Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 43, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 November 1886 — Page 7
SCIENTIFIC TRUTH
Regarding the Functions of an Important Organ, Of Which the Public Knows but Little, Worthy Careful Consideration. To the Editor of the Scientific American: Will you permit us to make known to the public the facts we have learned during the past eight years, concerning disorders of the human Kidneys and the organs which diseased Kidneys so easily break down.f You are conducting a Scientific paper, and are unprejudiced except in favor of Truth. It is needless to say , no medical Journal of'‘Code” standing would admit these facts, for very obvious reasons. 11. K WARNER & CO., Proprietors of “ Warner's Safe Cure.”
That we may emphasize and clearly explain the relation the kidneys sustain to the general health, and how much is dependent upon them, we propose, metaphorically speaking, to take one Irom the human body, place in the wash-bowl before us, and examine it for the public benefit You will imagine that we have before us a body shaped like a bean, smooth and glistening, about four inches in length, two m Width, and one in thickness. It ordinarily weighs in the adult male, about five ounces, but is somewhat lighter in the female. A small organ? you say. But understand, the body of the average size man contains about ten quarts of blood, of which every drop glasses through these filters or sewers, as they may be called, many times a day as often as through the heart, making a complete revolution in three minutes. From the blood they separate the waste material, working away steadily night and day, sleeping or waking,.tireless as the heart itself, and fully of as much vital importance; removing impurities from sixty-five gallons of blood each hour, or about lorty-nine barrels each day, or 9,125 hogshead a year! What a wonder that the kidneys can last any length of time under this prodigious strain, treated and neglected as they are? Wo slice this delicate organ open lengthwise with our knife, and will roughly describe its interior. \Ve find it to be of a reddish-brown color, soft and easiiy torn; filled with hundreds of little tubes, short and thread-like, starting from ttie arteries, ending in a little tuft about midway from the outside opening into a cavity of considerable size, which is called tho pelvis, or, roughly speak ng, a sac, which is for the purpose of liokliug the water to further undergo purification before it passes down from here into the ureters, and so on to the outside of the body. These little tubes arc the filters which do their work automatically, and right here is where the disease of the kidney first begins. Being tho vast amount of work which they are oenged to, from tho slightest irregularity in our habits, from cold, from higli living, from stimulants, or a thousand and one other causes which occur every day, they become somewhat weakened in their nerve force. What is the result? Congestion or stoppage of the current of blood in the small blood vessels surrounding them, which become blocked; these delicate membranes are irritated; inflammation is set up, then pus is formed, which collects in the pelvis or sac; tho tubes are at first partially, and soon are totally, unable to do their work. The pelvic sac goes on distending with this corruption, pressing upon the blood vessels. All this time, remember, the blood, which is entering the kidneys to be filtered, is passing through this terrible, disgusting pus, for it cannot take any other route! Stop and think of it for a moment. Do you realize the importance, nay, the vital necessity, of having the kidneys in order? Can you expect, when they are diseased or obstructed, no matter how little, that you can have pure blood and escape diseasel It would be just as reasonable to expect, if a pest-houso were set across Broadway and countless thousands were compelled to go through its pestilential doors, an escape from contagion and disease, as for one to expect the blood to escape po lu~ tion when constantly running through a diseased kidney. Now, what is the result? Why, that the blood takes up and deposits this poison as it sweeps along into every organ, into every inch of muscle, tissue, flesh and bone, from your head to your feet. And whenever, from hereditary influence or otherwise, some part of the body is weaker than another, a countless train of diseases is established, such as consumption, in weak lungs; dyspepsia, where there is a delicate stomach; nervousness, insanity, paralysis, or heart disease in those who have weak nerves. The heart must soon feel the effects of the poison, as it requires pure blood to keep it in right action. It increases its stroke in number and force to compeusa’e for the natural stimulus wanting, in its endeavor to crowd the impure blood through this obstruction, causing pain, palpitation, or an out-of-breath feeling. Unnatural as this forced labor is, the heart must soon falter, becoming weaker and weaker, until one day it suddenly stops, and death from apparent ‘•heart disease” is the verdict. But the medical profession, learned and dignified, call these diseases by high-sounding names, treat them alone, and “patients die, for the arteries are carrying slow death to the affected pari, constantly adding fuel brought from these suppurating, pus-laden kidneys, which here in our wash-bowl are very putrefaction itself, and which should liavo been cured first.
