Newspaper Page Text
TAKE IN THE BOOM.
When the winter days begin, find the frost is
setting in,
And the air is damp and chilly, and mankind
is sad with rheum;
When the ground-hog soundly snores, and pneu
mony goes out doors;
* When the other tender plants are housed, take
in the infant boom 1
Foraker's distended mouth yawps against the
Solid South,
Shut it, shut it. Baby Benson, feel and fear
the winter brume;
Hear the word that Jarnesy Blaine sends across
the salty main,
See, his big boom comes a-whizzmg, best take
in your little boom.
Pinkston's patron, Honest John, dreadfully is
laking on,
And his grim and icy features are enwrapped
in deepest gloom;
Mourning o'er his wretched chicks, vainly
against fate he kicks,
Ar.d grieves to think the time has come to
house his tender boom.
Hawley, Harrison and Hoar, Allison, Evarts
hear the roar
Of the Blviniac movement rushing like the
water through a flume;'
Hope and comfort gentle spring to your seeth
ing souls may bring.
But, till the winter's past, each one had best
take m his boom!
—X. P. Sun.
A DISASTROUS OMEN.
TJ»e Selection of Chicago as the Place to
Mold the Republican Convention.
At the mention of Chicago as the
place wherts the Republican party will
meet in June next, to name candidates
for President and Vice-President, what
a train of sad memories must be sug
gested to Republicans who were old
enough to be active participants in
political affairs in 1880. General
Grant, the great Captain credited with/
saving the Union, was a candidate for
the nomination for President. He
had been eight years President. He
had just returned from foreign lands,
from his voyage around the world.
He had been feted and toasted by
Kings and Emperors, Lords and
Ladies, the proud and the powerful.
Ovation followed ovation in rapid suc
cession. Cannon had boomed and
flags had been unfurled in his honor,
and brass bands had played “.See, the
Conquering Hero Comes.” Come he
had. He was again on his native
heath, and a candidate again for the
highest office in the gift of his conn
tryinen. in that august moment
Blaine struck him down, llow? By
asserting that U. S. Grant had turned
traitor to his country, and if again
made President, lie would destroy the
Republic and upon its ruins erect an
empire and establish a Grant dynasty.
Pqor General Grant. lie had aban
doned the Democratic party when his
cup of fame was full. Debauched by
the corrupt Republican leaders, who
wanted to use his renown—Hmy turned
him from what Ben. Harrison would
call “sunlit hills of duty,” to kill him
in Chicago— the slaughter-pen of the
world. Grant’s fame culminated at
Appomattox—after that there was
nothing for Grant At Chicago he
met a Brutus in Blaine, and died of
his wounds on Mt. McGregor. No man
who reveres (lie memory of Grant can
vote for Blaine without confessing
himself a paltron, nor for any man
who stood with Blaine on the occasion
when Blaine and his conspirators stab
bed Grant to death.
At Chicago Blaine and Sherman
and Garfield murdered Grant, polit
ically, and the wounds they inflicted
hurried him to his grave—and they
accomplished their work by attacking
Grant’s patriotism and by intimations
that he was really for treason, so
black, that in comparison Arnold’s is
white as an angel’s robe—and that is
what Grant received as a reward for
his abandonment of the Democratic
party.
But it must be remembered, and it
will be remembered, that James A
Garfield' became the beneficiary of
Grant s political assassination at Chi
cago—and that with his nomination
began a Republican factional fight un
paralleled for its murderous fierceness.
In the campaign of 1880 the Repub
lican.party sunk to tlie lowest depths
of corruption and depravity. It tri
umphed, but its success was the death
of Garfield. Poor Garfield, the bene
ficiary of Grant’s political death, and
the beneficiary of the crimes of Dorsey,
was seated in the Presidential chair to
be murdered by a Republican crank
who ha 1 been warmed into life in the
fires of Republican factional hate—
and as lie fired the fatal shot ex
claimed: “Arthur is And
Arthur became at last the beneficiary
of the Chicago light. Grant, Garfield,
Arthur and Guiteau are all dead. In
1881 Blaine was nominated at Chicago.
It is needless to say that his assassina
tion of Grant contributed to his defeat.
