Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 February 1884 — Page 7
THE UNAPPROACHABLE.
Some Hadaoniaa Opinions of Skakspesn. The following extracts are selected from the “Lectures on Shakspeare," by Henry N. Hudson, and published by Baker & Scribner in 1848. They are characteristic utterances of the most accomplished Skakspeariat that thin oountrv has produced: Shakspeare saw too deeply into everything to feel contempt at anything. The elec trio spark of wit lurks in his very tears, and even his sighs, while coming out, instinctively wreathe themselves into jokes. Perhaps Shakspeare’s greatest glory, both as a poet and as a man, is that he was no respecter of sedts, or parties, or persons, but simply a teller of the truth. . Shakspeare not only knows what we all know, but feels what we all feel, and utters forth the feeling with the same fidelity that he does the knowledge*. Shakspeare’s all-gifted and all-grasp-ing mind greedily devoured and speedily digested whatever could please his taste, or enrich his intellect, or assist his art. For innate, unconscious purity of boul we need not look for Shakspeare’s parallel in literature. In this respect, as in respect of genius itself, he is like the sun in the heavens, alone and unapproachable. From the first nature had evidently designed and fitted Shakspeare to be a sort of mediator btween herself and her children; to bring her down to us and raise us up to her. His genius was like sunlight, which, always taking the precise form and color of the object it shines upon, makes everything else visible, but remains itself unseen. i Shakspeare has sometimes delineated downright villains and sensualists, but he has never volunteered to steal the robes of heaven for them to serve the devil in without offending decency. Shakspeare’s facilities to the words and actions of men much the same as his senses would be to their physical structure, who should perceive their whole character in their thumb nails. His thoughts seem to have warbled themselves out in music spontaneously; the words seem to have known their places and to have arranged themselves in harmonious numbers of their own accord. . He (Shakspeare) is emphatically the eye, tongue, heart of humanity, and has given voice and utterance to whatever we are and whatever we see. On all scores, indeed, he is the finest piece of work human nature has yet ajiiieved. In Shakspeare’s hands thought truly incarnates itself in words, and words become alive with the spirit of thought; into the body of language he breathes the breath of intellectual life so that the language itself becomes a living soul. His love of the true, the beautiful, and the good was simply too deep and genuine to be listening to its own voice, or carrying a looking glass before itself to gaze at its own image; apd such is ever the case with souls that are smitten with such objects. Not venturing, perhaps, to undertake the drudgery, he almost unconsciously achieved the divinity of his art. With the skeleton of a drama before him, which another could furnish as well, he could clothe it with- flesh and inform it with life which none could furnish but himself.
A Matter of Principle.
“Say, Uncle Mose,” said young Jake Snow, as he met the old man; “who * am dis aunty-monop’ly I heerd some ob de folks talkin’ about ?” “Hush, chile, doan go roun’ ’sposen’ yer ign’renoe like dat. Aunty*monop’ly ain’t nobody but jes w’at sum people b’leeves.” “How’s dat?” “W’y, yer see, w’en a man has all dere is, dat’s monop’ly. An’ w'en you doan b’leeve in one man habin’ all dere is, dat’s aunty-monop’ly.” “How’d dey git to callin’ hit dat way, Uncle Mose? Doan peer to me to hab much sense in hit no way.” “Now jes hole on, an’ let me ’splain. Dere was a ole nigger name Monop’ly an’ he had a power o’ chickens. An’ dere ware ole Aunty Monop’ly as hadn’t none, an’ she was ’posed to ole Monop’ly habin’ all dem pallets he’s ownse’f. Dat’s de way hit fust started, an’ now w’eneber a man hab all dey is, dey says he’s ole Monop’ly, an’ w’en annuder one hain’t got nothin’ an’ wants to diwide, den dey say he’s ole Aunty-Monop’ly.” “Is you* for Aunty-Monop’ly, Uncle Mose?” “Now, see yer, chile, dis am a mattah ob princerple. I’ze got a lot ob chickens an’ a cow, darfo’, on de chicken an’ cow question I’ze monop’ly. But Bosschile hab a bank an’ a railrode, darfo’, on de bank an’ railrode question I’ze aunty-monoply ebery time. Dis yer sing am a matter ob princerple.*’— Texas Siftings.
