2 bei pe Sh a Ai yo A NEW PARLOR GAME, |onesse WHOEVER FIRST COMES ALONG WITH IT WILL GET RICH. Any Trivial Little Thing Easily Becomes a Cragze=Fun With Dean DagsePars- phernalia of the GamewDrawing a Pig. “The man who will invent a new parlss game that will catch the fancy of society needn't trouble himself about the little cares | of this life,” said a society man. “All the circles high and low are thirsting for somes thing new, and whoever gets in with it first fs sure to make a fortune. Now, to show you how easily a trivial little thing becomes a craze, I have only to call your attention to the bean bag game, to another, but a game that requires a little skill in throwing. whole thing-~the throwing. You want a pumber of bean bags of different sizes, a pleco | of painted canvas, with a hole in it, and ap- pliances to stretch the canvas between the folding doors dividing two parlors, and when you've got them you've got the new crass comslete. I've seen twenty married men and women throwing bags at tho hele in the canvas for two hours, and thoy seemed to enjoy it so much that they were reluctant to stop and go home, If you hear a business man complain of a sore shoulder you can truthfully suspect him of bean throwing. There is a sort of excitement about the game | that makes it popular, but it wont run very | long. Men like it because thoy want to « demoustrate to their wives that they can throw straighter than women; also because it makes them think of the days when a shin ing silk hat was a mark for a snowball or a brick. TEN SIZES OF BEAN BAGS. “Of course there are prizes for the best throwers as there are for the best players of progressive euchre, and once the things gets in motion everybody does his best to get the best prize. There are ten sizes of bags, and they count from 10 to 100, the latter of course | being the largest bag. A thrower begins with the ten, and if he succeeds in putting it through the hole in the canvas he tries to send the twenty bag after it, and continues to throw until he scores a miss, when he has The paraphernalia of the game, as you can see, is simple, yet it can be made to cost a good deal of money if any anybody bas a no- tion for costly things. Iam credibly informed that the genius who invented it has already made $20,000 from the manufacture and sale | of bags and canvas, and that his profits are increasing every day. “There is another form of amusement that is coming into favor very rapidly, though it fsn't nearly as popular as the bean bag. It is the drawing of objects on paper and slates blindfolded. I was at a party the other night when a contest of this kind was gotten up by some of the ladies, and it proved a source of genuine fun. “¢ Now, began one of the ladies who pro- | posed the game, ‘I will Rindfold Mr, M— | Mme } and let him try to draw a pig’ Mr. was accordingly blindfolded, a pencil was put in his band, and he began to trace the outlines of a porker on a piece of drawing paper. that pig as he developed it. When be got through and removed the handkerchief from his eyes to catch a glimpse at his work be just said, ‘Rats, that ala't a pig. than that.’ “He was right. It wasn't a pig, and it would have taken a greater genius than any that saw it to have likened it to any object to be found above ground. There were two or three stock yards men in the party, men who buy and sell hogs every day, and not one of them came nearer a pig than a pig itself could if ft had a pencil. All this may look trivial to persons who dont get a great deal of parlor entertainment, but [ assure you it was good fun for ev body there, 1tdoesn's take much » who are at all inclined to be domestic ir tastes, and t simpler tho popular it will become. Tha hre has stoud so long Chicago Herald to amuse | in the he game the mor t's wi Ox rossIve eu Georgia Dialects, In fornier day i crackerdom of Gs little colonies of Thus, each sect local dialect spoke settlers emigre people an : T youuns tel s Ue