Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 August 1887 — Page 7

THE COREAN RIP VAN WINKLE.

A Story Very Like Irving's Legend of the Catskills. "Was the legend of Rip Van Winkle •wholly the creation of Washington Irving? asks a writer in the New York Post, or did he put into such pleasing shape some story he had unearthed in his antiquarian researches? In Perceval Lowell’s charmiDg book, “A Sketch of Corea,” p. 205, I find this legend under the head of “Demon Worship”: “There lis ed once upon a time a certain well-to-do countryman, whose business took him into the woods. He was a feller of timber, and in pursuit of his work he often went far into the mountains. AD Coreans are fond of nature, and this man was no exception to the rule; so, with his business as excuse and his love as incentive, he would ramble on in the virgin forest. One day he wandered further than usual, and found himself at last some distance up the side of the mountain. Before him lay the peak seemingly close, and under the impulse of that species of folly which urges men to go to the top of anything lofty, in spite of their better judgment and repeated experience that the end never justifies the means, he climbed it. Wfien at last he reached the summit he found there four old men busily intent on a game of go. They were seated, squatting in a circle, the go-board in their midst, while around them on the ground lay flagons of sul, and a page sat hard by to replenish the cups as they were emptied. The four looked up as he approached, bowed with great civility, and, observing that he was tired, ordered the page to pour him out some sul. He sat down, sipped some sul, and looked on afc game. After tarrying what seemed but a very short time in such agreeable company he rose to take his leave. They bade him good-by with as much courtesy as they had welcomed him, and he started down the mountain. He descended* without accident and reached the bottom in much less time than it had taken him to go up. Mindful of his wife and children, he struck out for home, and arrived there in safety before sunset. On entering his own abode he was somewhat surprised to find the place occupied by people he had never seen. What was worse, they ordered him off the premises as an intruder. He remonstrated at thus being turned out of his own house, and in the altercation that ensued the master of the place came out from an inner room to see what was going on. He was a man well on in life, and yet the woodman never remembered to have laid eyes on him before. Appealing to him, howe er, for redress, the woodman was asked his name, and on giving it the man replied that such was his first name, too. (In Corea the first name is •equivalent to our last name.) On further questioning it turned out that the present incumbent was the woodman’s own grandson. The wanderer had come back to another world. His wife had long since died, his children all were buried; most of their children, too, had passed away, and his greatgrandchildren had grown up to manhood. He had been gone 100 years.”

The Huns.

The Muns were a people of Northern As a,, who, in the fifth century, invaded and conquered a great part of Europe. They were probably of Mongolian or Tartar stock, and the theory generally adopted by historians is that the Huns were directly descended from the Hi-ong-nou, whose ancient seat was an extensive and barren territory north of the great wall of China. These people so overran the Chinese about 200 B. C. that the great wall was built to keep them out. Their power wag broken by subsequent wars with the Chinese, in which the fatter, under the valiant Emperor You-ti, were successful. After this they were engaged in conflict with another powerful nomadic tribe of Northern Asia, and were so reduced in strength and shortened in supplies that they (divided their numbers and some 50,000 migrated to the east shore of the Caspian fcea, where they settled and became known as the “White Huns.” Later the ma : n body of the nation moved westward and settled on the shores of the Volga. In the third oentury they .crossed the river and invaded the territory of the Alani, a pastoral people living between the Volga and Don Kivers, conquered the race, and united it with themselves. In the following century, we find the combined nations invading the dominion of the Goths, which then extended from the Baltic to the Euxine. The invaders were successful, and what was left of the conquered Gothic nation was forced to seek an asylum within the bounds of the Koman Empire. The Huns settled on the banks of the Don and the Dneiper, soon became involved in war with the Koraans, and in the fifth century, under Attila, attained a high degree ot power, and included or governed all the tribes from the Volga ,to (the Rhine. Attila also seized the territory south of .the Danube, crossed the Khine, and threatened the existence of the Frankish Empire. The Prank* called the Romans to their aid, and at Chaloas-sur-Marne was fought in June, 451, the bloodiest' battle known to European history, in which the Huns were defeated. Attila’s army is said to have been 700,000 strong, and probably the armies allied against him aggreted nearly as large a force. But the Hunnish Empire, after Attila’s death, fell to pieces, and the people themselves were swallowed up by other tribes. Historians are not agreed on the question whether the modern Hungarians or Magyars a~e descendants from the race of the Huns or not. The White Huns of the Caspian shore, at

