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The Skill and Know-led**
Essentia] to th* production of the most perfect
and popular laxative remedy known have en¬
abled the California Fig Syrup Co.to achieve a
great atMT-es- in the reputation of its remedy*
Syrup of pits aa it is conceded to be the uni¬
versal laxative. For sate by all druggist*.
Tne bes tarmiG Are those who make thel r
hhm«sv the baiti
r Scott’s Emulsion
of cod-liver oil presents a
perfect food* palatable,
easy of assimilation, and
an everything appetizer; those these who are
to
are losing flesh and
Strength. The combina¬
tion of pure cod-liver oil,
the greatest of all fat pro¬
ducing foods, with Hypo
phosphites, provides for Quick a re¬
markable agent
Flesh'Building in all ail¬
ments that are associated
with loss of flesh.
Prepared Mew York by Scott * Bow«*. f'hemistft,
Bold by ail tlrufcgiiU.
Unlike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
—•OH —
Other Chemicals
are used In the
preparation of
Hi W. HAKE It & CO.’S
i m reakfastCocoa
which i» absolutely
pure and goluble.
I » h ) ( r fjIUia f the e more than of three iuixe<l timet
il i j '} ! I*with strength Blarcli, Cocoa
,,[. ' 1 Arrowroot or
~ C- Bujcar, ami is far
more eco¬
nomical, costing less than one cent a cup.
it is delicious, nourishing, untl kasij.y
DIGlfiSTEU __________________
Sold by Wroter« everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorcheater, Maw.
XV. Ij. DOUGLAS »•'! SHOE
IBM equal* custom work, costing horn
ft
. Wj-jT, stamped pair warranted, on the bottom, Take no Rubsti- i'.very
« local f<»r full
Hav* tulc. See* papers
^iriHWATtRpDiG^lhL Wirrr * ilL. description for of ladies our complete and
lines gen
DOUGTlJjt* TV tlemni or send for 11
Ylu hi stented Catalogue
VPk iai anuT ....... how to or¬
der by mail. Postage free. You can get the best
bargains of dealers who push our shoes.
$12 * "■ TO N* v “turutih a tmrfte and travel
M 1AI r ril ‘broach tin* country; u team,
ft wH If ftu pf ah ill »ukI>, I* not noecHHary. A
Aa ft* few vacancies tn towns and
cities Aim and women of good eharaeb r will ttnd
this un exceptional opportunity for profitable em
p oymeut. Spare hours may be used to good advan¬
tage. B. F JOHNSON A CO..
llth umi Mute Sts., IticlniionU, Vu.
Jauuat-)- 1.1, J. , , • • 1« pat* cant*
FebruaVv “ . . . • .10 “
l. . . . . 11 «
•• 13, . . . . 1 .*> «
March I, , , . . it “
*• 1.5. . . s
We id TOTAL, 1,5 K.iM-.nl.
liwvf pa la our etiatomera iu 7Z day*.
PtoIUs paid twice each moutW, mo uey can be
vrlthdrawu auv time; 9^0 to $1000 cau lie iu vested;
write for luformation.
iJSHKIt A CO., Batik era rr and Urotiei's,
IS ii ml *40 It road way. v New York*
llil tiP lion malic PhftiifififyPiim
nftLmu Ai>ti-t;at an nal ullB n Hl^uUlll
••••••♦•##••*##•*••••••••##•#♦##••«
•* t;ure» Dyspepsia, ana f'reveuLs Heartburn, Kutnmiallain, luaiif ttiiuu, A
m Outturn aud a Astui Hit, f
Y Useful iu Malaria luul Fevers. Cleannofl the
A Teem and Promotes the Appetite, ^weetetts “ A
T the Breath, Cures the 'ionacco Habit. Endorsed
•* by the M(Hileal Faculty. Smut tor 10, 15 or ••
A cum package. HALM, Stiver, Stamps or Jbstal Voi A ate. f a
Y GEO. h. Hu West Mth St., New le,
4 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
FOR TIHKH
Brain and Nerves
Nothin $ Equals Dr, Kind’s
Royal Geriuetuer.
A Guaranteed (Jure
FOR
The Opium Ilabit.
We guarantee to cure ihe opium disease board, in
any form in fifteen days* or SauiUnum no pay for Salt
treatment or attention. at
Springa.near fidential. Address, Austell.Ga* Urn. Correspondence Nelms’ Ouarantbr con¬
Opium Cure Co., or Lock Box 3, Austell, Oa.
ftTLANTA BUSINESS UNIVERSITY
" ATLANTA, CA.
tlooliitet'itinM? i*riu*lit*c* Short
tiamt, A t*. JSciul tot* eutuloaut*.
