Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, April 06, 1899, Image 3

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    [(jrEepifci
I Consumption
I Do not think for a single
I moment that consumption will
ever strike you a sudden blow.
It does not come that way.
It creeps its way along.
First, you think it is a little
cold; nothing but a little hack
ing cough; men a little loss in
weight: then a harder cough;
then tne fever and the night
- sweats.
The suddenness comes when
you have a hemorrhage.
Better stop the disease while
it is yet creeping.
Tou oan do it With
Agere ■
Cherrg 3
Pectoral
You first notice that you
cough less. The pressure on
the chest is lifted. That feeling
of suffocation is removed. A
cure is hastened byplacingone of
Dr. Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral Plaster
over the Chest.
A Book Froom
•- th» Diseases of the
Throat and Lungs.
WrHm us frooty.
It you have any complaint whatever
and desire the best medical advice you JH
. can passably receive, write the doctor
I freely. You will receive a prompt reply, JUL
Bk without cost. Address. M
A DR. J. C. AYER, Loweli, Mass. ifl
i Shears Made Famous by Salisbury.
One of Lord Salisbury's pet anec
lotes is the story of a barber whom
he once patronized. This tonsorial
artist did not fail to recognize his
patron, for the latter, on passing the
Bkop a few days later, was gratified tu
observe a placard in the window bear
ing this inscription: "Hair cut, 3d.
With the same scissors as I cut Lord
Salisbury's hair, 6d."
SIOO Reward. SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has been able to cure in all
its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
(hire is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cureistakeninter
nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy
ing the foundation of the disease, and givinn
the patient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature iu doiug itn
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure
Send tor list of testimonials. Addn >s
F. J. CHENEY SC CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Mexico has 7500 miles of railroad, havinr
added 140 during 1898.
Dr.Seth Arnold's Couch Killer invaluable as
a Cough remedy. Effect magical.— LlZZlE
J. Jusk, 448 West 20th St.. N. V.. Dec. 11.18 W.
The longest carpet In this country Is 336
'eet long and six feet wide, without seams
Fits permanently cured. No flts or nervous
ness after llrst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free
DR. R. H. KLINE. Ltd.. 931 Arch St..Phila..Pa
A trollry road In Maine has a rotarv
snow-plow.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes wean
men strong, biood pure. 50c, 41. All druggists.
The United States contains 35,407 drug
stores.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion. allays pain, cures wind oollc. iic.a bottle
About one German woman In every twen
ty-seven works in a factory.
To Cure a Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
About eight million tons of coal are an
nually consumed in London.
Waiting to Take Hold.
You know the misery of Sciatica Is aw
ful. Well, if you love misery better than
core, let it goon, but St. Jacobs Oil Is
waiting to take hold, subdue the pain, and
set you all right.
There are 3000 English words that are
dot found in the dictionary.
educate Tour Bowels With Cuscarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever
10c,25c. If C. C. C fail. dr'"-fir'» refund money
Ten Beans For Kverv Girl in Idaho.
With the bachelors outnumbering
the maids in every State of the Union
it ought to be easy for the unmarried
woman to secure a partner anywhere,
but the region where bachelors are
most in excess is, of course, the most
favorable to the spinster, since the
abundance of unmarried men gives
her a wider range of choice. From a
• matrimonial point of view Idaho is the
be3t State of the Union, for there the
number of the baohelors is to that of
the maids as 16,584 to 1426, each un
married woman in Idaho, therefore,
having ten or eleven bachelors, not
exactly at her beck, but available as a
husband. From most points of view
the West is the Mecca of the young
unmarried woman, for not only are
there more unmarried men in the
Western States, but a living is more
easily made in the West than in the
East, and therefore the Western men
are more addicted to matrimony. -
Ladies' Home Journal.
m TALMAGE'S SERMON.
SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED
DIVINE.
Subject: "Bundles of Life"—lnspiration
Drawn From a Homely Phrase—Life,
Spiritual and I'h.vsical, Is Divinely Pro
tected— Bur tiles Which Are Blesslnics.
TEXT: "The soul of my Lord shall be
bound in the bundle of life with the Lord
Miy God."—l Samuel xxv., 29.
