Newspaper Page Text
PUBLIC OPINION.
John Sherman waves the bloody
shirt, while his General brother tries to
hold it down. The garment should be
boxed up with the captured flags and
be seen no more.— N. 0. Picayune.
■ Senator Ingalls says the colored
man as a voter is a failure. —Hot
Springs News. Ami the. reason why
the Republicans think lie is a failure is
that he is rapidly getting his eyes open
and becoming a Democrat. — N. Y.
Herald.
With singular unanimity East,
West, North and South, the Demo
cratic party is declining to fight the
war over again. Nevertheless, let the
shirt-shaking proceed until the shirt
shakers are tired of it. Si. Louis Re
publican.
General Sherman says that the
war is over, while his brother, Senator
Sherman, says it is not over. As be
tween the two, it is doubtless better to
accept the statement of the one that
was there. About the only persons
who think the war is not over are
those who weren’t there. —Chicago
Times.
The departments under Demo
cratic control are making an excellent
showing for the past fiscal year. In
one division of the Land Office 1,542
patents were issued last year, as against
690 the preceding year, and 1,000 more
letters were answered than in 1886.
This increased work was done with
fewer clerks. Washington Post.
'—Senator Sherman says the entire
supervision of the election of members
of Congress should be with the United
States Government. John evidently
pines for the' return of the days when
every ballot-box in the Southern States
Was surrounded with Federal bayonets
and bitter-hearted white scoundrels in
citing armed bands of ignorant and
drunken negroes to violence and blood
shed. That time has gone, however,
viever to return.— N. 0. Slat
SECTIONAL HATRED.
Cleveland’s Terrible Arraignment of Self-
Seeking Mischief-Makers.
“While those who fought and who
have so much to forgive lead in the
pleasant ways of peace, how wicked
appear the traffic in sectional hate and
the betrayal of patriotic sentiment.”
These words of the President of the
United States, combining the loftiest
patriotism with a sober censure of re
cent intemperate utterances concern
ing the rescinded battle-flag order,
“ frenzied appeals to passion for un
worthy purposes” will con firm and
extend the feeling of confidence and
respect which is entertained for the
Administration by a vast majority of
the people of this country. They are
the words of a man who conceives for
patriots a nobler duty than the sys
tematic treasuring up of the memories
and the visible symbols of civil strife,
a more useful occupation than, the
frequent and fiery iteration of
principles which none disputes
and which are no where more heartily
and fully recognized than among those
whose defeat established them forever.
They come from the heart of a Presi
dent whose election marked the close
of the war period—the first President
of the completely re-united Republic—
and they evince a love of country such
as the traffickers in sectional hate cer
tainly can not feel and pnjffably can
not comprehend. Yet this is only a
single sentence among many equally
notable in the President’s letter to the
Secretary of the Philadelphia Brigade
upon the reunion on the field of Get
tysburg of the Union of ex-Confed
erate soldiers who fought there with
such desperate valor twenty-four years
ago.
As a dignified and proper rebuke
of the self-seeking partisans who have
of late attracted some public attention
by cursing and denouncing the Presi
dent, this letter is well-nigh matchless
in its perfection. A more terrible ar
raignment of the Fairchilds and Tan
ners and other apostles of bitterness
whom the flag incident brought into
prominence could not be framed without
x wide departure from those stand
ards of verbal propriety which a Presi
dent is constrained to respect. What
.everer thing can be said of a man
than that his conduct shows an “insin
cerity which conceals hatred by pro
fessions of kindness;” that he is a
maker of “frenzied appeals to passion
for unworthy purposes,” and that he
is engaged in “the traffic in sectional
hate and the betrayal of patriotic sen
timent?” With rare aptness Mr
Cleveland packs into one preg
nant phrase a characterization of
the “bloody-shirt” issue which is
strictly true and stingingly se
severe. “The traffic in sectional hate”
is a phraze which throws the revealing
light of the “just word” over the base
business in which not a few eminent
citizens of the Northern States are
still actively engaged. And this de
served censure of Fairchild and his
kind is joined to sentiments which ap
peal with force to every American citi
zen who sincerely loves his country,
his whole country. “It surely can not
be wrong,” w rites the President, “to
desire the settled quiet w hich lights for
our entire country the path to pros
perity and greatness; nor need the les
sons of the war be forgotten and its re
sults jeopardized in the wish for that
genuine fraternity which insures Na
tional pride and glory.”