But this is not all the kidneys have to do; for you must remember that each adult takes about seven pounds of nourishment every twenty-four hours to supply the waste of the body which is constantly going on, a waste equal to the quantity taken. This, too, the kidneys have to separate from the blood with all other decomposing matter. But you say], “My kidneys are all right. I have no pain in the back.” Mistaken man! People die of kidney disease of so bad a character that the organs are rotten, and yet they have never there had a pain nor an ache! Why? Because the disease begins, as wo have shown in tho interior of the kidney, where there are few tierves of feeling to convey the sensation of pain. Why this is so we may never know. When you consider their great work, the delicacy of their structure, the ease with which they are deranged, cau you wonder at the ill-health of our men and women? Health and long life cannot be expected when bo vital an organ is impaired. No wonder some writers say we are degenerating. Don’t you see the great, the extreme importance of keeping this machinery in working order? Could the finest engine do even a fractional part of this work without attention from the engineer? Don’t you see how dangerous this hidden disease is? It is lurking about us constantly, without giving any indication of its presence. The most skillful physicians can not detect it at times, for the kidneys themselves can not he examined by any means which we have at our command. Even an analysis of the water, chemically and microscopically, roveals nothing definite in many cases, oveu when the kidnevs are fairly broken down. {Then look out for them, as disease, no matter where situated, to 93 per cent, as shown by after-death examinations, has its origin in the breaking down of these secreting tubes in the interior of the kidneys. As you value health, as you desire long life free from sickness and suffering, give these organs some attention. Keep them in good condition, and thus prevont (as is easily done) all disease. Warner’s Safe Cure, as it becomes year after year better known for its wonderful cures and its power over the kidneys, has done and is doing more to increase the average duration of life than all the physicians and medicines known. Warner’s Safe Curo is a true specific,mild but certain, harmless but energetic and agreeable to tho - •» sr» ■* j Take it whon sick aef a cure, and never let a
month go by if you need it, without taking a few bottles as & preventive, that the kiuneyu may be kept in proper order, the blood pure, that health and long life mav l>e vour blessing. H. H. WARNER & CO.
Mental Disease.
It would have been more accurate to specify crime, instead of speaking vaguely of sin. The Saturday net iew, in an article on this topic, restates and professes to find approximate satisfaction in the familiar legal questions about insanity: “Did he know that what he was doing wrong? If he did, could he help doing it?” We are unfortunately compelled by the facts of the case to join issue, and contend that a man may know he is doing wrong, and do it without obligations or impulse of any sort, and yet be insane. There is unquestionably such a thing as “moral insanity”—that is, insanity of the conscience of morality; and this particular form of mental disease—for such it is—cannot unhappily be very readily or certainly distinguished from that depravity of the moral sense which characterizes alike low developments and what Herbert Spencer has designated, and Hughlings-Jackson has demonstrated in pathology, as “dissolution.” There will be no substantial progress in the study of mental disease until tiiis branch of science is rescued from the toils of the lawyers. The judges, by their formulation of imperfect views of facts in medicine—and therefore beyond the province of r onmedical observers, however able and acute —have done violence to truth and principle, and they have placed a great stumbling-block in the way of the doctors. For the present we must stand on the defensive, and may in all truthfulness be described as lost in amazement at the wondrous and inexpl cable folly of those who, while attempting to recognize a disease and to discriminate between it and health, should set themselves against the study of the only methods by which diagnosis, in a medical sense, can be safely or successfully performed. —The Lancet.
A Grim Collection.
Tbe city of Paris lias become lately the possessor of a remarkable collection of documents, which will have great interest in years to come for historical investigators. This was the series of death warrants, extending from the of April, 1808, to the Bth of December, 1832, belonging to Sanson, the notorious headsman of the revolution. The collection was bound up in nineteen volumes, and Sanson has prefixed to each volume a summary of the contents. It appears that during twenty-five years he executed 7,143 capital sentences, being an average of 217 executions in each year—rather a busy life. During the twenty-five years he only twice ascended the scaffifid without a fatal result—once in 1815, when Gen. Count Lavalette was to have been executed tor complicity in the return of Napoleon, but- escaped the night before his intended execution through the heroism of his wife. The second time was in 1817, when Phi-lippe-Jean Antoine, a noted coiner, was respited at the last moment by Louis X\ 111.
