsl 6 bottles forts or It Will bo sent, prepaid on receipt of prlco by thu Dr Mila; Medical Go., Elkhart, lnd. Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure Restores Health 4 Popular Magazines £ FOR THE HOSE. .*■*+**£*, < .. SMVSmtfMKU snnl FRANK LESLIE S Popular MONTHLY: Contain! each Month: Orlglnnl Water Color ' Frontispiece ; 128 Ouurlo l*an<*) c t Reading Matter; 100 New and Hlglt-cluss Itlustru- ( lions; More Literary Matter nnd IttliMra- ( tluna than anv other Magazine In America , 23 eta.; JJ u Year. , Frank Leslie’s Pleasant Hears; FOR BOYS AND GIRLS. A Bright, Wholesome, Juvenile Monthly. Fully Illustrated. The best writers for young, people contribute to It. 10 els.; $! n year. , SEND ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS TO I HI aAR.NI-VII.LL GAZLTTL r> a. hues mu;, oa. I'lnxK I.im.ii M'um ui Montiu.v amt lIeC.AZi iis both one veer for Jpou I-kank. LVM-u-’h I i.pasant Ho uts poll Boys anu I<>i|. ik ii i<‘l>li. Ga/uttk l>oth I'm-on.* y-.- ir Undoubtedly the Best Club Offers! ! Z.IT Send t<> Frat k Tefstir's i'ufrtlshtna House, .V.F.,, for S'cv* Illustrated JYemium list, Fire. Burning Or > Freezing. , Whether you’re scorched < with fever or chilled with n deep seated cold, the same medicine will cure f you - f Dr. C. CROC’s ' . /ft# 1 , Jt 1 '; t For The liver, and Ktouevs. f Pleasant to the Taste. It docs not cause constipa f ticn, hut breaks chills, prevents ■ fever, purifies and thickens the f blood, corrects the liver, clean- ( f ses the stomach and improves digestion, creates an appetite and quiets the nerves. f At all drugjislsand general storas. CULLEN & NEWMAN, 1 Proprietor*. Knoxville, Tennessee. Tha LeziSag Coassrralori of An-. ; i ica^-^ ( '3 Cakl. Faiiltkn, Fou’uiiHlin I'xC bjr tZPy/v K. Tourjie- f ()'S V U\\ for Prospectß* ** f-. information. W. Halh, General Manage* THE WHITE HOUSE BABIES. Mrs. Cleveland dreads publicity for her children. Bbe says ber little | girls ate private parsons and that the public lias nothing to do with them. To her they are too sacred to be gazed upon by the vulgar public. This is to be repretted, as persons who kDO'v tie little lots dt clnre them to be most chinniing children, rfo lx i t i* she on preserving their pri- 1 y ilnit she In.a ni vi r had their j il olngraphh taken by any piofee-i ii.io.l pin togrupber. Only one sine- j *ur i- h id to liH'.e been allowed io; rkt sun j ictures cf them. Hbeisai . , ... you: g lady, an irriu ate personal fiiet <L Evidently Mrs. Cleveland's i nest in ber discretion was well i undid. Mrs. Cleveland has i o j uili feeling about her o.vn photo glyphs, which may I o bought m a nut vorn ty of gacefol poses at any hop w here pictures are sold. Don’t invite dint pp. intu eni’ by ypeem mint. Depend op n One Minute 0 ugh Cum* and y"U have m* and ate n 1 if. It ceres croup the otili harmless ninedy ilu-t puo luc* s iiime'hate result-. lJr. \Y. A. Wright. TH E NO KTHEAS i ERN. It appears that no oce wants the Noithinißicrn railroad. The pri per v set ms to be a died weight on ilie a,.ils of the State. Some time ago it "as ill red far sale, and the las* lav for the rubini-sion of bids for tli property w: Friday. No bids w ■ banded to Gov. Atkinson. The S to values tli** proper*y as wo*tb ID east §290,000. That figure was ii tin. and ns the lowest price that would uv it. The mlvcrti-enieiit tor bide s been it, ruling for some time, bu: t die expiration of the time limit Friday not a single bidder had made in a; penrarce- The road will c >n imio t-> be operated by the btate. It is din cted by a lecivor. INDIAN WOMEN, bt.Louis, Mo., Post Dispatch says “Indian women aro picveibialy healthy and strong, often marching for days with their bales upon their tucks. In fact they frequently go bo day befoie nml uft< l c mfineinent with tiicir tribes, up> u their march. These women acquire this gre.t Btrengtl> and power of • ndumnee by using a weed tint grow s in their I<> entity, out of which a medicii e is now being made, nnd kept by tin dr* ggiet, under the name Indian Weed (Female Medicine.) For Milo by J. it. Blackburn. Like ail dancing, the root of tbe ballet is to be found in prehistoric timet-', but Italy was the borne win r its growth