Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 September 1887 — Page 7

PETS OF FASHION.

TEquine and Canine Favorites of Society Ladle*. “Domestic Pets a Specialty," was the legend which induced a reporter to pay a visit to the house on which it was displayed, the establishment of a veterinary surgeon, in the northwestern section of the city. The "doctor” proved to be communicative, and soon gave k’B caller several points on the ills and pills of pets. “My practice is not confined to the treatment of domestic pets,” he explained, “for my legitimate line is horses. But I have called attention to this specialty merely to let the public know that I have not overlooked the needs of some important adjuncts of fashion. In this line I have most to do with dogs and ponies; cats do not seem to need my services, or if they do their owners do not think so. As a rule my patrons are of the wealthy classes, some of whom are passionately fond of their pets, and would rather sacrifice small fortunes than lose them. The small ponies (especially the Shetlands) are often the objects of the most lavish affection. I treat the animals at the homes of their owners, making regular calls, just the same as the physician does for relief of human ills. At times I have had odd experiences with the brutes, finding it often a hard job to make them take their medicines; but regular physicians have the same trouble sometimes with their patients. “ The favorite dog at present ? Well, I think that the setter is growing in popularity. The Gordon and Irish setters of good breed will bring fancy prices now, not from the hunter, but from ladies of society. Yes, the pug has lost his grip. Every dog has his day, you know, and the pug has had his. There seems to be a tendency now toward the growing popularity of large animals instead of smaller specimens. ” “Have you ever run across any cases of hydrophobia in your experience, Doctor ? ” he was asked. “Oh, yes; I have often been called in to cure dogs suffering from that disease; but my services were, of course, of no value. The only remedy for a mad dog is a bullet. Although M. Pasteur claims to effect the cure of persons who have been bitten, I doubt if he would undertake the treatment of a rabid dog. I think that he would draw the line at that point, There are some features about this mysterious disease which are misunderstood by people generally. In the first place, notwithstanding the belief, or rather the idea, that the so-called ‘dog days’ of the summer months are most productive of hydrophobia, statistics and my experience tend to show that the majority of the cases of rabies occur during the months of October and November. Then, too, dogs are often shot because they are supposed to be suffering from this disease, when in reality they are troubled with nothing more serious than a neuralgia of the mouth, what we call in humans toothache, which, exciting the salivary glands, gives the dog the appearance of the dreaded frothing as seen in hydrophobia. Then the dog, being harassed and driven around, he soon really looks as though he were mad. As I have said, in a great many cases the neuralgia is mistaken for the other disease.

“In my regular practice,” he went on, after a pause, “that is, in my veterinary career, I have treated some very fine horses. This city contains a number of good stables, owned by those itinerant families who flit away from the asphalt with the first warm wave. They transport their horses to the seaside or the mountains and keep them here only during the fashionable season. The recent paper chase craze has resulted in an increased activity in the horse trade. As in the case of dogs, there is a tendency toward a certain class of animals, and so in the stables I have seen evidences of a decided preference for good, solid, handsome coach horses, rather than fancy breeds, or saddle horses. “Getting back to dogs,” he said, “a case has just come to my mind of a lady, moving in the highest circles, who drove up here one day in a handsome carriage and sent for me to come to the curb. She was pale and trembling, and seemingly laboring under intense excitement. ‘Get in, Doctor, quick, and come with me at once. Oh! lam so afraid that he will die. Poor little dear! Come, hurry, please, my darling will die while you wait.’ Divining what she meant I went to the house and found the ‘darling 5 to be an ugly pug, suffering from an overdose of raw beef. I soon brought him around, and when I turned to go confronted the fair owner, who, with tears in her eyes, blessed me for saving the life of the ‘dearest, sweetest dog in Washington.’ ” — Waskitigion Star.

The Knights of Labor.

In 1869 a society was formed in Philadelphia by Uriah 8. Stevens, among the clothing cutters of that city. Its object was to protect the working classes and aid in the devleopment of skilled labor, and from the first its founder cherished the idea of developing it into a national organization. In 1871 this first society was regularly organized as Local Assembly No. 1. A ritual was adopted, and the society was called the Noble Order of the Knights of Labor. All its workings and even its name were to be kept by members an absolute secret, under penalty of dismissal, all necessary public referOice, as the announcement of meetings through the press, etc., being made by the use of five asterisks. In 1881 the name was made public. The order increased in Philadelphia until nearly all trades were represented in it, and branches were formed in many other cities. In 1878 a general assembly of

