Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.) 1883-1896, February 26, 1892, Image 4

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    Dep. Sheriff Wheeler
Does Not Care to Live
It He Cannot Have
HOOD'S
Sarsaparilla
It would be difficult to find a man better
known iu the vicinity of Burlington. Vt.,
than Mr. R. D. Wheeler, of Winooski Falls,
the efficient Deputy Sheriff of Burlington
county. Ho says:
■«C. I. flood & Co., Lowell, Mas*.:
"Dear Sirs: If Hood's Sarsaparilla cost
$ I O.CO a Gott'e
I should still keep using it, as 1 have for the
past ten years. With me the question as to
whether life is worth living depends upon
whether I can get Hood's Sarsaparilla. I
don't think I could Jive without it now, cer
tainly I should not wish to, and suffer as I
used to. For over ten years 1 suffered the
horrors of the damned with
Sciatic Rheumatism
for if ever a man suffers with anything in this
world it is with thatuwful disease. It seems
to me as if all other physical suffering were
compressed into that one. I took about every
thing man ever tried for it but never got
a dollar's worth of help until! began taking
Hood's Sarsaparilla
I have taken it DOW pretty regularly for ten
years and have no more pain and can get
around all right. I have advised a good
many to try Hood's Sarsaparilla," R. D.
WHEELER, Deputy Sheriff, winooski Falls, Vt
Hood's PiJls cm Liver Ills
JOHNSON'S
~4AfODYN^
LINIMENT
FOR HOUSEHOLD USE
\\CEA~v OT7y
ORIGINATED
For INTERNAL as much AS EXTERNAL USB.
By an Old Family Physician.
SOOTHING, HEALING, PENETRATINQ
Dropped on Sugar, Children T.oro
to talc* Johnson'* Anodyne Liniment for Croup, Cold*
Boro Throat, Tonpllltl*. Colic, < Yaiiirw and l/ainn. Re
lieves Summer Complaint«, Cuts and Uruifcs like
Cures Coufrhß. AHthma. Catarrh, PronehltK Cholera-
Morbuß, Chilblains. Chaps. HorenesH in Body or Limbs,
Stiff Muscle® or Strains. Inhale for N.rvou* Ileudache.
lll'st'd Pamphlet free. Sold everywh, .>. I'rtee X,■ cts.
Bix bottles, §2.00. I. S. JO UN SO.. <*. ( 0., Boston, Mu.-,s,
K Y .N U—jj "
"August
Flower"
I had been troubled five months
with Dyspepsia. I had a fullness
after eating, and a heavy load in the
pit of my stomach. Sometimes a
deathly sickness would overtake
me. I was working for Thomas
McHenry,Druggist, Allegheny City,
Pa. , in whose employ I had been for
seven years. I used August Flower
for two weeks. I was relieved of all
trouble. I can now eat things I
dared not touch before. I have
gained twenty pounds since my re
covery. J. D. Cox, Allegheny, Pa. ®
!V»
Kidney,Liverand Bladder Cure.
Rlietiiimgfisiii,
Lumbago, pain in Jointsorback. brick dust in
Urine, frequent, calls. Irritation, lntlamatlon,
gravel, ulceration or catarrh ol bladder
Disordered IJver,
Impaired digestion, Rout, billions-headache.
SWA TIP-KOOT cures kalni v difficulties.
ha. Urippe, urinary trouble, height's dbuase
Impure Is3©od 9
Scrofula, mala Ha, gen'l weakness or debility,
Guarantee-Cse contents of One Bottle, it not hen- '
Cfited, Druggists will refund to you tho price paid.
At Drugglftttt, 50c. Size, sl*oo Size,
Guldo to Hoalth"fre<v-Conaultiition
DIU - Y- I
E•••• # © ® © €
•Tutt's Tiny Fills*
A A Kindledos<' prodiKM s bcnc'ii .;il
suit*, giving cheerfulness oi'initid and
• buoyancy of body to which you v.« : >
lM*foro ant ranger. They enjoy a pop
ularity unparalleled. Price,
••®•• ® 0 Q • •
H»»d to
RARFIELD TEa ™
Mofbadeuiing;( urc<i Sick Headache;
rctioresOMupiex ion; caren Con»U()a( ion.