MAt LEAN. LTiitTlS & WALKER,
PATENTS — uio.was 1 )•. snii’MiN,
WasUiuuUflu, U. 0. N<» a ty’s tv\
■ uuiil i'uteui obtaineU AVrite for Inventor's Guhk
■
PISO’S CURE FOR
CtiiiaumpttYea and people
whohave weuk lungaor Asth¬
ma, should use PI so'a Cure for
Consumption, it has cured
thouteunds. It lifts not Injur¬
ed one. It is not bad to take.
It is the beat cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. 95 c,
CONSyMPTlON.
A. Si. U. Sixteen, '04.
i s s mmmms
i Flanifold an Arc Impure occasioned and Ini- by
M Disorders poverished tion of the Blood. condi¬
s To Slight Cure impurities, Scrofula, if not corrected, Eczema, develop into serious maladies. s
Rheumatism
and other troublesome diseases is required a safe and reliable m
remedy purities purely from vegetable. Such is S. S. S. It removes all im¬
the blood and thoroughly cleanses the system,
thousands of cases of the worst forms of blood diseases have been
H Cured by S. 5. S.
& 6 nd for our Treatise, seat free to any address SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Manic, 6a.
s s s
A FEW NEW NEVERS.
-- Never fad , to keep , appointment.
an
Never call on people jnst at bed
tirue, or during dinner, or before they
are downstairs in the morning.
Never stop people who are hurrying
along the street and detain them forlO
or twenty minutes.
Never," when you see two people en
gaged in earnest talk, step iu and enter
upon a miscellaneous conversation.
Never begin to talk about “this,
that and everything” to one who is
trying to read the morning K papers PP • 0 r
a book, - - or anything else.
Never tell long stories of which you
yourself are the hero.
Never inconvenience people by
coming in late at church, theatre, lee
ture or concert.
Never talk when others are singing
or doing anything else for your amuse¬
ment, and never, the instant they have
finished, begin to talk upon a differ¬
ent topic.
Value of Good Cooking.
We masculines have yet to learn that
the kitchen is the most important end
of the household. If that goes wrong,
the whole establishment is wrong. It
decides the health of the household
and health decides almost everything.
Heavy bread, too great frequency of
plum pudding, mingling of lemonade
and custards, unmasticable beef, have
decided the fate of sermons, legislative
bills, and the destiny of empires. The
kitchen knife has often cut off' t.ho
brightest prospects. The kitchen grid¬
iron has often consumed a commercial
enterprise. The kitchen kettle has
kept many a good man in hot water.
It will never be fully known how much
the history of the world was affected
by good or bad cookery .—Nashville
Advocate.
Ureal bins: 1’oittort.
tou can’t draw a breath without, inhaling
poison, if you sojourn in a malarious loca itv
during: the unhealthy season The dcuizms
of malaria stricken regions testify that the
on y certain safeguard against the poisonous
vapor and its products, chills and fever, re¬
mittent fever, ague cake and dumb ague, is
ilostetter’s Stomach Bitter-, which remedies,
also, rheumatism. cons.ipation, biliousness, dyspepsia and
It Is better to run from evil companions than
to be overcome by them.
Dr. Kilmer’s 8 waM r - Hoot cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet Laboratory and Binghamton, Consultation N. free. Y.
“Man’s inhumanity to man make (countlens
thousand /’—tramps.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With local applications, as they cannot reach
th« seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or
constitutional it disease, internal and remedies. in order to euro
you must take Hail’s
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di¬
rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is not aquack medicine. It was
prescribed for by one of and the is best regular physicians prescription. in this
country It. composed years, of best a known,
i* t he tonics com¬
bined wit h t he best blood miritiers. acting di¬
rectly on tlie mucous surfaces. The perfect
combination of the two ingredients is what
produces such wonderful results in curing ca¬
tarrh. Send for testimonials free. Toledo,
F. J. Chunky & Co., Props., 0.
Sold by druggists, price 75c.
NIiIIoIi’n
Is sold mi n trunni‘ tiM*. It pui*<*s incipient Con¬
sumption; it is the Best Cmuh <
If you couhi secure uohl at 50c. on $1 you
would order some by mail. A free catalouut'of
mailable arth-h s in drug line will t.eaeli you
how S. to (\ stive Ilat 50c. Dye, on $1. 10 K. A. iia.ll, (’harlot
ton, •.
