Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, June 20, 1902, Image 3

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    TO YOUNG^LADIES.
From the Treasurer of the
Young People's Christian Tem
perance Association, Elizabeth
Caine, Fond du Lac, Wis.
"DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:— I want to
tell you and all the young ladies of the
oountry, how grateful I am to you for
all the benefits I have received from
using Lydia E. Pinklmm's Vege
table Compound. I suffered for
MISS ELIZABETH CAINE.
eight months from suppressed men
struation, and it effected my entire
Bystera until I became weak and debil
itated, and at times felt that I had a
hundred aches in as many places. I
only used the Compound for a few
weeks, but it wrought a change in me
which I felt from the very beginning.
I have been very regular since, have no
pains, and find that my entire body is
as if it was renewed. I gladly recom
mend Ijya.ia E. Pinklium's Vege
table Compound to everybody."—
Miss ELIZABETH CAINE, CO \V. Division
St., Fond du Lac, Wis.— ssooo forfeit If
above testimonial Is not genuine.
At such a time the greatest aid to
nature is Eydla E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. It prepares
the young system for the coming
change, and is the surest reliance for
woman's ills of every nature.
' Mrs. Pinklmm invites all
young- women wlio are ill to
write her for freo advice. Ad
dress Lynn, Mass.
Natives Keep Valuable Secret.
The Antaimoro, one of the oldest
tribes of Madagascar, po.-sees the sec
ret of making, from the pulp of a na
tive shrub, a very beautiful and endur
ing kind of paper, resembling parch
ment. Each family possesses a few
sheets of this papeh, 0:1 which Its
chronicles and traditions are recorded
and the same paper is used for trans
cribing the laws of Mohammedanism.
The paper is said to have been invent
ed in the middle of the ninth century
by a Mohammedan shipwrecked on ths
coast, who desired to transcribe his
torn and, water-soaked copy of the
Koran in an enduring form. The An
taimoro will only make the paper foi
sale when some pressing necessity
arises.
The more you flatter some people the
more they rise in their own estimation.
FITS permanently ourod. No fits or nervous-
ness after lirst day's U9© of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerveltostoror.s2 trial bottle and troatisefrea
Dr. It. 11. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St.. Pkila., Pa.
Over one-third of the manufactured
goods which are made in France are
the products of female labor.
CntAri-li Cannot Jl Cured
With local applications, as they cannot roach
tho soat of tlio disease. Catarrh is a blood
or constitutional disoaso, and in order to cure
it you must tako internal roinodies. Ilall'd
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts
directly on tho blood and mucous surfuco.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack modicino.
It was prescribed by one of tho best physi
cians in this country for years, and is a reg
ular prescription, It is composed of tho
best tonics known, combinod with tho best
blood purifiers, acting dirootly on tho mu
cous surfaces. Tho perfect combination of
tho two ingredients is what producos such
wonderful results in curing catarrh. Bend
for testimonials, frco.
F. J. CHENEY Co., Props., Tolodo, O.
Sold by druggists, price, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills aro tho bost.
The largest order of merit in the world
is the French Legion of Ilonor, which now
y. has reached half a million members.
A NBtv Practice.
A nasty practice is what the Chicago In
ter Ocean calls the pasting of repeated lay
ers of wall paper, one upon another, thus
covering up tho filth and germs of disease
that may be propagated in the very absorb
ent and decaying mass of flour paste, paper,
animal gluo, colors, etc.
They give opinions of eminent health offi
cers and sanitarians, urging that such prao
tice should be stopped by legal enactment,
and also take occusion to say that these
sanitarians recommend Alabastine as a dur
able, pure and sanitary coating for walls.
The Inter Ocean says: "This is a very im
portant question, and, as It costs nothing to
avoid this dangor, why take any chances?"
How much of the alarming spread of small
pox and other diseases may be due to unsan
itary wall coverings?
The planetoids, of which there are over
300 known, have all been discovered gince
January 1. 1801.
j, Lost His
♦ R.Ke\E medism
By the use of a bottle of
St. Jacobs Oil.