Beautiful Abigail, In her rhythmic plea
for the rescue of her inebriate husband,
who died within ten days, addresses David,
the warrior, in the words of the text. She
suggests that his life, physically and in
tellectually and spiritually, is a valuable
package or bundle, divinely bound up and
to be divinely protected.
The phrase "bundle of life" I heard many
times in my father's family prayers. Fam
ily prayers you know, have frequent repeti
tions, because day by day they acknowl
edge about the same blessings and deplore
about the same frailties and sympathize
with about the same misfortunes, and I do
not know tfhy those who lead at household
devotions should seek variety of composi
tion. That familiar prayer becomes the
household liturgy. I would not give one
of my old father's prayers for fifty elocu
tionary supplications. Again and again,
in the morning and evening prayer, X heard
the request that we might all be bound up
in the bundle of life, but I did not know
until a few days ago that the phrase was a
Bible phrase.
During the last spell of cold weather
there were bundles that attracted the at
tention and the plaudits of the high heav
ens, bundles of clothing on the way from
comfortable homes to the door of the
mission room, 2nd Christ stood in the
snowbanks and said as the bundles passed:
"Naked, and ye clothed me. Inasmuch as
ye have done it unto one of the least of
these my brethren ye have done it
unto me." Those bundles are mnltibly
ing. Blessings on those who pack them.
Blessings on those who distribute them.
Blessings on those who receive them,
With what beautiful aptitude dill Abigail
in my text speak of the bundle of life! Oh,
what a precious bundle is life! Bundle of
memories, bundle of hopes, bundle of
ambitions, bundle of destinies! Onoe in
a while a man writes his autobiography,
and it is of thrilling interest. The story of
his birthplace, the story of his struggles,
the story of his sufferings, the story of his
triumphs! But if the autobiography of the
most eventful life were well written it
would make many chapters of adventure,
of tragedy, of comedy, and there would
not be an uninteresting step from cradle
to grave.
Bundle of memories are you! Boyhood
memories, with all its injustices from play
mates, with all its game with ball and bat
and kite and sled. Manhood memories,
with all your struggles in starting—ob
stacles, opposition, accidents, misfortunes,
losses, successes. Memories of the ilrst
marriage you ever saw solemnized, of the
first grave you ever saw opened, of the
ilrst mighty wrong vou ever suffered, of
the flrst victory you ever gained. Memory
of the hour when you were affianced, mem
ory of the first advent in your home, mem
ory of roseate oheek faded and of blue
eyes closed in the last sleep, memory of
anthem and of dirge, memory of great
pain and of slow convalescence, memory of
times when all things were against you,
memory of prosperities that came in like
the full tide of the sea, memories of a life
time. What a bundle!
Bundle of hopes and umbitlons also is al
most every man and woman, espeoially at
the starting. What gains he will harvest,
or what reputation he will achieve, or
what bliss he will reach, or what love he
will win. What makes college commence
ment day so entrancing to all of us as we
see the students reoeive their diplomas and
take up the garlands thrown to their feet?
They will be Faradays in science; they will
be Tennysons in poesy; they will be Wlllard
Farkers in surgery; they will be Alexander
Hamiltons in national finance; they will be
Horace Greeleys in editorial ehair; they
will be Websters in the Senate. Or she
will be a Mary Lyon in educational
realms, or a Frances Willard on reforma
tory platform, or a Helen Gould in military
hospitals. Or she will make home life
radiant with helpfulness and self-sacrifice
and magnificent womanhood. Oh, what a
iundle of hopes and ambitions! It is a
bundle of garlands and scepters frprrt
whieh I would not take one sprig of
mignonette nor extinguish one spark of
brilliance. They who start life without
bright hopes and inspiring ambitions
might as well not start at all, for every
step will be a failure. Bather would I add
to the bundle, and if I open it now it will
be because I wish to take anything from
It, but that I may put into it more coronets
and hosonnas.
Buudle of faculties in every man and
every woman! Power to think—to think
of the past and through all the future, to
think upward and higher than the highest
pinnacle of heaven, or to think downward
until there is no lower abysm to fathom.