HUNTING THE WILD BOAR.
THE FAVORTTE SPORT OE THE
GERMAN EMPEROR.
Art Imperial Shooting Party—lnitia
ting a New Arrival— .V Boar
"Drive"— Uniform ot the Hunters.
While gemsboc or chamois stalking
appears to be tho favorite sport of the
rulers of Austro-Huugary and of Sax
ony, that of Emperor William and the
house of Hohenzollern is wild boar hunt
ing. This species of game abounds in
the imperial preserves of Koeuigs-Wus
terhausen, of Letzlingen, of Goehrde,
and of Springe, the latter quite near to
the ancient city ot Hameliu, celebrated
in legendary lore for its "pied piper"
and for its rats. The preserves at
Goehrde arc, however, those most af
fected by the young monarch, as they
were also by his grandfather, the late
I Emperor William. Persons invited lor
the first time to the?e imperial shooting
parties have togo through a regular form
of initiation, somewhat akin to that
practised in the case of people "crossing
the line" for the first time at sea. Ou
the evening before the day ou which the
klilnt is to begin, and when the party
are assembled in the smoking and card
rooms of the Jagdschloss after dinner,
the great oak table in the dining room is
cleared and ornamented with several
lines of chalk. The Grand Huntsmen
von Kotze, or Lis deputy, Count Falk
enstein, thereupon, after receiv
ing the Emperor's final instructions,
selects a dozen members of the party and
conducts them to the dining-room, where
they take their places around the table,
each armed with a wooden spoon of dif
ferent size. At a given signal the hunts
man in charge of the imperial pack of
bloodhounds, who has been stationed at
the entrance leading into the dining
room, sounds the view halloo on his
horn, and immediately every one of the
wooden spoons is rubbed up and down
the oaken table in a manner that pro
duces a sound similar to that of the
noise made by a pack in full puruit. The
person about to be initiated is thereupon
seized and blindfolded, after which the
doors are thrown open and he is carried
into the dining-room and laid athwart
the chalk lines. The Einperor draws
his short hunting-knife, and after mak
ing several mystic passes with it in tho
air, strikes tne prostrate body of the neo
phyte a smart flow with the fiat of the
broad blade. The huntsman toots forth
the signal of "dead,dead," which is used
to call the pack oil the quarry, aud tho
new-fledged "wardiuen" is permitted to
struggle oil the table and onto tho
ground. I may add that the Emperor's
blow with the hunting-knife is not the
only one which the neophyte receives
while stretched on the table, nor does it
constitute the sum total of the initia
tion, but only the conclusion thereof.
Indeed, there is sometimes a good deal
of rough horse-play on these occasions,
in which tho Emperor, who delights
therein, takes a prominent part.
The boar hunts ou the following day
partake of the nature of tho chamois
drives, the only difference being that the
drivers, or "treibers," arc assisted ia
their work by a carefully trained pack of
boar-hounds, which are accustomed to
obey the horn signals of the huutsman
in charge, and are of much service in
driving the quarry from its lair in the
dense brush and underwood. Another
difference is that the shooting party in
stead of firing in the direction of the
drivers are under strict orders only to
fire away from them. That is, one is
practically forced to wait until the wild
boar rushed past before one's rifle may
be levelled. Of course it sometimes
happens that the boar, instead of charg
ing past, charges dirqctly at one in the
most fierce and manner and it
is for the sake of beiug prepared for an
assault of this kind that each member
of the party is provided with a kind of
pike or lance, which goes by the euphon
ious name of a "sowpen."
