Democratic Sentinel, Volume 9, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 January 1886 — Page 7

THE CAROLINA CLAY-EATERS.

A Physician’s Analysis Shows that the Clay Contains Arsenic. [Prom the Philadelphia Times.] It has been a matter of speculation for years as to why the “poor white trash” of Central North Carolina ate the clay that is found in that part of the country. It remained for a Philadelphia physician to solve the mystery. A short time ago Dr. Frank H. Getchell, of 1432 Spruce street, went on a gunning expedition to North Carolina. His quest for game led him into the wild country back of Salisbury, which is inhabited, for the most part, by a miserable race of beings with only just enough energy to eke out a wretched existence. These creatures are nearly all veritable living skeletons, and, with few exceptions, are addicted to the habit of clay-eating. While shooting wild turkey and other game in this wild region, Dr. Getchell made an incidental study of this peculiar habit of vice amoDg the inhabitants. It is a mountainous country, and in the spring little rivulets start out from the caps of snow on the mountain, and, as the days grow warmer, the little rivulets become torrents, and great wash-oifts are made along the mountain-side. The soil is of a heavy, clayey nature, but there are strata of clay that is heavier than the rest, and when the water rushes down this clay is formed into little pellets, and rolls and accumulates in heaps in the valley. These little pellets and rolls are what the clay-eaters devour with as much avidity as a toper swallows a glass of whisky. “Among the poor people of this section,” said Dr. Getchell, “the habit of ;eating clay is almost universal. Even little toddlers are confirmed in the habit, and the appetite seems to increase •jritli time. While investigating the |matter, I entered a cabin occupied by one of these poor families, and saw a little chap tied by the ankle to the leg of a table, on which was placed a big dish of bread aud meat and potatoes within easy reach. The child was kicking and crying, and I asked his mother why she had tied him up. She replied that she wanted him to eat some food before he went out to the clay and he refused to do so. The woman confessed that she ate the clay herself, but explained that the child’s health demanded that it eat some substantial food before eating any earth. Almost every one I met in this section was addicted to this habit. They were all very thin, but their flesh seemed to be pulled out. This was particularly noticeable about the eyes, which had a sort of reddish hue.

“All of the elay-eaters were excessively lazy and indolent, and all of these conditions combined led me to the conclusion that there must be some sedative or stimulating qualities, or both, in the clay, and I determined to find out whether there was or not. I consequently brought a lot of the clay home with me, and Prof. Tiernan and myself made an analysis of the stuff and discovered that, instead of clayeaters, the inhabitants of Central North Carolina should more properly be called arsenic-eaters. All of this clay contains arsenic, but exactly in what proportion we have not yet discovered. Arsenic-eating is common in many parts of the world. It acts as a sedative and also as a stimulant. The mountaineers of Styria, Austria, are habitual arsenic-eaters. They give as their reason for eating it that they are better able to climb the mountains after eating the poison, and their explanation is a perfectly reasonable one, qs arsenic acts as a sedative to the heart’s action. The habit is also prevalent in the Tyrol and in the Alps. “It is also said that the peasant girls of Switzerland and parts of Germany and in Scandinavia eat arsenic to give luster to their eves and color to their cheeks, but this is a matter I have not investigated. It has been shown that arsenic or arsenical fumes are a sure cure for intermittent fever. The inhabitants of a section of Cornwall, England, at one time all suffered with this type of fever, but when the copper works were established there the fever disappeared. This was accounted for by the arsenical fumes created in the treatment of copper. As to whether arsenic-eating shortens life I am not yet prepared to Bay, but I intend investigating the matter thoroughly. ”

Fight with a Grizzly.

While two telegraph-repairers were carrying on their work in the Selkirk Mountains, one of them was attacked by a grizzy bear, which caught him by the calf of the leg as he was drinking from a stream. The bear endeavored to carry him into the cave, but h e placed his arms around a tree and bellowed for his companion, who came close to the bear and emptied seven Winchester balls into him. Seeing the seven balls did not make him relinquish his hold, he caught the ferocious animal by the ears and tried to haul him off. This caused the animal to move a little, thus enabling the friend to pull his companion’s riHe from under the bear. He then commenced pouring his friend’s seven bullets into the bear’s head, and had fired the last shot when tho bear rolled over. The trouble then was to get the jaws open to release his hold. This was done by inserting the barrel of one pf the rifles and prying it open. —Winnipeg Sun. .. ■

Was on Another “Lay.”

