Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 49, Decatur, Adams County, 19 September 1895 — Page 3
A PARALYTIC CI'KED. »faGr an «. Reactionary So!d.er, and His Fathcr . Both Died of •"araly.,,. Y et the Third Generation M Cured The Method, Tikf rd ' l \ l '‘ e , i/eral ‘ i ' Mass. Wr'keA ? < ‘ rU ' lt frOm a ckar » Ware the '■' a ’“ B t 0 Wr Fra “ k T aid .m e • Well kD, ? n Boston one nieht* at 235 aal,iB B t on ttreet, ®ae n lfht lbout gjl to ret I " te "‘ e »er sought out Mr. Ware PtrtiJullVln'h U '' ' aTe the intere «‘“8 V ••Tk ■* 10 “ ls own way. while I B ?°’ k v Came very suddenly fa itt eff^. a ’ le T b,lt U nas n ”‘ las t”'S able to be a'b’ur. aC “ ™ Btate Th . h ’ me ln aT » ry nervous J h 7 M . U ‘' " asa second «“ d “«« leg Wer ? fl ’v " hi ' ll my ■'••ft arm and •eg were practically helpless, the" J »r^f r f n J? father ' wiM> "® s a soldier in P«r.lvsk” U M Da ? , War - final 'y of Pfral’sn. My lather died also of paralysis, eomphcated with other troubles, fatal 6 ei? had so:u ” boowledge of the fatal character of the disease which is ond".. ar l '? our faiuil - v - Af,er 'bo soer.'r >»tTa 1 l ?” k wamin 8. for, in all probability, a third would carry me off. A. most everything under the sun was ro>'.';“r 1< ’ nd > , ' d t 0 me aD,i 1 tried all the ics that seemed likely to do any food, but to no effect. „ *r> e °o- y fb'-ng I found that helped me was Dr. U UM am( ‘ p ink p jns _ anrt j , enSy * - "re that u it hadn't been for those pills 1 would have been dead years ago. i * st ‘P bare a slight reminder of the last attack six years ago. My left arm 1. not as strong as the other and my left toot drags a little, as the paralysis had the effect of deadening the nerves. But I can still walk a good distance, talk as ® a ;dy as ever, and my general health is •plendid. I am over seventy years old, although I am generally taken to be twenty years younger. •'The Pink Pills keep my blood in good condition and I believe that is why I am B °>o c’ a ' , h°ugh cheerfulness may help. I have thought of it a great many Dmes, and I honestly believe that the Pink 1 ills have saved my life.” Mr. M are has every appearance of a pe. ioctly healthy man. ami arrives at his othce promptly at 8 o'clock every morning, although he has reached an age when many men retire from active life. His experience is well known to a great many' people in Boston, where his constant cheerfulness has won him hosts of friends He thinks that both his father and his grandfather could have been saved if I‘ink Pills had been obtainable at that time. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They may be had of al! druggists or direct by mail from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Schenectady. b>. Y.. at 50c per box, or six boxes for $2.50. Embarrassing Popularity. At one time the Duke of Wellington’s extreme popularity was rather embarrassing For instance.on leaving home each day he was alwa . s Intercepted by an affectionate mob. who insistedon hoisting him on their shoulders and asking where they should carr him. It was not always convenient for him to say whe.-e he was going, so he used to say: ‘‘Carry me home, carry me home.’’ and so he used to be brought home half a do’en times a day a few minutes a ter leavnghisown door. A King's Plaything. I laying cards w re introduced into Europe by a crusader about 1390 to amuse Charles IV., King of France, who Had fallen into a gloomy state of mind bordering on madness. The hearts were originally called Caesars, and were designated to represent the ecclcsia.-tics.
