Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 1, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 February 1886 — Page 7
STRICTLY PURE. Ujng balsaM The BEST and CHEAPEST COUGH AND CROUP REMEDY. As an Expectorant it has no Equal. ALLEN’S LUNG 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 CKOUP REMEDY. Those desiring a remedy for CONSUMPTION or any LUNG DISEASE should secure the large SI.OO bottles. Directions accompany each bottle. US'S old by All Medicine Dealers J. N. HARRIS & CO. (Liiitei), Proj’rs, CINCINNATI, OHIO. an. SOLDIER’S IkMjKk v n■ a (tan SOMEIHINtt MKm: wk t C ORB. New - showing MUSg.- .IH& HtW WHIR* Enlistment. Discharge, Hatties participated in, wounds, promotions, etc., and a cto record decease A magnifiWsSaßßStyrent work of art. Striking steel portraits of Lincoln, Grant, Sherman, and Sheridan. Battle scenes, etc., making a beautiful picture for framing. When filled out. Will prove an interesting record for all, and a priceless souvenir to posterity. Highly indorsed by leading military men. Those who lost soldier friends during or since the war, and every veteran now living, will be sure to order one or more copies. fiftfin inCNTC can reap a splendid harvest, as UUUU AUCn I u the inducements offered with the Soldier’s Record are unequaled. Children of Soldiers prize tticrn highly. Every purchaser is made a subscriber to our paper. For fuil particulars and sample outfit address. The CHICAGO LEDGER, 271 Franklin street, Chicago, 111, CREAMBALM OAIMBH Cleanses the Head. Relieves Pain at Once. Allays In- J flammation. Heals Sores. Restores Taste and Smell. A Positive Cure. “ TCUCD A particle is applied into H fl Y " rr « til each nostril. Price 50 cents I law I 1 !■■■■■* at druggists’ or by mail, send for circular ELY BROTHERS, Druggists, Owego, N. Y, Inn 1 n«.PiTo active ageuts, male and teI 1111 °/ UmTIT male - Barker Burglar Alarm. I In 1 I 11111 Send for circulars and terms. AUU r L 1 Uill Barker & Co., 1.2 Na saust.,N.Y. MPIIIIkKI* For milk or beef stock of DEVONS mS mm V WllV westfield, n. y. II A vr AITO R. S. k A.p. Lacey, Patent Bw 15 I 5F* in | W Attorneys,Washington, D.C. I I kal I W Instructions and opinions •a to patentability FREE. J*S*l7 years’ experience. WM SIYC QAn active Mam or Woman in every |B ||9 I E to sell our goods Salary *7B. H £fi ■ per Month and Expenses. Expenses in ad- ■ ■ vancc. Canvassing outfit FREE! Particulars free. Standard Silvor-ware Co. Boston. Mass. IF YOU WANT TO KNOW 1,0011 mportanttliings you never knewor thought ei about the human body and its curious organs. How life is perpetuated, health saved,disease induced Howto avoid pitfalls of ignorance and, indiscretion, How to apply Home-Cure to all forms of disease, Howto cure Croup, Old. Eyes, Rupture, Phimosis, etc.. How to mate,he happy in marriages haveprize babies S! D FREE PAMPSLETS Murray Hill Pub. Co., 129 E. 28th SU hew York. V iNEGAR Bitters is the great Blood Purifier and life-giving Principle; a Gentle Purgative and Tonic; a perfect Renovator -and Invigorator of the system. In Vinegar Bitters there is vitality but Bo alcoholieor mineral poison. Diseases of the skin, at whatever name or nature, are (literally dug up and canted out of the system ina short time by the use of the Bitters. Vinegar Bitters allays feverishness. It relieves, and in tone cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Gout, and similar painful diseases. Vinegar Bitters cures Constipation and prevents Diarrhoea. Never before has a medicine been .compounded possessing the power of Vinegar Bitters to heal the sick. Send for either of our valuable reference books for ladies, for farmers, for merchants, our Medical Treatise on Diseases, or our Catechism on Intemperance and Tobacco, which last should Be read by every child and youth in the land. Any two of the above books mailed free on fieoeipt of four cents for registration fees. K.H. McDonald Drug Co., 832 Washington St*, N.Y. n n n mdway's n n n REMY 111 lla 111 RELIEF CUBES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Inflammations, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, Difficult Breathing, CURES THE WORST PAIN in from one to twenty minutes. Not- one honr after reading this need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. K RADWAY’S READY RELIEF Is a Cure for All Pains, Sprains, Braises, Pains in tho Back, Chest or Limbs. It was the First and is the Only FAIN REMEDY That instantly stops the most excruciatin'' pains ulti,»B mn «V ion ’ a u nd Congestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach or Bowels, or other glands or organS’by one application. A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will in a few minutes cure Cramps. Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nervous£S’e a v l mT' 81<>k headache. Diarrhea. DysenrnV Co l lC ’ flatulency, and all internal pains iliere is not a remedial avent in the world that will oHS 6 ver „ a ud Agu< and all other Malarious, Bilious and other fevers (aided by RAHWAY’S PILLS) sonuick as RADWAY’S READY RELIEF. ’ Fifty cents per bottle. Sold by druggists. Dr. Radway’s Sarsapariilian Resolvent Has stood the test of nearly half a century as a remedy for Scrofulous, Mercurial and Syphilitic Complaints. Chrome Rheumatism, Skin Diseases, and Import tes of the Blood. It builds up the hroken-down constitution, purifies the blood, restoring health and vigor. Sold by druggists; $1 a bottle. „ . DR. KADWAY'S PILLS, For thei wire of Dyspepsia and all Disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, etc. Be sure to get Radway’s 1 DR- kADWAY A CO. New York.
That Sausage.
A clergyman in a Southern State was on his war to preach a funeral sermon. As he was passing the house of a widow lady, a member of his congregation, she ran out and stopped him, saying, as they had just slaughtered their hogs, she had put up a few pounds of sausage as a present, adding that, as she had put it in double paper pockets, she thought it would not soil his clothes. He thanked her earnestly for her kindness, and rode on, having put the parcel in his pocket. All the time he was officiating at the grave a large, half-starved hound kept snuffing around him, sometimes approaching alarmingly near, attracted by the scent of the fresh meat. As the deceased was a man of some prominence, there was a considerable crowd collected, and great mourning and lamentation came from the family group; so no one paid any attention to the movements of the animal, but all noticed with concern —"or he was beloved by his congregation—the great pallor of the clergyman, and the beads of perspiration standing upon his brow, and they began to whisper to each other that Mr. H must be ill.
After the interment they all proceeded to the church, where the funeral sermon was to be preached. Just before entering, Mr. H turned round to ascertain the whereabouts of his tormentor, when lo! there he was, not far from him, but the crowd prevented him from approaching too closely, Just at this moment some one gave the poor creature a cruel kick, which sent him off howling. When the minister reached his pulpit —one of those old-fashioned affairs ascended by a short, steep flight of steps—he breathed more freely. He was just about to commence his duties when the sexton, a good old man, came noiselessly up tho steps with a slip of paper in his hand, which he wished to give to the minister, but who was unnoticed by that gentleman, though seen by all the congregation. He gently twitched his coat to attract his attention. A thrill of horror passed over the unhappy preacher at the dreadful thought that the dog had entered unseen in the crowd, and was now about to take forcible possession of the sausage before the whole assembly ; so, hoping to drive him away, he kicked back cautiously but vigorously, and struck the old man in the breast, who rolled down the steps. Seeing the look of surprise and alarm on the faces of the audience, he stammered out, with crimson face: “I must explain to you, my brethren, what must seem my intemperate conduct. A friend came out to me, as I was passing her house, with a small package of sausage for me to carry home in my pocket; but ever since I dismounted from my horse this old dog”—pointing behind to the prostrate sexton, but without looking round—“has been following me, and at length came into the pulpit, and has been tugging at my coat, determined to get the sausage from my pocket.” At this moment the sexton, a little stunned and a little hurt, arose from the floor, and the minister at a glance took it all in, stared wildly at him, took a drink of water, turned very pale, and sat down, overwhelmed with consternation.— Editor’s Drawer , in Harper’s Magazine.