became coincident with ibe development of the optra, says the Saturday Review. With the Medici it was in ported iuto France, and flourished as u tourt entertain ment under Catharine de Medici, As the ballet ini r aeul in popularity it was gradually nexxiated with tin* libretto of a great poet and the mus ic cf n great musician, and it usd to put on the stage by some noble patron of the art is. Princess of tb* royal blood frequtnily took part in the peiformance —L uis XIII, to wit, and Henry IV, who bad a spec mi dancing room built in the nrsen d. Even Le ltoi heleil did not deem it beneath bis d'gnity to imperson ate vaiious characters in the ball t, until ho was prevented by his grow ing c rpulence. DO NOT DO THIS. Do not. be I oil need to bay any oth er if you have made up your miud lo take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Re member that Hood's Sarsaparilla cures when all odara fail. D > not givu up 111 dispair lx cause other oied i'-ines have failed to help you Take Hoods SarsapuiuU faithfully and y>u may reasonably xpeot to lie cured. Ho IsPi lb are purely vegetable, carefully prepared lro.u tue best in gredients. 25 cents. SIZE OF PLANETARY INHABI TANTS. It is quite natural for th*> human n it and, which associate!? nil thoughts uud makes all ci immrisons by c rth ly standards, to think of the inhabi tants of son t *l' the monster worlds, which are known to be whirling ti r. ugh spa< s, as being giants of the most gigantic kinds. Take the star Arcturus ts tin illustration. That gigantic p'amt is 2,000,000 miles in circumference, nr about 658*000 rnil-js straight through from pole to pole or from equator to equator. Our little wot 1 I is only 8,000 miles in diameter it 1)4,000 iu circumfer ence—iu fact it is such a mere pigmy compared with Arcturus hat it might fall into one of that planet's gteat lakes, whether they be water or burning seas of gas, ami bury it self out of sight. We are apt to think cf these plane's as being in habited, bowevci mu h the chances may be against such an assumption, and to compare such supposed pier sons !•■ the size of the world upon which they live. If Arcturus is in habited, and its people are built on the s tine ratio that we are, nn aver age Arctunan cannot fall mucb short of bong 12 miles in height. ,fu a t now everybody is beginning to take a Spiing medicine. All i it is h go* and thing tc do provided you lute birrinroiih L'ver Regulator—the be t .Soring medicine, it is a slug gish liver that clogs the system and m ikes bad bl od. A dose a day of bimtnoDs Liver Regulator w 11 make anew man out of you, and anew wo rn n> 00. L;ok for the Red Z on tti < package It is bimmous Liver Regulator you want AN INCIDENT BY MU. MOODY. The interest in Mr. Moody’s ser in ns lies often in his unccdol.es. He gave hm incident recently of his work in England which was graphic, in j times grotesque, but it o n t ied a tie-t iiiendon* ly pointed moral. Mr. M * (ly said that he was once ! confion" and lyag >o 1 woman who asked bis * fforts i behalf of a young maD. “H s mother and father are dead,’’ said she. U H<* has no o; e left to look after Lira. His mother was my sister and 1 don’t want to let him go without an effort. He is dissipat ed, wild, profligate, ungodly. Oh, Mr M cdy, can’t \ou save him?” The lidy went on to say that he li d pii ti ind to > tterd reivers that iveniDf. He had not been up io tint tiu e and swore that he would r.eve.i go to cl uieh again. The mint vns fei lftl that this was her last dame and she wanted book thing ft ne. Mr. Mcndy real zed, he save, that this was a big job. The man did not bell viu him. He knew he would r bin h’S eff ts. “Hit my,'" exclaim ed the evatig' Ist, “how th*se good worn* and do work wh u t! ey *et their minds to do . nythii g. I prom is and her because it was easier to say jes than no. I rather Loped tlat the youeg man might not come. Teat night when I looked atout in the congregation and uid not see him then I breathed an air of relief. I was rather glad I Would not have to make the test. By and by, however, about two thirds of the way up the aisle I saw the lady and by her side was the mail. I preached right at him. I gave him the best I could. But