Newspaper Page Text
DiatBtsrsstsU Kindness.
“Won’t you havs another piece of
pie, Mr. Cleverly ?" asked Tommie.
“Thank you, Tommie,” replied Mr.
Claverly, “it’s very kind of you.”
“Oh, that’s all right,” returned
Tommis, with energy. “I’m a-lookin’
ont for myself, too. Ma said if it was
necessary to cut another pie, I could
hare two pieces .•'-Harlem IAfe.
Th. w.s.s, «» Siberia
frqn liver complaint or from kidney tronbie.
Bnt In Hostetter’a Siomach Bitters they cm
ftud relief. So o»n the malarious, the rheu
mafic, the neural oc the feeble and the old.
ciSw'of'ow.-"thirdof tim da aceiuurj-.' A wine
glassful three es a y.
Let.very mar, brin wliat he can and add
It to th* heap forth,, general good.
Dr. Kilmer’s s- w a m p - Ro or cure
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binvhanjton. X. V
A virtuous e (Tort is somet rn< •s frozen with
cold admiration and sullen neglect.
The management of the A * W. p. R. R.,al
between Atlanta ami N.-.v Orleans durinr t‘,
neit,>d of tin- Mmli-Qr.i- ii.-t.v; «- at ft,
Kimball 'h'h-". an l no -,- deairine b. main
f„^ this tr p Will do V. ,-H to ml on i,im M»m- day
C etc a , lre8 l,. B1 .in B ea r ac C om,no.
Oa.
Hattie We|i_ami Happy
Used to Suffer From Impure
Blood and Eruptions
V
^TP'MTw :
Hattie Dancer
Lawrence Station, N. J.
“ Hood’a Sarsaparilla cured my child of
impure blood and eruptions on the head.
Bhe wonhl scratch her head so that It would
Mend. The sores spread behind her ears,
aad the poor child suffered terribly. I doo
tered her the beat I knew bow but the sores
Aid not get rny better. But thanks to
Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Hood’s Olive Oint
Hood’s^ Cures
msnt, she is now well a« any or the children.
She Is as lartrn and healthy as any child five
yean old. This is all the medicine we take,
for I do not think there Is any Letter.
Oxoaoz Dakceb, Lawrenoe Station, N. J.
o o Easy to buy, In effect. easy to
take, easy 25c
W. $3 L. Douglas
SHOE TIT 13 THE FOR A BEST. KIN®,
ratNCHAtNAMEUtDCALf. COEDOVAN,
J|?4.*3KP FIHECALF POLICE,3S0LES. &KAHGMW
W&- P°?S| '42.II7S BOYS'SCiiOOLSm ! n>5.
Sle'HBK •wtoics
W-L’DOUGLAffl* SEND FOR C ATAtneue
"W EROCKTOH.MA3S.
Over One Million People wear the
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satlsfactoiy
They give the best value for the money*
They equal cuetora nhocs In style and lit*
Their wearing uniform,—stumped qualities are unsurpassed,
Ths prices are on sole*
Prom $1 to 53 sivei over other m»kcs.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
SULLIVAN
4 CRICHTON'S /
and School or shorthand
The BeH and Oheannet Buaii»*a College in America.
Boar Penmen Tune short. Oata’rwu* tree- Addrees
Hulllvan A Crichton, Pryor St., Atlanta. Oa,
T — bti*Ui«.Ns; world. ber uoaa. on OBACCO any of Improved Caialogue other RoputAtlon l ;rjfp't l!*t TaurUntea totvauoo maul'd and of i.t our frw. than SUITA farm'; seed lower SEEDS st-ods can fui Larfe*r price* 25 s?oon LE m years ** lu to found num¬ i the JU ail iu to
1* JB.AQl.AM) SKEJ) CO„nyoo.U»UlfaxCo..V i
* WORLD’S-FAIR *
imGIIKST AWARD!
. "SUPERIOR N UTRIT ION - T»?£ LIFE!’ .
i
Hll !