Republicans rc uembered his implaca
ble hostility to Grant at Chicago in
1880. Brilliant, but corrupt and de
praved, thousands of honest Republic
ans would not vote for hint, nor will
they vote for any man who encom
passed the downfall of Grant at Chica
go by charging him with treason to the
Republic. The selection of Chicago by
the Republican bosses as the place to
hold the nominating convention of the
Republican party is an omen of disas
ter to the party —an instance in which
*‘coining events cast their shadows be
fore.”—lndianapolis Sentinel.
SHERIDAN AND GRESHAM.
Why Neither of Them Should Re Sacri
ficed by their Party.
There are occasional suggestions
hither and yon that Lieutenant-Gen
eral Sheridan shall be the Republican
candidate for the Presidency. In like
manner the name of Judge Gresham
is brought forward. Both are widely
distinguished. Sheridan’s is the more
illustrious career. Gresham’s is the
broader and more diversified. Sheri
dan is essentially a soldier. From the
day he entered West Point as a cadet
his employment has been in the mili
tary service, through aa grade# o t
which he has passed, until now he i»
in command of the army. Gresham
was bred as a lawyer. Ho went from
the bar to the battle-field, and as an
officer of Indiana volunteers made an
admirable rccoid. Resuming after the
war the practice of his profession, ho
was soon appointed to the United
States District Bench for Indiana.
Thence he was invited to the Cabinet
of President Arthur, where lie served
as Postmaster-General and for a short
time as Secretary of the Treasury.
Like Sheridan, lie was a Stalwart.
Arthur embrace l the opportunity of*
fered by the retirement of Judge Drum*
mond to appoint Gresham United
States Judge for Ihe circuit which in
cludes Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana.
Both Sheridan and Gresham enjoy,
therefore, honorable life employments
in the public service. Neither is rich,
and both may look forward to the
crowning of a life of labor with an age
of ease certain that needful worldly
provision is made for them. Admin's*
trations may come and go, but their
tenure, unaffected by political changes,
is not disturbed. General Sheridan
will be retired in 1895. Judge Grusham
may continue in judicial harness until
the end of his days, or, if he choose,
may after a certain period of service
retire upon pay from the activities of
his office.
Judge Gresham has the greater
aptitude for political life, but neither
he nor General Sheridan seems inclined
to break from safe and pleasant
moorings to launch upon the troubled
sea of politics. There is an eminently
practical side to the American charac
ter, and both Sheridan and Gresham
are typical Americans. Both have
seen much of tho Presidency since
Lincoln’s day. Sheridan was an Inti*
mate of Gi ant, a favorite of Hayes, a
companion of Art Kim Gresham had
two different portfolios under ono
Administration and had his orig
inal judicial appointment from
another. The tinsel of power
deceives neither of them. They
know the worry and responsibility of
ft post which endures for eight years
at best, and then terminates absolute
ly the active career of the incumbent.
As a Presidential candidate, General
Sheridan need not resign his army
commission. Such a sacrifice was hot
required from General Hancock.
There is no precedent of a judicial of
ficer becoming the actual nominee of
a party for the Executive office; but if
Gresham were a candidate, he would,
probably, feci impelled to withdraw
front the bench. If elected President,
Sheridan’s resignation of his Licuten*
ant-Generalship would become neces
sary. lie could not but recall tha
fact that General Grant, resigning un
der such circumstances? was driven
by subsequent needs to seek Congres
sional action, whereby he might be
placed upon the retired list of the army,
and that one of the first acts of tlie
present Administration under the law,
passed just before its advent, was to
issue the commission which was a
solace to the old commander im his de
clining days.
However great the personal popu
larity of Sheridan and Gresham,
neither would enter the campaign with
an assurance of success. Kit lift would
be presented as the leader of a forlorn
hope against the rational, c mmon
sense sentiment of the country. Neither
ought to lio sacrificed in such a con
test. Logan, who in his own wav pos
sessed no little sagacity, foresaw and
in his last illnes- declared that tho
chance of a Republican candidates in
1888 would necessarily he slender.
Under the leadership of Blaine Na
tional Republican ascendency was lost.
Whatever perils of personal reputation,
whatever trials of personal temper
or health, whatever sacrifices of per
sonal fortune are to be made in the at
tempt to regain it ought justly fall
upon Blaine himself. The heat and
burden of the next campaign outfit to
fall upon him. Chicago Herald.