Lincoln Pleading Under the Trees.
A correspondent of the Springfield (Ill.) State Journal tells this story of Abraham Lincoln: “About four miles north of Mount Pulaski, on the farm of Joseph Beam, stands a white-oak tree which once served as a temple of justice, where Linooln practiced law. The eld Dement mill-stand, with its dam was the first built on Salt Greek. Dement’s rights were encroached upon by a dam built a few miles below for the Spence mill. » The water of the dam below backed up to the Dement dam and stopped its great wheel. Dement brought suit, and employed Lincoln to prosecute the case. This was in 1840. A Justice of the Peace, fresh from his plow on the prairie, and bubbling over with law and native justice, played the part of Judge. Twelve of the best men to be found in all the surrounding country were made jurors, and the case was opened to them, seated gravely in a row on the ground in the shade of the tree. When the evidence was all in, Mr. Lincoln made one of his peculiar speeches, full of force, wit, apt anecdotes, and ridicule. The jury deliberated a short time and brought in a verdict in favor of Mr. Lincoln’s client, and prononnoed the lower dam an encroachment on Demenfs rights. The
case gave Lincoln a high place in public estimation in that locality, a position which he never lost, and the tree is still known throughout the neighborhood as Lincoln’s tree. ”
Fashions in 1725.
We must own that some of the fashions of this season are a little strange. But, in truth, the freaks of Dame Fashion in the past were far more fantastic than those at which we are occasionally obliged to smile to-day. If the over-dressed girls of our own time are ridiculous, what were the beaux and belles in the early part of the eighteenth century ? At that period Spain still held its head loftily among the nations of Europe. The dress of the Spanish belle was then cut high in front and very low behind, displaying her shoulders, which were touched with red paint. Her face, the tips of her ears, and even the palms of her hands, were also painted, and she was perfumed from head to foot. Jeweled bodkins were thrust through her hair, bracelets and rings adorned her hands and arms, a broad knot of diamonds glistened at the top of her stays, and from it a chain of pearls or precious stones extended, to her waist. Pendants over a hand-breadth long, to which were sometimes added watches, jeweled padlocks, keys,.or little bells, hung from her ears. If she were short, she went about upon pattens six inches high, and if she were young and gay, she wore huge spectacles perched upon her nose and attached to her overburdened ears, to give her an air of gravity. The Spanish beau was arrayed in a manner even more elaborate and absurd. He, too, was perfumed. His hair was parted on the crown of his head, and tied behind with a blue ribbon about four fingers wide and two yards long, and he wore an immense hat. He had a velvet vest and kneebrifeches, and a scalloped doublet of white silk with hanging sleeves. His cloak was black, and he carried it wrapped about his arm, that being considered more gallant. In one hand he bore a light buckler with a steel spike in the middle, and in the other a sword, of a kind so long that no ordinary man could draw it from the sheath, which was therefore made to fly open upon touching a spring. His shoes were of the finest leather, fancifully slashed and extremely tight, and his collar so straight and stiff that he could neither stoop nor turn his head. Viewed beside such attire as this, the curly brimmed hats, excruciatingly tight trousers, and pointed shoes of the young dandies of to-day rise, we had almost said, into good taste. Moreover, the dandies of a former period were obliged to “give their whole minds” to tiie great business of * personal decoration. At present the young fop can satisfy his elevated ideas of “good form” and “the requirements of society” by concentrating the whole powers of his mind upon his dress for a fraction only of his butterfly life.— Youth’s Companion.
Training the Memory.
