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Lames nee'ln; ft tontr, or children who
*Mt building np, should take Brown’s Iron
Jllttere. it is ideas ait to take, cures Malaria,
ndigestlon, BHlo 'snesa au i Liver Com
plaints makes the Blood rich ami pure.
Teacher—How do you spell Shakespeare?
Pupil— Any way 1 p ease.
Teacher—-Correct.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eve-water. 1 Iru r i-is soli at 35r per liortie.
No Stomach
Can long stand abusive treatment,such as too hearty
and rapid eating, too much rich food, hurrying to
and from meals, overuse of stimulants or narcotics,
etc. The inevitable result must be Indigestion, and
later,
Dy pepsin
with ail the horrible suffering so many people know
too well. Dyspepsia d< es not get well of itself. It
requires careful attention to diet and a good medi
cine like
Hood’s £ars3pariiia
which regulates the stomach, liver and bowels, stim
ulates secretion of the gastric Juice, removes acidity
and tones the entire system to health,
flood’s Pills cure liver ills. Price 23c.
CHILD BIRTH • • •
• MADE EASY!
“ Mothers’ Friend ” is a scientific
ally prepared Liniment, every ingre
dient of recognized value and in
constant use by the medical pro
fession. These ingredients are com
bined in a manner hitherto unknown
“MOTHERS’
• FRIEND” •
WILL DO all that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to “ Mothers ’’mailed FREE, con
taining \ aluable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Sent bv express on receipt of price $1.50 per bottla
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Ga.
SOLD BY ALL DKUGGISTa
‘^German
Syrup”
‘ ‘ I have been a great
Asthma. sufferer from Asth
ma and severe Colds
every Winter, and last Fall my
friends as well as myself thought
because of my feeble condition, and
great distress from constant cough
ing, and inability to raise any of the
accumulated matter from my lungs,
that my time was close at hand.
When nearly worn out for want of
sleep and rest, a friend recommend
ed me to try thy valuable medicine,
Boschee’s German
Gentle, Syrup. I am con
„ fident it saved my
Refreshing ufe AlmosUhefir / t
Sleep. dose gave me great
relief and a gentle re
freshing sleep, such as I had not had
for weeks. My cough began immedi
ately to loosen and pass away, and
I found myself rapidly gaining in
health and weight. I am pleased
to inform thee —unsolicited —that I
am in excellent health and do cer
tainly attribute it to thy Boschee’s
German Syrup. C. B. Stickney,
Pic ton. Ontario. ’
ELYS Catarrh
CREAM BALM
(Tmnnf.il..'
Masai I’attsußCß. ||| ( 5kPLQ JN J
Allays Paiu aud W . " St y? jy k
Inflammation. T HAY FEVEftJp^
Ileal* the Sores Wi
Restores the m BHj
Senses ol Taste
and temell. C
TRY THE CORF.
A particle in applied into each nostril and is agree
able. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mall.
ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street, New York.
stqve jjyf isif
DO HOT EE DECEIVED
with Busies, Kna'ucls, and Paints which stain
the hands, injnre tho Iron, and burn off.
i The Risiri; Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant. Odor
less. Durable, and tho consumer pays lor no tin
or Blass packed wit ii every purchase.
-gISO’S-"CURE,rOR 7
Consumptive# aud people
who have weak lungs or Asth
ma, should use Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has enred
thousands. It has not Injur
ed one. It Is not bad to take.
It is the best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. 85c.
iCO#jffUMPT4QN.
• It is for the cure of dyspepsia ami its
attendants, siek-headache, const!
tion and piles, that w
JTutt’s Tiny Pills*
w have become r.o famous, 'lftev act W
gently, without grioing or nausea.
KING COTTON
Boy or sell your Cotton on JOZIES
M 5-Ton Cotton Scale.
M B* | 4 NOT CH SAFEST BUT BEST.
ytA jsj H For terms address
l!J SS iSJOirEB 01? BINGHAMTON,
W Jtw BINGHAMTON. N. Y.
fK TANARUS“ for best plants raised by anyone from
Ha'/ our Prize Chrysanthemum seed. w Kck£re o' ee<l
and Illustrated Catalogue. Ko 10. onlv 5f 5 eta.