Matilda Enhani, Columbia, Pa., says : y- - That 0 Bearing* & 1$ Down . > l : ceHr!£ t hsR- V- ■< 4 anddi«y,faint, t ; p ts. . 3 gasping attacks Ei vW\ I 8 left me as s 0 0“ £J ’&» i , IJS fs I began to n(f ')•„ • 'Jji la ‘‘' A"h-t £. [:.• ■ i.\ Vegetable r '/’>'? -f ‘’S Compound. I VJT ‘ ~' ' -■ k with woln t; troubles so long I thought I never could get well.” I waiter Baser t Co. LliqHsa, - Th- Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH GRADE k CC’CCASandCHOWLATES **>r*J) rOn this Continent hare received HIGHEST AWARDS from th? great 11 \ Industrial and Food K expositions L I Th IK EUnUPEAHD AMERICA. f‘s i I Caution: many imitations Ila I L? V*: of the labels and wrappers on our F .t i J ■ , i., consnmerashould make Hire g*■ J J- • ou- pfec- of msmi’scture, :n*iv. Dorrbester. Max* ’••■•xXSCy ie rr^Ul i each pAcMga SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. B iSli remember J ream XV/7 f) «™ vs&4j^ i)a M rliCQllS W eFST NECESSARY & ni.i K CEtEAu H ft bill. 9 FOOD ’ YOO ..«■”><«" J SrriendsOats| i FOR OLD AND YOUNG. ft t ALL GROCBR9 SELL (• l FRIEjgJDSL—j
THE CUP AGAIN OURS.' VALKYRIE HAD NO CHANCE AND DUNRAVEN KNEW IT. Beaten in the First Race, He Fouls the American Boat in the Second and Demurs to the Club’s Decis on— Sulks ami Refuses to Play. Story of the Fiasco. New York correspondence:
-GAIN the Amer- I | ica yachting cup ; stays on this side of the At- t lantic, and the . Britishers who have vainly tried since ISSI to wrest it from our Yankee boats may this time i add to discomfit- ! ure over failure ! chagrin attach- : ing to childish behavior of their champion. I n the first heat the j Defender ou t -
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~ sailed the Val-; kyrie so clearly on every point that it was confidently expected she would win three straight heats. Just before the start of the second heat, the British boat, possi- , bly not intentionally, but none the less in ■ violation of the racing rules, fouled the i Defender, and crippled her so that she I could not carry two of her sails. Vai- : kyrie crossed the starting line nearly two | minutes ahead of Defender; but crippled 1 as she was, that gallant yacht gave her I opponent such a chase that at the finish , there was but 47 seconds between them; ‘ she was more glorious in apparent defeat than she would liave been in a repetition of the first victory. But the club commit- I tee, conforming strictly to the rules, gave ’ the heat to Defender, and it is believed , this was what caused the remarkable ! display of pcttishnes<- on the part of Lord I Dunraven in Thursday’s contest. He, made no attempt to put his boat in racing trim, but loafed across the starting line with short canvas, and what was spread was slovenly. Hardly had ho made the start when he put about, and with the signal of acknowledged defeat flying, 1 laid his course for the club house. The I Defender sailed the course alone, and was awarded the cup. Dunraven alleges I as cause for his action that he was ham- I pered by excursion boats. The incidents ol Tuesday’s race are ! worth recital. Both boats wore stand- I ing for the line, wind on their starboard i beam and booms to port. Valkyrie was ! leading by fifty yards, fully 100 yards to '
I -A ' \ r ' f ?/ \\ A ’ AMERICAN YACHT DEFENDER. | ENGLISH YACHT VALKYRIE 111.