“Dr. Zukertprt, why is it that many good chess-players not only cannot play blindfolded, but are unable to comprehend how another man does it?” With a little shrug, the Doctor replied: “I suppose it is a difference in the powers of memory. My memory has a peculiar training. When I was 7 years old, and before I could read or write, I was able to demonstrate such a problem as the square of the hypothenuse, or to work out a simple equation entirely from memory. My godfather was a "professor of mathematics, and he had great faith in the value of training the memory. I myself believe that the memory may be trained in the’same way that we can train our bodies. My memory is good in other lines than chess. Whatever I read a few times I commit' to memory. I have not read Boman history since I was in the university; but I am ready to stand an examination in Boman history to-day. I believe I have forgotten none of the dates. I can play over now in my mind the games of chess that I played in the London tournament. lam the editor of the London Chess Monthly, and I compose nearly all my analytical articles and notes upon games of chess while traveling and with no board near me.”
Insects and Flowers.
It has long been known that flowers were necessary to insects; but it is only within the last few years that it has been discovered that insects are quite as necessary to flowers. There are, however, but two or three tribes of insects whose visits are serviceable to flowers in the way of fertilization. The Lepidoptera or butterfly tribe are specially so, and the moths flying by night and visiting such flowers as are only open at that time, are furnished with a trunk or proboscis which sucks up honey, in its fluid state, and in seeking it the insect becomes covered with pollen, which it tranfers from flower to flower. In this way a single insect will fertilize many flowers. Besides being attracted by the color of flowers, insects seem capable of appreciating taste and smell, just as the higher animals do. What flowers are to insects, fruits are to birds and mammals. Both are colored, soented, and sweet; but they have acquired their various allurements for the attraction of widely different creatures. —Chambersf Journal.
Out in Arizona.
Hon. A. W. Sheldon, Associate Justice, Supreme Bench of Arizona Territory, writes as follows: “It affords me great pleasure to say, from my personal observation, and you know the scope of such has been very extended, that St. Jacobs Oil is the great and wonderful conqueror of pain, the sovereign cure for all bodily aches and pains, and I cheerfully bear this testimony. The wise man keeps mum at all times; so does the Board of Trade man on certain occasions. Indolence and ease are the stimulus to exertion. A sweet thing in bric-a-brac— an Egyptian molasses-jug.
A MODERN RESURRECTION.
A Miracle That Took Place In Our Mklst Unknown to the PnbUc-The Details In Pull. [Detroit Free Press.] One at the most remarkable occurrences ever given to the public, which took place here in our midst, has just come to our knowledge, and will undoubtedly awaken as much surprise and attract as great attention as It has already in newspaper circles. The facts are, briefly, as follows: Mr. William A. Crombie, a young man formerly residing at Birmingham, a suburb of Detroit, and now living at 287 Michigan avenue in this city, can truthfully say that he has looked into the future world and yet returned to this. A representative of this paper has interviewed him upon this important subject, and his experiences are given to the public for the flrst time. He said: “I had been having most peculiar sensations for a long while. My head felt dull and heavy; my eyesight did not seem so clear as formerly; my appetite was uncertain, and I was unaccountably tired. It was an effort to arise in the morning, and yet I could not sleep at night. My mouth tasted badly, I had a taint, all-gone sensation in the pit of my stomach that food did not satisfy, while my hands and feet felt cold and clammy. I was nervous and irritable, and lost all enthusiasm. At times my head would seem to whirl and my heart palpitated terribly. I had no energy, no ambition, and I seemed indifferent of the present and thoughtless of the future. I tried to shake the feeling off, and persuade myself it was simply a cold or a little malaria. But it would not go. I was determined not to give up, and so time passed along and all the while I was getting worse. It was about this time that I noticed I had begun to bloat fearfully. My ltmbs were swollen so that by pressing my fingers upon them deep depressions would be made. Ay face also began to enlarge, and continued to until I could scarcely see out of my eyes. One of my friends, describing my appearanoe at that time, said: ‘ft is an animated something, but I should like to know what.’ In this condition I passed several weeks of the greatest agony. “Finally, one Saturday night, the wnisery culminated. Nature could endure no more. I became irrational and apparently insensible. Cold sweat gathered on my forehead; my eyes became glazed and my throat rattled. I seemed to be In another sphere and with other surroundings. I knew nothing of what occurred around me, although I have since learned that it was considered as death by those who stood by. It was to me a quiet state, and yet one of great agony. I was helpless, hopeless, and pain was my only companion. I remember trying to see what was beyond me, but the mist before my eyes was too great. I tried to reason, but I had lost all power. I felt that it was death, and realized how terrible it was. At last the strain upon my mind gave way and all was a blank. Hjyv long this continued Ido not know, but at last 1 realized the presence of friends and recognized my mother. I then thought it was earth, but was not certain. I gradually regained consciousness, however, and the pain lessened. I found that my friends had, during my unconsciousness, been giving me a preparation I had never taken before, and the next day, under the influence of this treatment, the bloating began to disappear, and from that time on I steadily improved, until to-day I am as well as ever before in my life, have no traces of the terrible acute Bright's disease, whioh so nearly killed me, and all through the wonderful instrumentality of Wasner’a Safe Cure, the remedy that brought ids to life after I was virtually in another world.” “You have had an unusual experience, Mr. Crombie,” said the writer, who had been breathlessly listening to the recital. “Yes, I think I have,” was the reply, “and it has been a valuable lesson to me. I am certain, though, there are thousands of men and wgmen at this very moment who have the 6ame ailment which came so near killing me, and they do not know it. I believe kidney disease is the most deceptive trouble in the world. It comes like a thief in the night. It has no certain symptoms, but seems to attack each one differently. It is quiet, treacherous, and all the more dangerous. It 18 killingtmore people to-day than any other .complaint. If I had the power, I would warn the entire world against it, and urge them to remove it from the system before it is too late.” One of the members of the firm of Whitehead & Mitchell, proprietors of the Birmingham Eccentric, paid a fraternal visit to this office yesterday, and in the course of conversation Mr. Crombie’s name was mentioned. “ I knew about his sickness,” said the editor, “ and his remarkable recovery. I bad his obituary all in type, and announced in the Eceentric that he could not live until its next issue. It was certainly a most wonderful case.” Rev. A. R. Bartlett, formerly pastor of the M. E. Church, at Birmingham, and now of Schoolcraft, Mich., in response to a telegram, replied: *“ Mr. W. A. Crombie was a member of my congregation at the time of his sickness. The prayers of the church were requested for him on two different occasions. I was with him the day he was reported by his physicians as dying, and consider his recovery almost a miracle.” Not one person in a million ever comes so near death as did Mr. Crombie and then recover, but the men and women who are drifting toward the same end are legion. To note the slightest symptoms, toy realize their significance, and to meet them in time by the remedy which has been shown to be most efficient, is a duty from which there can be escape. They are fortunate who do this; they arc on the .sure road to death who neglect it.
Too Much Gender.
A Philadelphia publishing house advertises a certain writer as “the popular American female authoress.” Lest there should still be doubt as to the sex of the person, it might not be out of place, perhaps, to add that this female authoress is a she woman.—Cincinnati Saturday Night. A tumulus at Taplow, England, was recently opened and found to contain a body apparently buried during the Saxon period, a shield, two drinking horns, several articles of jewelry and a quantity of gold fringe which had apparently served as frilling for the corpse. Antediluvian is the only aunt that outlasts time and sense. Fossil remains longer than any other fellow.
The Wrong Side of the Meridian.
On the down-hill side of life, which an old medical writer quaintly terms "the wrong side of the meridian," when the functions decay and the frame gradually bends under the weight of years, the system requires to be sustained under the burden imposed upon it. Innumerable physical ailments and infirmities then press upon it,-to which it had been in earlier life a stranger. The surest and pleasantest supS’rt and solace of declining years is found in ostetter s Stomach Bitters, long recognized as the most wholerime and agreeable of diffusible stimulants, tno most potent of tonics and alteratives. The aged and infirm may place implicit confidence in this invigorating elixir, which not only checks those maladies to wMoh elderly persons are peculiarly subject, but in a .measure retards the encroachments of time upon the constitution. “The bark went down,” said the ague patient after he bad swallowed a big dose of quinine. Leading Physicians, Eminent Divines,every one who tries it, indorse Samaritan Nervine. Paterfamilias (reading doctor’s bill): “Well, Doctor, I have no objection to pay you for tl}e medicine, but I will return the visits.” Dr. L. M. O. McPheeton, of Bloomington, Ind., writes: “Samaritan Nervine cures tits."