PU' lier dc Kfanda, febort 11111, \ . J
A ftTHlil? & DR. TAFT’S
Mcl I nm ails; sendusyour
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PATENTS m
lorphine Habit Cir*-d in 10
WrlWßlft;;.svißifja:BiSSlsssi;
A WOMAN’S AIMEU.
Our love is done I
t would not have it back, I saj',
I would not have my whole ran* May
But yet for our dead passion’s sake,
Kiss me once more an 1 strive to make
Our last kiss the supremest one;
For iove is done.
Our love is done!
And still my eyes with tears are wet,
Our souls are stirred with vague regret.
We gaze farewell, yet cannot speak,
And firm resolve grows strangely weak,
Though hearts are twain that once were
one,
Since love is done.
* But love is done 1
I know it, vow it, and that kiss
Must set a finis to our bliss.
Yet when I felt thy mouth onet mine,
My life again seemed half divine,
Our very hearts together run!
Can love be done?
Can love be done?
Who cares if this be mad or wise?
Trust not my words, but read my eyes.
Thy kiss bade sleeping love awake:
Then take me to thy heart; ah! take
The life that; with thine own is one,
Love is not done!
—Anne Reeve Aldrich , in Spirit.
AGAINST WIND AND TIDE.
•
BY iNXA SHEILDS.
People in Maysville always shrugged
their shoulders when. Mark Lauuson was
mentioned, aud usually the expressive
gesture was followed by soma depreca
ting remark.
“Comes of bad stock,” old Judge Len
nox would say, in his pompous dictator
ial manner. “All the Lnmsous were
worthless, and Mrs. Lamson was a
Kodge, and everybody knows what they
are.
The house in which Mark was born,
and where he scrambled up to manhood,
was a large farm house, tumbling to
pieces inside, with a roof always bein'*
patched against leaking, doors without
iocks and with shaking hinges, windows
that rattled in every wind, ceilings that
dropped plaster whenever a heavy foot
shook the upper rooms and furniture in
the last stage of sliabbiuess. His father
and mother were slatternly in dros3,
shiftless in household management, and
the handsome, bright boy was over-in
dulged and neglected as their own indo
lence suggested.
But Mark Lamson inherited none of
the leading traits of his parents. Prob
ably in Some remote ancestor there wa3 a
mixture of energy, resolution and ability
of which the Maysville gossips had never
heard, and for which they certainly gave
Mark no credit. It was in vain that the
Principal of the Maysville High School
declared that Mark had graduated with
the best record he had ever given iu the
school. It was useless for the lad him
self to keep his life free from blame, and
earnestly endeavor to do his duty.
Maysville could not forget that he was
a Lamson, and his mother was a Hodge
—“bad stock!”
As he passed from boyhood to man
hood, Mark began the unequal struggle
against fate and circumstances, that was
dictated only by his own endrgy. His
father had been able to get bread from
the farm by a b.zy tillage that gave the
bare necessities fertile table; his mother
had a very small income that gave the
three clothing of the poorest description,
and both were in open-mouthed wonder
that Mark was not content, as they had
been, to dawdle through life aud “make
out” with what they had.
And Mark, struggling to attain better
tbiugs, with only a vague, undisciplined
longing for improvement, met no en
couragement at home or abroad. He
tried to obtain a situation, but employers
were shy about giving work to a Lamson j
he met but a cool reception at the Mays
ville social gatherings, having no knowl
edge Of how to repair his own 1-inen or
keep his poor clothing even tidy. Boy
like, he imagined anew suit and gay
necktie were all-sufficient for a party,
and did not heed the frayed cuffs aud
broken collars at which the Maysville
belles turned up their noses.
But, iu spite of his father's lazy com
ments,his mother’s fretful remonstrances,
Mark Lamson, finding no employment
outside, determined to see if the farm
would not find him in work.
“Oh, yes; do as you please,” his
father said. “But there is no monev
for new-fangled fixings, and the laud
is about worn out. Plenty of it, to be
sure, but ’tain’t worth shucks.”
} So, single-handed,Mark undertook the
work of bringing up the old farm. Early
and late he toiled,repairing fences, weed
ing, picking stones* rooting out,.
stumps* preparing his land, without one
hand stretched out to help him,one voice
to wish him success. Thomas, the only
man his father employed* gave a surly re
fusal to aid, upon the ground that his
regular routine of shiftless farming took
all his time, aud Mark patiently sub
mitted.