windward. The committee boat was about 200 yards ahcrul and somewhat to windward of Valkyrie, which was not at all close hauled. Defender was iu no position to interfere with Valkyrie. The start was close at hand, and if, as has been claimed by some of the Englishman’s apologists, Valkyrie was in danger oi crossing before gunfire it could have avoided doing so by luffing, which would have put it still more to windward of Defender and in a still more advantageous position. Instead, it bore broad off and run down on Defender so straight that to many spectators it seemed the English boat was going into the American. Then, by rounding up sharply on Defender's bow, Valkyrie’s boom was made to describe.an arc over Defender's deck, with the result that the' American’s starboard topmast J irKKm i i ''ll Ar- ■ '-I I' I' \ vWwii) wF --T-. ■?;, TBt: AMERICA < I i>—T-ii: trophy fop. WHICH THE DEFEXDKH AXD VALKVI'.IE 111. FOUGHT. shroud was torn fn>m its fastenings at the spreader. The essential objection to this maneuver is that Valkyrie had no business to make it. It was forbidden by the rules of the New York Yacht Club and the sailing regulations of nearly every yacht club in existence, besides being contrary to the rules of th,' road on the high seas. How, then, could Defender be blamed for the accident? It must be said again the effort to place the blame on Defender was at once ridiculous and dishonest As to Dunraven’s charge that the excursion boats interfered with him in Saturday’s race it is well founded, but he suffered less from their interference than Defender, so that except for tho expression of a querulous disposition he had nothing to complain of. In Tuesday’s race the interference was much less, but again Defender suffered as much if not more than Valkyrie. To sum up the evidence we have Dunraven apparently natisfied with
the conditions of Saturday’s race until Tuesday’s race had demonstrated beyond . a doubt his boat could not sail with De- | fender. Then he suddenly displays a querulous spirit while trying to back up a i dishonest claim as a means of escape from an inexcusable breach of the regulations i under which he was sailing. The conclusion, therefore, seems unavoidable that, being satisfied by Saturday’s race his boat could not win a race , from Defender,.and being chagrined at the prospect of returning a second time to England without scoring a single victory, he deliberately planned to foul and disable Defender so as to win at least one race of the series. Undoubtedly he foresaw the race would be protested and the protest would be decided against him and his boat disqualified, but that would ! give him the opportunity he was soekj ing—namely, to refuse to sail the last race of the series and thus throw up the contest. It is deplorable to be forced to this conclusion, but Dunraven’s conduct fully warrants it. Earl Dunraven gave an exemplification Thursday of the English sportsman that it not pleasant to American eyes. The I attitude of the sulker and the churl is not a creditable one under any circumstances; j in the field of international sport it is at once disgraceful and disgusting. By his action Lord Dunraven placed himself . squarely in that attitude, and forfeited . the respect of sportsmen the world over. I By crossing the line with bare topmast, “en deshabille” as it were, and at once ' putting about, he deliberately intended to insult the American people, but he has ' injured himself and the name of English sportsmen far more than he has affronted ’ his hosts. FALLS LIKE A TRAP. Grand Stand at Louisville Gives Way, Injuring Many. Many persons were injured Thursday ! night by the falling of the section of the ■ grand stand erected on the river front at Louisville, Ky., for the purpose of witnessing the fireworks in honor of the G. i A. IL The portion of the grand stand which 1 fell was about 400 feet long and sixty feet wide. It was the lower part, and only i elevated about two feet. Immediately behind this part were seats elevated eight to twenty feet. On the entire stand there i were 50,000 people. That no one was killed is one of the marvels. As the stand careened the planks were forced together, and the feet and legs of hundreds of spectators were caught as in a huge trap. 1 lie noise of the exploding bombs and the fireworks and the cheering I of the crowd was so great that only those 1 adjacent to the portion of the grand stand ; which fell could hear it. Had it become I generally known a panic would have foll lowed. As to the exact number of people ! injured it will probably never be known. ' Pour policemen who were standing at
