Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 January 1888 — Page 3

DIETETIC RULES.

Solid and Liquid Food that Benefits or Injures Health. This subject should comprise everything that we take either as food or as drink. I must here warn my readers against taking drinks that are not foods but poisons. These drinks are all the fermented ones, such as ales, wines and «pirits. There are o her drinks that people often indulge in that are harmful to the body. I now reter to tea and coffee. If these are taken in large quantities, or at all strong, they exert la most injurious effect on the human body. True, tney do not make a man go home and assault his wife, but they deaden his faculties, paralyze thought, unsteady the nerves, and in many ways make man less of a man than he should be. The dietetic rules I advise my patients to follow are these: T ake three meals a day only, about five hours apart; eat the food slowly, chew it well, stop at the first feeling of satisfaction, ■eat brown bread always and drink cocoa chiefly. Three meals a day are as many as any one in robust health can dispose of; two might sufliee, but I find three fair meals allow me to be always clear and bright and ready for work soon after meals, and keep my body in good condition. I advise them to be taken about five hours apart, as food requires from three to four hours to digest. I'think it only fair to give the stomach a little rest in between. Some may find this long at first, but a little practice will soon make it right for them. The practice of taking food every two hours or so is most injurious, sets up a false craving and puts persons in a -low way if they cannot get food at these short intervals. The reason for eating slowly is to gently fill the stomach, and when it has had enough it will cry “stop. ”, Thorough mastication of the food is most important, as it prepares it for stomach digestion. The saliva has also a wonderful property of changing some of the starch of the food into sugar, which is thus soon absorbed, and gives immediate force to the system. When our stomach has received as much food as the body requires it makes us feel satisfied; to eat more is doing ourselves injury, as we then eat more than the stomach can digest and than our bodies require. We may as a rule trust our appetites to be our guides if we will but eat plain food, but if we add season ings, pickles, sauces, etc., we create a false appetite and overeat. As long as a person is plain bread and butter hungry he may eat. Any person who values his health will never eat any other'bread but the brown wlieatmeal or wholemeal bread. It is a perfect food in itself and contains all the elements for heating the body, supplying it with muscular force, and it has in it all that is requisite for our bones and bony structures. It also causes daily • action of the bowels, a most important function this, and when natural a great aid to keep well. Cocoa should be firunk at least once a day, as it has none of the injurious properties of tea or •coffee, and if drunk weak and not too sweet, is not at all bilious. At breakfast one may have brown bread and butter, one cup of cocoa and an egg if desired, while a little fresh ripe fruit is an important addition. Another breakfast is oatmeal or wlieatmeal porridge and milk; to insure mastication eat the porridge with a little bread finish up with stewed fruit and bread. No drink is required if this last breakfast is eaten. The use of bacon, ham, fish or meat at breakfast is not advisable, as these things more or less waste the vital powers and are not necessary. Those who are engaged at the desk all day may take a light lunch at noon, consisting of brown bread and fruit or a salad, or a poached egg, or some milk pudding; for drink they may have cocoa, milk or lemon water. Those who dine now may eat four ounces of lean beef, mutton, poultry, game or fish, and two vegetables always, such as greens and potatoes. As a second course there are the vrious milk puddings or stewed fruit and bread. Batter puddings, suet dumplings, Norfolk dumplings and Yorkshire puddings should only be indulged in by persons of strong digestion and laborious occupation. For drinks take lemonade. At tea time we may take weak tea, coffee or cocoa, brown bread -and butter, with some kind of green stuff, as a.salad, tomatoes, cucumbers, fresh or stowed fruit, or milk pudding. Fish, potted meats, etc., are not required at this meal, and do more harm than good. This should be the last solid meal; at nine or ten p. m., a drink of cocoa, lemonade, or other fruit drink may be taken, but no solid food. Suppers mean restless nights, dreams or nightmare, tired feeling in the morning, nasty taste in the mouth, no desire for breakfast, and more or less miserable feelings. —lion's ew ife.

Fertility of Resource.

The following took place in one of the junior departments of our public schools: The teacher was hearing a class of little fellows recite a lesson and defected one of them doing something wrong. He stopped and asked what he would do with the boy. There was silence for a while, which was broken by a little fellow, Jimmy C , who said: “Lay him over the desk.” Shortly after the teacher detected Jimmy in the same offense, and he remarked: ‘Til lay you over the desk after school.” Seme time afterward there was a great deal of laughter among the youngsters, and the teacher asked what it was all about. For some time there was no answer, but at last a little fellow said: “I’ll tell you what we are laughing at; Jimmy has put two copy-books on the place where he is going to get the licking.”— Victoria Colonist,

THE LAST LAUGH.