a at of the negros [The mv and middle counties many ways different from gibberish joblered by the whose gabble is about as intelligible as the shatter of rico birds that infest their own tide water plantations And yet the gulleless author will hear a conversation between twe ofty backmen and retire to his and evolve a dialect sketch that is a cross between the twaddle and the talk of the typical dv instrel with form t COrg accompan n STOMs of speak a dial lish tl vit io wie OR 3 salt water darkios, study tarwheol de m lable shirt Hits, ~ His Salary Dide't Go Up. en working for three years for or r old time wholesale houses,” said a De troiter who wns calling up reminiscences, “and 1 finally concladed that I ought to have a ralw of salary. 1 began on $4 per week and was ruled to 86, but there i$ bad stuck for two years. The head man of the firm was a cold, «tiff, austere man, who seldom recognized an employe and was known to bo hard hearted. I hesitated a Jong time before daring to approach him on the subject nearest to my heart, but one day I slid into the private office when I knew he was alone. “Well, sir,’ he snaps out, short as pie crust, # ile] came 10=tn on # {Came to what, sir! # fee] cutnio to mek you if you-you didn't think? “ ifige, bere, William!’ he said as ho wheeled around on me, ‘if my daughter loves you, amd you love ber, I've no objection to your mag. Fix ft up between you and don't P) { fe bad a daughter, bart 1 had never spoken 4 ber in my life, and ho knew it. I Fils Remarkable Strait. the i t me es tensile hy ‘ ANNA SS It isn't the old bean bag | . N i that you toss from one row or line of persons | That's the secret of the | It was funny, I tall you, to watch | I can do better | Heo answered me the way be did | TO ADELAIDE NEILSON., Hannah Loone's Ocenlt Influence Over | the Grest Actresss=Modjoska's Notion, | Hannah Leone's history has never been told, and as it gives an interesting page in theatrical history it is worth relating, | Hannah many years ago married a worth. ! Joss follow named Leone, und after enduring | with him for a fow years she finally left him {and accepted the ition of a dresser to Adelaide Neilson, annah is a short, hump- backed woman, but she has pleasing features and some call her pretty, From the time | she first accepted the position with Neilson, up to the time of that talented actress’ sad death, Hannah performed her duties without ever making a mistake. Hor duties as a { dresser consisted in packing and unpacking | her mistress’ wardrobe and in dressing Neil. {son for the stage. As Hannah was obliged i to know where avery article was and at a minute's notice be able to place her band | upon it, it may readily be seen that her duties were not only onerous, but that they also re- quired a great deal of headwork to success | fully perform, Hannah exercised some strange occult in- fluence over Neilson, and it is said that that most beautiful but most wayward woman i feared and loved no one but her, and that one look from Hannah's clear eyes had mors in- | fluence over her than the prayers and en- treaties of a hundred friends. Certain it is that Neilson loved the quiet little woman, for after her (Neilson's) will was read it was found that she had bequeathed to Hannah Leone the most beautiful and valuable set of jewels of her priceless collection, After Nelson's sad death in Paris Hannah returned to this country, and for some time remained in privacy: but in 1852 or 1888 she became Mod jeska's dresser, and she was with the latter until last fall. Modjeskn, like other great actresses, hos hor pet superstitions, First among them is that if sho goes on the stage at the first pro. | Juction ¢f a new piece without rubbing her hand over a humpbacked person's back the play will be a dismal failure Hannah, on account of her hump, was invaluable to Mod- | jeska, but owing to some disagreement sho | was finally discharged. At the production of “Daniela” in New York a short time