North America was formed, with the supreme office of general master wort* man. As now organized the order consists of an executive board, composed of a president and three members, eleced annually in October by the General Assembly. This assembly is composed of delegates from district assemblies, which in turn receive funds and delegates from the local assemblies, all being subject to the executive board. The local assemblies are each made up, generally, of workers in one trade, but there are also mixed assemblies, which unite workers in various trades. The motto of the order is—“An Injury to One Is the Concern of All. ” Its declared aim is to organize, agitate, and educate, with a view to the final solution of the labor problem: also to improve the condition of the working classes, and to prevent injustice and tyranny on the part of employers. Any person over 18 years of age, who is of good standing in his trade, is eligible to membership without regard to sex, color, creed, or nationality, unless he belongs to one of the “interdicted classes,” i.e., bankers, brokers, lawyers or liquor-dealers. The cost of membership consists of initiation fees, which are regulated by each local assembly for itself; monthly dues, regulated according to the needs of the assembly, and a small tax for the support of the General Assembly. The order has an insurance branch, organized on the mutual benefit plan.—Toledo Blade.

Alas, Poor Poet!

James Chambers, the beggar-poet, born in Sobam, Cambridgeshire, in 1748, though by no means an ignorant savage, was absolutely untamed, and his life was more like that of a hare or bird than a civilized human creature, but with this notable exception, that hares and birds are scrupulously clean, whereas he was not so. and endured every vexation that accompanies uncleanliness. He slept in sheds, pigstyes, in the open fields, under hedges and in the shelter of haystacks; barns were his favorite sleeping places, but they were luxuries rarely enjoyed, as farmers were disinclined to let him enter them for the purpose. He was always in rags; and in the portrait which was taken as a frontispiece to his poems he is presented in a tattered soldier’s jacket, breeches too short and unbuckled at the knees, a sort of stocking on one leg and one shoe down at the heel; his hair hangs about in disorder and his countenance has the inquiring look, “What will the kind lady or gentleman do for me?” His elbows stand out awkwardly, and over his right arm hangs a roll of ballads. When a child he was at school for one month; he was never christened, nor did he ever marry; but it is said that “He formerly made some progression toward matrimony by forming an acquaintance with a young woman, who after a number of successful solicitations and hapless endeavors left him a prey to the pangs of pungent disappointment. ” He consoled himself with dogs, keeping a great number of them always about him for companionship, probably on the principle of that German philosopher who said that the older he grew and the more he knew of mankind the more he loved dogs. He had only vague notions of how to behave himself, for although he was gentle and sensitive, and burned with hatred of injustice and cruelty, and really felt grateful for kindnesses rendered, he scarcely ever gave thanks for them, even for a draught of well-beloved home brewed beer. Although so scant in the expression of civility, he was sober and strictly honest, and moreover faithfully performed whatever he had promised to do, while the utmost confidence might be placed in his truthfulness. He must have been constructed of a singularly tough fiber, for his ways of life hardened him to the endurance of a wild animal. After supping on hard, moldy crusts, he would sometimes wake in the morning covered with snow driven through the crevices of the shed wherein he had been sleeping, his limbs so benumbed that he could not feel the cold, and though his constant complaint is of hunger, his health seems not to have suffered from these distresses, for at the age of seventy-two, though his wretchedness is fondly dwelt upon by his biographer, no allusion is made to his bodily health.— Nineteenth Century.

The Prince and the Freemason’s Sign. While at Osborne, Prince Albert, the late husband of the Queen, was in the habit of getting up early and walking about his farm. Passing a farmer’s house, he stopped to make some inquiries, knocked at the door, and asked the servant if his master was in ? The servant replied: “He is in, but not down stairs.” “Oh, very well,” was Prince Albert’s reply, and he was about to leave. “Would you be kind enough to leave your name, sir?” said the servant ; “my master would be angry if I did not tell him who called.” “Very well, ” said his royal highness; “you may say Prince Albert.” Opon which the man drew back, looked up significantly, put his thump to the tip of his nose, extended his fingers, and exclaimed: “ Walker. ’’ — The Highlander. If it were possible to rise above the atmosphere which surrounds the earth we should see nothing but an intense and sharply defined ball of fire, while everything else would be wrapped in total darkness. There could be no difference of light without an atmosphere or some similar medium for it to act upon; but, if the air around us extended to a height of 700 miles, the rays of the sun could not penetrate it, and we should be left in darkness. At the depth of 700 feet in the ocean the light ceases altogether, one-half of the light being absorbed in passing through seven feet of pure water.

Don't Langh at Nervous People.

