Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 26, Decatur, Adams County, 11 April 1895 — Page 7
Spring Medicine
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Or, in other words. Hood's Sarsaparilla, ' is a universal need. If good health is to be expected during the earning season the blood must be purifi-d now. Ail the i germs of disease must be destroy ed and the bodily health built up. Hood’s Sar •aparilla is the only true blood purifier I prominently in the public eye to-day. Therefore Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best medicine to take in the spring. It will help wonderfully in cases of weakness, nervousness, and all diseases caused by to pure blood. Remember,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the Public Eye To-Day
The Ant-Lion. B In constructing its snare the antg, lion begins by pushing itself hackwards in a circular direction so as to k trace a shallow furrow varying from p' one to three inches in diameter. A •ucces-ion of tl ese furrow-, is formed J * ® n ‘ "’ithin the other until a funnel•haped pit is at last constructed with I very loose sides. The insect then inS a.. closes itself at the bottom of the trap in the sand, leaving its enormous aws K alone exposed and widely extended. Ants are distinguished for an insatiag. ble curiosity, and should one spy the ca ity when it is abroad on the out- ■ loos for food it would never hesitate to approach the edge. The treacherous •and gi.es way an i the helpless thing goes rolling down into the jaws o. the ant lion. | Till: Sultan of Turkey is sendingo it Mohammedan missionaries to Africa, at hi-own expense.to check the Christian advance in that < ontinent.
NO SECRET IN THIS WOMAN’S CASE. Mr. Campbell Wishes Her Letter Published so that the Truth Muy Be Known. tSrWSAL TO OCR LAST BBADrM ] S Os the thousands of letters received trom women all over the world by Mrs. Pinkham, not one is given to the public Ull 'css by the w ish of the writer. Thusabi Jy solute confidence is \-w- r established be--7Z tween Mrs. ...j Pinkham and her / k/A \ armT r v'tY ' patients; Aand she A freely soWL lieits a let'dr 3 ter from I v’-/- TF C—- any wo ’ "▼£ , sv /' / man. rich or poor, who is in ill health or ailing. - In the case of Mary E. Campbell, of Albion, Noble Co., nd., her suffering I Was so severe, her relief so suddenly realised, and her gratitude so great, that she ' Wishes the circumstances published, in the hope that others may be benefited thereby, bhe says: — f My physician told me I had dropsy and falling of the womb. My stomach and bowels were so bloated 1 could not get a full breath. My face and hands Were bloated badly. 1 had that dreadful be iring-down pain, bai kache, palpitation of the heart, and nervousness. [' *• One of my physicians told me I had •omething growing in my stc.maeh: and th medicine that I took gave me relief on.y for a short time. 1 thought! must di.. I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it worked like a charm. After taking the first bottle I <• mid walk across the street, now 1 am well. I advise all my friends to take it.” —Mary E.Campbkij., Albion, Noble Co, The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBU3Y, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is alwavs experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cute is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes •hooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tabiespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. DIRECTIONS far uting CREAM BAI.M. - Apply ■kW*BAL*x| a particle < f the Balm well tip into the nortrih. After MjtWftVEg a moment draw strong ■t, breath through the nose. Use three times a day. after meals preferred. and before retiring. CATARRH ELY’S CREAM BALM %>pens and e'eanses the Saul Paee.g- f Allays Pain and Inti amination. Heals the Sores. Protects the Meufbrane trom Colds. Regtoreu the Eenat-s of Taste and Swell The Balm is quickly abeoibed and gives relief at once. A particle If applied into each nostril and Is agreeable. Price 50 r ent-., at dmggintn or by mail. ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street. New York. four kingdoms Agents, male a”d female, everywhere for a quick selling article. Prvtect-d by the U.S.GnVt. Particu. tars free. J. R. Hunter & Co., Arcade, Clnt’i, O. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothiwo Snr? for Children teething; so it-ns the gurus, reduces inflammation, aUavß pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle.