SPIRIT PRESS.
The Boston Transcript speaks ol
Governor Foraker, of Ohio, as “the
end man of politics.” This is doubt
less because he plays on the bones of
dead issues. Q tincy Journal.
Blaine’s plea for tobacco is the
tendcrest thing of the kind on record
since t lie ex-Speaker of the House of
Representatives pleaded with Mulligan
to return his letters. —SL Louis Repub
lican.
Those Republican Presidential
candidates whose activity has been re
newed by the President’s message
should remember Chauncey M. lie
pew’s remark, that the man who neg
lects regular business to nurse a Presi
dential boom is a “monumental idiot.”
—Boston Globe.
Will the gentlemen who urge
Mr. Lamar’s great age as an objection
to his confirmation as a Justice of tlio
Supreme Court kindly remember that,
as Secretary of the Interior, Mr. Lamar
was not too old to wrest 23,000,000
acres of land from the railroads and
restore it to the public domain.—Chi
cago Herald.
This year’s political contest is
not going to be any child’s play. It is
true that Mr. Cleveland ’.till enter tho
contest with the sympathies of the
masses in his support; but it also must
be remembered that Mr. Blaine goes
into the fight with all the wealth
and power and influence of the
monopolies at his back. They are
playing for big stakes, and if they
lose this time they lose forever. They
have the advantage of superb organ
ization backed by unlimited wealth.
They are in the last ditch and will
make a desperate struggle to recover
lost ground, fetich, in brief, is an out
line of the situßt ou in 1888.-*-St
Gleb?.
Cancer in England.
The general climate of England is
favorable to the development of ‘can
cer. Out of every million deaths from
all causes, tln>s<» from Cancer number
about 80,000. 1 his proportion is onlj’
exceeded by phthisis, old age, con
vulsions, bronchitis, pneumonia and
“debilitj’.” Next to consumption,
cancer is the most fatal of all the con
stitutional diseases; and it lias been
steadily gaining ground fof more than
twenty years. The deaths from can
cer per million of persons living were
iti 18(12, 361; in 1872, 131, in lKsf, 520;
in 1882, 582; in 1883, 516; in IKBI, 560;
in 1885, 566; and are now close upon
600. London Standard.
DEADLY DRINKING WATER!
A t reversal Kphlemic Caused. How It
/May Bo Avoided.
Typhoid fever rages everywhere!
Wherever fit ie» are dependent upon riv
ers or streams for their drinking water,
the fever rages violently. Throughout the
entire South west and Northwest the wells
are low; the water is of very poor quality;
and here also tho fever rages.
The authorities of Albany, New York,
Chicago, Cincinnati, fet. Louis, Philadelphia
and other Jarge cities are warning the peo
ple not to drink the water Without first
boiling it to kill the malarial and typhoid
germs.
Surely a winter of malaria ami typhoid
Will ill prepare our people to encounter a
summer of cholera
Cholera and. typhoid and malarial fevers
can all lie prevented by simple rules of life,
and these rules should be studied by every
one. These diseases are symptoms of a low
state of the system, produced by tho vitiat
ed blood.
This hfood is made impure because of the
impurities in tho drinking water, these itii
purities being deadly poisons Which paraiyzfi
the nerve action of tho kidneys and liver.
When these blood-purifying or gens arc par
alyzed, then the natural waste of the body
the uric acid accumulates in. tho blood,
arid fever can not be prevented until this
excess of uric acid has been removed.
Tho greatest necessity tif teveryday life is
pure water. Two-thirds of ono‘s body is
made up of water. If the water we drink is
impure, then how can we hope to escape
diseased conditions!
It is impossible. Tho stomach, liver and
kidneys can not purify polluted water.
Some cautious people resort to the filter
for purifying this water, but even the filter
does not remove this poison, for Water of tlifi
most deadly character may pass through
tins filter and become clear, yet the poison,
disguised, is there.
They who vise filters know that they must
become renewed at regular periods, for
even though they do not take out ail the im
purity, they soon become foul,
Now in like manner the human kidneys
act ns a filter for tha blood, and if they are
filled up with Impurities hiitl become foill
like tins filter, nil ihe blood iii the system
coursing throughtheirtbecomes bad, fork iS
now a conceded fact thatthekidiicys are the
chief means whereby the blood is purified.