that part of the stand say that saw from fifty to seventy-five persons taken away by friends in vehicles. They assisted at least ns many more to get back on the street behind the stand. All the ambulances and patrol wagons in ths city were summoned, and those only slightly injured were taken to the hotels at which they were stopping or to their homes. On the portion of the grand stand which fell there was a scene of horrifying confusion. Mr. Vreeland, assistant city editor of the Courier-Journal, was present when the accident occurred. “It was awful,” he said. “I saw men and women falling everywhere. Whether they were fainting from fright or pain I could not say. Then a panic followed. These who escaped being caught in the trap made a mad rush for the entrance, trampling over th >se' who had fallen, while those who bad been caught screamed for aid. Meantime the vast multitude on all sides continued to cheer and applaud the grand fireworks that continued to explode and light up the sky.” A number of Grand Ariny veterans who wore witnesses of >tlie acyjfient said they aided a large number of people who had been braised and injured about the legs to carriages and sent them to their hotels and homes. THE EARTH GAPED OPEN. Honduras the Beet* „f a Terrible Disaster, The earthquake in Honduras was the most frightful ca'amiiy of the kind that ever bcfj'l that country. The shocks commenced Sunday in the Y’ctapnn district, continuing all day at intervals, there being much damage. The city was filled by refugees from the mountain? and outlying villages. Tuesday morning the shocks ceased, quiet was restored and peuplo left town for their homes. At b o’clock that night heavy rumbling noises were heard, followed by a reappearance of the flames in the mountains,, which shot up several hundred feet Frightened people again flocked to town. At ■midnight the churth tower fell, carrying with it the roofs of three houses. Niue people were killed and eighteen wounded. Just before daylight another prolonged shock rocked the whole town as if it were a cradle. Many fleeing people were killed by rocks, which fell in a shower like a hail storm. Smoke from the mountains to the northwest rose to an enormous height, followed shortly after by the bursting of flames from the mountain sides and the throwing out of rocks and lava. Shortly after streams of molten lava set fire to a number of houses on the mountain side. Cattle grazing near by fled and were killed, being engulfed In the lava which continued flowing in Immense streams. It is reported at Yetapan that seventy-one houses were destroyed. One hundred and fifty-three dead bodies have been recovered and many more are missing. At Oovajuanca thirty-seven houses were destroyed. Ninety five bodies’ were recovered. At Cejuscat twenty-nine houses were destroyed, and eleven bodies were recur-' ered.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report PURE
TRIED TO DROWN THE SOUND. A£B<>arder’s Experience with an UnuIsually Vociferous Alarm Clock. An alarm clock, according to the habit of the beast, always goes off at the wrong time and in a thin-walled building it always succeeds in waking the whole house as well as its owner. The wear and tear upon the temper of the community is consequently greater than that caused by the combined efforts of a forgetful janitor and an intermittent elevator. A young man in an uptown house in Washington who has been in the habit of oversleeping hirnself, recently purchased an alarm clock of imposing proportions, and a bell like a lire engine gong. As usual, says the Post, the thing went off about 3a. m., and the owner, who had just fallen into a sound sleep, leaped wildly from his couch under the impression that the house was on tire or some other dire calamity had befallen. (leeupants of adjoining rooms followed suit, and the objurgationsheaped upon that unhappy alarm clock were both loud and long. A policeman on the beat blew his whistle under the impression that a riot was in progress, and the whole neighborhood was aroused. Meanwhile the owner of the clock tried to stitie it with the bed clothes, but still it hammered away vehemently and made more racket than ever. Finally, in despair he plunged the riotous timepiece into a jar full of water, where, at the expense of ruining its inner mechanism, its voice was stilled. The young man now hires a newsboy to wake him. Continuous Rails! Several methods have been employed to accomplish this result, which seems to be very desirable and especially advantageous where the track is used as one of the electrical conductors, as in the trolley system In one system the current from the trolley has been utilized for welding the rails. In St. Louis the method is pursued of uniting the rails at the joints by running a casting of iron around the joint, by means of a special mold and a portable furnace. The molds are heated up near the line of the track and a fire built around them, so that by the time they are to be put around the joints they are dull red. The iron is poured into the molds from a ladle. After pouring, they are allowed to remain ten minutes before being removed for use on another joint. The joint of every other section of track is cast in the morning and the remainder in the afternoon, this being dune to prevent, as far as possible, the severe strain of contraction, for when the joint is hot