He was twenty-one years old, when
into his dull,monotonous life came anew
stimulus—a hope, bright as a vision and
almost as baseless, lie feli in love! He
did not walk iu cautiously, counting his
steps and weighing his chances, but he
fell in plump, suddenly, hopelessiv.
There had been a warm discussion at
the Judge's about inviting Murk to the
party that was to celebrate Essie’s
eighteenth birthday and her final return
from boarding-school. But the pet of
the house had a will of her own and a
lively recollection of Mark’s handsome
face and boyish gallantries, and insisted
upon his being invited. Mark, carrying
in his memory only a pretty little girl,
found himself confronted by an undeui
able beauty; a face to win homage in far
more preteutious circles than Maysville
boasted, and a gentle grace of manner
none of the girls of his acquaintance had
ever extended to him.
The touch of .the soft little hand
offered to greet him riveted the chains
Essie s face had cast about Mark’s heart,
and made him her slave then and there.
He had starved all his jjfe for sympathy,
aad bis first haU'-imur with Essie fJUed
his longing heart with content. Sho re
membered all his boyish aspirations; she
entered into all his hopes and ambitions.
The party was the beginning of an inter
course that stimulated anew every good
resolution, gave anew vigor to every
hope of Mark’s life.
The village was essentially democratic,
and the fact that Essie was the only
child aud heiress of the richest, most in
fluential man in the place did not prevent
her from visiting Mrs. Lamson upon
terms of perfect equality. She was fond
of the weak, amiable woman, strongly as
she censured, iu her youthful strength,
the easy-goiug indolence that made her
home such a scene of confusion and dis
comfort; and, in her gentle, pleasant
way, she endeavoured to brighten that
home for Mark by suggestions and offers
of help that fell to the ground. It was
like fighting a feather bed to try to rouse
Mrs. Lamson to an active improvement,
and rebuffed there, Essie could only help
Mark by words of sympathy that were
like wine of life to his love.
An hour with Essie sent him back to
his uphill work full of new hope, every
energy stimulated, every hope bright
ened. He had not dared to set before
him in plain words the hope of one day
winning her heart to his own, for there
was all the humility of true passion in
that young, ardent heart, but he real-*
ized anew force, anew spur to am
bition.
Essie never sneered at him as the
neighbors had become accustomed to
doing; Essie never threw cold water
over his plans for improving the land;
Essie was never sarcastic over the clash
ing of his povery and his ambitions. As
he saw her more frequently, he ventured
to tell her of wider, wilder hopes, of
some day escaping from the drudgery
before him, and making his way to a
city, where his education might give
himastart in more congenial occupation.
“Father aud mother seem to need me,
now,” he told Essie, one day; ‘,‘they are
old, and they have no other child. I
think it is my plain duty to stay.”
“I think it is,” was the quick reply;
“your mother could scarcely bear a sepa
ration.”
“And while I am here, I must do the
work that lies under my hand,” he said,
“hard as it is! But Essie,” and his face
brightened, “do you know that already
I have made the farm pay double what
it has ever done. Next spring I can
hire help out of money I saved from the
sale of last year’s crop3l”
Essie, all eager interest, entered into
discussion of the capabilities of such a
lot for turnips, such a patch for wheat,
the possibilities of a dairy, the b33t cul
ture for fowls, as if she had never
studied music or filled her head with
French and German verbs.
But the horror and wrath ot Judge Len
nox, when, after two years of mild court
ship, Mark took his fate in his hands and
asked permission to mat*y Essie, caunot
be described.
“A Lamson!” he cried, when hav
ing dismissed Mark he returned to the
bosom of his family, "i Lamson for
Essie’s husband! The fellow wants
my money to spend after all his father
and his grandfather have squandered."
“Do you really and truly think Mark
i9 a spendthrift, papa?” Essie asked
quietly, t ‘Does ho ever lounge about
the stored or taverns, asg Harry Carter
auK Jamesijlayburn do! V
“I—Well, no, I never saw him,” was
the reluctant admission.
“Did you ever BrCar thtd he drank or
gambled, or even smoked!*
“N-o—l never did.”
