Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 November 1892 — Page 7
Mb& Nancy WrnTS, 1201 Carolin* St., Baltimore, MA, thus give* her experience! “We have used Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup ani have never found its equal for our chii« dren." . A Brooklyn inventor proposes to tap the earth’s interior for heat, and thus save fuel. Bkbcham’s Pills enjoy the largest sale of any proprietary medicine in the world. Made only in St. Helens, England. Nine tailors may make a man, but they are also pretty sure to break him. Nobody but a Gump Neglects a Cough. Take some Hilt'! Hokey op Hobehound and Tab instanter. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one Minute. FITS.—AII Fits rtopoed tree by Dr. KHne'sGre t Nerve Kestoi er. No Fits after first day’s use. Ma y velous cures. Treatise and W.OO trial bottle tree U Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. «1 Arch St.. Phils. Pa
e. IN GLASS. That’s the way Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets come. And it’s a more important point hill than you think. It keeps l| them always fresh and relii *ble, un^co the ordinary if pills in cheap wooden or •’ j. pasteboard boxes. 7> jX They’re put up in a better 7ff IM\ way, tmd aet *** a better Ilf 11 way, t^an th o huge, old-fash-ill ioned pills. No griping, no J* I hL violence, no reaction afterWJ ’*< ward that sometimes leaves uN you worse off than before. In that way, they cure permanently. Sick Headache, 9 I I Bilious Headache, Constipa--9 -JUUL- tion, Indigestion, Bilious Atmi y tacks, and. all derangements ■’ of the liver, stomach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and cured. They’re tiny, sugar-coated granules, a compound of refined and concentrated vege- ' table extracts—the smallest in size, the easiest to take, and the cheapest pill you can buy, for they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction,, or your money is returned. You pay only for the good you get. There’s nothing likely to be “just as good." Treating Ailing Women by Letter Most cases of Female diseases can be treated as well 1 by us through the mails as by' x J* ‘W.* personal consulfation. In writing for I - ‘ gl I advice, give age and I J f ]/ symptoms of your com- T"— 11 yi,' plaint, state length of | " time., you have been suf- I ’ f feting, and what means 1 . "I you have tried to obtain fz ■ 41 relief. '1 'll Mrs. Pinkham fully and J /L I' carefully answers all let- >ry L7~ **' ters ot inquiry, and charges nothing for her advice. All correspondence is Cz'/ treated, strictly confidential. Your letters will be received and answered by one of your own sex. Address, Lydia E. Pinkham Medical Co., Lynn, Mass, ' It Cures Colds, Coughs. Bom Throst,Croup,lnfluents,Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain euro for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. Ton will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles SO cents and SI.OO. p
Mrs. E. J. Rowell, Medford, Mass., says her mother has been cured of Scrofula by the use of four bottles of KSKI aiter having had much other treat- k3£S9 ment, and being reduced to quite a low condition of health, as it was thought she could not live. H3RRB Cured my little boy of heredlBSECSI scrofula which appeared all over his face. For a year I had given up all hope of his recovery, when finally I was Induced to use A few bo cured him, and no kS23| symptoms of the disease remain. Mbs. I. L. Mathers, Matherville, Miss. Oar book on Blood and Skin Disease! mailed free. Swm Srscrric CO.. Atlanta, Ga. Ki L LESSENS PAIM—IKSURES SAFETY to LIFE of MOTHER and CHILD. My wife, after having used Mother’s Friend, passed through the ordeal with little pain, was stronger In one hour than in a week after the birth of her former child. J. J. McGoldrick, Beans Sta., Tenn. Mother’s Friend robbed pain of its terror and shortened labor. 1 have the healthiest child I ever saw. Mbs. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga. Seat bymrorou. charges monoid, on-receipt of price, si.so per Lottie. Bonk ‘'To Mother!" malted free. BKADFISLD REGULATOR CO., For Mie by all Druggist!. ATLANTA. CA.
Irtl'Tt J \iIMA.