I leal zed that he was bracing hiiLbtlf again I, me a. and I knew that I had failed tc touch h m.” “After the sermon, according to my promise, I started for this young man. I wanted to shake his hand and talk to him. The crowd was great and I saw ti at I might not bs üble to get to him, so I started for him over the backs of the pews. The man suw me and divined my object. His aunt had i laced him in tie pew first and was hersi It sitting at the head as if to prevent bis leaving. At once the idea dashed over him that this was a conspiracy between bis aunt, and myself. He could not- push the lady aside, but it sud Jenly occur red to him that if I could go over ihe b.cus of the pews so could he and he started out. \Vn< n I reached the lady she said in (ears. ‘On, Mr. Moody,’ said she, ‘he has gone to perdition; he’ll be lost.’ “But 1 said to her,‘Madame, there is only oue way we can reach turn— by the way of the tlnoue. Ho can t dodge that influence.’ ” So the wandering boy was prayed for and the rest of the story is short. How be laughed to his companions about circonventing the evangelist; how, Anally, guided by Borne unseen influence and some good angel, he cast 1 fl' bis dissiopation uud became a man. rising in bi profession to the top louud and growing to beau up right citizen. “And when,’ eaul Mr. Moody iu conclusion, “.hat man came to me eight years later and told m* who he was uud I beggtd him to go with me to my mettiugb m the slums uud re lute iiis experience be hesitated. He said be bad a family growing up and he did uot want to make public con festion as to bow depraved bis life Dad beeu. However, be did go, and } t<ld bis story with wouderful elo -1 queuee and effect.”—Suvauuah Press. DID YOU EVER Try Electricß.tters for your Doub les f H not, get a bottle now a> and get relief. This medicine bas beeu louud to be peculiaily a lapied to the relief and cure of all Female com plaints, exerting a wouderful direct influence in giving strength and tone to the orguus. If you have loss of appetite, constipation, Headache, Faiuting Spt 11s,or arcNervous.Sleep- Isss, Excitable, Melancholy or troubl ed with Dizzy Spells,* Electric Bit ters is the mediciue you need. Health and strength are guaranteed by its use. Fifty cents aud SI.OO at S. B. Burr Jr’s Drug Store. owQ^ii BLOSSOM Acts like a poultice, drawing out fever and pain, and reinvig orating the entire Female Sys tem. It removes all obstructions and creates a healthy, natural flow of all secretions. It is the one natural cure for female troubles, because it is applied right to the diseased parts. Don’t take internal rem edies for Female weakness,com mon sense requires a direct ap plication for immediate relief and permanent cure. “Orange Blossom” is a sure, painless cure for falling and dropsy of the womb, profuse, difficult, irregular menses, leu corrhoea, ulceration, tumors, sick headache, constipation, sal low complexion. “Orange Blossom” is apastile easily used at any t : me. Every lady can treat herself with it. Mailed to any address on re ceiptof si. Dr. J. A. McGill&Co. 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, 111. Fo? Sale L.y J. H. Blackburn JOHN G. CARLISLE. An at Lack upon Mr. Carlisle’s politi cal integtv is in reality a dastardly insult to the South, tor he is and has be e . for nearly a generation not only her most distingui-beJ son. but the exemplar, par excellence, of Southern Statesmanship and S -utliern Stan dards of bohd* and trinh. And no matter what el a can bo said against the routb, t at section c u bout that of all itslong list of distinguish ed statesmen and patrons, beginning ! with Washington and J.ff-rson and coming dowu to Wi\ on and-Carlisle, not one has ever profit and iu a pecu niary way by his political station, not one man has left a name tainted with ihe fuiulesi breath ofjseandal or dis honor, but one and all have grown old and poor, like the Romans of cld. in laithfnl service to their country. I’ruly, a matchless record, made by a matchless race.