Decatur Democrat, Volume 36, Number 34, Decatur, Adams County, 11 November 1892 — Page 3

s’Wfß I ■ Mrs. A. A. William* Lynn, M*m. r For the Good of Others L B«. Mr. Williamt Heartily Indorse* Hood’s Sarsaparilla. We are pleased to present this from Rev. | A A. Williams, of the Slllsbeo Street ChrlsK tian Church, Lynn. Mas*.: “I see no reason why a clergyman, more than *' a layman, whoknows whereof he speaks, should | hesitate to approve an Article of Merit i and worth, from which he or his family have been signally benefited, and whose commendai tlon may serve to extend those benefits to oth- ' era by Increasing their confidence. My wife { has for many years been a sufferer from severe Nervous Headache for which she found little help. She has tried I many things that promised well bnt pei formed little. Last fall a friend gave her a bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It seems st a arising what ! simply one bottle could and diu do for her. The attacks of headache decreased lu number «d were less violent In their Intensity, while r general health has been Improved. Her appetite has also been better. From our experience with Hood’s Sarsaparilla I have no hesitation In Indorsing Its merl's.” A. A. Williams. HOOD'S TILLS are the best family cathartlo, gentle and effective. Try a box. Price 28c. ' DR. KILMER’S ST?P AM Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, Lumbago, pain in joints or back, brick dust In Urine, frequent calls, irritation, inflamation, I gmvol, ulceration or catarrh of bladder. Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, gout, billious-headache. SWAMP-BOOT cures kidney difficulties. La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright's disease. Impure Blood, Scrofula, malaria, gen’l weakness or debility. Gaarsiitee—Use contents of One Bottle. If not benefited, Druggists will refund to you the price paid. : At Drngrzlst*, 50c. Size, SI.OO Size* •Invalids’ Guide to Health”free-Consultation frea Db. Kiuikh & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y. •• How Old Man y "'™ cn fade W early, simply beII nnlr cause they do not LUvKj take proper care , . . of themselves, and not yet Whirled along in the excitements of Thirty. a fast-living age, J they overlook those minor ailments that, if not checked in time, will rob them of health and beauty. At the first symptom of vital weakness, use E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Trie roses will return to MSk Four cheeks, sallow 00 ks depart, spirits brighten, your step be- |eL. come firm, and back and feaKi headache will be known ’ no more. Vour appetite will gain, and the _ food nourish you. All Druggists «ell It, or tent J by mail, m form of Pills or lx>xengr«, on rccript of SI -00. Elver Pills, 58itc. Corrc- » 2K)udence freely amwered. j / ddreu in coiiHdence, j? , C) dO- AJ Tina E. PINKUAM Mid. Co., •***«*«»► Lynn. Mam. X It Cure, Cold,,CoughsSore Throat, Croup,lnflowga,Whooping Cough, Bronchiti.and Asthma. A certain our, for Con.umption in first atagea, and .ran relief in advanced atagca. Un at once. Ton will see th. excellent effect after taking the (nt dote. Sold by dealers everywhere, large bottle, W cento and SJ.Oa. r LESSENS PAIN—INSURES SAFETY to LIFE of MOTHER and CHILD. My wife, after having used Mother’s Friend, passed through the ordeal with little pain, was stronger in one hour than in a week after the birth of her former child. J. J. McGoldrick, Beans Sta, Tenn. Mother’s Friend robbed pain of its terror and shortened labor. 1 have the healthiest child I ever saw, Mbs. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga. Sent by express, charge, prepaid, on receipt el price, Jr.so Mr boule. Book “To Mothers” mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Foe tale by all Druggists. ATLANTA, GA. * — *L._—— The African Kola Plant, din ST n ITT 8 o vered lu Congo, West Africa, , C 'atnre’s Sure Cure for Arthina. Cur. Guaranteed or No Pay. Export Ofllm. Iti Broadway. Mew Turk. F r l arge Trial Caso, Free by Mall, addrew, KOLA IMPORTING CO., 13» Vino St, Cincinnati, Ohio. ________ fsiST POLISH IM TH! WORLD. | Jrith O PMte?, £ EnS?els, and Paint* which stain th* bands. Injure th* iron, and burn off. Th* Rising Bun StovaPoliih is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pay* for no tin or glass package with every purchase. |wnsmsSws,ooqm]