“Is he not regular at church!”
“Ye-es.”
“But, oh, Essie!” struck in Mrs, Len
nox, “What shabby, half-washed
shirts he wears, and his fingers ltd out
of his gloves, and half the buttons of his
eoat gone 1”
“Poor Mark!” said Essie,
needs a wife.”
“Well, he need not look here for
one,” growled the Judge.
“I heard Mr. Thompson say, la3t
week,” said Essie, quietly,“that there is
hot a better farm in Greene County than
Lamson’s.”
“Such a palace of a house!” the
Judge sneered,
“Mark is hoping to put anew house
on tho place, next year. He has had
builders over from B , but they say
the old house is beyond repair, and it
would east less to have anew one.”
“Aud where is the money to come
from?”
“Where the improved farm came
from,” said Essie; “from Mark’s indus
try, perseverance and energy, in the face
of the hardest discouragements ever a
young man had to fight.”
“Eh!” said the Judgei “What?
What?”
“See what he has done,” said Essie,
still in an even, quiet tone that carried
conviction far more than an excited one.
“Eight years ago, when he was but a
boy, he put his shoulder to the wheel
and took his playtime between school
hours to weed aud clear away stones.
Nobody helped him. He was ridiculed,
sneered at, discouraged on all sides. He
had the poorest farm in the place, and
he has made it one of the best. He
has put every spare dollar into
books on agriculture, improved ma
| chines, good stock. He has now four
men at work for him, good horses, good
cattle, good poultry, and he will have a
good house. Papa, do you not think it
will be a pity to have the new house in
the care of Mrs. Lamson, to ruin as she
has the old one? Out-doors the manage
ment is all left to Mark, and see what he
has done. But a man cannot make a
home comfortable alone; he needs a
wife.”
“Well,” said the Judge, “let him have
| one, but not my child.”
i “Still he loves me,” said? Essie, “and
I love him!”
“Pshaw!” said the Judge, and marched
i out of the house.
But prompt as he was, he was just,
and he loved Essie. He had let preju-i
dice influence him against Mark all his
life; now he took pains to find out how
I much of his dislike was well founded.
Grudgingly ouough was tho verdict given
iin Mari*, - * favor. Maysville 4id not wdi-
ingly acknowledge it had been wrong in
its estimate, and shouldered upon Mark
all the faults of his ancestors. But the
facts were strong, and Judge Lennox
found himse'f confronted by them.
Slowly, for he was not easily convinced,
he took respect into tho placo of con
tempt, and, after a month of patient in*
vestigation, sent for Mark.
The interview was a frank, manly one,
the old gentleman not being given to
half hearted measures of any kind. He
admitted his former prejudices, aud
heartily commended the young man who
had struggled so nobly.
“When your new house is finished,"
he said, “I will let my Essie be your wile.
A man who can make his way against
wind and tide as you have done, deserves
a happy home.”
The Judge being a power in Maysville
public opinion veered round, as soon as
the engagement was announced.
The new house being completed, Essie
became housekeeper,’Mrs. Lamson gladly
resigning her feeble reign. And under
the new regime it was wonderful to see
how even the old people smartened up.
They had no chronic objection to
cleanliness, if someone else did the
necessary work; and with Mart and Essie
to govern and direct, the Lamson house
hold so lost its old name, that you could
scarcely find to-day in Maysville one
voice to repeat the old saying that “Mark
Lamson came of bad stock.”— The Ledger.
A Very Queer Satellite.
The satellite nearest to the planet
Jupiter mu3t be a singular place of resi
dence, if tfiere be any possibility of resi
dents at all resembling human beings. In
the first place, though it is bigger than
our moon, the substance of which it is
composed is less than half as light as
cork, so that it is not a very solid place
of residence.
In the next place, though the sun ap
pears very dim from it as compared with
what it appears from the earth, it has a
moon—namely, Jupiter itself whose
surface appears many hundreds of times
larger than our moon.
Iu the third place, the recent observa
tions made of this satellite by Mr. Bar
nard, in the great. Lick Observatory,
make it not improbable that this satel
lite is reallv cut in two, and that there
fore there may be two separate little
worlds, probably not separated by any
very great distance (for the total diame
ter of the two together, if there be two
divisions of the satellite which was al
ways supposed till quite recently to be
single, js not above 2300 miles across),
revolving together through space, some
even of the details of one of which
worlds must be visible from the other,
if there be anything like telescopes on
either half.