The custome worn on these occasions
is an exceptionally hideous uniform,
specially invented and devised by tho
present Emperor. Tt consists of a
double-breasted frock-coat of gray cloth,
with grass-green lapels and collar, green
striped p intaloons, with high boots, and
a gray Tyrolese hat with a wide green
band. Any person who ventures to as
sert that the Emperor looks well therein
is guilty of a reckless disregard for th«
truth and of the basest flattery. For
the gray coat aud hat, aud especially the
green facings, cuffs, collar, and hat
band, only serve to intensify the bilious
tint of the Emperor's complexion.—
Harper's Weekly.
A Pathetic Scene.
It was only a sparrow, but the
sight of it, crouching timidly in
the judge's sheltering hand, awakened
a tender interest. It had such
a mild,melting little eye,and it regardtd
those around with such a trusting glance,
that I really felt a sympaty for it
.awakened within me. The judge's
daughter took the little creature in her
white and jeweled hands,and was softly
smoothing down its feathers as she
leaned forward to the grate in which a
hot bed of coals was smoldering. The
bird saw an opening undei the grate,and
as the caressing hand wasTaised flew out
and lodged itself immediately underneath
the bed of red hot coals. The small
party of lookers-on stood aghast with as
much horror as if it had been a child.
Then there was a united effort to save the
life of the little sparrow, but it was too
late. The di*ugnt had drawn it up into
the fire, and it had suffered but a mo
ment. A silence fell on the group of
observers that was only broken when a
shining was brushed Irom beneath
each eye.—Atlanta (Ga.) Journal.
Arabia and tlie Horse.
Br a great many people Arabia is sup
posed to l>e the home of the horse.
From ancient Itomau, Grecian, aud lie
liTew history it is readily learned that
the horse was unknown in Arabia long
niter he was a common factor in the lile
ol 6outhwu Europe.—Chicago Times.
What Everybody Says Must Hp True,
For over forty years there has been no dig
sentlng voice during that period. Dr. Tobias's
Venetian Liniment has been warranted as a
pain reliever to give porfect satisfaction or
the money would be refunded. Such a de
mand baa never been made, simply because
the millions who have used it and continue
to do so find that it is far above price—really
to them worth its weight in gold.
This liniment has. Indeed, accomplished the
most wonderful cures as the ccrtillcates show,
and can be seen at the Depot, 40 Murray St.,
New York. Pain yields immediately to its
conquering power-it has no choice. Being
clean to use, possessing no disagreeable odor,
has combined with its true merit to make Dr.
Tobias's Venetian Liniment the favorite pain
reliever that it is to-day.
The above is a good likeness of Mr. Geo. C.
Cradick engraved from a photo, taken a
short time ago aud sent to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
with his letter aud package of gravel he
speaks about, which was dissolved and ex
pelled alter using threo bottles of
fiwamp-lloot. The following is Mr.
Cradick's unsolicited account of his distress
ing and painful case.
GOSPORT, Ind., Jan. 30, 1892.
Dr. KILMEK & Co., BINOHAMTON, N. Y.
—I do not know how to express my heartfelt
thanks to you for the bcnellt I have received
from using your Swamp-Koot Kidney Liver
and Bladder Cure. lam now 03 years old,
and have sufferod almost death for alxiut
three years. 1 had given up to die, hut as i
profess to be a Christian man and a great be
liever in the prayer of the righteous, i prayed
that God would send something that would
prolong my life, and I feel thankful to Him
and you for the means that was sent. May
liod sjniro your lite many years yet that you
may hear the great good that your medicine
is doing. On the 20th day of August, 1801,
Mr. Frank Lawson, your agent at Spencer,
persuaded me to take a bottlo on trial. 1
have taken three bottles and it has brought
out of my bladder lime or gravel, which I
have saved in quantity tile size of a goose
egg and I now leel like a new man. May
Uod bless you and your medicine.
I remain your humhle servant.
80x 273. GBOKGEC. CRADICK.
SECOND LETTER.
DEAR DOCTOR —I take great pleasure in
answering your letter, which 1 received to
day. You" say "you would like to publish
my testimonial in your Guide to Health lor
a while." I have no objections at all for I
want to do all in my power for atllictod hu
manity . 1 send by this mail a lot of the
Gravel (about one-half of what I saved) that
the Swamp-Hoot dissolved and expelled from
my bladder.