THE GREAT
A\EDIOINAL^
Hzs justly acquired the reputation of being
The Salvator for
Invalids
^ The-Aged.
as Incomparable Aliment for the
Growth and Protection of INFANTS anc’
€H I LDREN
A superior nutritive in continued Fevers
And a reliable remedial agent
in alt gastric and enteric diseases;
often in instances of consultation over
patients whose digestive organs were re¬
duced to such a low and sensitive condition
that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was
the only nourishment the stomach
would tolerate when LIFE seemed
depending on its retention;—
And as a POOP it would be difficult to
, conceive of anything more palatable.
Sola by D -tUGGISTS. Shipping: Depot.
JOL.N CARLE & SONS. New V i-rk.
FROM WASHINGTON. T
NEWSY ITEMS PICKED CP Vf
THE NATIONAL CAPITOL.
-—
Sayings and j>oings of the 0«cl»l
„ pa(l8 of tho Oovermnent.
-
The president has sent the following
nominations to the senate: Joseph K.
Herod, of Indiana, to be first secre
tary 0 f the legation of the United
* Crycbtou, of
sta teg at j apan; William
West Virginia, to be secretary of lega
tion of the United States at Brazil; to
be consuls of the United States, Fred
Ellison, of Indiana, at Beliae, British
Honduras, William M. Masterson. to
Kentucky, at Aden, Arabia.
t» liepresentative , *• Moses, ir of e n. Georgia,
got through the house Monday the bill
increasing Mexican and Indian war
pensions from $8 to 312 per month.
committee, nas tln'll^on Deeu so iaxr 111 jhusioii
matters that nearly every member of
the house would be anxious to oblige
him in any matter relating to that
snbieot i he JTr. number anl of SkT Mexican war
now
on tho roll at 38, is 17,815, and of the
Indian war pensioners there are 7,500. |
Nearly all of these are in the south.
The house committee on appropria¬
tions voted to favorably report Mr.
Washington's bill lor an exhibit at the
Tennessee Centennial exposition, to be
held at Nashville in 1896. The sum of
$150,000 is recommended, cf which
$30,000 will be expended for a build¬
ing. The managers will be required
to satisfy the secretary of the treasury
that $750,000 has been subscribed be¬
fore the appropriation will be avail¬
able. The vote in committee stood 8
for to 5 against, Mr. Williams, of Illi¬
nois, making a spirited speech against
this class of appropriations.
Jones’s Bill Withdrawn. .
Senator Jones and the other silver I
men have abandoned the fight for the |
i passage of the free coinage bill, or for ,
resolution declaring for free coin- ’ I
age, in the senate. They did not push
the matter further because by so doing
it might have delayed the passage of
appropriation bills and have brought
about an extra session. Further)
there was nothing to be gained by
pushing the matter. It was evident
that owing to dilitory tactics no free
coinage bill could pass during the few
remaining days of this session, and as
the senate bad, by a majority of nine,
expressed its sentiments in favor of
tbe free coinage of silver, it was use¬
less to push the matter further.
The Secretary Notified.
United States Treasurer Jordan sent
this telegram to Assistant Secretary
Curtis Wednesday afternooon;
“New York, February 20, 2:30 p.
m.—Inform the secretary that the
syndicate has completed the matter of
the purchase of gold coin on this side
and have now turned in $123,000,000
gold coin in exchange for United
States This notes undesstood in excess of contract. ” that j
is to mean
$30,000,000 in gold have been secured
by the Belmout-Morgan syndicate in
America for payment of the ! ounds,
the balance,nearly $35,000,000, having
been secured times in the London, allotment when for more that j
than four ;
side was subscribed for. So far $23, - i
052,370 in gold have been received by :
the treasury from the syndicate and i
$22,060,820 in certificates issued to it. i
It will probably he several weeks be
fore tho bonds are ready for delivery.
To Save the Petrified Forest.
A memorial from tho legislative as¬
sembly of Arizona has been presented
to congress, requesting that the lands
covered by the petrified forest bo
withdrawn from entry until the advis¬
ability of making a public park of it j
cau be settled. The lands are iu j
Apache county, are ten miles square, i
covered and according by trunks to the of memorial, are of j
trees some
which measure over 200 feet in
length and from seven to ten feet in
diameter. The legislature represents ,
that “ruthless curiosity seekers are I
destroying these huge trees and logs;
by , Wasting tuem ■ search , oi ,
m pieces m
crystals which are found in the centre
of many of them, while carloads of the
limbs anu smaller pieces are being
shipped away to be ground up for va
rious purposes. ” To make it a public
park would preserve the tract from
vandalism and injure no one, as there >
are no settlers upon it.
