Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 November 1890 — Page 7

WOMAN'S INTUITION.

Nearly Always Bight In Her Jwltneet la • Regard to Common Things. An old gentleman over seventy came Into the city from his farm without his overcoat. The day turned chilly, and he was obliged to forego his visit to the fair. To a friend who remonstrated with him for going away from home thus unprepared he said: “I thought it was going to be warm; ,my wife told me to take my overcoat, but I wouldn’t. 'Women have more sense than men, anyway.” A frank admission. Women’s good sense is said to come from Intuition; may it not be that.they are more close observers of little things. One thing is .certain, they are apt to strike the nail oa .the head, In all the ordinary problems of life, more frequently than the lords of creation. “According to Dr. Alice Bennett, who recently read a paper on Bright's disease before the Pennsylvania State Medical Society persons subject to bilious attacks and sick headaches, who have crawling sensations. ;llke the flowing of water in the head, who are 'tired all the time* and have unexplained attacks of sudden weakness, may well be suspected of dangerous tendencies in the direction of Bright’s disease. ” , The veteran newspaper correspondent, Joe Howard, of the New York Press, In noting this statement, suggests: “Possibly Alice is correct In her diagnosis, but why she give some Idea of treatment? I iknow, a njan who has been ‘tired all the (time - for ten years. Night before last he {took two doses of calomel and yesterday he Wished he:hadn’t.” A proper answer is found in the following letter of Mrs. Davis, wife of Rev. Wm. J. 'Davis, of Basil, Ohio, June 21, 1890: “I do not hesitate to say that I owe my Jlfe \to Warner’s Safe Cure. I had a constant hemorrhage from my kidneys for more than five months. The do 'nothing for me. My husband spent hundreds of dollars and I was not relieved. I 'was under the care of the most eminent medical men in the State. The hemorrhage .ceased before I had taken one bottle of the Safe Cure. 1 can safely and do cheerfully 'recommend it to all who are sufferers of kidney troubles.” A Californian won a bride by giving « young lady his lower berth in a sleeping car. It is not the first time that love has stooped to one of lower birth.

JJACOBS OIL CUKES SURELY.

1 SPRAINS. ■ *" 1 Ohio <t Miss. Hallway. Office President and General Manager, Cincinnati, Ohio “My foot suddenly turned and gap e mo a very severely sprained ankle. The • ppilcu'tion of St. Jacobs Oil resulted at once in a relief from pain." W.W. Peabody, Prest. & Gen'l Man’gr.

THE CHARLES fl. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. Md. JI ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the teste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup or Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist .who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. Ean Francisco, cal, LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N.L n ■TI“M Tft V Instructions FREE to Uft I L Rj S V I inventors. jgGF*Write at rHI LhI u «SM h o^ kot J. B. CKALLE & CO>. Washington. D.C. lASTHM APMfiED.FREE I | b, Mali to Br. B. SCHIFFMAX, Bt. r.nl,XI»». | ■PATENTSSS ■ " w w ent, sentfree. PATRICK OTARRELL, Att’y at Law, WaahiugTn J).C. JOBN W.MORKTB, ■ ttLlwOlwlll Washington, D.C. ■ 3 yrs in last war, 15 adjudicating daims, atty riuoo. I .HTXDrntMC tto great foot remedy for m»k----1 IP/ rCUll’ic, lug the feet Inatant 1 if/ reilor for cold or perspiring feet On ule I, IF everywhere, or sent free ou receipt of so eta. ACT Sample package free at atoree, or mailed fer a Sy dime. Illuetrated Pamphlet Free. <✓ TUB rxulNK CO, WOULD h’LD‘O, N. T. tat rni rAI MU. Bead 6c. for circulars and testimonials. Address, DR. O. W. F. S.NYDER, 2t3St«M ChtogMU. Saaiethis paper when you write. HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address for forms foriapplteadon and full Information WM. W. DUDLEY, LATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS, 4 iS&^ ngtoa ’ D ’ c ’ Tutt’s Pills Tne first dose often astonishes the in val Id, giving elasticity of mind, bouyancy of body, GOOD DIGESTION. regular boweln and solid desh. Price, gfic, MOTHERS'FRIENFI ■SCHILD BIRTHBB IF ÜBSD BfiFOßg CONFINEMENT. Book to "Mothsrs' 1 Matlxd fbbx. •MADFUCLD MEGULATOB CO- ATLANTA. SA. . aSLOST AUDKOGUZM.