Farmers' Folly.
Borne farmers adhere, even against the full light of fact and discovery, to the oldfashioned folly of coloring butter with carrots, annatto, and inferior substances, notwithstanding the splendid record made by the Improved Butter Color, prepared by Wells, Richardson k Co., Burlington, Vt. At scores of the hast agricultural fairs it has received the highest award over all competitors. Saturday always reminds one of the wooden thing shoemakers use when they make sick folks' shoes. It's the last of the week.
A Case Not Beyond Help.
Dr. M. H. Hinsdale, Kenawee, HI., advises us of a remarkable case of consumption. He says: “A neighbor's wife was attacked with violent lung disease, and pronounoed beyond help from quick consumption. As a last resort, the family was persuaded to try Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the Lungs. To the astonishment of all, by the time she had used one half-dozen bottles she was about the house doing her own work.”
A Clergyman's Tongue.
Rev. R. Priest says tongues oannot express the good that Warner's White Wine of Tar Syrup has done for me and my family. I have labored in the oause fifteen years, and have never found anything that will relieve Hoarseness, and irritation of the Throat and Lungs, like White Wine of Tar Syrup.
Carbo-lines.
Earth brings the bitterness ol pain, Yet worth the crown of peace will gain; And thousands speak In accents fine The praises of our Carboline.
My Wife and Children.
Rev. L. A. Dunlap, of Mt. Vernon, says: My children were afflicted with a cough resulting from Measles, my wife with a cough that had prevented her from sleeping more or less for years, and your White Wine of Tar Syrup has cured them all. I have been a severe sufferer from Catarrh for the past fifteen years, with distressing pain over my eyes. Gradually the disease worked down upon my lungs. About a yoar and a half ago I commenced using Ely’s Cream Balm, with most gratifying results, and am today apparently cured. Z. C. Warben, Rutland, Vt. Pure Cod-Liver Oil, made from selected livers on tho sea shore, by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market. Mv daughter Wnd myself, great sufferers from Catarrh, have been oured by Ely's Cream Balm. My sense of smell restored and health greatly improved.—C. M. Stanley, Merchant, Ithaca, N. Y. (Easy to use. Prioe BO cents.) Chapped Hands, Face, Pimples and rough Skin, cured by using Juniper Tah Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. Beware of the Incipient stages of Consumption. Take Piso's Cure in time. Tho best and oldest medicine for cure of liver diseases is Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator. For a cold in the head, there is nothing so good as Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. “Bough on Rats” clears out Rats, Mloe. 180. Mother Swan’s Worm Syrup, tasteless. 260. “Rough on Coughs” Troches, 15o; Liquid,soo. Wells’ May-Apple (Liver) Pills, 100. “Rough on Toothache,” Instant relief. 150. “Buchn-paiba," Great Kidney and Urinary Cure. 81. “Rough on Coma," for Come, Wart*, Bunions. ISo. WELLS’ Health Renewer coree Dyspepsia, Impotonoa. The “Rough on” Tooth Powder, elegant. 150.