“My little girl has always had a poor appetite. I have given her Hood's Sarsaparilla. and sincejl have given it to her she has had a good sppet ite and she looks well. I have been a great sufferer with headache and rheumatism. I have taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I am now well and have gained in strength. My husband was very sick and all run down. I decided to give him Hood's Sarsaparilla and he began to gain, and now he has got so he works every day.’’ M ns. Annie Dunlap, 355 E. 4th St., S. Boston, Mass,
A Sneezing Corpse.
When Macready was a young man, classical drama in blank verse held the stage. One of these was “ .-Emilias, or the Fall of Rome.” .Emilius was played by an actor named Pops, and the exigencies of the play required him to be brought on the stage on a bier, supposedly dead. Flavius, acted by Macready, spoke an oration over the body. Pope was an inveterate snuff-faker, and just before going on one night he borrowed a pinch from one of the stage attendants. He was accustomed to only a mild invigorant, but the borrowed tobacco was the fiery Welsh snuff. Pope was duly brought on the stage by the usual army of “supers” and Macready began: “Thou last of the Romans, thy bleeding country calls thee in vain. Time and fortune may do their worst. Since thou ” Here, to Macready's astonishment, Pope’s face began to work, and then came a sneeze from the dead Roman that shook the flies. Macready started as if shot, and the audience began to titter, but he went on: “Since thou hast left us we are encompassed by enemies who ” Here the corpse began to show animation, and then came a succession of sneezes. Boiling over with rage, and in a voice heard all over the house, Macready muttered: “I )rat your blood, sir, why don’t you do sneezing off the stage:” The audience shouted, and the scene ended by the corpse stalking off to find and kill the man who gave him the snuff. Tools ot the Pyramid-Builders, A two years' study at Gizeh has convinced Mr. Flinders Petrie that the Egypt<*.n stoneworkers of 4,<XK) years ago had a surprising acquaintance with what had been considered modem tools. Among the many tools used by the pyramid-builders were both solid and tubular drills and straight and circular saws. The drills, like those of to-day, were set with jewels (probably corundum, as the diamond was very scarce,) and even lathe tools had such cutting edges. So remarkable was the quality of the tubular drills and the skill of the workmen that the cutting marks in hard granite give no indication of wear of the tool, while a cut of a tenth of an inch was made in the hardest rock at each revolution, and a hole through both the hardest and softest material was bored perfectly smooth and uniform throughout. Os the material and method of making the tools nothing is known. —London Exchange. FlammaKlON says the world is cooling off, and .hat Europe has lost two degrees this century. Ask Aid, It you are troubled with malaria, constipation. biliousness, kidney trouble or dyspepsia. of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, and it will be speedily forUseeming. Nervousness, loss ot appetite and sleep, and a loss of vigor, are also remedied by this restorative. Pbya'.elnana of eminence Indorse it, a val liable confirmation of the verdict of tile people and the press. Take it regularly. A Touch o r Romance, The first recorded instance of the forgery of a Hank of England note has a singular touch of romance about it. The forger was a linen draper at Stafford. named Vaughan, who, in the year 1758, employed several workmen to engrave different parts of a twenty pound note, and when a dozen bail been printed off he deposited them with a young- lady to whom he was engaged to be married as a proof of his wealth: but the imposition was discov ered, and Vaughan was hanged. SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its siaues, and that is catarrh. Halts tatarrh < ure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a const!tutienal disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh cure is taken internally, acting directly vpon the blood and mucous surfaces of lhe system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in aoing its work. Tbo proprietors have so much faith in its curativo powers that tbev offer One Hundred Dollars fer any case that it fails to cure Send for list of Testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. (ST’Sold by Druggists. 75c. ORANGES are crown in every continent in the world. One Box Did the Business. Harrison Thurston, of North Conway, N. H., writing under date of Nov. 2h 1893, to the Sterling Remedy Co., of Chicago, says that his brother was completely cured of smoking and chewing tobacco by using one box of No-to-bac, and is now recommending No-to-bac to tobacco users. One cubic foot of pure gold weighs 1,203 pounds. The face of humanity displays fewer pimples than formerly. Reason—Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. “Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c
