Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, December 07, 1893, Image 2

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    RETROSPECT.
Whe roses were not just so sweet, parhaps,
As wo thought they would surely be,
And the blossoms were not so pearly white
As of yore, on the orohard tree ;
But the summer has gone for all of that,
And with sad reluctant heart
We stand at rich automn’s open door
And watoh its form depart.
The skies were not just so blue, perhaps,
As we hoped they would surely be,
And the waters were rough thai Wise Sur
boat,
Tastead of the old calm sea :
But the summer has gone for all of that,
And the golden rod is here;
We can see the gleam of its golden sheen
In the hand of theaging year,
The rest was not quite so real, perhaps,
As we hoped it might prove to be,
Por instead of leisure came work sometimes |
And the days dragged wearily ;
But the summer has gone for all of that,
The holiday time is o'er,
And busy hands in the harvest fleld
Have garnered their golden store,
The summer was not such a dream, perhaps,
Of bliss a we thought ‘twould be,
And the beautiful things we planned to do
Went amiss for you and me ;
Yet still it is gone for all of that,
And we lift our wistful eyes
To the land where beyond the winter snows
Another summer les,
—Kathleen R. Wheeler, in Lippincott's,
!
THE LAST SCHOLAR.
BY ROBERT BEVERLY HALE.
hi & used to be the
{ fashion to go to
| Miss Lepington's
school when my
mother was a girl.
Schools came Into
fashion just
erinolines
puffy
I know for a num-
ber of reasons that
it was the most
fashionable girls’
i school in my |
“Zn mother's time; |
and what makes it perfectly certain
is that my mother would never have |
one to it unless it had been. Miss
a ghun ased to limit the number of
scholars to forty ; and there were many
stories current as to the early applica-
tions made for a place in that school.
1t was no uncommon thing for a happy
father to send in an application as soon
as a daughter was born; and it was
said that when Tom Snelling and
Eunice Dunbsr were engaged, they
wrote to Miss Lepington that in case
they were married and had a daughter
they wanted a place reserved for her.
I don't exactly know whether to be
lieve that dr not. 1 do know that my |
mother applied only six years before
hand ; but then her mother knew Miss
Lepington very well, and so Miss Leg
ington was probably willing to strain
% point
jut things cannot always stay in
fash: Hoop skirts went out
after s time, and ever so many Ccrino-
line makers were ruined Even these
beautiful great sleeves must go out
fash
have
Cones
fs
and
sleeves do
of style
I greatly fear that they may
disappeared before this story
it And Miss Lepington’s
school went out of fashion, too, You
gee, Miss Lepington would not have
German taught at and
there Miss Cartwright's school
that had a second comin of Goethe's
as a German teacher; and nowadays,
of course, every girl ought to know
German That was only one reason
out of a dozen for the falling off in
pupils
Miss Lepington must have noticed
the diminution in applications;
bat not seem to She
was than ever in her re
quirements She had never taken
any whose grandfather was
“somebody,
wold, Do at
when ther
pupils
hb a
Der shoo; ,
WAS
ah did
sterner
not
and she never
the time ecame«
were only thirty-five
then the remsining
dropped off, one by one, in a way that
pains me to tell of.
But Miss Lepington never thought
of miving up teaching. She just
as croct as in the old days, and s litte
stricter : and she taught just as well as
ever better, I don't doubt,
than Mise Cartwright, whose ancestors
were I don't know what when the
Lepingtons were lolling at their ease
in Levisgton Manor, or fighting for
their king at Agincourt,
1 suppose one reason the pupils
stopped coming was because Hanover
street deteriorated so. Every one
lives on Enderby square now, or else
on Collingwood avenue, and you can’t
really expect a girl of fifteen to walk
past all those queer shops on Hanover
street. Jt is a strange old place, and
one wonders how it could ever have
been so {ashionable,
Miss Lepington had a nephew,
Densil Smith, of Smith, Alen & Com:
any. They lived together in an old
on Paritan square,
rich, ond she mast have been quite
well off herself,
up in his business that he never knew
much about her school. He may have
had some little suspicion of what was
going on ; but one of his business rules |
was to get everything at first hand.