A correspond'eht .'writes: “I- send you a little poem called ‘The Lay of the Lark.’ If accepted, let me know.” Ejected, with thanks. If you will send a few specimens of the lay of the hen we will accept .—Burlington Free Press.

The Search for Wilkes Booth.

The assassination of Abraham Lincoln was a military crime. Whi!e actually in command of the national forces, he was' killed in a city which was his headquarters, strongly so tified and garrisoned, with a military governor, and a provost marshal whose patrols were abroad night and day a: resting all persons found violating the “rules of war.” Not only was the murdered commander-in-chief, to use the words of the Constitution, “in actual service in time of war,” but it was a time of “public danger,” in which the assassins were constitutionally excluded from any right to a trial in the civil courts. Peace had not then been conquered ; there was a powerful enemy in arms, to whom “aid and comfort” could be given; the leader of the rebellion was still at large; many loyal men were becoming disheartened by the conscriptions and by the prolonged expenditure of blood and treasure; and there are good reasons for believing that many e»emies of the Union, having traversed all the stages of crime, confidently hoped by this assassination to inaugurate anarchy at the North, and thus to prepare the way for a dictator. Before the martyr-President had ceased to live, Secretary Stanton directed a search for the recognized assassin, and an investigation into the circumstances connected with tlie perpetration of the bloody deed. The next day, in a letter to the Hon. Charles Francis Adams, Mr. Stanton said: “The murderer of the President has been discovered and evidence obtained that these horrible crimes were committed in execution of a conspiracy deliberately planned and set on foot by rebels, under pretense of avenging the South and aiding the rebel cause.” Subsequently the Secretary of War announced, in an official bulletin, that all persons who had harbored or secreted Booth, Atzerodt, or Herold, or who had aided or assisted their escape, should be “subject to trial before a military commission, and the punishment is death.” The bulletin concluded by saying: “Let the stain of innocent blood be removed from the land by the arrest and punishment of the murderers! All good citizens are exhorted to aid public justice on this occasion. Every man should consider his own innocence charged with this solemn duty, and rest neither night nor day till it is accomplished.” Secretary Stanton faithfully performed his shave of this work, and he was ably seconded by the Provost Marshal of the War Department, Col. L. C. Baker. The discovery by Fouche of the celebrated French conspiracy, headed by Pichegru, for the assassination of the first Emperor Napoleon, has been regarded as the greatest triumph of detective-police skill on record ; but it is eclipsed by Col. Baker’s report of his operations. It was not long after the commission of the great crime before he was thoroughly conversant with the associations and habits of the chief- actor’s acquaintances in Washington, Baltimore, Montreal, and other cities. Some were promptly arrested, a careful espionage was established ever others, confidential agents were sent out far and wide, some of them in disguise, the magnetic telegraph and the photographer’s camera were called into the service for the transmission of intelligence and for the multiplication of portraits for identification, and it was not long before the proofs of a conspiracy were overwhelming.

The Megaphone.

This instrument, used on shipboard, is a machine for magnifying sound. It is constructed of two cone-shaped tubes, eight feet long and three in diameter at the large end, which diminish to an apex in the form of rubber tubes ■small enough to place in the ear. Between these tubes are two smaller ones, constructed in the same manner, but not more than half the diameter. By placing the rubber tubes in the ear and speaking through the smaller cones the person can hear and be heard at a long distance, and it thus aids mariners in listening for the sound of breakers or carrying on conversation with persons on shore or other vessels at a distance. Dr. Fitch, of Honolulu, believes that leprosy is not communicable from person to person, except by heredity, and that it is really a fourth stage of syphilis, or a form of scrofula subsequent to syphilis occurring in persons of a broken-down constitution.— Dr. Footers Health Monthly. There is a New England Judge named Eck, who is reported as originating some very funny sayings. He doubtless presides over the court of Eck-witty. A little praise is good for a shy temper; it teaches us to rely on the kindness of others— Landor.