about the time the other part of the tribe was invading Europe, spread themselves over all of Eastern Lersia and the Indian border. Homan historians describe the Huns as hideous in appearance, with broad shoulders, flat noses, and small black eves, deeply buried in the head. Hideous legends were coined concerning their ancestry, ascribing it to the union of the witches of h'cythia with infernal sp rits, and such was the terror inspired by the repulsive appearance and savage manners of the barbarous race that these tales were readily believed. —lnter Ocean.

A Prince in Disguise.

A foreign prince staying in Paris made a heavy bet with a member of the Imperial Club that he —the prince —would, in the course of the next two hours, be arrested by the police without committing any offense or provoking the authorities in any fashion. The way he won his wager was by dressing himself in a tattered old blouse, a pair of moldy boots, full of holes, and a disreputable burlesque of a hat. Thus attired, he walked up to one of the most aristocratic cases in Paris, and seating himself at a table he called for a cup of chocolate. The waiter, as was natural, did not care about serving so suspicious-looking a customer before he was assured that payment would be forthcoming, so he told the prince that ho must pay in advance. Upon this his highness pulled a bundle of bank-notes out of his pocket and, picking out one of considerable value, told him to take the price of the coffee out of it and bring back the change. The man immediately went in search of the proprietor of the case, who, when he heard the facts of the case, ordered the coffee to be served, and at the same time sent to the nearest police station for a sergent de ville. The prince was of course arrested and taken before a commissary of police. He announced his rank and told his reasons for assuming such an unprincely costume. The authorities were obdurate at first, but finally they con sented to send the prince under escort to the Imperial Club, where the gentleman with whom the bet had been made proved his identity and paid his highness the money he had fairly won. —Manchester Guardian.

A Russian Noble’s Three Bobbins.

It will be remembered that the submission of the Merv Turcomans was gained by help of the famous Moscow merchant Kouschine, who sent his socalled trading caravan into Merv in charge of Alikhanoff and other officers in disguise. For the great services then rendered this pioneer of Kussian conquests in Central Asia has been rewarded with a patent of hereditary nobility. His firm is well known for its manufacture of cheap and highly colored cotton prints for the Asiatic market, and the arms now granted to him and his descendants display three bobbins, indicating the means of his elevation to rank and fortune. Precisely the same caravan tricks, lam assured, are now tried in Afghan Turkestan and by exactly the same persons. This Moscow house is full of enterprise, and being backed by the Government, with privileges over the Transcaspian Railway and elsewhere, of course sticks at nothing. Last February its politico-com-mercial caravans introduced Moscow goods into the bazars of Herat under our very eyes. —London Times. The agent of the German Baptist Publication Society, Cleveland, Ohio, Mr. H. Schulte, writes: “We keep St. Jacobs Oil on hand, and consider it most valuable in case of burns, scalds, etc.” Use according to directions.

Timely Domestic Hints.

If you are troubled with weak eyes never sift ashes while facing the wind; get your wife to do it, or wait till the wind shifts to another quarter. A cheap boy may be hired for fifty cents a day to pull weeds, but it costs a dollar extra to pay a man to watch the boy. He is a wise man who, instead of driving his neighbor’s hens out of the door-yard with a fusillade of old boots, cobble-stones and profanity, fixes up a snug plaee for them to lay in. The prudent man never buys patent medicines unless he sees them advertised in a religious paper. Such medicines may be taken with perfect safety. The editor is a good man and tests the virtue of the nostrums at the risk of his life for the benefit of advertisers, always taking out his pay for advertising in sample cases. If you are living beyond your means it is best to ignore the fact. Brooding over such trifles causes a man to worry, and worry kills more people than work.— Tid-Bits. Me. J. W. Mevis, 28 Rock street, Lowell, Mass., writes: “I was taken with a crick in the neck and suffered agony. St Jacobs Oil cured me.” For sale by druggists and dealers.

