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“Civilizing” Africa.
The Anti-Slavery Society, in London,
has received an important letter from
Enin Pasha, dated from Wedelai, Au¬
gust 16th, 1887,' (nine months ago),
which is most interesting and instruc¬
tive, and will allay much anxiety con¬
cerning the fate both of Emin and of
Stanley. Emin begins by saying he does
not intend proceeding to Zanzibar, as his
friends in England have expected him to
do, but to remain where he is, and con¬ has
tinue the work of colonization he
begun in the Western shores of Lake Al¬
bert. Even when Stanley reaches him,
he will not alter his plans. “Would you
desert \ our own work” he writes, “just
at the dawn of better times?” He ap¬
pears to be in good spirits, and describes
the country he is civilizing as very prom¬
ising. With the consent, and even assis¬
tance of native chiefs, he has established
“stations,” and introduced order every¬
where. The crops were abundant, and
that cotton plantations were yielding
very fairly. Through the agency of
an English missionary in
Uganda, a postal communication
had been opened to and from Zanzibar, with
as well as facilities of intercourse
Uganda. He says he is glad Stanley
' chose the CoDgo road for his expedition, numberles
as although, he will encounter of the soil
difficulties, arising mostly doubt out succeed in
to go across, ho will no
overcoming them; while coming by
Uganda his progress would have been op¬
posed by force. Emin Pasha adds
that, he thinks once provided with the direct necessaries, road to
it easy to open a
the sea coast by way of Langa and Masai
countries. The only obstacle he saw was
the fierceness of the Lang 1 people,' but
this,'too, might be conquered. Finally,
he mentions the fresh outbreak of war
between the kings of Uganda and Kabre
ga, which had temporarily closed all
communications, so that he was not cer¬
tain when he would be able to forward
his letter.
“Ah me!” sighed hollow, Potts,“I’m ambitio tired of vain.” living,
'I he worldis ,'s
“Come nowl” said his chum, “I know the
It’s symptoms; all liver—that’s plain.
your very
“You need not suffer, for help is < asy;
PiercUs Peilets go right to the place.
*A friend to the bilious,’ I well might call
them—
There’s nothing be'ter; they suit your case.”
Potts Ceased his sighing and bought the “Pel¬
lets.”
No more he mourneth his hapless lot!
His face is cheerful, is his heart forgot! is lightsome,
His melancholy qu te
Out of nearly 1,000 applications for license to
sell liquor in 1 ittsburg, Pa., 218 got them.
If Sufferers from Consumption,
Scrofula, Bronchitis, and General Debility will
try Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with
Hypophosphitcs, they will find immediate re¬
lief and permanent benefit. The Medical Pro¬
fession universally declare it a remedy of the
greatest value and very palatable. Read: “I
have used Scott’s Emulsion in several cases
of Scrofula and Debility in Children. Results
most gratifying. My little patients take it with
pleasure.”— YV.A.HULnEitT, M.D., Salisbury ,111.
Nothing More Dangerous
“Than a neglected cough,” is what Dr. J. F.
Hammond, professor in the Electio Medical
College, says, “and as I cheerfully a preventive recommend remedy
and a curative agent, of Gum and
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy Sweet
Mullein.”
_
If afflicted with pore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
NERVES! NERVES!!
What terrible visions this little word brings
before the es of the nervous.
Headache, Indigestion, Neuralgia, Sleeplessness,
Nervous Prostration,
All stare them in the face. Yet all these nervous
troubles can be cured by using
vt>s ^.raines
r y.
fgrnJjouM
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
THIS GREAT NERVE TONIC
Also contains the best remedies for diseased con¬
ditions of the Kidneys, Liver, and Blood, which
always accompany nerve troubles.
It is a Nerve Tonic, an why Alterative, it a Laxative,
and a Diuretic. That is
CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL.
$z.oo a Bottle. Send for full particulars.