“If I Only Had Capital.”
In all sections of all lands we find a class of people, mostly young men, who are good talkers, but very poor workers. They are constantly bemoaning their lot in life, and grieve because they were not born .with a silver spoon in their mouth. stand on the street corners or loaf in the billiard and pool rooms, and, like Micawber, are constantly waiting for something to turn up, never themselves putting forth the first effort to turn anything up. “Oh, if I had capital, I’d show you how to make money. I would invest in this enterprise or that industry, and, soon it would be bringing me in handsome returns, and then I would be living, and not dragging out a mere existence; but this getting along without money is what I never could do, and I never expect to know how. ” Such is the soliloquy of many young men who reside not a thousand miles from Portsmouth. t To all such, should they peruse these lines, we would say: “You are the architect of your own fortune,” and you are and can be just exactly what you want to be, and what you are willing to work to attain unto. Money is not all the capital that is necessary as a stepping-stone to success. Any young man who has his bodily and mental health, and a mind of at least some culture, has capital that many of the moneyed men never possessed, and if he will only utilize this God-given capital with vim, force, and push, he will thereby be enabled, under ordinary circumstances, to lay up for himself some of that other kind of capital which is so essential to one’s happ ness and comfort in everyday life. What our young men of to-day need is not so much money as it is the push and energy to earn it. Then when it comes in the reward of their own labors, they will appreciate its value more and know how to save it, and by assiduous toil perhaps some day they may have the capital the lack of which they so much bemoan at the present day. Then, young man, go to work, cease loafing on the street corners and public saloons, and use the God-given capital you have at your command, and this may be a means to a desirable end. At. any rate, don’t forever stand crying, “If I had capital,” when all the talents you have are depreciating in value for the want of proper exercise.—Portsmouth (Fa.) Times.
A dose of Red Star Cough Cure willpre- ; vent yen disturbing tho congregation aid i put you in a right frame of mind to enjoy the services. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
Life at Rome in St. Paul’s Day.
The condition of the lower classes rendered them more hopeful subjects for the ennobling influences of the faith of Christ. It is true that they also lived in the midst of abominations. But to them vice stood forth in all its bare and revolting hideousness, and there was no wealth to gild its anguishing reactions. Life and its temptations wore a very different aspect to the master who could lord it over the souls and bodies of a thousand helpless minions, and to the wretched slave who was the victim of his caprice and tyranny. As in every city where the slaves far outnumbered the free population, they had to be kept in subjection by laws of terrible severity. It is no wonder that in writing to a church of which so many members were in this sad condition, St. Paul thought it necessary to warn them of the duty of obedience and honor toward the powers that be. The house of a wealthy Homan contained slaves of every rank, of every nation, and of every accomplishment, who could be numbered, not by scores, but by hundreds. The master might kill or torture his slaves with impunity; but if one of them, goaded to passionate revenge by intolerable wrong, ventured to raise a hand against his owner, the whole family, with their wives and children, however innocent, were put to death. The Roman lady looked lovely at the banquet, but the slave girl who arranged a curl wrong had already been branded with a hot iron. The triclinia of a banquet might gleam with jeweled and myrrhine cups, but if a slave did but drop by accident one crystal vase he might be flung, then and there, to feed the lampreys in his master’s fish pond The senator and the knight might 101 l upon cushions in the amphitheater, and look on luxuriously at the mad struggles of the gladiators ; but to the gladiator this meant the endurance of all the detestable savagery of the lanista, and the taking of a horrible oath that, “like a genuine gladiator, ” he would allow himself to be bound, burned, beaten, or killed at his owner’s will. There were, doubtless, many kind masters at Rome; but the system of slavery was in itself irredeemably degrading, and we cannot wonder, but can only rejoice, that, from Caesar’s household downward, there were many in this condition who found in Christian teaching a light and peace from heaven. However low their earthly lot, they thus attained to a faith so sure and so consolatory that in the very catacombs they surrounded the grim memorials of death with emblems of peace and beauty, and made the illspelt jargon of their quaint illiterate epitaphs the expression of a radiant happiness and an illimitable hope.— Anon.