AWOMANS INFLUENCE
BY LULU JAMISON
CHAPTER XXII. A HASTY WORD A\D ITS PUNISHMENT. Dr. Philips, whose recognized partner Brian became, had known him from the hour of his birth, and on this account, and because, tco, of the deep friendship entertained for his father, he took more than usual interest in him. “I want to see in you the worthy successor of my old friend,” he said one day. “You can work out an honorable career, and you should. You owe it not only to his memory but also to that dear, sweet wife of yours. Let her be your inspiration. I promised your father when he was dying that I would act the part of a iriend to her. I don’t believe I can do that more effectually than by helping you. ” “The old refrain. Doctor. In all that is done for me, I see Margaret as the prompting motive. This prevents any feeling of conceit on my part, and I am willing that she shall have the welldeserved credit, but, nevertheless, my windless sails flap rather dolefully.” »-.«♦» “Dr. Philips says I have a dear, sweet wife. What do you think of that, Margaret?” “That he is a man given to overpraise," replied Margaret, glancing up from the scarf she was embroidering. “A very nice man, though,” she added, turning to her work once more. “So good to me and so good to you. ” He was standing behind her chair, and bent his head to look into her eyes. Nervous under such close contact she started up, and made a pretense of arranging some books upon a small table. The sigh with which his eye followed her awakened in her heart some twings Of remorse for what, she felt obliged to confess, was an unreasonable betrayal of ill-huumor.
“Come back to your chair, Margaret. You can be very cruel sometimes.” “Have you ’any right to blame me, Brian?” A glance at his face made her regret this question the second it passed her lips, but before the could recall it he had left the room, with the words destined to echo in her heart through many long, bitter days. “No, Margaret. No right at all. I see your love is 1 ot for me. ” A few minutes later she heard the sound of his horse’s hoofs on the drive outside. It was too late now. She must wait until his return. Then she would te l him how sorry she was. She wondered why the moments dragged so heavily, scarcely an hour had passed since Brian had left her; It seemed more like three. The sound of some disturbance down stairs came to her ears. With a nervous start she listened anxiously. There was no mistaking the hurried footsteps and subdued voices. Something unusual had happened. With a mind filled with terrible dread, and a heart beating to almost suffocation, she flew down the steps, along the hall, and into the library, and there No need to ask the matter now. During a second, In which she seemed to die a hundred deaths, she took In the white face and still form upon the sofa, and then, without even a cry, but with an expression that fixed itself Indelibly upon the minds of those who saw it, ■he knelt beside this remnant of the life and strength ot an hour before, and, taking tpe cold hands between her own, soothed; aftd pressed them in her effort to bring back their lost warmth. Poor hands! a little while ago she had shrunk from their contact, ano now they were all powerless, too helpless to respond even to her touc 1; yet she would still hold them, and, perhaps, after a time he might feet She would lay her heart on his, he would hear its beating and might understand. She would “Margaret.” She heard her name repeated softly; she felt a gentle touch upon her shoulder, and a strong hand lifting her from her crouching position, and she raised her face, haggard an l drawn with suffering, to meet Dr. Philips’ sympathetic glance.
“Don’t give way,” he said kindly, seeing the question In her eyes. .'We must get him to his room, and meanwhile we may hone that things are not so bad as they seem.” “Poor child," he murmured after he had left her; “and poor Brian. I little thought, when I saw him so well and strong yesterday, that to-day he would be so near death. A sad ending to his young career. ” While Margaret sat by Brian’s bed, trying in the pain and remorse which filled her heart to overflowing to make the most of the few attentions she could lavish upon him, a thought came to her like a ray of hope. “I will ask him to come,” she said under her breath. “I will ask him to come. Did you call me, Brian?" She bent over the bed and gazed mutely up n the motionless face. No, Brian had not called, and with a heartbroken Bigb she turned away to write the telegram which was to tell Wilson of Brian’s danger. And three hours later Wilson came. Well might Marsaret say, as her hand rested in his sympathetic clasp: “I felt so sure that you 'would come. Your presence gives me strength and hope. I feel that he will be safe in your hands. ” “As safe as these hands can make him, Mrs. Leigh. Please God, your confidence will not be misplaced. ” Margaret herself scarcely realized th e extern of this confidence until she had taken Wilson to Erian’s <2room, and waited with a suspense that amounted to agony the opinion which she felt would mean so much. She watched his face anxiously, but It revealed little, and only by a subtle intuition did she understand that he considered Brian's state most critical.