WELLS, RICHARDSON BURLINGTON, & CO., VT. Proprietors,
That Tired
Is experienced by almost every one at thli season,
and many people resort to Hood’s Sarsaparilla to
drive away the languor and exhaustion. The blood,
laden with Impurities which have been accumulating
for months, moves sluggishly through |the veins,
the mind falls to think quickly, and the body Is still
slower to respond. Hood’s Sarsapar.lla .s Just what
Is needed. It purifies, vital zos, and enriches the
blood, makes the head clear, creates an appetite,
overcomes that tired feeling, tones the nervous sys¬
tem, and imparts new strength and vigor to the
whole body.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
7s proven to be so va tly superior to any other sarsa¬
parilla, orbl :od purifier, that one ha* well said: “Its
health giving effects upon the blood and entire
human organism are a> much more positive than the
remedies of a quarter of a century ago as the steam
power of to-day is in advance of the sLw and labori¬
ous drudgery of years ago.”
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $3. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
SSSsSsSSSST
T>AL!M’S 1 Business College, Phila., Pa., Situa
tioas furnished. Life Scholarships 5»»40. Write.
m §§§ ^?^OP^AEJOR 6 ) m Dn.WsUin™ Sor & . -p Y mEt) v
e> h
nvE § I p ; m w*J \ |L
\ For a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure. I S am*
V 50 CENTS. 5
..
CATARRH IN THE HEAD.
' SYMPTOMS OF THE DISEASE.-Dull, heavy headache,
obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the
head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at
others, thick, tenacious, there mucous, purulent, bloody deafness, and hacking putrid;
the eyes are weak; is ringing in the ears,
or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive mat¬
ter, together with scabs from ulcers; the voice is changed and
has UOO U a “ 11UUUI nasal twang CM mif, ”; , the mu breath K/.V/UVU is 10 VUV.IW1T offensive; V, D1UC11 smell and wuv* taste
impaired; imDaired: there there is i3 a a sensation sensation of of dizziness, dizziness, with with mental mental dep depres
Bion, a hacking cough and general debility. Only a few of of the
above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any o one case,
Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the
above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave.
No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less
understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
Common Sehse If you would remove an evil, strike at its
i root. catarrh * *’ ” real cases, ' cause some of
TnEATMPUT IIM.nilaC.ni. I | weakness, impurity, or otherwise faulty
condition of the system, in attempting to
. mm cure the disease our chief aim must bo
directed disease, to the removal of that successfully came. The thousands more we see of this
odious and wo treat of cases an¬
nually at. the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, the more do
we realize the importance of combining with the nse of a local,
soothing and healing application, and a thorough and persistent inter¬
nal use of blood-clcansiug tonic medicines.
n In curing catarrh and all the various diseases with
linlEr vuihi 1 I bronchia^ is and 80 frequently lung diseases, complicated, weak stomach, os throat, ca
nLLIWIlfU* Dri iiunr I g tarrhal deafness, weak or inflamed eyes, impure
blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wonder
f u j powers and virtues of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med¬
ical Discovery cannot be too strongly extolled. It has a specific
Size qp pellets.
9 wwm © o o
& % o o o
/ I
'//, 'T$7a Vi
*11 W\ PLEASAji T- ORIGINAL “X ^ C
ITTLE LIVER PILLS* i
m
2 >7 m
Sold by Druggists.
25 Cents a Vial.
being purely vegetable,
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets operate without disturbance to
the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in glass
vials, As hermetically sealed. Always fresh and relia¬
ble. a gentle laxative, alterative, or active
purgative, they give the most perfect satisfaction.
Nearly everybody needs a good spring medicine
like Hood’s Sarsaparilla to expel impurities which
accumulate in the blood during the winter, keep up
strength as warm weather comes on, c eate an ap¬
petite and promote healthy digestion. Try Hood’s
Sarsaparilla anil you will be convinced of its pecul¬
iar merits. It is the ideal spring medicine—reliable,
beneficial, pleasant to take, and gives full value for
the money.
“I take Hood’s Sarsaparilla as a spring tonic, and I
reoommend it to all who have that misera le tired
feeling. ’ C. Parke lee, 349 Bridge street, Brooklyn.