A Horrible Form
Ot malarial disease is dumb ague. Constant drowsiness, sleep interrupted by a chill, succeeded by a consuming heat, and that by an exhausting sweat. A sensation as of numbness from cold, but no shaking attends it. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters invariably eradicates it, though it is the most obstinate form of miasmahorn disease. To conquer it with quinine is as impossible as to battle down Gibraltar witli a howitzer. Malarial disorders of every kind are attended with derangement of the livor, a fact evinced by tho saffron tint which tho skin assumes in such diseases. For this symptom, as well as for its cause, the Bitters is a certain remedy. Constipation, dyspepsia, rheumatism, aud inactivity of the kidneys and bladder, are also relieved by this fine alterative.
The Germ Theory.
In 1721, the year of the great plague, Goiffin, a physician of Lyons, wrote as follows: “Minute insects or worms alone can explain these diseases. It is true they are not visible; but it does not therefore follow that they are nonexistent. It is only that our microscopes are not at present powerful enough to show them. We can easily imagine the existence of creatures which bear the same proportion to mites that mites bear to elephants. No other hypothesis can explain the sac ts. Neither the malign influence of the stars, nor terrestrial exhalations, nor miasmata, nor atoms, whether biting or burning, acid or bitter, could regain their vitality once they had lost it. If, on the other hand, we admit the existence of minute living creatures, we understand how infection can be conveyed in a latent condition from one place to break out afresh in another.” It will be seen from the above that at least one of Pasteur’s ideas was anticipated by 165 years. Mr. J. Howard James, manager Stuckert’s Livery, 619 N. sth s'.reet, Philadelphia, Pa., says: After trying all other remedies without relief, for a heavy cold on the chest, accompanied by a severe cough, I used Red Star Cough Cure, and in a very short time was entirely well. A young man who suffered pretty regularly .three times a week with severe attacks of neuralgic headache, was relieved by discontinuing meats, or adopting a purely vegetable diet. Meats when not thoroughly digested as they are apt not to be in case of torpid stomach and liver, develop poisonous compounds which favor rheumatic and neuralgic affections. Dr. Foote’s Health Monthly. ... St. Jacobs Oil is pronounced a most extraordinary cure for rheumatism by Hon. wJifftnes Harlan, ex-Vice Chancellor, Louisville, Ky.
Important. When you visit or leave New York City, save baggage, expressaga, aud $d carriage hire, and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot Gl3 rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million dollars, $1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Kestanraut supplied with the best. Horsa cars, stages, and elevated railroad to ail depots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other first-class hotol in the city.
How Patti and Nilsson Once “Rassalled.”
The Paris correspondent of the Philadelphia Times tells of a dinner party in that city in DU*, where Patti aud Nilsson met, relating the following extraordinary occurrence: Coffee was served in the salon, and Ambroise Thomas tried to induce both Nilsson and Patti to sing something, but neither would consent to do so, although the eminent composer volunteered to play the accompaniments. “I have eaten too much to be able to sing,” said la Patti; and then she added, “but I am ready to wrestle with Nilsson if she likes.” “Ras-sal! qu’est ce que e’est quo ca ?” asked Saint Armand, who knows no language but French, and that not as well as he ought to. Explanations followed, and then took place a laughable, not to say somewhat naughty, trial of strength between the two rival divas. Mile. Patti made quite a plucky struggle, but in the end Nilsson put her fairly on her back, amid loud applause led by the illus.rious composer of “Faust.” Then some one suggested that Gounod and Thomas should wrestle, but they declined, and the athletic entertainment was broken up by the Prince going to the piano, where he sang a love air from “Pliilomene et Faucis” to his own accompaniment. — Texas Siftings.
The best insect destroyer known: Hot alum water is the best insect destroyer known. Put one pound in a gallon of hot water and let it boil until all the alum is dissolved. Apply hot with a brush, and all creeping things are instantly destroyed, without danger to human life or injury to property. Sick and bilious headache, and all derangements of stomach and bowels, cured by Dr. Pierce’s “Pellets”—or anti-bilious granules. 25 cents a vial. No cheap boxes to allow waste of virtues. By druggists. Where one “man wants but little here below” three others are within calling distance who want all. The prompt use of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral will often prevent serious lung troubles. Is it not strange that the masculine singers do not start a bass bawl club? f Buckingham's Dye for tho Whiskers is hasily applied, and colors brown or black. Muddy streets are dangerous because they are full of cart ridges.
Sixtieth Year.