BRUISES. 746 Dolphin Street, Baltimore, Md., Jan’y 18,1890. •T was bruised badly in hip bnd side by a fall and suffered severely. St. Jacobs Oil completely cured me.” Wm.C. Harden, Member of State Legislature.

IN A TOWER OF WATER.

Whlrlwl Aroand Lika a Top In Mid Air —A Boy’s Experience. Under recent date a Fall River (Mass.) correspondent writes as follows: ’*! A boy with a wonderful capacity for cold water made a kind of Noah’s ark time of it last evening for people who dwell around the South Park. There-is-a tall stand-pipe near the park where the sprinkling cart loads up; and the pressure from the pond at that point is something like a million pounds to the square inch. Just what possessed the aforesaid boy to climb that stand-pipe while the band was playing gayly in the band stand will probably never be known. Possibly he had found life tob slow at the drinking fountain, and may be that he didn’t think he could do the standpipe any harm. At any rate he shinned up and began monkeying with the cap at the top. A fuil-grown man with cold steel appliances would undoubtedly have experienced considerable difficulty in unfastening that tap, but the foot-high urchin found it easy enough. His a©“ compiishment will surprise him to the end of his days. He was bending directly over the pipe, stomach down, when the last thread of the cap screw was loosened. There was a swish and a roar and the million pound pressure sent a mighty volume of water 1,000 feet into the air. It would have been a magnificent spectacle but for one feature which froze the blood in the veins of the assembled multitude. As far as the eye could retch, and almost at the very-top of this tower of water, a tiny speck slowly revolved. It was the small boy, helpless, and feebly waving his hands and feet in his terror. Fortunately the tremendous force supported him, and the centrifugal power convexing toward the sides of the torrent, kept him in the middle. It was wet work looking on, but for a few seconds nobody dared to move. Then a brave member of the police department recovered his presence of mind and darted to the Park House telephone. A little later Superintendent Kieran of .the water works arrived on the scene, pale but determined. The same thought seemed to inspire the crowd at the same moment, for 500 voices exclaimed: “You must let him down easy.” Superintendent Kieran needed no such warning. He knew that to shut off the supply suddenly meant a terrible fall for the half-drowned lad, who had ceased to move up there among the stars, and with a touch as light as a woman’s he began to turn back the swift tide in the main artery. Inch by inch the tower of water diminished; inch by inch that small speck of humanity descended. The excitement was at concert pitch. Everybody spoke in hoarse whispers. Finally a joyous cheer rang out. The urchin was thirty feet from the ground, and scores of arms were outstretched to receive him. “Stand steady;” was the order, and the last spoonful of water was turned off, and the boy dropped safely into a network of hands. “That beats balloons,” he said, as he wiped his face with his dripping sleeve.

The Home Truth of a Foreign Proverb.

The Spanish have a proverb— demasiado ee peligroso—“too much is dangerous.” It “brevity is the soul of wit,” this means a great deal. Excesses and other imprudences in eating and drinking are productive of one' tremendous evil —the progenitor of many others—and these are atuong the follies to which this pithy saying has direct application. Tbe evil to which we aUude is indigestion, to the relief and cure of which Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters has contributed more than any medicine which science has given to the American people. This invigorating stomachic and corrective is the means not only of reforming a disordered or enfeebled condition ot the digestive organs, but of renewing healthy action of tbe bowels and the liver. Besides this, it counteract a tendency to rheumatism and kidney complaint, extirpates and prevents malarious disease, is a potent restorative of strength which is failing, hastens convalescence and mitigates the infirmities of age.

About the Sun’s Corona.