Power to think right, power to think wrong,
Eower to think forever, for, once having
egun to think, there shall be no terminus
for that exercise, and eternity itself shall
have no power to bid it halt. Faculties to
love—filial love, conjugal love, paternal
love, maternal love, love of country, love
of God. Faculty of judgment, with "scales
so delicate and yet so mighty they can
weigh arguments, weigh emotions, weigh
worlds, weigh heaven and hell. Faculty of
will, that cun climb mountains or tunnel
them, wade seaslor bridge them, accepting
eternal enthronement or choostng ever
lasting exile. Oh, what 1} is to ue a man!
Oh, what it is to be a woman! Sublime and
infinite bundle of faculties! The thought
of it staggers me, swamps me, stuns me,
bewilders me, overwhelms me, Oh, what
abundle of life Abigail of ray text saw in
David and which we ought to see in every
human yet Immortal being!
. Know, also, that this bundle of life is
properly directed. Many a bundle has
missed its way and disappeared because
the address has dropped, and no one cun
find by examination for what city or town
or neighborhood it was intended" All great
carrying companies have so many misdi
rected packages that they appoint days of
vendue to dispose of them. AH intelligent
people know the Importance of having a
valuable package plainly directed, the
name of the one to whom It is togo plainly
written. Baggage master and expressman
ought to know at the flrst glance to whom
to take it.
The bundle of life that Abigail in my
text speaks of is plainly addressed. By
divine penmanship it is directed heaven
ward. However long may be the earthly
distance it travels its destination is the
eternal city of God on high. Every mile it
goes away from that direction is by some
human or infernal fraud practiced ugainst
ft. There are those who put it on some
other track, who misplace It In some wrong
conveyance, who send it off or send it back
by some diabolic miscarriage. The value
of that bundle is so well known all up and
down the universe that there are 1,000,000
dishonest hands which are trying to detain
or divert it or to forever stop its progress
in the right direction. There are so many
influences abroad to ruin your body, minil
and soul that my wonder is not that so
many are destroyed for this world and the
next, but that there are not more who go
down irremediably.
Every human being is assailed at the
start. Within an hour of the time when
this bundle of life is made up the assault
begins. First of all there are the infantile
disorders that threaten the body just
launched upon earthly existence. Scarlet
fevers and pneumonias and diphtherias and
Influenzas and the whole pack of epidemics
surround the cradle and threaten its ocou
pant; and infant Moses in the ark of bull
rushes was not more imperiled by the mon
sters of the Nile than every cradle is itaper-
U«d by aliments all devouring, la after
years there are toes within and toes w!th«
out. Evil appetite joined by outside al«
lurements. Temptations that have utterly
destroyed more people than now inhabit
the earth. Gambling saloons and rammer
lea and places where dissoluteness reigns
supreme, enough in number tc 30 round
and round the earth. Discouragements,
jealousies, revenges, malevolences, disap
pointments, swindles, arsons, conflagra
tions and cruelties, which malce continued
existence of the human race a wojider
ment. Was ever any valuable bundle ever
so imperiled as this bundle of life? Oh,
look at the address and get that bundle go
ing in the right way! "Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart and soul
and mind and strength."
Know nlso that a bundle may have in It
more than one invaluable. There may be
In it a photograph of a loved one and a
jewel for a carcanet. It may contain an
embroidered robe and a Dore's illustrated
Bible. A bundle may have two treasures.
Abigail in my text recognized this when
she said to David, "The soul of my lord is
bound in the bundle of life with the Lord
thy God." And Abigail was right. We
may be bound up with a loving and sympa
thetic God. We may be as near to Him as
over were emerald and ruby united in one
ring, as ever were two deeds in one pack
age, as ever were two vases on the same
shelf, as ever were two valuables in the
same bundle. Together in time of sorrow.
Together in time of joy. Together on
earth. Together in heaven. Close com
panionship of God. Hear Him, "I will
never leave thee, nor forsake thee." "For
the mountains shall depart andthe hills be
removed, but My kindness shall not depart
from thee, neither shall the covenant of
My peace be removed, saith the Lord that
hath mercy on thee." And when those
Bible authors compared God's friend
ship to the mountains for height and
llrmness they knew what they were
writing about; for they well knew what
mountains are. All those lands are moun
tainous. Mount Ilermon, Mount Gllboa,
Mount Gerizim, Mount Engedi, Mount
Horeb, Mount Nebo, Mount Pisgah, Mount
Olivet, Mount Zion, Mount Morlah, Mount
Lebanon. Mount Sinai, Mouut Golgotha.