NEW ORLEANS JUSTICE.
A Bribe Taker and a Dishonest Law
J«*r Sent to the Penitentiary.
At N>w Orleans, Councilman Numa
’
i' ISSR ___, L, convlc ted . for , . having ac
ceptea a bribe of one hundred dollars
from Groceryman Sherman was
teneail “ 7 by I.,- t'„ i ___ Ferguson w ___ „ to . three .. .
ears at u hard labor in the state pem
■
tentiar y _
-Ambrose Smith, a well known and
popular attorney, convicted of having
appropriated to his own use cue thous
* uOUft^B, , n Which t-.Tti he collected nr-.* for
alia Iiaa
a client was also sentenced to three
years in the penitentiary.
-
PArvivr I ACKING / t OMPAN\ MV enpfi GOESl .v. NDER m nn
-
The John Moran Company, r ** of St. Jo
seph, Makes a Deed of Trust.
The John Moran Packing Company
at bt. Joseph, Mo., has given a deed
of trust on all its property in that city,
John Donovan, Jr., being named as
trustee. This action was caused by
the depression in business for some
months past.
The trust was executed in favor of
the State National bank of St. Joseph,
which holds notes to the amount of
SoO.OOO against the company to s euro
the St. Joseph Stock Turds Company.
▼kku of Or C*r**l Crops.
The report of the sf.tistioian . of . the . j
agricultural department concerning
the area, product and value of the ce
real crops for 1894, which has recently
been published, contains some very
significant figures. The report states
that the corn crop of the year is one
of tbe being ! owe but * t ,°“ 19.4 r f?“ bushels. rd ' t , he The P«
acre area
harvested m the corn-prodnoing states
b “ ^Vnl^ta^ToO^Tom !
7 (manna r™ tv!!!* . nUntaJ Th«
= P D ? e “ about i«ii cannon , /U,UUU
, h™. 06 “
“ above ** T*iT the averac** g ®' "ho iho
bidhila d L Lff°«i
l f IfR ® b “! b ’ heb 18 ° ed 4
SfSSSf’of ‘ t ® ^ 88^ ™ The'
of of yield v,Q has been 13.a. bushels pei
acre, and the average value per bueheJ
49.1 cents. The estimates of the area,
nroduct and value of the other crone
are ft9 follows:
27,023,5oo acres product, t0T r?£?iA 662,086,928
bushels; £5 vslue SM4 816 920- yield
bushels
Eye—Area “cmtui 1 944 iT 780 acres: prod- P
- t 4 . ^,72 „61 0 bushels; value, t sia $13,
Barley—Area, 3,170,602 acres; prod
net, 61,400,463 bushels; value, $27,
134,127.
Buckwheat—Area, 789,232 acres
product, 12,668,200 bushels; value
$7,040,230.
Potatoes—Area, 2,737,973 acres
product, 170,787,338 bushels; value
$91,526,787.
Hay—Area, 48,321,272 acres; prod
net, 54,874,408 tons; value, $468,578,
321.
Tobaoco—Area, 523,103 acres; prod
uct, 406,678,385 pounds; value, $27,
760,739 .—Scientific American.
Columbus and the Historic Egg.
At last science has demonstrated how
our discoverer made his egg stand on
® nd a ? d 8ecured tbe means b ? wblcb
to “ ake bls expedition , a success,
Ih,) was first laid down on its
Blde about . f ,4h a P tbe at ? bandln and . lbe a clrc,t! dl f tdl ™° vad tha
egg catches onto the movement and
be g ln8 to rotflte a fdewise axis; as
the speed , is made to increase it is
gradually brought upon its tip end,
spinning like a top when the plate
can be P lace(1 on the table with the
e «8 0a e “ d f a condition that would
wy ll illustrate tne earth on its polar
axlB '
Atf ALPENA MIRACLE.
MRS. JAS. M. TODD, OF LONG RAPIDS,
DISCARDS null CRUTCHES.
In an Interview with a Reporter She Re¬
views ller Experience and Tells
tile Real Cause of tiie Miracle.