The observations made by Professor Sehaeberle. of the Lick Observatory, in connection with the eclipse of last December have led him to propound an entirely new theory of the solar corona. According to his observations the corona is caused by light emitted and reflected from streams of matter ejected from the sun by forces which in general act along lines normal to the surface. These forces are most active near the center of each sun spot zone, and owing to the change of the position of the observer with reference to the plane of the sun’s equator the perspective overlapping and interlacing of the two sets of streamers at these zones cause the observed apparent change in the type of the corona. Having had this idea suggested to him in the course of his investigations, Professor Sehaeberle has hit upon a mode of mechanically demonstrating it Having stuck a number of needles in a ball to represent the streams of matter, he jjlaqed the model Jn a beam of parallel ray? and allowed its shadow to fall upon a> screen,, the. result being that an indefinite variety of forms similar to the jCoronal structure can be reproduced by simply fbvglvihg the model- Whether ‘tne’forms that are stien according as the observer is above or or in the plane of the sun’s 1 equator agree with those that should be seen has yet to be proved; but if there is such agreement it will go far in the direction of confirming this novel view of the sun’s corona.

A Wonderful Paper.

Wbcn you were reading the large Prospectus of lhe Youth’s C<rtnpunton..publlshed last week in our columns, did you stop to consider what a wealth of talent was engaged In producing this remarkable paper? Its success is phenomenal, and it is read in 450,000 families because it is the best of its kind. Now is the time to send your subscription. $1.75 sent at once will secure you the rest of this year free, including all the Holiday Numbers. The Youth’s Companion. Boston.

Fashion with the Maori.

It appears that white women are responsible for the rapid depopulation of New Zealand. When female missionaries went among the Maoris they insisted that the Maori women should wear clothing. The latter could not be induced to overcome their prejudice against skirts, but discovering that the missionary women wore corsets, they decided that the latter was a garment not wholly devoid of merit. The result is that every Maori woman now goes about her daily work clad in a corset laced as tightly as the united efforts of half a dozen stalwart warriors can lace it. Being unaccustomed to tight lacing, the women are dying off with great rapidity, and the repentant female missionaries now regret that they ever asked their dusky sisters to consider the question of clothing. The mortgagee generally has a fat thing In his lien.

Making Money Anywhere.

Having read Mr. Moorehead’s experience plating with gold, silver and nickel, I sent for a plater and have more work than I can do.. < )t>is prist ng the spoons, casters and jewelry that people want plated. The first week I cleared $37.10, and In three weeks $119.85. and my wife lias made atfout as I have. By addressing W. EL Griffith & Co., Zanesville, Ohio, you can get circulars. A plater only costs $3. You can learn to use ft tn qn hour.' Can plate large or small articles, and can make money anywhere. A. J.Jonson.

Phil Armour's First Sloo.

A frequent visitor to New York is Phil Armour, short, stocky, far from attractive in any sense, but a singularly happy man, who has managed to make a big fortune. He cares little for money now, but a time was when the loss of SIOO nearly drove him mad. It was a good many years ago, in the days of gold on the Pacific slope. Armour was one of the numberless throng there searching for fortune. Fortune paid no Jibed to him, however, but finally he managed to get some “washings” that he sold for SIOO. This sum he carefully tied up in an old cotton handkerchief for safekeeping. Then he hunted around for a place tb put it His eyes spied ah old ahd dllapitated coffeepotln. a corner of thq cabin he occupied 51 th three other seekers for fortune. e put the SIOO carefully In it and placed it lovingly on a convenient shelf; then he went about his daily toil. When he returned from work his eye instinctinely searched for tpe pot. It was gone. One pf the partners had tired of work and come home. He had nothins else to do, so; he went tOtdoan house. The old coffee-pot went with the .rubbish, and a fire was made of ft all in a little clump of bushes naarTiy,, Great Was the consterrtattdh when Armour t6Fd what the pot Contained. . Arid how carefully he worked over the fire to rescue the pot! Finally he reached it, blackened and bent, but IJhe money was intact, and no happier man slept in the diggings that night, Thereafter he carried it around with him in a belt. ' 1 And that was the foundation of the Armour millions.