INDIANA STATE NEWS. OCCURRENCES DURING THE PAST WEEK. Ab Interesting Summary of the More Important Doing* of Our Neighbors—Wedding* and I»eatha—Crimes. CaMualties and General Newt Note* of the State. tfooftier Happening* Mbs. N ei.i.e Dt-xx, 82, Shelbyville,was fatally stricken with paralysis. Cost of maintaining tin-Prison South for the month of March was $11,100.50. Catholic K. of P. at Terre Haute will not obey the ]«>pe’s order to renounce the lodge. Mbs. llabkv Mt buy, Madison, has a pair of steel-rimmed spectacles over 2DC years old. White clay, suitable for making crockery and queensware, lias been found near Madison. Infant daughter of Isaac Bronston, Lebanon, fell into a tub of water, and was dead when found. Mbs. Jennie Hixes, Sheridan, took chloral for heart trouble and got too big a dose, she will die. Brokers refuse to buy Jeffersonville's Jfki.OiO bond issue because the bonded debt would exceed the legal indebtedness of the city. Insurance compaines affected by the Anderson gas explosion, two weeks ago. will sue the Anderson gas company so: $50,000. Prisoners at Marion have been planning to escape. One prisoner betrayed the scheme, and received his liberty as a reward. Eight steel saws were found. “Miss Mai.inda Uabc.fr, aged 70 years, who died in Harrison county, last week, had never been outside the county, nor visited the county seat until the week before her death. June 18, 1889, Gertflrde Alpaugh, a handsome young woman of Andrews, put a slip of paper in a bottle and hurled it in the foaming Wabash. The slip asked the finder to write to her. Two days ago a young man of Lockport found the bottle and sent Miss Alpaugh the requested missive. While Frank Knotts, an employe of the plate-glass factory at Elwood, was assisting to carry a large plate of glass from the horse to the bench it suddenly broke and a large segment fell on him, ripping open his scalp from the top of his head to the base of the neck, indicting a dangerous wound. Charles Cassidy of Jeffersonville, aged 71, was struck by a suburban train of the Pennsylvania road and fatally injured. Cassidy was deaf and failed to here the approach of the train. He was one of the oldest steamboatjengineers in the country, and retired two years ago on account of his hearing. He leaves a wife. The famous Howard county ditch case of Lee vs. Rarey that has been in court about ten years was tried again last week, at Kokomo, resulting in a verdict for ths plaintiff. The litigants are wealthy residents of Howard township, living on adjoining farms. The contention is over a small ditch. The costs of litigation have already exceeded the value of both farms ami there is no telling when the contest will stop. The case will again be sent tc the Supreme Court. Department Command >r Shiveley, of the G. A. R., requests a correction of the statement that he intended removing the headquarters of the order from ludianpolis to Wabash. He states that he had appointed Adjutant-general Smock to serve as adjutant-general during his incumbency, and the headquarters are located at the home of the Adjurtant. The banner and colors of the State organization were taken to V abash, but he wishes it understood there will be no change otherwise. Tin: ladies of the First Presbyterian Church of Kokomo, caused a slight commotion in religious circles by giving a minstrel preformance in the opera house. Almut thirty of the most prominent church members appeared on the stage in burnt cork and gave an excellent entertainment netting the church a handsome sum. Rev, R. (1. lioscamp, the pastor, was consulted by the more diffident ladies, who hesitated aliout applying the cork. He eased their consciences by the jocular remark that some of them appeared on the street daily with’powdered face, and even wore them to ehueh. and he saw no difference from a moral standpoint whether the powder used was white or black. Patents have been awarded to the following residents ot Indiana: Edward T. A. Akass. Indianapolis, extension grille fret work: David E. Brentlanger, assignor of one-half to J. R. West, Gas City, measuring device: Malcolm Dickerson, assignor of one-half to J. F. Curtice, Fort Wayne, electrical transformer; Ada Harris. Indianapolis, hair straightener: Frederick A. Hetherington, Indianapolis, assignor to W. Schmidt, Chicago, dough dividing machine: John 11. Hoober, Kentland, cultivator: William Huberts, Lafayette, tile ditching machine; Jacob C. Hunsinger