“BiitWN’s Bronchial Tuochks” are widely
known as an admirable remedy for Bronchitis,
Hoarseness, Coughs and Throat troubles. Sola
| 1/4 hojee*.
------*-------
1 m
Hh W‘
1; s
V, - -tf
ft
rSviiv
Mrs. S. D. Ashley
FOR WOMEN IN FEEBLE HEALTH
Hood’s Cannot Bo Too High¬
ly Recommended
“O. J. lloix] <1- Co., Lowell. Mass..
“I have used Hood’s Sarsaparilla for years
and it lias always given the best of satisfac¬
tion. 1 had little appetite aud was troubled
with rheumatism in the left arm and shoulder
and bach. As soon as I began to take Hood’s
Sarsaparilla my appetite increased, tlie
Rheumatic Troubles Ceased
and I felt better than for years before. I have
used it iu tlie family and would not do without
it. It cannot be recommended too highly for
Hood’s s, ;> Cures
women in feeble health, nor for children when
teething. Any one giving it, a fair t rial will l>e
well satisfied.' Mks. S. D. Asiii.ky, North
Richmond, Ohio. Get Hood's.
Hmitt's Pills act easily, yet promptly and ettl
eieally, on tue liver amt bowels. « cents.
t UNCLE SAM’S PET- [ i!
*
- ▼
| PLASTER CASTS OF EMINENT MEN
IN THE NATIONAL MUSEUM.
i ‘ - -
! w Life Masks Are Made — Sculptor
Mills and His He ue made Indians
—The Eskimo Dolls.
j T~fTHE I weird head of Joseph Francis,
1 1 and ghostly, looked
down from a shelf in an out
<T of-the-way corner of the NV
j tlo »al Museum. It was a mask in
1 P lftfiter > taken from the aged inventor
; of lifeboats a few weeks before he died.
Close by was a similar counterfeit pre
■
! sentment of the living General Greelv,
of Arctic fame. It is a sort of like
; BeHH ra ther painfully striking, inas
much as it resembles in all essential
respects a death mask. As in the case
with a death mask, the eyes are closed
and expression is lacking. However,
it is a perfect reproduction of the
features, save for a slight distortion
caused by the plaster, which pulls
down the eyelids and the muscles of
the cheeks. The mask is in fact a cast
of the entire head, except that what
might be called the “bottom” of it is
left off to permit it to be taken off,
whole.
The usual method of taking a life
mask is to insert straws in the nostrils
while the plaster is spread in a soft
state over the head. But Theadore A.
Mills, the sculptor who made these
likenesses, prefers to leave off the
lower part of the nose, thus enabling
the person to breathe more more com¬
fortably. The whole operation re¬
quires only about fifteen minutes. It
is easy to add the bottom of the nose
afterward. Such masks ought to be
made of all great men while they are
living. Thus their features might be
accurately preserved for all time. But
in the last illness the face is apt to be
much altered, in contour of feature as
well as expression. The sculptor uses
the mask only as a model, with a photo¬
graph to help. He opens the eyes,
relieves the “drawn” effect caused by
the plaster, aud the result is like life
itself.
Sculptor Mills, who does work for
the National Museum, sometimes
makes lay figures for that institution
by baking casts of different parts of
the body of a living man or woman—
the arms, legs, bauds, feet, etc. —and
putting them together, thus repro¬
ducing the entire individual. This he
did with some of the manikins for the
World’s Fair in Chicago, which were
to represent savages in the ethnologi¬
cal exhibit. The joints where the
parts met were filled in with putty
and painted over with the color of the
individual’s complexion. The only
portion of the body which cannot be
copied by casting is the abdomen, the
movements of which in breathing
would break the hardening plaster. It
is a disadvantage to be a near relative
of a sculptor, beoause he usually in¬
sists on utilizing the anatomy of his
family for the purposes of his art.
Most of the big dolls shown at the
museum to illustrate the races of man¬
kind aro clothed so that only the head
and hands need have the appearance
of flesh. In making one of them the
first operation is to produce what is
called a sketch in clay—that is to say,
a mule figure iu miniature, roughly
done, in the attitude desired for the
manikin, which is to be of full human
size . Using this as a guide pieces of
well-seasoned inch plauk are sawn out
for the trunk and legs. The legs are
made all in one piece, or jointed, ac¬
cording ns the figure is to stand, sit,
kneel or lie down. To the body sec
tion a cross piece is fastened for the
shoulders and another for the hips.