These organs are filled with thousands of
hair-like tubes, which drain the impurities
from the blood, as the SCWet pipes drain
impurities Guilt our houses.
If a sewer pipe breaks under the house,
the sewage escapes into tlie earth and fills
the house with poisonous gas; so if any of
tlio thousand and one little hair like sewer
tubes of the kidneys break down, the entire
body is affected by this awful poison.
It is a scientific fact that the kidneys have
few nerves of sensation; and,consequently,
disease may exist in these organs for a long
time and not hr suspected by the Individual.
It is impossible to filter nr take the death
out of the blood When the least derange
mCat exists in these organs, and if the
blood is not filtered then the uric acid or
kidney poison, removable only by Warner's
safe cure, accumulates in the system and
attacks any orgSi, producing nine out of ten
ailments, just as sewer gas and bad drain
age produce so many fatal disorders.
Kidney disease may bo known to exist if
there is any mark'd d>‘i artare ■ from or<lL
nary health Without apparent known cans®,
and it should be understood by alt that the
greatest peril exists and is intensified if
there is the least, neglect to treat it promptly
with that great specific, Warner's safe cure,
s remedy that has received tho highest rec
ognition by scientific men, who have thor
oughly investigated the character of kidney
derangements.
Tho liver, when deranged, immediately
announces the fact by sallow skin, consti
pated bowels, coated tongue and headaches;
but the kidney when diseased struggles on
fora long time, and tho fact of its disease
can only be discovered by the aid of the mi
croscope or by the physician who is skillful
enough to trace the most indirect effects in
the system to the derangement of these or
gans as the prime cause.
If you would secure a fresh share of life
seek the fresh air. T-xa-t Siftings.
• ♦
Woman’* Work.
There is no end to tho tasks which daily
confront the good housewife. To be a suc
cessful housekeeper, tho first requisite is
good health. How can n woman contend
against the trials and worries of housekeep
ing if she bo suffering lrom those distress
ing irregularities, ailments and weaknesses
peculiar to her sexi Dr. Tierce's Favorite
Prescription is a specific for those dis
orders. The only remedy, sold by drug
gists, under a positive guarantee from the,
nanufacturers. Satisfaction guaranteed
n every case, or money relunded. See
printed'guarantee on bottle wrapper.
“He gave me some pointers,'’ siid the
tramp of tlie farncr; “he jabbed me with a
pitchfork.— Drift.
A Reliable Almanac for 18SS.
Webster's Unabridged Dictionary says
that an almanac, is “A book or table con
taining a calendar of days, weeks and
months, to which astronomical data and
various statistics are often added, such as
the times of tiie rising and setting
of the sun and moon, changes of
the moon, eclipses, hours of full tide,
stated festivals of churches, weather
probabilities, etc.’’ All this and more too
will ne found in the Ben Franklin Almanac
issued by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St.
Paul Railway. Send six cents in post ago
to A. V. H. Carpenter, General Passenger
Agent. Milwaukee, AVis., and an almanac
for I»S3 will be forwarded to your address.
Money just now is like many men who
have it—close. —Texas Siftings.
Tlie Coining Comet,
It is fancied by a grateful patron that the
next comet will appear in the form of a huge
bottle, having “Golden Medical Discovery”
inscribed upon it, m bold characters. Whether
♦.his conceit and hujh compliment will be
verified, remains to be ■'vii, but Dr. Pierce
will continue to send forth that wonderful
vegetable compound, and potent eradicate!'
of disease. It has no equal iti medicinal and
health-giving propei ties, for imparting vigor
and tone to the liver and kidneys, in
purifying the blood, and through it cleans
mg and renewing the whole system. For
scrofulous humors, and consumption, or
lung scrofula, in its early stages, it is a
positive specific. Druggist?.
— - ♦
There is not much color to e u vet it cuu
scarcely tie cajitd a sober tint.—A, otft.
A General Tlo-tlp
of all the means of public conveyance !tt a
large city even for a few hours, during a
strike of tho employes, means a general
paralyzing of trade and industry for the
time being, and is attended with an enor
mous aggregate loss to the community.