Consternation in the Congregation—The Wisdom of the Innocents. Adjoining an out-of-the-way, but favorite, summer resort, is a iittl3 Chapel in which religious services are held occasionally, as clergymen can be obtained, during the pleasure season. A visiting divine consented to preach one Sabbath last summer, and, notice being given, quite a congregation of hotel guests and resident neighbors assembled. In opening the services the preacher suggested that, as the chapel was provided with no musical instrument, perhaps some one present would start a hymn, in which the congregation could join. A brief pause ensued, and then the congregation was convulsed at hearing an old lady strike up, in a cracked voice, “Believing we rejoice To see the cuss removed.’’ As no one “joined in,” the old lady did not proceed far with the hymn, and an' awkward contretemps seemed imminent Tne clergyman was quick-witted, however, and turned the ludicrous incident to good account He quietly arose and announced as his text the word-, “Believing we rejoice,” from which he preached an excellent sermon, one that, under the peculiar circumstances, made a deep impression. The old lady will probably never Know why she caused such a sensation. She lived in the neighborhood, and being accustomed to the pronunciation “cuss” for “curse” sang it that way. Homespun people often ran counter to some of the common customs, or time-worn prejudices of society, and are laughed at. Sometimes they are right, and society is wrong. When new and valuable ideas are evolved in the progress of the world’s thought, those who first believe in them are often subjected to ridicule. But it is those who believe who have occasion to rejoice. Mr. A. Way is a prominent farmer at Navarino, N, Y., who was prostrated with kidney disease, and reached a point where “the doctorsaid he had done all he could. ” Felx 28, 1883, he writes: “As a last resort I began the use of Warner’s safe cure, and to-day lam hale, hearty and happy.” October 13, 1887, he again writes: “If it had not been for your wonderful discovery of Warner’s safe cure I should have been in my grave to-day. I am, to all appearances, as free from any trouble of the kidneys as any man living. The doctor who doctored me and said 1 must die has since died with Bright’s disease!” The honest old fanner was doubtless derided and laughed at by tbo medical man, and many of his friends, when he announced his determination to try W’arner’s safe cure, a proprietary medicine; but he is alive and well to-day. while the physician who laughed at him is dead. The wise old farmer has the last laugh!

So Little of Now in Life.

There is bo little of now in our lives! It is always “to-morrow. ” Balpli Waldo Emerson has likened to-day to a king in the disguise of a beggar who comes to our doors, and waits patiently for that which we may have to give. Woe to him who sends this royal mendicant away empty handed; for under his common, perhaps ragged, garment he wears a priceless robe whose hem we should be glad to kiss as we welcome him in.

There is so little of now in our religion. It is next Sunday’s affair. Next Sunday we will put on our soul’s best clothes, partake of the bread and wine, and get so near Heaven that our very gloves and bonnet strings will exhale sancitv. “Peace on earth, good-will to men,” will beam from our homeward turned faces, and a good dinner and an evening of pleasant repose will tend to assure ns what very good people we are, to be sure! thus to have spent a day in the service of the Lord. We shall feel comfortably convinced that we have, somehow, honored the Lord’s day and kept it very holy indeed.— Emily Leland Moore , in Si. Louis Magazine.

Preparing and Spinning Flax.

Flax gives us two classes of yarn, namely, linen or line yarn and tow yarn. The processes of preparing linen yarn are very similar to those of preparing worsteds; of course, the machines are different in their construction, because of the difference in the length and character of the fiber. Flax is “hackled,” beat or crushed, to make it flexible; it is then “scutched,” an operation equivalent to combing. In some cases the fibers are too long to work; they are then broken by a “saw. ” After the scutching the short'fibers are carded for “tow” yarn in the same manner as the “noil,” or short fibers of wool after combing, are carded for woolen yarn.

A Natural Result.