The four limbs are attached by bolts
or hinges, and the shape of the trunk
is formed by ribs of thick galvanized
wire. Thus is produced the skeleton.
Now burlap is stretched over the
ribs, and on the outside of this layers
of excelsior are put ou by sowing and
wrapping with twine. Over all is sewn
an outer skin of burlap. The legs are
stuffed aud wrapped in the same way,
the feet included. It remains to put
on the head and hands. The former
is usually modeled by the sculptor
from a photograph of an individual of
the race to be represented. The latter
are plaster casts of real hands. If the
arms are to be bare they are made of
plaster or papier mache; otherwise
they are made of wood, padded as
above described. The head, neck,
hands and any other exposed parts
a,re painted suitably to the complexion
required. Then the head is sent to a
wig maker on F street, who constructs
for it the proper kind of chevalure.
Such a manikin will stand travel and
handling well, the plaster portions be¬
ing packed separately. Once made, to
dress it is easy enough. With a pho¬
tograph of a man or woman of any
nation or tribe and a complete COS
tume there is no difficulty in turning
out a doll in accurate likeness of the
original.
The taking of the casts of the sort
referred to requires no little skill.
Suppose, for example, that a hand is
to be reproduced. The first thing
necessary is to carefully oil the skin
all over in order to lay down the hairs
on the surface. If this were not done
the hairs would catch in the plaster
and the removal of the latter would be
painful. Next the plaster is spread
over the hand. When partly dry it is
cut so that it may be removed. As
soon as it has become hard it is taken
off. Of conrse there must be a good
many pieces, and these are apt to be
broken more or less iu the process.
But the pieces have to be glued
together, each one being oiled on the
inside, the result being a perfect mold
of the hand. Into this mold a mix¬
ture of plaster and water is poured.
At the end of a few minutes it has
hardened, and the mold is gently
broken. The coating of oil has
vented the plaster poured in from
sticking to it, and within is found an
exact likeness of the hand. Obviously,
the mold is destroyed in the opera
tion, A foot or any other part of the
body ifJ done in the same wfty .
In making such casts various com
positions are used in preference to plas
ter of paris. Some of recent invention
have the “feel” of flesh. They have
been utilized recently by the National
Museum in manufacturing counterfeit
® n * ke *. which ^ e as “ real
bve ones, thus adding „ to the rea , isra
of the effect. The same thing is done
w,th fishes, but nearly all of the models
of ftn n y creatures ou exhibition are
® a8t ln . tue money pnlp Iromtb
Treasury, which is macerated
C8sh - freshly caught fishes are em
P^yed for producing the molds, and
the casts are P alnted ,n tlie highest
style of art. This method is much
raore satisfactory than stuffing fish
skins - For mounting small mammals
the skm 18 sometimes first removed
and a cast of the Hayed body is made
in plaster. Over this the skin is then
put, the proportions of the animal
being thus exactly retained.—Neu
York Advertiser.
The Old String Story.
Ex-Speaker Heed has retained an
old-fashioned method of reminding
himself of certain things to be done
during the day. It is not uncommon
to see him enter the House of llepre
sentatives with a string tied around
his little finger. This was the case
one morning recently when he brought
with him a white piece of cord tied
with ends hanging an inch from the
knot about the little finger of his left
hand. Newspaper men speculated ou
what was to be done during the day.
When the ex-Speaker endeavored to
twist the Speaker up in a parliament¬
ary decision during the morning most
of them thought that that was what
the string meant. The man from
Maine, however, did not cut the cord
off when he got through that little ef
fort, so that it is still a mystery.
A story is told of Mr. Beed and his
peculiar habit. A little child of his
family ex-Speaker's had playfully attached a string
to the finger, as she had
often seen him do in the morning,
This was done by the little one so
quietly that it was unnoticed at the
time. Mr. Reed got to the Capitol,
and when he took his seat he saw the
string. Then be relapsed into a brown
study. He couldn’t think what it had
been put there for. For the first time
in his life he thought he was getting
absent-minded and was fearful lest he
should leave some important duty un¬
done. The ..... little mischief - , maker ,
watched , , for him in the evening and
asked him if he had attended to it.
“Have I attended to what?” he in
quired.
“Oh, I tied the string on so yon
would think to bring me a box ol
candy, said the child, and then tin
cloud was lifted from the mind ol
leader of the Republican party. It is
needless to say the little gftl got the
candy—Washington News.