A Mystery.
How the human system ever recovers from the bad effects of the nauseous medicines often literaUy poured into it for tho suppositive relief of dyspepsia, liver complaint, constipation, rheumatism, and other ailments, is a mystery. The mischief done by bad medicine is scarcely less than that caused by disease. If they who are weak, bilious, dyspeptic, constipated, or rheumatic would oftener be guided by the experience of invalids who have thoroughly tested Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, they would in every instance obtain the speediost aid derivable from rational medication. This medicine is a searching and at the Bamo time a thoroughly safe remedy, derived from vegetable sources, and possessing, in consequence of its basis of fiure spirits, properties as a medicinal stimuant not to be found in tho fiery local bitters and stimulants often resorted to by tho debilitated, dyspeptic, and languid.
Cuvier on Tight Lacing.
The great naturalist, Cuvier, was walking one day with a young lady, who was a victim of tight lacing, in a public garden in Paris. A lovely blossom upon an elegant plant drew from her an expression of admiration. Looking at her pale, thin face, Cuvier said: “You were like this flower once; to-morrow it will be as you are now.” Next day he led her to the same spot and the beautiful flower was dying. She asked the cause. “This plant,” replied Cuvier, “is an image of yourself. I will show you what is the matter with it.” He pointed to a cord bound tightly around the stem and said: “You are fading away exactly in the same manner under the compression of your corset, fund you are losing by degrees all your youthful charms, just because you have not the courage to resist this dangerous fashion.” An electric spark m a dusty atmosphere causes the dust to settle, and if the air be smoky, clears it up. This is probably one reason why the air seems so clear when sniffed after a thunderstorm, even though there has been but little rain.— Dr. Foote’s Health Monthly.
“Gentle as the Breeze of Evening.”
This line of an old hymn is quite appropriate when applied to “Pleasant Purgative Pellets.” “1 don’t like to take pills if 1 can avoid it,” wo often hear people say, “because they constipate me so.” Now the “Pellets” never do this. They are so gentle and mild that their effect is almost precisely similar to a natural movement of tho bowels, and no unpleasant effects are left behind. When trains are telescoped the poor passengers see stars.
A Happy Port.
What port is sought by every living creature ? Sup-port. You can not well make it if your lungs are not sound. Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein will make them so and cure your cough. I linve been selling Athlophoros about one year. The sales have been very fair, and in every instance tho medicine has proved satisfactory to the purchaser in casco of rheumatism and neuralgia. Samuel Hastings, a druggist of Mendota, 111. Bronchitis is cured by frequent small dosei of Pifo’o Cure for Consumption.
Prematurely Aged.
Many a woman is robbed of those charms which the rentier sex value so hlrhiy, and made old before her time by functional irregularities. To such the bloom of youth may be restored by the use of a remedy which has stood the test or time and which is to-day acknow. edged to be without an equal as a cure for all lemale weaknesses —Dr. Pierce's “Favorite Prescription.” By ail druggists. A Pueblo (Mexican) paper is called the Mother-in-Law. Married men won’t have it iu the house.
Throw Away Trusses.
Cures guaranteed of every case of rupture undertaken. Book of particulars, 10 cents in stamps. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. HHAkspeare would not have asked “What’a in a name?” if he had tried to wrestle with the titles bestowed upon his pet orchids. Neuralgia and Rheumatism are depicted in engravings as demons tearing at the human fonn, but they could be more truthfully described bv showing a disordered stomach of clogged blood vessels. Vineoab Bitters affords certain relief and eventual cure for both bv acting upon the internal system. It dispels all pain demons instanter. A billiard ball gets off its b&ise when, it jumps tho table and tries the floor for a run. —New Orleans Picayune. The lougest pole knocks the persimmons, and Bigelow’s Positive Cure kuocks all coughs, colds, croup, hoarseness, bronchitis, asthma, influenza, and consumption. Pleasant for children. Safe and speedy. 50 cents and sl. German photographors are now making photographs of lightning. They are said to be striking likenesses. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, in thousands of cases, has cured a cough in a few (lays. A rising young lady from the Yeast—Sallie Ratos.— St. Paul Herald. Had a bilious attack and one of those indescribable cases of constant weariness. Took quinine and other remedies without relief. Took Dr. Jones’ Red Clover Tonic: am strong and well. Asa Thompson, Logan. Ohio. The printer has a pick nick all the year round.— Texas Siftings. For removing dandruff and promoting tho growth of tho hair, use Hall’s Hair Renewer. A dog belonging to a Cincinnati shoe dealer chews tobacco. Probably Spitz.