(From fie Aryus, Alpena, Mich.")
Via have long known Mrs. Jas. M. Todd,
of Long Rapids, Alpena Co,, Mich. She has
been a sad cripplo. Many of her friends
know the story of her recovery; lor tho bene¬
fit of those who do not wo publish it to-day.
Eight years ago she wo3 taken with ner¬
vous prostration, and in a few months with
muscular and inflammatory rheumatism. It
affected hor heart, then her head. Her foot
became so swollon she could wear nothing
ou the:,,: h ’r hands were drawn all out of
S **8P°. Hor oyes were swollen shut more
‘ban half the time, her knee joints terribly
swollen and for eighteen months she had to
be held up to be dressed. One limb became
entirely helpless, and tho skin was so dry
u:i11 cracked th at it would bleed. During
these eight years rhe had been treated by a
s ' oro of physicians, and has also spent much
time at Ann Arbor under best medical advice,
AU said her trouble was brought on by hard
work and that medicine would not cure, and
that rest was the only thing which would
ease her. After going to live with her daugh
ter she became entirely helpless and could
not even raise her arms to cover hersolf at
night. The interesting part of tho story fol
lows in hor own words:
“I was urged to try Dr. Williams’ Pink
DiilB for Pale People and at last did so. in
three days after I coaim3nced taking Pink
pm 3 1 could sit up and dress myself, and
after using them six weeks I went home and
.ommenced working. I continued taking
the crutches, pills, until now I begin to forget my
and can go up Mid down steps
without aid. Iam truly a living wonder,
diking out ot doors without assistance,
“Now. if I ean say anything to induce
those who
so
nte sufferera will try Pink Pills according to
directions, they will have reason able to thank
God for creating men who are to con
££
pink Pills for the after effects of la grippe,
and weak women with impure blood, and
with good results.”
Mrs. Todd is very strong in her faith in the
curative powers of Pink Pills, and says they
have brought a poor, helpless cripple back to
WSlCaK
household duties, thanks to Dr. Williams’
1 n‘
Dr. ™ YiUhams > Pink r>- . t>u Puls contain * • all no the el«- i
meets necessary to give new lifeand richness
to the blood and restore shattered nerves.
They arc for sale by all druggists, or may be
had by mall from Dr. Williams’Medicine
Schenectady, N. Y-, for 60c. per
box, or six boxes for #2.50.
-
R.waro of Ointment, lor Catarrh That
Contain >Icrcurv*
as mercury will surely de-troy the sense of
! smell and complete'y derange the whole sys
tom when entering it through the mucous sur
i eians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to
the good you can possib y derive from them.
Hall's Catarrh Cure manufa tured by F. J.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. contains no mer
^ cury, and i- taken internally, acting directly
u P° n ,h « V 0 " 1 <Y' d muooi.s surfaces of the
system In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be
I sure to get the genuine. It is taken internally.
* y F ' J ‘ Che “' y
| IS^Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle.
cessfu' For WTiooping remedy.—M Cough.Pioo’s J>. Dieter. Cure 67 is Throop a sue
, Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., !Nov. 14, '94.
1 Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
I teething, >llay softens spain, the gums, wind redu colic. e- inflamma
| ticn* cures 25 d. a bottle
| Karl's Clover R<y>t, the great blooi port for,
1
>. -
Metallic C*rp«t«.
Lowell parties are imported t« making be ex
perime ^ nting with a process fer
t8ilio varns for nge in car pet8. The
es8 oou61bts of a foundation of a
^ eUl coating OB an inferior surface,
, nd weaT i ng the strands in certain
propor ‘ ti 0 ns. The object is to secure
fs reaU , r dnrabilitv and strength than it
possible to obtain from the use of
var ^ s made {rom our anima i or yege -
t ab l e fibers. A non-oxidizable metal
is -ployed and this is dissolved and
applied to the surfaces of threads, ren
dering them like metal in appearance
ac d general characteristics. The me
t#1!io composition is composed of aln
minium ’ boral > 1,thftrge “ nd
was< These compounded with white
Iead a!id OEe 01 tWO ° ther sub8tance8
produce a metallic coating that it is as
flelible and 8oft aa c “ mmon P“ nt
would be, yet to all appearances the
/*ovprin2’ is as metftl * very mucb re
li; aluminum Various sub
®* . a J lces f „ an be be used x * sed for the core or
A^it% ° 0 tt ®“ ’fl^ete! luk The me
V to the yarns
. utomat i ca ii y i u a device \ consisting of
s chamber , u in which *1 the ingredients • .