CHOLERA AT SEA. Terrible Experlenoo With th. Pest on an Ocean steamer, ■’l saw 465 English and Irish emigrants - die of cholera In six days,” Patrick Murrav, the Water street livery man said recently to a Pittsburgh Dispatch reporter. “I came to America on the steamer Virginia, of the old National line. I traveled as a steerage passenger. There arc 1,875 passengers, and the crew was made up of 82 seamen. We sailed from Liverpool on April 4th, 18(16, and we arrived in New York harbor just 14 days later. We were at sea eight days when the cholera broke out. It was the black cholera, and it reached the ship with the first sunshine after a three days’ storm. “During the storm, which was violent beyond description, we kept huadled together in the hold of the ship. We had not been on deck ten minutes after the weather cleared when the passengers began tumbling over with a strange ailment, which afterward proved to be choldra. We had on board with us a doctor who was working his way to America. Ho had little ability and less medicine to battle with the pestilence. “The ship was crowded almost beyond its capacity and the plague had full sway. It swept through the ship like a deadly cyclone and the dead and dying were scattered about like flies on a poisoned plate. The unfortunate would tumble over and many of them would die in ten minutes. Others would linger for two or three days and some of them even recovered. But from the minute the disease struck the ship there was an unceasing, distressing wail that went up from the helpless suffers. Without friends, without medicine, without the consulation of a minister and even without hope, the victims yielded to the scourge as a suicide plunges into eternity. “I was not stricken with the disease. 1 was constantly among the dead and dying, and I had positively no hope of escaping. I went about doing all I could for the afflicted ones, and every hour my surprise Increased that I had not been stricken. While waiting for the disease to attack me I really became reconciled to the fate that seemed sure to overtake me, ana when occasionally I would get a little sleep I would wake up disappointed to tind myself all right. You can scarcely imagine how completely abandoned one feels under such circumstances. Drifting about like a lost soul, with nothing but death and horrible distress in sight, I i could have died then with absolute abandon. We used to drop the dead overboard without ceremony. “But relief and hope came to us after reaching New York. We wecc I not allowed to land. We were driven : back to Sandy Hook, where we were . held in quarantine for six weeks. Medical attention never failed, and I all the possible comforts were sent to ' us every morning. The afflicted were i taken from our ship to an old gun-1 boat which was anchored out in the ocean, and there, for the first time ■ since the cholera struck us, did we begin to appear anxious to live.” Entreated by a Queen. The Roumanian has in every walk in life a fierce and savage pride which causes him to abhor the idea of medicine and surgery, and to consider the loss of a limb as terrible as that of life itself. He has become accustomed to the idea that only beggars are so disfigured, and believes thatno necessity should constrain him tosuch a loss. During the Russo-Turkish campaign of 1877 many Roumaniansoldiers were wounded, and Queen Elizabeth—-“ Carmen Sylva” —who constantly visited the hospitals, found that some of the patients died because they chose death rather than disfigurement. It occurred to her that, if one yielded, others would follow, and one day, when the surgeon was turning away sorrowfully from an obstinate patient who could be saved only by an operation, she approached and added her own entreaties. Still the *sol<iierreiterated that, if his leg were j amputated, he should only be taker for a mendicant, like the wretched outcasts of the Carpathians. “I am not a beggar,” said be proudly; “I will lose my life, but not my honor.” “It is true.” said the queen, “you are not a beggar, but I am;” and she threw herself on her knees at the bedside. “I have never prayed but to God, but now I supplicate you to listen His wish and mine. Let j your leg be taken off, and spare your life to your family, your country, and me, and—” s “And, if I consent my lady, what then?” “Why, then,” sho sajd joyfully, rising and seizing his hand again, “I will give you the most beautiful cork leg in Europe; it shall work with springs, and, when the war is over, you shall come and dance at the palace with your sons.” “I consent,” he said softly; “but you must hold my hand during the operation.” Auer that, there was no more opposition to the surgeon’s