—Kansas C.ty Ti mes. Soothing, healing, cleansing, De- Witt’s Witch Hazel Suive iB the ene my to sores, wounds and piles, which it never fails to cure. Stops itching and burning. Cures chapped lips and cold-sores in two or thite hours Dn. VV. A. AVmght. A QUEER EXPERIMENT. Professor Worthington has been studying a cmious phenomenon for twenty years. The splash of a drop occurs in the twinkling of an eye; yet it is an exquisitly regulated phenom enon, and one that very happily illus trates some cf the fundamental prop erties of the fluid. The problem that Professor Wor thington has succeeding in solving is tc kt a drop of definite size fall from a fixed height in comparative dark uess onto a suiface,and to illuminate it by a flash of exceedingly shoit du ration at any desired stage, so as to exclude all the stages previous and subsequent to those thus selected. The many illustrations in bis volume testify to the accuraicy and beauty of bis work. The curious results of a splash of a drop of mercury from the height of three inches upon a smooth ghss plate are narticularly interesting. Very soon alter the first moment of impact miuute rays are shot out in all dirrectiouß onthe surface with mar velouse regularity. From the ends of the rays droplets of liquid split off. The liquid subsides in the mid dle, and afterwards flows into a ring. The ring then divides in such a man ner as to join up the rays iu pairs. Thereafter the whole contracts, till the liquid rises iu the centre, so as to form the beginning of tbs rebound of the drop from the plate. Im modiately the divps at the ends of the arms break eft’, while the central mass rises in a column, which just falls, itself to break -ip iuto drops, He photographed no fewer than thirty successive stages of the spLsfi wilhiu the twentieth of a second, so that the average iutervd between them was about the six-huudreth of a second, ikm .rkabie are the splash es of water-diops falling about six teen inches into miik, but more beautiiul are the dome forms when the height is fiftv-two inches.— Know ledge. One Minute Cough Cure touches the right spot. It also touches it at the right time if you take it wLeu you have a cough or cold. Sea the point? Then don't Cough. Dr. W. A. Weight, A JACE OsIER 1 HIGH. 7be most lem *i km le hiVT’an mon stroeiry ttn*t ever saw ill** Ight of da* upon the American Continent is liiMle E ta'-islao Aricbi, a 7 ; ear-old Mexican gill, wh*> resoi s '*ith bet foster pnenrs i eir ihe liul- villagi of Morenlii, in t* e .State < f Aguas calUmtHS. Th" first tf at was kriowi of this rarest • f all human being was when a M( X’c.ui paper made th< following brief staten eri*: “Within the list few days tier* has been brought fr m I’haroto M> - relia a little pir] with a sicond fc- . *m the right bip. h* tween the bip jttirit and the knee. If you con press the cheeks if it is q .eeily situated face i* - pens its es. lb* fie" has a inoutli cent minor three pearly teeti , bur the nos * is entirely wanting.’’ MX oiccbs after Ihe put'- licatiou "f the *b->vfc a physic im • * M 'relia succeeded m gathering lb* foil facts relative t thin queer < as(: * * * When sue had been in the world about two years an nflt— rualion of the whole ivyi ti of tb<* thigh set in, which finally de veloped into an enormous cyst. Then, by'degrees, there uppeare I an eye, an eyebrow, one nostril of the nose, curly lish**s; m and finally, the other brow. Next uppea'ed one r>w of four teeth and then the “bangs’ began to grow rapidly and friug*- the fore head. * * * Taken all in all, it, is one of the ino.it singular freaks n the human family tbt haa been repotted during ibis ce tury. The freak has b**pn described iu the papers of both Vera Cruz and Mexico City, the account creat'dg considerable comment among the medical fraternity of both places. Before you try anything el>e for the blood take rdmmons L.vi r Regu lator. It is the b* st ilo >d medicine because it is the best liver reme y. If your liver is active and > t work the blood will be the Rst Simmons L : ver Regulator is the best Spring medicine. “I tell my friends if the;, want to enjoy health and happim s they ought io take Slum- ns L vei Regulator.”