If the satellite is not cut in two Mr.
Barnard holds that there must be a light
belt round it, very like tho light belt on
Jupiter itself, and that this light belt
produces the impression of division un
der certain circumstances of the orbit.
We may hope that the Lick Observatory
will at length solve the problem. Per
haps the residents of the two halves of
the planet, if it be in halves, can really
telegraph to each other.— London Spec
tator,
Eight Kind of Scissors.
One needs many pairs of scissors, and
true economy coasisists in having a pair
for each sort of work. Tift cutting of
paper is very trying to sharpened steel,
and a pair might be kept for that pur
pose. Long slender shears are handy
for general use: buttonhole scissors could
find a place in every work basket; a pair
of scissors for trimming lamps in the
kitchen is necessary where there is no
gas; grape scissors table are not
altogether new; scissors to cut flowers
in the country are a convenience.
Few people carry pocket scissors of
the Ifolding sort. Those that do never
part with them. Convenient for maDl-
use, to a clipping from a paper
at a a string, etc., they
answer almost eimiv of the
pocket knife and are much more conven
ient to handle. Give a person accus
tomed to their use a knife aud the pocket
scissors and he will part with the former
first. No cutting blade should be put
in the fire, as it will then lose its temper
which is denoted by its turning blue.
Such a knife or blade will never keep
its edge.— Hardware.
Highest Railway in the Alps.
The new Alpine railway, the Brienzer
Rothhornbahn, is the highest railway in
the Alps and commands magnificent
views. It is 2351 metres (7836 feet)
high at the summit level, and ascends
1682 metres (5606 feet) or sixty-seven
metres (223 feet) higher than the Pilatus
Railway. The journey occupies one
hour and a half. The gauge is 0.8 metre.
The line is a pure rack-and-pinion rail
way on the Abt system, and i3 similar in
construction to the Monte Generoso Rail
way. The steepest gradient is one in
four—that is, less than the maximum
Pilatus ascent. The railway has been
built in a remarkably short space of time.
It was begun so recently as the Ist of
October, 1890. No fewer than teu tun
nels were bered; numerous streamlets
were bridged and heavy stone dams had
to be erected. —Boston Transcript.
Russian Leather.
I lately came across a singular tra
dition about the earliest known manu
facture of Russian leather. It seems it
was first made in Persia; and there has
never since been any which equaled the
soft texture, the elegance and flexibility,
and the deep, rich, unfading maroon
color of some of the covers of ancient
'Persian manuscripts.
There was some secret about the tan
ning, some process which is among the
lost arts. The tradition is that the hides
were carried to the top3 of mountains,
and left there to be struck by lightning 1
' That was the secret!
Of course wj are to understand from
this that exposure to a high atmosphere
had something to do with it, and that
the curing required a long time; for
what could be the chance of their being
struck by lightning?— Wide dwa^e.
Friend—“l can’t help wondering why
amn on your small salary should give
his ffianced a cluster diamond ring.”
Mr. Smartchapp —“That’s so; she
won’t slip it off and leave it up stairs
when the other fellows call.”—Street <&
Smith’s Good News.
Mast persons are broken down from over
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit
ters rebui ds the system, aids digestion, re
moves excess of bile, and cures malaria. A
ependid tonic for women and children.
Inquiring Child—Papa, why do people cry
at weddings?
Papa—(nbstr.K telly) Most of ’em have
been married themselves.
STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, .
Lucas County, f
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney. &
Cos., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of sloo.for each and every
case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the
use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December, A. D., 1886.
,—■ , A. W. Gleason,
iSEAL '
' —, —' Anton/ Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Curo is taken internally and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD?
These is a 3 inch display advertisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
aiike except one word. The same is true of
each-new one appearing eaoh week, from The
Dr. Harter Medicine Cos. This house places a
“Crescent” on everything they make and pub
lish. Look for it, send them the name or the
word and they wilt return you book, beauti
ful LITHOGRAPHS or SAMPLES FREE.
Sudden Changes of Weather cause
Throat Diseases. J here is no more effectual
remedy for Coughs, Colas, etc., than Brown’s
Bronchial Trochee. Sold only in boxes.