Two years ago last September 1 was taken
with pain almost all over me, my head and
back, my legs and feet became cold, would
get sick at my stomach and vomit often,
suffering a great deal from chills and at
times tlvse were so severe that 1 thought I
would freeze todeath. The condition of my
urine was not so bad through the day, but
during the night, at times, I had to get up
every hour, and often every half hour.
Would urinate sometimes a gallon a night,
then it seemed my kidneys and back would
kill me. I bad been troubled with consti
pation for many years, but since using your
Swamp-Hoot have been better than tor a
long time. The medicine has helped my
appetite wonderfully and it seems as though
I could not eat enough.
1 live about six miles in the country from
Gosport. 1 was born and raised here, and
have been a member of the M. E. Church for
forty-two years.
Pardon me for writing so much for I feel
that 1 would never get through praising your
great remedy for Kidney, Liver and Bladder
trouble;. Your true friend,
Those who try Swamp-Root have gener
ally tirst employed the family physician, or
used all the prescriptions within their reach
without benefit. As a last resort, when their
case has become chronic, the symptoms com
plicated and their constitution run down,
then they take this remedy, and it is just
such cases aud cures as the ono above that
huve made Swamp-Root famous and given
it a world-wide reputation. At Druggists
Met. size, SI.OO size, or of
1)H. KILMER & Co., BINGIIAMTO\, N. Y.
Kennedy's
Medical Discovery
Takes hold in this order:
Bowels,
Liver,
Kidnevs,
Inside Skin,
Outside Skin,
Driving everything before it that ought to be out.
You know whether
you need it or not.
fcold by every druggist, and manufactured by
DONALD KENNEDY,
RD.YHI IIY, JMAKH.
BBi. ■
" MUSHROOMS MILLION ■
i There ■ money in grow, a
ing Mushrooms. Constant
■ deniaud et food prioeis.
of Bpawn (enough (or a I
H 4expcrlnient),b^niall,
rates l»rg«- lots. I
® cd Growers. Importer! j|
m an* fteawrs, Vnna«wpt»U. Va. Oardin«r'B Seeds-.
P -New Catalogue for IPOT nev -etdy. Free Bend for it. j|
■ ■ ■ ■ a ■ <■ u ■ ■..liia.iiif
rniflT I A linO <»al v «rton and Hratoria
FRUIT LANUS.
and 4 to •> weeks earlier. Very cheap. Big profit*. K. H.
PORTKU, Heal Estate fc Investments, Galveston,Texas.
112 A .MONTH for ' Urlght Voting Men or
mllK I.adies In each county. Address I*. \V.
▼ ZIEGLBB COss l'hiln.. l*a.
DIU I fie Guitars, Mandolines,"Violins, Auto Harp*
Hand Instruments—Catalogue sent.
F It EE M. .sLATER, 56 Vcsey St., New York.
"■ 1 X jll"V HI »»*""
riVtillyM A fl i d T^/f7c
| buffalq^NTY!'
NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN.
Large hats are increasing in favov.
Men dressmakers are called "creators.*
Glitter appears necessary now in jet.
Itug-covered .lounges are the right
thing.
Princess dresses are very much in
vogue.
High buttoned boots arc still the
favorites.
Pale yellow is one of the prettiest
6hades for evening dresses.
Patti, the singer, says she has only
$600,000 worth of diamonds.
Furs and feather trimmings play a con
spicious part in midwinter millinery.
Bodices are still much trimmed, only
a few perfectly plain ones being seen.
The princess dress appears in a new
shape exclusively for tea-gown models.
Sable has never been so universally
worn since the days of our grandmoth
ers.
Fashion now equally favors two styles,
the quite tight, and the half-fitting
jacket.
The Princess May is described as a mar
vel of puuctualitymnd a girl who is ex
ceptionally neat and orderly.
