Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, October 03, 1900, Image 3

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    All
Woman
Know
That ordinary treatment
falls to relieve painful
periods.
They know Lydla E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Com
pound will and does and
has, more than any other
medicine.
Every woman knows
about Mrs. Plnkham's
medicine.
Every woman knows
some woman Mrs. Pink
ham has ourod.
But nine women out of
ton put off getting this re
liable remedy until their
health Is nearly wrecked
by experiments or neg
lect!
Then they write to Mrs.
Pinkham and she cures
them, but of course It
takes longer to do so.
Don't dolay getting help if
you are sick.
She has helped a million
women. Why not you ?
HERMITS AMONG THE COMMONERS.
The Eritish M. P.'s Aro Not a Sociable
Set—Twenty Years of Silence.
There is probably no assembly in the
world where so little social and per
sonal intercourse takes place. I was
for five years in the House of Com
mons without knowing half a dozen
men outside the small body of 35 to 40
members with whom 1 acted. These
were, of course, stormy times, and it
was difficult to say whether an Irishman
in the epoch between 1880 and 1885 had
a fiercer hatred tor Liberals or Tories.
Things, of course, have greatly
changed, but even now I see every day
members of the House of Commons
who must have been there for the same
20 years as myself, and not only have I
never spoken to them, but I do not
know some of them by name.
Amid all its grogariousness the
House of Commons has its isolation.
Members retain there the eccentricity
or the love of solitude which are char
acteristic of certain temperaments. Mr.
Charrington, the member for Mile-End,
for instance, who is one of the most
universally generous men in the House,
and who is never deaf to a true tale
of undeserved suffering, has rarely been
seev to talk to a single human being.
The same instinct, perhaps, which made
him refuse both a baronetcy and peer
age. keeps him apart from his fellows,
lie dines alone, lie takes his single cigar
in the smokcroom .alone, he sits on a
back bench in the House, still and ever
alone.—T. P. O'Connor, in London
Mail.
Deafness Cannot Re Cured
by local applications, as they ennnot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only ono
way to ouro deafness, and that is by constitu
tional remedies. 1) afness is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous liningoftlie
Eustachian Tuba. When ti 1i- tube is in
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness in the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten arc
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Uure. Send
for circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
In 1898 the tobacco monopoly yielded
Prance an income of 329.000,000 francs.
To Cure a Cold in On# Day.
Sake Laxative Uromo Quinine Tablets. All
rugglhts refund the money If it falls to cure.
■ W . (Jitovx'u signature is on each box. 260.
More than half the population of the
t*rth has direct access to the Pacific.
Mrs. Lucy Parsons, the anarchist,
threatens to throw the entire police
DOUGLAS
<Ht I.nrKrst .tinkers m
O Ufe of Menu 83 and '■
1 n nt shoes In the world. We Mi}
1.2 more $3 and SS.M> 9 3
t_® limn any other! 9
g# Ms
g g W•1••I>o 11 k1 n . r>ofc9
0 o other make is becauselgH ?
£** nHf'l'lx 'yurcthrfScßi.fSg
1 w "ill
£ EVrport I'd and AnicnmiraPL \
g* f leathers. The wm kmun-AA
•
b eunal to 81 and ffi shoes orTtV
M Th** flt llke
''j ''' P
wl - tru! |E ry '
The Real Worth of Our $3 and $3.50 Shoes ff
compared with ether makes is $4 to $5. g
■ ll ffi thenar treat 83 and 83.50 shoe bnsi- B
manufacturing, 'enables us to produced
. higher (mule Sft.oo and 83.80 shoes than ff
can to had elsewhere. Your dealer B
should keep them ; we give one dealer B
H Take no •iibatlti'ite*! Insist
Won hnvlngW.L.Douglas shoes with B
■ nameand prlrentampedon tiottoni.9
M If your dealer will not get them for g
Jiyott, send direct to factory, en -M
H closing prico and 2fie. extra B
for carriage. State kind of M
leather, sire, and width, M
9 plain or cap ton. Our /y
shoes will reach you JSr
CUTTING MAHOCANY TREES.
Experienced Woodsmen Alone Can Find
Suitable Timber For Market.
