Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 March 1891 — Page 7
SENATOR HEARST DEAD.
CALIFORNIA’S MINING KINO PASSES AWAY. Story of th« Millionaire Statesman's Rapid Rise from Obscurity to It ealtli and Fame —He xfncleared Himself to Rich and Poor Alike. Senator George Hearst, of California, died at his residence on New Hampshire avenue ? in tbjs city, says a Washington, D. C., special. JJe had boon ill for a long time, and in December last, went to New York City to consult with Dr. Charles Ward, in regard to his condition. The physic*an found that he was afflicted with a , complication of diseases, and resulting primarily from a serious derangement of the bowels. Acting upon the physicjap’iS advice he returned to his family in this city, and yielded himself entirely to medical treatment. Absolute quiet and rest was strictly enjoined, and **js pfßcial duties were lightened as, much as possible. Notwithstanding the fact that he, revived the benefit of the most careful .nursing and the .most skillful
medical attention, a steady and uninterrupted decline was observed, and it was seen several weeks ago that his case was & hopeless one. The remains will be taken to San Francisco for interment. George Ilearst was born in Franklin County, Mo., Sept. 3, 1820. His father had gone to that State from North Carolina in 1819. Tho son received only such a limited education as the common schools afforded in that day. He worked on his father’s larm until 1850, when he caught tho gold fever and went to California. For several years he was a miner and prospector, and subsequently by location and purchase, he became the owner of valuable mining interests and a large employer, having at one time as many as 2,C00 men at work in his mines alone and operating quartz mills that crushed 1,000 tons of ore per day. The increase of his wealth was steady and rapid, and for some years past his income has been something like §I,OOO per day. Ho has been for a long time chief partner in tho extensive mining -firm of Hearst, Haggin, Lewis & Co. He owned above 40,000 acres of land in San,.Luis Obispo County, California, a ranch of 160,000 acres of grazing land in Old Mexico, stocked with a very large herd and a fine stable of thoroughbred horses. He was also interested in a large tract of land near Vera Cruz, and in railroad/ building in Mexico. His fortune at the time of his death was estimated at $26,000,000. Senator Hearst leaves a widow and but one child, William R. Hearst, proprietor of the San Francisco Examiner. The following tribute to the late Senator is from the pou of a well-known Californian; “For thirty years or more George Hea - st has been one of the vital men of the West, one of the individual forces which have inspired and given direction to that quick and vast development of its resources which is one‘of the material miracles of the century. Hut it is not as the mining expert, the organizer of gigantic enterprises, or the possessor of a great fortune that he will be mourned. It is not an obituary commonplace, but the simple truth to say that his death will bring sorrow to thousands of hearts. Change of fortune mado no change in the inan. As a Senator of the United States he was the same simple, unaffected, clear-headed, warm-hearted George Hearst, who mined on the Feather and Yuba Rivers in the fifties, and took his share of tho rough, free life of the claims and cabins To tho thousands of the comrades who knew him he remained always as a comrade. Ostentation was abhorrent to a man formed on his rugged lines, and it will never be known how many successful men owe their beginnings to him or how many broken lives were made easier to live because of his hidden, helping hand. To hundreds upon hundred of the associates and even the acquaintances of pioneer times he was a good providence. “Because he was so thorough a Californian Mr. Hearst was hold in affection by all Californians whose experience reached back to the days when railroads and the sharp competition of commercial life were unknown on the coast His years of hard work and intimate mingling with men of every social and intellectual grade gave him a knowledge of human nature and a sympathy with its defects and weaknesses which kept him free from the pride of pur-e and hadness of feeling that sometimes go with the riches of the self-made man, and while he had a singularly keen perception of character, and a shrewdness that baffled all pretenders, his heart was tender, his charity great, and his capacity for forgiveness inexhaustible. “His death is a serious public loss not only to California but to the entire Pacific coast, and peculiarly to the miners, whose special friehd and advocate he was. In tho death of George Hearst a strong man, an able man, a good, and very humble man has been taken away. He had a manly, a gentli l , and a loving heart. There will bo moist eyes in thousands of Western homes, grand and humble, at tho news of his death, and the sorrow will not be least in the cabins dotting the canyons and streams of the Sierras. ”
For Sober Thought.