How much more serious to the Individual
Is the general tie-up of bis system, known as
constipation, and due to the strike of the most
important organa for more prudent treat
ment and better care. If too long neglect
ed, a torpid or sluggish livel 1 will produce
serious forms of kidney and liver diseases,
malarial trouble and chronic dyspepsia. Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets are a
preventive and cure of those disorders.
They are prompt, sure and effective, pleasant
to take, and positively harmless.
The counterfeiter, no matter where he
goes, is seldom well lodged. At least, it is
believed that wherever he is he li is bad
quarters. —Boston Courier.
Nothing Without Its Sling,
And that, too, in the shape of the heart
burn (most abominable of acidities!) after
eating, if indigestion, in its chronic form,
has you in its clutches. Neither, if it. inis,
can you long expect immunity from bilious
ness and constipation, its pleasing col
leagues, the hideous trio vieing each with
each to render yom life more miserable.
Get Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters at once
insist upon the genuine in- glass —and use it
with rational persistence.
It is the shop pin that often furnishes the
piece that passeth understanding:—Alia
California
—— —-
SrbnEN Changes of Weather cause Throat
Diseases. There is no more effectual rem
edy for Coughs. Colds, etc., than Brown’s
Bronchial TkoOUES. Acid only in boxes.
Price 25 cts.
An Irish wake is usually characterized by
a spree ue corpse, says t ie Washington Critic.
I? you want to be cu - ed of a rough, ttaft
Halo’s Honey of Horchound and Tar.
Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure In one tninute.
There is a great deal of blow about the
signal service officers. —Boston Cost
If afflicted with Sore Eyes use Dr. Isaac
Thompson's Eye Water.Druggist* sell it.2sc.
Tut? girl With the highest hat is reckoned
at the lowest figure.—.V w Haven Xems.
Ely’s Cream Balm
IJifisy COLl> m HEAD.
prmsfe AJ _ ■ _,,
| f*MCATARRH
lifer'Not a Liqu tl or Snuff.
Apply Balm into each nostril.
loy-lv#' uicl ELY DUOS.. *35 Greenwich St., N.Y'-
roqipwEc
•Pfßrf?
THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY
For Liver, Bile. Indigestion, etc. Free rrom Mercury;
contains onlv Tore Vegetable Ingredient*. Agents—
CJHAB N: CkITTKM ON* \ F.W Y«Mtk.
Sft| f|SSO© nil get Pensions, if x i
fc! 3 B*iCl nJ disabled; Officer*’ pay, boun
ty collected; Deserter* relieved: years’
practice: aiiudCs* r»r no fciv. T av.'S SUNT FBEK;
A. W. nct OIDIH ft ft tluclnuniq Om A tTashirfcHni, D.ll
PER PROFIT nnd SAMPLES FKFJB
E alia ff-n-tTm *° men canvassers for I>r. SentT*
VjJjJjl 1 (>opuine Electric* Kelt*. Tirnfcbc*,
etc. Lady agents wanted for Electric Corsets. Quick
sales. Write for terms. Dr. Pcott,Bs2 Broadway, N. Y.
&E TO $8 A DAY. Samples worth $1.50
■rea* FU EF. Lines not. under the horse’s feet. Write
HUKUSTKR SAFETY REIS HOLDER CO., Hull/,Rich.
| For a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot core. \\ )/ i
(f%'4 */£»
a... '.X .. ■■■ j. _. 1 _ - - >c'- E&iSl
f COPYRIGHT, IW7. 1
CATARRH EH THE HEAD.
SVIWiPTOTBS OF Hit: OISISASE. Dull, heavy headache,
Obstruction of the nasal passages. (liS' haTgf-fl fnllinjr from tho
head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, arid acrid, at
others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody nnd putrid)
the eyes are weak; there is ringing in the enrs. deafness, hacking
or coughing to clear the throa f , expectoration of offensive intit
ter. together irith scabs from ulcers; the voice is changed and
has n “nasal twang"; the breath is offensive; smell and taste
impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, wi*h mental depres
sion, a hacking cough and general debility. Only a few of the
above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one case.