wishes, since they were also those of the beloved lady of the land. Franceb Obeyed Instructions. When little Frances went- to her last children’s party she was carefully instructed by her mamma what she could eat. Among other things she was allowed to eat just three spoonfuls of ice-cream. When Frances’ mamma next met the mamma of the little girl who gave the party, the latter said: “Your Frances is a very remarkable child.” ‘•ln what way?” “She was so careful about what she. should eat; and I noticed that she took just three spoonfuls of icecream and then pushed her saucer away, remarking that she was only allowed to eat that,much. I think that was a rare piece of self-denial in one so young, I don’t think 1 could have resisted the temptation to eat the whole saueerful myself even now, i atfd even if I had known it would injure me. Frances is fond of ice-cream, too, isn't sue?” | “Oh, yes; very,” replied Frances’ mamma; “but she can always be trusted in matters of that kind.” Just then the little girl came in with her nurse, and her mamma said: ‘» “Frances, lam much pleased to z -

learn how carefully you obeyed me 1n not eating more than three spoonfuls of ice-cream at the party.” “Yes,” replied Frances, “an’ I wouldn’t have rated dem free ’poonfuls If you hadn’t told me to, ’tauso do ice-cream wasn’t good.”—Harper's Bazar. Not In Hix Lino Exactly. A man with an armful of handbills went into Mr. Schoppcnheim’s restaurant and asked permission to tack a hundred or so to the wall, says the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. “Vot vos dose?” asked Schoppenheim. “Circulars advertising a railroad excursion.” “You goes avay off mlt a week or den days, and you goes sheupor as to stay at home?’’ asked Schoprenheim. ‘That’s it.” “Unt you vants to hang dose cir« gulars mein restaurant in?” “You’ve got it.” “Got vot?” “The idea.” “Den mein gustomers vould read dose circulars?” “That’s the idea.” “Unt go avay off den days or two weeks?” “Yea” • “Unt don’t eat dinners here vile dey vos away?” “Well, they could hardly do that, you know,” sail, the handbill man hesitatingly. “Dot’s vdt I dinks meinself. Nein! I guess I von’t have any of dese pills hung mein restaurant in; Good day, mein friendt.” The Malo Bass and Young. A small-mouth bass, the variety sought by anglers, and the only kind caught about the islands in Lake Erie, attains a weight of about one pound in two years, at which time it also arrives at maturity in a productive sense. It then fans off a clean place on the gravel, deposits eggs, which are impregnated by the male member of the family, wnen, contrary to the general rule laid down by nature, the female goes off to some favorable watering place, while the old man attends strictly to household duties and by the most constant care fans with his tail all the sediment off the eggs and drives off all intruders, even to a tenpound mud-turtle. He brings his little family of several thousand individual fishes, about as large as the end of a broom splint and about a quarter of an inch ■ long, to become as long as a broom . handle and weigh all the way up to j ten pounds, according to the conj science and eyes of the one who for the first time pulls him permanently out of aqua pura. He seldom attains a weight of over four pounds, alj though those weighing six pounds ’ have been caught.—Cleveland Press. Her Little Brother. Little Tommy was entertaining one ' of his sister’s admirers until she api peared. “Don’t yon come to see my sister?” he inquired. •"Yes, Tommy, that’s what 1 come for.” • “You like her immensely, don’t you?” •.Of course, I admire her very much. Don’t youthink she is nice?” “Well, I have to, ’cause she's my sister; but she thumps me pretty hard : sometimes. But let’s see you open i your mouth once. Now shut it tight till I count ten. There—l knowed you could do it. ” “Wfav, Tommy, who said that I couldn’t?” “Oh, nobody but sister?” “What did she say?” “Well, she said you hadn’t sense enough to keep your mouth shut, and I bet her two big apples you had. And you have, havent you? And you’ll make her stump up the apples, wen’t you 9” Theyoung man did not wait to see whether she would “stump up” or not. Taper Stockings. Stockings of paper are among the latest products of German inventive genius. A Berlin paper devoted to the shoe trade states that the socks arc made of a specially prepared impregnated paper stock, for which an extraordinary effect on perspiring feet is claimed. The paper absorbs the moisture as rapidly as it is formed, and the feet remain dry and warm and perfectly sound, while the constant temperature maintained in theshoesissaidto.be a great preventive of colds. The manufacturers direct bits of their paper to be put between the toes, and then ajarge piece to be wrapped over the foot and the stocking tq be put on over all.