—Mrs. R \Y. Smith, Mc- Intosh Jilt;ft, Ala. The railway on the Brooklyn bri Ige has been in opeiati* n twrlyt years and three months. During that time it has transported between the two cities 391,153.850 passen gers. The number is ( qual to a frac tion more than 27 per cent of the es timateJ population ( f the world, i about one *and one-filth the popula tieu of Europe and five and three fourths that of the United States. In the reorganiz tion of the Geor gia Midland and Gulf railroad, by the new owners in Baltina re a few days since, ihey changed its name by knocking out the “Gulf,” and leaving it the Geirgia Midland. A KENTUffI MIRACLE. JUDGE JOHN M. RICE TELLS HOW HE* WAS CURED OF SCIATICA, Circuit Judge, Congressman and Assemblyman. {From the Covington, Ky., Post.) The lion. John M. Rice, of Louisa, Law rence County, Kentucky, has for the past two years retired from active life as Crim inal'and Circuit Judge of the sixteenth Judicial District of Kentucky. Ha has for many years served his native county and state in the legislature at Frank fort and at Washington, and, until his re tirement was a noted figure in political and Judicial circles. The Judge is well-known throughout the state and possesses the best qualities which go to make a Kentucky gentlemen honored wherever he is known. A few days ago a Kentucky Post reporter called upon" Judge Rice, who in the follow ing words related the history of the causes that led to his retirement. “It is just about six years since I had an attack of rheuma tism ; slight at first, but soon developing into Sciatic rheumatism, which began first with acute shooting pains in the hips, gradually extending downward to my feet. “ My condition became so bad that I even tually lost all power of my legs, and then the liver, kidneys and bladder and in fact, my whole system, became deranged. “In 1 8S8, attended by my son John, I went to Hot Springs, Ark., but was not much benefited by some months stay there. .My liver was actually dead,and a dull persistent pain in its region kept me on the rack all the time. In 1890 I was reappointed Circuit Judge, but it was impossible for me to give attention to my duties. In 1891 I went to the Silurian Springs, Waukeshaw, AVis. J stayed there some time, but without im provement. “The muscles of my limbs were now re duced by atrophy to mere strings. Sciatic Sains tortured me terribly, but it was the isordered condition of mv liver that was I felt gradually wearing mv life away. Doc tors gave me up completely. “ 1 lingered on in this condition sustained almost entirely by stimulants until April, 1893. One day John saw an account of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People in tlfe Kentucky Post. This was something new,and John prevailed upon me to trv them. I remember I was not expected to live for more than three or four Jays at the time. The effect of the pills, however, was mar velous and 1 eould soon eat heartily, a thing I had not done for years. The liver began almost instantaneously to perform its func tions, and has done so ever since. AA’ithout doubt the pills saved my life and while I do not crave notoriety I caiinot refuse to testify to their worth. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People contain all the elements necessary to pive new life and richness to the blood and re store shattered nerves. They ruay be had of all or direct from the Dr. Wil liams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 50c. per box, or six boxes for $2.50. “Gi7e me a liver regu xtor and I can regulate the world,” said a gen ius. Tne druggist handed him a bottle cf DeWitt'ii Lt tie Early Ris ers, the f,.mouu little pills. Dn. W. A. Weight. ' SICK HOMME Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsb, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per. feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. Smalt Price. Gratclul — Comforting, EPPS’ COCOA Breakfast— Supper. “By a thcronrh knowledge of the nat ural laws which govern the operations of digestion nud nutrition,and by a care ful application of the fine properties of well selected foe.-a, Mr. Epps has pro vided for our breakfast and supper a del icately flavoured beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious u-e of such articles of diet that a constitu: ion may be gradual ly built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of | subtle maladies are floating nrotuid us ! ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a propeily nourished frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simplg with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tins, by Giocers, la beled thus: JAME i El’l’S & CO., Ltd,, Homooopa.h ic Chemists, London, England. IMTCM GHICXENS 8V STEAM) jjASMsSS 1 fxcalsjAMaciiSator. ?! latino. Thousands in sue -1 ■, cessfulopcTition. Guaran tee'J to hatch u 1 irger por ceatage of fertile at H ess than any other 1 11 Circulars Lowest priced ■ Send 60. for y first-class Hatcher made j Ulus, (’ataligue.” GEO. !I. !i*T^lHi,Jlhilncy^l^ P?hiciiesicr* Er.sli.!i Diamond hron t ENNYROYAL PILLS Orlelnul and Only Genuine. A safe, alwavs reliable, laoics af\ & 4\ Druggist for' Chichester .< Knqli*h />* iOT\A Lotrtiontl Brand in Kcd and Gobi metallic sealed with blue ribbon. Take \W Jtefnsedangerous snbatitw v J- / sff tions and imitations. A t Druggist s, or send **C. I i*‘ stamps for particulars, testimonials anc \ llciicf for LaiiicA,” in inter. by ri^nrr —X // Mail. Tesiimonial.4. A amt. Paper " A'bhdi enter Bold by ail Local Druggists. A n.luuu., t THADI ONE MARK MINUTE COUCH CURE cures quickly. That Is what it was made for. Prompt, safe, sure, quick relief, quick cure. Pleasant to take. Children like it and adults like it. Mothers buy it for their children. Prepared by E. O. DeWltt & Cos., makers of De Witt’s Little Early Risers, the famous little pllU. 1000 WAYS TO CURE A COLD! Quinine, aconite, hot tea, onion syrup, whiskey and quinine, rock candy and rye, a “sweat.” foot bath, star vation feeding, wrapping your hose around your neck, cod liver oil, and old hundreds cough cure, those and over 900 other ways are used by the human race to cure a cold. The best way is to make CISIIMAVb menthol imiw.F-K your daily companion and you will never catch cold. A man must be miserable indeed .. Cf who is laid up with a had Cold, Ca- I ii larrh, Headache, unable to breathe ['l without pain, his throat sore and hi! head throbbing,when one little pro duct in the market called CISIfHAMI ix ha leu wiil give him instant re lAtUl llef - , RELIEF EASY TO GET! He may go on and on, sneeze bis head oft for that matter, snillle and AJJ# '■ snort around to everybody’s diyom- f *x\ tar fiture. Hiseyesmay become inflamed, j ft f' fW • his head ana cars ache, and hi3 throat wl j so sore he can hardly swallow. Pa- \ /^n\ tien't In* must be to endure it all when \ \tr/ j) \ \ for 60c. he cun buy CBSHMA.S’S MEN- \pr y I T!h>L inhalku and restore himself / j to his normal condition. f , Cushman’s IVSeniho! Inhaler a Jewel! 1 A woman will sit around prostnt* e<l nerves, feeling despeiatc over loss of sleep, head and eyes racked with pain, cold settled in every 9 i hone, so miserable that life seems 4Y— a blank, but if siie would make the Lit marvelous little instrument known J as CUSHMAN’S MENTHOL INHALER her daily companion, her headache! would come less frequent, r.he would never have a cold, and sore throat and catarrh would have no terrors. NEVER NEGLECT A COLD OR COUGH Neglect a Cold or Cough and if La Grippe don’t get vou. Consumption ! will. Cl MIN AN’S isr U.EUcurescolds pHI and all diseases of the brcntlnvay passages. You lose dollars in doc- v!&n\ tor bills in not keeping ttsIIJIAN’S v|Yfe\ IMIALKiI handy to drive off a cold r-/\ or cough or sore throat at its very 4/ \/Jf first approach. 1 The Greatest Authority in the World.! SPr. J. Lennox Browne, F. R. C. S. Ed. Senior Surgeon to the Cen tral London Throat aniXxy Hos pital, Bays: “The vapor of Menthol checks in a manner hardly lese than . marvelous, Colds in the l*ad. For all forms of nasal diseases, caus ing obstruction to the natui* t-reathway, I prescribe a'BHlifl (Pi SII-NTHOL INHALER to the extent Of I T k' - / Jli hundreds per annum. u r'* / [lf not thii r*vr>rairendtion *afflcfent tful ftfl DR. BROWNE. who rrtd mt y P™ 6 * b * Uf 1 Brings leep to the sleepless. Cures Insomnia and Nervous Prostration. Don’t be fooled with worth less imitations. Take onlv CUSHMAN’3. •• druggists, or mailed, postpaid, on receipt of price. Writ! for book on Menthol and testimonials. CUSHMAN DRUQ CO., VINCENNES, IND., U. S. A