Red Heads and White Horses.

The red-headed girl and white horse superstition has taken a deep hold in Chieago, and lots of people in that scientific city now assert that whenever you see one of the beacon-topped damsels out of doors an albino equine will not be far off. One realistic fellow says: “It is a phenomenon that, in my opinion, is easily explained by the fact that white horses are more common than girls with red hair, and a person can hardly look anywhere on the streets without seeing a white horse, and he may look a long time for a red-haired girl. It is to be hoped that this subject will not arouse public attention to such an extent that the poor lassies who had not the choosing of color for their hair will be compelled to disguise themselves with wigs or remain indoors until the excitement has subaided.”

The Lion and the Lamb.

Moxie and the rumsellers are friends at last It was thought it would injure their trade. Now they are making most money on it and do no harm, while the old drinker prefers it Thank God that it bids highest on the liquor dealer’s pocket The American peoplo have grown to be the most nervous aud intellectual people in the world. It is quite lucky that the Moxie Nerve Food has come along to sustain both. It bids fair to be the mainstay of the over-worked and over-stimulated, as well as to be able to rectify the effects of dissipation. Druggists sell it.

The Toothsome Caramel.

Although so many of our pleasantest things come from Erance, the caramel is an American invention of not quite a dozen years’ standing. It was not known in Europe till about six years ago; and it is now made there by only one firm of confectioners—a London house. A pint of cream to three pounds of sugar will make a goodly quantity, boiled together, and the flavoring, of whatever desired nature, added when it reaches 260 degrees Fahrenheit. Pour out the mixture then on flat dishes to cool, and as it beg ns to “set,” which is very soon, cut it into little blocks with a sharp blade dipped in co'd water. These will be good for some time, and are about as innocent a confection as there is to be found.

The Old Folks at Home,

Or elsewliore, need a tonic now and then to bustain them under growing infirmities. No Baser or more thorough invigorant for age and the delicate can be found than Hostetter’d Stomach Bitters, a seasonable medicine in those ailments of commonest occurrence—liver complaint, indigestion and bowel disorders ; a pure botanic safeguard against malaria, and a reliable means of counteracting rheumatism. To the convalescent, it is a valuable aid in the recovery of strength, and to the debilitated, nervous invalid it yields tranquil slumber and renewed appetite—two prime factors in the re toration of vigor. Being of purely botanic origin, it is freo from those objections urged against mineral remedies difficult or impossible of assimilation by the system, and which impair the tone of the stomach, which the Bitters, on the contrary, strengthens and regulates. It is indorsed and. prescribed by the medical fraternity.

That’s the Right Place to Send It.

The Star of Bethlehem has been x-e----discovered in Kentucky. Well, quite likely, quite likely; that’s the State where they need it. The first time it was discovered Kentucky was off somewhere at a Rowan County hangin’, or something of that sort, and didn’t get any good of it. Now, if Professor Klein really has discovered it again, just all the rest of the world stand back and let Kentucky have it all to herself; there won’t be more than enough of it to go around, even then. — Burdette. Weak lungs, spitting of blood, consumption, and kindred affections, cured without physician. Address for treatise, with 10 cents in stamps, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, GO3 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. It is only after she becomes a centenarian that a woman is willing to own up to her age. —Boston Post.

Prof. Loisette’s Memory Discovery.

No doubt can be entertained about the valuo and genuineness of Prof. Loisette’a Memory System, as it is so strongly recommended by Mark Twain, Mr. Proctor, Hons. W. W. Astor, Judah P. Benjamin, Dr. Buckley, and others. For full details send for Prof. L.’s prospectus, at 237 Fifth Ave., New York. From it the System is taught by correspondence qu te as well as by personal instruction. Colleges near New York have secured his lectures. He has had 100 Columbia Law students, two classes of 200 each at Yale, 200 at Meriden, 250 at Norwich, 400 at Wellesley College, and 400 at University of Penn. We cannot conceive how a system could receive any higher indorsement Indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility relieved by taking Mensmau’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains blood-making, force-generating and life-sus-taining properties; is invaluable in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork, or acute disease; particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Hazard, Hazard & Co., proprietors, New York. Bead the advertisement of Mount Morris Academy in another column of this paper.