Thousands of eases annually, without manifesting half of ihe
above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in tie- grave.
No disease is so common, more deceptive nnd dangerous, less
undcistood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
vou would remove an evil, strike at its
KfHSF 8 root..' As the predisposing or real cause of
UJiDiRUn via ol I catarr j l j n t[),. majority of eases, some
TbCHTMCMT E w-eftUtiess, impurity, or ollierw ise faulty
! ntfll nH.ilI. I condition of tho system, in attempting to
cure the disease our chief aim must be
directed to the removal of that cause. Tho more w>- see of this
odious disease, and we treat successfully thousands of eases an
nually at the Invalids' Hold ami Surgical Institute, the more do
we realize the importance of combining with the use of a local,
soothing and healing application, a thorough and persistent inter
nal use of blood-clenhsiug and tonic medicines.
„ curing catarrh and all the various diseases with
Lfjjpr E which it is so frequently complicated, ns throat,
uiit-i g bronchial, and lung diseases, weak stomach, ca-
Qri iiupr | tarrhal deafness, weak or inflamed eyes, impure
nCLISnuL. | blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wotider
-v-= -wJ j- u | powers and virtues of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med
ical Discovery cannot be too strongly extolled. It has a specific
or PELLETS -
A ELEJ)[iTTLE liver pills.
Y PURELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS!
JeT ' J As a LIVER 1*81.1« they are I tioqiialed !
SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE.
/ .'y/A.J jq ftrware of Imitntions. which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask for
l ; vy // vlf } • lir. Pierce's Pellets, which are littl* Sugar-coated Pills, --
\\ / f or -Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET A DOSE.
M Ts.,' d a, o,u,~rr SICK HEADACHE, jP#
/ • .-a .*= uui Hilious Ileadnelie, SlirwinesK, C’onstlpalion, K' TV
/ Llm * _ v r ** ' liidiee-tion. Uiliotis Attacks, and all derange
' * ments of the stomach and bowels, are promptly re-
Ib-ved ami permanently cured by the use of Dr. WJk
BKING PI RF.I.Y VKGF.TABI.Ei IPierce’s S*ellet-. in explanation of their remedial
~ » j- l power over so great a variety of diseases, it nay , , „
P ’ ts ’m. n, D -insa truthfully be said that their action upon the system is universal, not a
’ W V>o ,rr ii ° r °f C a Upa gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence,
vt us, hermetically sealed. Aiwa vs fresh nnd reita
h! . Ae \ gcntl laxative, alterative, or active Jlsnnfartcrfj by WOBIU'S Pl>rL>SH’l VEPtCAT. AShOCIAIWJn.
purgative, they give the most perfect satisfaction. aUFjr a.L.Q- 1M- ‘V.
riPs PHOTO.
. yjK The venerable bene
ft, VLAtif factor of mankind,
intent upon his good
works, is known as
We see him here.
His familiar face and
form have become a trade mark, and the
he has done is illustrated in the follow
iiig inarvelous instance i Jan. 17, 1883,
George C. Osgood & Co., druggist!!, Lowell,
Mass., wrote: “Mr. Lewis Dennis, No. 186
Moody st., desires to recommend St. Jacobs
Oil to any afflicted with rheumatism, and?
desires esjtccially to say that Orrin Robinson,
of Grantvilie, Mass., a boy of 12 years, came
to his house in the summer of 1881 walking
upon crutches, his left leg having been bent
at the knee for over two months and could
not be bent back. He could not walk upon
it. Mr. Dennis had some St. Jacobs Oil in
the bouse and gave it to him to rub on Ills
knee. In six days lie had no use for his
crutches and went home well without them,
and he has been well since St. Jacobs Oil cured
him.” In July 1887, inquiry was made of the
Messrs. Osgood to ascertain the condition of
tlie little Cripple, Which brought the follow
ing response : “Lowell, Mass., Jtlljr 9; 1887;
The poor cripple on crutches, Orrin Robiti
feoii, ettred by HP Jacobs Oil in 1881, lias re
mained ell rod. The young mail has beeit
and is now at work every day a! manual
labor. Dr. George C. Osgood, M. I).’’ No
dtbet remedy can make the same showing.