SiJacobsOil V' -- r=.-_- ~ ~~- --y
iCCUTf WANTED to sell Lubricating, Harness, and ItPCfflO Shoe Oils. E.F.Diktbbichb, Cleveland, 0. RID DfiVTo sell our rubber hand stamps. Terms DID in I free. Taylor Bros. A Co., Cleveland,Ohio. AGENTS WANTED for the best and faitest-selllng Pictorial Books and Blblea. Prices reduced H per cent. National Publishing Co., Chicago, Hi, DITCIITC 8®? 11 stamp for our new book on IAI LIII O. floats- £• BINGHAM, Patent *” 1 "" ' Lawyer, Washington, D. C. IDE VOH UIEiV 0 Send live 2c. stamps lor a samAnC IUU TYIAA f pic that will cure you. BecUield Tonic Powders, 149 Tompkins Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. PUCAP I AHrK Near Railroad. Watered. No. 1 for You ng Wlenfir™£“USKSlSS nlshed. Circulars free. Valentine Bros., Janesville,Wls. Address C- BatlSs, Dubuque, la. PATENTS SSS Pull instructions and Hand-Book of Patents sent free. SEND YOUR ADDRESS fiSs grand sermon, "FOOD AND MORALS." FOWLER A WELLS, 753 Broadway, New York. SMB A6ENTB WANTED ting Machine ever invented. Will knit a bah of stockings with HEKL and TOK complete in 20 minutes. It will also knit s great variety ot fancywork for which there is always aready market. Send for circular and terms to the Twombly Knitting Machine Co.. US Tremont Street Boston. Maas. TO SPECULATORS. “•fWSSiSfo'S 00 " Commerce. Chicago. New York ORAnr ft PROVISION BROKERS. usag^'gaaHMsaßiiTagfflas: MONEY * lo ° Per Month cutting. The simplest and most perfect Large profile. Quick returns. No canvassing, Oomplme ouW only •1.00. Bytum remit at OSVbO. Secure territory at once. Every lady-who aewa and every l&aßVSVSKfeWEtftsaiSfiJ:
THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Believes and cure* RHEUMjtftSI, Neuralgja, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADAOHK, TOOTHACHI, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS, •PBAIKS, Soreness, Cuts, Brulstt, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, And all other bodily aches and pains, FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by *ll Druggist* and Dealer*. Direction* In U languages. 4 The Charles A. Vogeler Co. u a. vooxlu a 00.) Baltlaur., Rk, O.S.A.
The only known specific for Xptloptle Ttta. TB Alto for Spasms and Falling Sickneea. Karroos Weakness tt Instantly relieves and ewes. Cleanses blood and quickens elugglah circulation. NeutroUses terms of disease and aarea sickness. Coras (k SKEPTIC SAID] ugly blotches and stubborn Mood sores. Eliminates Bolls, Carbuncles and Scalds. and promptly cures paralysis. Yea, It la a charming and healthful Aperient. Kills Scrofula and Kings Bril, twin brothers. Changes bad breath to good, remov‘‘"“'Mwi* Ing the cause. Routs bilious tendencies and makes clear complexion. Equalled by none In the delirium of fercr. A charming reaolrent and a laxatlre. It drives Sick Headache like the wind. %M Contains no drastic cathartic or opiates. Relieves fiHE BREITj the brain of morbid fancies. Promptly cores Rheumatism by routing It. Restores lMe-glrlng properties to the blood. Is guaranteed to cure all nervous disorders. cr"Rellablo when all opiates fall. Re. freshes the mind end Invigorates the body. Cures dyspepsia or money refunded. t Diseases of the blood own It a conqueror. Endorsed In writing by over fifty thousand loading citizens, clergymen and physicians In U. S. and Europe. I (jrpor sale by all leading druggists. guo. (18) For Testimonials and circulars send stamp. TbeDr.Si. Richmond Med Co.StJosapb.llo. Lord, Stontenburgh <fe Co., Agents, Chicago, IIL ITEE O&SAT BLOOD 7URIHE& A Liver and Kidney Remedy, EJ Compounded from the well known! Curatives Hops, Malt, Bnohu, Man-^^ i drake. Dandelion, Sarsaparilla. Cas- m earn Sagrada, eta, combined with an V agreeable Aromatic Elixir, I THEY CURE TJTSPEPSIA k INDIGESTION, A Act npon the Liver and Kidneys, BHOTTLATB THE BOWELS, H They cure Rheumatism, and all Urii nary troubles. They invigorate, i nourish, strengthen and quiet a the Nervous System. V As a Tonlo they have no Kqual. A Take none but Hops and Malt Bitters. FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS H Hop* and Malt Bltiors 00. U DETROIT, MICH. H