His news about Miss
eaid,
inst
shi
and
Ones
Was
much
herself, and thushe thought
He
Lepington
he was sure to know the truth,
was the only friend of Miss Looping: |
ton's who did not know it, {ter a panse,
The school grew smaller and smallor, |
till there were only twenty pupils. |
Then ten of these left in a body to go
to Miss Cartwright's. Then the rest
deserted, one by one, until—I don't
| I have a new instructress,
Hoe was
too. They took hold of exch other's hut dogs will eagerly eat lard and
He was so wrapped |
a character in a story than a girl in |
every day life. She was very beauti- |
ful, in the first place, and very amiable, |
and very good ; and she wae, as yon
gee, so loyal that she stayed with Miss |
Lepmgton after every one else had
deserted her,
+] shall undertake the first class in |
French myself this morning, Constance. |
I have severed my connection with
Mille. Deronlet, and until such time as |
I shall dis-
the position my-
dubing af
Chmige sho au
soll.”
Constance took out her French |
books and followed Miss Lepington
out of the deserted schoolroom into |
the recitation room,
“Rend, Constance, if you please.”
Constance read. She read so sweetly
in any language that it was hard even
for Miss Lepington to find fault. 1]
should like to hear her read Russian,
but then I was always very fond of
Constance Alford.
“Look out for your ‘puis,’ Constance.
Did not Mademoiselle tell you how to
pronounce that word? Now after me:
puis, ! {
“Pais,” said Constance.
“That is more tolerable ; but practise
it, my dear, before the mirror. The
lips must move in one particular way.
You can always discover a Parisian by
the way he pronounces ‘puis.’
And so on, till at last the French
was over. Then there was the study
hour, and then the English literature
class, which Miss Lepington taught
herself, for she had “‘severed her con
nection” with all the assistants except
| old Miss Nutting, who eamein to teach
drawing once aweek. And Constance
| Alford often told me that she was very
glad to get rid of the other i
tor Miss Lepington WAS an
USLrNelors,
excellent
teacher, though perhaps = trifle too
OAITOW IN Some WAYS
After English literature came
This was the first break in the dignity
of the 1. Constance found a
chair and drew it up close to Miss
Lepington’s, and then they ate their
lunch together, and talked affection-
ately, for they were very fond of ench
other.
a
schoo
“Did vou know I waseighteon years!
old to-day?" ssid Constance.
“Why, my dear child?’ eried Miss
Lepington “And 1 have not given
you a present "
“Yes, you have, said Con-
stance (she never called Miss Leping-
ton ‘‘dear” during school hours). “You
give me a present of something every
time yon teach me. But I have some-
thing to tell you; bat I hardly dare.”
“Not quite so many ‘buts,’ ” said
Miss Lepington, stroking her favorite
and only) pupil's hand.
“Yes, dear, all the ‘buts’ I want in
recess,” said Constance, mischievously,
“What do you think I have done p!
“Become married 27 |
out laaghing. |
Oh, how ro-|
I never should
ds TY a
engaged to be
Constance burst
“Right the first time!
mafitic yon are, dear!
have believed it."
Miss Lepmgton
romantic, my child
{ know a little of the world
I hope that you
happy. I am confident that
the gentleman both is and will be so
Who is he
“Tack Mackenzie,” said Constance
“He's splendid, Bat I haven't told
you everything. I thought-—1 hoped
vor wouldn't mind-——1i I think
that he rang the door just now
Did vou hear it? I asked him to come
here to see you and me You don't
mind, do you, dear?”
Miss Lepington tried to lock stern;
but she couldn't. No one could look
stern at Constance, Miss Lepington
did look in the glass to spe that her
hair was all right, snd then changed
her spectacles for her eyeglasses.