We sadly need to be touched by the power of a grent spiritual regeneration; this common life is pivoted upon two great and radical errors from which we can find no refuge except in the spirit of the gospel of Christ These: are that enjoyment of some kind is the true end of life, and second tho -belief that pain and sufferings are life's greatest calamities. And when we attempt to construct a theory of life or a plan of society upon the basis of these mistakes, we see nothing but inexplicable changes and dismay.
A FOOL’S ADVICE.
Points* Paragraph* that May Be Beneficially Construed. .
\ k f HKN the barking .\jl f dog stops barkI Vying, look out for f 1 * him. If you monkey with a buzz-saw, Wm do' it with a monKfSra kev-wrench • Don’t get bitI ten and then you f won’t need any I of the hair of the dog.
Never marry a cross-eyed woman; you can’t tell whether she is going to strike or kick. Neiver do to-day what someone else will do for you to-morrow. If you expect to travel zig-zag, don’t take that long lane that has no turn. Don’t be too good; remember that it is the prodigal son who gets the fatted calf. A woman’s haste is the thief of time, so never go shopping with one when you’re in a hurry. Don’t, throw physic to the doge;.it might poison them. Keep it until moonlight nights and throw it to the cats. Don’t propose before your girl’s little brother. “Little pitchers have big ears,” but more than that, they usually have a mouth to match the ears. If you want a dollar, earn it; if you need a dollar, borrow it; if you are hard up, beg it; but if you want it bad. steal it—that’s bad. Always talk with your mouth, not with your hands, head, or feet, for if you do not— actions speak louder thi n words—folks will have you arrested for disturbing the peace. It’s all very well to say “better is a dinner of greens where love is than a rib roast if hatred there be.” You go for the roast and' maybe the greens will come •on with the other vegetables.—Texas Siftings.
THE EPEIRA SPIDER.
One of the Most Brilliant Spiders Found in American Gardens. As the butterfly excels the moth in brilliancy or color, so the epeira excels all other spiders. They weave webs of enormous size, with large and regular meshes. Who doe* not know the big spiders of the parks and gardens, whose web often embraces the breadth of an entire thoroughfare ? Who has not had occasion to admire the splendid appearance of the epeira diadema, with' its reddish-yellow coat, marked in the upper part with dark lines, a sort of design resembling the cross of St. Denis? Among the spiders in general the male, in point of size, is much inferior
THE SPIDER.
to the female, but it is rare to meet with so enormous a disproportion as exists between the sexes of tho.,black and golden epeira. The male, when contrasted with the female, is a veritable pigmy. The question is, what chance has he when his fancy turns to amorous thoughts, and he erects his tiny tent near the vast' structure of his Dulcinea?
He Was Too Honest.
A Detroit life insurance agent recently received a letter from a man in the interior of the State who said he was thinking of taking out a policy, and he asked that a blank be forwarded'him. It was returned soon after, and the following is a specimen of the’ man’s honesty: “What did your father die of?” “Consumption.” “Your mother ?” “The same.” “Ever have heart trouble?” “Yes, very bad?” ‘‘Lost any brothers and sisters by death, and if so, what did they die of?” “Lost five of them, and # all died of consumption and heart disease.” “Do you ever spit blood?” “Heaps of times.” “Ever had any serious accident ?” “Yes. Had nearly all my bones broken two or three times.” “Memory good?” “No.” “Sleep well?” “No.” “How's your appetite ?” “Very poor.” Several other important questions were atiswerecl after the same candid fashion, add the agent will have to write him that there is no life insurance truthful a man. —Detroit Free Press.
The Tile Fish.