The obliteration of sectional lines
*d the quieting of sectional passion
precious results of Mr. Clt*v«-
d’s election. The extent to which
results have been achieved is not
It generally recognized, it is meas
jed to the public eye by the increas
g frequency of reunions and of ex
innges of gieetings between the sol
,*r* of tha Union army and those who
fought against them. The coming of
the survivors of Pickett’s division to
the field of Gettysburg on the invita
tion of the Philadelphia Brigade marks
the growth of the new feeling. But
the change has been most conspicuous
ly demonstrated by the character and
the limitations of the pow-wow about
the Hags. It was led by General hair
child, a professional old soldier. It
was helped on vociferously by “Corp.”
Tanner, another professional old sol
dier and chronic office-seeker. And
it was kept up by newspaper editors to
whom, as to the two gentlemen we
have named, the incident seemed to
have been providentially furnished in
an unprecedentedly “dry time,” for
partisan use against the’ Demo
cratic party. But the great mass of
the people of the North were wholly
unaffected by these “frenzied appeals
to passion.” They were moved neither
by apprehension for the permanency of
the “results of the war” nor by any
sort of sympathy with those who were
engaged in the traffic in hate. The
good sense of the South in treating the
outbreak with the contempt it de
served responded to this feeling of in
difference at the North. The loyal cit
izens of both sections of the country
saw clearly that the agitators were
bawling about a thing that didn’t ex
ist. They could make no sane person
believe that Grover Cleveland was a
“copperhead” or that there was any
where in his Administration a dispo
sition to put the “Confederacy in the
saddle.” It was a false alarm whose
falseness was everywhere recognized,
even by those who raised it. And now
the President’s Gettysburg letter comes
to put further difficulties in the way of
the persons who are pursuing what a
late lamented fabulist described as “a
policy of all cry and no wolf. ” — N. Y.
Times.
NEGRO SUFFRAGE.
Why the Republican Party Pronounces
It an Unqualified Failure.
“I have no hesitancy in declaring
that in this country negro suffrage has
been an absolute and unqualified fail
ure,” said Senator Ingalls in a speech
at Abilene, Kan. Why does a bitter
Republican partisan pronounce negro
suffrage an absolute and. unqualified
failure when his party has received
the negro vote almost solid, North and
South, for nearly twenty years? It is
becoming a million of negro votes
cast for the Republican party at every
election for so many years have failed
to secure the negro any share in the
office at the disposal of the party? No.
If that w r ere the reason for Mr. In
giflls’ declaration, how eloquently and
bitterly would he denounce his party
for its treatment of the humble
but faithful race to which it owes so
much. Aside from failure to secure
recognition in the way of nominations
and offices from the Republican party,
negro suffrage has failed in but one
other respect. It has failed to keep
the Republican party in power after its
own blunders and crimes had turned
three-fourths of the white voters of the
country against it. As for keeping the
Republican party in power, white suf
frage has been a still more “absolute
and unqualified failure” than negro
suffrage. The colored man has done
his best, but to require him to keep in
power a party that persistently arrays
against itself an overwhelming major
ity of the working-men of the far more
numerous white race, is asking too
much. — St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
HIS LAST CHANCE.
A Plausible Explanation of John Sher
man's Apparent Inconsistency.
Is it conceivable that within ten
days of each other the two subjoined
expressions of political sentiment pro
ceeded from the accommodating
larnyx of lion. John Sherman, of
Ohio? Yet such is the fact. The first
is from Mr. Sherman’s reply to the in
vitation to go to Gettysburg. The
second is from his letter congratu
lating Foraker on his action in the
matter of the battle flags:
“Now that all alike “I Gave felt keenly
feel that an lndestruct- the tendency of public
ible Union binds us to- opinion, especially in
gether, there should be commercial cities, to
a cordial and hearty yield every thing, honor
fellowship between the included, to the spirit
blue and the gray.” of the rebellion. A halt
has been called.”
The honest fellow feels and he feels.
Some days he feels one wa| some days
the other way.
But on all days of the week, and at
all hours of the day, John Sherman
feels that he is getting pretty well
along in years, and that 1888 is his last
chance.
Whatever apparent inconsistency
there may be in some of his utterances,
the real platform on which honest John
Sherman is running for President is
short, simple and straightforward.