“You were indisercet, my child, to
ask young gentleman to a girls’
but since he is here,
we must welcome him
Mr. Macks in."
“| hope you will pardon my intru-
I Tank as he eame forward
anxions to meet the
lady who has been so intimate with
Constance : and Constance would have
me see vou where she had known you
and grown so fond of yon Will you
forgive me?’
Miss Lepington blushed again, She
was not used to fine speeches from |
No ean be dis
pleased with Constance,” she said,
“and I begin to think that her fiance
shares her immunity.”
After that the three had a nice talk
about the old school; and Constance
told several anecdotes, which Miss Lep-
ington had never heard before, about
things that had gene on under the
teacher's nose; and Miss Lepington
told the two young people stories about
their mothers, who had been class
mates, and pointed out the desks where
they had sat,
The time for the recitation in nat
blushed. “Not
Perhaps it is that
My dear
Constance, will be
YETY, VOI
11
well
ih
hell
a
school : of conrse
Jane, show
nie
as 80
young men, one
| ural history waa past, and they were
in the middle of the hour for Latin
grammar, and still Jack stayed on. At
jast he rose to go, and Constance rose,
hands and stood facing Miss Leping-
ton. And then suddenly Miss Leping-
! ton understood what was going to hap- |
en.
Jack had come to Sake Constance
i away.
Lepington’s |
weliool was always derived from Miss |
Miss Lepington wes a consummate
mistress of her emotions, ond yet Con-
stanee is very sare that her dear old
teach ors eyes were full of tears,
“(350d by, Constance.” she said, af-
“IL need not tell you to
be & good irl. See that you deserve
her, Mr. Mackenzie.”
of ean't,” said Jack, “but Tl try.”
Constance and Miss Lepington kissed
each other and parted; and the two
like to say it—until Constance Alford | lovers went ont, leaving the teacher
was the valy pupil in Miw Lepington's |
the worst is said, |
Ana now
were to have a school
A would be
school,
for if any one
with one sche
the 1
alone in the deserted sohoolroom. Just
ne Shey passed the doorway, Constance
looked bask and saw Miss Lepi
| ject.
| ford and Mr. Mackenzie are engaged
“Donsil,”
next morning at breakfast, ‘I am go-
ing to discontinue teaching. Yester-
day was the Inst day of school.”
Mr. Densil Smith looked up with his
egg spoon half way to his mouth.
“Have your pupils been dropping
off?" he inquired,
“Yes.
loft yesterday.”
“Why, that's too bad. But think of
the rest of them,” said Mr. Smith sym-
pathetically. ‘Don’t leave them sud-
denly this way.”
’ : i |
“Thank you for your kind interest, |
Densil. But I assure you there is no
alternative. Let us change the sub-
Have yon heard that Miss Al-
to be married? I have been thinking
| of what I shallgive them for a wedding
present, and have finally definitely de- |
I have |
cided upon the school-house,
no further need of it.”
And that is how Constance and I
came to set up housekeeping in Han-
| over street. —Munsey's Magazine.
- rent —
A Rawhide Cannon.
named La Tulip,
known as the
A Syracuse man
has invented a cannon
La Tulip rawhide gun, of which great |
things are expected. One of the guns,
made by its inventor, was tested at |
It weighs in the |
Onondaga Valley.
neighborhood of 400 pounds, while the
cannon of the same calibre in use by
the army weighs nearly 1500, Its pe-
culiarity lies in its lightness and the
easy manner in which it can be trans
ported. Across the bre ach it measures
sbout fourteon inches, and tapers to
about six at the muzzle A forged
steel cone forming the barrel runs to the
full length, and is only three-quarters
of an inch in thickness Then comes
layer after layer of the finest rawhide,
compressed until it has the strength
of steel. In fact, its toughness and
staying powers are said to exceed ste el.