A Gentle Stimulus

Is imparted to the kidneys and bladder by Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, ■which is most useful in overcoming torpidity of these organs. Besides infusing more activity into them, this excellent tonic endows them with additional vigor, and enables them the better to undergo the wear and tear of the discharging function imposed upon them by nature. Moreover, as they are the channel for the escape of certain impurities from the .blood, increases their usefulness, by strengthening and' healthfully stimulating them. In certain morbid conditions of these important organs they fall into a sluggish state, which is the usual i>reSuril6r.of.dißeSßo. What, then, cm be of greater service than a medicine which impels them to greater activity when slothful? No maladies ore more perilous than those which affect the kidneys, and a medicine which averts the peril should be highly esteemed. At a stand still— the Pea-nut business. New York News.

In the Hospitals.

Baltimore and Philadelphia hospital physicians are prescribing the new proprietary medicine. Bed Star Cough Cure. It contains neither morphia, opium, nor any other injurious ingredients. The price is only 25 cents.

Strange Ways of the Modern Young Man.

“It seems to me that the young men nowadays have some queer ways about them,” remarked old Mrs. Pipkin, as she divested herself of her wrappings after a trip down town. “Why so, mother?” asked her sou. “Why, in the street car to day there were two young fellows, and one said to tlie other: ‘Where's your overcoat ?’ ‘ln soak,’ replied the other one; ‘Where’s yours?’ ‘Same place,’was the answer, ‘mine has been in soak all summer.’ Now when I was a young woman the men used to put their overcoats in a trunk with camphor and things to keep away the moths, but 1 suppose the latest style is to put them in soak. I’d think it would take all the shape out of them.”— Pittsburg Chronicle. A wok i> of kindness is seldom spoken in vain—it is a seed which eyen dropped by chance springs up a flower. Toimg' and middle-aged men suffering from nervous debility and kindred affections, as loss of memory and pypochondria, should inclose 10 cents in stamps for large illustrated treatise suggesting 6ure means of cure. Address World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. “All’s well that ends swell,” said the surgeon as lie plunged his scalpel into the abscess. — St. Paul Herald. Those who tako Dr. Jones’ Red Clover Tonic never have dyspepsia, costivonoss, bad breath, piles, pimples, aguo aud malaria, poor appetite, low spirits, headache, or kidney troubles. Price 60 cents. A thieves’ dictionary bas just been published. It is a work of abstract knowledge. — St. Paul Herald. Foe throat and lung troubles, the most reliable remedy is Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It must be a poor singer who can’t make his “board” from the “timbre” of his voice.—Musical Herald. The most scientific compound for the cure of coughs, colds, and all throat and lung troublos is Dr. Bigelow’s Positive Cure. It is pleasant, prompt, and safe. 50 cents aud sl. He is only a success at boating whose life is oar.— St. Paul Herald. Physicians indorse Hall’s Hair Renewer. Ita use is always attended with good results. A dey spell—S-a-h-a-r-a. Spellbound—The Dictionary. — Puck.

The Great German Physician.

The remarkable phase in the practice of Dr. Peter W. Schmidt (frequently called Dr. Pete) is, he never asked one to describe their disease but tells each one their trouble without asking a question. His success is phenomenal. His practice enormous. He is sought after by hundreds' wherever he goes, because he cures when every other physician and remedy have failed. He has allowed liis groat medicines, Golden Seal Bitters and Lung Food for Consumption, to be offered to tho suffering, and we assert without fear of successful contradiction that there is no disease they will not cure. Thousands of bottles have been sold Thousands of brokendown and discouraged invalids saved. Send to Golden Seal Bitters Company, Holland City, Mich., for Facts for tho Million! Free.

A Remedy for Lung Diseases.