The mahogany hunter Is the most
Important and best pakl laborer in
the service, for upon his skill and ac
tivity largely depends the success of
the season. Mahogany trees do not
grow in clusters, hut are scattered pro
miscuously through the forests and
hidden in the dense growth of under
brush, vines and creepers, and it re
quires an experienced and skilful
woodsman to find tlieih. No progress
can be made in a tropical forest with
out the aid of a machete, for the way
must be cut step l>y step.
The mahogany is one of the largest
and tallest of trees, and the hunter,
seeking the highest ground, climbs to
the top of the tallest tree and surveys
the surrounding country. liis prac
ticed eye soon detects the mahogany
by its peculiar foliage and he counts
the trees within range of his vision,
notes the directions and distances and
then, descending, cuts a narrow trail
to each tree, which he carefully blazes
and marks, especially if there bo a
rival hunter in the vicinity. The nx
lncn follow the hunter, and after them
come the sawyers and hewers.
To fell a large mahogany tree is one
day's task for two men. On account
of the wide spurs which project from
the trunk at the base scaffolds must
he erected and the tree cut off above
the spurs, which leaves a stump from
ten to fifteen feet in height—a sheer
waste of the very best part of the
tree and one which American inge
nuity should certainly devise some
means to prevent. While the work of
foiling and hewing is in progress
other gangs are busy making roads
and bridges over which the logs may
be hauled to the river. One wide
"truck pass." as it is called, is made
through the centre of the district oo
cupied by the works, and branch roads
are opened from this main avenue tc
each tree.
Most of the trucking is done at night
by torchlights of pitch pine. The oxen
are fed on the leaves and the twigs of
the breadnut tree, which gives then?
more strength and power of endurance
than any other obtainable food. The
trucking being done in the dry sea
son, the logs are collected on the bank
of the river and made ready for the
floods. On the longest rivers these
begin in June and July, and on others
in October and November. The logs
are turned adrift and when they reach
tide water are caught by means of
booms* Indian loggers, usually Car
ibs, follow the logs down the river
in order to release those which arc
caught by obstacles.
No little judgment and experience
is required "■ determine at what ox
act stages of the flood the logs should
be sot adrift. Should the water rise
to what is called "topagallant flood"
before the logs reach the boom many
of them would he carried over the
banks and left high and dry in cane
breaks and thickets or covered up by
sand and rubbish. From the boom the
logs are rafted to the embarcadero and
"manufactured" for shipment.—Self
Culture.
City Men and Country Pupers.
The homing instinct in the blood Is
felt by hard-headed, shrewd and prac
tical men, engaged in business in great
towns, and apparently free from in
convenient sentiment. Yet, though
they scan their newspapers with keen
and eager relish, they throw them
aside when read, while some little
sheet, not particularly well printed
and put together as if jumbled in a
scrap-basket, is slipped into the pocket
and carried home. This is the coun
ty paper published up-country, and
filled with intimate personal details,
the pleasant and kindly neighborhood
gossip which goes on at the postottice
and around the station when the train
comes in. Here are familiar names:
the story of life in a farmiug commun
ity related with minute care; the go
ings and comings of kindred and ac
quaintances; the sales, the purchases,
the casualties, the changes, all chron
Icled without much art or skill, but
with closest and most satisfactory
realism. The man may he a million
aire several times over, but he was
once a boy on the farm, and he will
be a subscriber to the little country
pppcr as long as he lives.—Margaret
E. Sangster, in Collier's Weekly.
A3. =•- XT**.
Hygiene For the Seaside.
Once upon a time we were taught
that a bather should always become
well cooled off before he went into
♦he water. Now he comes to the shore
after a tennis match or a game of golf
or a spin on his wheel and plunges at
once Into the waves. The old conser
vative is shocked, but the modern phy
sician approves, and gives his reasons
for it. After active exercise the blood
is in full circulation, the heart is
doing its best, and the shock of the
cold dip has only a tonic effect that
strengthens the walls of the blood ves
sels by the quick contraction that fol
lows the previous expansion. Some
doctors even depart so far from re
ceived traditions as to advise a course
like this to persons suffering from
heart weakness, assorting that the
shock acts on the heart like the spur
upon a horse, and stimulates ir to
fresh effort. Such treatment should
hardly be adopted, however, without a
physician's specific advice.—Harper's
Bazar.