DADWAY’C
llpmiL.su
The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy
For the cureof alldisordufLof the Stomach, bivt-r.
Rowels, Kidneys, Bladder, RefHnis IJisoasen, boss
of Appetite, IJoulacho. i’ostiveness, Indigestion,
Bilious,tess, Fever; Jnltanitoation of the Bowels,
Piles, and sill derangements Of the Internal viscera.
Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals
or deleterious (truss.
Price. i!5 cents tier hbr. , Sold by all driißßists.
PEHFBI’ niGßwriO.N Will he a ccmiipllshpfl
l»y taking Had wav’s Tills. By bo doing Nl( K
SI FA D A <lll% Dyspepsia, I’onl StoniM<ili r Bil
iousness will he avoided and tho food that »•* oaten
contribute its nourishing properties lur the support
Of the natural waste of the body.
DYSPEPSIA.
DR. RADTV.VT S PII/I.S arc a cure for this
complaint. They restore strength to the fftouiAch
and enable it to perform its functions. The symp
toms of Dyspepsia disappear, and with them the
liability of the system to contract diseases. Take
the medicine according to directions, and observe
what we say in “ False and True'’ respecting diet
A few extracts from the many letters we are con
stantly deceiving!
Dr. A. C. Middlebrook.Doraville.fJa.: *‘t
in my.practice and family in preference to all other
Tills. I ’..
Mrs. Caroline Derr Creek, Tnd.: “ t be
lieve my life has heed raved by your medicine.
Have lone been suffering with Dyspepsia ftiM Liver
Complaint.'’
11. A. Carr, T M , Escambia, Ala : “Best Tills lie
has ever used."
N. Hummel, Boonville, Mo.: Cured him when all
others failed.
Alice E. (Flavor. Mt. Storm, XV. Vn.: “t positive
ly say that Had way's ttre the host Tills i ever had
for Dyspepsia.
BTSend a letter stamp to !)R. fIADWAY A TO.,
N’o. 32 Warren St., New York, for “False and Time.*’
J bURANG'S
RHEUMATIC REMEDY
will positively cure rheumatism when
, everything else on earth fails. It is
’ taken Internally, and cures quickly and
thoroughly without ruining the atom
nch. I'rlce, one dollar u bottle or
JVplr bottle* tor live dolinr*. Sold
fj c'v fill druggists*. Send for t ree 40-page
“ pamiilile! h: Bi. K. IIKI.PIIES-
NTINE. ltruintist, WASH I NGTON.II.4v,
A MOXTII. Agents Wo Uteri, aabestsell-
H icg articles in the world. 1 sample free.
Address fA Y HItOXSON, Detroit , Midi.
FBEr UCAI for Poultry, Brnmilnteil Bone and
vUlvI. m*, 'rushed Oyster shells. Send for
I’rlce List. YOKIC CHEMICAL WOHKS, York. I’a.
effect, upon the lining mucous membranes of (he nnsnl nnd oilier
air-passages, promoting the natural secretion of th- ! ir ftillteles aTid
glands, thereby softening the diseased nnd thickened membrane,
and restoring it to its natural, thin, delicate, moist, healthy con
dition. As n blood-purifier, it is unsurpassed. As those diseases
which complicate catarrh are diseases of the lining mucous mem
branes, or -if tlv blood, it wiil readily be seen why this medicine
is so well calculated to cure them. t
|“*7 ’’ -'-'"'fl Asa local application for healing (hediseased eondi-
S I nnm I tion in Ihe head. T)r. S.-ige’s Catarrh Remedy is beyond
■ kuunt, a njj pomparjgon the best, preparation ever invented.
I AnrUT ilt is mild and pleasant to use, producing no smarting
R UilEnl. 8 or pain, and containing no strong, irritating, or euus
iw»* tic drug, or other poison. This Remedy is a power
ful antiseptic, and speedily destroys all bail smell which accom
panies so nianv cases of catarrh, thus affording g''eat coiutort to
those who suffer from this disease.