Their sufferings are very real, although you, with your vigorous physique and strong nerves, can scarcely believe it. .Rather suggest the use ot Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which, in removing every trace of dyspepsia, and regulating the liver and bowels, strikes at and extirpates the most prolific cause of chronic nervous trouble. That nerve-shattering disease, fever and ague, is among the formidable ailments, to the removal of which this genial remedy is specially adapted. Nervous prostration, resulting from prolonged mental or physical effort, is also a state of the system where the intervention of this tonic is very desirable, more particularly as its use is to quiet and relax the tension of overwrought nerves. The Bitters are invaluable in rheumatism, neuralgia, and kidney troubles. no substitute for it.

The Coyote and the Greaser.

The fauna of New Mexico are few, but of interest. Besides sixteen varieties of rattlesnake, twenty-one of horned toad and forty-two of lizard, there is the coyote and the greaser. The greaser is wealthier than the coyote. I have known an opulent greaser to possess two strings of red peppers, a bushel of corn, a peck of onions and seven dogs. One greaser, who lived near Fort McRae, was the Vanderbilt of the section. He had nine dogs. The coyote is so poor he cannot even afford to keep fleas. The coyote is superior to the greaser in that he sings. Shortly after midnight I have known officers, who usually had but an indifferent ear for music, to lie awake for hours listening to a chorus of coyotes, and expressing their opinion in the strongest terms. A coyote sings every night when he has no supper, and he gets a supper about once a year when he is in luck.— Henry Guy Carleton.

The Ladies’ Favorite.

The newest fashion in ladies’ hats will doubtless cause a flutter of pleasurable excitement among the fair sex. Ladies are always susceptible to the changes of a fashion plate; and the more startling the departure, the more earnest the gossip over the new mode. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a positive cure for the ills which afflict females and make their lives miserable. This sovereign panacea can be relied on in cases of displacements and all functional derangements. It builds up the poor, haggard, and draggedout victim, and gives her renewed hope and a fresh lease of life. It is the only medicine for woman’s peculiar weaknesses and ailments. Sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers that it will give satisfaction in every case, or money refunded. Read printed guarantee on bottle wrapper. The man who paints the town red frequently gets some of the paint on his nose. —Rahway Advocate.

The Cutest Little Things.

“Cute!” he echoed. “Well, I don’t know as the adjective would have occurred to me in just that connection. But if you mean that they do their work thoroughly, yet make no fuss about it; cause no pam or wcaknes: and, in short, are everything that a pill ought to be, and nothing that it ought not. thenl agree that Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets are about the cutest little things going!” Young hopeful (on seeing a negro baby for the first time) —“Mamma, is that a spoiled child?”

“Consumption Can Be Cured."

Dr. J. 8. Combs, Owensville, Ohio, says: “I have given Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites to four patients with better results than seemed possible with any remedy. All were hereditary cases of Lung disease, and advanced to that stage when Coughs, pain in the chest, frequent breathing, frequent pulse, fever and Emaciation. All these cases have increased in weight from 16 to 28 K>s., and are i ot now needing any medicine. ” Tippler’s motto—“ Don’t give up the sip.” Negaunee, Mich., November, 1886. Smith’s Bile Beans give entire satisfaction, and our trade ia increasing constantly. They are thorough, mild, and the most economical liver remedy in the market So say all who have used them. Yours repectfully, L D. Cyb, M. D. Dealer in Drugs, Stationery, Etc. You will get more comfort for 25c. in Lyon’s Heel Stiffeners than in any other article you buy 3 months’ treatment for 500. Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. Sold by druggists. Remember that one of Smith’s Bile Beans does the work of five ordinary cathartic pills and that it is absolutely harmless. The Frazer is kept by all dealers. One box lasts as long as two of any other.

Sick Headache Is one of the most distressing affections; and people who are its victims deserve sympathy. But the great success Hood’s Sarsaparilla has had in curing sick headache makes it seem almost foolish to allow the trouble to coutinue. By its toning and invigorat ng effect upon the digestive organs. Hood’s Sarsaparilla readily gives relief when headache arises from indigestion ; and in neuralgic conditions by building up the debilitated system Hood’s Sarsaparilla removes the cause, and hence overcomes the difficulty. "My wife suffered from sick headache and neuralgia. After taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla she was much relieved.” W. B. Babb, Wilmington, Ohio. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. i 100 Doses One Dollar.