CATAR R H ELY’S CREAM BALM ■ witl be absorbed, effect ““Hy dcaimlng tlie ■ SBS.'Co,7m "tADI be«>' of catarrhal virus, TvHl causing healthy aecreMHAVrFVCDWK* gs J tbuia- It allays lnflainf mitlaii, protects the Ur/P <9membrane of the nasal ■toa j JIM passages from addltionsl colrls. complete- / iy heals the sores, and sCX/Pl BM restores sense of taste RSS 110(1 smell. ' ioT U 6W m " ” U.SA. | a few applications (spsspspir relievo. A thorough HAY a rtVbH treatment will cure. 88 ■» Agreeable to use. Send lor circular. Price SO cents, bv mall or at druggists. ELY BROTHERS, Druggists, Owego, N.Y. This porous plaster Is 8 8 W 8 absolutely the beet ever fg made, combining the - _ ■■ vlrtuoa cf hops with Dl AGTCD gams,baluixui ex- ■ • w I EmiEm tracts. Its power is wonderful In oaring diseases where other plasters simply relieve. Crick In the Back and Neck, Pain In the Side or Limbs, Stiff Joints and Xuscles, Kidney Troubles, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bore Chest, AlToctions of the Heart and liver, and all pains or aches In any part owed Instantly by the Bop Platter. |W Try a ja am mm It. PriceM cents or five for ILOA, 1— £k Iwß EL Hailed on reoelpt of prloe. Sold by _ - TT *dl drugglsU and country stores. DAMZ If Bop Platter Company, -A DMVIV —Proprietors, Boston, Hw.-. m HTFor oonstlpatlon, loss of appetite and diseases of ths bowels take Hawley’s Stomach and Liver Pills. It cents, ——seas—■———aaaa—— CALL. It contains a list of valuable Premiums to iff* MiV’s-g®® "4~; uae tbouaanda of eaaas of the worat kind and of long standing have been eared. I o deed, so strong la myfalth He aecurlty required except Cor Interest, and then only penonal These loans are for poor or men of moderate means, In amounts
For Two Generations The good and stannch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT, has done more to assuage pain, relieve Suffering, and save the lives of men and besets than all other liniments pot together. Why? Because the Mustang penetrates through skin and flesh to the very none, driving ont all pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restoring the afflicted part to sound and snpple health.
ALLEN’S Lung Balsam! A 600 D FAMILY REMEDY! —THAT WILL CVRX—r COUGHS, COLDS, CRODP, Dr. Meredith, Dentist, . _ of Ciaetnaali, ws. lhmi.il Jsr«oish Wriekt, of to to hi Um laet stafee es Hl£r.al!?£ Y*-i CeasuspUsa and was la- l ) 2*«* us Aat Sta wife had IM c is* r.Y.* to «.um. hh 9 he and his Brighton think an« to rwun. us prae- W It the test m£ldn. la the U CONSUMPTION. — ehMr'«f C * U Wm. A Graham k Co., saass T SfiSf.2SS thal Ua Issng B.lmm ha. — ' Of tM W MfitthlEl wed U. anther es Cea- I *!?*”*"'. * HADlifiß afta. Ih. ~k. I Mi wl«Mi| Who BAa bftn M* ricfeThto rii™ W .o L ■ Aloud with Brnn.hUi. la incurable Ht un otfdri its want form for twalvn k now*ae v- “j I *. rT! fl ynars. Th. Lnnr Balum 3T.T3L Vw eared him at It !iu co.wi ournd. H. thinks all so? ■■ •*« »' Ur »»- Aleud should |lvs It a trial. IU * Utfa * ALLEN’S LOW BALSAM Is hrsnnlMS to the most dolleatn child 1 IS eontatlna no Opium In any form 1 BsanmmeiAsS by Fhytlalast, Mlalntan and Aamns. In feet by sveryhody who has (tvaa It a good trial. It Mater falls te Bring As an Expectorant It has no Equal. SOLD BY ILL MEDICINE DEALERS. Thousands Hastened to Their Graves I Belying on testimonials written in vivid, glowing lahguage of some miraculous cures made by some largely puffed-up doctor or patent medicine has hastened tnonsands to their graves; believing in their almost insane