since, after everything was ready, Modjeska refosed to allow the piece to go on unless she could rub her hand over a humpbacked person'sback. The stage to zi ‘c th t the list | manager was in agony until he happened to | give way e next person on the list, | epy a humpbacked man in the audience The manager quietly had him called upon tho stage, and after Modjeska had daintily caressed his hump with the tips of her fingers she consented to make her entrance upon the | stage, and the play moved smoothly on and it is owing alone to the great love she bore Neilson that she has never risen to a higher place in the world, She is living at present in New York, quietly up town streets. She has had many offers from great actresses to enter their service, but has not considered any of thom favorably, , =New York Star, The Culinary Artist's Despair. The French delegation sent over to the inan. ! guration of the Bartheldi Status of Liberty was entertained at dinner by the Union Leagues club. And what a supper! A supper such as only the wedding feasts of Gamache could give an idea. The dishes served were of the most ex. quisite and costly description; the confection. ery was of the most learned and artistic sort; dish after dish came on selected from a bill of fare which covered no less than an enor ! mous page of closely printed text Nothing, in fact, was wanting except the appetite to do i honor to a banquet worthy of Sardanapaius At midnight the first course was «till The chairman thervupon took a oe step. He summarily and order Progress dec put a stop to endl loss pageant, champagnes to be errved lent Drink. way of a soci lar ne i Io ¢ tail and a pin by one, place } 0 COrTIer oF whirled three Umoes around, and then started on & blind search for the donkey, vw if they reach it, the tall is to be pinned, If the guest goes in another direction and stumbles against a wall, door, chair, or anything ele, thers be must leave the tail. The movements | of the blindfolded are apt to be ludicrous The person who makes the best effort to place the tail upon the donkey where it belongs rie ovlves a present of some kind, while the goes who makes the most unsuccessful effort gets | the booby prize. Now York Ban, ii wl ieh, The Paris Ben Marche, The celebrated shop called the Bon Marche Paris has a “band” or orchestra composed 250 of the men aid women connected with establishment, The other evening, writes corresponclent, they gave a concert in the uge Jai of the store, and eminent artists Hannah Leone is a finely educated woman, | speaking three or four different languages, | .onone of the | inj ON HELEN'S CHEEK, On Melen's cheek was once a glow, An arc of dreamland glimpsed below, A silver purpled, pesshy beauty Iu tidal swayings to and fro, O flush of youth! outvelveting The butterfly's Arabian wing! The very argosies of morning Bear not from heaven so rich « thing, On Helen's cheek a springtide day, Fragile and wonderful it lay; From Helen's cheek these twenty sumioers Child lips have kissed the bloom away, Nay, Time! record it not so fast, The reign of roses overpast ; All victor pops of theirs encircle A loyal woman to the last, fio true of speech, of soul so free, Of such a mellowed blood is she, That girlhood 's vision, long evanished, Rounds never to a memory, No loss in ber Love's sell descries! Up trembling to adoring eyes, The sweet mirage of youth and beauty On Helen's cheek forever Hos, — Louise Iinogen Guiney in The Independent, PERSIA'S RAGGED REGMIENTS. OMecers and Thelr Plunder, presents (generally a rather ludicrous appear- ance. Mis uniform is of cotton cloth and mostly of a deep blue color. It is made of what we call shirting, and when new is very suitable clothing in a warm country. But soon the military Luttons begin to disappear and are replaced by sabstitutes of all sorts, shapes, colors and sizes. The hair disappears from the warriors sheepskin sbako, which quickly grows shabby on scoount of his habit ually using it