The conversation had been about children in general, and the mother told the following story about her own child, a little tot not more than 3 years of age: “The other night she was kneeling by my side and s .ying her prayer of ‘Now I lay me down to sleep.’ She got as far as ‘if 1 should die before I wake,’when she stoped, and, being in a hurry to place her in bed, I said: ‘Well, go on; what comes next?’ The little eyes were sparkling with earnestness and deep thought, and after having apparently settled the question in her own mind she said, in her baby way: ‘A fooneral.’”— Philadelphia Call. ; A Frenchman, aged 87, still amuses himself by breaking colts up in New Hampshire. God called some preachers to preach just to keep them out of devilment.

Popular Education.

We sympathize with the feeling which often leads citizens to boast thi * no child bom in this country need grow up in ignorance, and yet it is a fact that many people who have learned to read and write have never taught themselves to think.. A man who suffered from catarrh, consumption, bronchitis, scrofula, or “liver complaint,” might read, till his eyes dropped out, how these and many other diseases have been cured by Dr. PiercC’s Golden Medical Discovery, but if he did not take the lesson to himself and test the virtues of this great medicine, his time would be thrown away.

Foreigner —Ah! cbor monsieur, I forget ze vourre name, eet iz so queer and strange He—My name is‘Smith.— Town Topics. Sadden Changes of Weather cause Throat Diseases. There is no more effectual remedy for Goughs, Colds, eta, than Brown’s Bronchial Troches. Sold only in boxes. Price 25 cte.

*Ah me !* sighed Potts, Tm tired of living, The world is hollow, ambition s vain.’ ’Como now!* said his chnm, ‘I know the symptoms ; It's all your liver—that’s very plain. “Yon need not suffer, for help is easy; Pierce’s Pellets go right to the place. ‘A friend to the bilious,’l well might call them— There’s nothing better; they’ll suit your case.” Potts ceased his sighing and bought the "Pellets.” No more he mourneth his hapless lot! His face is cheerful, his heart is lightsome, His melancholy is quite forgot! There is one good thing about violin • playing—it keeps np the dead oat market, i —luck. Db. Sage’s Catarrh Kemedv cures when ; every other so-called remedy fails. j Bed pepper may not be a great luxury. ! but, nevertheless, it makes one’e eyes waiter.— l J uvk.

AN OPEN LETTER

From Rev. .J. Roberts, Pastor First M. E. Church, Fremont, Mich. Rheumatic Syrup Co., Jackson, Mich.: Gentlemen— nly daughter Maud has used Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup and Piasters, which you so strongly recommended her to try. It has now been about eleven weeks since she commenced, and her inflammatory rheumatism is nearly broken up. Her limbs were badly swollen, and the poor girl was in terrible agony. In the midst of the pain we wound the Plasters about her limbs, and, as a result, the swelling was reduced and she became quiet and rested. The Syrup corrected her indigestion, cleansed the rheumatic poison from her blood, and she is now able to be around the bouse. She still uses the Syrup and Plasters, and will continue to do so until entirely well. We consider Hibbard's Rheumatic Syrup and Plasters remedies of great merit. ' Rev. J. Roberts, Pastor First M. E. Church. Fremont, Mich., Oct. 26, 1887. Little things upset the plans of little men; but solid honesty stands solid to the end.— Philadelphia Record.

In General Debility, Emaciation.

Consumption, and wasting in children, Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites is a most valuable food and medicine. It creates an appetite for food, strengthens the nervous system, and buikls up the body. Please read:'“l tried Scott’s Emulsion on a young man whom physicians at times gave' up hope. Since he began using the Emulsion his cough has ceased, gained flesh and strength, and from all appearances his life will be prolonged many years.”— John Sullivan, Hospital Steward, Morganza, Pa. In lovemaking, it is a less misfortune to fail with the right person than to succeed with the wrong one. — Life.

A Letter from the Pastor of the M. E. Church.

Franklin, Oakland Co., Mich., » Dec. 1887. f Rheumatic Syrup Company: Dear Sirs—Mr. AA. Rust, of this place, furnished me one bottle of your Rheumatic Byrup. Have taken about two-thirds of it Before taking it the slightest change in the woather affected me very much. I am now almost entirely free from the awful twinges of rheumatism, and changes in the woather do not affect me. S. A. Long, Pastor of Methodist Church, Franklin, Mich. The receipts of a walking match are properly called gait money.

Consumption Surely Cured.