* ra P ut > aud through w ic e y ns
are drawn, the coating adhering to the
mrfac0 ef the threads .-Industrial
World.
The Blood-Curdling Yell.
Mrs. Strongmind—What would the
men say if 1,000,000 women wrath
Bhould rise in their righteous
and demand the ballot at the point of
the bayonet?
Mr. Strongmind (abstractedly)—
Oh, rats, I suppose.— Truth.
An Important Difference.
To make it apparent to thousands, who think
themselves 111, that they are not affected with
any disease, but that the system simply needs
cleansing, is to bring comfort home to their
hearts, as a costive condition Is easily cured by
using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the
California Fig Syrup Co.
Good address and pleasing manner always
express a truth to best advantage.
The Stan fiord
remedy for all stomach and tabule liver gives complaints relief,
is ttipans Tubules. One
but. in severe cases one should to taken after
each meal until the trouble has disappeared.
The Greatest fled ical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered in one of onr common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He has tried it In over eleven hundred
eases, and never failed except in two oases
(both thunder humor). He has now in
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty miles
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, and a perfect oure Is warranted
when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is oaused by tho ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Read the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious It will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you can get, and enough of it.
Dose, one tablsspoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
WALTER BAKER & GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On thia Continent, hare received
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the great
Industrial and Food
v,W EXPOSITIONS
In Europe ana America.
Unlike th* Dutch Process, no Alt*
lies or other Chemicals or Dyes «r«
BREAKFAST used in anv of their preparation*.
Their delicious COCOA is absolutely
pure and soluble, and cotta lest than one cent a cup.
GOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER, MASS. I
Worn-Out Lands
quickly restored to fertility by the use of fertilizers containing
A High Per Cent, of Potash.
Full description of how and why in our pamphlets.
They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save you
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street. New ' T o r '*
Consumption
was formerly pronounced incurable. Now it is not In all
of the early stages of the disease
Scott’s Emulsion
a
it
TRACK MASK.
Sendfor pamphlet on Scott’s Emulsion. FREE.
Soott A Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists- SO cents and SI.
Do You Wish
the Finest Bread
and Cake?
It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is
the purest and strongest of all the baking powders.
The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweet¬
est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow¬
der makes the lightest food.
That baking powder which is both purest and
strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome
food.
Why should not every housekeeper avail herself
of the baking powder which will give her the best
food with the least trouble ?
Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift
or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal,
as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul¬
phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome.
Certain protection from alum baking powders can
be had by declining to accept any substitute for the
Royal, which is absolutely pure.
Boiled Milk.
Some very interesting experiments
have lately been made in France by
Dr. Cbamouin in the line of boiling
milk to free it from being a means of
infection and contagion. There has
been a great prejudice in this country
against boiled milk for infant feeding,
but the idea that the boiling process
does away with the nourishing proper¬
ties and digestibility is done away
with by Dr. Chamouin’s experiments.
He fed a number of kittens on boiled
milk and a number ou fresh milk.
Those fed on the boiled milk were
twice as fat and healthy as those fed
on fresh milk.
He further carried on experiments
in Paris which assured him that the
infant death rate could be made much
less, were the thousands of infants
hand fed, given boiled milk instead of
fresh milk.
This series of experiments has been
very interesting from the reason that
boiled milk has been used, with un
qualified success, in rearing my own
babies, as fat and healthy a set as one
could desire. The amount of milk
used in a day was placed in a fire
crock and boiled. The thick top or
scum lifted off and the crock covered
and put away safely, was all there was
as to trouble. A tiny granite sauce
pan held just enough for a meal and
that meal was slightly warmed, not
heated hot, before putting it into the
bottle .1.
t, Boiling mil.t is, indeed, a simple
precaution against the bowel ailments
of infants, so (simple every mother
should try it- Womankind.
Smoking and Sense.