Price 23 cts.
FITS stopped free by Dr/. Kline’s Great
Kerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila.. Pa.
If you are constipated, bilious or troubled
with sick hea l ache, Beecham’s Pills afford
immediate relief, of druggists. 23 cents.
vV#
COPYRIGHT 1631
All gone
■woman’s suffering and woman’s
weakness. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription puts a stop to it. It’s
a remedy for all the delicate de
rangements and disorders that make
her suffer, and a cure for all the dis
eases and disturbances that make
her weak. It’s a legitimate medi
cine, that corrects and cures; a
tonic that invigorates and builds
up; a nervine that soothes and
strengthens. For bearing - down
pains, displacements, all the func
tional irregularities peculiar to the
sex, it’s a safe and certain remedy.
Other medicines claim to cure?
That’s true. But they don’t claim
to do this: if the Favorite Pre
scription fails to give satisfaction,
in any case for which it’s recom
mended, the money paid for it is
refunded.
Judge for yourself which is likely
to he the better medicine.
And think whether something else
offered by the dealer is likely to be
“ just as good.”
You pay only for the good you get.
On these terms it’s the cheapest.
DONALD KENNEDY,
Of fioxbu ry,Mass.,Says:
Strange cases cured by my Medical Discovery
come to me every day. Here is one (if Paralysis—
Blindness—and the Grip. Now how does my Medi
ckl Discovery cure all these? 1 don’t know, un
less It takes hold of the Hidden Poison that makes
all HumoT.
Virginia CrfY, Nevada, Sept. 9th, 1891.
Donald Kennedy—Dear Sir: l Will state my case
to you; About nine years ago T was paralyzed In
my (eft s;d;, aud the best doctors gave me no relief
for two years, and I was advised to trv your Dis
covery, which did its duty, and In a few months I
was restored to health. About four years ago I be
came blind In my left eyS tty a spotted cataract.
Last March I was taken with Ltt Grippe, and was
confined to my bed for three months. At the end of
that time, as in the start, then It struck me that your
Discovery was the thing for me; so 1 gof a bottle,
and before it was half gone I was able to go to my
work In the mines. Now iu regard to my eyes, as I lost
my left eye, ai.d about six months ago my right eye
became affected with black spots over the sight as
did the left eye—perhaps some twenty of them—but
since I have been using yoflr Discovery they all
left my right eye >.ut one; and, thank God, the bright
light of heaven is once more making its appearance
la my left eye. I am wonderfully astonished at it,
and thank God and your Medical Discovery.
Yours truly, Hank White.
A, wv F* A MONTH for 3 Bright Young Men or
in|n| Ladies in egeh county. Address P. W.
H*'**'’**' ZIEGLER & CO., Phila., Pa.
COLDS, _
A COUGHS,
HOARSENESS,
v CONSUMPTION
ALL AFFECTIONS OF THE THROAT AND LUNGS*
TAYLOR’S CHEROKEE REMEDY OF
SWEET GUM in MULLEIN
Is the BEST KNOWN REMEOY.
Ask your druggist or merchant for it, and take no substitute,
as nothing else can take its place.
■ ' PIANOS
We send pie,nos on approval, return*
able if unsatisfactory, railway freight
both ways at our expense. Distance,
even thousands of miles, makes no dif
ference. —With our patent soft-stop the
piano wears less and lasts longer: also is
rendered practically noiseless, when de
sired, for practising.
We take old pianos as part pay, balance
to suit reasonable convenience. Catalogue, etc... free. Write.
Ivers & Pond Piano Cos,, Boston.
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when 1
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant!
and refreshing to the taste, and act®
fently yet promptly on the Kidneys,,
aver and Bowels, cleanses the sys--
tern effectually, dispels colds, head
aches aud fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Byrup of Figs is thfr
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial fa its;
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known. #
Syrup of Figs is for sale in buo
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand win p*®’
cure it promptly for any one who j
wishes to try it. Do not accept anj
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIS SYRUP CO.