Owed Him an Arm.

In the summer of 1877 Gen. Jubal A. Early was a guest at the Arlington Hotel, Hot Springs, Ark. Among the other notables stopping there was the then somewhat ex-Governor Stearns, of Florida, who had been recently appointed by President Hayes a commission to .adjust the claims of citizens of JJpt Springs who had improved real estate afterward decided to belong to the National Government One day the two gentlemen, who had no personal act. quaintance, met in the hotel office. “General Early,” said Stearns, politely, “you ought to be willing to shake hands with me. You owe me an arm,” and he indicated his empty sleeve. , “How is that, Governor?” queried Early, at the same time extending his hand. , H “I lost that arm in the cause of tho Union at ‘Winchester, where you commanded the Confederate army.” i, “Indeed!” responded the General suavely, as he stroked his long gray beard and slightly straightened his bent figure. “You mustn’t blame me for that. I always instructed my men to do their duty, but somehow the rascals would blunder. ” The future intercourse of the two gentlemen was limited to a passing bow. n

Noxlous Humors,

Combined with wind and waior, are carried to and from every part of tho body every six minutes. In many cases there are flying pains in the body—sometimes in the back, sometimes in the side, and at other times'ill the arms and legs, and these are often called rheumatic pains, but in reality are nothing m >re than wind and water mingled. with the blood, and carried to every part of the body in its circulation. Let anyone troubled with any or all of the symptoms here described take the wonderful English remedy, Beecham’s Pills, four, five, or even six, and afterward two pills morning and night for a few days, and they will carry off all noxious humors, expel tbe wind, cause a free circulation of the water, .and lay the foundation of health and strength. Beecham’s Pills are prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, Lancashire, England. B. F. Allen Co., 365 Canal street. New York, Sole Agents for the United States,’ will mail Beecham’s Pills on receipt of price, 25 cents a box, if your druggist does not keep them.

Disgrace vs. Respectability.

Society Bud —Oh, it’s perfectly terrible, and we re all ready to die of mortification. Just think, my own sister the wife of a mere nobody—never belonged to our set at all. She eloped with him last night, leaving a note saying that before morning she ’ would be the wife of one she loved better than life Itself. Friend —Mercy! I hope it wasn’t that ugly old fellow I saw coming in here yesterday. “No; her lover was young and handsome. That homely old bald-headed, toothless wreck you saw is the Count Groggie. ” “That creature, a count?” “Yes, a real count. He has not only a title, but he is rich; and as soon as I can conquer my aversion to the old fool, I’m going to marry him. ” — New York Weekly. AMANwhoIMU practiced medicine for forty years ought to know salt from sugar ; read what he says: Tolbdo, 0., Jan. 10,1887. Messrs F. J. Cheney <t Co.—Gentleman—l have been in the general practice of mediefne for most forty years, and would say that in all my practice and experience have never seen a ' preparation that I could prescribe with as much ! confidence of success as I can Hall’s Catarrh ! Cure, manufactured by you. Have prescribed i it a great inany times ana its effect is wonderful, and would say in conclusion that I have yet to find a case of Catarrh that it would not cure, if they would take it according to directions. Yours truly, L. L. GOBSUCH, M. D., tiffice, 215 Summit St. We will give SIOO for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured with Hail’s Catarrh Cure, ' Taken internnllv. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O. 49~501d by Druggists, 75c. 1 A New York grocer, who recently took a trip to Coney Island, was sitting on the beach fooling in tbe sand with a small shovel. A friend seeing him stopped and bade him the time of day. “Howdy,” replied the grocer, absent- > mindedly, taking up a shovelful of sand. ' “How many pounds of sugar did you say?” i Little Alphonse XIII. of Spain is ] four and a half years old. He has a pro- i digious appetite, and it is necessary to ; watch him carefully at table to prevent i him from gormandizing. « After tbe Arizonians got through 1 with him the coroner cut him down and I sat on him. The verdict was, from the ; appearance of the rope, “knot dead.” Polar beats—the fellows Who are striving in vain to depress the price of i ICA-

Art Criticlam.