Tired Languid Dull -Expresses the condition of thousands of people at this season. The depressing effects of the warm weather and that tired feeling are quickly overcome by the use of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It gives strength in place of weakness, gives tone to every organ, creates an appetite, and purifies the blood. Give it a trial now. “I have been troubled for many years with violent headaches. Hood's SarsapariUa did me so much good that I feel like a new being. I earnestly recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all who suffer with headaches.” Mbs. E. Satchkll, Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. SI; six for S 5. Prepared only by C. £ HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell,Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar.

Thl. r.p,o..nt, . Throughout its various Beenes, Who use thu Smith’s Bile Beans. JiILE BEANS purify the blood* by acting ~9. promptly on the Liver, Bkln and Kid- The original Photograph, ney*. They eonslst of a vegetable combination that P anel •!“. of this picture ha* no eonal in medical ocience. They enre Con«tlpa- ®f nt on receipt of lOc. in tion, Malaria, and Dyspepsia, and /re a safeguard nir.V MKA of fcv l r “» c hill« and fever, gall stone*, B *li*uU,*ko. * disease. Send 4 cents postage for a 9am- L the TRI Ts* of what we —y- Trice, 25 cents per bottle, mailed to any addre**, postpaid. DOSE ONE BEAN. Sold by druggists. •*’- SMITH «St 00., PROPRIETORS, ST. XjOTTXS, mo.

For a woman to say she does not use Procter & Gambles Lenox Soap, is to admit she is “behind the times.” Nobody uses ordinary soap now they can get “ Lenox ”

An Important Arrest.

The arrest of a suspicious character upon liis general appearance, movomeuts, or companionship, without waiting until he has robbed a traveler, fired a house, or murdered a is an important func.ion of a shrewd detective. Even more important is the arrest of a disease which, if not checked, will blight aud destroy a human life. The frequent cough, loss of appetite, general languor or debility, pallid skin, and bodily aches and pa us, ‘ announce the approach of pulmonary consumption, wh ch is promptly arrested and permanently cured by Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery.” Sold by druggists. No love is so intense as that of the eighteen-year-old youth for the twenty-six-year-old girl. He gets over it, dt coutse, but while it’s in motion it's sixty miles an hour, including stops.— Ptick.

“I Don’t Want Relief, but Cure,”

Is the exclamation of thousands suffering from catarrh. To all such we say: Catarrh can be cured by Dr. Sage% Catarrh Remedy. It has been done in thousands of cases; why not in yours? Your danger is in delay. Inclose a stamp to World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., for pamphlet on this diseaae. The “I deal” man will usually be found presiding over a faro bank.

I. O. O. F. Announcement.

The Transportation Committee of the Sovereign Grand Lodge, I O. O. F, to-day announces that the grand official route from Chicago to Denver and return in September will bo Chicago, Hock Island A Pacific Uy., Chicago to Kansas City, Union Pacific liy., Kansas City to Denver returning via Burliugtou Route, Denver to Chicago. Official tram will leave Chicago for Denver at 2p. m., Wednesday, Sept 14 Use Frazer Axle Greaso; ’tis the best in the world—will wear twice as loug as any othor. Prevent crooked boots and blistered heels by wearing Lyon’s Patent lleol Stiffeners. Ik a cough disturbs your sleep, take Piso's Cure for Consumption aul rest welt