The rawhide is put on in strips coiled
around and around, and is several inches
in thickness, On top of this lie two
coils of steel wire wound to its strong-
est tension and then filed smooth. The
cap placed at the breech can be easily
removed for inspection of the rawhide
filling. The tests were pronounced
saecessful, snd further trials will be
had. A five-inch bore will be con-
| structed as soon aa posuible, and when
mounted npon a movable carriage 1t
will then demonstrate whether it can
effectively. The five-inch
cannon will be smooth bore and used
to discharge dynamite csrtridges, a
trial of which will be made, Freder-
jek La Tulip, the inventor, has been a
worker of rawhide for twelve years and
be used
ix conversant with it in every detail
Rome (N. XY.) Sentinel,
EG —
Origin of the Word “Trolley.”
Most persons w ho nse the word “‘trol-
ley” probably do not know the origin
of this term, or why this aame was
given to that apparatus by which the
electricity is conveyed from an a rial
Twenty years ago, the word was
ased to designate form track
can be tilted, for carrying rail
road materials or the like This is
the only definition of the word in
Webster's Dictionary of the edition of
1848. In the edition of 1892 of the
same work, three other definitions sre
added. 1. A cart that
pushed by hand or drawn by an ani.
sal.” Tt is noted that this meaning
of the word is in use in England, not
in the United States “A truck
from which the load is suspended on
some kinds of eranes.”” This meaning
ia technical, according to Webster, and
employed only in speaking of machin-
ery. 3. “(Electric railway.) A truck
which travels along the fixed condue-
tors. and forms a means of connection
between them and a railway ear.” It
is easy to see how the primitive form
of the electric trolley, which travels
up wires, came to receive ita
name from the resemblance to other
types of trolley ; and the name, having
been immediate iy given to its prim-
it ce was naturally retained when
the method of connection was changed
from a little truck moving on a wire,
to a mast having at its end a wheel
pressing on the lower service of the
Detroit Free Press,
——
A Rattler’s Bite,
wire
“eg
which
narrow 1%
"
sid the
wun MP
VE au
wire.
I send you recipe for the bite of a
rattlesnake that 1 will warrant to cure
in ninety-nine cases out of every hun
dred. I have known it tried for forty
voars in lllinois and have used it on
several animals that were bitten by
rattlesnakes since coming to Florida, |
and have never known it to fail ina |
single instance.
swelled part with pure hog's lard, and
lot the patient drink one hall pint of |
In severe cases re- |
| peat it in half an hour and give all |
| hungry, so that when you make the
this melted lard,
| the sweet milk that patient can drink.
| This kills the poison almost immedi
ately, and the swelling will disappear
in a fow days. A horse or a cow must
' be drenched with a much larger dose,
drink milk, even when their heads aro
| so swollen that their eyes are closed
and the yellow saliva is running from
their montha, Don't eall in a doctor
if bitten by a rattler (as they are more
dangerous than the snake), but use the
above remedy, snd I will warrant
| eure, —Jneksonville Times-Union.
Li is III -
Action of Cold and Heat,
The generally ncoepted theory of the
cooking of mest relates to the appli-
ention of heat, but Dr. Sawiczovosky
has called attention to the fact that
almost precisely the same chemical
and physieal changes can be socom:
plished by ex
treme cold.
anid Miss Lepington the
One of the dearest I ever had
| of our ferrets do know their
| of
died,
| onsily trained, or more useful when
! do this the first time or two
Thoroughly soak the wound and the |
SHOOTING WITH FERRETS.
TRAINING
BITS FROM THEIR HOLES,
Points About Muzzling and Working
the Creatures and Choosing the
Ground to be Covered,
LTHOUGH there are a goodly
number of hunters who think
the créam of sport does not
& arrive until the snow is on
the ground, they ean get after the rei
bit, and by the aid of the ferret, drive
him forth to get a good running shot
without all the tiresome tramping,
along the scent of a rabbit in search
of food, often to get no nearer to the
quarry than several hundred yards
Truly the ferreter has the best of it
when he knows his business and has a
good ferret that knows his equally
well. The great trouble is that so few
business,
or, to use a common phrase, ‘one end
it.” The fault of this lies in the
owner of the ferret, and is easily reme
for there is no animal more
trained, than the well-bred ferret. |
was talking to a man the other day
who breeds ferrets and makes quite a
business of it, keeping them on »
farm, snd having them divided off in
| yards and hutches, just ws if they were
prize rabbits. I wanted to buy a
couple of young buck ferrets for the
coming season, and asked him if he
had any bred from parents that had
been properly trained? He replied
“When 1 first commenced this bum
ness I had ferrets on hand that were
trained like bird dogs, and, of course,
1 valued them sccordingly Do vou
think there was any demand for them ?