A Willi Five l'umiels.
The Russian cruiser Aslcold, that
was launched some two mouths ago
at Kiel, Germany, presents a very
unique appearance. She Is an ar
mored cruiser, and is exceedingly long
—ll3 feet—and sets very low in the
water. She is the only vessel In ex
istence that has five funnels. She will
be armed with thirty rapid-fire guns
of different calibre, and can Btcatn
twenty-one knots an hour.
Where to Locate?
WHY, IN THE TERRITORY
TRAVERSED BY THE
Louisville
A " Nashville
Railroad,
—THE—
Great Central Southern Trunk Line,
KENTLCKY, TENNESSEE. ALABAMA,
MISSISSIPPI, FLORIDA.
•—WHERE
Farmers, Fruit Growers,
Stork Raisers. Manufacturers,
investors. Speculators
and Money Lenders
will find tho greatest chances/In the United
States to make '"big money" by reason of tho
abundance and cheapness of
Land and Farms,
Timber and Stone,
Iron and Coal,
Labor—Everything.
Free sites, financial assistance, and free,
doni from taxation for the manufacturer.
Land and farm* at SI.OO nor acre and up.
wards, and stX>,ooo acres in West Florida that
can be taken gratia under the U- S. Home-
Head laws.
Stock raising in tho Gulf Coast Distriot
will make enormous profits.
Half fare excurslona the flret and third
TueKdayK of each month.
Let us know what you want, and we will
tell you whero and how to get it—but don't
delay, as the country is filling up rapidly.
Printed matter, maps and all information
free. Address
R. J WEMYSS.
Scncral Immigration and Industrial Agent
Low sville. Kv.
MILITARY NOTES.
Franco Preparing a Surprise Japanese Army
Organized Upon German Lines—Pen
sioners' Widows Long Lived.
It is not an uncommon sight to see
a Chinese soldier with a fan and an um
brella strapped across his back.
The British government is the owner
of over 25.000 camels. Several thou
sands are used in India to carry stores
and equipments when the regiments are
changing quarters.
Field Marshal yon Waldcrsec's flag
for the campaign in China is a Uhlan's
flag, divided into four squares, two black
and two white, witl: a red border, and a
bar running transversely across the de
sign. The flag is attached to a Uhlan's
lar.ee.
A large number of the new French
field pieces, with quick-firing action, arc
being manufactured as quietly as possi
ble. so as to spring a surprise upon an
enemy in the event of war. as in the
case of the new rifled field gun in 1859
and the mitrailleuses in 1870. The mor
al effect of such surprises is the chief ele
ment of their value.
At the present time the United States
has more warship tonnage under con
struction than ever before in the history
of the country in time of peace. The
new vessels building or authorized in
clude seventy of all classes. 12 of which
are battleships, 6 armored cruisers, 9
protected torpedo boat destroyers, 15
torpedo boats. 7 submarine gunboats
and one lake gunboat.
The Japanese army is organized upon
German lines, which supplanted the
French system fti 1872. Since 1880 the
Jap lias ceased to seek for instructors.
He does not think the British training
a thorough one for service in the field.
Common sense chose them the German
system, but they love the British na
tion. They arc natural allies of Tommy
Atkins, because they look upon his his
tory as a record of bravery and cour
age and honor.
No pensioner of the Revolutionary
war survives. The last one died in iB6O,
at the age of 109, hut last year there
were, and doubtless still arc, four Rev
olutionary widows 011 the pension rolls,
none of them older than 66. Pension
ers' widows make little of the lapse of
centuries. Judging by precedent it is
not improbable that 150 years from now
there will stiff he widows drawing pen
sions 011 account of the services of their
husbands in our late war with Spain.
M. Marcel Monnicr, a French literary
gentleman, spent a considerable portion
of 1899 in an extended journey through
China. On his way from Peking to
Tien Tsin lie passed through the village
of Yo-shi-Wo. Here a garrison of Chi
nese imperial troops had been station
ed since the outbreak of the war with
China. The troops had been forgotten
by the imperial military authorities at
Peking. Since they were dumped down
there not an order had reached them
and not a cent of pay had been distrib
uted among them.