With the last gleam of hope dying from her heart, she followed him from the room. “The truth,” she pleaded, pressing her, hand to her ejes. “The whole truth. Ah! you hesitate. That is more still. lean bear the truth best.” “Poorchild," heanswered. “You must not give way to this despair. Yet, since you ask me so- the truth, 1 will not deceive you. Brian’s condition is most precarious. The odds are all against him. He has but one bare Chance.” “He has one chance,” she repeated, snatching at this straw of hope. “Then, Doctor, we will make the most of that! one chance. He cannot fight for him-: seif: we must fight for him.” “We will fight for him,” was Wilson’s reply. “Your courage and bravery must win, and I shall exercise all my skill .sad all my experience for him. I shall
wire immediately for a professional nurse, and since we are to work together I need only remind you of the necessity to keep your health and strength." “Let me stay with him,” she replied, with an effort to compromise, “and I promise to be docile in all elsj. Ah, I see Bertie. He has heard. ” Yes, Bertie had heard; and Bertie, as usual, could not hide his feelings as he gave Margaret messages of sympathy from the friends whose hearts were never more truly hers than in this hour of her trouble. CHAPTER XXIII. TUB SHADOW OF DEATH. Two days passed and no change came. The sun lay warm and bright on the lawn outside. The birds sans' their same sweet song. The breath of flowers perfumed the summer air, and the unequal battle between life and death still went on in the darkened room. Bertie sometimes sat up to relieve Wilson and the nurse, but Margaret gave way to none. “It is only the beginning,” she said, in answer to Wilson’s expostulations. “'Let me stay now. After awhile I will sleep." And Wilson, yielding, she spent three nights in a weary vigil, but when the fourth came nature would stand no more. She could no longer endure the ravings ot a delirium which brought the past so sharply and vividly before her. She could not listen to the eloquent pleadings for love in such weak and broken sentences, nor hear her own reproach, so doubly cruel, repeated by his unthinking lips. “Oh, for the power to live it over again, ” she cried In the anguish of her heart. “Oh, for one moment ot consciousness in which he might understand.” 1 The sleep induced by bodily weariness was deep and long, and it was quite late the next morning wh.n Margaret reached Brian's room. Wilson met her with an encouraging smile.
“He has been very quiet,” he said, noting the question in her eyes. “I, managed to snatch several hours’ sleep.” The hours passed slowly. The siledce was unbroken except by the humming of the bees optside the window, for even Brian’s complainings were stilled for the time. Once he murmured Margaret’s name and she felt his eyes upon her face, but there was no intelligence in them, only the dullness of delirium. After a little while he began once more to give expressions to his fevered fancies. It was always Margaret and the shadow between them, Margaret reproaching or repulsing him, or Margaret helpful and encouraging. And Margaret could only sit and listen; though when his sharp cry rang through the silence of the room, “Margaret, I can’t see you; where are you, Margaret?” sha placed her head beside him, and answered in low, wretched accents:
“Here, Brian; close beside you. Can’t you feel my hands? They are holding yours.” Did her voice penetrate that dull brain? For one second she thought so. But no. The heavy eyes turned from her face. “Han.s! Who said hands? Oh, yes; I remember now. You said it, Margaret. Don’t you know you said it? Your hand would be in mine. Do you—think of—the night? And I said—ah, I—said—what did I—say?” His voice sank away in an unintelligible muttering. A few seconds of silence and his mind wandered again. He was fighting his old battles now and calling upon Margaretfor sympathy and help. And in an anguish that could find no other expression, she burled her face in the pillow beside him. “I can’t bear it, I can’t bear it!” she cried, passionately. “Bear it,” repeated the weak voice. “Bear it? Ah, no; I can’t bear your contempt. You are —so hard; so hard—upon me. No right to—reproach you. No right—at—all." Her head sank lower. She could find no answer to these bitter complainings. Suddenly she felt a hand upon her shoulder, and raising her miserable face she saw Wilson standing over her. “Will you c >me out In the air for a few moments?” he said, with quiet authority. “The weather is pleasant. Thomas will take care ot Brian." With a sort of mechanical obedience she followed him to the broad piazza, where the pure air, warm sun and odor of sweet flowers seemed doubly grateful after the close atmosphere of the sick room. He was silent for some seconds. Evidently he found It difficult to put his thoughts in suitable language. She saw and understood his hesitation.