* Barber and Noble. A pretty story is told of a nobleman whom his barber leftnalf-sbaved, and in a great hurry, His Lordship thought the man was maa and sent to inquire after him. He returned in person and thus explained himself: “I was not mad, my Lord, but the sight orthat heap of guineas on your dressing table, and the remembrance of my starving family so affected me, that if I had stayed another minute, I should have cut your throat” “I am glad you didn’t do that,” said his Lordship, gently, “and by all means take the guineas. I won them at the gambling table, and I should doubtless have lost them there. ” Shading for Electric Light. According to an eminent oculig» the electrie light in order to be harmless to the eyes should be guarded in one of three ways—either with frosted white glass, opal tinted covers, or surmounted with colored fringe so that the eyes can never see it\covers of cut or efflorescent glass being objectionable, even dangerous, to the sight. f Boat Bicycle. A man at Portsmouth, N. H., ha. put his bicycle on a boat It is connected with a gearing which turns a propeller set in motion by treading the pedals and the boat is said tc move swiftly through the water. If it pleases you to hear a fricn say he would do anything in the world for you, dpn’t prepare a thorn for yourself by mentioning one or two things you want done. If a man pronounces a word wrong, he also usually lugs it in .every time he opens his mouth,

A Few Reflections Upon Night. It in night. A policeman awakes with a sudden start and moves aronnd the corner, having a Hocret fear at his heart that he had slept through all that night, all next day and far into to-mor-row niglit. It is night in a great city. The poker ond faro-rooms aro in full blast, 10,000 loafers are holding down street corners, and here and there an intoxicated Alderman can be seen making his way to a policy shop or a gathering of the pavement ring. Under cover of darkness, first manufactured over 6,000 years ago, the hotel beat lowers his duds from the fourth-story ■window; all who have dead-head tickets start for the opera-houses; hundreds of young mon set out to spark; reporters look forward to fires, robberies and murders, and church choirs meet to rehearse and wrangle and lay up clubs for each other. 'Tis niglit in the country. The stock has been fed, the squeal of the pig is hushed, and the tired horse munches at liia corn and wonders why his master throws in so many cobs without a kernel on them. The watch dog sits at the gate, perfectly willing to chew up any of the neighbors for a cent, and within the farm-house all is serene, or would be if John Henry could (find the grease for his boots, Mary Ann could find her novel, the old man discover the hiding-place of the bootjack, and the mother solve the mystery of how some of her neighbors managed to get a dress costing 2 shillings per yard while she had nothing but calico. ’Tis night on the ocean. The proud steamer sails gallantly on and on, the Captain snoring in his berth, the mate playing eucher, the lookouts asleep, and everything in readiness to swear, in case of collision, that it was all the other vessel’s fault. Nothing is heard but the steady beat of the propeller, the groaos of the immigrants and the voices of men and women declaring that anybody who plans an ocean voyage for pleasure ought tc. be shot to death with codfish balls. The gambols away his hard earmngs, the whale rolls over for another nap, and the business-like shark follows in the ■wake to pick up any opportunities which may tumble overboard. ’Tis night on the Jprairie. The red men gather about the camp-fire to count the scalps they have taken within the last week, and to grumble at the Government for not furnishing them port wine and repeating rifles. The white hunter and trapper curls himself up to wonder where he can find old bones for breakfast, and to realwe what a fool he has made of himself, and the gaunt wolf shoulders his cflßpty stomach and sets out in search of something to make life worth living for. Niglit grows apace. In the city the weary wife takes her place in the hall with club in'liana. In the country the old folks fall into bed aweary with the work of the day, and the young people spark and chew pop-corn. On the ocean the sea-sickers continue to grow ■worse, and the songs of the mermaids fall flat. On the prairie the Indians finally decide to make war in the spring, the hunter falls asleep to dream of eating his boots for dinner, and the ■wolf meets a wildcat and offers to toss up to see which shall eat the other.