Tho Youth's Companion celebrates this year its sixtieth anniversary. It might well be named the “ Universal Companion," since its readers are found in 400„l)OO families. It is so wisely edited that its pages are as interesting to adults as to the young people. Besides the best short and serial stories it contains a great vax-iety of popular and useful information on natural history, science, home arts, games, and sports, and is fully illustrated. It costs but $1.75 a year, and a subscription sent now is credited to January, 1888.
How to Make Money.
No matter in what part you are located, you should write to Hallott & Co., Portland, Maine, and receive, free, information about work you can do and live at home, at a profit of from $5 to $25 arid upwards daily. Some have made over $5 >in a day. All is new. Capital not needed; Hallett <fc Co. will start you. Either sex; all ages. Those who commence at once will make sure of snug little fortunes. Write and see for yourselves.
“BUCHU-FAIBA.”
Quick, complete cure, all annoying kidney, bladder, and urinary diseases. sl. At druggists.
“ROUGH ON BILE” FILLS.
Small granules, small dose, big results, pleasant in operation, don’t disturb the stomach. 250.
“ROUGH ON DIRT.”
Ask for “Rough on Dirt.” A perfect washing powder found at last! A harmless, extra fine, A 1 article, pure and clean ; sweetens, freshens, bleaches, and whitens without the slightest injury to finest fabrics. Unequalod for fine linens and laces, general household, kitchen, and laundry use. Softens water; saves labor and soap. 6c, 10c, 25c. At druggists or grocers. Mensman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains blood-making, 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 work of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork, or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co., proprietors, New York, bold by druggists. “Rough on Rats” clears out rats. mice. 15c. "Rough on Corns”—hard or soft corns. 15c. “Rough on Toothache. ” Instant relief. 150. “Rough on Dentist" Tooth Powder, 10c. Wide awake 3 or 4 hours every night, coughing.—Get immediate relief and sound rest by using “Rough on Coughs” Troches, 10 cents. The mother’s favorite cough medicine for the children and adults is “Rough on Coughs” Troches, 10c. Liquid, 2f*c. LICK PRESERVER. If you are losing your grip on life, try “Wells’ Health Renewer." Goes direct to weak spots. Best, easiest to use, and cheapest Rlso’s Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists; 50c.
“DON’T PAY A BIG PRICE!” CC Oanto Pax® f° r a Year’s subscrip. DO VClllb tion to the Weekly American Rural Home, Rochester, N. Y„ without premium—“the Cheapest and Best Weeklv in the World,” 8 pages, 48 columns, 16 years old. For One Dollar you nave one choice from over 150 different ClothBound Hollar Volumes, 300 to 900 pp„ and paper one year, post-paid. Book postage, 15c Extra. 50.U00 books given away. Among them are: Law Without Lawyers; Family Cyclopedia; Farm Cyclopedia; Farmers’ and Stockbreeders’ Guide; Common Sense in Poultry Yard; World Cyclopedia; Danielson's (Medical) Counselor; Boys’ Useiul Pastimes: Five Years Before the Mast; People’s Historv of United States; Universal History of All Nations; Popular History Civil War (both sides). Any one book and piper, one year, all post-paid, for $1.15 only. Paper alone, 65c, if subscribed before the Ist of March. Satisfaction guaraiteed on books and Weekly, or money refunded. Reference, Hon. O. R. Parsons, Mayor Rochester. Sample papers, 20. RURAL HOME CO., LtdWithout Premium, 65c a year I Eocheste b, N.Y
How Women Differ from Men.
At least three men on the average jury are bound to disagree with the rest, just to show that they've got minds of their own; but there is no disagreement among the women as to tho merits of Dr. Pierce’s "Favorite Prescription.” They are all unnnimous in pronouncing it the best remedy in the world for all those chronic diseases, weaknesses and complaints peculiar to their sax. It transforms the pale, haggard, dispirited woman into one of sparkling health, ana the ringing laugh again “reigns supremo” in the happy household. It is said that a green turtle can live six weeks without food. The turtle seems to be the editor of the brute creation.
Human Calves.
An exchange says:—“Nine-tenths of the unhappy marriages result from human calves being allowed to run at largo in society pastures. ” Nine-tenths of the chronic or lingering diseases of to-day originate in impure blood, liver complaint or biliousness, resulting in scrofula, consumption (which is but scrofula of tho lungs), sores, ulcers, skin diseases and kindred affect ons. Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” cures all these. Of druggists. Talk is cheap—except you employ a stenographer. —Somerville Journal. Valuable and Convenient. Brown’s Bronchial Troches are a safe and sure remedy for Bronchitis, Coughs, aud other tror.blos of the Throat and Lungs. Sold only in boxes. Price 25 cents. An ode to a goat may bo called a nanny* versarv.