What is Electricity ?
Probably no better answer can be
given to the above query than the one
that follows: It is stated that on oii€
occasion when Professor Galileo Fer
raris, the Italian scientist, whose name
is known to all electricians, was asked
by a young lady what electricity was,
lie ventured to answer it. Opening
her autograph book he wrote: “Max¬
well lias demonstrated that luminous
vibrations can be nothing else than
periodic vibrations of electro-magnetic
forces. Hertz, in proving by experi¬
ments that electro-magnetic oscilla¬
tions are propagated like light, has
given an experimental basis to the
theory of Maxwell. This gave birth to
the idea that the luminiferous ether
and the seat of electric and magnetic
forces are one and the same tiling.
This being established, I can now, my
dear young lady, reply to the question
that you put to me: What is
ity? It is not only the formidable
agent which now and then shatters and
tears the atmosphere, terrifying you
with the crash of its thunder, but it is
also the life-giving agent which sends
from heaven to earth, with the light
and the heat, the magic of colors and
the breath of life. It is that which
makes your heart beat to the palpit a
tiou of the outside world, it is that
which has the power to transmit to
your soul the enchantment of a look
and the grace of a smile.’’—Scientific
American.
Changes Wrought by Chemistry.
Chemists turn scrap iron into ink,
old bones into lucifer matches, the
sha vings of blacksmith’s shops into
Prussian bln,, fusel oil iu.o oil of
apples ancl pears, the drainings of cow
houses into fashionable perfumery,
beournrs’ beggars rags ram inf,, into new now- pilot coats,
cesssool nltii into axuinoiiia, and tar
waste into aniline dyes and saccha
rine. In Paris, V they‘first utilize rats
to , clear n the u flesh * trom the ,, , bones ot .
carcasses, then kill the rats, use up
their fur trimmings, their skin for
glo\ j.-.. es, av their ■ il• thigli v bones for .. tooth- . ,,
picks, and their tendon and bones for
gelatine wrappers. fu- These are a few
of ii.. tiio things the Trm, Iron T,v Industual n Ga
zette names among the products con
verted into use by* the chemist aud in*
x Ant nr *
Perfumes.
There is no perfume more generally
agreeable than the clean, sweet odor
of orris root. Violet sachet powder,
if of a very fine quality, and so faint
as to be the mere suggestion of a per¬
fume, is. generally pleasant. Rose,
musk and other stronger scents give
many an unpleasant sensation of faint¬
ness or even nausea, aud are always
open to the disagreeable suspicion of
being used for counteracting purposes.
After all, as Henry Ward Beechci
said:’“There is no smell so universally
\ pleasing as no smell,” aud absolute
dantiness of person attracts far more
than any perfumery can do.—St. Louis
Post-Dispatch.
Vmf \Baking
^J \& waer D
All other powders are
cheaper made and in¬
ferior, and leave either
acid or alkali in the food
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO , 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Profit in Potatoes.
Farmers iu Lincolnshire, England,
have recently turned largely from
wheat have profited growing by to potato growing, Sales and
the change. of
potatoes are reported at from $100 to
$125 an acre in the ground. Sold in
this way, the cost of the crops is not
much greater than wheat, as the cost
of harvesting is eliminated, and a
blind man can see which gives the bet
ter profit. We think there are many
American farmers who could make the
same change in their methods with
profit. One thing is certain—a good
crop of potatoes always pays a profit,
A good crop of wheat does not always
do it. — Western Plowman.
A New Cake Recipe.
*\sponge , cuke . is . made , by ,
. beating the yolks of and
six eggs two
cups of sugar together and adding the
beaten white. Add to this mixture
one cup of flour and ten tablespoonfuls
of boiling water. Then a second cup
fill of flour and two teaspoon fills of
baking powder. Essence to taste; bake
in a moderately hot oven.
The liiggist fish are the ones that
get away. .Inst so with many of
opportunities. *
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The subject of the above portrait is a
FtX“an“l^»ytV Mr. Manson is known ‘‘his H^e
word is as good!
bis bond. ” In a recent letter to Dr. R. V.
^^'iSfSSJ'SSSSSl falo. N. Y., Mr. Manson
“ f ,r fierce’s Pleasant’Pellets says :
- are the
best pills I ever took for the liver. All my
friends say they do them the most good.”
This opinion is shared by every one "who
once tries these tiny, little, sugar-coated pills,
to be found in all medicine stores.