A man and woman stood looking at the paintings in the exposition art gallery. “This picture is worth $5,000,” he remarked, consulting his catalogue. “That's queer," replied the woman; “this one is much larger and is priced at only $2,500.” “Well, you’ll notice that the frame is not such a good one. ”— Pittsburg Chronicle.

Never Neglect a Cold.

Dr. Austin Flint says in the Forum: "It is probable that a person with an inherited tsndency to consumption woqld never develop the disease if he could be protected against infection with the tubercle bacillus. In the light of modern discoveries consumption can no longer be regarded as an Incurable disease.” It is no exaggeration to say that Kemp’s Balsam, when taken In time, has saved many from consumption. At all druggists’; 50c and sl. Sample bottle free.

No Need of Brads’reet.

Seaside hotel proprietor—l see you have given our finest suite of rooms to a man named Bilkins. Are you sqre he can pay the rates? Clerk—Yes; he’s immensely rich. Proprietor—How do you know? Clerk—He is old and ugly, and his wife Is young and pretty. Explained at Last.—The fact that Washington never told a He has been satisfactorily accounted for. He never went flshlM. The fact that Dr. White’s DandeliOTY Alterative has become the most popular Liver and Kidney Remedy is also easily accounted for. It Is an honest mudicfne, made of the best and purest materials that money will buy, and performs all that is claimed for It. Try it. •

Kept Back.

Watts —Isn’t that ridiculous? I mean that girl across the way. I’ll bet my hat’ she isn’t a day under nineteen years of pge, though she is dressed in fourteen-year-old style. Potts—Well, I don’t suppose it is her fault. She either has a big sister or she is the daughter of a widow.

CAtARRh Js a complaint which affects nearly everybody, j Daniercns tendencies eharacferlce that very more or less. It originates in a cold, or auccea- common affection, catarrh in the head. The foul ■lon of cplde, combined with impure blood. Diss- matter dropping into the bronchial tubes or greeable flow from the nose, tickling In the lungs la very liable to lead to bronobltla or conthroat, offensive breath, pain over and between the aumptiou. As catarrh originate! In impurities eyes, ringing and bursting noises in the ean, in the blood, local applications can do but little •re the more ;common symptoms. Catarrh is good. Tne common-sense method of treatment la cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which strikes to purify the blood, and for this purpose there directly at Its Cause bv removing a}! impurities is no preparation superior to Hood’s Sarsaparilla, from the blood, building tip the diseased tissues, Tire powerful action of this medicine upon the and giving healthy tone to the whole system. I blood expeis every Impurity and cures catarrh. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Bold by all druggists, St; six for 85. Prepared only I Sold by all druggists. 81; six for 85- Prepared only by C. I. HOOD A CO., LoweU, Mass. by C. I. HOOD A CO.. Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar (OO Doses One Dollar Catarrh Cured, ONE CENT I If you Stiffler from Catarrh, in any of its forms, It is your duty to yourself and fami’v so obtain the mean- of a certain enre before it is too late. This you can easilv do at an expense of one cent for a postal card.bvaendiuK your name and address to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, New kork, who will send you FREE, by return mail, a cooy ot the original recipe for preparing the best and surest remedy ever discovered for the cure of Catarrh In all It- various stages. Over one million cases of this dreadful, dihgiistlng. and often times fatal disease hav» been cured permanently during the paat five yean by the use of tnls medicine. Write to-day for this FREE recipe, its timely use may save you from the death toils of Coasumptiou. DO NUT DELAY longer, if you desire a speedy and permanent cure. Address Frofl J. A. LAWRENCE, I 8» Warren Street, New York, FAW Wil »> - ■ ■ THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY BROTHERS, 00 Warren St, New York. Price 00 ■ piSO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best. Easiest to use. ' Cheapest. Relief is immediate. -A cure is certain, For Cold in the Head it has no equal. M 1 wnHF Mn WV"" 1111, W l HT ▲ VHW 9W A mH Ira BV ■ It lyn Ointment, of which a small particle is applied nostrils. Price. 00c. Sold by druggists or sent by mall. Address, E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. ■■ every WATERPROOF COLLAR or CUFF —■ THAT CAN BE RELIED ON “e op pjot to srpiit! THE MARK IVOt tO DlSOOlOr! —— BEARS THIS MARK. 1Y TRADE xgfe Ellu lo i o mark. NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAR BE WIPER CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE OHLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. REPAIR YOUR OLD STOVES . . AND SAVE YOURMONEY. The Northwestern Stove Repair Co. of Chicago, Manufacturers and Furnishers for the Hardware Trade of .Repairs for all Stoves and Ranges Manufactured. ” ‘ r l Ask your Hardware Dealer to order for you, giving name of Stove. ESF’CUT THIS OUT, FILL BLANKS. AND GIVE FT TO YOUR HARDWARE DEALER. 1. Name of Stove 2. Number of Stove. 3. Name of Maker 4. Latest Date of Patent 5. Wood or C0a1....". 6. Is Coal put in on top by removing lids ?i,. 7. Is the lining Brick or Iron ? 8. Has the bottom Grate one or more parts ? 9. Give your hardware dealer the names of parts wanted. BE SURE to order from your-hardware dealer only. He will order what you want from us. Don’t destroy your old Stove, but repair it. A little money will make it as goed as new.