Catarrh Gan be Cured Thousands who liavo been troubled with that disagreeable How from the nose, offensive breath, pain over aud between the eyes, ringing and bursting noises in the oars, and otlior disagreeable symptoms of catarrh, have been entirely cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the best blood-purifying medicine. It expels every taint of impurity from the blood, vitalizes and enriches it, and also, improves the general health. If you suffer from catarrh, try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. *T have been troubled with catarrh about, a year, causing great soreness of the bronchial tubes and terrible headache. I saw the advertisement of Hood's Sarsaparilla as a cure for catarrh, and niter taking only ono bottlo I am much better. My catarrh is cured, my throat is entirely well, and my headache has all disappeared.” li. OimioNS, Hamilton, Butler Co., O. “Hood’s Sarsaparilla has helped me moro for catarrh and impure blood than anything elso I ever used." A. Ball, Syracuse, N. Y. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. *1; six for $5. Prepared by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Poses One Dollar Cures and Prevents Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Bronchitis, Catarrh. Bl *43f Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Asthma, Frostbites, 1 Chilblains. quicker than any known remedy. It was the lirst and is the only PAIN REMEDY That Instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays Inflammation and cures Congestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or organs, by one application. No matter how violent or excruciating the pain the Rheumatic, Bedridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgic, or prostrated with diseases may suffer, RADWAY’S READY RELIEF will afford instant ease. Thirty to sixty drops in half tumbler of water will In a few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms. Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiling, Palpitation of the Heart, Malaria, Chills and Fever, Faintness, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrhea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind in the Bowels and all Internal Pains. Fifty Cents per Bottle. Sold by Druggists. Dll. HAD WAY & CO., N\ Y., Proprietors of Radway’s Sarsaparillian Resolventand Dr. Radway’s Pills.
DATFUT EOIt SALK. THE ADAMSON 00., rHIC.ni patent So icltors Muncie, ludima. AMIIU Morphine Habit Cured in lO inPllliffl *° 20 dny». ,\o pay till cured. VI IVafl Ur. J. Stephen*, Lebanon, Ohio. DIAMOND Ventilator.—kn Agent Wanted in every County to introduce our System into every Buildins?. School, bedroom and office. Liberal commissions. Address, tor details, D.V. Co., 187 Dearborn St.. Chicago. MftllF HTUUY. Book-keeping, Business numc Forms, Penmanship, Arithmetic. Shorthand, etc., thoroughly taught by mail. Circulars free. COLLKGK OF KU.SIXKSS, Uuffl&lo, M. Y. All Hil CM suffering from Nervous Dolnli- “ « awl C. 111 ty, Vital Weakness, Wadin' Ailments, from any came, send f >r particulars and advice for self homecure. i)r..l. Rennert. Peru.lnti. n B. S. & A. P. Lacey, Patent BPffl Is l M R Attorneys,Washington, D.C. ■ n ■ blw ■ W Instructions and opinion* aa to patentability FRKK. Wl7 years’experience. no VOII ENJOY reading a FIRSTU\J IUU CLASS STORY PAPKRf If so, subscribe for Til it CHICAGO I.kUUKiI, only $ 1.50 per year. Vour Postmaster Is agent for it and will receive your subscription. FACE, HANDS, FEET, and all their Imperfections, including Fasaw cial Development, Bair ana Scalp, SuperTrfi jc tluous Hair, Birth Marks, Moles, Warts, Moth, Freckles, Hed Nose, Acne, Black Heads, Sears, Pitting and their treatment w’c&o / Send 10c. for hook or 60 pages, 4th edition. Dr.J. 11. Woodbury, 8? N. Pearl St., Albany,N.Y., pKt’b’d 1870. OLD SOLDIERSS* guOT t * and £XPKRIKNC’KB for each issue of THE CHICAGO LEDGER. One whole page is devoted to War Sketches every week, and they are all true to life. Bead them. You cannot fail to appreciate them, for they are furnished by “JOHNN and “YANK,” and give interesting experiences In the Union and Confederate armies. Bend two letter stamps for a sample copy of the best Family Story Paper In the West. Only $1.50 per year. AddreM CHICAGO LKUGKU. Chicago. 111.