Dr. Robert Newton, late President of the Eclectic College, otf the city of New York, and formerly of Cincinnati, Ohio, used Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam very extensively in his practice, as many of his patient 3, now living, and restored to health by the use of this invaluable medicine, can amply testify. He always said that so good a remedy ought to be prescribed freely by every physician as a sovereign remedy in all cases of lung diseases. It cures consumption, aud has no equal for all pectoral complaints

Free to Ministers, Lawyers, Doctors, and Teachers. I will send two bottles of Warner's White Wine of Tar Syrup— best remedy in the world for Coughs, Colds, Throat and Lung Diseases —if you will recommend it to your friends, and get your dealer to order a dozen bottles from his wholesale druggist. Send name of your druggist. Map of Holy Land free with medicine. Address Dr.C. D. Warner, Chicago, 111. All druggists. Laiiguage fails to express the good results I have experienced with Athlophoros. My head was drawn over my left shoulder with rheumatism, hut half a bottle made me as good as new. A. 11. Raker, 1165 West Harrison street, Chicago, ill. Lyon’s Patent Metallio Heel Stiffeners keep new boots and shoes from runningover. Sold by shoe and hardware dealers. If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye Water. Drug-arista sell it. .25c. If a coug-h disturbs your sleep, take Piso’s Cure for Consumption and rest well.

Red Star TRADE Wi/ MARK. COUGHSURE Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poison. lure. OKets. PROMPT. AT Druggists and Dealers. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., BALTIMORE, MB. CTJACOBS (HI GERManMEOY ■ Cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Iftf Limit liMk.fk., Hfirnrh., Toot*«&, I 1)1 | n|f| PK^F° , 'FIFTV'oi:NTB, ■ VI ■ Ulll AT DRUOOISTO AND DEALBSS, THS CHABLIB A. TOUBLXB CO., Bt LTIMOU, KS.

The Brand on Cain was not more fearful than are the marks of skin diseases, and yet Dr. Pierce's “Golden Medical Discovery" is a certain cure for all of them. Blotches, pimples, eruptions, pustules. scaly incrustations, lumps, Inflamed patches, salt-rheum, tetter, bolls, carbuncles, ulcers, old sores, are by its uso healed quickly and permanently. When people are compelled to use snuff they are certainly put to a pinch.— Baltimore Every Saturday. It* you are bilious, take Dr. Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets,’’ the original “Little Liver Pills.*’ Of all druggists. Watering the stock of a leather-making company is a new form of hido-draulic. - Pittsburgh Telegraph. Dr. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters —a medicine that expels disease without weakening the patieut, exhilarates tlie spirits without the aid of alcoholic poison—<»ures every phase and consequence of indigestion, restores the shattered nerves, regulatos tlie bowels and the liver, and imparts to the constitution new strength and elasticity. Let tlie sick rejoice! Cincinnati pork men believe the pen is mightier than the sword.—At. Paul Herald. “Put up" at the Gault House. The business man or tourist will find firstclass accommodations at the low price of $2 and $2.50 per day at the Gault House, Chioar go, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located In the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot. Elevator: all appointments first-class. Hoyt & Gates. Proprietors. 1 have been bothered with catarrh for about twenty years. I could not tell how mnny different remedies 1 have tried, and none seemed to reach my case like Ely’s Cream Balm. 1 had lost my Bmell entirely tor the last fifteen yeurs, and 1 had almost lost my hearing. My eyes wero getting so d.m 1 had to get some one to thread my needle. Now I have my hearing as well as J ever had, and I can see to thread as fine a needle as ever 1 did, and my smell Is partly restored, and it seems to bo Improving all the time, i think thoro is nothing like Ely’s Cream lialm for Catarrh.—Mrs. E. E. Grimes, 67 Valley street, ltcndrill, Perry Co., Ohio. Mensman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains bloodmaking, force-generating, and life-sustaining properties; Invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility: also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-work, or aoute disease, particularly If resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co., proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists. ■ t is Ihingeroiis to turn] or with irritating liquids and exciting snuffs. Use Ely’s Cream Balm, which Is safo and pleasant and is easily applied with the finger. It cures the worst case of Ca arrh, Cold In the Head and Hay Fever, giving relief from the first appllcat.on. All druggists have it. Price 60 cents. By mail 60 cents. Ely Bros., Owego, N. Y.