it heats the rail for some distance on each side, and consequently there is considerable expansion. In Tills Work-a-Day World Brains and nervous systems often give way under the pressure and anxieties of business. Paresis, wasting of tbe nervous tissues, a sudden and uuforewarned collapse of the mental and physical faculties are dally occurrences. as the columns of the dally press show. I-'ortify tbe system when exhausted against such untoward events with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, that most helpful medicine of the weak, worn out and infirm. Use it In rheumatism, dyspepsia, constipation and malaria. Worth the Admission. Farmer Makestraw -I say, Mariah, we must ail drive into Squashtown next week. A feller named Professor Flyhigh is goin’ up in a balloon, an’ then he’ll jump o ', with nothin’but an umbrella to hold him. Mrs. MakesXvaw -Is it a free exhibition.' ' ~ ' , ‘ „ Farmer —No. it will cost us 25 cent‘s apiece but if.that umbrella ain't no stronger than most that's sold nowadays, we’ll git the worth of our money.—Xew York Weekly. Tickets to Chautauqua Free will be offered to all ptlrchasers of Njacara Fails Excursion tickets via the Nickel Plate road, September 21. Toronto SI.OO extra. The heart ordinarily beats about seventy times a minute, und throws i about twfo ounces of blood at eabli con-. traction. | Home-Seekers Excursion During Sept, and Oct. Agents of the Nickel Plate road will be pleased to furnish, upon application, complete informatioij relative to these excursions. Bear in mind the elegantly equipped solid through trains via the ixipular route, Wall street is a poor stock pasture, it is a Fact That Hood’s Sarsaparilla has an unequaled record of cures, the largest sales in the world, and cures when all others fail. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Bicod Purifier Prominently in the public eye to-day. $1; I six for $5. Be sure to get Hood's. k-l ’ c Pi 11 c act harmoniously with rtUUU o ill lb Hood's Sarsaparilla. J
“Brevity Is the Soul of Wit.” Good Wife, You Need SAPOLIO
Suggestive. Undoubtedly many talented writers have to wait long for financial success. But it is well for an ambitious author to face the question whether his failure to make a living by his pen is a re- , suit of the poor quality of his work. French philosopher ha- been much hai ns-ed by the complaints of a wouldi be writer whose talent* were certainly not in the direction of literature. One day the young man made a particularly discontented speech about the i poverty of writers. ‘■Yes,” re.oined the philosopher, ‘‘there are as many poor writers as j there are—poor writer. Think of it, I my friend.” And his friend thought of it clearly enough to adopt another profession. SI.OO Added To the low Hates offered by th6 Nickle Plate road, Sept. 21st, to Niagara Falls, ! will procure a ticket to Toronto. Ask 1 Agents for the sche lule of Niagara Falls Excursion train. Very young people imagine that having a big ambition is all they need to become great. Halt's Catarrh Cure ; Is taken internally. Price 75 cents. Il’ there is anything which will make a young man query whether evolution is not a failure it is Vo see a ! pretty girl kiss a pug dog. ! Agents of the Nickel Plats ruad are in ' possession of information which will enable them to quote special excursion rates to points in the Northwest, West, Southwest, ami South, for tickets sold during ‘ September and October. Further informaI lion may be .secured by applying to local | agents of that popular low rate line. The man who has no friends generally enioys himself by breaking up the friendship of others. * The Last of the Season. September 21, the Nickel Plate read will run a Niagara Falls Excursion. Ask agents for time of train and rates. Honor to whom honor is duo—Let it i candidly be said that some book agents are bigger lores than others. ' The Nickel Plate road will run a Ni- ' agara Falls Excursion. September 21. Ask J agents for information. After a man reaches the age of 25, ! he nover gets through regretting the i things he did in the past. Piso’s Cure for Consumption lias no j equal as a Cough medicine.—F. M. Abbott. . Stß Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 1893. — Very few women ever make ice crea.n witho t sending their neighbors a bowl full of it. The Nickel P'ate road offers a splendid I opportunity fui visiting the AVest, VorthI west, and Southwest, by authorizing excursion rates to points in that territory, ou Sept. 2-lth. Ask agents for further information. Many a man rides to a race track I and walks back. Mm. Winslow's S.HiTHtNG SXRVF r->r Chiktrsn totalling: soitena tUe gums, reauees lufianinmlion, alias a palu, curua wind colic. ceuta a bottle. You have probably noticed that sober men seldom light. Remember the Nickel Plate road has authorized a low rate Home-seeker-Excursion to points in the West, Northwest and Southwest, on Sept. 24th. Enquire of agents for particulars*. Don’t bet is the only straight tip.