Ihe U. b. Inspector of Immigration at But
lalo, N. Y., writes of them as follows:
“ from early childhotxl I have suffered
from a sluggish liver, with all the disorders
accompanying such a condition. Doctors’
prescriptions used in abundance and patent medicines I have
reI ief 1 ; they only afforded tem
f, ora £f A, was recommended to try
Dr - ■ Pierces . Pleasant Pellets. I did so, tak
ing two at night and one after dinner every
day for two P*het weeks. I have reduced the dose
J° 1 have ’° ne ! months ’ every increased day for two in solid months, flesh
m six
twenty-twopounds. than I have been I am in better health
since childhood. Drowsi
ness and unpleasant feelings after meals have
completely disappeared.”
Assist nature a little now and then with a
gentle laxative, or, if need be, with a more
searching and cleansing cathartic, thereby
removing ach and bowels, offending matter from the stom¬
and toning up and invigo¬
rating the liver and quickening its tardy
action, and you thereby remove the cause
of a multitude of distressing diseases, such
as diseases, headaches, indigestion, biliousness, skin
boils, carbuncles, piles, fevers and
maladies too numerous to mention.
If people would pay more attention to
properly regulating the action of their bow¬
els, they ior would have less frequent occasion
to call their doctors’ services to subdue
attacks of dangerous riim aaas
Tansy Kills Moths.
“There is one sure preventive of
moths. It is tansy,” says a correspond¬
ent. “Sprinkle the leaves freely about
your woolens and furs and the moth
will never get into them. When I was
a child my grandmother used to send
me to the tansy patch on the hill, with
a large basket iu which to bring home
plenty of tansy leaves. In the garret
were five hair-covered trunks, studded
with brass nails, filled with her best
blankets, flannel sheets, etc. I re¬
member how grandmother took the
extra supply out of those trunks in
the garret once a year, hung the ar¬
ticles on a clothesline down in the or
chard, beat them and put away again
to lie amid the tansy leaves until an
other year. The fourth generation of
her posterity ‘ are sleeping under the
sam blankets and coverlets now,
which " ,,roves Golden the effieaev of th.it Za „„
, ti t,me me- ’ ~ PhUade, Phlladel P n hia
'
___
To scale a fish easily, plunge it in
boiling water. Cold soft' water and
soap will remove grease from washable
Place meat over, not ou ice,
as the water draws out the juice. Never
leave it wrapped in paper, but lay it
on a plate.
this That, of all known agents to accomplish
purpose. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets ar«
unequaled, used, is proven by the fact that one,
ondary they are always in facor. Their sec¬
effect is to keep the bowels opeu and
regular, not to further constipate, as is th,
case with other pills. Hence, their great
stipation, popularity piles, with sufferers from habitual con¬
and indigestion.
The “ Pleasant Pellets ” are far more effec¬
tive in arousing the liver to action than “blu,
pills,” calomel, or other mercurial prepara¬
tions, and have the further merit of being
purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in
any condition of the system ; no particular
care is required while using them.
Composed of the choicest, concentrated
than vegetable extracts, their cost is much more
is that of other pills found in the mar¬
ket, yet from forty to forty-four “Pellets”
are through put up in each sealed glass vial, as sold
of tho druggists, and can be had at the price
Dr. Pierce more ordinary and cheaper made pills.
first prides himself on having been
to introduce a Little Liver Pill to the
American people. Many have imitated them,
but none have approached his “ Pleasant Pel¬
lets ” in excellence.
For all laxative and cathartic purposes
the “Pleasant Pellets" are infinitely supe¬
rior to all “ mineral waters.” sedlits pow¬
ders, “ salts.” castor oil, fruit syrups (so
called), laxative “ teas,” and the many other
purgative compounds sold in various forms.
Put up in glass vials, sealed, therefor,
always fresh and reliable. One little “Pel¬
let ” is laxative, two gently cathartic.
As a "dinner pill,” to promote digestion,
take one each day after dinner. To relieve
distress from over-eating, nothing equals
them. They are tiny, sugar-coated, anti
bilious granules, scarcely larger than mus
tard seeds. Every child wants them.
turbing Then, and after shocking they-are taken, instead of dis¬
the system, they act in
a mild, and natural way. There is no re¬
action afterward. Their help lasts.
“ just Accept good.” no substitute recommended to bn
dealer, as because of They paying may be better for th e
him abetter profit,
but he is not the one who needs help
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