His platform is “Now or never!”— N.
Y. Sun.
Blaine and Sherman.
The Republican presidential nomina
tion lies between Blaine and Sherman.
At this time the chances are in favor
of Blaine, but Sherman is a shrewd
campaigner and the months that inter
vene between this time and the conven
tion may work wonderful changes.
But both these gentleman are predicat
ing their contests on false issues. That
is to say Blaine proposes to appeal for
popular support on the Irish question
while Sherman relies on the bloody
shirt for a battle-flag. The people of
this country have nothing to do with
the Irish question and the bloody shirt
is no longer a vital question. It is pas
sing strange that two men of wide ex
perience and fine mental attainments
should fall into so serious a blunder as
to make their contest on irrelevant
issues. The American people are not
in sympathy with such t'erfflishness.-
Harrisburg (Fa.) Patriot
RESULT OF IDLENESS.
The Amount of Mental Work That May
Hafely Be Done by Kvery One.
There is as much danger of hurting
the brain by idleness as by overwork.
Dr. Farquharson argues that intellect
ual power is lessened by the listlessness
in which well-to-do classes generally
spend their lives. Under such condi
tions the brain generally loses its
health, and although equal to the de
mands of a routine existence, is unable
to withstand the strain of sudden emer
gency. So, when a load of work is
unexpectedly thrown on it in its unpre
pared state, the worst consequences of
what may be called overwork show
themselves. Similarly, a man accus
tomed to sedentary pursuits is likely to
be physically injured by taking sudden
ly too violent exercise.
As to the amount of mental work
that may safely be done, Dr. Farquhar
son says: “So long as a brain-worker
is able to sleep well, and to take a fair
proportion of out-door exercise, it may
safely be said that it is not necessary
to impose any special limits on the ac
tual number of hours which he devotes
to his labors. But when what is gen
erally known as worry steps in to com
plicate matters, when cares connected
with family arrangements, or with
those numerous personal details which
we can seldom escape, intervene, or
when the daily occupation of life is in
itself a fertile source of anxiety, then
we find one or other of these three
safeguards broken down.” — Scientific
American.
How to Select a Wife.
Good health, good morals, good sense and
good temper, are the four essentials for a
goqd wifor These are the indispensabfcs.
After them come the minor advantages of
good looks, accomplishments, family posi
tion, etc. 'With the first four, married life
will be comfortable and happy. Lacking
either, it will be in more or less degree a
failure. Upon good health depends largely
good temper and good looks, and to some ex
tent good sense also, as the best mind must
be affected more or less by the weaknesses
and whims attendant on frail health. Young
man, if your wife is falling into a state of
invalidism, first of all things try to restore
her health. If she is troubled with debili
tating female weaknesses, buy Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription. It will cure her.
Ir the fuzzy caterpillar would only know
its place and keep it, society would be
much happier. —Merchant Traveler.
Are You Going on a Journey
Into the country or elsewhere. If so, show
forecast by providing yourself with Hostet
ter’s Stomach Bitters,* a useful companion
for the tourist, since it serves to relieve the
debilitating effects of heat, fatigue and in
sufficient ventilation, and is sometimes of in
finite value in checking a fit of sickness on
the way, where medical aid is difficult or im
possible to obtain promptly. Constipation,
colic, dyspepsia, chills and fever and liver
complaint succumb to the Bitters.
The reason why ostriches should flock
together, is that they are peculiarly birds
of a feather.
AN ugly complexion made Nellie a fright.
Her face was all pimply and red.
Though her features were good, and her blue eyas
were bright.
" What a plain girl is Nellie!” they said.
But now. as by magic, plain Nellie has grown
As fair as an artist’s bright dream;
Her face is as sweet as a flower new-blown,
Her checks are like peaches and cream.
As Nellie walks out In the fair morning light.
Her beauty attracts every eve.
And as for the people who called her a fright,
“ Why, Nellie is handsome;” they cry.
And the reason of the change is that
Nellie took I)r. FierceWlolden Medical Dis
covery, liver, cleared
her made her' flood pure, her
breath sweet, her face fair and rosy, and
removed the defects that had obscutfed her
beauty. Sold by druggists.
In base-ball playing the pitcher contains
the cream of the players. —Burlington Free
Press. *’
Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets Pos
sess Powerful Potency, Pass Painlessly,
Promote Physical Prosperity.