Australian View of Parliament.

Here is a view of the House of Commons strikes the correspondent of one of the Australian papers: “It is an idle, gossiping, demoralizing, whisky and soda competing atmosphere, which is repellant of men of affairs. Th* other day I was sitting next to one of the most eminent solicitors in England, and as he rose to go he exclaimed: ‘Three days of this place would send me into a strait waistcoat.’ Until then he had nursed Parliamentary ambitions." This correspondent must really take care, or he, too, will figure at the “bar" of the House —for a purpose other than “whisky and soda. ” — Pvll Mall Gazette Neaklt every article sold is cheapened. In cost of production, at expense of quality. Dobbins' Electric Soap is exactly to-day what it was in 1865. absolutely pure harmless and uniform. Ask your grocer for it. A popular soprano is said to have a voice of fine timbre, a willowy figure, cherry lips, chestnut hair and hazel eyes. She must have been raised In the lumber region. “Evuy work requires a proper method.* Halt ths trouble ot house-eleaning results from lack of common-sense means. Use 8 APO LIZ it is a solid cuke of Scouring Boas, Try it. Prometheus was great on the “court. • People speak to this day about the Promethean “spark. ” — Texas Siftings. Rhoda Broughton, the English novelist, has written twenty-two books. You make no mistake if yon occasionally give your children Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers. It Is a uice candy and while it never does harm It sometimes does u world of good. “Misfortunes never come single,” chuckles the old bachelor, when he hears a tale of married infelicity. Bebcham'sPills cure Sick Headache, The Great American Dessert —pie. Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Plso’s Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50c.

Let every enfeebled woman know it! There’s a medicine that’ll cure her, and the proof’s positive I Here’s the proof —if it doesn’t do you good within reasonable time, report the fact to its makers and get your money back without a word—but you won’t do it! The remedy is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription—and it has proved itself the right remedy in nearly every case of female weakness. It is not a miracle. It won’t cure everything—but it has done more to build-up tired, enfeebled and broken - down women than any other medicine known. Where’s the woman who’s not ready for it? All that we’ve to do is to get the news to her. The medicine will do the rest. W anted W omen. First to know it. Second to use it. Third to be cured by it. The one comes of the other. The seat of sick headache is not in the brain. Regulate the stomach and you cure it. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets are the little regulators.