SERGEANT JEREMIAH MAHKR, of Ard
cath, Royal Irish Constabulary, says: "My
friend, Air. Thomas Hand, has been a great
sufferer from rheumatism in the back and
joints for the last four years, during which
time he has employed many different
methods of treatment, but obtained no relief
whatever, and for the last two years has
been unable to walk without a stick, and
sometimes t\yo sticks, and was in great pain
constantly. 1 induced him to procure a
bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, which he applied
with the most astonishing and marvellous
effects. Before he had finished using the
contents of the first bottle he could walk
readily without the aid of a stick, and after
a few applications from the second bottle he
was free from pain, and ha 9 been ever since;
and although fifty years of age and a farmer,
can walk and work without experiencing
ftny pain or difficulty whatever."
Voc,nt.Bß's Ci'RATXvn COMPOUND, the great remedy
which make* people we'l -, 11 1* made from the formula
. of an eminent f ondon physician. Send to St. Jacobs
A Oil, Ltd., Baltimore. Mil., for a free u%!< bottle.
MYSTERIES OF THE MIND
SOME INEXPLICABLE PHENOMENA
CONNECTED WITH THE BRAIN.
People of Great ARC Remember More
Clearly the Events of Their Youth
Than They Do Those of Later Life—
Strange Healing Powers.
There is no subject so important for
all of us to study as the constitution
of our minds writes Garrett P. Ser
viss, in the New York Journal. Some
of the most remarkable and inexplic
able phenomena of the mind relate to
the power of memory.
A very curious side light Is thrown
upon this matter by a sentence at the
close of a letter from the famous as
tronomer, Otto Scruve, to Mr. W. J
Hussey, of the 1-lck Observatory, pub
lished in the latest number of the Pro
ceedings of that celebrated Institution.
The letter was written in acknowl
edgment of the receipt of a copy of
Mr. Hussey's volume of observation
on the double stars originally dis
covered by Struve. At the close of
the letter the venerable astronomer
says:
"I must ask your pardon that in
answering your letter I make use of
my mother tongue—the German.
Formerly it was very easy for me to
write Euglish and to speak it, but now
It would be a severe task for a man
standing iu his eighty-third year."
This is iu accord with the common
experience that people of great age
remember more clearly the events of
their youth than those of later life.
But it might I o supposed that this
tendency would not hold good with the
acquirements made by a mind of more
than ordinary power like that of
Struve, in its period of greatest activ
ity.
It would be Interesting to know
whether is a common experience with
those who have in the course of their
lives acquired the ability to write and
talk with ease in some other language
than their native speech.
Of course, disuse always weakens
one's hold upon a language, and a per
son may, in that manner, even forget
his mother tongue, but Struve says
nothing of this, and ascribes his loss
of command over English entirely to
his advanced age, averring that a great
effort would now De required to write
a language which formerly he wrote
with ease.
May not the tendency of the memory
In the latest years of life to recur to
youthful scenes and expressions fur
nish a sufficient explanation of the
childishness of old age? All of the
nobler faculties of the mind must. In
a greater or less degree, be dependent
for their exercise upon the material
supplied by the memory.
A man without absolutely no mem
ory though in full possession of his
reasoning powers, would be unable
to manifest any intellectual strength,
and the general character of our men
tal operations must always be largely,
if not mainly, governed by what mem
ory presents to the mind. So, in ex
treme age, when the only pictures in
' memory's gallery that remain clear and
distinct are those impressed in early
youth, the entire frame of the mind
becomes cast in a corresponding mold.
In some instances the vagaries of the
memory may supply an explanation
of apparently supernatural occur
rences. Wo hud a case of that kind in
a story related by the celebrated Dr.
John Abercrombie:
A lady suffering from an incurable
disease was sent from London into the
country, but, feeling death approach,
she begged that her infant daughter
be brought from the city to see her.
The child was taken to her mother's
bedside, there was an affecting scene
of parting, and the two never met
again.
As the child grew up she had no
recollection whatever of her mother.
When she had become a woman, one
day, be mere accident, she entered the
room where the parting had occurred
and was at once strangely agitated.
She said, byway of explanation: "I
have a distinct impression of having
been in this room before, and that a
lady who lay in that corner, and
seemed very ill, leaned over me and
wept."
The singular persistence and the
stimulating power of early memories
are well illustrated by another story,
told by Dr. Benjamin Itush, the fa
mous physician who signed the De
claration of Independence:
In his youth he had been acquainted
with a little girl, a farmer's daughter,
and the two had often watched an
eagle's nest in the top of a dead tree.