and W. Ensuiiiiger, assignors of one-third to F. H. Batt, Laurel, poultry crate: John T. Smith, Kokomo, depurator; George Southard, Indianapolis, envelope: Frank Stanley, Libert? pneumatic straw-stacker; John H. Welch, Fort Wayne, self-measur-ing oil pump. Governor Matthews has announced the names of the trustees for the four insane hospitals of the State. Os the twelve insane hospital trustees named by the Governor Rix aro Republicans anti six Democrats. The Republicans are in the majority on the boards of the Northern and Eastern hospitals and the Democrats will have control of the attairs of the Central and and Southern hospitals. Following are the newly appointed tiustees: Central Hospital—John Osterman, Indianapolis; J. L. Carson, Fairland, Shelby county; D. IL Davis, Knightsville, Clay county. Northern Hospital—Dennis Uhl, Logansport: Jacob J. Todd, Bluffton; Re;* E. F. Scott. Bass Lake, Starke county. Eastern Hospital — Silas E. Hate, Ceneva, Adams county: E. Gurfbey Hill. Richmond: AV. D. Page. Fort Wayne. Southern Hospital—W. M. Swornstedt, Evansvill; S. P. Boyd, Washington; Wm. T. Mason,Rockport. Jefferson Calhoun,alarm hand,aged SO years, met his death at Peru by the running away of his team, which bad seared at a train of cars, and as he could not manage them he jumped from the wagon landing on his head and shoulders, which caused his death. Farmers in Laporte County say a large part of the wheat is killed there. The cold weather and the absence of snow from many of the fields resulted in weakening the roots and the dry weather and winds ot March completed the work so the entiri tops and roots of the wheat are dead. It is now thought that much of the wheat wih be plowed up and put in spring crops.
$ : J You want the Best : ( e * Royal Baking Powder never disappoints; 1 never makes sour, soggy, or husky food; £ X never spoils good materials ; never leaves 5 £ lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake ; while J * ail these things do happen with the best 2 of cooks who cling to the old-fashioned e methods, or who use other baking powders. J j e J If you want the best food, ROYAL J £ Baking Powder is indispensable. e F ROYAL BAKING POWOER CO., 10S WALL 6T.. NEW-yORK.
A Horse on Mark Twain. Mark Twain tells thus the story of his first great London banquet, at which, by the way, there were eight or nine hundred guests. He admits that not having been used to that kind of dinner, he felt somewhat lonesome. The lord mavor, or somebody, read out a list of the chief guests before he began to eat. When he came to prominent names the other guests would applaud. “I found the man next to me rather a good talker. Just as we got up an interesting subject there was a tremendous clapping of hands. I had hardly every heard such applause before. I straightened up and set to clapping with the rest, and I noticed a good many people round about me fix their attention on me, and some of them laughed in a friendly and encouraging way. I moved about in my chair and clapped louder than ever. ‘Who is it?' 1 asked the gentleman on my right. 'Samuel Clemens, better known in England as Mark Twain,’ he replied. I stopped clapping. The life seemed to go out ol me. 1 never was in such a fix in all my days.” A Lightning Artist. “Lightning sketches” have long been familiar performances at public entertainments. As to more artistic work it is recorded that Sir Edwin Landseer once painted a picture within an hour, says the Blackburn Times. One night recently T. B. Hardy, the marine painter, performed a much more remarkable feat before a large company of brother artists, literary men, and members of the dramatic profession. He had before him on an easel a piece of paper measuring about three feet by four. It was already stretched and framed. On this he drew with charcoal “The Pool,” below I.ondon bridge, showing the tower in the background and barges, ships, and steanyirs coming up the river on the floodtide. Aerial and wave effects were Obtained by rapid rubbing with the hand or doth. The whole picture was completed in ten minutes and yet so good was it that many of the company were eager to buy, and eventually it was sold for twenty guineas. The money was given to a masonic charity. Bairn of Gilead. The real Palm of Gilead is the dried juice of a low shrub, it is said, that grows in Syria. It is very valua! le and scarce, for the amount of balm yielded by one scrub never exceeds 60 drops a day. According to Josephus, the Balm or Balsam of Gilead was one of the presents given by the Queen of Sheba to King Solomon. The ancient Jewish physicians prescribed it evidently for dyspepsia and melancholia. During the last two centuries the wealth of Great Britain has increased fortyfold.