“I know what you would say,” she broke in, covering her face with her hands. “I know so well. You have heard Brian. You understand. And you must realize now what a hard, unkind, . undutiful wife I’ve been. What a ” “Hush,” he interrupted, in a strange voice. “I must not allow even your lips to say such unkind words about yourself. They are not deserved. You lay too much stress upon what he says, forgetting that it is only the raving of delir.um. Brian has made me his confidant and I feel that I can judge. “You cannot know all,” she answered, pressing her hands together. “You cannot know of the hundred little things —the motions, expressions, words—all meaning so much* You cannot know of them, but I do. They are always before me, and the last day—the very last day—l spoke unkindly. I shall never forget it—never. I saw that it hurt him. I intended to tell him I was sorry. I had no chance. They brought him back so. Now he cannot know; he cannot understand that I would suffer any pain for a moment of consciousness to tell him lam sorry. God will not grant me even that—not even that. ” “Why will you think of all these thingsr” heaske I.pres ntly. “Isitnot human to be a little unkind sometimes? Then look at the other side also. What you have done for Brian. We must not bewail the past, but go on bravely to meet the future, promising ourselves always to do better and better. You want to go in now?"
“Yes, Doctor, I feel stronger, and I thank you. - ’ The days passed, bringing but little perceptible change in Brian’s condition. But the crisis came at last. Gradually the fever spent Itself, and the tired frame, wearied with its long struggle, sank into a stupor so deathlike that only the faint heart beats told that life was still there. Margaret knew that he would either waken with a new lease of life or pass into that deeper sleep that knows no waking on this side of eternity. She watched and waited, and prayed for the long hours to pass. The shadows of night, which seemed to have held the anguish of years, gave place to the light of dawn. The lines of blue grew deeper and deeper in the east, the rim of the rising sun rested upon the brow of the hills, and the distant crowing of a cock, welcoming the
open’ng day, came like a clarion note through the silence. —‘ ” It reached Brian’s can He turned uneasily. Margaret was on her knees In a second, a feeling half joy, half fear clutching at her heart. She bent her face close to his. Perhaps he realized her presence, for he turned again and moaned sightly. His waking mind was struggling for comprehension, his eyelids trying to throw off the heaviness that held them down. At last they opened slightly, then wider, and their slow wandering gaze fell upon Margaret's face, a face white and drawn from long and anxious watching, but revealing a story of love. Those eyes were not slow to read. “Thank God," murmured Brian, with an effort to overcome his intense weakness. “Margaret, you —love me—at last?” With a cry of passionate joy she buried her face upon his breast. “Oh, Brian, eo much! so much that I could not live without you.” “Thank Goi,” he eaid again, in a voice scarcely above a whisper, yet vibrating with such Inexpressible happiness that it reached Wilson, as he stole silently from the room. “ Youihave found your true place at last, my darling, my wife. Your true resting place. It is a weak defense now." “It is my chosen rest and support,” she answered, with brimming eyes, catching and holding in its place the weak arm that had tried to clasp her so lovingly. “It is weak now, but it will be strong soon. Let me lean upon its strength always. Let me have your heart, as you have mine, fully and entirely. Oh, if you could know how I tried to tell you this, as I sat by you during those hours when you could not understand; how often I laid my heart upon yours, hoping you might hear its beating, and maybe realize that it was full of love for you! You did not know then, but you know now, and—you may kiss your wife.” Brian could not speak, but his eyeß filled with something strangely like tears, as she held her loving, blushing face for the long, tender kiss he left upon her lips. Neither spoke again. With his hand in Margaret’s, Brian was content to He still until overcome by weakness ho slept. [to bb continued. 1
The Future United States.
“The population of the United States will increase for many years yet, but never again in so great a ratio as during the last century,” said Prof. Howard W. Shaw, now at the Southern. “This country can support a population of 300,000,000 much more easily than France can support her 40,000,000, but after we touch the hundred million figure our increase will be slow. It is cheap homes and high wages that now attract immigration. Low-priced latid will soon disappear and with it will go high wages, despite the wisdom of statesmen. Then, instead of a constant stream of homeseekers pouring into America, a considerable stream will pour out towards the fertile lands of South America and Southern Africa. Uncle Sam will probably begin the twentieth century with 80,000,000 people; he will do well if he ends it with an increase of 20,000,000. By that time—the beginning of the twenty-first century—we will be a homogeneous people. There will be no longer Irish-Americans and Ger-man-Americans, but everybody will be American pure and simple. The many streams that are now flowing hitherward from all parts of Europe will have amalgamated, and the result will be one of the best balanced and most Intellectual peoples the world has ever known.” —Globe-Dem-ocrat.
Soldering Metal for Aluminum.