Well, there was not, and when I asked
815 or $20 for a perfectly trained for
ret people thought I was crazy. Sol
gave it up, snd have neither
traded ferrets nor ferrets reared and
bred from trained stock It does not
pay.”
now
I was surprised st and picked
out a pair to do my own training,
ready for the first tracking snow. As
from this it would sppear that a great
many people who use these animals do
not understand the advantage to be
gained from a trained one,
well make it plain before I
further I think all
there are few things more annoying to
the hunter than to have the ferret
“lis up” when put into a hole, result-
ing in the loss of sport while you wait
his pleasure shout ecomi mt, or if he
is left, the of the ferret,
say, $10. That is only the first evil,
the others are when he will not work
at all, refusing persistently to g
an earth, or when |
a rabbit, he will kill and eat 1
of dragging 14 ont, iden of
answering the volos mas
tor In Germany, Frenee and Eng
land the ferret all « f this,
nd there is, with exceptions, no
bother and no delay to sport
this,
I may as
gO ANY
will allow that
LEE
Tom value,
y Into
we enters, and finds
ustend
and has no
bis
or call {
dH
gis
ia tan
few
:
Obtain a young animal, and see that
he is healthy, has clean feet,
wi them or
having been any, for
“hutch ret”
fellow sensitive fo
apt to shirk Take and have
for his home a moderately warm, dry,
clean huteh, and mind that it is kept
so. This is the most important item
of them all. Then commence the
training process, which done
through the medium of food When
you go to bed feed him, make a oun
ous squeaking sound like s rat squeal
ing, produced by pressing the tongas
against the side of the teeth and
strongly sucking the sir through the
interstices. Any boy will give you a
Do this whenever he fed,
80 a8 to impress upon the mind that
the sound is connected with food, and
half the training is done
to handle him Make
to the fact that when
hand down he will think It
Lt hd
pA $3 3
with n
senbs | any sign of there
sign of
M1 # . .
his 18 a sign of
and will make fhe
hard weather, and
him home
1%
lesson 1%
Then begin
ap
von
your mina
put Y
18 BOM
Our
to ont. and will raise up to
it, that the
hand away in a sudden manner he will
be quicker than you, and will seize 1t,
“nos and if you draw
| giving you sa pretty bad bite ; but that
if you keop the hand moving stea lily
and fairly down, in a fearless manner,
the ferret will find out his mistake
and not bite. This is one of the hard
est lessons the trainer has to learn, as
they hMoodthirsty looking littl
cattle, and it requires some courage to
Having
overcome this diffienity, handle the
ferret at all times and all seasons.
You ¢ not overdo it, and after a time
you will take quite a fancy to the lit-
tle thing. I never earry a ferret bag,
but carry them loose in my pocket,
which ia fitted with a flap and button,
Having progressed so far, take the
ferret out in the open, and take him
are
eall he will be keen to come to you,
when he must be rewarded with a
piece of meat or liver. If he does this
| well, advance him to the hedgerow or
brash, and get him so that he will
come to you whenever you make the |
eall.
When the hunting commences, be
oareful and have the ferrets well fed
the night previous, but not the morn- i
ing yon go out, unless it is very cold, |
when a very little milk may be given.