4 Other remedies may ▲ tST. JACOBS OIL ! j H’iZf cure Sprains, Bruises, and a Backache J HAVE YOU FIVE OR MORE COWBI Mg. MW 1 t_X.. -X. = If bob “ Baby ” Cream Separator will earn i ts cost for , you every year. Why continue an inferior system another year at so great a loss? Dairying is now the only profitable feature of Agriculture. Properly conducted it always pars well, and must pay you. You . 11 Separator, and you the REST, the ST Baby.” All styles and capacities. Prices, $75. R upw&id. Send for sew Catalogue. H . JBX . THE DE l*¥*L SEPARATOR CO.. Branch Office,; General Offic i: ELGIN. ILL. 74 CORTLAND! ST.. NEW YORK, “He that Works Easily Works Successfully.” Tis Very Easy to Clean House With SAPOLIO
j ismi PBICE. SISQ 9 The AERMOTOR ANTI-FREEZINC THREE-WAY K FORCE PUMP has few castings to break, has a very large air chamber, has a very large spout opening, has a windmill shut-off lever attached, and can be furnished by any dealer this side of ths Rocky Mountains ■ at the above price, Os conrse, it is better to go to an Aermotor agent for them. It is always better to go to an Aennotor agent for any- thing you may want which he handles. As a rule be is a first-class, live, reliable, wide-awake fellow; that is the reasonhe is an Aermotor agent. It is doubtful it in our entire list of thousands of agents, you can find one slow, stupid, behind-the- fellow. We furnish also a SPECIAL AERMOTOR FORCE PUMP AT $4.50, BETTER THAN USUALLY SOLD AT $8 OR $lO. Send for our Pump Catalogue. Buy nothing but an Aermotor Pump, and do not pay more than Aermotor prices for it We protect the public. furnish it good goods at low prices. We have established twenty branch houses in order that it may get goods cheaply and promptly You consult your own interests by insisting on not only Aermotor prices but Aermotor goods at Aermotor prices. Be sure and see our offtf next week of a S4O Feed Cutter at fro, AERMOTOR CO., Chicago.
Good Stock. A farmer who does not lielieve in thoroughbred stock should be consistent, and refuse to a cept improved machinery. tile drainage, the silo, the separator and creamery, and all the other things which have aided in making agriculture a better occupation than it was THE EVOLUTION Os medicinal agents is gradually relegating the old-time herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing into general use the pleasant and effective liquid laxative. Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy see that it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all leading druggists. A new telegraphic invention will convey 2,000 words a minute over the wires. Not So Convenient. Physicians indorse Ripnns Tabules by prescribing the remedies they cuntniu, but in form not so convenient, inexpensive and accurate as in Ripaus Tabules. First impressions are lasting. The first impiession of what you have to sell is gained through advertisement. Ptso's Cure is the medicine to break up children’s Coughs and Colds. Mrs. M. G. Blunt, Sprague, Wash.. March 8, ’94. Every year 2,200 vessels are lost at sea.
