Newspaper Page Text
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Hr* He Symon*
Baltimore, Mil.
Run Down
'
Headache s, W O Appetite
Six Bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Brin t Back New Life.
"O.1, Hood A Co., L,(; -vii, Mas a.:
“Dear Sirs—Before using Huod’a Sarsaparil¬
la I was frequently nick and did not know
what was the matt r with ine. One day I
would feel so tired l coul I hardly stand, the
t ext I woul l have a severe headache and so
on, bring not know.Ujf what the nest, day would
lorih. 1 did not have any appetite arid
Was Greatly Run Down.
(tried agiod many medicines hut they did
me no good. Having heard a great deal about
Hood's Sarsaparilla 1 decided to try a bottle.
Hood's*s>Ciires
1 am glad to say I soon felt hotter. I have now
used all bottles and feel as well as ever. It
baa b en of great benefit to mo as 1 have re¬
gained my app't t“ and
Now Enjoy Good Health.
I can strongly recommend Hood’s Sarsaparil¬
la as an excellent blood medicine." M. Sv
MOSg, A iaq ntth St ,. Baltimore, Maryland.
tfaauy, Haod’a the Pills liver net aud cnslly, won. yet promptly aod efli
on ho 25 coats.
Sips of Health.
You don’t have to look
twice to detect them—bright
color,
smiles,
bright in
every tion. ac¬
Disease is
overcome
only when
weak tissue
is replaced by the healthy
kind. Scott’s Emulsion of
cod liver oil effects cure by
building is agreeable up sound flesh. It
to taste and
easy of assimilation.
Prepared by Scott * Bowne, N. T. A11 drufutirta.
A Guaranteed Cure
* FOR
The Opium Habit.
We guarantee to cure (ho opium tliwase in
aujr form la ttfteon attention. ila.ru, or no pay for board,
i.reatmvnt or Saultirimn at Balt
Spriatti«,uear fidential. Address Au-tell Him. Un- Corroapomionae Nuns' con¬
Guaiiantbc
Opium Chur Co., or Izwk Boxy, Austkm* Ga.
HILMSfIspniChewingGun)
“•CuiMsuua PyspepNla, rruvtjuu tUumuuuUiu, Outurftt liuttg; stum, •* A
§ Heartburn, und Astuma. ¥
\ A Pawul hi Malaria ami Fevers. Cleanses the
¥ Teem and Promotes the Appetite, sweetens A
thfc Breath, Cures the Tobacco Habit. Endorsed r
A •• by the Medical Faculty, seud tor 10,15 or 35 **
f ceui package. Silver, Slump* or I\ntal Note, f A
mh. HALM, U-> West mb St., New York,
ATLANTA BUSINESS UNIVERSITY,
" ATLANTA, GA.
Bookkeeping, BusincM* Practice, .Nhorr
tiood, Arc. Scud for catalogue.
niACLKAN, CURTIS tfc WALK Kit, M>n«rs.
I Your o o
f * Is Heart’s the most important part of Blood organism. Three- JuL |
I* fourths your 19
wy of the complaints to which the system is subject
2L are due to impurities in the blood. You can therefore 21
▼ realize how vital it is to . Keep . * It . Pure ^
*
f m For removes which all nothing impurities, equals cleanses S. S. S. the It blood effectually thor- ”
oughly and builds up the general health.
i Oar Treatise Mailed on Free Blood to any and address. Skin Diseases SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta 81.
VT- D. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE
equals custom work, costing from
mmm fc Kit, and’yr’ice
(JEIT, x , stamped on the bottom. Every
®ffieakles$; ^ pair warranted. Take no substi¬
tute. See local papers for full
description lines for of ladies our complete ami
' gen
’W-LbdOaUs'S'-— W llemen or send for il¬
lustrated giving Catalogue in
> JJ P: structions
_ iiJAL
ATIXt 5TTUS. — how to or
derby mail. Postage free. You can get the best
bargains of dealers who push our shoes.
FOR
TeethingChildren
PR. KING'S
Royal Germetuer
Is the best. Never fails.
PATENTS I until Eatont ©btatued.Write lor Inventor’* JOT Outdo
H
PISO’S CUBE TOR
Cen.nmptlve* and people
wiio have weak innp.or Asth¬
ma. should use Piso's Cure for
Consumption. It has cured
thousands, it has not Injur¬
ed one. It is not bad to take.