An astonishing instance of the extinction of a species is found in the case, of tlei’ tfle fish, which was first found, so-f a*r as science is aware, by vessels fishing for cod a few years ago in witters south of Long Island. Thie fish grew to be forty pounds in weightand was very palatable, so- shat the Fish Commission thought that it might be propagated and rendered most valuable for food purposes. Unfortunately, just as the commission was on the point of beginning operations with this end in view, a x easel coming in reported that it had run across, a.t a considerable distance out from land, great quantities of fioating fishes, most of which were tile fish. From that time until now not one tile fish has ever been seen, so that evidently the entire species was wiped out at one fell swoop. One theory entertained is that an Arctic current, bearing icebergs, eame unusually near the shore and suddenly reduced the temperature of the water to such a low point tlia 'J the tile fish were all killed,
He Was There.
“Is there a man in all this audience,“» demanded the female loctureqon woman’s rights, fiercely, “that has ever done anything to lighten the burden resting on his wife’s shoulders? What do you know of woman's work? Is there a man here," she continued, folding her arms and looking over her audience with superb(Bcorn, “that has ever got up in tho morning, leaving his tired, worn-out wife to enjoy her slumbers, gone quietly down stairs, made the fire, fooked his own breakfast, sewed the missing buttons on the children’s clothes, darned the family stockings, scoured the pots and kettles, cleaned and filled the lamps, swept the kitchen, and done all this, If necessary, day after day uncomplainingly? If there is such a man in this audience let him rise up. I should like to see him.” And away back injthe rear of the hall a mild-looking man in spectacles, in obedience to the summons, timidly arose. He was the husband of the eloquent speaker. It was tfi’e first time he had ever had a chance to assert himself.
A Fact.
In an Interview with a leading drug house the New York World, Nov. 9, 1890, gives the’following'' comment on the proprietors of reliable patent medicines: <*He is a'specialist, and should know more of the disease he actually treats than’ the ordinary physician; for while the latter may come across say fifty cases In a year of the particular disease which this medicine combats, its manufacturer investigates thousands. Don’t you suppose his prescription, which you buy ready made up for 50 cents, is likely to do more good than that of the ordinary physician, who charges you any where from $2 to 510 for giving it, and leaves you to pay the cost of . having it prepared? “The patent medicine man, too, usually has the good sense to*conflno himself to ordinary, every-day diseases. Ho leaves to the physician cases In which there is immediate danger to life, such as violent fevers. He does this because, In the treatment of such cases, thero are other elements of importance besides medicine, such as proper dieting, good nursing, a knowledge of the patient’s strength and so on. Where there istmo absolute danger to life, where'the disease is one which the patient can diagnose for himself or which some physician has already determined, the patent medicine maker says fearlessly: ‘I have a preparation which Is better than any other known and which will cure you.’ In nine cases out of ten his statement is true.” This is absolutely true as regards the great remedy.for pain, St. Jacobs OIL ,It can assert without fear of contradiction, that it is a prompt and permanent cure of pain. It can show proofs of cures of chronic cases of 20, 30 and 40 years’ standing. In truth it rarely every falls if used according to directions, and a large - proportion of cures Is made by half the contents, of a single bottle. It is therefore the best From an interview. New York World.
A Unique Club.
Captain Dunleavy, of the San Francisco police, has the most unique policeman’s club in the United States. It is made from a walrus tusk. It is about twelve inches long and weighs five pounds. • They are most fortunate who soonest learn to expect nothing for which they have not worked hard, and who never acquired the habit of pitying themselves overmuch, if ever in after life they happened to work in vain.
Thebe is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro: nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedied, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment.- Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only>constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten dropß to a teaspooiijpl. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for auy case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F, J. CHKNEY & CO., Toledo, O. AS"Sold b 7 Druggists, 700. The first London directory was printed in 1667, and contained but sixty-four pagej, with the names of 1,790 persons and firms.
Do You Cough?