Many years afterward he was called
to attend his former playmate, now
a married woman, when ahe was des
perately ill at the lowest stage of ty
phus fever.
"Upon entering the rcom," he says,
"I caught her eye and with a cheer
ful tone said only. 'The cagfe's ncsti'
She seized my hand, without being
able to speak, and I discovered strong
emotions of pleasure in her counte
nance. From that time she began to re
cover and she is now living."
So there is a power of healing that
resides in the mind and often it Is
through the abiding memories of child
hood that its power Is manifested.
Farmer O'Neal's Lumber Teotli.
Farmer Foley O'Neal Is using a set
of false teeth he made himseif out of
a piece of seasoned apple tree root with
no other tool than his pocketknlfe.
The teeth are of perfect shape and reg
ularity, and the plate, which is of the
same piece of wood, fits his mouth as
well as if fashioned by a plaster im
pression. I-Ie can crack corn with
these teeth.—Philadelphia Record.
Each person in the civilized world
consumes an average of eighty pounds
of meat yearly.
BREAD AND BUTTER STATE.
Now Name Gained For Minnesota by Its
Dairy Products and Flour.
Minnesota has heretofore been known
as the Gopher State. Now it is be
ginning to be called the Bread and
Butter State. The reason of the change
becomes clear when It is said that last
year its mills turned out 20,030,000 bar
rels of Hour, and there were churned
in the State 50,000,000 pounds of but
ter.
In the product of spring wheat Min
nesota stands at the head of the States
of the country ahd its flour mills are
noted not only throughout the North
west, but In foreign countries as well.
The extensive development of its dairy
interests is comparatively recent.
The combination of wheat and flour
with milk and butter is more clearly
marked in Minnesota than iu any
other State. New York and Illinois are
important dairy States, but the value
of the wheat crop in New York is less
than one-third the value of its oat
crop, and less than one-eighth the
value of its hay crop, wheat being now
one of the minor agricultural products
of New York, once the chief wheat
State.
Illinois raises a fair amount of
wheat, but the corn crop, which Is of
very much more importance, yields in a
year $8 to every dollar received from
the product of wheat.—Sun.
WISE WORDS.
In misfortune even to smile Is to of
fend.—Bacon.
Sweet mercy Is nobility's true badge.
—Shakespeare.
You may follow luck to ruin, but not
to success.—Garfield.
An infallible characteristic of mean
ness is cruelty.—Johnson.
What makes life dreary is the want
of motive. —George Eliot.
The plea of ignorance will never take
away our responsibilities.—Ruskin.
Pride is as loud a beggar as want,
and a great deal more saucy.—Frank
lin.
Modesty seldom resides in a breast
that is not enriched with nobler vir
tues.—Goldsmith.
To persevere in one's duty and 1)3
silent is the best answer to calumny.—
George Washington.
Our grand business undoubtedly is
not to see what lies dimly at a dis
tance, but to do what lies clearly at
hand.—Carlylc.
Patience and strength are what we
need; an earnest use of what we have
now; and all the time an earnest dis
content until we come to what we
ought to be.—Phillips Brooks.
Every day I see more how neeessnry
it is to be consistent, uncompromising
and gentle; for often, perhaps, wheu a
word would not be borne, an act of
forbearance or self-denial might be re
membered in a cooler moment.—A.
Hare.
Where Scienco Beats Nature.
The eye and ear have long been
regarded as marvels of mechanism,
quite the most wonderful things in the
world. But compared with the imple
ments of the present-day laboratory,
the sensitiveness of all human organs
seems gross enough. A photographic
plate, coupled with a telescope, will
reveal the presence of millions of
stars whose light does not affect the
retina in the, least. The microscope,
too, with its revelations of the world
of the infinitely small, tells us how
crude,, after all is this most delicate
of the senses. Indeed, we may liken
it to a piano where only a single octavo
towards the middle, sounds. From the
ultra violet to the lowest reaches of the
spectrum is a range of some nine oc
taves of light variations, of which,
save for our new mechanical senses, we
should never have been conscious of
but one.
The ear hears little of what is go
ing on around us. By means of a mi
crophone the tread of a fly sounds like
the tramp of cavalry. Our heat sense
is very vague; we need a variation of
at least one-fifth of a degree on a
thermometer to realize any difference
in temperature. Professor Langley's
little bolometer will note the differeaca
of a millionth of a degree. It is 200,-
000 times as sensitive as our skin.—
Harper's Magazine.