THE EIGNESS OF THt OCEAN.
Its Waters Contain Many ol tho Important
Elements o' the Earth.
Some people gratefully reflect that we
owe the clouds and the tides and the
winds to the "Mother and Maker of
men," but these arc less numerous than
the folks who "would like to know"
what wc should do for soles and cod and
mackerel if there were no ocean. Yet
think only how big it is! If you divide
the whole gitibe's area into eleven parts
the sea covers eight of those, with an
average depth of 2.000 fathopis. Try
to imagine 12.030 feet of solid, perpen
dicular sea water lying upon eight
elevenths cf the entire planet!
A patient mathematician has been at
the nains to inform us that this hulk of
brine would weigh one and a half I>il
uon millions of tons. For the most
part this vast body of water—thus set
down in figures as 1,530.000.000.000.
coo.ooo tons— is of the same composition
everywhere, and, as everybody knows,
carries great quantities of ocean salt.
But that same salt is itself singularly
Not only are there in it the
chlorides and sulphates of sodium, pot
ash. magnesium and liruc, which arc fh
miliar to many, hut it contains also
silica, boron, bromine, iodine, fluoric
acid and the oxides of nickel, cobalt,
manganese, zinc, silver, lead, copper,
aluminum, barium and strontium. Ar
senic and gold are also found in it. along
with those rare metals lithium, rubidium
and coesivct.—London Telegraph.
Rotary flight can be given to an ar
row like that of a rifle bullet by using
feathers of one wing for the same set
of arrows, the curve of the wing giving
the rotary motion.
OUR CONSULS NEED MORE PAY.
Present Compensation is Inadequate to Prop
erly Meet Requirements.
The meager pay of our consuls is a
matter of whose importance congress
men who are themselves essentially
provincial can never be convinced.
Knowing little of any world but that in
which they have moved and had their
being, entirely ignorant of the establish
ed usage of diplomacy and the cosmo
politan society in which the consular
representative must dwell, they forget |
that a proper consideration for appear
ances is an absolute necessity; and pet- j'
tiness and meanness and certain sorts'
of small economy bring us into con
tempt and minimize our influence with
European powers, which in their long j
experience have acquired a very salu
tary worldly wisdom. There is hardly ■
a consulate in the world where the
American representative is not the most'
shabbily housed, poorly served and!
poorly paid man among his consular I
associates. Frequently his means are 1
so inadequate that he is unable to return
in any proper degree, the social favors I
that have been shown him. Through'
parsimony that curtails expense here i
that the Government may be wantonly
lavish with certain species of bold and
notorious jobbery, its representatives'
abroad are often placed in the humiliat
ing attitude of mere hangers-on—men
tolerated, but not respected. It also
explains why so many entirely objee- j
tionablc persons arc appointed to con-'
sular posts, aside from the confessed
reward for purely political service, in
which fitness, intelligence and ordinary
good breeding cut 110 figure. Men of
refinement, of culture and experience re
fuse to be so abased.—The Chautau- j
quan.
Europo Docs Not Combat Trusts.
The European public maintains a 1
complacent attitude toward trusts, but if i
these trusts had done evil instead ofj
good they would not have been toler- j
ated. for governments and the leading
political economists, as well as trade
rivals, have c/0.-rlv scrutinized their
daily walk and their average tendency.
There arc pirates among trusts, com
binations with more water than blood in j
their make-up, and reckless gamblers.
The world has uothinir to fear from the
proper use of the power of
combination. It is the abuse
or that" power that should exer
cise th; vigilance of the citizen and the
strong arm of the law.—Ainslce's Maga
zine.
Not Typewritten. Play Rejected.
Struggling authors who feel that their
work waits long tor appreciation may
take sonic comfort from the history of
a play which has been the one real suc
cess of the past year in London, a time
when almost nothing lias succeeded, not
even war dramas. This summer one
of the most prominent and successful
of American actors sat in a box and saw
the performance and suddenly realized
that 14 years ago the play had been
submitted to him. It was not typewrit
ten, and the author's handwriting was
so illegible that the actor never man
aged to get into the play.—-Saturday
Evening Post.
No Taste Better Than a Bad Taste.
The Germans and the Austrians have
for many years drawn their teas from
unknown sources, neither Indian nor
Chinese. Hence the present complica
tions in China will not affect them.
When George Eliot and George Henry
Lewes arrived for the first time in Ber
lin the latter craved for a cup of tea.
"It tastes like nothing at all," he saitl
when it was brought to him. "Then
thank your stars." remarked his com
panion, "for it might taste bad."—Lon
don Illustrated News.
30 FEET OF BOWELS
c\% M 1 o f re Packed away in your insides and must be kept clean,
\ J / cd order and doing' business.
V? , It' s a long way, with many turns and pitfalls to catch
v*v y refuse and clog the channel if not most carefully
-v.cleaned out every day.
When this long canal is blockaded, look out for
trouble—furred tongue, bad breath, belching of gases,
yellow spots, pimples and boils, headaches, spitting up of
Q J food after eating—an all-around disgusting nuisance.
/^/)(^ Violent pill poisons or griping salts are danger
-ICjp^ll ous to use for cleaning out the bowels. They
/Nlriw/*^klTri'V''force out the obstruction by causing violent
. ' spasms of the bowels, but they leave the in
testines weak and even less able to keep up
/ Ml- Vx V * regular movements than before, and make a
7 )M 2 fa/yer dose necessary next time.
xIsSP Then you have the pill habit, which kills more people
than the morphine and whiskey habits combined.
i wf-, The only safe, gentle but certain lx>wel cleansers are
K§Bpf sweet, fragrant CASCARETS, because they don't force
out the foecal matter with violence, but act as a tonic on
the whole 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the muscles
TnitALiHENTAKT cikal. 1. low., md „i restore healthy, natural action. Buy and try them!
(Look out for imitations and substitutes or you can't get
u^ h fci£s^rv^f. o rm;~SdK:•"'Awin'Tni'ciiSr reso . lts * Cascarcts are never sold in bulk. Look for the
*^T l i^ii?^mi o i4. n >inu,. D trh , duosnii 1 m o ii wftii trade-mark, the long-tailed "C" on the box.) You will
,7.'^'^"%%TrF"". 'iSSii: hnd that in an entirely natural way your bov.els will ba
Sili^tSSS.lku!i i. promptly and permanently
Get the genuine If you want results! Tablet Is marked "CCC " Cascarets are never
old in bulk, but only and always In the light blue metal box with the long-tailed " C." Look
for the trade-mark—the C with a long tail—on the lidl nrmtT? g *^ff^^
25c.
y " v. -ft*
I £E£] ° needy rnor tal, who can't afford to buy, we will mail a box free.
jy l?bsi£. ol<l Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. 410
P Jf. U. S7. 'OO.
nDADCV NEW DISCOVERY; 1t,..
YJ IV \J r O I amok rolt.f .net cor.. Wont
rW. Book of tMlimonikl. ud 10 dm▼ t' tr..tm.nt
l"r.k, D,. H. S. HUB'S SSBS, In B, AIL.U,
HOW BIG EEN GOT MIS NAME.
Facts About the Famous C ock So Oear to
the Hearts of Foreigners. 1
"Big Ben" has ceased from booming
for a brief space, and a large section of,
London misses in consequence one of i
its most familiar sounds. But there is I
nothing very wrong; a little cleaning is',
being done. How many people know j (
why the famous clock is called "Big
Ben." The name, in fact, is that of the j
hour bell—which weighs 13 tons 11'
cwt.—and was so called after Sir Ben
jamin Hall, who was first commissioner
of works in iB6O, the year in which the.
clock was first set going in the tower, j
It had, however, been in motion in the j
manufactory, for some years before that j
date. Each of the four dials is 22 feet
6 inches in diameter, and the clock :'s
ISO feet above the ground. The quar- j
ters arc struck on four bells weighing '
from one ton to four tons each.
The large bell cracked before leaving
the foundry, and a similar fate befell j
the second bell of the same size, the
hours being struck for several years 011
the largest of the quarter bells. "Big 1
Ben" the Second, after undergoing re- |
pairs, was again brought into use and
has performed satisfactorily ever since, j
1 The clock part proper takes only about'
20 minutes to wind, but the striking
parts require five hours each. It should
be remembered that the first stroke of
"Big Ben" denotes the hour, the small
er bells indicating the quarters by the
! first stroke in each case.—London
Sphere.