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Mason
UNRIVALED ORGANS On tho EASY PAYMENT system, from *3.25 per month up. 100 styles, s'l ! to SOOO. Send for Catalogue with full particulars, mailed free. UPRIGHT PIANOS, Constructed on the now method of stringing, on slm* liar terms. Bend lor descriptive Catalogue. MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO. Boston, Now York, Chicago. No Rope to Cut Off Horses’ Manes. kV Celebrated ‘I.CLIFSI.’ lIAU'IIU and If It IDLE Combined, can- JPIV not ho Slipped by any horse. Sample !f ■! Halter to any part of U. S. free, ou /gj/OB receipt of sl. Sold by nlLSadolcry, yqSJVjg Ala Hardware and Harness Dealers./Vif f! Special discount to tho Trade. MendW J?C.i.iuHTHOUSE J Rochester J N.Yw!??—-J V" MENTION THIS PAPER w«b„ w»itin« to iduitiuh. m m M fIQ IN NORTHERN M li ||d WISCONSIN. BI ■S 500,000 ACRES IV of Choice Ilaidwood Farm* Kn ■ ™ Ing Lands for Sale at $. r >.o:i an acre on long time. HXTRAOKIUN A ItY Inducemonts offered. IVO DROUTHS or CYCLONES S Full Particulars, with good hap. FREE. Address C. L. COLBY, f Land Com. Wis. Central B. R„ Milwaukee, Wiv / ■/S^|brnl:'<Tlci'lro-Mugiictleftelt-wKEpSkSiL combined. Guaranteed the on *y ono * n tho world generating a continuous Electric it Magnetic ’M/7,• tSF' " current. Scientific, Powerful, Durable, W.///PComfortable and Effective. Avoid fraud!. Over 9.000 cured. Send Stump for pamphlet. _ ALSO ELECTRIC BELT* FOR 01 SEA HEM. Ot. HOBNE, Inventor, 191 Wabash ave. Chicaco. OThe BUYERS’ GUIDE la la.uod Sept, and March, each year. W“313 pages* H'/j x 11% inches,with over 3,500 Uluatrattona a whole Picture Gallery. GIVES Wholesale Price* direct to consumers on all good* tor personal or family use. Tells how to order, and gives exact cost of everything yon use, eat, drink, wear, or have fan with. These INV ALU ABLE BOOKS contain information gleaned from the markets of the world. Wo will mall a copy FREE to any address npon receipt of 10 cts. to defray expense of mailing. Let ns hear from you. Respectftally, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. *27 ds 229 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111*
Ha re been heartily enjoyed by the citizens of nearly every town and city in the United State*. Marvelous Cures have been performed, and witnessed by thousands of people, who can testify to THE WONDEKFUI, HEADING POWEB OF Hamlin’s Wizard Oil. IT HAS NO EQUAL FOB THE CUBE OF RHEUMATISM, N EU P.ALG 1 A.TOOTH ACH E, EARACHE, HEAOACHE, CATARRH, CROUP, SORE THROAT, LAME BACK, CONTRACTED CORDS, STIFF JOINTS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, BURNS, And Many Other Pains Caused by Accident or Disease, It is safe and sure, does its work qnickly and gives universal satisfaction. For sale by druggists. Price. 50c. OurSongßook mailed free to everybody. Address WIZARD OIL COMPANY, CHICAGO. RUPTURE Have you heard of the astonnding reduction fey Dr. J. A. Shekman’s famous Home Treatment, the only known guarantee, comfort and cure without operation or hindrance from labor? No steel or Iron bands. Perfect retention night and day: no chafing; suited to all ages. Now #lO only. Send for circular of measurements, instructions and proofs. Get cured si home and be happy. Offlre-ai*4 Broadway, TV ew York.
Y 7 Miner T nrlinnDr- Frazier’s M«g!c Ointment will Y nTITIIT I inlllfiX remoT ® pimples, blackheads and AUUliy. JUUmUOfreckles.lthealscuts.burns,chapped hands and lips, ardcold sores. Price 50 cents At druggist's or mailed by WMS. MIG. Co., Cleveland, O. Sure relief > nmrv]( a KIDDEBB PmillESraJSs ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■Charlestown, Maas. ■ Plso’s RemedyJbr Catarrh la the BB Beat, Easiest to tJse, and Cheapest. | lAlao rood for Cold !n the Head, I •C.N.-U, g No. 48-80 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, please say you saw tho advertisement jm this paper.