The Sultan has prohibited Turkish
women from wearing French costumes
in the streets of Constantinople.
The turquoise and diamonds given to
Miss Cornwallis West when she became
the Princess of Plcss were the finest ever
seen.
Mrs. Leland Stanford has purchased
130 handsomely bound Bibles, togo in
the students' room at the Palo Alto
(Cal.) University.
Clara Barton, the Red Cross President,
is the only woman to whom the old Ger
mau Emperor e"er gave the decoration
of the Iron Cross.
The catalogue of the new Leland Stan
ford, Jr., Univerfity, of California, con
tains the names of 430 students, ninety
of whom are women.
The Vanderbilt ladies, of New York
City, are said to possess $500,000 worth
of laces. The Astors value their stock
of laces at $300,000.
Dom Pedro's daughter fancies that
she has lights in Brazil almost as big as
the country. The right to keep out of
it will be the safest right she can exer«
cise.
Mrs. Phrebe Durand died a few days
ago at the home of her daughter in
Irvington, N. J. She was 100 years old
ou the 15th day November, and up
to that time she had never known what
it was to be prostrated with sickness.
Two German women of Orange, Mrs.
August Erdman and her step-daughter,
lecently issued two editions of the Orange
Volksbote entirely alone, writing the
copy, setting type, reading proof,making
up the forms aud working thorn oil on a
hand press.
At a Civil Service dinner the Princo
of Wales made a speech, at which ha
said that he was "glad aud proud to
think that the Duke of Clarence would
marry a woman born in this country,
living in this country and having the
fceliugsof au Euglish woman."
Mrs. Antoinette Brown-Blackwell,who
has been called the pioneer woman
preacher of America, lives a life of great
retirement at Elizabeth, N. J. But dur
ing the year she will make au appeal for
public recognition in the form of a book,
ou which she is now at work,concerning
the relations of religion and science.
The Birmingham (England) School
Board have approved an arrangement
made by the Educational Conimitteo
with the Council of the Birmingham
Athletic Society whereby athletic in
struction will be afforded to the femalo
pupil teachers on each of the five ordi
nary school mornings in every week.
Albani, the prima donna, docs not
stand alone in the proud possession of a
diamond stomacher. Mrs. Astor has one,
too. It is made of a skeleton girdle of
silver wire, pointed back and front,
reaching from the corsage to the end of
the bodice and literally nailed with bril
liants. The stones are individually
mounted and can be unfastened at will.
The last gown made for Eugenie, once
Queen of French fashions, typifies the
change in her position in life. It is a
dinner dress of plain black silk -with
only a slight trimming of jot on the cor
sage and skirt to relieve its somber
severity. It is simplicity itself for au
Ex-Empress who once spent $20,000 a
year on her costumes.
In Reykjavik, the capital of remote
Iceland, a charitable lady has erected on
her own land a high school for Iceland
girls. Needing more funds for teachers'
salaries, books, etc., than her private
income would cover she has sold her
family jewels, many of them heirlooms
700 years old, In order to obtain the
money for her enterprise.
Mile. Elsie St. Oiner, a Frenchwoman,
is starting out at the age of sixty to
make a tour of the world by way of the
southern hemisphere. She expects to
spend three years in collecting statistics
for the French Geographical Society,and
it is to be hoped she will not meet with
any of the mishaps that beset Mrs. French
Sheldon ou her journey into the Dark
Continent.
At the Cincinnati Technical School
girls are permitted to take alt the classes
in manual training if they desire. Two
of its graduates—Julia Bedinger and
Lucy Mary Riggs, of Kentucky—are not
only learned in arcuitectual and me
chanical drawing, but are also experts
in the use of carpenters' tools, aud are
practically familiar with the intricacies
of steam machinery.
The only woman living who witnessed
the battle of Waterloo is Muie. do
Velariola,now ninety-eight year» old, but
in full possession of all her facultieo. Ou
tho eventful battle-day she and her sis
ters —then the Miles. Caprau—stood }n
a neighboring wind-mill and witnessed
the defeat of the French army, and the
game evening she helped eir« for tho
[ wounded ou the battle-field,
Always on Time.