It Is the best cough arrup.
Sold everywhere. 85c,
■ CqH SUMPTION.
A. H. C.......
JlOrn
. Scott's'’
m ^m
*
Unlike the Dutch Process
K0J» No Alkalies
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are used in the
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
IflBreaMastCocoa
1 which is absolutely
pure and soluble .
j i It has more than three times
the strength of Cocoa mixed
with Starch, Arrowroot or
nomical, Sugar, less aud is far more eco¬
It is delicious, costing than one cent a cup.
DIGESTED. nourishing, aud easily
Sold by Grocers everyrrhsrs.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Hass,
TREATMENT
A Terrapin Farm.
There is a terrapin farm ne r
Mobile, Ala., said T F Swift, of
Mobile. There are but two of these
farms in the United States, the other
being in Maryland. The farm is f*ur
rounded by a high fence, and canals
are land cut through it with narrow ridges
of between. Every terrapin
that is caught off the coast is taken
there, and fishermen are constantly
kept at work hunting for them.
The ends of the canals are so
secured that it is impossible for the
terrapin to escape, and they breed us
rapidly on the farm as they do in
their native haunts. Several thou¬
sand of them are constantly kept on
hand, while from 10,000 to 12,000
dozen are sold annually at prices
be ' n " I>rinCipU,ly hl NeW Y( f rk and
Philadelphia, from which points the
entire trade of the country is sup¬
plied. At meal times the sight of
thousands of terrapin scrambling up
the banks to get their food is a most
unique and interesting one.—[St,
Louis Globe-Democrat.
boURTKKN women known as tiie
Grey Ladies of Loudon have dedicated
their lives to working among the poor
of Biaekheath. The population of
this district amounts to over 70,000,
and the Grey Ladies, so called from
the habit they wear, visit the sick
and try to educate the well. They
have one day a week for rest, but
with that exception devote them¬
selves entirely to the people around
them.
“.•Shall | Ever be Strong Again <’>
Many persons suffering from chronic lack
of vigor nsk themselves this question in vain.
They have neglected the one sure means ol
conferring what they lack and long for. In a
very brief time, if they would but use Hos
tetter’s Stomach Bitters, they would find
' hrir appetite arid sleep renewed and strength
revived. 1 he Bitters will also surely remedy
dyspepsia, malaria and liver complaint,
Von impair your best capital when you make
moneyat the expense of character.
Tho Dalian Convention.
Public ackno\vlcdgmeat of the zeal arid en¬
ergy with which the representatives of the
Hoads composing the line via Montgomery,
New Orleans and Marshall have labored to
provide safe, expeditious and oom for table
due transportation to Dallas upon this occasion, is
labor,s them; is occasion and the successful felicitation. fruition of their
for They were
the first in the held to offer special train ser¬
vice through to Dallas without change: and
while other lines subsequently yielded to the
force of competition and nave advertised
through lanta and sleeping New Orleans cars to Dallas, yet the At¬
line Short Line is the only
which has provided a special train with
day coaches attached, through to Dallas with¬
out The change. day in
coaches this train will be
everything, equipped with short wash-stands, soap, towels and
of sleeping accommoda¬
tions, The necessary to the comfort of passengers.
seats are of the latest and most comfort¬
able design. This accommodation—by means
of which a chan re of cars may be avoided
without necessitating the expense of sleeping
cur appreciated accommodations, should ini most highly
that by those who do not wish to incur
it is expense.
(anci a particularly which those fortunate who circumstance
Worth one attended the Fort
Convention some years since and were
delayed appreciate) by high water along ot her routes will
that- this special train service is
arranged A*. L. N. tor over the A. <fe W. R, W. By. of
<fc and T. & R Hoads, for the reason
that t hese lines are located above the highest
high water mark and are not subject to inun¬
dation at any season of the year.
Such public spirit and interest in the emu
tort , and welfare of the Delegates should he
i©cognized, and rewarded with their patron¬
age.
ThfiiRfl Are Looking Better.