Charlie, 6 Jim the 98th July. Youra foreTtr, DOT, East Oraaga. fIDIIIU Mmrphlm’ Habit Cure* In IO llr I HIM l? ZOdny*. No pay till curedVI IVfill Ur. J. bieptiena, Lebanon, Ohio. gpt w to *8 a day. Samples worth $1.50, FKKK fines not under the horse’s feet. Write Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly. Micl MENTION THIS PAPER when wbitime to adteetiebee. A full business course, a Normal Penmanship course, Shorthand and T>po-Writing all taught by efficient teachers. Catalogue and full particulars sent free. Address D. L, MUSSELMAN, A. M„ Principal. Gem City Business College, Quincy, 111. MENTION THIS PAPER whin writing to aovbitdim. NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Boston, Mass. ough Instruction in Vocal and Instrumental Muilc, Plano and Orßan Tuning,Fine Arte,Oratory,Literature, French, Germaa, and Italian L"nguaget, Enfflieh Branch**, Gymnastic*. Jf®. I Tuition, $•! to i2.lt board and room with Steam Heat and Electric Light, |S.OQ to $7.60 per week. Fall Term begin* s*s*' 8 « Calendar,with full information, addresc E.TOUBJEE, Dir., Franklin 8q. t BOSTON, Mom. MENTION THIS PAPER warn* wgrriwe to ADvaanssiu. Rock River Seminary, (established IN 18S9), NOW, MT. MORRIS ACADEMY, MT. MOltltlS. ILL.. FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. COURSES—Four Literary, mid First-class Commercial. Special advantages to beginners. No saloons nor billiard balls in town. P ain living, plain dressing, aud church attendance required. Good board per year(4 i weeksl, 80H.40. Salisf.ietion in instruction euarauteed. Send tor catuh cue. Address (Mention this paper.) J. G. KuYKIt. I'rin. MENTION THIS PAPER when wEmsa to ed.ebti.ebe.

St. MARY’S ACADEMY (On* M le West from Notre Dame University.) Tlie fifth Academic term will open Monday, Sept. 5. SCHOOL OF ART AND DESIGN. CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC. The Academic Course is thorough in the Preparatory. Senior, and Classical Grades. Music Department, on the plan of the best Conservatories ot Europe, is under charge of a compleie corps of teachers. Studio modeled on the great Art Schools of Europe. Drawing and Painting from life and the antique, Phonography and Type-Writing taught. Buildings equipped witli Fire Escape. A separate department for children under in. Apply for catalogue to Mother Superior St. Mury’s Academy, Notre Dame P. <).. st. Joseph Co., Indiana. MENTION THIS PAPES whs. warns, ro .Dritnaa One Agent (Merchant only i warn, .I . The best evidence of the popularity of your "Tar eill’i Punch” is, that after the first trial 1 have a permanent customer. I have sold them for more than tlire< years, and the only fault that my customers find witli them is that they can’t smoke any other 5c cigar witli satisfaction. Hohebt H. Cowduky, Ph. G.. Chicago Address K. W. T ANSEL L< Sc CO., Chicago. MENTION THIS PAPER wwas wains, to idybbtuxu. KIDDER'S P«BTIItS£SSi Mast, MENTION THIS PAfCK vim wkitimm w> adtiktumi.