You will ride M a Bicycle W Os course you will ride. All the W X world will—fashion, pleasure, X business — men, t women, children. Vs It takes a while K »». ' ' sometimes for the y world to recog- M 0/ nize its privileges; /1 but when it: does X J I adapts itself W 'A/Wreai:: A) promptly. There- (?? tAfic fore, you who are . . in the world will W ride a bicycle—a gg W COI.VAIRIA W S 2. bicycle if you desire the best the SIZ t/ world produces; a Hartford, the k/ W next best, if anything short of a W k 2. Columbia will content you. NZ k/ Columbia*. $ 100; Hartfords, L/ SSo s6o; for boys and girls, SSO. POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn, xa Boston, New York. Chicago. -San Fr incikcn, Providence, Buffalo. A Catalogue—comprehensive, beautiful—at any agency fl ee, or by mail for two2-cent stamps. The book tells of all the new Columbian and Hartford* TAPE-WORM ’ mm Mire Cure within 2 hourtt. No inconveniences, ‘.a do*, (pr u S 2 ruaranteeel tiulficJenL GUAKANI KEMkIiY (0., Dolgeville, N. Y
BEST IN THE WORLD. VVox itire'oAAq ami W \ c'ftea’&pesa x\\\s - A I/ \ xaXrn \xu\vi utvrwaWeA Al/ @THE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH :a rakes for general blacking of a stove. THE SUN PASTO POLISH for a cuiclr after dinner mine, applied and pol* ished with a cloth, llurso Bros., Prop*., Canton, Maas., U.S.A* W. L. Douglas ft's CUAC IS THE BEST. Wk) VnUtriTFOR AKIN», gCORDOVAW, tENCHAELNAMCLLEO CALF. *3*9 Fine CALfiltoNcria *3.SO POLICE, 3 SOLES. ?60 »2.WORKINu W , -EXTRA FINE!>L 7 5BOYS‘SCHO2LSHOE1 LADIES--3's2s'°BfsTp’oNGol*.0 I*. SEND FuR CATALOGUE iV-L-• D O L • OL->Kja* BROCKTOHJAASS. Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for the money. Thev equal custom shoes in style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—-stamped on sole. From Si to $3 saved over other makes. if vour dealer cannot sudp! y you we can. Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples, loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things so» everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in the world.especially of women; and it can al J be prevented. Go by the book .free at your druggist’s.or write B.F. Allen Co. ,365 Can St., New York. Pills, and 25$ a box. Annual sales more than 6,000.000 boxes. GOOD '' Kitchen complete without uur I ROTARY BISCUIT AND /dSU; A. J CAKE CUTTER Samples of Round 01 Square mailed for Ifi ct*., or the two for ‘*s < ts. AGENTS WANTED. They Sell AT SIGHTI SSDWAY MFC. CO., 32 to 40 South JefTerson st.. CHICAGO, ILI* (Pieawe mention this paper.) ■""TEXAS" VIA Do you know that the farmer has more opportunities for making money in TEXAS than almost any State in this great country? Interest yourself in the subject and see how true this is. REMEMBER, THE W&BASH Is the Great Steel Rail Highway to all points West and Southwest. For Rates, routea, mapa, and general informali m. call upon or addreaa the nearest Agent of the Wabash System, of write to R G BUTLER. D- P A„ Detroit. Mich. F. H. TRISTRAM. C. P. A., Pittsburg. Fa. P. E. DOM 8 A UGH, P. &T. A Toledo. Ohio. R. G. THOMPSO\ P. &T. A.. Fort Wayne. lu< J. HALDERMAN. M. P. A , 201 Clark St., Chicago, 111 J. M. McCONNELL P. AT. A .Lafayette, Ind. G. D. MAXFIELD. D. P. A., Indianapolis. Ind C. S. CRANE. G. P. AT A.. St. Louis, Mo. THE SALES LADY, pi v L / \ Often in the morning There comes a feeling Os weariness, indescribable: Not exactly ill, Nor lit to go (o the store, Rut too near well Tu remain away. One • Ripans • Tabule Taken at night. Before retiring. Or just after dinner. Has been known To drive away that Weariness- for months. And, would you believe it> There are THREE DOZEN IN A BOX. PATENTS. Examination aa4 Advice as to Patentability of In▼ention. Send for Inventors’ Guide, or How to Gel a Patent Patbicx O'Farbblu Washington. D. Q F. W. N. U. - - - - No. 15—95 When Writing to Advertisers, say you saw the Advertisement in this paper.