— Detroit Free Press. A Last Request, “Wait a minute,” said the Texas desperado who had been convicted of horsestealing and murder. “What’s the matter now?” asked the sheriff. “I wish to ask a favor before I am taken to the scaffold.” ‘•Well, what is it?” “Let one of your deputies go up-stairs and get my lucky penny.”—Judge. Mrs. Nancy Wirts, 1201 Caroline St., Baltimore. Md.. thus gives her experience: “We have used Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup, and have never found itq equal for our children.” A Wise Youth. “Don’t you think you waste time and money with your yacht, Mr. DeLoaf?” asked the minister. “No, sir, Ido not. There is no telling, Dr. Fourthly, when this world is to he deluged again and I'm not going to be caught on dry land with the example of Noah before me.” HALF-FARE TO SEE WESTERN LANDS. Last Chance Tills Year. The third and last Harvest Excursion will bo run to especial territory—Oklahoma and Indian Reservations and Texas. The Great Rock Island Route runs into and through these reservations, and is the only road that touches these lands, lately put on the market. See hand-bills giving particulars, and remember the date is Oct. 25, lor Chicago and points to and including Mississippi River, and one day later for Missouri River points. . John Sebastian. G. T. and P. A., Chicago. 111. He Know by Experience. *“Papa, what docs the man lick the stock quotations with?” “Lick the stock quotations? What do you mean?” “It says in the papers ‘stock quotations caretully corrected,’ and when 1 get corrected 1 get licked.”—Exchange. Fine Playing Cards. Send.lo coats in stamps to John Sebastian. Gen’l Ticket and Pass! Agt., C., R. I. & P. R'y. Cnicago. for a pack of the “Rock Island” Playing Cards. They are acknowledged the best, and worth five times the cost. Send money order or postal note for 50c. and will send live packs by express, prepaid. Woman's Curiosity. “John,” she said as they left the soda fountain. “What Is it?” “Wasn’t 15 cents a good deal th pay for a glass of sarsaparilla. I’—Life. 1 ’ —Life. Nothing Lika IK For seven long years I suffered more or less with Kidney and Liver Complaint, and during that time doctored with a number of Physicians, who stated that my case was beyond cure. I found no Remedy like Swamp-Root and to-dav, thank Goa, I am a well woman. Mits. A. WiiELCHBL. Olio, Ind. A Bad Bar. Tanks—We can’t afford to patronize McDudel; his family has a bar sinister. Guzzllier—So that is it; I noticed their claret was away off.—Now York Herald. A Boro Throat and Coa*k ( it suffered to progress, often results in an incurable throat or lung trouble. ‘Brown’s Bronchial Troches" give instant relief. . r-s». Can’t Burn Artltlolal Teeth. Crematory experts say that it is impossible to cremate a sot of false teeth. Foor thousand degrees of heat have been turned onto the artificial grinders without affecting thorn In the least. ay NOBODT BUT A Gtrilf NeOLBCTB A OoVSH. Take Mme Hale's Hoxxr of HoiumovKD and fluid fl 'a. Pike's Toothache Dbops Care la one Minute. Mur are as particular about the way their meats cooked, a* a woman is about her tea e ’

A Canal Reopened. Health is largely dependent upon a regular habit of body. Tho bowels act as an Impor- i tant canal for the carrying of waste matter of I the syatem. They, together with the kidneys and porce, are outlets for debris whose presence Is fatal to the body’e will-being. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters Is no vlolenj. purgative, but a gentle laxative admirably adapted to the wants of the constipated. It never gripes and wrenches tho Intestines as all drastic cathartics do, but produces an action akin to that of an effort of nature. Blllonsneee, Indigestion, with their associate manifestation, costiveness, ere speedily and completely remedied by this flue corrective, which also conquers malaria, sick headache, kidney and rheumatic trouble, and checks premature decay. He Thought Out Loud. The late Duke of Cambridge was in the habit of thinking out loud, so to speak, and there wore times when his audible expressions of opinions was at least inopportune. It is related of him by a London