This will insure better work, Arriving
at the oarth, either loeated before
hand, or by the hound dog, take the
ferret and place him in the entrance ;
if it bo tenanted he will immediately
go down, if not he will go ina little
way snd come out. Then pick him
up and try elsewhere. If he stays in,
to the ground will
and tell
there
in the earth, Pod
and if
THEM TO DRIVE RAB-
blood on them.
with ment or liver until he is an old
hand at the business, You will then
have a ferret that will be the envy of
| the neighborhood. Bometimes the
best spimals will take » fit and “lay
yp,” that is to say, they will refuse to
come out, and in
at ene end, and bank both ends ap
with a sod of grass, The next morn
ing, or possibly as you return, the
ferret will be found enrled up on the
bed waiting for his master.
The question of mMuzziizg a wii is 2
always a lively matter of argument.
Most of the muzzles used are totslly
unfitted for use, and one might as res
gonably expect s race horse to run
with a plowing collar around his neck
as to expect a ferret to do good work
with one of the made-to-sell monstros- |
ities on his A muzzle should
consist of five light, soft lesther straps,
which are put together so one forms
the ring of the snout, the others lying
slong the under the
chin, one around the nose near the
eves and the last encircling the neck
close behind the cars, If you cannot
make one yourself take the little fel-
low to & harness maker and get him
interested in the matter, and he will
turn ont a muzzle that will fit like a
Indy’s glove, and the ferret will work
comfortably snd well. Remember al-
ways that the animal is obeying =
natural instinet he hunts and
that your aim is to assist him as much
nose,
ane nose, oue
when
A8 YOU Can
As to working them with bells I am
not so pre judic d If the grass
undergrowth is thick one must either
have bells or very great watchfulness,
as it ruins ferret to let him run
around loose, even for a very few min-
will do if he
or
"
utes, and thet is what he
out of earth withont being
The n is that
the sound travels a long way through
the ground, and if there are any other
with rabl in them they
“git up snd git” while the
hunter is ocenpied with one. If they
; be of the tiniest
model of sleigh bell procurable, and
should be slung on to a very light
strap, care being taken in putting the
collar on that the bells are so arranged
that the buckle comes ander the chin,
and the bells one vach side and one in
the middle of the back of the neck.
If the bells hang under the chin they
are in the way and half the time they
cannot sound, while if properly dis-
in the collar the weight of the
buckle will keep them on the back of
the ck, where they will do
Re od.
As most rabbits bolted from earth
are shot within a twenty-yard renge,
the gun must either be a cylinder bore
or must be loaded to produce
what is called “‘seatter’” shooting, and
what is more it must be a hard-hitting
gun, for the furry fellow takes a lot
of killing, and frequently gets away
with quits load of whot on board
The orthodox load is one ounce and a
auarter of No. 6 shot and thao
y half of powder, using
over the powder ; but many
prefer No. 4 shot, and un-
use wood or
gets
an
Keen to bells
objectl
1s
Nu
DAKSREZ CS
will «ll
are used they shonld
posed
ne most
#0 aw
a
drachms and
thick wads
good
hesitatingly
powds r in the second barrel,
both. Thas very important
misty roing,
black powder hangs around. Arrange-
ments to {air rabbit shooting
and board may be obtained as low as
twelve dollars per week, and a personal
visit will arrange for any number of
odd days sbont the same terms,
Rabbit shooting obtained this way
beats tramping unknown ground out
New York Recorder.
-  —
A Carions Worm,
men
smokelons
if not in
on A
from
bE
mi when smoke
include
of sight
When Her Majesty's ship Challenger
was engaged in making that celebrated
soundings, and while meas
urements of ocean de phe were being
taken in the f the Ladrone
falands, the sight a enrx
specimen of family to the
The about the
nearly twenty.
series of
viemniny 0
iredge
the
creature
us
worm
was
oi & Liar inah rat 3
three inches in length, and striped
and banded with all the primary colors,
It had a hooked, hornlike proboscis,
well equipped with powerfal teeth,
each hooking downward. The horny
beak was nsed expressly for capturing
food, and was only 34 inches in length.