Yes, we have the divine promise that all
those mountains shall weigh their anchor
age of rooks and move away from the
earth before a loving and sympathetic God
will move away from us if we love and
trust Him. Oh, if we could realize that
according to my text we may bound up
with that God, how independent it would
make us of things that now harass and an
noy and discompose and torment us! In
stead of a grasshopper being a burden, a
world of care would be as light as a
feather, and tombstones would be marble
stairs to the King's palace, and all the
glauts of opposition wo would smite down
hip and thigli with great slaughter.
Know, nlso, that this bundle of lite will
be gladly received when it comes to the
door of the mansion for which it was bound
and plainly directed. With what al.-icrlty
and glee we await some package that has
been foretold by letter, some holiday pre
sentation, something that will enrich and
ornament our home, some testimony of ad
miration and affection! With what glow
of expectation we untie the knot and take
off the cord that holds it together in safety,
and with what glad exclamation we un
roll the covering and see the gift or pur
chase in all its beauty of color and propor
tion. Well, what a day it will be when
your precious bundle of life shall be opened
in the"house of manv mansions," amid
saintly and angelic and divine inspection!
The bundle may be spotted with tha marks
of much exposure, It may bear inscription
after inscription to tell through what or
deal it has passed, perhaps splashed of
wave and scorched of llame, but all it has
within undamaged of the journey., And
with what shouts of joy the bundle of life
will be greeted by all the voices of the
heavenly home circle.
In our anxiety at last to roach heaven
we are apt to lose sight of the glee or wel
come thut awaits us if wo get in at all. We
all have friends up there. They will some
how hear that wo are coming. Such close
and swift and constant communication is
there between those uplnnds and these
lowlands that wo will not surprise them by
sudden arrival. If loved ones on eitrth ex
pect our coming visit and are at the depot
with carriage to meet us, surely wo will
be met at the shining gate by old friends
now sainted and kindred now glorified. If
there were no angel of God to meet us and
show us the palaces and guide us to our
everlasting residence, these kindred would
show us tho way and point out the
splendors and guide us to our celes
tial homo, bowered and fountained and
arched and illumined by n sun that never
sets. Will it not be glorious, the going In
and the settling down after all the moving
about and upsettiugs of earthly experience?
We will soon know all our neighbors, king
ly, queenly, prophetic, apostolic, seraphic,
archangellc. The precious bundle of life
opened amid palaces and grand marches
and acclamations. They will all be so glad
we have got sately through. They saw us
down here in the struggle. They saw us
when we lost our way. They knew when
we got off the right course. None of Ithe
thirty-two ships that were overdua at New
York harbor In the storm of week before
last WHS greeted so heartily by friends on
the dock or the steam tugs that went out
to meet them at Sandy Hook as we
will be greeted in the heavenly
world If bv the pardoning and pro
tecting grace of God we come to celestial
wharfage. We shall have to tell them of
the many wrecks that we have passed on
the way across wild seas and amid Carib
bean cyclones. It will be like our arrival
some years ago from New Zealand at Syd
ney, people surprised that we got in at all,
because we were two days late, and some
of the ships expected had gone to the bot
tom, and we had passed derelicts anl
abandoned crafts all up and down that aw
ful channel—our arrival in heaven all the
more rapturously welcomed because of the
doubt as to whether we would ever get
there at all.