Yes, ©very day shows cheering signs of im¬
provement in every branch of business, if you
are out of employment, or have spare time oc¬
casionally, & Co., Richmond, write without delay to B. F. John¬
son gestions that will lio Va., who can make sug¬
worth your consideration.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken
internally, and and acts directly upon the blood
mucous surfaces of the system. Send for
testimonials, F. J. CHUNKY free. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
& Co., Props., Toledo, Q #
Sometimes a man feels the lightest when he
has a heavy load on.
fiEKENLAND’S QUEER MINE.
-wmann, nr
wOHjjD,
Curious Find of Ninety Years Ago
Aow Used In the Manufacture of
Aluminum—An Odd Camp.
E VERY usually vessels widest April intervals scattered that a at curious that about fleet time at the of is
in the ports
along both coasts of the Atlantic
Ocean puts to sea and heads away for
a point in the lee of Cape Desolation,
on the southwest coast of Greenland.
The ships of this fleet, says Frank Les¬
lie’s, have the strongest and best of
canvas and gear aloft, while the hull is
not only unusually strong everywhere
but is built solid at the bows, covered
with an extra layer of plank there, and
then armored with steel plates. The
passage before this fleet is at the best
one of the most arduous in the world.
The destination is but a few miles
south of the Arctic circle. An ocean
river sweeps along the coast, bearing
masses of field ice hundreds of miles in
extent, and into and across this bar¬
rier the fleet must fight its way to the
harbor for which it is bound, and
when loaded there the fight must again
be undertaken in order to return.
The voyage is undertaken by the fleet
in order to carry to Philadelphia the
product of the cryolite mine in the
Arsok fiord. This mine is so odd that
it is unique. There is no other cryo¬
lite mine in the world. It is worked
in odd fashion, by the men of an odd
mine camp, and it was discovered by
an odd prospector.
In 1803 a German prospector named
Gieseckewent to Greenland, landing at
Cape Farewell, where he lived with
the Eskimos, and with whom he trav¬
eled up the rugged coast in the skiu
covered comiaks until ho reached the
Arsuk fiord. An Eskimo who resided
there told him that a few miles up the
fiord wa* a curious stone, which his
people called the ice-that-never-melts.
They used it in dressing pelts, rub¬
bing the stuff on the flesh side, where
it acted somewhat as soap might. Gie
secke went to the place and found at
the water’s edge a cropping of white,
soft rock, that when wet looked ex
actly like wet, snow-mixed ice. It tv as
an entirely novel substance, so he
gathered samples, prospector fashion,
and he had hard luck with them, which
is also after the fashion of prospec¬
tors. On his.way home in a Danish
ship a British erniser captured the
outfit, and Gieseeke lost all he had.
However, the chemical world learned
that Gieseeke had found the floride of
sodium aluminum, and it was named
cryolite, which means ice stone.
No one but chemical students took
note of it, however, until Professor J.
Thomsen, of Denmark, made some ex¬
periments with it about forty-five
years after it was found, and demon¬
strated that chemically pure alum
could be cheaply made from it as well
as sal soda, bicarbonate of soda and
some other useful substances, So a
company to work the mine was formed,
and about 1860, men and materials
were sent up there to mine the stuff
and ship it to Copenhagen. Thereat
Ivigtut came into existence as a mine
camp, and it is to this day the only
white settlement in Greenland. It is,
of course, a Danish settlement, for
Greenland is one of the colonies of
good old King Christian. First of all
they built a house to live in, using
timber ami boards to build up walls
and stu fling the spaces between ceil¬
ings with moss. Then most of the
houses were shingled over all, but that
built for the superintendednt was
covered with smooth Norway pine.
Thore were double doors and double
windows, and the best of coal-burning
stoves, while huge coal bins were
erected close by. So, the storehouses
to hold other supplies sufficient to
last three years were erected aud filled,
and they have been kept full continu¬
ously.
The cryolite deposit was walled in
and covered over with gray granite.
When the covering had been cleared
off they found a mass of the pure
white cryolite about 600 feet long and
200 feet wide. Investigation showed
that this was the top of a pocket or
chimney of the material that plunged
down at an angle of forty-five degrees
with the horizon into the mountain
that rises there. It was also learned
that the cryolite, though pure on top,
was mixed with much carbonate of
iron in the chimney of ore.