What part of a fish is like the end of a
book! The fin-is, W
Immaculate as alabaster is the complet
ion beautified with Glenn’s Sulphur SoSp-
Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye. 50c. The best-
The honey bee is a regular merchant. It
cells comb for a living.
Old smokers prefer “Tansill’s Punch”
sc. cigars to most 10 centers.
“What can I use to clean carpets?” Use
your husbaud. —Danville Breeze.
Relief is immediate, and a cure sure.
Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. 50 cents.
A Western town is proud of a farmer
named Timothy Hay.
Save your wagons, your horses and your
patience by using Frazer A xle Grease.
A postage stamp is like a youngster. It
always sticks to business better after it
has been thoroughly licked.
A cross hog will make the upper strand
of a barbed wire-fence feel soft as downy
pillows are.— Atchison Champion.
“Did you hear of the accident to Jones?”
“Why', no; what happened to him?’’
“Well, he fell from his lady’s favor and
broke his engagement”
The rose- bug by any other name would
do just as much damage. —Pittsburgh Chron
icle. •
The flower known as the bachelor’s but
ton must be one that does not stay on long.
—A'. V. Picayune.
The real-estate agent doesn’t want the
earth; ho is always trying to sell it.— Bos
ton Courier.
Hard to discourage—the banana peel;
the public h; s always sat down on it—De
troit Free Press.
The musical composition, “Warblings at
Eve,” is the first intimation that Adam was
a singer. —Detroit Fvery Saturday.
The light anil festive wheel appears of
have an unlimited charm. Tbe astrono
mers very gravely inform us that even the
earth “cycles” around the sun. —Merchant
Traveler.
Train Hand—“ See here, where are you
going with that axe?” Passenger—“ Keep
cool, young man. We stop for sandwiches
at the next station.”
If there’s any thing that worries a man
who wears patent leather shoes, its to
have a boot-black try to convince him that
he wants a shine. —Merchant Traveler.
0, .
A scientist has discovered the “earth
quake belt.” It is found in the spot
where the green cucumber shakes you.—
Newman Independent.
Nfc r or nothing--* society bud— Li/s,
Cool Breezes an i> Rippling Waters we
seek “In Summer Days,” and we find them
on the bold bluffs ana wave-girt shores of
Mackinac Island, that tourists’ paradise
that has been made a National Park. We
find them also amid the bewitching Thou
sand Islands and exciting rapids of the St.
Lawrence, and in the wild gorges of the
White Mountains. And to learn just whore
to ti nd them and how to get to them wo
send a couple of stamps to O. W. Ruggles,
G. P. Ag’t Michigan Central, Chicago, and
ho will send us “In Summer Days.”
It hurts like thunder to be struck by
lightning. Oil City Ulizzard.
Waltham
PATENT
%
Dust Proof
Watches
were originally made for rail
way men, whose service par
ticularly required an abso
lutely tight closing case.
They have given entire
satisfaction, and their reputa
tion has spread so rapidly,
that they have become the
standard Watches for Millers,
Miners, Lumbermen, Far
mers, Mechanics, Engineers,
Travelers and others whose
occupation requires a watch
which is proof against dust
and moisture.
Over 150,000 Waltham
Patent Dust Proof Cases
are now in actual use.
The Waltham were the
first Patent Dust Proof
Cases manufactured, and are
the only ones which com
pletely exclude dust and
moisture from the movement.
They are far superior to
all others claiming equal
advantages.
Each genuine case is
plainly marked with the
name and trade mark of the
American Waltham Watch
Company.
FOR SALE BY ALL FIRST CLASS
JEWELERS.
JU>_ _ I r . ... ■ . . ■ —i —*
The following words, in praise of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription as a remedy for those delicate diseases and weak
nesses peculiar to women, must be of interest to every sufferer from such maladies. They are lair samples Of the spontaneous
expressions with which thousands give utterance to their sense of gratitude for the inestimable boon of health which uas been
restored to them by the use of this world-famed medicine.
John E. Segar, of Millenbeck, Vo., writes:
flg | /%A “My wife had been suffering for two or three
2$ £\J v years with female weakness, and had paid
m. . out one hundred dollars to physicians with-
I HROWN AWAY out relief. She took Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
’ Prescription and it did her more good than
™ all the medicine given to her by the physi
cians during the three years they had been practicing upon her.”