as a pillow. Moreover, the foot coverings of no two men in the regiment are alike, and the whole crew presents a melan- choly appearance, ean. Previous to a review or festal parade be may be seen carefully preparing a plume of white feathers, procured from the nearest | domestic fowl, and binding them to & plece of stick. When this martial plume has at | antly affizes it to ashako, On the occasion of official illuminations composite candles are served out by the loeal governor at the rate of one to each man The colonel has, of | course, a greater number of men on his lst { than ever make an appearance; be keeps the | difference. The other officers appropriate half the remaining eandiex The non-com missioned officers eat (i. a steal] a cortain | proportion, and at length one candle is served out to every five men. This is divided into five portions, a mew wick Is inserted, and, | when the regiment is paraded, at a given signal a box of matches is passed round, and | the regiment triumphantly presents arms | | with a lighted candle in each man's mushel as por general order, The pay of the Persian soldier is nominally seven tomans (£2 15a) per annum and rations He is lucky if he gots half his pay, which dos | not reach him til it Las passed through the | bands of many persons, his superiors. But { his rations of three and a ball pounds of { bread a day are quite another matter, If his | rations are tampernd with the soldier mutinies ! | at once, and there is no atrocity of which the | Persian soldier robbed of his rations is inca~ | pable —8t. James’ Gazette, Men Full of Whima. { of women, a half dosenn tolmoro sigves who daily go on ‘thangs, who say they cannot sleep unless a | Others tell of getting be cannot sleep unless bis head i= turned toward the north, He has a whim that he is a compass. It is said ex-Attorney General Irewster likes an open grate, but detosts the of the black coal and the red listasteful to him to = Kx he with lash the fuel pt on hand for Of a plooe of x bb a whim ut inres for HOTT OUETIONR or was a smoker, he wn as a dry smok be oLior cigar in laated to oli whim is that {| Tunes-Star Agresable Odors for Gas, at rovers residents of ed by of Troy were less gas has aroused of 2. A 1 lor which will presence, and out to actom- be generally one giving it an ox : H t ita ve boon taken It on On Las Ime the odor y nat iv be made i retained as a curious flelds of it =» s thus nate pas wish an odor, why does not : and delight seh odors an shall be most agrees ! Few, for instance, ike r ne Boeing that feasible sy combine use the as, and why eannot it be in essence of mignon lossom, or ylang yian fused hen ette or apple | York OC th with the A mmercial Advertiser, Eleetrie Photographs. Not long since ware recorded some inter. eting experiments in which M. Ch. Zenger sectired photographs in the darkness of a moonless night phogphorescancs of certain had Loen brightly flluminated during tho day. AM. 1. Tomasi has now described some oven moro remarkable effects under the en phonious name of “effluviography.” By an exposs of a few minotes’ duration he has irpressod upon a pittographer’s sensitive plate an image of an object through which a silent discharge of electricity was pasing, this result being obtained when care was | taken to insure perfect darkness and with a current of 100 lew tension to give any sign of Shabby Soldiers of the Shah~Thieving | The Pe sinn soldier, even on state ogcasions, | But yot the Persian soldier does the best he | tained the size of a lamp brush he triumph | ' the channel for the escapes of certain ! tain morbid conditions of these import. lant organs, they fall into » sluggish | { atate, which is the usual percursor of | | No maladies are more perilous than | ] | No use charging all whims to the account | i Mon are full of them, There are | i quid of tobacco reposes beneath their tongue, | up in the night to | sinoke, and there is one old crank who insists New through the imperceptible | objects which | Rd — HAVE YOU RHEUMATISM? A Remedy that has been in successful use for many yeurs in Evrops, and was ouly lately wtroduced in this country, is the RUSSIAN RHEUMATISM CURE This Remedy has the endorsement of Continental Physicians and Government Sanitary Commissions, an woll as the thousands of sufferers to whom it has brought relief, It has saved others-Ail who have trdud 38, It WILL CURE YOU from further agony, If you'll only give it & chanos EVERY BO WRUSSIANS ln x (RADE MARKS) AND bua | SIGNATURE Trobe this Size. Kone routs. withunt this Rip. waters and Soth Trade Mark * PRICE Groceries, MEAT MARKF Liraauisted Sugar SBca pound All o ade# rv Good bargsine In all grades, Abit Finest New Orlosns sg 800 per gallon, OXY] Vine assortment of Coffees, both gros ant susetod, Our roasted Coffees are always fresh. TOBACCOS ~All the new and desirable brands, OIG ARS. —Bpecial attention given 10 our cigar trade We try to soll the best 2for be and Be cigars in Yoo completes informst'on, Descriptive Fume town. philet, with testiinonials, free, For sale by nll druggists, If one or the other is not tn position to furnish it to you, do not be per susded to take anything alse, aut apply direct Lo tis Omers! Agente, PVAELZER BROS, & CO, Bib & B21 Marker sureet, Philadelphia. TEAR Young Hyson, 600, 80c, §1 per pound. Twper- inl, 800, 80g, #1 per pound. Gunpowder, 60c, she, ¥l peor pound. Oolong, 0c, 80e, $1 per pound, Mined green sod black, Ge, 80c, §1 per pound A very fae noovlorsd Japan tes. Also, a good bargain in Young Hyson at 400 per pound, '}'0 any one sending us £2.75 oash CHEESE — Finest Tull cream chesss at 16c per pound. not coupons, we will them the | Cexrae Demoorar and Lady's Book for one year, It is one of the most | send VIN RG AR «Pure old cider vinegar made from whole cider, One gallon of this goods is worth wore thas two gallons of common vinegar, (oidey's luwest pi ices. | i R & CO. Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS and CONFECTIONERY. in connection. STONEWARE 10 atlsizes of all the desirable shape best quality of Akros ware, This is the most sstie factory goods in the market, N | FOREIGN FRUITS Oranges and lemons of the freahost goods to be bad. We buy the best and Juciest lemons we oun find. They are better snd { cheaper than the very low priced goods, FRUIT JARS We have the now lightuing fruit \a be | | | ond Mason's porcelain-lined sud glass 1p jure, Hghtuing jar i» far ahead of suything yo! knows 11 is un Hitele higher in price thas the Mason jar, but itis worth more than the difference in prices. Buy the lightuivg Jor snd you will sot regret it, We have thew in plots, quarts and half gallons, MEATE «Vine sugar-cured Hiswe, Fhoulders, Bresk fart Bacon, sud dried Beef, Naked and canvases We guarautes every ploce of ment we sell, OUR MEAT MARKET. — We have ty fine lambs dress for our market as wanted We give specie sttention to getting Soe lamin and slvwaye try to Lave 8 Boe flock shevd comers can depend ob gettieg uice lamb at all tines BECHLER & 00. GROCERS & WEAT MARERY, Bosh House Block, Belleionis, Ps. Our yopular magazines published and the | | subscription price is 82 00 and with the | 1887 1887 | 0 » Democrat $2.75. Rend the advertise- The Pittsburgh ment ia another column of this paper, WEEKLY POST, Cn] — ENLARGED TO wJteh, Mange, and Scratches of every TWELVE PAGES, kind cured in 30 Minutes hy Woolford's TheOnlyDemocratic Sanitary Lotion, Use no ocher his } fesides In- | i I never fails Sold by F. Potts Green, Druggist, Bellefonte Pa. 8-44 ly. — a] A— A Gentle Stimulus i Is imparted to the kidneys and blad- | ber by Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which is most useful in overcoming torpidity of these organs, fusing more activity into them, this ex. oellent tonic endows them with ad-| ditional vigor, and enables them ihe | better to undergo the wear snd tesr of the discharg ng funciion imposed upon | them by nature. Moreover, us they are