Seven Farthings Capital.
What is the smallest amount for
which a company can legally ba
floated? In a lecture, delivered at tilt-
London Institution, G. F. Emory
snid it was seven farthings. As long
as ho had the necessary seven share
holders a promoter could make tin
shares oue farthing each, and no legal
question could be raised. Mr. Emory
told some amusing stories of the wilea
of the hogus promoter. One was about
an astute gentleman who actually in
duced a London banker to subscribe
$2500 towards a mining property in
Africa which was nothing more than
a barren field. Wheu the banker dis
covered the fraud he wrote an angry
letter, demanding the return of his
$2500. The promoter replied thrcugh
a lawyer to the effect that the ban
ker's letter amounted to au attempt
to obtnin money by threats, and, as
that was a punishable offense, he
thought of taking proceedings at the
Mansion Ileuse. That disposed of the
banker.—London Chronicle.
n.alth Slates.
"Antiseptic elates" are the thln-s
that the careful, germ-fearing mother
buys for her children nowadays. Tliey
are made of some lightweight ma
terial, papier maehe, perhaps, and
there is no temptation to spit on this
slate or even to use a sponge on it.
A piece of cotton flannel is all that
is necessary for au eraser.—New York
Press.
LARGER PENSION AT 103.
Hiram Cronk the Last Pensioner of
War of 1812.
A bill is pending in the House to
increase the pension of Hiram Cronk,
of Oneida county, New York, who is
said to be the sole survivor of the
War of 1812, from sl2 to $25 per
month. Hiram Cronk is said to be 103
years old. There are now on the pen
sion rolls 1,527 names of widows cred
ited to soldiers of the War of 1812,
but the most of these married men
much older than themselves, and their
hero soldier boys have long since
passed away. Personally Cronk took
no part in the fighting, but he enlist
ed and was ready to meet the British.
As his services were not required he
was discharged. Next day he was in
Watertown, and in the night was
aroused by the sound of cannonading.
A day later he learned that a British
gunboat had passed and fired a few
shots at the defenses of Sackett's Har
bor. Cronk went home, but enlisted
again on October 8, 1814. He served
40 days as a private, and assisted in
building log barracks along the shore
at Sackett's Harbor. He was honor
ably discharged November 16 follow
ing. Hiram Cronk married Polly
Thornton at Western (now Western
ville), Oneida county, March 21, 1825,
and in the years that followed sev
eral children were born to them. He
subsequently received from the Fed
eral government two military bounty
land warrants, one for 120 acres and
one for 40 acres, but sold them. In
1871 he filed a pension claim, but it
was rejected. It was reopened in 1878,
and $8 a month was allowed him. In
1886 his pension was increased to sl2
a month. Of late years he has been
quite feeble, and has required a guard
ian. He lives on a little farm (mort
gaged to almost its full value), and
his daughter and son-in-law live with
him. The daughter is 70 years old.
Cronk stil! takes an interest in war
matters and current politics. His eye
sight and hearing are still fairly
good.
New Petroleum Motor.
A new invention is announced,
which, if all that Is said of it be
true, will revolutionize the petroleum
motor. As is known, engines of the
kind, in their present form, require
the Introduction into the cylinder of
air, the latter producing with the pe
troleum vapor a mixture which is ex
ploded by the electric spark. Car
bonic acid gas Is thrown off through
the escape pipes. The new invention
Is that of a chemical process, still kept
secret, by which, it is said, the escape
of gas in question can be utilized pre
cisely to feed the cylinder. A contin
uous series of chemical transforma
tions, so to speak, Is established. The
twofold result of the process is that
the engine, first, does not deprive the
atmosphere of pure oxygon by appro
priating the gas for its own consump
tion; and, secondly, does ont further
reduce the proportion of pure oxygen
In the air around by throwing out car
bonic acid gas. The invention is
chiefly of importance for submarine
navigation, and Its author is said to
be a naval engineer. Hitherto, sub
marine boats have necessarily been
propelled by electric power. If the
petroleum motor can be Improved so
that it does not impoverish the air
around, it will he applicable to vessels
of the kind. This will be an obvlouß
saving of weight and bulk in the en
gines of submarine boats. Apart from
this consideration the new invention
will obviously effect a considerable
economy of weight in the petroleum
motor itself, an advantage of import
ance for automobilism generally and
in particular for aerial navigation.