Once there it will be found that the
safety of that precious bundla of lite was
assured because it was bound up with the
life of God in Jesus Christ. Heaven could
not nfford to have that bundle lost because
It had been said in regard to its transporta
tion and safe arrival, "Kept by the power
of God through faith unto complete salva
tion." Tho veracity of the heavens is in
volved in Its arrival. If God should fail
to keep His promise to just one ransomed
soul, the pillars of Jehovah's throne
would fall, and the foundations of the
eternal city would crumble, and infinite
poverties would dash down all the
chalices, and close all the banqueting hails,
and the river of life would change its
course, sweeping everything with desola
tion, and frost would blast all the gardens,
and immeasurable sickness slay the Im
mortals, and the new Jerusalem become
an abandoned city, with no chariot wheel
on the streets and no worshippers in the
temple—a dead Pompeii of the skies, a
buried Herculaneum of the heavens. Lest
any one should doubt, tho God who cannot
lie smites his omnipotent hand on the side
of bis chrone and takes affidavit, declaring,
"As I live, saith the Lord God, I have
no pleasure in the death of him that dieth."
Oh, I cannot tell you how I feel about it,
the thought is so glorious. Bound up with
God. Boundup with infinite mercy. Bound
up with infinite joy. Bound up with In
finite purity. Boundup with Infinite might.
That thought is more beautiful and glori
ous than was the heroic Abigail, who at
the foot of the crags uttered, "Bound in
the bundle of life with the Lord thy God!"
Now, my hearer and reader, appreciate
the value of that bundle. See that it is
bound up with nothing mean, but with the
unsullied and the immaculate. Not with a
pebble of the shifting beach, but with the
kohinoor of the palace; not with some
fading regalia of earthly pomp, but with
the robe washed and made white in the
blood of the Lamb.
A Boom nt Pittsburg.
A wave of prosperity in Pittsb irg started
every mill, factor; and workshop to its
fullest capacity,
Elizabeth's Gift to Eases.
A ring of surpassing great historical
interest is the celebrated hoop pre
sented by Queen Elizabeth to the Earl
of Essex, at the time when he was
her favorite; she told him, should he
ever come into trouble, no matter
what, he should send her the ring.
The occurrence when Essex was con
demned to death and sent her the
ring which she did not receive, is one
of the most tragical on the pages of
history. The ring was by Essex sent
to his cousin, Lady Scrope, but the
messenger handed it by mistake to
l;he Countess of Nottingham, whose
husband was one of the enemies of
Essex, and the ring was never handed
to the Queen. Years afterward, when
tlie Countess was dying, she sent for
the Queen, confessed her guilt and
asked forgiveness. But Elizabeth
was so enraged that she violently
shook the dying woman, cursed her,
etc., and refused her forgiveness. The
ring itself is enameled blue and has a
small portrait of the Queen.
AN EXCELLENT COMBINATION.
SUCCESSFUL ENTERPRISE BASED ON
MERITS.
The Importance of Informing the Vubllc
of tlie Value of an Article Through
the Leading Newspapers.
The few remedies which have attained to
wido-world fame, as truly beneficial in ef
fect and giving satisfactiou to millions of
people everywhere, are the products of
the knowledge of tho most eminent phy
sicians, and presented iu the form most
acceptable to the human system by tho
skill of the world's great chemists: and one
of the most successful examples is the
Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co. Unlike a host of
imitations and cheap substitutes. Syrup of
Figs is permanently beneficial in its effects,
and therefore lives and promotes gocvl
health, while inferior preparations are be
ing cast aside and forgotten. In olden
times if a remedy gave temporary relief to
individuals here and there, it was thought
good, but now-a-days a laxative remedy
must give satisfaction to all. If you have
never used Syrup of Figs, give it a trial;
you will be pleased with it, and rec
ommend it to your friends or to any who
sulTer from constipation, over-feeding,
colds, headaches, biliousness, or other ills
resulting from an Inactive condition of the
kidneys, liver and bowels.
In the process of manufacturing the
pleasant family laxativo made by the
California Fig Syrup Co., and named
Syrup of Figs, ilgs are used, as they are
pleasant to the taste; but the medicinal
properties of the remedy are obtained from
an excellent combination of plants known
to be medicinally laxative and to act most
beneficially. As tho true and original
remedy, named Svrup of Figs, Is manufac
tured by the California Fig Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will assist
in avoiding the worthless imitations manu
factured by other parties. The Company
has selected for years pn.9t the leading pub
lications of the United States through which
to inform the publio of the merits of its
remedy.
Fifty walnut trees in Cass County, Mich.,
vero recently sold for SIO,OOO cush.