Make the Weak Strong
“My appetite was poor, I could not sleep, had
headache a great deal, pains in my back, my bowels
did not move regularly. Hood’s Sarsaparilla in a
short time did m; so much g 7od that I foel like a new
man. My pains and aches tra relieve i, my appetite
improved. I say to others try Hood’s Sarsaparilla.”
G. 1?. Jackson, Roxbury Station, Conn.
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mas3.
IOO Doses One Dollar
____ _
Blair’s Pills. ........... e ES£ar
™„.
A. N. U. •Eighteen, ’88
effect upon the lining’ mucous membranes of the nasal and other
air-passages, promoting the natural secretion of their follicles and
glands, thereby softening the diseased and thickened membrane,
and restoring it to its natural, thin, delicate, moist, these healthy con¬
dition. As a blood-purifier, it is unsurpassed. As diseases
which complicate catarrh are diseases of the lining why mucous this medicine mem¬
branes, or of the blood, it will readily be seen
is so well calculated to cure them.
rsn 0 I all comparison the best preparation ever invented.
ftp _ CUT 11* is mild and Peasant to producing no smarting
I ■ Hur.it 1. 0 use, irritating,
or pain, and containing no strong, Remedy or caus
tic drug, or other poison. This is a power¬
ful antiseptic, and speedily destroys all bad smell which accom
lanics so many cases of catarrh, thus affording great comfort to
hose who suffer from this disease.
hmmm 1 kmiiKiw.ni I ■ MISSES^ regulates, and builds
not on j y c ,] eangeSi purifies,
Cures. up quers the throat, system bronchial, to a healthy and lung standard, complications, and con¬
when any such exist, hut, from its specific
effects iroon the lining membrane of the nasal passages, it aids
materially in restoring the diseased, thickened, or ulcerated mem¬
brane to a healthy condition, and thus eradicates the disease.
When a cure is effected in this manner if is permanent.
Both Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh $1.00, six Remedy bottles are for sold $5.00. by Dr. druggists Sage’s the Catarrh world Remedy over. Discovery 50 cents;
half-dozen bottles $2.50.
A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable hints as to
clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will be mailed,
post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-ccut postage stamp.
Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
PURELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS!
As a LIVER PILL, they are Enequaled!
SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE.
Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask for
sr-ssajsssas! *!s*MHrs , S 8 £ B ‘
SICK HEADACHE, T*’
Bilions Headache, Dizziness, Constipation,
Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, ami all derange
ments of the stomach and bowelR, are the promptly of i»r, re¬
lieved and permanently cured by use remedial
Pierce’s Pellets. In explanation of their
of diseases, it may _____
power over so said great a variety action the system Is universal, . ____. not a
gland truthfully tissue be escaping that their their sanative upon influence.
or
Manufactured by MOULD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION,
BUFFALO, 2ST. "NT-
WELLS’
INVISIBLE
Velvet!
Dreamy Figs y
A Magic Com- (Mg
plexion for Beauti Face, Haf
ner
Neck and Arms Be
dressing Elegant forg jjj; i
and [B§s
skin. whitening Unrivaled the Bat
for Theatre, Re- KB
ceptions. Parties,&e.Un- Balls, |S IgS A
~ lualled Slcate forH BBS
trans
parent white- “
less, nessAioftyouihful effect and fine finish. Harm¬
doesnot roughen, draw, wither, nor in any
way Superior injure the most delicate or sensitive skin.
to any Powder, Paste or Liquid for
toning Sunburn, down red or flushed face. Effaces Tan,
low Skin, Freckles, Pimples, Coarseness, Sal¬
all blemishes and imperfections. SI.
bottles at Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers,
or by Express. prepaid, on receipt of price.
E.S. Wells, Chemi.-.t, Jersey C ity, N. J..U.S. A.
“ROUGH ON NEURALGIA, 1 ’ $1.00. Drug.*
“ROUGH ON RHEUMATISM,” $1.50. Drug.
“ROUGH ON ASTHMA,” $1.00. Druggists.
“ROUGn ON MALARIA,” $1,50. Druggists,
or prepaid b y Ex. E. S. Well,^ .Terser Pity .
i9Paiyl^a»saii«.
ROUGH on TGQTHAQHE“ I Bo