STRICTLY PURE. Contains No Opium in Any Form. TO/O/# xQ mm The BEST and CHEAPEST COM AND CROUP REMEDY. As an Expectorant it has no Equal. ALLEN’S LIC BALSAM! IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES. Price, 25 cts., 50 cts. and $1 per bottle. The 25-CENT BOTTLES are put up for the accommodation of all who desire simply a COUGH or CROUP REMEDY. Those desiring a remedy for CONSUMPTION or any LUNG DISEASE should secure the large SI.OO bottles. Directions accompany each bottle. OSTBodd by All Medicine Dxalebs."Bs J.N. HARRIS & CO. (Limited), Proj'rs, CINCINNATI. OHIO. BUY SALZER'S (inCro.«e,wi..) SEEDS. P A WPHn Treated and cured without the knife. 11 A ll I, h. ri B°°k on treatment sent free. Address U till UP LI F. L. POND. M.D.. Aurora. Kano Co., l P n JITCIITiP R. S. & A.P. Lacey, Patent n M I JA Attorneys,Washington, D.(.'. ■ w ■ w Instructions und opinions a« to patentability EUEE. years’ experience. WA BITCh Ad a, live Man or Womi li 01 Bffl I L fc, county tn sell ourgooo. MSB per Month and Expenses. Expenses in ml- ■ ° vanee. Canvassing outfit FRKK! Particulars free. Standard Silver-ware Co. Poston. M---Hitt YOU A FRIEND SSSSEftR If so, pi are in their hands a copy of Magruder's Reply to Inpersoli. Ministers, superintendents, teachers, and students should avail themselves at once of this masterly and conclusive argument. Price, cloth, »1, C.H.JONEB 77 aark Bt.,ChlcaAgo.il 1

BUY NORTHERN GROWN SEEDS. Mrsa ar. sryMß BY MAIL, Catalog free. JOHN A. SALZER. La Cro«««. Wi«._ SESm

111 |#K les > b , ic PaT-steady work, no talk. 111111 l Ek 11,1 hl,ur toT either sox. fll.ftO I I I I | I ■ |A samples free. Bend stamp nnd U I U I wcuro a plea, int winter’- businesi. . O. B. Merrill A Co.. Chicago. 111. ® These f-m B. _H. DQUCLASS A SONS’ Capsicum Cougli Drops ?£ lds and ® oro Throats, an of Consumption, and of great benefit in most cases of Dyspepsia. -Ph, ‘ (BEWARE Of IttlVftiOMS.) “!T - * J In^pTu U n^ 0 JS r p§g y a ffiiSSf rleao * Retail prlcis 1& cents per quarter pound* FOB SALE BY ALL DEALERS. %DBBILITIWfBIALEM decay. A Life Experience. Remarkable and quick cures. Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed particulars. Address Dr. WARD A CO. Louisiana* Mo.

■ Wfl w * | " I 1 5 This medicine, combining Iron with pure vegetable tonics, quickly Kid completely Cores Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Weakness, Impure Blood, Malaria, Chills aud Fevers, and Neuralgia. It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the Kidney and Liver. It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to Women, and all who lead sedentary lives. Itdoes not Injure the teeth, cause headache,or produce constipation— other Iron medicines do. It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, relieves Heartburn and Belching,and strengthens the muscles and nerves. For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of Energy, etc., it lias no equal. tr The genuine has above trade mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. MsS, «»It St BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE. HDI lE. mDiv n I Vinegar Hitters, a purU<»lfCAnu|TT‘tsA' native and tonic, purifies the S|A blood, strengthens the liver and kidneys, and will restore ttfa'JSßhTj&k health, however lost. Vinegar Bitter* Is the best remedy discovered for ISgayA promoting digestion, curing headache and increasing the Vinegar Bitters assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Vinegar Bitters is the great disease preventer, and stands at the heaaof all family remedies. NO house should ever be without it. Vinegar Bitters cures Malarial, Bilious and other fevers, diseases of the Heart, Liver and Kidneys, and a hundred other painful disorders. Send for either of our valuable reference books for ladles, for fanners, for merchants, our Medical Treatise on Diseases, or our Catechism on Intemperance and Tobacco, which last should be in the hands of every child and youth in the country. Any two of the above books mailed free on receipt of four cents for registration fees. R.H. McDonald Drug Co., 032 Washington St., N. Y. jh dlßr Your Newsdealer forTHE CHICAGO A *4 LEDGER, tiie Best Ktoiiy I'a ran AJhMwJKJki lu the country. Head It. /SjgCy FACE, HANDS. KKKTj Rn< *lmperfection,, including Facial Develeminent, Sunernuou, Hair, lilrth Mark,, Mnlea, jtIH ’ If Warts, Mote, Freckle,, Red Noie, Acne, lilacs lal'L Heads, Scar,. Pitting, and their traatmant. 1)H. jnaJKT/fEtJoHN h. woodbury. a: s. pearl bt„ acftni / >fJ».U,HA!«Y, 17. Y. Eit’blli'd 1870. Send lOe for hook