WHAT AILS vour Do you feel dull, languid, low-apirlted, lifeless, and indescritiably miserable, both physically and mentally: experience a sense of fullness or bloating after eating, or of “goneness,” or emptiucss of stomach In the morning, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent headaches, blurred eyesight, “ floating speck*’* before the eyes, nervous prostration or exhaustion, irritability of temper, hot flushes, alternating with chilly sensations, sharpbiting, transient pains here and there, cokf feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, »r disturbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant, indescribable feeling of dread, or of impending calamity? If you have all, or any considerable number of these symptoms, you are suffering from that most common of American maladies — Bilious Dyspciwia, or Torpid Liver, associated with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The mom complicated your disease has become, the greater the number and diversity of symptoms. No matter what stage it has reached. Dr. Pierce** Golden Medical Discovery wi)l subdue it, if taken according to directions for a reasonable length of time. If notcured, complications multiply and Consumption of the Lungrs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disc use. Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other gravo mahulles are quite liable to set In and, sooner or later, induce a fatal termination. Dr. Pierce** Golden Medical Discovery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and through that great blood-purifying organ, cleanses the system of all blood-taints and impurities, from whatever cause arising. It is equally efficacious in ucting upon the Kidneys, and other excretory organs, cleansing, strengthening, and heuliug their diseases. A* an appetizing, restorative tonic. It promote* digestion and nutrition, thereby building up both llesh and strength. In mularial districts, this wonderful medicine has gained groat celebrity In curing Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases. Dr. Pierce’* Golden Medical Disco very CURES ALL HUMORS* from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to tb* worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, “ Fever-sore*," Scaly or Hough Skin, in short, all disease* caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful, purifying, and Invigorating modicin<>. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heiu under its Ixiiiign Influence. Especially has it lnnuifested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema. Erysipelas, Roils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-Joint Disease. “ White Swellings,” Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents In stamps for a largo Treatise, with colored plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amountfor a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections. “FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.” Thoroiighlycleanse It by using Dr. Pierce** Goldea Medical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital strength and bodily health will be established. CONSUMPTION, which Is Scrofula ortho Lung*, is arrested and cured by this remedy, if taken la th* earlier stages of the disease. From Its marvelous power over this terribly fatal disease, when first offering this now world-famed remedy to the public, Dr. Fierce thought seriously of calling It his “Consumption Curb,” but abandoned that name as too restrictive for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonio, or strengthening, alterative, or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, and nutritive properties, is unequalcd. not only as a remedy for Consumption, but for au. Chronic Diseases of the

Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthniu, Severe Coughs, and kindred; affections, it Is nil efficient remedy. Sold hy Druggists, at SI.OO, or Six Bottle* for $5.00. f3r Send ten cents In stamps for Dr. Pieroe’a book on Consumption. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, ' 603 l«atu St., BUFFALO, N. U DCUOIfI 110 tOT . Penman Laws to V. §T r IN.N UNN 94!"* Agents n r/dKKAI.D ■ •■■•OIU 111 Si Powell, Indianapolis, Ind. Q JkTCUTO H. Ha v r Laoey, Paten* “A I til la essssstsrssiss is to patentability FKI*. K. |j-17 yearn’ experience. A R LIN RE PEAT INC Rifle teed perfectly BBdT IN THK. curate and ab » o lut e 1 safe. Mado In all sixes for V large or email game. BALLARD Gallery, Hunting and Target Rifles. Send for II lu.l rated Catalogue. Mturliu Fire Arms Co., New liuven, Conn. A' I ,i \ I,ON THIS PAPER wkbn warn,, to innwim. CThe OLDEST MEDICINE In the WORLD le BbT probably Ur. Isaac Thompson’s Bj elebrated Eye Watelf This article is a carefully prepared physician's inscription, and has been in constant use for nearly a century, and notwithstanding the man v other preparations that have Is-en introduced into the market, the sale of this article is constantly increasing. If the directions are followed it will never fail. Wo particularly invite the attention of physicians to its merit*. John L. Thompson, Sons & Co., TROY, N. T. MARVELOUS MEMORY .... . DIHCOVJOBY. n holly unlike artificial system*. Aliy hook leu rued In one rending. Recommended by Mark Twain, Richard Proctor the Scientist. Hons. W. W Astor. Judah P. Benjamin. Ur. Minor, etc. Glass of lui Columbia law two classes AD each at Yale, suo University of Penn.. AX) at Wellesley College, etc. Prospectus post free. r-ROr’, EOfsEPPE, 237 Fifth Are.. New York. JJOP3U . Cures Nsurallfa, "Toothache, Throat* Lame Back, Stiff Joints, Sprains, BruilsK Burns, Wounds, Old Sores and All Aches and Pains. ino many testimonials received by us more thaa> V* we „ c,a,ni for this valuable remedy. I*. not only relieves the most severe pains, bo* It Cures You. That’s the Idea l Sold by Druggists. 50 cts. So.vo Book mailed freow Address WIZARD OIL COMPANY CHICAGCL ■ Piso’a Remedy for Catarrh is the H| Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggists or sent by mail. I 60c. E. T. Hazeltina, Warren, Pa. G. N. U. No. WHEN WRITING to advertisers, i.iul’ I***® 1 ***® mmr Joa a * w ibe advertise in* main tni* paper.