The Great German Physician.
The remarkable phase in the practice of Dr. Peter W. Schmidt (frequently called Dr. Pete) is, ho never asked one to describe their disease but tells each one their trouble without asking a question. His success is phenomenal His practice enormous. Ho is sought after by hundreds wherever lie goes, because ho cures when every other physician and remedy havo failed. He lias allowed his great medicines, Golden Soal Bitters and Lung Food for Consumption, to be offered to the suffering, and wo assort without fear of successful contradiction that there is no disease they will not cure. Thousands of bottles havo been sold. Thousands of brokendown and discouraged invalids saved. Send to Golden Seal Bitters Company, Holland City, Mich., for Facts for tho Million! Free.
Free to Ministers, Lawyers, Doctors, and Teachers.
I will send two bottles of Warner’s White Wine op 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 bis wholesale druggist. Send name of your druggist. Map of Holy Land free with medicine. Address Dr.C. D. Warner, Chicago, 111. All druggists.
“Put up” at the Gault House.
The business man or tourist will find flrstr class accommodations at tho low price of $2 and $2.50 per day at tho Gault Hou§o, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel Is located in the center of tho city, only one block from the Union Depot. Elevator; all appointments flrst-cluss. Hovt & Gates. Proprietors.
A Distressed General.
What General causes more distress, is more prevalent, and spreads more dismay? General Want. If it was from the want of sound lungs Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein would out-general it. For dyspepsia, indigestion, depression o spirits, and general debility in their various forms; also, as a preventive against fever and ague, and other intermittent fevers, the “Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., of New York, and sold by all druggists, Is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal.
An Undoubted Blessing.
About thirty years ago a prominent physician by the name of Dr. William Hall discovered, or produced after long experimental research, a remedy for diseases of the throat, chest and lungs, which was of ■uch wonderful efficacy that it soon gained a wide reputation in this country. The name of the medicine is DR. WM. HALE'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, and may be safely relied on as a speedy and positive; cure for coughs, colds, sore throat, etc.
Med Star TRADE MARK. (ough(ure Free from Opiates, JEmeUes and Faison. lurl'. O KfJts PROMPT. AOrir? AT Dai-oorera xxn Dxalxx*. ———“ THB CHAKLEB A. TOO ELBE CO.. B A I.TIHOBK. MP.