To the Editor:— Please inform your readers that I havo a positive remedy for the abovenamed disease. By it's timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if tney will send mo their Express and P. O. address. Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM. M. C., 181 Pearl St., N. Y. The fruit peddler never resorts to legal measures.— Puck.

Dyspepsia Does not get well of itself; it requires careful, persistent attention and a remedy that will assist nature to throw off the causes and tone up the digestive organs till they perform their duties willingly. Among the agonies experienced by tho dyspeptic, are distress before or after eating, loss of appetite, irregularities of the bowels, wind or gas and pain in the stomach, heart-burn, sour stomach, etc., causing mental depression, nervous irritability and sleeplessness. If you are discouraged bo of good cheer and try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It has cured hundreds; it will cure you. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Made only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. IPO Poses One Dollar PENSIONS 40 Soldiers and Heirs. L. BINGHAM. Att’y, Washington, D.C. MENTION THIS PAPER when writing to iotbrtiurii. GOLD is worth SSOO per pound, Pettit's Eye Salve SI,OOO, but is sold at 25 cents a box by dealers. MENTION THIS PAPER nix writing tg abtbitiixu. jtftPn A MONTH. Agents wanted. 90 best sell.\/n ing articles in the world. 1 s»mple FREE. VtwU Address JAY ItKONSON, Detroit, Mich. MENTION THIS PAPER wisb writing to adtirturrj. A urw UniTPT complete in each number; also H flljW nUilm stories and essays. $3.00 per year. aawMGGGGa Send 10 cents tor sample copy to LIPPLNCUTVS MAGAZINE, Philadelphia. HflllC CTIinV Bookkeeping, Business Forms, UIIIC O 111111 «Penmanship,Arithmetic,Shorthand, etc., thoroughly taught by mail. Circulars free. Bryant’s Business College, Buffalo, N.Y. MENTION THIS PAPER wrbn writing to adtretures. n A TFC MTPO K - s - * A -Lacey, Patent r U | ff* SW I Jh Attorneys,Washington, D.C. ■ ■■ ■ ■■■ w ■ w Instnictions and opinions as to patentability FREE. J#9“l7 years’ experience. FIIPPBy return mail. Pall Description ► Bf ► ►Moody's New Tailor System on>ress r tlk■■Cutting. MOODY & 00., Cincinnati, O. MIXTION THIS PAPER whin wkitin* to adtiktuim GO TO FLORIDA free guide books,-maps or truth about land. write O. ill. OltOgßY, 99 Franklin St., N. Y. STEKETEE’S

Dry iters! Make Your Own Bitters. Why piv a Dollar for a bottle of Stomach Bitters, containing more poor whisky than medicine, when the undersigned will send you by mail one 4 oz. package of UO ,TS, HKKIJS and BKHRIEB, which will make ONE GALLON of the best TONIC anyone ever used. The use of this Tonic has cured INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA. Fr.VER and AGUE; as an appetizer none belter; acts on the Kidneys and General Debility, and gives Tone to the stomach; in fact, I challenge all other Tonics. It is far the cheapest Tonic known. One package will equal one dozen bottles of ordinary Bitters >-old for On„ Dollar per bottle. Full directions on every package. Ask your Druggist for “STEKETEE’S DRY BITTERS * If your Druggist does not keep them on sale, then send to the undersigned. I will send one package to any address within the U. S. on receipt of 25c. U. 8. postage stamps taken in payment. Two packages 50--, ana ft trial bottle STEKETEE’S NEURALGIA DROPS laeluded. Add'ess _ GEO. O. STEKETEE, Grand Rapids, Mich. Use STEKETEE'S PINWOWd DESTROYER, lor* cure. Price 25 cent*.

HIS PHOTO.

°form have become a trade mark, and the good he has done is illustrated in the following marvelous instance: Jan. 17, 1883, j George C. Osgood & Co., druggists, ix>well, i Mass., wrote: ‘‘Mr. Lewis Dennis, No. 136 I Moody st.. desires to recompiend St. Jacobs Oil to any afflicted with rheumatism, and desires especially to say that Orrin Robinson, of Grantvilie, Mass., a boy of 12 years, came to his house in the summer of 1881 walking upon crutches, his left leg having been bent at the knee for over two months and could not be bent back. He could not walk upon it. Mr. Dennis had some St. Jacobs Oil in the house and gave it to him to rub on his knee. In six days he had no use for his crutches and went home well without them, and he has been well since St. Jacobs Oil cured him.” In July. 1887, inquiry was made of the Messrs. Osgixxl to ascertain the condition of the little cripple, which brought the following response: “Lowell, Mass., July 9, 1887. The poor cripple on crutches, Orrin Robinson, cured by St. Jacobs Oil in 1881, has remained cured. The young man has been and is now at work every dav at manual labor. Dr. George C. Osgood, M. D.” No other remedy car, make the same showing.