Mrs. George Herger, of Westfield, N. V.,
Tur PnriTrer writes: “ I was a great sufferer from leucor-
IHe Until LS I rhea, bearing-down pains, and pain contin
_ _ ually across my back. Three bottles of your
r ARTlil V nfIHM * Favorite Prescription ’ restored me to per
unniriL, uuun. f ect health, i treated with Dr. , for
■■ nine months, without receiving any benefit.
The * Favorite Prescription ’ is the greatest earthly boon to us
poor suffering women.”
TREATSISG THE WRONG DISEASE.
Many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease,
another from liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion or prostration, another with pain here or there, and in
this way they all present alike to themselves and their easy-going and indifferent, or over-busy doctor, separate and distinct, diseases,
for which he prescribes his pills and potions, assuming them to be such, when, in reality, they are all oniy symptoms caused by some
womb disorder. The physician, ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages his practice until large hills arc made. The suffering
fiatient gets no better, but probably worse by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper medicine,
ike Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all those
distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery.
Mrs. E. F. Morgan, of No. 71 Lexington St.,
rHYSICIANS EnMt Boston, Max*., says: “Five years ago 1
i uiuiuinnu wag a ,j reac ]f u i sufferer from uterine troubles.
FAILED Having exhausted the skill of three phy
i Hutu. sicians. I was completely discouraged, and so
weak I could with difficulty cross the room
alone. I began taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and
using the local treatment recommended in his ‘Common Sense
Medical Adviser.’ I commenced to improve at once. In three
months I was perfectly cured, and have had no trouble since. I
wrote a letter to my family paper, briefly mentioning how my
health had been restored, and offering to send the full particulars
to any one writing me for them, and enclosing a stamped-en
velope for reply. I have received over four hundred letters.
In reply, I have described my case and the treatment used,
and have earnestly advised them to ‘do likewise.’ From a great
many I have received second letters of thaiaks, stating that they
had commenced the use of ‘ Favorite Prescription,’ had sent the
$1.50 required for the ‘Medical Adviser,’ and had applied the
local treatment so fully and plainly laid down therein, and were
much better already.”
THE OUTGROWTH OF A VAST EXPERIENCE.
Tbe treatment of many thousands of cases
of those chronic weaknesses and distressing
ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids'
Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. V.,
has afforded a vast experience in nicely
adapting and thoroughly testing remedies
for tile cure of woman’s peculiar maladies.
Or. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
is the outgrowth, or result, of this great
and valuable experience. Thousands of
testimonials, received from patients and
from physicians who have tested it in the
more aggravated and obstinate cases which
hail baffled their skill, prove it to be the
most wonderful remedy ever devised for
the relief and cure of suffering women. It
is not, recommended as a “ cure-all.” hut
as a most perfect Specific for woman's
peculiar ailments.
A* h powerful, invlgorating tonic,
it imparts strength to the whole system,
and to the uterus, or womb and its ap
pendages, in particular. For overworked,
“worn-out,” ’'run-down,” debilitated teach
ers, milliners. dressmakers, seamstresses,
“shop-girls,” housekeepers, nursing moth
ers. and feeble women generally, Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the great
est earthly boon, being unequalled as an
appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. It
promotes digestion aud assimilation of food.
AddrsM,
COCKLE’S
ANTI-BILIOUS
PILLS,
THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY
Fop l.ivdr. Rile, Indication, etc. Free from Mercury;
oontnins only Pure Vegetable Ingredients. Agent—
CUAS. S. CKITTEXTON, NEW YORK.
For Mexican War and Union Vetr
ÜbAdiUßd ernns. MILO B. STEVENS k CO..
■ Washington, Clereland, Detroit and Chicago.
■ 8 B9* Morphine Habit Cured In JO
B S ft Si i ilrfi to #0 dnj i. No pi»y *lll cures.
US 9 wall Dr. J. Slephcnt, Lebanon, O.
&F" TO S 8 A DAY. Samples worth*l.so
J*-. FREE. Lines not under the horse’s feet. Write
BKKnSTKK SAFETY IIKIN HOLDER CO., Holly,Mick.