Tga, TSSaa gmsr*W»-i This represents a healthy life. Just such a life as they enjoy Throughout its various scenes. Who use the Smith’s Bile Beans. Smith’s BILE BEANS acting r— ' —j directly and promptly on the JUiver, Skin and Kid- The original Photograph, neys. They consist of a vegetable combination that °, f , thi ? T’ ctu F® has no equal in medical science. They cure Constipa- ’aSh™.. 10 1 tion, Malaria, and Dyspepsia, and are a safeguard against all forms of fevers, chills and fever, gall stones, st. .tools, Mo. and Bright’s disease. Send 4 cents postage for a sam- ■ ■■ ■ —* pie package and test the TRUTH of what wo say. Price, 25 cents per bottle, mailed to any address, postpaid. DOSE ONE BEAN. Sold by druggists. «T. 2P. SMITH db 00., FIiOPJUETOEJJ. «T. LOUIS, MO. RS LICKE R-B“ ■ None Pennine unless Don’t waste your money on a gum or rubber eoat The FISH BRAND SLICKER ■stamped with the above j g absolutely v.<itrr and wind proof, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm, m tbapb mass. for the “FISH BRAND” sttcraa and take no other. If your storekeeper doe»

Mild, soothing, and healing ia Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy An exhaustive article—the stomach pump. St. Louis, Ma. Jan.* 30, 1885. I havx used Smith’s Bile Beans in my family for some time; they have always given entire satisfaction; would not be without them. j. B. Walsh, 1608 Biddle Street

CATARRH sawsa and y HAY-FEVER & CURE. ELY’S CREAM BALM. haa I Apply Balm into each nostril. GOLD is worth *SOO per pound, Pettit’s Eye Salve SI,OOO, but ia sold at 25 cent* a box by dealers. MENIiON THIS PAPER wku Tim,, TO aptmtwsu. ft Pill Habit Cured aallafaetory brfora a.r pay. UIIU IVI rr«c 4. M. BAMTCM, UM Wa<4, Cl«iuiU, O. nrUPinilO Bend for tension Law* to U. S. rrnlX NX Claim Arents FITZGERALD » LiIOIUIIU & powEix. Indianapolis, Ind. OPIUM "it!« Ur I win Hr. J. Stephen*, Lebanon, Ohio. » A MONTH. Agents wanted. 90 bestselling article* in the world. 1 simple FREE. Address JAY BRONSON, Detroit, Mich. MENTION THIS PAPER wvbm warns* to adtsbtimb*. AUflAiiincrauem.ybedue. AdNlll Milo B. StkvknvACo. I la 11WIWil VMetropol’nBlk,Chicago, 111. _MENTION THIS PAPER wan warna* to aonanaaaa. return mail. Full Description kKFF Moody's New Tailor System of Dress I llaumiCutting. MOODY A CO.. Cincinnati, O. MENTION THIS PAPER waaa wants* to aoTaarMua. H ITEkITCt kS. * A. P. LACEY, Patent pF U I ► N I X Attorneys,Washington, D.C. I ■ Bail ■ V Instructions and opinion* a* to patentability FREE. **~l7 years’ expert eno*. HANDSOME, c/i ’ Jjjj OUB FULL STYLISH SEAMLESS PBNTS TV SHOES a“J “® ner // I please. Perfect ~mnta. of I Fit «uaranteed For samples oi I wp refer to anv Cloth and 4 loot tape ‘v' ™ mewure (worth 10c.) Co., 'or leading Clrcnlnr.’FX: I h ° U “ mum 1a1877, ‘TmHIKIiSINCINNATI.O.i? CO.

□IGESTYUN

A SURE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Over 5,000 Physicians have sent us their approval of DIGESTYLIN, saving that it is the best preparation for Indigestion that they have ever used. We have never heard of a case of Dyspepsia where DIGESTYLIN was taken that was not cured. FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGGRAVATED CASES. IT WILL STOP VO MITING IN PREGNANCY. IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Summer Complaints and Chronic Diarrhea, which are the direct result* of imperfect digestion, DIGESTYLIN will effect an immediate cure. Take DIGESTYLIN for all painsand disorders of the stomach; they all come from indigestion. Ask your dnigidst for DIGESTYLIN (price $1 per large bottle). If he does not have it, send one dollar to us and we will send a bottle to you, express prepaid. Do not hesitate to send your money. Our house is reliable. Established twenty-five years. WM. F. KIDDER & CO., Manufacturing Chomists, H 3 John St.. N. Y. MENTION THIS PAPER *hkh warnas to adtsktisbu. TH CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Ml Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use K in time Sold by dmp*crißtn I FOR HORSES. I |f U villa, W. Va., ) S gl Nov. 17, 1886. J g H Recently I bought a H young horse. He was || m taken very ill with Pneu- ||g II monia. I tried to think S of something to relieve || ® him. Concluded what ® || was good for man would S ■ be good for the horse. O j|| So I got a bottle of Piso’s m 3 Cure and gave him half S IS of it through the nostrils. g This helped him, and I continued giving same ® doses night and morning g| g until I had used two w bottles. The horse has w H become perfectly sound, w ® I can recommend Piso’s o Cure for the horse as w || well as for man. n N. S. J. Strider. CURESiWHEREALL ELsTfaIlS." q" |n Best Cough Syr up. Tastes good. Use g IB i° time. Sold by druggists. [*|