cr Jacobs on GERMankMEDY 10l I 3 II i-asWßft’iSSfc. ■ **■ ■ **■■■ AT DRUGGISTS AND DRALEBB, THR CHARLES A. VOOELER CO.. BALTIMORE, HD. BUY SALYER'S (La Crew, Wla) SEEDS. C«U.Fr«. /k CITT YonrKew»deai*rtorTHE CHICAGO DC LEDGER, the Best Story Paper i#i th** country* Read it. nll IP
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS WILL CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION" MALARIA CHILLS and FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN in the BACK & SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES FOR SALE BY ALL pRUGGISTS The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Red Lines on wrapper. TAKE NO OTHER. /'Carpenters and woodworkers. sls and upward aa> V'eures exclusive rights to manufacture and sell article required in every house, public building, ote. Handsome profits. Address J. BADGER, 43 W.l33dst.,N. Y. M. W. PmjTTATtr Wayne, Du Page Co., Illinois, HAS IMPORTED FROM FRANOE Percheron Horses valued at $5,800,000, which Includes about TO PER GENT OF ALL HORSES Whose pnrltyof blood is established bv pedigree* raStu^Book’ere^inl&tJhcd^ln’tii^counu^^*'^’ EVER IMPORTED TO AMERIOA. aSm^ONHAND: mported Brood lares Imported Stallions, Recognising the prim • accepted brail intern. breeder* that, howI bred animal* may b* ft 1 '? lo D P- lr .their pedigree* arc not re ?,° .i should be valued only as grades, I will sell all Imported stock at grade price* when I cannot furnish with the animal sold, pedigree verified by tho original French certificate the Fercheron stud Book of France. 100. page Ulna. lL“V'fsr;f*f“ lo * uo &*?• Wayne, lIIh. ,l„ 35 mile* weat of Chicago, on tho Chicago A North-Western Ry. Xo Wov&s Mold express the agony I endured from Rheumatism, and it was all I could do to endure It. Crippled, not able to walk or sleep, 1 took two-thirds of a bottle of ATHLQPHOROS and In a fhw days was well." T F.. Chatfieid, 365 11th Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. Athlophoros Is tho only real core for Rheumatism ever discovered. Ask your druggist for Athlophoros. If you cannot get ltof him do not try something olse, but order at once from us. We will send ft express paid on rccolpt of price, SI,OO per bottle. ATHLOPHOROS CO.. 112 Wall 8t„ New York. __ E-PAGES fULIQUID GLUE g AlSi— ° EVERYTHING IfjEfcjEjSHßFa] Wood, Leather, Paper, Ivory ,01ns», lß«lMrritf^ftYi (!,l ‘ na , furniture, I)ric-a-Bruc, do. Strong as Iron, Solid a* a Books total quantity sold during tbs UulsljKS^J nut: five years amounted to over iaaMi gqjuiMiHMi, I»Ot4®WWWITIS All dealers can sell it. Awarded ffijjWSpKHjJSri’ronounccd Strongest Glue known Bend dealer’s card and 10c. postagt l# 11118 P 0 Ad ‘ Ruaau’ujtMKST Co. Gloucester!Main FOR COUGHS, CROUP AND CONSUMPTION USE HPS OF SWEET GUM AND MULLEIN. The Sweet Gum from a tree of the same name growing in the South, Combined with a tea made from the Mullein plant of the old fields. For sale by all druggists tit 25 cents and fI.OO per bottle. WALTER A. TATI/OHI, Atlanta, ft*. fillip sides of v B. H. DOUGLASS & SONS' Caimcam Cough Drops for Coughs, Colds and Sore Throats, an Alleviator of Consumption, and ol’great benefit in most eases of Dyspepsia. (lEWARE OF IMITATIONS.) They are the result of over forty years* experleno# in compounding: OOtTO-H REMEDIES. Detail price 15 cents per quarter pound* « i FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS. * Mp A Life Experience. Remarkable and quick cures. Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed particulars. Address Dr. WARD a CO. Louisiana, Mo. CONSUMPTION. I b*v* a positive remedy for the above disease; by It* a*e thousands ofcasss of the worst kind and of long standing hare been cured. Indeed, t ostrong!* m faith In Its efficacy, that Iwl 1 send TWO BOTTLISB PltEB. together with a V A I.UAIII.E TREATISE on thla die****, to any sufferer. Give express and 1* O. addr sa. DR. T. A. SLOCUM, Ist Toarlgt., how York, You are allowed a free trial of thirty days ol tho use of Dr. Dye s Celebrated Voltaic B -it with Electrio Suspensory Appliances, for the speedy relief and permanent cure ot Nervous Debility. Impaired Vitality. and all kindred tr>di les. A'so for many other nIL. eases Complete restoration to Health and Vln? guaranteed. No risk is incurred. Illustrated pamfnvetope. maib'd tree, by addressing VOLTAIC KKLI OIL, Marshall, Michigan. ■ ■jg jg jwjpSfc u 1 sfgj,’ jfgTrRBWB M CURES~WHERE AU EISOAIIS. |M Best Cough Syrun. Tastes good. Use N l^^l^kraLMdliydruggjs^^H C M. P. Ho, ft—B6 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS. i !tP le * ,e J’ o " **vr the advertisement in this paper.