PCM Cl Q Officers’ pay, bounty pro
Ells Oil# lew cured: deserter* relieved;
21 years’ practice. Success or no fee Write
for circulars and new laws. A. W. McCor
mick & Son, Cincinnati, O.; Washington, D. C.
SslSilßsljaiiEQlli.
CURES WHERE ALL ELSL FAILS.
EH Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use "S
IZri in time. Sold by druggists. g|
NO M ATTER
liow you dress your hair,
COILED HIGH on the head or
low on the neck,
French Twist or in PUFFS, the
IVIIKAOO BRAIDED WIRE HAIR
ROLL is a great KELP. It makes
the hair look full even when it is
THIN. It holds heavy hair out
from the head so that it does not
gather dampness from PERSPIR
ATION. It is very much lighter
and cleaner than rolls of human or
other hair, and consequently more
comfortable. Made to
MATCH ANY COLOR H ASR
Ask to see them. Sold by Ilair dealers
and others. If you do not find them we
will mail you, postpaid, two for twenty-five
cents. Price lists to dealers.
WESTON & WELLS, WANUF’C. CO.,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
cures nausea, weakness of stomach, indi
gestion, bloating and eructations of gas.
As a soothing and strengthening
nervine, “ Favorite Prescription” is un
equallod and is invaluable in allaying and
subduing nervous excitability, irritability,
exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms
and other distressing, nervous symptoms
commonly attendant upon functional and
organic disease of the womb. It induces
refreshing sleep and relieves mental anx
iety and despondenev. 4
Hr. Pierce’* Favorite Prescription
is a legitimate medicine, carefully
compounded by an experienced and skillful
physician, and adapted to woman's delicate
organization. It is purely vegetable jn its
composition and perfectly harmless m its
effects in anv condition or the system
“Favorite Prescription ” is a posi
tive cure for the most complicated and
obstinate cases of leucorrhea, or “whites,”
excessive flowing at monthly periods, pain
ful menstruation, unnatural suppressions,
prolapsus or failing of the womb, weak
back, “ female weakness,” anteversion, re
troversion, bearing-down sensations, chron
ic congestion, inflammation aud ulceration
of the womb, inflammation, pain and ten
derness in ovaries, accompanied with “in
ternal heat.’’
XV OULU’S IHSTtMAUV MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, No, SG3 k*«iu »tr««t, BUFFALO, IN'. V*
-T'- 1 — 1 " Mrs. Sophia F. Boswell, White Cottage,O.,
iuuruf flufAV writes: “1 took eleven bottles of your ‘ Fu-
IllliLiE #4viml vorit© Prescription' and one bottle of your
Urn ‘Pellets.’ i am doing my work, and have been
11 til for some time. I have had to employ help tor
QlinrnnTCa about sixteen years, before I commenced tak
uurrunic.fl. (ng your medicine. 1 have had_to wear a
11 supporter most of the time; this I have laid
aside, and feel as well as I ever did.”
! . " ,1! 111 " Mrs. May Gleason, of Nwnica, Ottawa Co.
S T ctDRKS Milk., writes: “Your 'Favorite Prescription’
j ii iiuiinu j jag work( . ( j wonders in my case,
y UUnunrim Again she writes; “ Having taken several bot
| i7bnuC.no. ties of the * Favorite Prescription ’ I have re
■ gained my health wonderfully, to the astonish
ment of myself and friends. 1 can now be on uiy feet all day,
attending to the duties of my household.
I A Marvelous Cure.—Mrs. G. F. Sprague,
JEALOUS of Crystal, Mich., writes: “I was troubled with
ul.mi.uuu female weakness, leucorrhea and tailing of the
nnnTnne womb for seven years, so I laid to keep my bed
UUUIUnO. f or q good part of the time. 1 dortored with an
iwir»J arTn y of different physicians, and spent large sums
of money, but received no lasting benefit. At lust my husband
persuaded me to try your medicines, which 1 was loath to do,
because I was prejudiced against them, and the doctors said
they would do me no good. T finally told iny hi sband that if
he wouid get me some of your medicines, I would try them
against the advice of iny physician. He got me six bottles of t lie
‘ Favorite Prescription, * also six bottles of the ‘ Discovery,' for
ten dollars. T took three bottles of ‘Discovery’ and four of
‘ Favorite Prescription,’ and 1 have been a sound woman for four
years. 1 then gave the balance of the medicine to my sister, who
was troubled in the same way, and she cured herself in a short
time. I have not hud to take any medicine uow for almost
four years.”