CREAM* 'u&sM tarrh 12 years. J’AcW droppings into th rH”£ADl throat were naasraf-Wi.«yrPurp®luj jy M ing. My nose bled first day's use of Cream Balm no bleeding , the .wc-SW ness is entirely gone. pjjt.] D. G. Davidson ,I?ith —ISphp W% the Boston Budget. " P t (\ Aparticlels applied Into eacn nostril and Is agreeable. Price 50 cts. at druggists; by mail, registered, ets. ELY BROS., 25.1 Greenwich Bt.. New York.

KIDDER’S f A SURE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Over 5,000 Physicians have sent us their approval of DIGEBTYLTN, saying 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 CASKS. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY. IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Summer Complaints and Chronic Diarrhea, which are the direct results of imperfect digestion, DIGESTYI.IN will effect an immediate cure. Take DIGESTYI.IN for all pains and disorders of the stomach; theyaU corae from indigestion. Ask your druggist for DIGESTYLIN (price $1 per large bottle). Jf be does not have it, send one dollar to us and we will send u bottle to you, express prepaid. Do not hesitate to send your money. Our house is reliable. Established twenty-five years. WM, F. KII’DER & CO., Manufacturing Chemists, M 3 John St., N. Y. MENTION THIS PAPER wns* warns. to .ttikti.ixa.

DCllOinftlC Sf n(1 ,or Pension Lsws to U. 8. rEwoIOHS mOEESSSSSSSA £T% w to 88 a day. Samples worth (1.50, FREE Lines not under the horse’s leet. Writ* Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mici MENTION THIS PAPER whin warns, to imiituiu, KIDOER'B PABTILLEB!sBSS?i: MENTION THIS PAPER whan waitiw* ro advaatiakm. [jpinj AW V JA uj K,offerer, we will nail enough tO( onv!:ire, tSAflaMWrn. B. S. Lxudsksacu A Co., Newark, M. J. AH F NTS WANT FT) tO » eU novelty rug riOC/lf/O VVfUI tCU MACHINES and‘RUG rglfr. A-.TATTEKNB, lor making Rugs, IBagha. *gTidies, Caps, Mittens, etc. MaflS!a|®§ffi{WffihSj(iiiue Hent by mail for sl. Scud Ififwß—for late reduced price-list. * E. ROSS & CO,, Toledo, Ohio. fSCVLADY AGENTS permanent JBmT i employment at (50 to (100 per |29BklFSEnnil*' month selling Quceirf'it ySupiMafsV, .porters. Sample outfit free. .T — - Address Cincinnati Suspender WCo., 11E. Ninth St., Cincinnati, 0. NORTHERNPACIFIC II LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS® FREE Government LANDS. WTULUOjfO or ACKH of each in Minnesota, North oakota, Montana, Idaho. Washington and Oregon. 6C||n FAR with Maps descrlblngThs •Cllll rUUmT Agricultural,Grazing and TlmVs, nd i n^ w . 2££V.?s*l tler,, J ß S n ♦ Fr*«- Address CBAS. B. LAMBOM, La 8 n T d . i ffiETOK*

Everybody wants the earliest B||V MfIRTIIEDII CDftllfli A Hi ■ jb vegetables and largest farm DU I HUH I IlfaNH UHUWH Ms ■ R K.l Sr.WIRSX* ?, ropp nod the way to get them is to plant Salzer's Meeds. 100,000 fa fa H| Ik Roses ftnd Plants. Bend 8c for sample Boiumza Oat* (200 bu. per ■ ■ n IFEBWta.) and finest catalogue ever published. JoHlLßiLZEk,LaCrosse, Wii. Mi fa |#

I CURE FITS! When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop them for a time and then have them return again. I mean a radical cure. I have made the disease of FTCR, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life long study. I warrant my remedy to cure the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post Office. M. G. HOOT, M. C„ 183 Pearl St., New York. MIXTCAN LInFmENT m bfyp et / ftsfeHSS? / I Jv&S*n? n L e *. M MEXICAN iinFmeSt