America's greatest physicians have con
iiuured La Grippe anil Its after effects.
Their treatment has been thoroughly
t 'sted in the hospitals of Europe and of
this country, and is embodied in Or. Kay's
Lung Balm.
liev. H. B. Dye, of Morrison, lowa,writes:
"Mrs. Dye had a bad attack of La Grippe
which settled on aer lungs. She used Dr.
Kay's Lung Balm, with most decided good
effects, which is a repetition of past ex
perience with her. Nothing is so prompt
and positive in its effects on her iungs."
You should write for free advice and a
copy of Dr. Kay's Home Treatment, an
illustrated book of ll(i pages of receipts,
etc. Dr. B.J. Kay Medical Co., Saratoga
Springs, N.Y.
The largest ruby in the world is in the
British state crown.
Lane'a family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to
be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently
011 tho liver uud kidneys. Cures siek head
ache. Price 25 and 50c.
There nro 2C9 color varieties of the chrys
anthemum to be seen in Japan.
To Care Coustiputton Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c orSSo
If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money
Counties In Indiana have been author
ized to use voting machines.
EdncitiiiK Russian Soldiers.
Russia has taken up the Italian idea
5f using the army as a means of edu
cation. All conscripts are to be taught
reading and writing during their six
years' service, and where it is neces
sary will be trained for trades as well.
1 Modern Science Recognizee 1
I RHEUMATISM I
|j &s a Discd.se of tha Blood fl
jA) There is a popular idea th&t this dibe&se (raj
(z is caused by exposure to cold, and that xy)
\v some localities &re infected with it more w
}k th&n others Such conditions frequently
promote the development of the disease, W
Ja but-from the fact that this ailment runs fx
In in certain families, it is shown to be hered-M
w itary, and consequently a disease of the W
| L4Among the oldest and best known residents of Bluffs, 111., is Adam JjJ/
Hi/ Vanguudy. He has always been prominently identified with the interests
QM| of that place. He was the first President of the Board of Trustees, and for Cm
r. long time has been a Justice of the Peace. He says : "I had been a suf- nJJ
|IV| terer of rheumatism for a number of years and the pain at times was very uttl
wl intense. I tried all the proprietary medicines I could thiuk or hear of, but iUI
mu "I finally placed my case with several physicians and doctored with |JA
Ajjf them for some time, but they failed to do me any good. Finally, with my Art]
OIL hopes of relief nearly exhausted I read an article regarding Dr. Williams'
Wfr Pink Pills for Pale People, which induced me to try them. I was anxious JJJ?
aJJ to get rid of the terrible disease and bought two boxes of the pills, I began Vj||
\lm using them about March, 1897. After I had taken two boxes I was com- |X\f4
\(ll pletely cured, and the pain has never returned. I chink it is the best medi- FyY
Mr/ cine I have ever taken, and am willing at auy time to testify to its good |wV
PERFECT womanhood depends on perfect health.
Nature's rarest gifts of physical beauty vanish beforo
pain.
Sweet dispositions turn morbid and fretful.
The possessions that win good hus- ■
bands and keep their love should be guard- § m 'f* 112
ed by women every moment of their lives. rE/MmF Eh w m
The greatest menace to woman's per- Rifil A tit
manent happiness in life is the suffering WW
that comes from derangement of the
feminine organs.
Many thousands of women have realized m
this too late to save their beauty, barely in time to save their
lives. Many other thousands have availed of the generous in
vitation of Mrs. Pinkham to counsel all suffering women free
of charge.
MRS. H. J. GARRETSON, Bound Brook, N. J., writes: ••DEAR
r Mrs " P inkham —l have been tak-
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable
Compound with the best results
and can say from my heart that
your medicines are wonderful.
[L- chronic inflammation of the left
ovary. For years I suffered very
could not walk across
the room without help. After giving up all hopes of recovery,
I was advised to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound and wrote for special information. I began to improv®
from the first bottle, and am now fully restored to health."
"To Save Time is to lengthen Life," Do
You Value Life? Then Use
SAPOLIO
Saving the Nation Needless Expense.
A new postofßce was established in
a small village way out West, and a
native of the soil was appointed post
master. After a while complaints were
made that no mail was sent out from
the new office, and an inspector was
sent to inquire into the matter.
He called upon the postmaster and
asked why no mail had been sent out.
The postmaster pointed to a big and
nearly empty mail-bag hanging up iu
a corner and said: '"Well, I ain't sent
it out 'cause the bag ain't nowhere
nigh full yet!"— Philadelphia Satur
day Evening Post.
IKg Go to your grocer to-day
[|L and get a 15c. package of
IW. ta^es t * ie place of cof-
UT fee at £ the cost.
Made from pure grains it
rmL is nourishing and health-
W ful *
that your grocer gives you GRAIN-O
lIUCIIM ATIOM CUUEO—Sample bottle, 4 days'
KMLUm A I lolfl treatment, postpaid, lO cents.
■ ■ ALEXANPEH REMEDY CO. , 24tiGreenwicliSt.,N.Y.
17KOSTKU FEKT. KTC. Cure guaranteed.
1 By mail, BITE CO.. Roselle, N. J.
' sore eyes, \ THOmpSOII'S Ey# Water
on Athletic Goods
Insistupon Spalding's
Handsome Catalogue
A. G. SPALDING fc LKO3.,
Saw York. Chicago. Denver.
fify Salzfr's Sreds are Warranted to ?rodnce.
&&Mahlon Luther. E. Troy. l'a.. world
fflfMUhieott. Wi<,. 173 bush.'bartey, and . I.orejoy,
few 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c. B
Ofi# 10 pk K «ofra?e fa-nye-di, Salt Bush, Rape fo^Sheep,, tKM
Seed Catalogue, telling all about our Farm
seeds, etc., all mailed tou upon receiptor but
P t!lOO;oToj>blU eed l'otatot^^&^
Please 1.1». ,
Bend this alone,sCt !
adv. along. No. AO #
iSi
Send Postal for Premium List to the Dr. Setk'
Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsocket, K. I.
MALARIA, CHILLS & FEVER,)
Grippe & Liver Diseases. -
KNOWN ALL DRUGGISTS. 35c.
FIVE POUNDS
PURE DAIRY BUTTER
made from one gallon milk: new discovery. Address
for information,W. Young. I*2 Park Ave., N.Y. City
A GOODGARDEN
is a pleasure and a profit. Gregory's seed book di
rects a right beginning. Gregory's Seed insure the
most successful ending. Get the Dook now it's free.
James J. H. Gregory & Son, Marblehead. M ass.
n DHDCV NEW DISCOVERY; give*
W\ Vp I 1 quick relief and cures worst,
cases. Book of testimonials and lO dw*i' treaUnanfc
Free. Or. H. I. ORBEIt'B SONS. Box D, Atlanta. Ok,
117 ANTED— aseof bad health that K-T-l'-A-N-S
* » will not benefit. Send 6 cts.to Ripans Chemical
Co., New York, for 10samples and 1000 testim nittls.
or Know Thyself Manual. I
**' a Humanitarian and eml
f„Th« ■}« a . Meoum of Medical Science
for MEN ONLY, whether married, unmarried, or
about to marry: young, mlddlo-aged or old. Price
50cents by mall, sealed; sent free for6odays. Ad
dress ThePeabody Medical Institute. No. 4 feutflneh
St., Boston, Mass. thief Consulting Physician,
graduate of Harvard Medical College, cla ■ 18m!
Late Surgeon sth Mass. Reg. Vols., the most eml.
Am erica, who ALWAYS CURES
iHl'el^^^K^'iVnda;"^';^,' 011 lD pe " iU ° r
fj.T.l'oH if.'i'SMh? PeatHKty Medical Institute l as at-
JSi!^ff!s, l ! u .S# ected "to a test which only a merit.
'ri.iii.i. I .''V" 1 11.' 1 . undergo.—Boston Journal.
Ihe reabody Medical Institute has many luilta>
tors, but no equals.-Boston Herald.
MPMTTHM™w I-apbr WHEN s-CPLY
I.TIXIIN 11U1M ING TO AUVTi». NVNI;-l I
U Beat Cough Sjrrup. Taatea Good. C«e M
Q in time. Bold by druggists. IN
4pi l liH I "