£ OMEN’S FACES —like flowers, fade and wither with time; the bloom of the rose is only known to the healthy woman's cheeks. The nervous strain caused by the- 'ailments and pains peculiar to the sex, and the labor /| aU( i worry of rearing a family, can often be traced by the lines in the woman’s face'. Dull eyes, the sallow or wrink’.ed face and those " frMings of weakness” have their rise in the derangements and.irregularities peculiar to women. The functional derangements, painful disorders, and chronic weaknesses of women, can be cured vviLh Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. For the young girl just entering womanhood, for the mother and those about to become mothers, and later in “the change of life,” the “Prescription” is just what they need; it aids nature in preparing the system for these events. It’s a medicine prescribed for thirty years, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y. I EWIS’9B°oLYE SAX B Powdered and Perfumed, f" PATEN FED.) ®' ’ The ,stron<7«st and purest Lye inadei, r otber Lye, it being a fine /AP° wd,ar packed in a can with **reinova 1h lid, th® contents ht« always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 30 minutes icithout boiling. It is the beat for cleansing waste-pipes, W w di si iif outing sinks, closets wushsL ing bottles, p&inte trees etc. PENNA. SALT Gen. Successfully Prosecutes Claims Ixßte Principal Examiner U. S. Pension ihire-m 3 yrs in last war. 15 adj'-’dicatins claims, atty since, lUAWVK?* twSSTi. >uro relief i ctytu •
Brvr THE WOULD. /wbß VVcr AwabAAu 'ox A 7 \ oYxti’OT'ess Vws - % / VttaXvw vs Vtu'tY nwrwaXUA.'V
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THE Risixqsci STOVE POLISH 1. cakea for genera blacking of a stove THE SUN PASTS POLISH far « q k after Tinner sr.me, applied and polished with a aibth.
Morse Bros., Props.. Canton, Mam*. VjS. A* ii-’ ' KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of tbe pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, became it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug' gists in 50c and fl bottles, but it is man. ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, who«e name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of r igs, and being well informed, you will not accept auy substitute if offered. e-— 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 foi everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than ha t the sickness in ths world,especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book, free at your druggist’s,or write B,F. Allen Co. ,^C&na 9 . St., New York. Pills,loC and 25c a box. Annual sales more than I.fiaO.OOO boxes. --■rr. J '.MM—Mag/ t TEXAS VIA Do you know that the farmer haa more opportunities for making money in than almost any State in this great country? Interest yourself in the subject and see how true this is. REiEMBER, THE WSB’SH Is the Great Steel Roll Highway to all pbint< West and souQiwefct. lor Raree. roti tee. n upu e and general informati >n. call v.pon x,r address the nearest Agent of the WaM&sb System, us write to R G. BUTLER. D. P. A., Detroit, Mich. ' F. H. TRISTRAM. C. P. A.. Pittsburg, Pa. P. E. DOMBAUGH, I', ar T. A.. Toledo. Ohio. R. G. THOMPSON. P. & T. A , Fort Wavne, lad J. HALDERMAN. M. P. A., 2i-l ( lark St., Chicago TH j. m. McConnell p. & t. a., dui . ette, imi. G. D. MAXFIELD, D. p A. Indianapolis, Ind 0. S. CRANE. G. P. \ st. Louis. Mo. JI;.- ■ Dennis Bernhard, whq lives at No. USS Jefferson avenue, Bzjoklyn, N. Y., writes under date of May 23,1595: “Having heard of your Tabules, and having suffered for years from dyspepsia an l d biliousness, I thought I would try them. 1 have been using them now for about six weeks and they have given me great relief.” Mr. Bernhard keeps a Bowery lodging house and the air is often very bad. He says that a Tabule takeu now and then keeps him from getting sick in that air. Rlpans Tabules are sold by drufiglsts. dr by mail !t th»‘prica (50 cents a box» is scat v» she Ripaas t’Leuilcal Company, No. lo Spruce Street, New ¥■ rk. Sample vial. 10 cents. CAAYF'yVO TbotiiAfi P. SimpMm,WasMnstnn, L E■ 1 i O D - G - utt 8 uutfj Patent ot>-’ ■ tained. Write for Inventor's Guide. F. W. N. U. • - N ». 3 s 93 When writing to Advertisers say yo« •aw the advertisement iu thia paper. gga •' 7 . * L’ MB ha Best Cough Syrup. Totes Good. Us* Rg t . E In time. Sold by druggist-