journal that during divine service, whenever the rector said “Lot us prav,” his royal highness would answer In a voice audible throughout the church, “Aye, to be sure; why not?” Once at tho opera, after the duke bad swept tho house with his glasses, be called out In a tone that reached from pit to dome, “Why, I declare, there are not half a dozen pretty airis in the house —not half a dozen, not half a dosen.” • 100 Reward. •100. The readern of this paper will bo pleased to learn that there la at least one dreaded disease that acienee has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting dlreetly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so topch’faith in Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. I HENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 09-Sold by Druggists, 75c. Red Clover. Red Clover grows in New Zealand with great luxuriance, but until recently it was necessary to import all seeds from England. Darwin showed that the plants can be fertilized and made to produce seed only through the agency of humble bees, and, as -these creatures were unknown in New Zealand, attempts were made to introduce them, and they were finally, about ten years ago, carried the entire journey alive, while in a torpid state, in freezing chambers. Since then they have multiplied, and the red clover bears seed. Have Ton Asthma? Db. R Fchiifmaxn. St. Paul. Minn., will mall atrial package of Schiffmann's Asthma Cure free to any sufferer. Gives Instant relief in worst cases, and cures where others fail. Name this paper and send address. The Old Rubber Trick. “Why, you poorold man! how did you come to lose your foot—in the war?” “No, ma'am. I used to live in the suburbs and in rumning for a train on an early spring morning I caught my foot in the mud and left it there.” Important to Fleshy People. We have noticed a page article in the Boston Globe on reducing weight at a very small expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp for a eopy to Betina Circulating Library, 36 E. Washington street, Chicago. HL • Or Thinks He Is. She—Do look at that man on that bicycle! Why does he stoop in such a ridiculous fashion? He—Oh, that’s all right He’s on pleasure bent—Boston Transcript Beecham's Pills enjoy the largest sale of any proprietary medicine in the world. Made only in St Helens, England. French ArtiUery Horses. The French Artillery is horsed with dark and white horses alternately. S' IN GLASS. That’s the way Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets come. And it’s a more important point 111 than you think. It keeps | . them; al ways fresh and reli- ■ Zif) able, unlike the ordinary » pills in cheap wooden or • pasteboard boxes. (a They’re put up in a better Al Sl\ way, and they act in a better • o' I Y' way, than the huge, old-sash-H ion'ed pills.' No griping, no i IIP violence, no reaction after- ' * ward that sometimes leaves vou worse off than before. In that way, they cure permanently. Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, ConstfySktion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and cured. They’re tiny, sugar-coated granules, a compound of refined and concentrated vegetable extracts —the smallest in size, the easiest to take, and the cheapest pill you can buy, for they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You pay only for the good you get. There’s nothing likely to be “just as good."

It is better to take Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil when that decline in health begins —the decline which precedes consumption — rather than wait for the germ to begin to grow in our lungs. “Prevention is better than cure; ” and surer. The saying never was truer than here. What is it to prevent consumption ? j Let us send you a book on careful living ; free. Scott & Bowne, Chemists, 132 South sth Avenue, 8-w York. druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of cpd-liver —all druggists everywhere do, ERADICATES BLOOD POlson and bloo d taint . Csvbral bottles of Swift’s Specific (S.S. S.) 0 entirely cleansed my system of contagious blood poison of the very worst type. Wm. S. Loomis, Shreveport, La. a a IKMm CURES SCROFULA EVS=N IN ITS worst forms • —. I HAD scrofula in 188-1, and cleansed my system entirely from It by taking seven bottles of S. S. S. I have not had any Symptoms since. C. W. \V ilcox, Spartanburg, S. C. SB* , ■9SS| HAS CURED HUNDREDS OF ESSES CASES OF SKIN CANCER. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed fat. Swift Sfkcific Co, Atlanta. Go.