Washington had many admirable
traits worthy of imitation, and one of
them was rigid punctuality. This was
well illustrated by an incident during
his visit to Boston, Mass., one hundred
years ago. Having appointed eight o'clock
in the morning as the hour at which be
should set out for Salem, he mounted
his horse just as the Old South clock was
striking that hour. The company of
cavalry which was to escort him did not
arrive till after his departure, and did
not overtake him till he reached Charles
River Bridge.—New York Observer.
How'a Thla ?
Wo offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any case of catarrh that cannot bo cured by
taking Hall's Catarrh Curs.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business transac
tions. and flnanrliilly able to carry out any ob
ligations made by their tlrni.
\\ EST & TKUAJT, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
WALDINO, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesalo
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price 75c. pT bottle. Hold by all druggists.
An Important Difference.
To make it apparent to thousands, who
think themselves ill, that they are not affect
ed with any dhease, but that the systgill
simply needs clean-ting, is to bring comfort
homo to their heirts, as a costive condition Is
easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manu
fa<turcd by the California Fig Syrup Co.
No SAFER HKHKDT can be ha 1 for Coughs
and Colds, or any trouble of the Throat, ihan
"Brown's Bronchiil 2Voc/tcs." Price *5 cts.
Sold only in birxex.
KITS stopped free by Dit. KLINK'S GKKAT
RJEKVE KESTOHEH. No tits after first day's use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise au Isi trial bottu
tree. lir. Kline. TO Arch St.. Phil*., PA.
BEECHAM'S PILLS enjoy the largest sale of
any proprietaiy mojicine in the world.
Made only in St. Helens, England.
'f afflicted with sore eyes use Dr.lsaac Tliomo
♦ on'sEye-water.Druggists sell at 25c.per bottle
Catarrh—Remove the Cause*
I was afflicted from infancy with Catarrh, and for ten years with eruptions on my face.
I was attended by the best physicians, and used a number of Blood remedies with no per
manent relief. MY LIFE BECAME A BURDEN TO ME, for my case was declared incurable.
I saw S. S. S. advertised, and took eight bottles, which cured me entirely, and I feel like
a new person.—Miss JosiE OWEN, Montpelier, Ohio.
I was the victim of the worst case of Catarrh that I ever heard of. I was entirely
deaf in one ear, and all the inside of my nose, including part of the bone, sloughed off.
No sort of treatment benefited me, and physicians said "I would never be any better." As
a last resort I took Swift's Specific, and it entirely cured me and restored my hearing. I
have been well for years, with no sign of return of the disease. —Mrs. JOSEPHINE POLHILL,
Due IVrst, S. C. S. S. S. cures Catarrh, like it does other Blood diseases, by elimina
ting the poison which causes it. Treatise on Blood and Skin mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA.
SPjSHHH-ELY'S CREAM BALM—Clean.™ the Nafml. V
Alluyi I'nin and Inflammation,
Apply into the Nostrils. - It is Quickly Absorbed.
——— soc. DniKgistaor by mail. ELY BKQ8», 66 Warren at., M. MP m ij
' i I>aiiK'ht<»r of C. H. Wlnnc, 16 Addison Btret't, , IT \A/ 111
MM I 5S ! UloversTllle, N. Y.,was In the second stage of Con■ i
■ 'iivw | sumption. She was reduced to a mero skeleton.] VCCD AKTC
I I'hvHlclans could do ber no good. A few bottles ws ■
PDA AC |of POKESTINE COlGlf BYRUP cured her, rnnn j
VJ9 i% M\ C, 1 and to-day there la not a HEALTHIER YOUNG LADY IJLIIJ
lu that city than she. S3OO will be paid for a Rem- £ L
__ __ __ <»dy that will cure Throat and Lung Diseases, La ■ * A I I*l 11
Uk/ I lU| Al CT Grippe, etc., as quickly a* thin. i*rice 23c. and 50c. I I BJ I U
*T I II II ba per bottle. Dealers supplied by any whole Kale I HI R I ■
7 druggist in the United States. I Willi I
SL"
the hands, Injure the iron, anil burn off. !