Tho Queen Hunts, Others May Follow.
Now that the Italians possess a sport
ing queen it is to be surmised that they
'themselves will care more lor hunting
and shooting. The average Italian gen-
Jtleman does nothing; he is content to he
i idle and waste him time at a cafe. But
■ the new queen is apparently a splendid
| shot. She is an adept with a revolver,
! and possesses the island of Monte 1
| Cristo, an agreeable little wild resort
where her husband built her a hunting
lodge, and where she spends happy
days of hunting, pursuing every ki.id
of game, even wild boars. Such an ex
ample will surely move the most indol
ent of Italian men into sonic semblance
of virility.—London Graphic.
England Seeks to Retrench in Cca!.
For illuminating purposes we now
have gas and electricity, and. from the
point of view of coal economy, the lat
ter wins in a canter. In large supply
stations steam engines arc used to
generate the electric current, and in
smaller ones gas engines are employed;
each has its advantages in its own
sphere of action. It has been calculated
that the ordinary gas flame consumes
about 16 tunes as much coal energy to
produce the same amount of light as
floes an incandescent electric lamp, aiid
about 60 times as much as produces an
equal illumination in the electric arc.—
Pearson's Weekly.
Aids to Siberian Emgrants.
- The Russian Government is distrihut- <
ing large numbers of pamphlets in j
which the advantages of Siberia for col- j
onists arc described in tempting lan- 1
guagc. Since 1893 nearly a million 1
peasants have emigrated to the regions
opened by the new railway. They re
ceive reduced rates, get land at low
rates, and even advances of money,while
73 schools and more than 100 churches
have been built for them.—New York
Post.
Piao's Core for Oon*nmption 1* an Infallt
h'o medicine for couch* and cold*.—N. "-V
biMitel, Ocean Grove, N. J„ Fob. 17, lUOL
Next to Gibraltar, Malta is the strong
est fortress in the world.
Thai Little Book For Ladies, r?
SLICE MASON. Bociuiu. N. X. (
IThompson'* Eye Water
The man who crossed Niagara Fal1
on Blondin's back lives in Chic**go.
Blondin was the greatest rope-walker
of that day.
Sweat and fruit Molds will not discolor
goods dyed with Putnam Fadeless Duul
| Sold by all drugglsto.
| The Prussian government is about to
take measures to preserve various kinds
of trees that are in danger of extermina
tion.
Th* Bolt Prescription for Chilli
and Fevor Is a bottle of Ohove'B TastelbM
Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine fa
a tasteless form. No cure—uo pay■. Price 60a.
I The population of Finland includes 2,-
j 527,800 Russians.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness alter tlrst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restoror. $2 trial bottle and treatlso
tree. Dr.lt.li.KLiNE.Ltd.U3l Arch StPhlla.Pfc
| India, it is said, is well able to spare
jo, 000 more native troops.
1 Druen have their use, but don't store
them In your stomach. IJeeman'n I'epsia
Gum nids nature to perform its functions.
I The average watch is composed of 175
1 different pieces.
' Frey's Vermifuge makes happy homes and
keeps the ohildren well. Entirely vegetable.
Chile can put 37: coo men in the field
and has ample modern arms.
Mrs. Window's SortninaFyr up for children
teothinv, Heltons the ruius. reduces in II am na
tion. allays pain.cures wind colic.2sc a bottle.
Country roads in China are entirely
undefined.
■ "Well, I say that the very
best of men don't know the
difference between their souls
and their stomachs, and they
fancy that they are a-wrestling
i with their doubts when really
it is their dinners they're a
wrestling with.
I "Take my old man. A kinder
I husband never drew breath;
| yet so sure as he touches a bit
I of pork he begins to worry
hisself about the doctrine of
! Election, till I say, "I'd be
ashamed to go troubling the
minister with my doubts when
an Ayer's Pill would set things
' straight again."
J. C. AYER COMPANY,
Practical Chemists, Lowell, Mass.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla Ayer's Hair Vigor
Ayer's Pills Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Ayer's Ague Cure Ayer's Comatone
■I