Don’t delay. Take' Kemp’s Balsam, ihe best cough cure. It will cure your coughs and colds. It will cure sore throat or a tickling in the throat. It will cure pains In the chest. It will cure influenza and bronchitis and all diseases pertaining to tho lungs because It Is a pure balsam. Hold it to the light and see how clear and thick It is. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Large bottles 50 cents and $L „ Johnny Dumpsey— l don’t believe our teacher knows much, ma. I hadn’t been in school half an hour before she asked mo how to 8 pell cat. Many of the worm medioines and vermifuges sold by druggists irrltOT ) the stomach of a little child. Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyers never do. As harmless as candy, yet they never faiL Try them. By mail. 25 cents. John D. Park. Cincinnati, Ohio. The Overend, Gurney <fe Co. failure, nearly a quarter of a century ago, involved others amounting to upward of $500,000,000 Any article that has outlived 24 years of competition and imitation, and sells mote and more each year, must have merit. Dobbins' Electric Soap, first made in 1865, is just that article. Ask your grocer for it. The greatest misfortune of all is not to be able to bear misfortunes. Chauactek is the diamond that scratches every other stone. “I’m all. used upi” exclaimed Amy, after a shopping tour of several hours. “Yes,” replied the high-school girl, “I am utilizedat an plovation myself.” For Coughs and throat troubles use “BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES.”— “They Stop an attack of my asthma cough very Falch, ifiatntuiUt, Ohio. “Pa, what docs non compos mentis mean?” “That, my son, is a mind without a compass. Beech a m’s Pilxs act like magic on a Weak Stomach. The more cane a Southerner raises the more sugar he has. FITS—AII Fits stopped free bv Dr.Rline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first dsjr's nse Marvellous cures. Treatise and t-'.OO trid bottle free to Fitcaseg. bend to Dr. Kline. 931 ATcli St* Pnilg- Pa.
Pemnatism t -SCIATICA }
The Ladles Delighted.
The pleasant effect and the perfect safety 'with which ladies mar use % the liquid frnlt laxative; Syrapef Kits, under all conditions make it their favorite remedy. It is pleasing to the eye.and to the taste, gently, yet effectual in acting on the kidneys; liver and bowels.
A New Plate Glass Polisher.
. Thomas Todd, of Butler, Penn., has invented a method of fire polishing plate glass, whereby the grinding and polishing of one side of the sheet is saved, and the fire-polished surfaeo is said to be of brighter polish than is obtainable by artificial polishing. “Blessed Abe the Merciful.” Don’t forget It when you have a mortgage on the property, of a widow, and also bear In mind that Dr. White’s Pulmonaria is the most wonderful cough remedy. It will cure u cough In half the tiiue required by any other. It Is pleasant to take and entirely harmless. Journalism —A iEill employing workingman who are expected to furnish ideas and information to blooming idiots, and opinions on all matters to the wretched opinionless.
March April May Are the best months in which to purity your blood. These are the months In every year when thou* During the long, cold winter, the blood becomes ands of old lriends resort to a regular course of thin and impure, the body becomes weak and tired. Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The tact that Hood’s Sarto the appetite may be loet and jußt now the system parilla, once fairly tried, becomes the favorite craves the aid of a reliable medicine like Hood’s spring medicine speaks volumes for Its excellence Sarsaparilla. and medicinal merit March April May Hood’s Sarsaparilla is peculiarly adapted to the In these months this year thousands of new needs of the body during these months. It thor- patrons wIU take Hood’s Sarsaparilla and realise its oughly purifies and vitalizes the blood, create < a benefits iu blood purified and streug h restored, good appetite, cures biliousuess and headache, gives Will you be one of the number? Hood's Sarsaparilla healthy action to the kidneys and liver and imparts costs but little, and the investment yields profitable strength to the whole body. returns. Just try it. March April May Now Is the time .when you should give Hood's "Last spring I was completely fagged ont. My Sarsaparilla a fair trial. That scrofulous taint strength left me and I felt sick and miserable all the which has been in your blood for years, may be time, so that I could hardly attend to my business, thoroughly expelled by giving Hood’s Sarsaparilla a I took one bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and it cured fair trial. It is reslly a wonderful blood purifier, me.' There is nothing like it." ll.C.Bxuole, Editor and building-up medicine. Enterprise, Belleville, Mich. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only I Sold by ail druggists. |1; six for |!S. Prepared only by C. 1. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. I by C. i. HOOD & CO. Lowell. Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar I 100 Doses One Dollar
coming of winter as a constant state of siege. It seems as if the elements sat down outside the walls of health and now and again, led by the north wind and his attendant blasts, broke over the ramparts, spreading colds, pneumonia and death. Who knows when the next storm may come and what its effects upon your constitution may be ? The fortifications of health must be made strong. SCOTT’S EMULSION of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lim£ and Soda will aid you to hold out against Coughs, Colds , Consumption, Scrofula, General Debility , and all Ancemic and Wasting Diseases , until the siege is raised. It prevents wasting in children. Palatable as Milk. jiitn.:’: Vi* t ■* ii-■ : s?T * ' «... Scott's Bmulsiou U non-secret, and Is prescribed by the Medical Profession all over tWworld, because its ingredients are scientifically combined in such a manner as to greatly increase their remedial value. ..i ■ iT-A ’ ' ' > CAUTlON.—Scott's Emulsion Ik-put up in salmon-colored wrappers. Be sure and gist the genutpe, Prepared only by Scott ABo wne, Manufacturing Chemists, Ne w York, fold bygSl i>r.qggist«, — MbMI relieves ' INSTANTLY. gfMglM romWWBPMI ELY BBQTHBRS, sis Warren fit. New York. Price BoctaMß-£z2Lsߣl Bv'V Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the E9l evert WATERPROOF COLLAR or CUFF " THAT CAN BB RELIED ON ** INTot to Split! THE MARK ISTot tO DISCOIOrI ■ BEARS THIS MARK. # TRADE Elluloid mark. NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. Chichester-a Eh6ush, Red Cross NNfc Diamond Brand A rEKHNRom *r\\i\is A . THE ORIGINAL AltD GENUINE. The only Safe. Sere, and reliable Pill for •&]*. 51 yjif) Mk Drugidet for Chichester * Unflith Diamond Brand U KH ana Gold metallic L, IS T «*|« H * kind, tofu; Suhttitatioea and Imitation,. V
Tattooing.
In London there is a man who follows the business of tattooing. The majority of his patients 'a-c men who have designs of » naval character pricked into their skin, but there are also a great many women who employ his art, if it may be termed such. With women the decoration is usually a .bee, a butterfly, a spray of flower or a monogram. These ornaments are worn Inside the wrist, so that they may be hidden by the glove, if necessary
Completed to Deadwood.
The Burlington route, C., B. <fc Q. R. R., from Chicago, Peoria, and St Louis, is now completed, and daily passenger trains are running through Lincoln, Neb., and Custer, S. D-, to Dcadwood; also to Newcastle, Wyoming. Sleeping ears to Deadwood. Teacher —Tommy, what is a strait? Tommy (close observer) —Ace, king, queen, jack and ten-spot. Proverbs are popular, but not more so than BAPOLIO. It also Is "What many want, and but one has discovered." Have you tried it? . No Optum In Plso’s Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fall 25c.
“August Flower”. How does ho feel ?—He feels cranky, and is constantly experimenting, dieting himself, adopting strange notions, and changing the cooking, the dishes, the hours, and manner of his eating—August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ?—He feels at times a gnawing, voracious, insatiable appetite, wholly unaccountable, unnatural and unhealthy.—August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ?-*-He feels no desire to go to the table and a grumbling, fault-fihding, over-nice-ty about what is set before him when he is there —August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ?—He feels after a spell of this abnormal appetite an utter abhorrence, loathing, and detestation of food; as if a mouthful would kill him—August Flower the Remedy. How does he feel ?—He has irregular bowels and peculiar stools — August Flower the Remedy, d) -VASELINEFOR A ONE-DOLLAR RILL sent us by mall we will deliver, free of all charguH. to auy person in the United Btates, all of the following articles, carefully packed: One iwo-ounoe bott’o of Pure Vaseline lOcts. One two-ounce bottle ot Va-eUno Pomade.... 15 * One jar of Vaseline Cold Cream 15 * One cake of Vaseline Camphor 100 10 " One cake of Vaseline S.iap, unscented 10 * One cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely scented 2# • One two-ounce bottle of White Vaseline 35 " *l.lO Or, for po»tage stamp,, any single article at the price named. On no account be persuaded to accept.from your druggist any Vaseline or preparation therefrom unless labeled with our uame.becauseyou mil! certainly receive an imitation which has little or no value. Chesebrough Mfg. Co., £4 State St., 3». Y. GRATEF UL-CO M PORTING, EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST. "By • thorough knowledge ot the natura! laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful applic atlon of the fine properties of wel.-scleoted Cocoa, Mr. Epps baa provided our breakfast tablet with a delioately flavoured beverage which may aavo us many heavy doctors* bills. It laoy the judicious use ot suoh artloies ot diet that a constitution may be gr dually built up until strong enough to resist every tendenoy. to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around ue ready to attack whoever there is a weak point. We may esoape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and n properly nourished frame. "{Midi Service Gazette." Mode simply with boiling water or milk. Bold only In half-pound tins, oy Grocers, labelled thus: JADIUH EFI’M <fcOO., Homoeopathic Chemists, ___ , Loßoon, F/nOland. _ mm l|pP ILLUSTRATED PUB LIULP cat!cns ' wiih nm. Is f|E k JssMyseK&jtt NORTHERN PACIFIC R. R. U All I/O Bert Agriculture l , Grazing and Timber Land* now open to settlers. , Maile l FREE. Address CHi.O. 8. LAUBOSH, lml Com. K. V. 8. t„ fit. Paul, Vlu. JWKour minutes from Court House. glooms ft fTVtmfftr weekly. Transients 500 "l>. American and KufcKkh9MCHliCal!B»BO ropnan plans. EveuyNMMeaBf I *TBWMWB thino New. #Tn universal flavor M* corded Tilunoiusx’s I’uar* Bound Cabbage Bums leads me to offer a P, Gaoww Onion, Ik, jts«S Ytlbrn 014 s in Mufma, Tolntroduceltand show its capabilities 1 will pay |IOO for the best yield obtained from 1 oonee of seed which I will mail for SO eta. Oat*. Isaac P. Tlllln*haat, La Plum*. P*. ■ II ■ llTf*||Secretaries, and Or111IIIM I |" I jgaiiizers by an AsHV nil I !■ ÜBCBgnicnt Order pay- ■ f ing sloo.od in six months at an estimated cost of 944. Reputable men and women can secure liberal compensation. Address M. MoIjmTYRB Supreme Manager, No. 1028 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. PEDINE FEET. Smaller Shoes mty be worn with comfort. Price, <o cte. « Drug Store*, or by mail 1 rial Package and illustrated pamphlet for s dime. THE I‘EDINE CO., World Builoino, New York. n dress dtomk * Wkllinotos, Madison. Wla. M I liupr F. M. B. A. men. Grangers. LaborHLLIHmUL liefprmers, Urt-eiihnckers. and AutiMonopolists, send for sample copy.Joliet (111.) News. A CTUM A db. Tim asthmalinb AO Inm A-A||B C n >erer tail.; tend usyoe. sddre»», we will mall trial WUIICUBOTTLE CDCI? THE N. TATI BttS. M. 60. JoOHWTM.M.Y.P RE E C. N. U. No. 10-Ol-\\riTKN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, vs please say you saw the advertisement In this paper. ' A SAVIOR OF HER SYX. Wiikk pain becomes a constant companion; When there is no repose for the sufferer, by day or night; when life Itself seems to be a calamity ; and when all this is reversed by a woman, ha* ahe not won the above title? LYDIA E, PINKHAM’S £££& cures all those peculiar weaknesses and ments of women, all organic diseases of ! Uterus or Womb, and Ovarian Troubles, Bearlng- ; down Sensations, Debilitv, Nervous Prostration, : etc. Every Druggist sells It, or sent by mail, In form of Pfils or Lozenges, on receipt of SI.OO. r-S-Hrm. PUfchaw's hack,” «>«• to H»IM s*d BUgasita,” I fcff Uesutlfully tlliNtrsted, w*t receipt of two Se. ituips. j Lvdia E. Pinkliam Mod. Co.. Lynn. Maas.