This is the invention of Alexius Rader, of Christiania, Norway. It consists in combining cadmium, zinc, and tin mixed in substantially the following proportions, viz.: Cadmlum, fifty parts; zinc, twenty parts; tin, the remainder. The zinc is first melted in any suitable vessel, then the cadmium is added, and then the tin in pieces. The mass must be well heated, stirred, and then poured. This soldering metal can be used for a variety of different metals, but is especially adapted to aluminum. The proportions of the various ingredients may be varledjn accordance with the use to which the article is to be put. For instance, where a strong and tenacious soldering is required, a large proportion of cadmium can be used; where great adhesion is desired, a larger proportion of zinc would be used; and where a nice and durable polish is desired, a greater per cent of tin would be used. The alloy thus made, independent of its use as a solder for aluminum, is light in weight and capable of taking a high polish.
A Smart Yankee Skipper.
A writer in the Nautical Magazine tells a story of how a Yankee skipper contrived to free his ship from rats. While he lay in port he discovered that one of the British ships then in the harbor had ’among her cargo a great quantity of cheese. He therelore found an excuse for hauling over to her and mooring his own .packet alongside. The next step was to procure a plank, smear it well with red herrings, and place it so as to lead through one of the ports on board the Englishman. The immediate result was a wholesale emigration of the rats from the American ship’s hold to the cheese-laden vessel alongside.—Chambers’ Journal.
Tranks.
There are comparatively few roundtop trunks made now. The idea was that greater resisting power could be obtained with least weight by imitating to some extent the shape of an egg, which, as we know, will bear an absurdly great weight, but unfortunately there was no guarantee that the baggage-smasher would always stand the trunk the right way up. His failure to do this gave numberless reminders of the fact that no box is stronger than at its weakest point, and the damaged sides became very common. Now most trunks are made with flat tops, and are so strong all over that It is very difficult, even for an expert trunk-smash-er, to break one.
Artificial Worms.
The latest triumph of Yankee inventive genius is an India-rubber fishworm. It is said to be a remarkably good imitation of the common earthworm, is indestructible, and in actual use proves as alluring to the fishes as the genuine article. For work to be the promoter of long and valuable life, we must know how to perform it and within what limits. Like everything else, we must use without abusing it.
En Olden Times
People overlooked the Importance of permanently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action, but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally injure the system.
Do Not Biow Out a Light.
If your wick is dirty, if your oil is poor, if your wiok doesn’t fit its slide tightly, then sparks may drop from the wick into the oil chamber, or the wick may fall through its tube into the oit The greatest danger with an oil lamp is in blowing it out; don’t do that, but turn it out. —New York Sun.
A Canal Reopened.
Health is largely dependent upon a regular habit of body. The bowels act as an Important canal for the carrying of waste matter of the system. They, together with the kidneys and pores, are outlets for debris whose presence is fatal to the body's well-being. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is no violent purgative, but a gentle laxative admirably adapted to the wants of the constipated. It never gripes and wrenches the intestines as all drastic cathartics do, but produces an action akin to that of an effort of nature. Biliousness, indigestion, with their associate manifestation, costiveness, are speedily and completely remedied by this fine corrective, which also conquers malaria, sick headache, kidney and rheumatic trouble, and checks premature decay.
Short of Young Men.
f?o serious are the results of the absence of the summer-resort young man from Estill Springs, Ky., that the managers advertise their promise to “give to the first young with a dress suit who applies his board for a week free of cost,"
$100 Reward. $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to leam that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work, The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any oase that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. WSold by Druggists, 76c. Glass with a wire core is a new material made in Dresden, the glass being fused to the wire while In a plastic state. The adhesion is said to remain perfect under severe fluctuation of temperature.
All for 55 Cents.
The Monon Route has added to its already splendid equ'pment two brand-new dining cars, which are now in dally service on the fast day trains between Chicago and Louisville. These cars are models of convenience, cointort, and beauty, and are operated on the a la carte plan, which means that a passenger cun get anything he wants and pay onlz for what he gets An elegant steak, with bread, butter, coffee, or tea, with cream, is served for only 65 cents. Wutch for the Monon’s new schedule to Florida,
Have You Asthma?
bit R. ScnirruANM, St. Paul, Minn., will mall atrial package of Sehlffmann’s Asthma Cure free to any sufferer. Gives instant, relief in worst cases, and cures where others fail. Name this paper and send address.
Fine. Flaying Cards.