Exactly what a true repres niative of
the would de with a
“‘oapture 4" edible may seem a mystery
to the average reader, but our rain.
bow-colored sub-marine curiosity had
use for just such provisions When-
worm speci wu
ever a periwinkle's egg case or a fresh |
lot of frog spawn floated his way he |
instantly seized upon it with his
armored beak and quickly
enveloping his dinner.
are revealed a remarkable state of
affairs. The “dinner hook” was the
same at both ends, the body of the |
worm fastening around it at the mid- |
dle. and the color of the “‘inside” of
the worm was the same as the *‘out-
side’ —that is, if anyone could tell
which was which. For want of a bet.
ter name the specimen was labeled
| Vormes vice versa.--St, Louis Re-
publie.
EE
Live Rabbits for Pythons,
| Humane persons have raised a
| fost against the caretakers of the Jar:
din d'Acolimatation in the Bois de
Boulogne, Paris, who allow rabbits to
be put into the cage of the pythons,
| which have lately arrived, during the
ma This is done with a view to
garden,
ed with in
Always reward him |
|
|
|
gnch & case the best |
way is to make a nest of grass or leaves |
“turned |
| himself wrong side out,” completely |
This prooed- |
Nixty Miles of Locusts,
The African Steamship Company's
stesner Winnebah hes had a most no-
usual experience when steaming be-
tween the latitudes of Cape Verd and
8t. Louis, Senegal. For sixty miles
the vessel stemmed through locusts,
which were so thickly pscked to-
| gether on top of the water that they
| completely covered the surface for
piles around ; indeed, they appeared
| to be lying on the sea as fur asthe eve
could reach. The
doubt, been blown from
:
had,
Mor
: resembled
gigantic grasshoppers, snd one which
was secured was five inches in length,
Of course, all the locusts had
orowned, but
Winnebah did
wing.
DO YOU READ
The testimonials published in
They unre reliabis
‘4
locusts
the
the sea nay
Ho
he 2 4
wal  Swiban
been
the
the
thom board
not see ADY on
i's
Farsaparilis,
nr
nA
worthy of confidence us came from
Wit
your most trusted neigh
| Hood's* Cures
ruve
NE A ” . a =
»
| Was Civen
To die, having malarial fever
80 Ladly Lhere
seemed 10 be no cure, | came east and began
, take Hood's Sarsaparilia. I sat onoe began
to get better. At that time 1 had no appetite
and severe headaches Hood's Sarsapmrilla
has completely cured me « i aalaris and bead.
sche. It is aleo a great help to my stomach, 8
general blood purifier and an excellent
spring
nedicine.™ :
Ortvesr Latoxk, Glens Falls, N.¥
Hood's Pils Cure Siok Headache, #0 cents
SHILOHS |
(3
Cures C Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Croup,
Whooping Cough and Asthma. For Commmp.
fiom it has 5o rival: has cured thousands where
all others failed : will cure you if taken in time,
warrantee, For Lame
5 PLASTER. sscts,
“MOTHER'S
. FRIEND” .-
is a scientifically pesured Liskipent
and harmless; every jent is of °
recognized value and in constant use
by the medical profession. It short.
ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes
Danger to life of Mother and Child.
Book “To Mothers” mailed free, con-
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Rent by @ wa, charges prepaid, on receipt
of jrioe, $1
MRS. MILLY VERGUSON,
Try, N.Y
The following tribute to DANA'S
power over OLD CHRONIC COM-
LAINTRS, was sent ws Hy Wm, Grooss
of the well-known “6G ROOM'S PHAR-
ACY." 120 Congress St, Troy, N. X.:
G EX wd have boon trouthed with
LIVER COMPLAINT, CONSTIFA-
N and DYSPEPSIA J Yap She,
emploved the best Doctors in city;
Old Chronic Complaints,
Thelr medicine i
A
DANA'S
SARSAPARILLAI
betier
-
half
Trop, X.Y. MRS. rs
SANA SARSAPARILLA GO., BELFAST, ME.
rotenone