burgh. | AFTER JANUARY 1, 1887, “Tax Wekxry Post will be eninrged 0 TWELVE PAGES nets ger han is DPresenl SEs, impurities from the blood, increases | their usefulness by strengthening and healthfully stimulating them. th us Ta RAT Paper in tb 12 PAGES, 84 COULMS, | Interesting Besaing Matter nvery for One Year for g it the Largest and Chespest e Country In cer disease, What then can be the greater | service than a medicine which im pels them to greater sciivity when slothfal ? £10.00 And an Extrs Copy FREE 10 the those which affect the kidneys, ands | 7 : En medicine which averts the peril should | Fetter Up of Club | hight i pen | Single Subscription, $1.25 » year, be highly esteemed. | postage prepaid. | A ———————— WAI I AI | ALL THE NEWSof THE WEEK AND A GREAT VARIETY OF MISCELLANY. POLITICAL. — Always All w Important Question FOR THE FARMER TO CONSIDER, | National Administration. LITERARY Illustrated tales, sketch- { es, choice miscellany, blography snd ’ ! poetry. WASHINGTON Ample and reliable ’S BAUC H | correspondence, mail and telegraphic fr 2 | congressional procesdings RAW B 4 a MARKETS Careful Pitvsburgh, Foreign and oil "MANURES, |odisrins total : win ormed of ris marke wers interest : money and stock markels al home and sbrosd ORRESPONDENCE - It { sprightly letter fo ivit Bj oy ¢ in Paris d “i » te 03 ) -. ah ) . send for “Raset's Phosshate Gal _ . ath snd the west ONS | “Ti ston, in the eight pages and Sty wile aad iw # teresiing » oe A at vil Fre. New ¥ rh Washing- iw svewa| BAUGH & SO RAW-BONE |Massfactarcndl super-ProsPHATE | PHILADELPHIA, PA. USE BAUGH'S CELEBRATED $25 PHOSPHATE ‘A Valuable FOR SALE six miles snst of Bellefont fade S, | townel the Jacksonville 120 Acre andallowancs, in s | HIGH STATE OF CULTIVATION crt’ Weakly Editier in AR About 3 GOOD ETAXDING TIMBER " H & Ii W ST} actos | 8 nL \ v con-uane Mewspaper, | © ery Wednesday, A clean, pure, bright and interesting FAMILY PAPER. 0 latest rews, dowt Wo {bv | Twe Good Fruit Bearing Orchards, A Good Frame House and New Bank Barn, and all other i Necessary Outbuildings, Good Flowing Mountain Water all the year round. 1 i [1] wiaine hour of going to press | Agricultural, Mierke, Fashion, Household, Political, Financia, and Commereia Pemicn!l, Humorous and Sditornial section of trained lia pixteen od thing For turther particulars inquire of H. J. TIBBENS, Eseentor, Or J. 1 Bhaller on the premises ap. om S& TERME WILL BE BASE. y hd TAT WANTED to canvas for the SALESM ENaie of Nursery Stock. Steady employment gunranteed. Salary and Expenses Vaid Apply nt once, sisting age. CHASE DROTHERS, (Rater to this paper.) 1000 Rochester N.Y. eenrnits, oll jor {0 riralant .w be Put Cf begioning 10 eng fal stories by Fil foreign writers of 0° N / 3 THE DAILY STAR uv 4 . he Darky Bras sontaine sil the sews of the day five fore: Iie special correspondence ss rom Lomaws. Jace Berlin, Yiencs asd ¢ 14 8 commande 1 Ture, AL W bol ears wm. Albany. «nd o her news centers, he blest correspondents, specially rotained by the Tus Sean, fn 43 the intest news hy po 00 Jo Niterary features are unearmesed, 3 he Punaieial wind Market Reviews goo unasually fill and complete, “yweeind aie] and extraordinary Induces etnies to agents and CanvassOrs. send for clrenlars YERMS OF THE WEEKLY TAR ww fon hoo rag vr rostaon tn be United Sos aod Canadn, cniside the limit uv New York Uy re AALER REY 4 . we wow v ¢ ih] Clatm of (and one © oY LAW TEAMS OF THE ralLY mw Stn POL RRS © winding Sunday)... * perlean and Complexiya Boxatifier ’ TR AUB CURE POR sosmmamintn Watarin, Fever + ni Agnes, Serofula. Waneer, Ery sl pens, Boils, Pimples, Wieeors, Sore 1.y ea, Lenkd Head, Tete or, Salt asus Ce renrial nnd ail Bleod an sik nn Disease . Pd LL lL ed Ra FLA ae tor 1 AL, Rik, Fra 1 LOERS er 70 0. | COA : from TONGUE, and A un] A tho LIVER or £108 a . K BAYH Ne) EY arin doctors’ » Paper in Pitts- | enjoy ment of life is lost ONE DOLLAR| In Clubs of Five or Over 10 Copies for | Democratic, | giving a