For several years the working of the
deposit did not pay, but in 1864 the
Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Com
pany contracted to take two-thirds of
all that the mine eould produce, and
since then the mine men have been
getting rich while paying the crown a
royalty of one-fifth. The most inter¬
esting use made of the stuff in America
is in the production of aluminum, the
metal that has made such rapid strides
in the art recently.
An open hole 450 by 150 feet large
and 100 feet deep has been dug out in
the work of thirty years. In summer
the miners simply blast up the bottom
and out down the sides of the hole;
other workmen break up the blocks,
separate as far as possible the iron ore,
and run the whole up an incline rail¬
road operated by steam. The refuse
has been used in making and extend¬
ing the dock at which the stuff is load¬
ed into ships. The water that falls
and sweeps into the mine is lifted out
by a common steam pump. In winter
the work of clearing away the covering
rock and cutting down terraces goes
on with terrible regularity, even
though the latitude is above fifty-one
degrees. The men then work on an
odd staging. The mine is filled with
water and the mem, work on the ice
that quickly forms. One of the oddest
of mining accidents happened when,
one day, a quantity of cartridges were
accidentally fired beneath this ice
staging, splitting it up ia all direc¬
14 is not often that miners » re
thus in danger of drowning.
| s<5a g, s t g 0 f 130 men and three women
in summer and sixty men and three
j women in winter. The steamer Fox,
, famous in arctic historv in connection
j makes with the from search for Sir John Franklin,
two to three trips every
summer from Copenhagen to the camp,
carrying supplies. On the first trip
out in spring it carries seventy men,
and on the last one back in the fall it
takes nearly the same number home.
A few come to the United States every
year. While in Greenland they are
supplied with an abundance of bread
and cured meats, with weiss beer and
coffee. They have some vegetables
which are imported from the United
States, and all the game and fish they
want. Ducks and gulls swarm about
fiord, and the apparently barren
mountains are the homes of many ptar
migun and rabbits. The finest trout
and salmon are to be had for the tak
ing, and the arctic cod is also easily
gotten. The men are allowed to go
hunting and fishing almost at will
WISE WORDS.
There isn't a bit of religion in self
pity.
We all hate self when we see it crop
out in somebody else.
The man who rides a hobby is gen¬
erally lame in both feet.
The sun is always shining to the
man who walks by faith.
The man who will say a mean thing
wul sooner or later do one.
The love that “suffereth long and is
kind” is not the love of self.
It takes some people a long time to
find out that it never pays to worry.
To be contended with what we have
is about the same as to own the earth.
You can tell what kind of a man a
boy will make if you know what man
is now his hero.
The world is full of people who
would prefer caudle light to sunlight
if they had to pay for it.
The fear of punishment may keep
men from doing evil, but it cannot
make them love the good.
When you get up to pray for th«
conversion of the heathen, don’t ex¬
pect the missionary to go at his own
expense.
One reason why tome preachers do
not reach the masses is because they
get up in she church steeple to write
their sermons.
One reason why some people do not
get religion is because they do not
want to get enough to spoil them for
the world.—Ram’s Horn. ♦
Porterhmise and Tenderloin.
A carcass of beef is cut iu nineteen
pieces. All of tho pieces and the
names are in the dictionary. Look at
the list and you will not find the
names “tenderloin” aud “porter¬
house”—two names that the inexperi¬
enced buyer has always on his lips.
The porterhouse is a delusion and a
suare in ninety-nine cases out of 100.
The tenderloin is the thick part of the
sirloin after a few round-bone pteaks
have been cut off, and is balled the filet
de boeuf. It makes a choice piece for
roasting, but if not sold in a lump, is
cut into sirloin steaks of three grades.
The first and second grades arc tech
nically “hip sirloin steak” and “fiat
bone sirloin steak.” These are the
tenderloin steaks that the young
housewife pays extra for. There are
not over six of each kind in one car¬
cass, her so ^he chances are that she pays
good money for a third-cut, or
“round-bone”, sirloin, which is itself a
capital steak.
Porterhouse steaks are cut from the
small-end sirloin steak, and one car¬
cass contains but a few of them. In¬
genious butchers understand the knack
of cutting the small-end sirloin so as
to include other portions of the beef,
thus enabling them to sell both at
porterhouse prices.
Good beef has a juicy or sappy ap¬
pearance, with a fine, smooth grain,
which is easily noticed. The fat, both
outside and through the muscles, pre¬
sents a clear, straw-colored appear¬
ance. The flesh should be cherry red.
When meat rises quickly after being
pressed it may be considered prime.
When the dent made by pressing rises
slowly or not at all, depend upon it
the beef is poor. — Washington Post,
New Implement tor the Soldiers.
The infantry and chasseur regiments
of the Austro-Hungarian Army have
just been supplied with a new imple¬
ment which can be used as a spade,
hatchet and saw. It is about a foot
and a half in length, weighs about two
pounds, and is so arranged that it can
be hung on the belt at the left side
near the bayonet. It will enable the
infantry to do all that is necessary in
laying out a comp, fixing cooking
places, providing a water supply, and
throwing up light earthworks. Exer¬
cises in the use of this new weapon,
which is intended to render infantry
regiments independent of their own
pioneer companies, have also been in¬
troduced, and will be carried on by
the Vienna garrison in one of the large
drill grounds in the environs. —Chica
go Herald.
The “Gentle Reader.”
Charles Dickens once received an
invitation to a “Walter Scott” party,
each guest being expected to appear
in the character of one or the other of
Scott’s heroes. On the eventful night,
however, Dickens appeared in simple
evening dress, among a host of Rob
Roys and Ivanhoes. The host asked
him which of Scott’s characters he
represented. “Why, sir,” replied
Dickens, “I am a character you will
fiivl in every one of Scott’s novels. I
am the ‘gentle reader. ’ ”—Detroit Free
Pres* 1
Why not, indeed?
When the Rovat Baking Powder makes
finer and more wholesome food at a less
cost, which every housekeeper familiar with
it will affirm, why not discard altogether the
old-fashioned methods of soda and sour
milk, or home-made mixture of cream of
tartar and soda, or the cheaper and inferior
baking powders, and use it exclusively?
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Woman’s Influence is at Home.
Under no imaginable circumstances
could I go to the polls or exercise the
right of voting. American women en¬
joy without restraint every civil, social,
ethical, and intellectual" right com
patible with feminine delicacy and re¬
fined Christian womanhood and to in¬
vite them into the arena of politics
would prove subversive of ail domes¬
tic quietude, loosen the ties that link
them to their kingdom, the home
hearth, and proves as disastrous to
harmonious social order as did
the “Wooden Horse” to the house¬
holds of Troy. “Woman’s right
to vote” would involve the forfeiture
of woman’s privilege of commanding
the reverence and deferential homage
of mankind. Feminine opinion is a
powerful political facter when express¬
ed geDtly in the sacred precincts of
home, by dropping ballots of noble
aims and exalted principles and senti¬
ments into the open hearts and minds
of brothers, husbands and sons, but
wrangling and wrestling at “election
polls” would inevitably resolve the
whole question of woman’s political
influence into one or mere numerical
valuation .—Augusta Evans Wilson,
If a person were to ask a railroad
company for a free pass for a goat,
what form of table talk would his re¬
quest naturally take? Why, this of
course: “please pass the batter.”
It is more pleasant to receive an un
| grammatical, beautifully poorly embellished apeUed apology check than tor
I a
j not paying a debt.
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If tfie following letters had been written
neighbors by your best they known and most esteemed
could be no more worthy of
your confidence than they now are, coming,
trustworthy as they do, from citizens, well known, intelligent, and
neighborhoods, enjoy who, the fullest in their several
all confidence
and respect of who know them. The
subject known and of much file above portrait is a well
G. Foster, residing respected No. lady. Chapin Mrs, John
at S3 Street,
Canandaigua, V. Pierce, Chief N. Consulting Y. She writes to Dr. R.
Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Physician to the
Buffalo, N. follows: xustltute
at troubled with Y., as “ I was
I doctored eczema, with or salt-rheum, seven
years. a number of
our home physicians and received no
benefit whatever, I also took treatment
from Philadelphia, physicians Jersey in City, Rochester. Binghamton, New York,
and
received no benefit from them. In fact
I have paid out hundreds of dollars to the
doctors without benefit, Mv brother came
to visit us from the West and he told me to
try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
He had taken it and it had cured him. I
have taken ten bottles of the ‘Discovery.’
and am entire! _ irely wishing cured, and if there should
be be any any one one any information I would
gladly return correspond stamped envelope.” with them, if they enclose
Not less remarkable is the following from
Mr. J. A. Buxton, a prominent merchant
of Jackson, N. C., who says: ‘‘I “ I had
been troubled with skin disease all my
life. As I grew older the disease seemed
to be taking advertised a stronger hold upon me. I tried
many remedies with no benefit,
until I was led to try Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. When 1 began taking
it my health was very poor ; in fact, several
persons have since told me that they thought
I had the consumption. I weighed-only about
125 pounds. The eruption on my skin was
confined accompanied by severe itching. It was first
to my face, but afterwards spread
over the Back and head, and the itching be
cam© dftiou simply when I unbearable. began This was my con
when I would rub the taking the ‘Discovery.’
of branny scale parts affected a kind
would fall off.
Old Weather Proverbs.
It is a sure sign of rain if the cat
washes her head behind her ear.
When horses and cattle stretch out
their necks and snuff the air, it will
rain.
A lively horse tells of a cold day.
When the moles throw up the earth,
rain soon follows.
Bats who speak flying tell of rain to¬
morrow.
Buzzards flying high indicate fair
weather.
Wlien chickens crow before sundown,
it is a sign of rain next day.
If chickens go out in the rain it will
rain all day.
A screeching owl indicates cold or
storm.
Whim Traveling
Whether on pleasure bent, or bail ness, take
on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Pig,, as it
acts most pleasantly and effectively on the
kidneys, liver and bowels, prevent in? fevers,
headaches and other forms of sickness. For
sale in SO cents an i $1 bottles by ail leading
druggists.
Tue papers describing a brutal prize fight go
through the mall at pound rates.
Dr. Kilmer’s 8 wamp-R.oot cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
I amphlet and Consul tat ion free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. V.
It is a very serious thing for one to be a
tunny man and find no market for his jokes.
Sliilott’a Chip
Is .sold on a guarantee. It cures incipient Con¬
sumption; it ia the Best Cough Cure; i5u, 50c, $1
“
should OJI ro,mH~oRK Thkoav,
etc., try •Groan’* Bronchial Troches," a
Price 26 ceuis* re remedy ' SoW u,iLu *" bou *'
For a while I saw no change or benefit
from taking the ‘Discovery,’ but I persisted
m Dr. Us Pierce’s use, kegping Pleasant my bowels Pellets, open and by taking taking
much outdoor as
I exercise as was possible, until
disease began to gain in flesh, and gradually the
released its hold. I took during the
year somewhere from fifteen to eighteen bot
ties of tho ‘Discovery.’ It has now been
four years since I first used it, and though
not using scarcely any since the first year,
my health continues good. My average
wight being 155 to 160 pounds, instead ofi
125, am it was when I began the use of tho
Discovery.’ of Many persons have reminded
me I look my improved appearance. Some
say younger than I did six years
ago when I was married. I am now forty
®!ght better years old, and stronger, and enjoy
health than I have ever done before
mmy life” Yours truly,
Tbousandsbear testimony,in eqnallystroDB
terms, to the efficacy of this wonderful rem¬
edy m curing the most obstinate diseases. It
rouses every organ into healthy action, puri¬
through fies, vitalizes and enriches the blood, and,
it, cleanses and renews the whole
system. All blood, skin, and scalp diseases,
from a common blotch, or eruption, to the
worst scrofula are cured by it. For tetter,
buncles, salt-rheum, goitre, eczema, erysipelas, boils, car
uuacies, nds goitre, or or thick thick ne«k, ne*k, and and unequaletj enlarged
g‘ a and swellings, it is an
remedy, robbed of "Virulent, contagious, blood-poisott ^
is its terrors by the “ Discovery
and auu by oy its its persevering persevering use use the most tainted
system Book renovated and huiU up up anew. anew.
A on Diseases of the Skin, with col¬
ored plates, illustrating the various erup¬
tions, mailed by the World’s Dispensary
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., on
receipt Book of Scrofulous six oents for postage. Or, a
Disease, on “Fever 8ore«,” Diseases, “White as Hip-Joint
“Old Soree," Ulcers, mailed Swellings,”
in or for same
amount stamps. 'U
T—