/VERMIFUGE/'- «ncr« dar-APAN ACE A\
/ ilhitiii . EAT£OODFOO D V nnoinco 1
( THE J 3.8 E CHEERFUL 1 PURIFIES ]
\ CHILDREN /SYPH! LYTICy
f?ondohUairl
_ loLrestoeer /
ML \ (ENGLISH) /
fcj' TB w, \D«SWAYNE4SCy
QINTfEN*
THE GREAT CURE FOR
ITCHING PILES
n siefiatn
stinging, must- at night-->SjJBB -
by scratching—very ■
■''if alio wed to continue tumors form whicnXfQ,
Swollen bleed and ulcerate, becoming very sore.
PUN. »\VAVN K ’ rt O 1 N '1'11( EM T
Mi KS. btopsile! ing&bleeding,heals PIIRI
1 f IhV ulceration, and iu many
UNIV cu W^MHI\
THE OLDEST MEDICINES IN UNSOLD BY DRUGG STS
ORASNSCE RANCHES BINE
RIVERSIDE, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
Old proves in proof! condition, none yielding lose
than 10 per cent, of tin* price, which ranges from
S7OO to s*£,soo per acre. One specially fine ranch of
20 acres, containing 1,200 Washington Navel Crane:*
trees. Trice, $50,000. Another of 10 acres with SHQ ‘
orange trees, good house and barn. Price, sls.B*o*
Another 10 acres with 800 orange trees, house end barn.
Price, $12,500. One ranch of 20 acres, with 300 orange
trees am! 17 acres in 7 year old raisin grape vines, house,
barn, well and windmill. Price, sl**l4o. Easy terms
on all. Send telegraph money order of five per cent*
of the price to secure a thirty days' option. Til OK,
ItAKf’hVKliTi *Kr MININ, Rankers and Brokers in Real
Estate, RIVERSIDE, CALIFORNIA.
JO IVES:
HE
ItYSthe FREIGHT
Ton \\ agon Scale*.
n Levers, Suel Bearings, Bras*
re Beam and Beam Bo* for
Every For free price list
mention thi* paper and addrew*
JOKES OP BINGHAMT9H, .
BIN tt 11AMTON* X. Y.
HRS, WOS WATER and LI OH TNI N© PJttOJf
IRON ROOFING
for any k*ind of City or Parm Kuifdlnnfu
Write for testimonial? from your State. Addrcß*
roKI’KK lit ON KOOFING CO** Cincinnati, Ohio*,
|HA
EDUCATIONAL.
UNION COLblOKof LAlViChicago. KallTcrm Lo
gins Sc; i ::i. For ctreularndd. 11. Booth, C'hicatio.
TTS ADUV f.tam hero and earn
gj Ci** m “ T good pny. Situation*
Xiruislied. Write Valentine Bbos., Janesville, Wlo.
mm state a ”i Y ’
Eleven courses of study. Eiirht well equipped lab
oratories. tV Catalogues sent free on application.
A. N. K.-E. 1141
WHEN WHITING TO ADVERTISERS PI.EABB
•tale that you taw the Advertisement in (Alia
paper. -
In pregnancy, “ Favorite Prescription ”
is a “ mother 8 cordial," relieving nausea,
weakness of stomach and other distressing
symptoms common to that condition. If
its use is kept up in the latter months of
gestation, it so prepares the system for de
livery as to grealiy lessen, and many times
almost entirely do away with the sufferings
of that trying ordeal.
“Favorite Prescription,” when taken
in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxa
tive <loses of Dr. Pierce's Purgative Pellets
(Little Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney arid
Bladder diseases. Their combined use also
removes blood taints, and abolishes can
cerous and scrofulous humors from the
system.
’“Favorite Proscription ” is the only
medicine for women sold, by druggists,
under a positive guarantee, iron) Hie
manufacturers, that it will give satisfac
tion in every case, or money will be re
funded. This guarantee has been printed
on the bottle-wrapper, and faithfully car
ried out for many years. I.urge bottle*
(100 doses) SI.OO, or six bottles for
$5.00.
F*'“ Send ten cents in stamps for Dr.
Pierce’s large, illustrated Treatise (PH)
pages) on Diseases of Women.