IN OLDEN TIMES People overlooked tho importance of permanently benollciul effects and were satisfied with triiiiHient action, but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will pennanently cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which oct for a tithe, but finally injure the system. If an undertaker should die, would his rival bury him? Fits atopped free br Dr. Kllne’aDreit Nerve t:e,tu er. No Flta after Bret day’e uee Marvelona curee. 'I rraliae and *1 no trial Pottle tree t--Fit caaea. Send to Dr. Kline,«ll Arch Bt.. Phlla, l a Some fellows never talk like men until they get. a cold. / Consumption. Dr. Hambleton writes: “There can be no doubt, whatever, as to the great benefit of the habit of deep breathing and full inspiration in ordinary life. The great curse in thjs country is consumption, and children suffer from it heavily.” It is well that the parents should remember that consumption always begins with a cold and any cold, no matter how slight, is exceedingly dangerous. When a cold attacks the system, It should be attended to at once. The best remedy is Reid’s Germ an Cough and Kidney Cure, for this ministers to all the excretory organs. It acts at once upon the kidneys and enables them to renew their work of purifying the blood, by driving out of it, the uric acid. When this is done, the lungs will easily perform their part Get this great remedy of any dealer. Small size 25 cents, large size 50 cents. . ’ Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, Ills.

Bileßetns Small. "Guaranteed to cure Billons Attacks. Sick. Headache and Cotiatlpallon. 40 in eac> bouie. Price 23c. lor sale by druggists. Picture “7,17, 70” ana sample dose free. J. F. SMITH & CO.. Proorietors, HEW YCFK . Coat _worlßL SUCKER The FISH BRAND SUCKER is warranted waterproof, and will keep you dry in tho hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddie* Beware ot imitations. Don t buv a coat if the “ Fish Brand” Is not on it. Illustra|ted Catalogue free. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. Ely’s Cream Balm WILL CURE KPATARaYoI (Price SoTentsTl y* / 1 Apply Balm into each nostril. 1 ILY BEOSw M Warren BU N. Y. SCzJ « FAT FOLKS REDUCED NX f( \ Mrs. Alice Maple. Oregon. Mo., writer X\( I i “My weight was 820 pounds, now it is 195, a reduction of 125 lbs.” For circulars address, with 6c., Dr.O.W.F.SNYDER. McVicker's Theatre. Chicago,UL PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE. I Send at once to John Seb \stian, G. T. A. C.. R. T. fc P. R. R., Chicago, and receive, postage paid, the slickest decked ever handled. TEN CENTS per pack, postage stamps, for oue or many. PATENTS! PENSIONS! Send for Inventor’s Guide,or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest Os I’enxion and Bounty Laws. PATRICK. O’FAKKELL. Washiuxton. 1). C. nEACNtSS ANO HEAD NOISES CORES Ijr Hrby Peak's In VAI bit E-irUuflhion*. U hisDers.’iexni. Successful when all Soil EDCE br F. Hocox. &W B’w<y» -N .Y. Write for book of proof* ■ ibC*

£TI fl vr • When vour family Physician has given vonr case will carry vou safely over the br.dce and restore you io permanent health. For sale by druggistyncc sl. 6 for |5. Bergen Asthma Cure Co.,PetersburgJnd JOHN WAN AM AKER, Postmaster-General of the United States, Is usually considered, and rightly so, one of the brightest business men in America, and when he writes to the Editor of Arthur’s New Home Magazine'as follows: • - Office of the Postmaster-General, Washington, D. C., Feb. 17, 1892. My Dear Mr. Reed : As your Magazine gets thicker, it gets brighter. Like the big wood fire on the hearth in my library when I pile more logs on. I knew Mr. Arthur very well from way back, but I doubt if he would know his old monthly since you’ve put out the dead wood, and put in so many more pages and departments, and taken on so many young and sparkling writers. If you kt ep on giving such good pictures you’ll have 200,000 subscribers. I fear advertisers will crowd you (for some things can be well advertised in magazines), but don’t drop any of the - reading pages, and don’t let a dry or dull line creep in. Don’t raise the price either, if you can help it, even if it is half the price of other no-better magazines. I congratulate you on doing