The venerable benefactor of mankind, intent upon his good works, is known as we see him here. His familiar face and

nfl jr. I The treatment of many thousands of cases of those chronio weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids’ Hotel ana Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapting and thoroughly testing remedies for the cure of woman's peculiar maladies. Or. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and valuable experience. Thousands of testimonials, received from patients and from physicians who have tested it In the more aggravated and obstinate cases which bad baffled their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of suffering women. It is not recommended as a “cure-all,” but as a most perfect Specific for woman's peculiar ailments. A» a powerful, invlforating tonic, It imparts strength to the whole system, and to the womb and Its appendage's in particular. For overworked, “worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, “shop-girls," housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial und restorative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nervine, “Favorite Prescription” Is une§ualed and is invaluable in allaying and subuing nervous excitability, irritability, exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organio disease of the womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is a legitimate medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate organization. It is purely vegetable in its composition and perfectly harmless In its effects In any condition of the system. Foi? morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dyspepsia and kindred symptoms, its use, in small doses, will prove very beneficial. “ Favorite Prescription ” Is a positive euro for tbo most complicated and obstinate cases of leuoorrhea, excessive, flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak baok, “ female weakness, antoverslon. retroversion, bearing-down sensations, chronio congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with “ internal heat.” As a regulator and promoter of functional action, at that critical period of change from girlhood to womanhood, “Favorite Prescription " Is a perfectly safe remedial agent, and can produce only good results, it is equally efficacious ana valuable in its effects when taken for those disorders and derangements Incident to that later and’moat critical period, known as “ The Change of Life.” “Favorite Prescription.’’when taken in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative doses of Dr. Pierce’s Purgative Pellets (Little Liver Pills), cures Liver. Kidney and Bladder diseases. Their combined use also removes blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and scrofulous humors from the system. “ Favorite Prescription ” is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, u uder a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers, thatTt will give satisfaction in every case, or money will bo refunded. Tills guarantee has bo<m printed on the bottle-wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years. Large bottles GOO doses) SI.OO. or six bottles for $5.00. For large, Illustrated Treatise on Diseases of Women (100 pages, paper-covered), send ten cents in stamps. Address, Woiid’B Dispensary Medical Association. 663 Main St, BUFFALO, N.Y.

Cures Neuralgia, Toothache, Headache, Catarrh, Croup, Sore Throat, . RHEUMATISM, . Lame Back, Stiff Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Burns. Wounds, Old Sores and All Aches and Pains. The many testimonials received by us more than prove all we claim for this valuable remedy. It no*, only relieves the most severe pains, but It Curts You. That’s the Idea 1 tSUSytttiVt COMPANY CH'iCAGtL

CATARRH Can Be Cared. Yes, sir; and it isn’r necessary to go to California, or Florida to accomplish it either. DK. CADY’S CATARRH CURE is a SURE specific fertile cure oi this terrible disease. He used it in his general practice for years, and NEVER failed to cure. It is compounded now with his own hands to insure positively that chemically pure, high-gi ale remedies ara used in its manufacture. Your patience fiiay have been exhausted by using some, or all, of the nostrums so largely advertised, but let it revive In the us: of this, for it is a sure specific. YOU may not be affiicted in this regard; if not, please recommend it to some one who is, and thus confer a favor at botli ends of the line. The most obstinate, palnral and long-stand-ing cases readily yield to its curative power. It IS. recommended upon its merits. No valueless certificates of cure, no picturing the fr.ghtful results of the disease, or unprofessional clap-trap arc used to increase its sale. Follow directions and it will cure you, otherwise money cheerfully refunded. It is perfectly sale, agieeable, and easily applied. One package willdo the work. Don’t deceive yourself or allow others to deceive you by telling you it is too high priced. SPURIOUS arfic es sre DEAR at any price— GENUINE ARTICLES are CHEAP at any price. Dr. Cady’s Catarrh Cure is GENUINE, and is worth TEN times the price. Sent with full directions, by return mail, to any address.in the United Stites or Canadas, upon receipt of $2Xn. Druggists not allowed to handl* - it. A. P. CONNOLLY, Sole Agent. C.N.U. No. I—BB WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, i Is? *•** “I I°» mw the advertisement la this paper.