SAN FHANCtSCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KV. NEW *■ '•
Will purify BLOOD, regulate
WBPi'-m KIDNEYS, removo LIVES
dlsoTiler, build strength, renew
appetite, reslore health and
Vigo rot'youth. Dyspepsia,
Y&WIpK Indigestion, thattlred fed
ingabsoitttelv eradicated,
sill* Mind brightened, brain
I ■ 9P A 'bones, nerves, tnU*-
■ 111 11 r cles, receive new force,
iHE 8 S , suffering from complaints pe-
I IB U 11 culiar to their sex, using it, find
" a safe, speedy curo. Return*
rose bloom on checks, beautifies Complexion.
Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear"
* * Crescent. ” Send us 2 cent stamp lor 32-paga
pamphlet.
BR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St. Louis, Mu.
GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878.
VV. BAKER & CO.’S
§| Breakfast Cocoa
and) from which the excess of oil
has * Msen re“H>vd
Ls absolutely pure anti
it is soluble.
ftfm No Chemicals
fuj i|| l|Vl4 are used iu its preparation. It
IfJ : iit I'A has more than three limes the
II j f strength of Cocoa mixed with
1 9 'I [ 1 ltd Btarch, Arrowroot or Sugar,
■ H j|||j and is therefore far more eeo
-9n . | If |j 1 tu'lri ica !, costing less than one
ill II If U centa cup. It is delicious, nour
-1 Ishine, strengthening, easily
digested, and admirably adapted for invalid*
as well as for persons in health.
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO.. Dorchester. Mass.
■ .*.*-*_> ▼ sr. wr. ■■■■ m
•
SrpilE RIPANfi TABULES regulate the stomach, •
X l’vsr and bowels, purify the blood, are pleas- J
J ant t>i u*Xo, safe and always effectual. A reliable 2
2 remedy for Bilioufmey*, Blot-chea on the Face, 2
2 Bright- S Disease, Catarrh, Colic, Constipation, 2
2 Chronic Diarrhoea. Chronic Liver 1 rouble, Dia- m
0 betes, Disordered .Stomach, Dizziness, Dysentery, 0
O Dyspepsia, Eczema, Flatulence. Female Com- 0
A plaints, Foul Breath, Headach*-. Henrtburn, Hivea, 0
• jaundice, Kidney Complaints, Liver Troubles, 0
• Loss of Appetite, Mental Depression, Nausea, •
• Nettle Rash.| ~ - ~ P&Juful Diges- •
• tion, Pimples, -Ns. Rush of Blood 2
• to the Head. Sallow Com- 2
2 plexion, Salt Khcurn. Scald 2
2 Head, Scrof- ZaSJ j ula, Sick Read- 2
a ache, Skin Dis- / oases, Sour 0
m Stomach, Tired Feeling, Torpifl #
0 Liver,Ulcers, Water Brash 0
0 and every other oyinptom •
C or disease that! Z-T!T results from 0
O impure blood or a failure in the proper perform- 0
g ance of tlwir functions by the stomach, liver and •
• intestines. Persona giveii to over-eating are ben- •
J eflted by taking one tabule after each meal. A 2
2 continued use or the Ripang Tabules is the surest 2
2 cure for obstinate constipation. Th?v contain 2
2 nothing that can be injurious to tin. knout delt 2
:eate. I gross 1-2 gross $1.25. l-AJrress 7&0., 0
1-24 jrvoss 15 cents. Sent by inf.tl postage paid. #
0 Address THE RIPANS CHiEMICAL COMPANY, 0
0 P. O. Bcs 672, New York. 0
0 0
IIICHFIVCOR EUCHRE PARTIES
II should send at once to Jonx Sebastian, G. T. A.
C., R. 1. &B. It. R., Chicago. TEN CENTS, in stamps,
per paok for the slickest cards you ever Hhullled. I’or
fl.OOyou will receive free by express ten packs.
1 Pin TITPT Health Helper rnrr
v i ifi/ -I tells how. 50c. ayear. !• Kr T
T | |f,|i Send for sample. Dr, * 1 ILL
* . t- 1 n tJ.V.V. J. H. DYE, Editor, Burialo, W.T.
PENSIONS'-- Due all SOLDIERS! \ dis
soled. SaFEE for inpronse. I*6 years experience.
White for Laws. A. \V. Alc( ORiHXCK db
SONS, Washington. D. (J. A (Jincisnati. O.
A. N. U Three, 1892.