WHAT AILS YOU? Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, lifelees, and indescribably miserable, both physically and mentally; experience a sense of fullness or bloating after eating, or of “goneness," or emptiness of stomach in the morning, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste la mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent headaches, blurred eyesight, “ floating specks ’* before the eyes, nervous prostration or exhaustion, irritability of temper, hot flushes, alternating with chilly sensations, sharp, biting, transient pains here and there, cola feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or 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 Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more 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 will subdue it, if token according to directions for a reasonable length of time. If not cured, complications multiply and Consumption of the Lungs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease, Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other gray* maladies ore 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 acting upon the Kidneys, and other excretory organs, cleansing, strengthening, and healing their diseases. A* an appetizing, restorative tonic, it promote* digestion ana nutrition, thereby building up both flesh and strength. In malaria 1 districts, this wonderful medicine ha* gained great celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chill* and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases. Dr. Pierce** Golden Medical Dis* covery CURES ALL HUMORS, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, “Fever-sores,” Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, all diseasea caused by baa blood are conquered by thia powerful, purifying, and invigorating medicine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under its benign influence. Especially has it manifested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, 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 large Treatise, with colored plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections. “FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.” Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce** Golden 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 in 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. Pierce thought seriously of calling It his “Consumption Cure,” but abandoned that name as too restrictive for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative, or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, ana nutritive properties, is unequaled, not only as a remedy for Consumption, but for all Chronic Disease* of the Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an efficient remedy. Sold by Druggists, at SI.OO, or Six Bottle* forss.oo. t3ff“ Send ten cents In stamps for Dr. Pierce’* book on Consumption. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 063 Main St., BUFFALO, N. X, <T* I*/ to *8 a day. Sample* worth 11.50, FREE. Lines not under the horse’s feet. Writ* Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mich MENTION THIS PAPER wsbh WTrriH* to **t*mtm**. One Agent (Merchant only) wanted In every town for Everybody wants “Tansill’s Punch” 5c cigar nowy they were always good, but of late they have improved. I heartily approve of your way of doing business; you are sure to hold and increase your trade. A. Arend, Druggist. Chicago, 111. Address R. W, TANS.LL & CO., Chicago. DR.BAIRP’SGRANULES Cure DyMpepsiu,itlalariu. Pile*. Heart Disease, Impure Blood, Kidney Disease, Torpid Liver, Habitual Constipation Etc. A new principle, a newjfe remedy. Purely Vegeta-'* ble. A full size Box sent !>' Ki.lC , postage prepaid, to any Invalid, or their friends sending their add ess a* once. Give account ot case, symptoms, etc. Address UK. BAIRD. 157 W. «3<l Nt.. N. Y. MENTION THIS PAPER w*s> wiiri.a to idvbktm***. marvelous MEMORY I Wholly unlik* artificial system*. Any bonk learned In one reading. Recommended by Mark Twain, Richard Proctor the Scientist. Hons. W. W Astor. Judah P. Benjamin, Dr. Minor, etc. Class of 100 Columbia law students-, two clashes 200 each at Yal*. soo University of Penn.,. JOO at Wellesley College, eta Prospectus post free. PROE. LOISETTE, Fifth Ava, New York, WA* FOR rTIIX PA, fi (iff Cures Neuralgia, Toothache, Headache, Catarrh, Croup, Sore ThrnH. , RHEUMATISM, < Lame Back, Stif! Joints, Sprains, Bruises* Burns, Wounds, Old Sores and All Aches and Pains. testimonials received by us more than prove all we claim for this valuable remedy. IS not only relieve* the most _severe ndms. b<£ _ It Cures You. That’s the Idea I Bold by Dniggist*. 5O et*. Song Book mailed free Address WIZARD OIL COMPANY CHICAGO KIDDER'S MENTION THIS PAPER wmm wjutin* to ■ Piso’a Remedy for Catarrh 1* the Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggist* or sent by mail ■ 60c. E.T. Haaeltine, Warred Pa. c-U. No. 38-»7~~ WHEN WRITING TO , ’I. P 1 **’* 1 F°“ *aw tlfe adver&em***