cordial and candid support of the | Farm DR. RYMAN'S INDIAN VEG- ETABLE BALSAM. FOR THE THROAT. The grestest known remedy for Colds, Consumption Coughs, Hourmnes, Asthms, Sore Throat, Croup, Spitting Blood, and sil Disesses srising from an irritsted throst and Infsmwed Lungs. This Balsam. Compound hae been used In private practice over twenty vesrs geining « high reputation for curing all Lung and Throst sfiectivns with those who have used it. It a» and reality, vet true, that two-thirds of the deaths within our midst are caused from bad colds becoming deeply sested in vital portions of the jung tissue through neglect snd improper care or treatment When beslth is destroyed all Then, because which suck the life-blood by degrees, and lesve the poor emaciated sufferer with no chance for re- lief, the relisble way is 0 thoroughly eradicatethe destroyer [from the system By Using Ryman’s {Pure Vegetabl Remedy, petante You will find it imparts bealth and vigor to the whole system, scling ou the Mucous membrane of the Throst sad Bronchial Tubes greatly facilitates expect. | oration, breaking up » treublesome cough in & marvelous short period, at Lhe same | time increasing the sppetite, causing an | enjoyment of food, enables the stomach to properly digest it, purifies toe blood and | imparts a healthy complexion, | Ryman's Carminative, For Dysentery, Diarrhoea and Chol | era Morbus. This Carminstive, found | ed on just medical principles, is the most positive remedy offered to the public; bundreds bave been cured by it when other remedies have failed. A fair trial will prove its efficacy. FOR {CHILDREN TEETHING, it is the MosL pieasal t LUNGS AND { these treacherous colds reliable and safe reme- { dy for children “in cases of Griping | Pains, Colic, Che lera Morbus, Diar- | rhoea, &c., vow belore the public. A trial will prove the truth of this ssser- tion. No mother should be without it, FOR DYSENTERY. The most violent Dysentery have speedily yielded 10 the magic power of carminative, If taken according to lirections success is certain, DR. RYMANS CELEBRATED {CARMINATINE for children teeth | ing greatly facilitates the process of | teething, by softening the gums, redu- cing all irflamotion—will allay ALL | PAIN and spasmodic action, ard is | sure to regulate the Bowels, Depend nit, Mothers’ it will give rést to r-scives aud RELIEF and HEALTH rs We have prepared Medicine for Cases OF ape i ou * | many years, and can say in ecnfidence | and truth THAT IT HAS NEVER FAILED | IN A SINGLE INSTANCE 10 EFFECT A | CURR timely used. We have pever known of dissatisfact on by any one who ased it, on the contrary all | are delighted with its operations, and | speak in terms of heighest commenda. | tion of its magical effects and Medical virtue in almost every ‘nstance when | the infant is suffering from pain and | exhaustion, relief will be found in fifi teen or twenty minutes afier the cAr- | MmixaTive is given. This valuable Medicine hae been used by most | EXPERIENCED snd SKILFUL NURSES with never-failing success. It not only relieves the child fron pain, bat ip. vigorates the stomache and bowels, corrects acidity and gives tone and and energy to the whole system, It will almost instantly relieve aririxg IX THE BOWELS AXD O10 aud over. come convulsions, which, if not sjeed. ily remedied, end in death, We believe it is the BEST Sua. ® wESY REMEDY IN THE WORLD 10 ull coon of Dysentery and Diarrhoea whether it arises from teething or from any other cause, aud say to every mother who has a child suffering from any of the fore-going complains, do not let your prejudice, bor he prejudices of others, stand between your suflril- ing child and relief, that will sure to follow the use of Rymax's Canuisy Fo directions for using we- accompany each bottle, #9 A trial of the'Carminative wil recommend it. per Bottle. and Count Price 25 cents y Merchants a ain ; booed 03. i when : tl. A. Moore
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers