Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, May 01, 1893, Image 3

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    How to Keep Toting.
We find thie circulating in the news
tapers. Tho author is unknown to us.
U contains much truth:
"Past grief, old angers, revenges, oven
paat pleasures, constantly dwelt upon
•U dead, decaying, or decayed thought
—make a sepulchie of the soul, a cem
etery of the body, and a weather boaten
monument of the face.
"This is age.
"Tho women who nover grow old are
the student women—those who daily
drink iu new chyle through memorizing,
thoroughly analyzing, and perfectly as
•imilating subjects apart from them
selves.
"Study is development—is eternal
youth.
"The student woman who makes wise
use of her acquisitions has no time to cor
rugate her brow with dread of the beauty
destroyer leaping fast behind her.
"Hot considered or invited, old age
keeps his distance. Brain culture, based
on noble motive, means sympathy, heart
gentleness, charity, graciousness, en
largement of sense, feeling, power. Such
e being cannot become a fossil';"—Sci- -
entific American.
Innane florae.
Burlington, N. J., has a horse that
ha* been declared insane.
"Remember that In (iarfleld Tea you hare as
unfailing romedy for Indigestion, Sick Head
ache and every attending ill that an abused
y itomach call make you suffer. Every druggist
••lis it. 2£0., 60c. and sl."
The heart has nothing to do with the
making of "society" laws.
NOSAFETI RBMF.DY can be had for Coughs
and Colds or anv ironhle of the Throat than
"Brown's Bronchial Troches." Price 25 cents.
Sold only in boxes.
A man's accusations of himself are al
ways believed, his praises never.
A Complete Newspaper For One Cent.
ITic Pittsburgh Chronlcle-'Tclcyraph is sold by
a.l News Agents and delivered by Carrier!
•very where, for One (' mt a copy or Six Cents a
weelo It contains daily, the news of the
world, receiving as It does, tlio reports of both
the Associated Press and the United Press. No
•ther paner. which soils for One Cent receives
both of these reports. lis Sporting, Financial,
Fashion,and household Departments are un
tQualed. Order it from your News Agent.
Sufferers from Dyspepsia
Here's Something for You
to Read
Distress in the Stomach CURED by
HOOD'S.
Miss Jennie Cunningham
& South Newcastle, Me.
" When I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla,
I could eat nothing but very light food, with
out having terrible d stress in my stomach. 1
hod tried other medicines, which did me no
good. Before I hod taken 1 bottle of Hood's 1
saw that it was doing me good. I continued to
grow better while taking o bottles, and now J
HOOD'S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
can eat anything. 1 have had no distress foi
months, and I think there is no medicine foi
dyspepsia like Hood's Sarsaparilla. My appe
tite is excellent, and my health is very
much bettor than for years." Miss JKN
me CtJRNixciHAM, South Newcastle, Me.
IIOOLL'S PILI.S cure Constipation by restor
TOG the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal.
4 . PNII3
r/SH
Thli Trade Murk 1 on the bet
WATERPROOF COAT
riu.tr.tod In the World 1
c "rr"V" A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS.
Unlike the Dutch Process
r-ji No Alkalies
Other Chemicals
arA use< l in
mlpreparation of
W. 11AKER & CO.'S
JfißreakfastCocoa
'I '\ i\ which is absolutely
In |•i I\l pure and soluble.
ftfi I miw'fen ft bus more thanthreeti met
EBa E I Si the strength Of Cocoa mixed
HHab r<l f 'fa with Starch, Arrowroot or
and is far more eco
nomical, costing less than one cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and easil.7
DIGESTED.
Sold everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
"ft OTHER'S
\ FRIEND" /
is a scientifically prepared Liniment
and harmless; every ingredient is of
recognized value and in constant use
by the medical profession- It short
ens Labor, Lesseus Pain, Diminishes
Danger to life of Mother and Child.
Book 'To Mothers" mailed free, con
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
V Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt
>f price, sl-60 per bottle.
BRAOFiELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga.
Bold by all druggists.
THE MERKY SIDE OF LIFE.
STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE
FUNNY MEN OB' THE PRESS.
A Misiinacrstanrtinx—A Part Ques
tion— A Solulinn to tho Problem—
Ho Wanted tn Know, Ktc , Ktc.
They stood there together foadly.
In the twilight calm an 1 gray,
And he said: "Taia is the swea'test hour,
l iove the close of the day,"
''Ob, I do, too,"Bhe briskly sail,
This maiden in her prim®,
"And so when wj are morris I, dear,
I'll wear then all the time!"
OF COUHSK SUE KNEW IT.
Harry— "Docs she know you lore her ?"
Fred—"She can't help knowing it.
Why, she told me she had SIO3O a
year."—Life.
HE CDULDN'T TELL.
Waiter—"How did you find your
steak, sir!"
Guest—"Blamed If I know how I did
find it, it was so small."—Detroit Free
Press.
DID NOT WANT MUCN.
Hunker (at Mrs. Dinsmore's small and
early)—"l hope we shall hayo a little
music."
Spatts—"So do I. As little as possi
ble."—Truth.
COLUMBUS WITH VARIATIONS.
Young Lady (to postal clerk) —"Two
stamps, please."
Postal Clerk—"Yis, ma'am; with or
without whiskers?"— Puck.
IIE WANTED TO KNOW.
"The only thing left now," said the
counsel to his client, "is the Judge's
charge."
"How much is it likely to be!" asked
the client, anxiously.—Truth.
A SOLUTION TO THE PR>BLEM.
Mrs. de Style—"How do you manage
to get your servants to wear caps? Mine
won't."
Mrs. de Fashion—"l hire a policeman
to admire them."—The Million.
A PERT QUESTION.
She—."So you'ie fully determined to
marry her, are you?"
ne—"Absolutely."
She—"H'm! Don't you ever feel
sorry for her?"— Detroit Tribune.
AN OLD TRUTH NE STATED.
She—"J. believe you don't care for me
as much as you say you do. With you,
I think, it is 'out of sight, out of mind.'"
He (earnestly)—" You are right, for
when you are out ot my sight, I am out
of mind."—Life.
PERSONAL MAONETISSI.
Jeweler—"Your watch is magnetized.
Have you been near a dynamo or riding
on the electric cars, recently?"
Jim Hickey—"No; but I've been—er
—calling a good deal on a very attractive
young lady."—Puck.
A VICTIM AT LAST.
"Oh, girls, there's a trampl' 1
"Are you sure? 1
"Yes. Don't you see him?"
"isn't it lovely! Now we will have
some one to try our new cooking school
biscuit oa!"—Dietetic Gazette. "
DIFFERENCE OF OPINION.
"I love the 'Last Rose of Summer,'
don't you?" asked Miss Daisy of Cholly
Jump-Up at tbe musicale the other even
ing.
"No; I find the 'last rose of winter' I
more dear," replied Cholly.—Pittsburg
Dispntch.
CONTEMPORARIES.
"The shark is the oldest type of "ish,"
said the school teacher.
"Not any older than tlio sucker, I !
guess," remarked the boy whose father
signed a lightning rod contract that
afterward turned out to be a promissory
note.—Detroit Free Press.
TERRIBLE.
Stranger (rushing into the police sta
tion excitedly)—" Gimme tea of your
best men right off! I've been robbed!"
Sergeant—"Wnat of, sir?"
Stranger "What of? Valuables,
mm—valuables. Two of the biggest
lumps of coal iu the house are gone."
Truth.
A CONNOISSEUR.
"So the painting which you showed
me last week has been sold to the baron
for $3000?"
"Yes, sir."
"Well, give mo one for $1333. I want
folks to see that I am a better art con
noisseur than the baron."—Fliceude
Blaetter.
FEMININE FIGURES OF SPEECH.
"To whom are you writiur, Grace?"
"To Lou Simpson. Madge. Shall I
send anything from jou?"
"Lou Simpson! I think that girl is
simply horrid. I wish you wouldn't
have anything to do witli her. Well
send her my iove."—The Ledger.
A TRAGEDY.
Tho Tramp (at the side door)—"Yis,
mum. Your little dorg ruu out au' bit 1
me."
The Hostess—"Little Fido bit you?
Poor little thing. And you, you wretched
man, I don't suppose you care—even—if
—he's—boo-hoo—p p pois-onedl"—Chi
cago News Record.
THE VERY MAN.
First Artist —"Well, old man, how's
business?"
Second Artist—"Oh, splendid I Got i
a commission this morning from a mil
lionaire. Wants his children painted
very badly."
First Artist (pleasantly)—" Well, my
boy, you're the very man for the job."—
Life.
WHY NOT TAKE TWO OR TUHEE?
Colonel Cole Hoyle (to daughter)—
••Yes, Libby; while you have been gal
ivanting around Europe ge tin' your ed
ucation, your old pops has been peggin l
away until he has grown rich as mud.
We have finished our new works and are
just making things hump. Yes, indeedy;
we can take the crude oil iu one eud of
the buildiu' and when it reaches the
other, it comes out thoroughly reSnel.
Libby (languidly) 4 'Dear father,
won't you try to find time to take a trip
through the works yourself, the liisl
thing iu the morning."—Puck.
IIIS VIEWS UAD CHANGED.
Oue June day, as I rode up to the
house at the foot of a long hill on the
banks of Tug Fork, iu West Virginia, J
heard a woman giving someboby hark-
Irom-the-tomb OJ the inside, aud in
about a minute a man came through the
door with a rush, followed by a freckle
faced, towz'.e headed female armed with
a broom. "She saw me and dodged back
into the house. The man stopped his
flight up the road. It was quite apparent
that I had flushed a domest'c iufclicity
at its height, but beiug prudent I re
frained from saying anything, expecting
the inan to mention it.
44 Can you tell me," I asked, 44 where
the road forks below here?" —•
44 'Tain't very, plain, mister," he re
plied, "an* I'll go a.id p'int it out, sob
you won't miss it."
I thanked him and rode along behiud
him, neither of us speaking.
At the forks he stopped.
••That's the road you take, mister,"
he said, pointing out the war.
I was about to ri<}c oil when ho held
up his hand.
"Mister," he said, 44 how old air you?"
I told him.
4l Au' I am fifty goia' oa fifty-one,"
he said, 4< an' tel here lately I didn't kcer
much what happened, so long's they let
me live tell I die uv old age."
44 And don't you want to now?" ]
asked with real curiosity.
44 1 can't say kit I do."
44 Why not?"
He came closer to me aud looked
furtively ovei his shouldej.
* 4 Mistcr," he almost whispered, that
wuz my wife you seen come out uv the
house. She married me last April."—
New York Recorder.
The Odor of Mti3k.
The most potent of all perfumes, rank
and attar of roses, are imported from tho
East, but are too powerful, especially the
former for European tastes at the pres
eut day. It was, however, tho favorite
scent of that most elegant of royal ladies,
the Empress Josephine. Down to the
epoch of the destruction of the palace of
St. Cloud by fire during the war of
1870, the dressing room of the suit she
had beea wont to occupy aud especially
the drawers of the bureau she had used,
were redoleut of that odor. The mortar
employed in building the now ruined
Mosque of Zobeide at Tauris was mingled
with a quantity of musk by the piety of
the masons engaged iu the work, and to
this day the surrounding atmosphere is
highly scented with it, especially when
the sun shines upon the ruins. This ex
traordinary durability of the scent pro
ducing quality has brought about vari
ous interesting experiments. A French
chemist once exposed a small quantity of
musk after weighing it to the rays of the
sun in a closed room. After a certain
period the musk wa9 again weighed and
was found to have lost no perceptible
portion of its substance, even when ths
minutest test 3 were applied. Yet "the
scientific experiment calculated that the
volume of perfume evolved had amouui
cd to no less a quantity than 57,000,000
of particles.—New York World.
Facts Ab nit Crude Perfume?.
Mask ia tho raw looks a good deal
like axle grease, and smells worse. Tho
popular notion that the musk of com
merce is obtained from the rauskrat is a
mistake. Most of the supply comes from
the musk deer, a creature that is care
fully reared in Iu lia for the sake of the
secretion. This secretion is shipped iu
the crude state, and is used not only iu
the manufacture of the liquid perfitmo
sold as musk, but also in very small
quantities to give strength and staying
power to many perfumes made from the
csEcutial oiks of flowers. Curiously
enough, the blossoms of two native
plants have n noticeably musky odor.
Oae is the small, yellow blossom of a
creeping vine known as the musk plant.
Its odor is marked, and is counterfeited
in the commercial perfume called muse.
The other is tho blood root. The pure
white blosstm of that early spring plant
has a distinct though delicate musky
odor. A bean known as the musk be ta
is a cheap substitute for aoimil musk.
Civet is a greasy and intensely strong
secretion of the animal of that name. As
sold by the dealers in essential oils, it is
yellow in color, and of about the con -
sistency of honey. Like musk, it is not
used at its full strength, but is diluted
and dissolved in alcohol or usel as an
auxiliary to other perfume?.—Chicago
later-Ocean.
Activity is Nature's I.a r.
The first g'.ance at the heavens seems
to discover rest. But as soon as we be
gin to look narrowly an I get beneath
the surface of th ; UJI, we find that every
thing is in niotiou after a most wonder
ful manner. Nothing is at rest. Not
an atom but is moving and working at a
tremendous rate. Every word and every
particle seems to have a mission, and to
be energetically and remorselessly busy
in fulfilling it. Enthusiastic work—
from it there is no dispensation and no
respite.
Day and night, summer and winter,
the astronomical forces take no holiday.
Some motions are more rapid than
others; the planet, or moon, or sun has
its varying rates of speed; sometimes,
perhaps, a relative rest may bs reached
for awhile in the contest between equal
contending forces; but even in this ca : e
the rest is merely relative to a few cir
cumstances.—New York Journal.
Tlioy Just Cut the IVntiics in Two.
How many collectors of coins know
anything alioiit the curious half-pence
issued centuries ago by English au
thorities, half-pence in the truest
sen eof the words, since they were
nothing more than minted pennies
cut directly in half.- Specimens of
these coins have been discovered fre
quency among the buried treasures
which from time to time have been
unearthed in (treat Britain. In
lain ash ire in 1840 were found a rare
lot of coins, among which were sev
eral pennies of the time of Alfred
and Edward divided in this way.
Similarly divided pence of the time
of Edward the Confessor have been
found, and in speaking of the dis
covery, in I Slid, of a number of these
curious half-pence of the time of
William the Conqueror, and unques
tioned authority stales that they
were probably issued from the mints
in that form, since the whole collec
tion had evidently been in circula
tion. in the British Museum in Lon
don are specimens of these divided
coins issued under various monarchs
from Ailrcd to Henry 111., with the
latter of whom the custom ceased
An eminent a- ha'ologist accounts for
the divided coins by saying that this
doubtlesss arose from the scarcity of
small change, which was in part
remedied under the reign of Edward
I. by the coinage of half-pence and
farthings.
PEIITEIIZE liiNcnzizKow sxnr.oiv.SKl
is a .San Francisco cabinet-maker, and
i'erterje Zmuchzizkomskckowlowski
is a Buffalo boiler-maker. The con
sequences of a chance meeting oi
these two men in a narrow Boston
street would be too horrible to con
template.—Rochester Tost Express.
Royal faking Powder
Is Absolutely Pure
AA/ HILE there are so many alum baking pow
* * ders in the market, the use of which all
physicians decide render the food unwholesome
and liable to produce dyspepsia and other
ailments, housekeepers should exercise the ut
most care to prevent any powder but the Royal
from being brought into their kitchens.
In the use of Royal there is an absolute
certainty of pure and wholesome food.
The official State Chemists report: The
Royal Baking Powder does not contain am
monia, alum, lime, nor any injurious ingre
dients. It is absolutely pure and wholesome.
The Government reports show all other
baking powders to contain impurities.
In the use of any baking powder but Royal
there is uncertainty if not actual danger.
It is unwise to take chances in matters of
life and health.
f : ' 1 ' • ' I n M and Pitn - hlcli stain the
han h, In lure the Iron and hum red '
TH- Rlln< Srm Nlnvc I'ollHti la Hrllllnt. Orlor
less. Durable, and the cotiHiimer pays for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
MllfiT HAVE? Arema AT ONCE. Sample
f I nHIC Sa*ht<><-I( 'Put '92) free by mall
for 2c. stamp. Immense. I u civ tilled. Only good
one ever Invented. Heats weights. Sales unparalleled
H'j A (lav. Write Quirk. BKOIUHD, I'hlla., 1' l
■ THE KISMD |
| THAT CURES|
£ I
1 A MARVEL INCOHOES ! |
■Kidney and Liver Disease!
FOR 15 V£ABB, JG
CURED BY 3 BOTTLES! §'
DANA SARSAFARILLA CO.:
GRNTLEMEN :—Having born reatnrrd to
health by the uaeof your Sarrapsrills I feel itfiS
my duty to let otheri know the great benefit l 9
hav Yeceived.
For 15 yenrn I have Wen troubled withHN
severe pain In TH" Niomuch, nliio H i.i.B
ney nud loiter Jlftrae, §o badly that forSS
weeks at a time I bad to stay in bed. jjfi
1 havo uaed three bottles of
s DANA'S I
SARSAPARILLA I
ard I feel like n new man. I rerr,m-§ i
mend It to any afflirtrd with disvaae of the Kul-H
nevt. Yours reipectfulir.
Cohort, N. Y. CHARLES SIMMONS. Jgj
The truth of the above it rertiflcd to by H |
JAMES S CALKINS,
Druggist of Cohoct, N. Y. 0
Never purchase of a " SUBSTITUTE!?, 'I
(a perion who tries to soil you
else when you call for Dana's.) Our bot-H
ties are being Tilled with a
ARTICLE by "Substituters." Buy of the™
HONEST DEALER who sells you what youhjj
gask for, and If <ou receive no benefit heS
M will return your money.
Dana Sarsaparllla Co., Belfast, Malno. §
A HOST OF WJTKESBES.
A Catarrh Cnrr That on the Vn.ollc
lied Testimony nP Thouinuds.
Mrs. M. J. Tamblin, Kyle, Texas, suffered
ten years from chronic catarrh; tried every
catarrh cure in vain; took Pe-ru-na and was
completely cured. Hon. W. D. Williams,
New Vienna, Ohio, had catarrh twenty
years, affecting lungs and throat; could fin J
no cure; was entirely cured by Peru na. W.
D. Stokes, Baton Rouge, La., had catarrhal
deafness, cured by I'e-ru-na; can hear as
well as ever. Rev. J. C. Randall, Sulphur
Springs, Texa, was cured of catarrh of the
kidneys by Pe ru-na. Mrs. Thomas Weaver,
Lee, Athens Co , Ohio, had chronic catarrh
since childhood: Pe ru-na effected a enre.
Mrs. J. W. Reynolds, Elkton, Ohio, box 4<>,
had catarrh of lungs and head, bad cough;
physicians failed to cure; completely re
stored to health by Pe-ru-na. Mrs. Dicy A.
Lewi-*, Independence, Mo., was afflicted
fourteen years by chronic catarrh; best
physicians failed; took Pe-ru-na and is en
tirely well.
For further particular and a multitude
of other witnesses, write to The Pe-ru na
Drug Manufacturing Company, Columbus,
Ohio, for a free copy of their illustrated
treatise on catarrh. Pe-ru-na is also a sure
cure for coughs, colds, bronchitis, la grippe,
first stage of consumption, and all climatic
diseases of winter.
Klie Keats McGurrln.
The fastest typesetter in Cali
fornia is said to be a young woman
who is employed In a newspaper (fli e
it Santa Barbara.
HOUSEMAID—"tin, Froressor, Pre.
fessor, just think, I have actualij
swallowed a pin." Professor (look
ing up from his book) —"What! you've
swallowed a pin? Well, here's an
other one for you."—Fllegende Blaet
ler.
-T A
J IS USELESS.
HOMETACKS
STRAIGHT TACKS < \ for K
WHOLE T \
V\nAT SHARP TACKS /'.l
RIGHT SIZED TACKS FOR
r</t All HOME USES 1 */ T T
T wit
( ompuaUn.t- Used in all homos.
Home Tacks, sold by all dealers
Home Nails.
j Cures Conaiimpt^on. ('uiikll , ( roup, Nora
Throat. Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee.
Spectacles S
Pure iFinzllinn Pebble Spectacle*,with hand
some rolld-gold frames and bows. Your mimhrr
I tent postpaid, only 30c. it pair. Worth Ave timet
that umount.lf you don't know the number you need
! lend us your age. St eel-rimmed spectacles. 10 eta.
! <Johl'H Sovelty Co., 573 nud 575 Broadway, New York.
Garfield Tea HE;
I I.HT* B Constipation, KCHI ores Complexion. Haves Doctors'
Bills Sample free. OARVIKI.OTKA C 0.,319 W.46thßt.,N.Y.
j Cures Sick Headache
| ANTI-NICOTINE
A Sure, harmless, reliable cure for the TOBACCO
HABIT. Pleasant to take. No bad after ••fT-cr*
*1 per box id 50 tablets, for fft. At druggists or
sent direct by
LOOMIS DKl'O CO., Waupacn, Wis.
AC E NTS
■ W n , sight: ageiita making big
inoncy. I'. A. I'AINTKH. I'ntriitce, Tltiisvillle, Pa.
finmii* lol * l """ Dablfc Cored In 10
! fiIHIKIHi to !iO days. No pay till cured.
W IVin DR. J.STEPHENS, Lebanon, Ohio.
PATFNTS
I it I Ll" I U tallied. Write for Inventor's Guide.
I "PATENTS! PENSIONS !-Sml for in..„t
I 1 or a Guide or How to Obialn a Patent, s.nd fn.
%estof PENSION mid BOUNTY LA WS?
FATKILK O FAKKEL. WASUINUTON. D. a
811 IIKT HIMIRV .■>! All,. Thoroughly taught
by reporters. < at. and tlr t ietnon free .1. (~ Render
-on, I'iln. Pott's shorthand College.winiamsport. Pa.
Si P lßo ' B for Catarrh Is the RS
Bold by druggists or sent by mail. Hfl
Bf] 60c. E. T nazeliloe, Warren, Pa. f^j
OXU KNJOYS
Both the method and results when
Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
Constipation. Sjrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial m its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
Wishes to try it. Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. '
umvr.LE, KI. HW yon A, sr.
MEND rOUR OWN HARNESS
ITTHOMSON'S flfifc
f| SLOTTED ~~ 11
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tools rcqu.rrd. Only a hammer needed t<> drive
and c'ineh thm easily and quickly, leaving ihe clinch
absolutely smooth. Requiring no hoc to be mnde In
ihe leather nor burr lor the Rivets. They are strong,
lough and durahlr. Millions now in use. All
lengths, uniform or assorted, put up lu boxes.
AaU your dealer for lltem, or send 40c. in
stamps for a box ol 100, nssorte l sizes. Man Id by
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.,
WAI.THAH, MASS.
F~ lENSiON^Krs.'ft
Prosecutes Claims.
Sjrain laut war, ulty since.
Worth Reading.
MT. STERLING, KV., Feb. 13, 1889.
F. J. Cheney & Co M Toledo, 0.
Gentlemenl desire to make a brief
statement for the benefit of the suffering. I
had been afflicted with catarrh of the head,
throat and nose, and perhaps the bladder for
fully twenty-five years. Having tried other
remedies without success, I was led by an
advertisement in the Sentinel-Democrat to
try Hall's Catarrh Cure. I have just fin
ished my fourth bottle, and I believe I am
right when I say I am thoroughly restored.
I don't believe there is a trace of the disease
left Respectfully,
WM. BRID3E3, Merchant Tailor.
BULL) 13 V DRUG GISTS, 75 cenu.
IllPf We offer
you a ready
made medicine for Coughs,
Bronchitis and other dis
eases of the Throat and
Lungs. Like other so called
Patent Medicines, it is well
advertised, and having merit
it has attained a wide sale
under the name of Piso's
Cure for Consumption.
"To Save Time is to Lengthen Life." Do Yea Value
Life? Then Use
SAPOLIO
'August
Flower"
I have been troubled with dyspep
sia, but after a fair trial of August
Flower, am freed from the vexatious
trouble—J. B. Young, Daughters
College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had
headache one year steady. One bottle
of August Flower cured me. It was
positively worth one hundred dollars
to me—J. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen.
Merchant, Townsend, Out. I have
used it myself for constipation and
dyspepsia and it cured me, It is the
best seller I ever handled—C. Rugh,
Druggist, Mechanicsburg, Pa. •
r a u 13 '•
STEEL EPWUteI
JUMBO* the A'exandra improved Cresm Sep
arator ; capacity 200 to4<K)o pounds per hour; two
horse power will run it. Also lew model HAND
SEPARATOR for the sale of which AG/-NTS
are WANTED in every section. Manufacturers
of cveryiniuff in line of machinery and supplies for
batter and cheese factories. Send for catalogue.
DAVIS A RANKIN BUILDING AND MFO. CO.,
240 TO 254 WEST LAKE STREET, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
fair TBrArrAffrerffsDiS
■ For Indigestion. RllUnsßeu.
r Headache, < enwtlpailon, Had
ICoMlexlM. OWeaelYa Breath,
land ail disorders of the Stomach.
?LiTerand 80-wels,
I RIPAN6 TABULEB
i set rentlv yr* promptly. Perfect
■ digrKtion follows their nse. Bold
I For f rwo aamnlre wCrm
, RIPAN. XwTM._,
It Is now a "Nostrum,"
though at first it was com
pounded after a prescription
by a rearular physician, with
no idea that it would ever
go on the market as a proprie
tary medicine. Hut after
compounding that prescrip
tion over a thousand times in
one year, we named it "Piso's
Cure for t 'onsumj tion," and
began advertising it in a
small way. A medicine
known all over the world is
the result.
Why is it not just as good
as though costing fifty cents
to a dollar for a prescription
and an equal sum to have it
put up at a drug store?