The Rising Sun Store Polish Is Brilliant, Odor- 1
lew .Durable, and the consumer pays lor no tin j
or glass package wit h every purchase.
X Y N V- «
•••••••#•••••••••••••••••••••••«««
Z - RIPANS TABULEB regulatef
Z the stomach. liver and bowels,l
• **wlfi?r% purify the blood. ore safe and of !
a fSmW fect ial. The In-st general familyX
« ) medicine known for BUlou.sness,a
a/ .<■*>/ Coualll)at ion. Dyspepsia, Foil®
Breuth, Headuehe, Heartburn, LOH*#
°- Anpetlte, Mental Depression,#
® Painful Digestion, Piropk-8, Sallow#
}• Complexion, Tired Feeling, and®
every symptom or dlscoae resulting from Tmpun;®
blood, orarailure by the stomach, liver or intestinea?
Jto perform their proper functions. Persons given to?
Z over-eating are beneiited by tok ing a T Alll* L K after J
a each meal Prk'.e. by mall. ljm>ss|2j 1 bottle lftc. Ad-Z
• droas THE RIPAtfS CHEMICAL <\>.,loSpruceSt..N.Y. J
• Aunt* Wanted; EK-IITY per tfnl profit, i
DROPSYH
Pflsltlvciy Cured with Vegetable Remedies
H»T« cured thuusan ds ot CAGES. Cure patients T»ri»-
nounced hopeless by best physician*. From first dose >
symptoms rapidly disappear; In 10 days two thirds of all
Bj m ptoms removed. Send for tree book of testimonials
of miraculous cores. 10 days' trratnent free by
mail. If yon order trisl, send lite, in "tamps to pay post
age. DR. 11. H. liIIEEN A SONS, Atlanta. Ga.
wnnnnTTitY'R FACIAL SOAP.
For the Skin. Sfslp and Complexion. He
I~ fHjjb bultot *0 years experleut-e. * For sale I
/ at Druggists or by mail, 60f. Sample ;
/ (HHA Cake and 128 p. hook on Dermatology
VHH .md lk-auty, !Uliis.i, on Skin. Scalp,
f£7 'VMS Nervous and lMood diseoae and their |
Y7 ~ imE treatment, sent wealed for 10*.; also
JV DIBFIOVREHK.NTS like BIRTII MARKS,
U*y: C 7 *l.»le». Wart*, India Ink and Powder
Carkt, Scars, Pitting*, Rednew of .We, No
\ •- perßuou Hair, Plwi.lfs hr. % removed
joitx H. WOODBI'ftV. UFRBATOLIM'KA*.
IHSTTIVTK, 18i« Wsst ItadAmt, 51. V. City Consultation
free, or » r lette» A«ren" wanted In each places
(■ 11P" ff" Illustrated Publications, with
net &
■ ■■■■■l Washington and Oregon, the
■■BBH FKEEUOVERMIE.VT A
■ AND CHEAP ms
1 NORTHERN I AMftV
PACIFIC R. R. LA Bill ml
Best Agricultural < i r ar-
Ing and Timbei Lands
now open to eettlers. Mailed FREE. Address
'HAS. R. I.ASIiIOKS, l.aad COM. X. I'. It. It., Si, Paal, Blnn.
PffiOlSEll
==o FUlikY WARRANTED®=>
J STCN SCALES S6OFREICHT ftjg
; Binbhamton.NY
nrfli WET T FREE
UDI
P£UVBXOlfß>lhie all SOLDIEBS:
J4 disabled. M fee for increase. 2K years ex
perience. Write for Laws. A.W.MCCORMICK
SONA WASHINGTON. D. C. A CINCINNATI. Q»
IB 111 II ■ i'M ■ll MM
ConannpiUes and people H
who have weak lu us* or Asth
ma, should use i'iso's Cure for
Consumption. It has cured ■
thomaada. ft has not injur- I
ed one. It Is not bad to take. ■
It is the best cough syrup- H
Sold evert-where. «se.