what no one else has done in putting out two copies at the price that others charge for one. The old homestead and the young daughters’ new home can each have your Magazine without paying more than others charge for single copies of their fiublications. Your old friend, JOHN WANAMAKER. It should indicate to the average American citizen that under the new management it is at least awake, and when we know that they have more than trebled their circulation within the year, and that among the very best people of the land, we may admit, without further argument, it has been the journalistic success of Boston. One Dollar a Year. Sample Copy Ten Cents. Each copy contains r.n order for 35 cents worth McCall’s GloveFitting Patterns, so that every subscriber for a year gets $3.00 worth of Patterns Free. Send live two-ccnt stumps for.one. THE ARTHUR PUBLISHING COMPANY, Pbill, Pa. HPlk'i Remedy fbi Cstsrrh ta the Q AOB HIM Q J DRU. SIipHEN^ Lebanon,Ohio. Zm MBM F. W, N. U No. 4«—»3 ■ Sold by druggists or seal by mull. Pn When Writing to Advertisers, uy you « 50c. B.T. Hardline, Wsrreu Pa. H ise the Advartiieinent In thle paper. V .... . „ " '°Z ' i . ,r

“August - Flowbr” Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green’s August Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox, Defiance, O. • AT y I THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND bkr COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor taya It acta gently on the atomach, liver and kidneys, and la a pleasant laxative. Thia drink U made from herbs, and is prepared for usa ae easily as tex It la cal led LAKE’S MEDIGINE All driggisu Mil it at 50c and |1 p«r package. If y«u caanat nt ft. vend vonr aridreu far a frss tarn pl*. Ijuse’s Family ledieia* ■avaa the bawel* eaeh dav. In order to be healthy, this it aacaa> ury. Address 0 RAT OK. >. WOODWARD. Laßo“, N. Y. P ifr on I N n i r A d ’ i .=□ .=□ .=□ .z=j PRINTING OFFICE OUTFITS at reasonable rates and upon liberal terms. Writ> for Partici’Laes. FORT WAYNE NEWSPAPER UNION, Fort Wayne, Inti. The Oldest Medicine in the World is probably DR. ISAAC THOMPSON’S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER. This ariiue is a cardully prepared physician a proscription, ami has been in constant use for nearly a ceuturv. There are few diseases to which mankind are subject more distressing than pore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been tri-d without success Forall external Inflammation of the eyes it Is an infallible remedy. If the directions are followed it wilt never fail. We particularly incite the attent-on of phvsicians m its merits. For sale by all druggists- JOHN J . THOMPSON, SONS t CO., Troy, N. Y. Infliwp Illustrated Publications, « Mbs WITH MAPS, describing pT Minnef''ta,NorthDakota.Montana, | EBB ■■ldaho. Washington and Oregon, th* FREE GOVERNMENT Aa ■ and low price B A Blftaß 1 NORTHERN B £N||% PACIFIC R. R.IaPIIIUO O*The best Agricultural, Gratin® and Timber Lands now open to settlers. Mailed FREE. AddrWT UiAb. LAXRORS, Laid Com., N. F. R. R., fit. Paul, MUate raaaaaa«*«»«»4a*aosss*«ss»****«s*«> t • RIPANS TABU LES regulate J > the stun inch, liver and bowels, purl- > t blood, are safe and effectual ;Z ! )Clt »“«Heine known for bilioua- i JAP Aj/pess. constipation, dyspepsia, foul A” I breath, headache.mental depression,♦ v painful digestion, bad complexion.* Z and all diseases caused by failure of* • the stomach, liver or bowels to per- * • form their proper functions. Persons given to over- T • eating are benefited by taking one after each neal.x • Price, *2; sample, 15c. At Druggists, or sent by mail. X * RIFANS CHEMICAL CO.. 10 Spruce St., New York. J *•••••••••••••••••••< ■>••••••••••••> $40,000,000 Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in IS9I. Your invention may be valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and intelligent advice, Os charge, W. W. DUDLEY & CO., Solicitors of Patents, Pacific Bldg., 62 F St. N. W., Washington, D. C. Mention this paper. gARFIELDTES ■4l ofbad eattng;cu / sSick Headache; regtoregComplenon ;< urrsCond i pat ion, Saad far it— m axV buast, luzX Ugj. m BICYCLES Sib Bperh-load?rB Iglaß bcn-»,-T than else. sr - 50 - hl RIFLESS2.OO| WATCH ESflbeael IOS «.in SU. < .a,in«.U,a.