Mr. E. Potter, 820 llalq street, Terrt Haute, Indiana, tnfnred ft om Neuralgia and found no relief till be uaed ATHLOPHOROS* then in one day's time the paiu wae all gone. It will give prompt relief in all ca«e» of Neural* gla. Aik your druggist for Athlophoros. If you cannot get it of him do not try something else, but order at onoe from ut. We will send it express paid on receipt of price, SLCO P«r bottle. ATHLOPHOROB 00,, 112 Wall St„ New York. CLYDESDALE AND ENGLISH SHIRE HORSES/ The on ystudlnAmarleacuntahiiug she very ijSIKMQiMk host spud mens of both hrciidH. Prize-winner* m Chicago Fair, iho mKhPH HWhSPs AMfp World'u Fair al New Grlnans. the Royal SoWjnC’fgßSnEgraCWvl riety id England, etc. Wg**" 1 - ~WW M Large importation ar- - -I'vttl HI rived August li!, and -- -WS B|J| more to follow. Our buying facilities belnC TlE’jM'- ff'ilMMtf*:) JPtfla uneQuuled, there Ik mo . *uch opportunity ofr fared elsewhere to procure first-class animals of choicest breeding at very lowest prlcos. F.verv animal duly recorded and guaranteed. Terms to suit all customers. Catalogues on application. GALBRAITH BROS.. Janesville. WU. FORCOUCHS, CROUP AND CONSUMPTION USE TAJK OF SWEET GUM AND MULLEIN. The Sweet Gum from a tree of the same name ? rowing In the South, Combined with a tea made roni the Mullein plant of the old fields. For sal* by all druggists at 25 cents and SI.OO per bottle. WALTER A. TAYLOR. Atlanta. Ba. IMPORTER AND BREEDER OF FRENCH DRAFT HORSES I I offer for sale the very best specimens of French Draft Horses that can be found in France. All parties wishing good, reliable stock are invited to call and sea my stock, which now number about 100 head. Terms and prices to suit purchasers. All stock sola under » guarantee of beim? breeders. I have also some very nne Ilercjor ' Hull Calve*, all from im porte i stock JAMES A. I'ERRY, Rivcrvicw Stock Fa.m W|]m"u£ ton. 1)1 , .Vi mile-, south of Chicago, on C. * A. R. I{.

I CURE FITS! When t iiay euro i tto not mean merely to stop them Tor' a Uuie and then Imvo them return again, I mean a radli cal cure. 1 lmvo made tho disease of FITS, EPILEPSY j or FALLING SICKNESS a llfo-long study, / warrant my j remedy to cure tho worst cases. Because others haye j failed Is no reason for not now recelrlng a euro. iJend aft ' onco for a treatise ami a Froe Bottle of my Infallibleremedy. Give Express and Post Office. It costs yo* 1 nothing for a trial, »nd I will cure you. I Artdrcis, Dr. H. 0. BOOT, l«a Pearl flt.. N.w Yorfc msimmm You arc allowed a free Mai of thirty davn of th« like ot Dr. Dye's Celebrated Voltaic B-lfwitl/Eleetrio Kusperieory Appliances, for the speedy relief and per- | Clm °i y*™ o ™ Debility impaired Vitality, and all kindred iron les. Also for many other diseases Completerestoration to Health and Vigor d ‘ i j 1 * s Incurred. Illustrated psm r I Remedy for XJnUrrh Is the ■ Best. Easiest to Use; And Cheapest. \ ■ Alm good for Cold Headache, Hay Bever, Ac. 80 cents. | y - p - No. 4-3 fl ~ W^Fease'liV TO in thfe «u>er. 7 700 *“ w tl,c advertis.rn.aA