Hmwmm T)m Golden Medical Discovery is the natural
rFkSS?S3FST "helpmate'’ of Dr. Bng“’s Catarrh Remedy. It
i uißitmi.fi not only cleanses, purifies, regulates, and builds
PIIGCO U P 11’“ system to a healthy standard, and con-
UUhLOf quers throat, bronchial, ar.d lung complications,
roama ■ iiwnr-ii when any such exist, but, from its spccino
effects upon the lining membrane of tho nasal passages, it aids
materially in restoring the diseased, thickened, or ulcerated mem
brane to a healthy condition, and llms eradicates the diseuse.
\Vh< n a cure is effected in this manner it it permanent.
Both Dr. I*ierce‘s Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Rented v are sold by druggists the world over. Discovery
SI.OO. six bottles for $5.00. Dr. Cage's Catarrh Remedy 60 cents;
half-dozen bottles $2.50.
A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable hints os to
clothing, diet,, and other matters of importance, will be mailed,
post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-cent postage stamp.
Address, W orld’s Dispensary medical Association.
No. 603 Main Street, Buffalo, N. V.
MEXICAN UNIMENT
a I'/ - "
IIE ¥ I Ali mustang
IfgjE/UIJ All LINIMENT
a JONES
n Levers, lifarlngfl, Rr&««
rc Bcata and h*»«
SQO,
Brerv fi*e Scale. For Tre* prif
BQfc'fl(!*•*. IW« piper and aiflrrs.
JONES Of GNOHAMTSN,
BINGHAMTON. N.
WEAK, NERVOUS PEOPLE
- And others snffcrinß with
~dl'. hm-Rheumatism. Nenmlsnn.Kld.
.41S - -VY® - ""EyAi’cy and nil chronle ntsensri
WFfil rf'tui. SfCl tStnrr porltiTely cured hv Hr.
Im-ne-s f.->ELECTRO.
•'! CTIC BELT. The,,,
sands In p\ cry Stnte in thi
Cnioffhao been cured. KI-WTRIuTT instantly
felt. ratcfl-^fvNted nml sold l ft years. Whole family can
wear same belt. rt.KtTßlt' srspKNSOWKM free with mal#
bolts. Avoid worthiest KLFITBK Till SSRJ
FOR HITTt'HK. 700 cure! In Rend etnnip for pamphlet
DR W J, HORNE Inventor,|B9TT»Umli At,Cllirasto.
MEMORY
\\ holly unlike art Iff rial syfltefil**
Ant btiqli learned in one reading.
Itecomniended by Mab 5 .Twain. Ricrfabd ProttoH.
the Scientist. Hons. W. \V. Awron Judah P. Bfaja!*
MIN, Dr. MINOR, Ac. Class of IOC tMumbia Law stud
ents; two classes Of 200 each at Yale; 4CO University
of Penn.Philti..4ooat Wellesley College and ff«r*e|»irgs
classes at Chautauqua University, Ac. PrOspectUSFop*
iltESfrom PKOF. LOI3ETT& 237 Fifth Ave.. N. Y t
iflfi WB3 u mx
S B i H B meed, may he writ
■ ten with OK FOVr.t INK'S
n KX SKI* I.OMiHAML” Timm day's prac
tice makes a faster writer with the ordinary let*
terii of tho alpha hot than three months’study of
Shorthand. It is therefore of Immense advantflao
to business men, lawyers, clergymen, students,
clerks, mechanics and all who wish to »»u tbe pen
rapidly. A business accomplishment makes busi
ness opportunities. Instruction book mailed on re
eeipt of 5£.» els. by F. <*. I>R FOXTA !\ K, ears
of MfCTHOPOLITAN, 44 LfKOA dwa V. New YORK.
SIOO to S3OO 4^2
worktnK for u«. Agent* preferred who can luml-li
their own and give their whole time to the
bminexs. Spere hinmr-nte may be profitably em
ployed iviso. A few vacancies in towns amt cities,
it. K. JOHNSON A CO., 101.1 Main Ht., Richmond. Va,
Boek-hepping,Penmanship, Artthi
ntetlc* Shorthand, etc., thoroughly tnughl
by mail. Circular* free. BBt AXT-H t'OI.LFOK, T.
I PISO'S CURE FORCjQNSUMPTI 0 N
HAMILTON’S PILLS.
A.N.K.-K 116# i
WHEN WHITING TO ADVERTWEUN PLEAsi
nfnf* iliat jou f.aw tiie Adver* isvmcDi itt tbit
impels