faith that the same miracle will be performed on them, and that these testimonials make the cures, while the so-called medicine is all the time hastening them to their graves. Wo have avoided publishing testimonials, as they do not make the onres, although we have THOUSANDS UPON THOUSANDS of them, of the most wonderful enres, voluntarily sent us. It is our medicine, Hop Bitters, that makes the cures. It has never failed, and never can. We will give reference to any one for any disease similar to their own If desired, or will refer to any neighbor, as there is not a neighborhood in the known world but can show its euros by Hop Bitters. A LOSING JOKE. A prominent physician of Pittsburgh said to a lady patient who was complaining of her con-tinuoiriU-health, and of his Inability to oure her, jokingly said: “Try Hop Bitters I" The lady took it in earnest and used the Bitters, from which she obtained permanent health. She now laughs at the doctor for his joke, but he is not so well pleased with It, as It cost him a good patient. FEBB OF DOCTORS. The fee of doctors is an item that very many persons ore interested in. We believe the schedule for visits is $3.00, which would tax a man confined to his bed for a year, and in need of a daily visit, over SI,OOO a year for medical attendance alone ! And one. single bottle of Hop Bitters taken in time would save the SI,OOO and all tho year’s sickness. A LADY’S WISH. "Oh, how I do wish my skin was as dear and ■oft as yours," said a lady to her friend. “You “¥o£T“ mauled Bitters that makes pare, rich blood and blooming health. It did it for me as you observe.” GIVEN UP BY THE DOCTORS. “Is it possible that Mr. Godfrey is up and at work, and cured by so simple a remedy?* “I assure yon it is true that he is entirely cured, and with nothing but Hop Bitters, and only ten days ago his doctors gave him up and said he must die, from Kidney and Liver trouble 1" THE BURE CURE FOR ———• KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, CONSTIPATION, PILES, AND BLOOD PIBEABEB, I PHYSICIANS ENDORSE IT HEARTILY. —mmmi “Kidney-Wort is the moat auooeaaful remedy I ever uaed.” Dr. P. 0. Ballou, Monk ton, Vt. “Kidney-Wort la always reliable. ’’ Dr. R. N. dark. So. Hero, Vt. “Kidney-Wort hae eured my wife after two yearn Buffering.” Dr. 0. U. Summerlin, Sun Hill, Ga. IN THOUSANDS OF OASIS It hae onred where all alee had foiled. It U mild, but efflolent, CERTAIN IN ITS ACTION, but harmless Infill aaeee. tWltcleaaeee the Blood and Streagtheaa and fftveo New Lift to all tho Important organa of tho body. The natural aotlon of the Kidney, la reatored. The Liver la oleanaed of alldlaease, and the Bowela move fraply and healthfully. In thla way the worst diseases are eradicated Atom the system. M MUCH, «LOO LIQUID 08 DBT, SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Dry oan be sent by mall. WELLS, RICHARDSON * OO.SnrUagtoa Vt. DCUCinUe T° 80 l<hers and heir*. Seud stamp rCllulUila elrcul «g»- Col. L. BINGHAM, * ■••vivnw Attorney, Washington, D. C. Consumption Can Bo Cured. mH/iLL’S LUNck BALSAM Cfure*.Consumption, Colds,Pneumonia. enz»,BronchuuPUl|culnris,BronchitislHi»ars«tBj^S£sK.a2as£,»a« and heals the Membrane ofthe Lungs, inllnined and poisoned by the disease, and prevents tlie nljrnt sweats and tightness across Hie chest which accompany it Consumption Is not an 1 ncurable malndv. HALL’S HALS AHI vvlUe.tr* rg’hjggjjLjfaQbya professional aid flails. CATARRHUI write to Dr. C. R. SYKKS, Chicago, 111., for tuJ inHHSURE CURE Eaey to nee. Acvftftln cut*. Njrtj-.rpenFlvr. li re* months' trtoWhcm lb One packtakP. (lw«l for Cold lu the Head, Headuche. Dltaluesg. Hqy, Fevt r. An, FlHy cents. By all Drugrlsts, of !<w Mmll. fe T. UAZBLTIN K. pa. C.N. U. No, ft -11. \VHJ£N WHITING To Aln iiitlW , G. plamse say you saw the *itv*rl.-* „ rt ,j lb thla paper.