It requires no experience to dvo with Pur-
KAM FADELESS DIES. Simply boiling your
goods in the dye is all that Is necessary.
Sold by all druggists.
It Is expected that the railway now
being built to connect Valparaiso
with the Rio de la Plata will he com
pleted In five or six years.
ltent For trie SOITAII,
tfomattorwhat alls you, headuoheto ■ dan
cer, you will never get woll until your bowel*
are put right. CABCARETS help nature, oure
you without a gripe or pain, produce easy
natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to
start getting your health back. OABOARETS
Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up In metal
boxes, every tnblot has C. C. C. stamped on
it. Bewaro of imitations.
Camels are the only animals that cannot
swim.
flfunjr School Children Are Mlcklv.
Hothor Gray'o Swoot Fo wdcrs for Children,
need by Mother Gray, a nurse In Children's
Homo, New York, break up Colds In 24 hours,
euro Foverishnoss, Headache, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy
Worms. At all druggists', 26c. Sample mailed
Free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy, N.Y.
Germany is to expend $75,000 on mili
tary motor-cars.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
ns n cough cure.— J. W. O'BRIEN, 822 Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0, 1900
The favorite air of the average girl is a
n^Jlionaire.
WW
" I suffered terribly and was ex
tremely weak for 12 years. The
doctors said my Mood was all
turning to water. At last I tried
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and was soon
feeling all right again."
Mrs. J. W. Fiala, Hadlyme, Ct.
No matter how long you
have been ill, nor how
poorly you may be today,
Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the
best medicine you can
take for purifying and en
| riching the blood.
I Don't doubt it, put your
whole trust in it, throw I
away everything else. §
SI.OO a bottle. All druggists. I
Ask your doctor what ho thinks of Ayer's J|
Barsaparilla. He knowsnll about this grand R
old family medicine. Follow his advice and H
we will be satisfied. if
J. C. AVKR Co., Lowell. Mass. H
DAN 6BOSVENOB SAYS:
"Pe°rii-na is an Excellent Spring Catarrh
Remedy—l am as Well as Ever."
HON. DAN. A. GttOSYENOB, OF TIIE FAMOUS OHIO FAMILY.
Hon. Dan. A. Grosveuor, Deputy Auditor for the War Department, in a let
ter -written from Washington, D. G., says:
" Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit
derived from one bottle of Peruna. One week lias brought won.
derful changes and lam now ns well as ever. Besides being one
of the very best spring: tonics It Is an excellent catarrh remedy."
...DAN. A. OROSVENOR.
In a recent letter he says:
"I consider Peruna really mo
I wrote you last. I receive numi
all over the Country asking me
invariably answer, yes."---Dan
A CungreMinua'ii Letter.
Hon. H. W. Ogden, Congressman
from Louisiana, in a letter written nt
Washington, D. C„ says the following
of Peruna, the national catarrh rem
edy:
*'l can connoientiounly recom
mend pour I'eruna an a fine tonic
and all around good medicine to
thone who arc In need of a catarrh
remedy. It hi in been commended to
me by people who have used It, an a
remedy parlieatarly effective In the
cure of catarrh. - For thone who need
a good catarrh medicine 1 know of
nothing better." — H. IF. Ogden.
Treat Catarrh In Spring.
The spring is the time to treat ca
tarrh. Cold, wet winter weather often
retards a cure of catarrh. If a course
Rest Your Eyes.
Strong eyes are said to give their
possessor both pleasure and confi
dence, while weak eyes that feel and
look hot and tired certainly give no
delight to their owner nor to those
who look back into them. It rests the
eyes to shut them, if only for a min
ute at a time, in some convenient in
terval, and if it is any way possible
to lie fiat on the back for any length
of time the gain to the eyes as well
as to the whole body is Immense.
England's War Expenses.
The army estimates issued in Eng
land show a grand total for the year
1902-03 of $301,550,000, which Is in
tended to provide for 420,000 men, of
which 219,700 men are for the ordi
nary army service and 200,300 for war
services. The estimates, of which
$200,000,000 is required for war, show
a decrease under this head of $116,-
250,000 compared with 1901-02.
One of the Buenos Ayres newspa
pers has a consultation room in which
the poor can get medical aid and med
icine free.
ISOSra 7 4a, 70S I'.lr.f f.