Edison says that when he is busy J
and deeply absorbed , . in . , his . work ,, he con
sumes about twenty cigars a day; when
he is less active mentally, about ten.
They are always strong cigars. The
inventor says that this excessive smok
ing has never, so far as he can discov
er, done him any harm, and if it did
he would be certain to stop the habit,
His grandfather, family has been who one lived of smokers, be 108, |
his P to
tr* been an inveterate , , smoker , and ,
so chewer of tobacco as well. —Pilblio
Opinion.
Stuffed Beefsteak.
Vary the old methods of cooking
steak by trying this. Make a nice
dressing as for turkey or chicken;. lay
it in steak, roll and tie at both ends.
Put in pan as a roast iu a little cold
water. Add a lump of butter, put in¬
side the stove and baste frequently.
Thicken gravy with bread crumbs and
season.
will effect a cure quicker than any other
kuown specific. Scott’s Emulsion pro
mot:.,- the making of healthy lung-tissue,
relieves inflammation, overcomes the excess¬
ive waste of the disease and gives vital
strength
For Coughs, Colds, Weak Lungs, Sore Throat,
Bronchitis, Consumption, Soro.Ma, Anemia,
Loss of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Children.
Buy only the genuine with our inode*
mark on salmon-colored wrapper .
Fast Living.
The most remarkable instance ot
rapid growth is said to be recorded by
the French academy in 1729. It was
a boy six years of age, 5 feet 6 inches
in height. At the age of five Ms voice
changed, at six his beard had grown,
and he appeared a man of thirty. He
possessed great physical strength, and
could easily lift to hi3 shoulders and
carry bags of grain weighing two
hundred pounds. His decline was as
rapid aB his growth. At eight his hair
and beard were gray; at ten he tot¬
tered in his walk, his teeth fell out,
and his hands became palsied; at
twelve he died with every outward
sign of extreme old age. — Times and
Register.
THE ONWARD IT ARCH
^ of Consumption is
YX stopped short bv Dr.
ical Di3COVery If
you haven’t waited
beyond reason,
4b " e s c °“^' 4e re '
„ a n
jPyt^OH Although by many
believed to be incur
W=fK a b)e, there is_ the
\.*V \ ® offiWng witnesses to
tlle fact that ’ in ail
' ts earlier stages, mu
Sc° n Not^rery
case, but a lam tir.
cenlagr of cases , and
we believe, fully 98
per cent, are cured
by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical progressed Discovery,
even after the disease has so
far as to induce repeated bleedings from
lar matter), great loss of flesh and extreme
emaciation and weakness.
Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases
reported ic *j to us as cured bv Golden of Mea- that
D i SC0V ery” were genuine cases
dread and fatal disease ? You need not take
our word for it. They have, in nearly every
“^VTxpeM interest 0 ^ &yskia? in rais¬
who have no whatever
representing them, and who were often
but who have been forced to confess that
it surpasses, in curative power over this
fatal malady, all other medicines with
which they are acquainted. Nasty cod
]j ver Q ;j an( j pg filthy “emulsions” and
mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these
cases and had either utterly failed to bene¬
fit, or had only seeraed to benefit a little for
a short time. Extract of malt, Whiskey,
and various preparations of the tried hvpophos
phites had also been faithfully in vain.
The photographs of a large number of
those cured of consumption, bronchitis,
lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal
catarrh and kindred maladies, have c e eu
skillfully reproduced in a book of 1 ?#
pages which will be mailed to you, on re¬
ceipt of address and six cents in stamps.
You can then write those cured and leam
their experience. AddressWoRLD’s DiSCEN
SARY Medical Association. Buffalo. N.».
?i
!
SHE WAS BUND.
A blindne.. come* to mo row, an
It It i« queer, I “
then. I fceve now. i <
see your eye* but not yoar i boss,
re*d blurred; because d*rk some epot* of cover th* them, J* j.
mi |kaowMl”boutlt;*t will , i DYSP*PS|*J cure you «
Take ona of those; it
ten minutes.
What i» it?
A • Ripans • Tabule.
WPjf ^ Pellets
^Tonic
treatment
, amth“
Bast So ld brdrvp m
In time. -“BEIsSHTSIkM
USCN.SU
(£5) , LYN. ‘