■ "I"
#Tf\ r A\
coprmokr ia» ' < \ yp
Ward off
disease by removing the cause of it.
It's with the liver or the blood, nine
times out of ten. A sluggish liver
makes bad blood and bad blood
makes trouble. Dr. Pierce's Gold
en Medical Discovery makes pure
blood. It invigorates the liver and
kidneys, rouses every organ into
healthful action, and cleanses and
renews the whole system. Through
the blood it cures. For Dyspepsia,
Indigestion, Biliousness, Scrofulous,
Skin and Scalp Diseases even
Consumption (or Lung-scrofula) in
its earlier stageß, its a certain
remedy.
Nothing else is "just as good."
Anything " just as good " could bo
sola just as this is. It's the only
blood-purifier that's guaranteed to
benefit or cure, in every case, or the
money is refunded.
The catarrh that isn't cured costs
SSOO. Not to you, but to the pro
prietors of Dr. Sage's Cat'.rrh Rem
edy. They promise to pay you tho
money, if you have a a incurable
case.
They don't believe that you have
one.
WOK IN PRIZES
given he first persons who gives the correct■
answer to the following :
What word In this Ad- A rare opportunity for
TertUcmcnt .pell. 112 ry madam »nd maid,
tUe ..mo ISackwurd Rfc*
as Forward] lnir<-ash frizes*
For the First correct answer, • • cash S2OO
To tho Second " ••••-'• 100
To the Third « « • 75
1 o the Fourth " 50
To each of ths next Twenty, 15.00 each M 100
To each of ths next 100, - 2.00 each " 200
Total Prizes In Cash, $725
Answer* must |*each ns on or before April sth,
1894. Willi your answer send tt.">e. po*tul note
or 80c. la •tnmp*, for one quarter's subscription
to our 10 page Mont hly Paper. Our April issue
v. ill announce the result oft hocontest, with name?
■land add reuses of the winners. This offer la made
g§*olely to advertise our publication end Introduce
■it Into now homes. In addition to the above we
■Khali giveaway 100 4'holea llou«e or ltmdness
fSjLot* worth not loss then ilOto sua) each. Wo shall
KHi>n>niptlv glre all the prltes offered hero. Write
■your name and address plainly and enclose sub-
Inscription money to
GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
EPPSSCOCOA
BREAKFAST.
rt Bv a thorough knowledge of tho natural laws
which govern the operations <»f digestion and nutri
tion, and by a careful application of the flue proper
ties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. £ppa has provided
our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bev
erage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills.
It Is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet
that a constitution may be gradually built up until
strocg enough to resist every tendency to disease.
Hundreds or subtle maladies are floating around us
ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point.
We may escape many a fstal shaft by keeping our
selves well fortified with pure blood and a properly
nourished frame."— Civil Service Gazette.
Made simply with boiling water or milk. Fold
only in half-pound tins by Grocers, labelled thus
JAMES EPPfi* dc CO.. Homoeopathic Chemists,
LOUDON, ENGLAND.
II AM aMT itu Agent in your town. Good
If #% I pay. M. L. McMixx.Duluth.Mlnn.
jftMaaSlMorphinn Unblt Cured In lO
OPIUM
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable
Compound
a woman's remedy for woman's diseases,
has stood the test or many years, and is
to-day the only successful and harmless
cure for all those peculiar weaknesses and
Diseases of Women,
organic diseases of the uterus or womb,
inflammation, ovarian troubles, fallingor
displacement of the womb, faintness, ner
vous prostration, weak back, aches, etc.
All PrujrslMt sell it. or n»nt by mail, in form of rill* or
I
Correspondence freely spawered. Aadre Mid confluence
. LVDIA E. I INKHA-M MKD. CO., LYNN, MASS, I