■—ata—a
laim Htiß.i ■.' Fab-.. [.
■Hin iHHim ii in mi L
19001=1,251), 154 Pairs.
■nsßKiiEXHrcaKraanEii
1901 = l,s(i(;,?■■>() Pairs.
I 111 illH Wli 111 ■! I ■ Mill I 111 11 mi I II
Business More Than Doubled In Four Yearn.
son n,o re u
and sß,Soahoea than any 01 her twonutnufiw-t .ireis.
W. L. Douglas SB.OO And $1.60 shoes placed aide by
aide with $5.00 and ffl.oo slices of otner make* nre
found to be just as good. They will outwear two J
paira of ordinary $3.00 and $3.60 shoes. f i
Made of the best leathers. Including Patent y
Corona Kid, Corona Colt and National Kangaroo. H
Fa. l Color Krelet. and AI ear. niaek Hooks t'sod. H
•V.L. Douglas 84 ••011l Kilre Llr*" cannot be equalled, fl
Shoe* by mall. 25 <>tA. extra. Catalog M
fr<o. IV. T POTOLAS, Brockton, Muss. N
1 naw.-'L IT.rwHK.7r aTmn -Jnwr.-,^!
|p A DHI T WullPat.er. Border same price,
■ b M DUi! also 2c, 2Me r Bc, 4c, Be up. Sam
plea freo. Ew.ng Wall Co . Boaver Falls. Pa.
P. N. U. 1\ *O2.
SSRSSrSfc Thomps:n's Eye Water
ire meritorious than I did when
:rous letters from acquaintances
if my certificate is genuine. I
. A. Grosvenor.
of Peruna is taken during the early
spring months the cure will be prompt
and permanent. There can be no fail
ures if Peruna is taken intelligently
during the favorable weather of spring.
As a systemic catarrh remedy Pe.
runa eradicates catarrh from the sys
tem wherever it may he located. It
cures catarrh of the stomach or bow
els with the same certainty as catarrh
of the head.
If you do not derive prompt and sat*
isfactory results from the use of Pe
runa write at once to Dr. Hartman,
giving a full statement of your case,
and he will be pleased to give you bis
valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Ilartman Sanitarium. Columbus,
Ohio.
GOO© WEATHER
DUCKS
/ //jy/X IS tiOOD WEATHER FOR YOU
T°U WEAR THE CENUIftt
N&>£fl nam**
¥-Sm, fin bri
OILED CLOTHING
WET WEATHER PROTECTION
13 dI'ARAHTfcCD DUCES THIS TRADE MARK.
OUR PULL LINE OP WATERPROOF CLOTHING
IS SOLD BY REPRESENTATIVE TRADE EVERYWHERE.
A. J.TOWER CO.. BOSTON. MASS. , 6
Capsicum Vaseline
Put up In Collapsible Tubes.
A Substitute for and Superior to T.lnstard or any
other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate
skin. Tho pain allaying: and curative qua'ities of
thisartl le are wonderful. It will stop the t othache
at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. •
We recommeud it as tho best and safest external
counter-irrltent known, also am nn external remedy
for pains In tne chest an l sto nacli and all rheumatic,
nonrolgic and gouty o unplnints.
A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will
bo found to bo invaluable in the household. Many
people say "It Is tho best of nil yuur preparations."
Price, 15 cents, at all druggists, or other deal ■■ a,
or by sending this amount to us la postage s.ampt
we will send you a tube by mail.
No article should be occep:e l by the public unless
the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not
genuine.
CIIEESHBROUGH riANUrACTURING CO.,
17 St to Street, New York City.
I have used Ripans for several
years in my general practice as a
first-class extempore remedy for
late dinners' distress, and have
carried them in my vest pocket in
the little paper cartons. At ban
quets and at lodge meetings I have
often passed one to an adjacent
brother.
At druggists.
The Five-Cent packet is enough for nn
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
CO cents, contains a supply lor a year.
SALZER'S SEEDS.
Great catalogue, with large number of sued sample*,
mailed on re eipt of M<c Yi ortli !j Mt.Ufl in tret a start
Salzei-'e dfiitf it Crushed MtciS. U. sr on earth.
tl.MperSoolb. hw, . i.s lor fllolhs :j ..■■. .or Kan lbs.
JOHN A SALZER SEED CO., La Crass,, Wis.