MTiumreas-sifiiEE MOTHERS.®®® per package. Kent poot-jialrt, with full liirtriKtlwu. C&cularKaiKrtaKtliiimilnliforteKtaintM. A.hlrrM , PR. MNYDER. Lock Box «SX. Chloaco. lU. MKNTTOW THM FAFBB ww wawwe ee aerene—M A ROBBER OR THIEF Is better than the tying scale agent who tolls you as gospel truth that the Jones' $60.5 Ton Wagon Scale is not a standard scale, and equal to any rrihde. For free book and price list, address Jones of Binghamton, Binghamton, N.Y, PENSIONS' Sie Disability Bill is a law. Bojdlep disabled sincee wir are entitled. Dependent widows nnd parenta now dependent whose sons died from effects of aruyr JdUeCommissionerofPansions. WMRIICTOH. 0. The OUett Medicine tie WerU h /rtMlf scrlptton, and has been lu constant use for nearly » century. There are few diseases to which mankind art subject mors distressing than sore eyes, andnone, perhaps, for which more remedies have been, tried without success. For all e x ternal Intlammatioa of the eyes It Is an infallible remedy. If the dlreo tlons are followed it will never fail. We particularly invite the attention of physicians to Its merito. For ADTHMA, Jmgrfy’ Popham’s Asthma Speolfla iHIMMA o,ves Immediate relief. lIMIMctLiM mWk 11 18 believed to bo the■L*. nlbest- ASTHMA Iteruody to humanity. As evidence wo givo a Kw Package I- HKli. Hold by liruvglsts. bent by mail, postpaid, for tl per Box. Address THOB, POPHAM. 2001 fridge Avenue. Phlla/ta. < | EWIS' 98 LYE! ML* I f OWDZMD AND PSEPinm. las (PATENTED.) Ill®FtA The strongest and vwest Dye> made. WiD make the BBST Perfumed Hab» Soap in twenty minutes without boiling. It toth* best for clslnfeoting stake closets, drains, washing bottloA ■■ barrels, paints, otc. W PENNA. SALT HANUPG. CO.* Gen. Agtc., Phlla., Pa. HAY & STRAW PRESS. 43"! will ship this PRESS on triSL to be worked: aa n Sf »n JS4.FJMSJ than any other portable horse press, NO BALE. For conditions, circulars, etc , address J. A. BPEN(jEIt. Dwiaht, IHlnols. nT Mt WONOCRFUL | f ityijACOMBININGS ARTICLES)zL FURNITURE . i W ‘ Wa retail at tha vholanlefaHorn prUM.ffJ fAr. rflcr LUUURO Mro. -VASELINEFOR A ONE-DOLLAR BILL sent us bv msIT we wul deliver, five of ah chances, to auy pen m In tbe Unl'ed States, all of the follow.uz articles, caretul.y packed: One fwo-onnee bott’e of Pure Vaseline 10eta. One two-ounce bjltle ot Va-ellue Pomade.... IS • One jar of Vsseh e Cold Cream,ls * One cake of Vaseline Ca uphor leelo * One eake ot Vaseline 8 ap, unscentodlo * Onecakeof VasciineHoap exq i sltolvscented OS * Obe two-ouuce bottle ox Wui.e Vaselineos * , BLU> Or, for pontage ttamm, any tingle arUc’e at the prfae named. On no account be persuaded to,accept frinu your druygiet anu Vaseline or pr pariition therifronp. unless labeled with our name, because you ictll certatne ly receive an imitation which has little or no value. Cheeebrouxh ML;. Cck, 24 Stole BL, N. Y. Ilf E A If UPU “ d WOMIN ean «WIW ml rUH Bira B" VV fas fill In Kall •rwaatin* Vltalhy.. Exhaasted her. as. ud klndnd sllbwhu. <4 pw. Reek eu I‘rlvata and KerveuslHaeaM. sent FREE (s<WX CURE C VARAN TEED. 8” YT.AES* TtoLOWE MEDICAL INSTITUTE, WbutuLCeaa. * I prescribe and fully endorse Big G as the only oam la specific for the certain cum TO 6 DXTB.tS of this disease. |MfaaaraMMd .« lefa G . H . EN 3RAHAM,M. sass* Saristare. ’ Amsterdam, N. Y. fefl Xr<aaty*yfa« W « h * ve 801,1 wWfa CinclnnatUmy faction. Ohio. D. fr. DYCHE 4 CO., wMnto W Chicago, Ito ~ <’■ N. U. Jto. AS-WO WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, VV please any you auw tbe adverttaeimw . la this paper