Send 10 cents In stamps to John Sebastian, Gen’l Ticket and Pass. Agt, Cl, R L & P. H’y. Chicago, for a pack ot the “Rock Island” Pluvlng Cards They are acknowledged the best, and worth five times the cost. Bend money order or postal note for 60c, and will send five packs by express, prepaid.
Important to Fleshy People.
We have noticed a page article in the Boston Globe on reducing weight at a very small expense. It will pay our readers to send two-cent stamp for a copy to Betina Circulating Library, 86 E. Washington street, Chicago, HL Louis VII., surnamed the Lion, was poisoned during an unsuccessful campaign by one of his officers. A SORE THROAT OR COUGH, if suffered! to progress, often results in an incurable throat or lung trouble. “Broton’s Bronchial Troclicg” give instant relief. Steam brakes were first proposed in 1864; air brakes invented, 1869.
I \l y" '.life ■^S : -91' Mr*. A. A. WUlfama Lynn. Mm*. For the Good of Others Bev. Mr. Willlame Heartily Indoreee Hood’e Sareayarllla. We ere plessed to present this from Rev, A. A. William*, of the Slllsbee Street Christian Church. Lynn. Mass.: “I see no reason why a clersyman. more than a layman, who knows whereof he speaks, should hesitate to approve an Article of Merit and worth, from which he or his family have been signally benefited, and whose commendation may serve te extend those benefits to others by increasing their confidence. My wife has for many year* been a sufferer from severe Nervous Headache for which she found little help. She has tried many things that promised well but pei formed little. Last fall a friend gave her a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It seems surprising what simply one bottle could and did do for her. The attacks of headache decreased in number and were less violent in their intensity, while her general health has been improved. Her appetite has also been better. From our experience with Hood’s Sarsaparilla I have no hesitation in indorsing its inert *. n ’ y A. A. Williams. HOOD'S FILLS are the best family cathartic, gentle and effective Try* box. Price 25c. Ely’s Cream B?Jm R&i&l WILL CURE KSATAftft? 01 Apply B«lm into each noxtrll. ELY BROS, M Warren 8U F. Y. SK_£c<2L_SS A ----TO The AlHeaa»Kol»Plant. fISTIi lllr? discovered in Congo, West Ls 111 Iva Africa, is Nature’s Bure Cure for Asthma. Care Onanantced or No Pay. Export Office, UM Broadway New York, For Large Trii.l Case, FREE by MalL address KOLA IMhOBTIBO CO., US VU*St.,Clnciuati.olU<>. MINTION THIS FAFUI nu v*m«« TV .uvsktubb*. 11E1I?*E88 AMD HfAb MOISES COREB UFDE F P«k’»lvT«W.XarC M blo»a WhUp.r»h.»m. Sae<»«talwh«iMlrTm.dkif»n. Soldrr}gr HV.Haooz.Ueß’vu.N.X. W>»<forboakefproof*rKU MENTION THIS PARER .n. wam.a to .onronu. OPiUMK MENTION THIS PAPXR waaw w*mwa ro ■ Flso’s Remedy fix Catarrh la the M Bert, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. I by druggists or sent bjuZTl No. AT. HsssUlc* Warren, Pa ■
RADWAY'S n PILLS, Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause perteot Digestion complete absorption and healthful regularity. For the curb of all disorders ot the Stomach, Liver. Bowels. Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE. INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. PERFECT DIGESTION will be accomplished bv taking 'Redway's Pills. By their ANH-BILIOUS properties thev stimulate the liver in the secretion of the bile and Its discharge through the biliary ducts. These pills in doses of front two to four will quickly regulate the action ot the liver and tree the patient from those dlsord-rs. One or two ot Radway's Pills, taken dallv by those subject to bilious pains and torpidity of the liver,will keep the system regular and secure healthy digestion. Price, 25c per box. Sold by all druggists. ‘ RAD WAY'« NEW YORK. It is better to take Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil when that decline in health begins—the decline which precedes consumption rather than wait for the germ to begin to grow in our lungs. “Prevention is better than cure;’’ and surer. The saying never was truer than here. What is it to prevent consumption ? Let us send you a book on careful living ; free. Scott& Downs, Chemists, 13s South jthAvsnus, New York, Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion ot cod-liver cil—all druggists sv.rywhers do. |t, H Coit WORLD! SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER la warranted waterproof, and will keen you dry hl the hardest storm. The new POMMEL BLII'KKK Is a perfect riding coat, and ooverathe entire saddle. Beware of imitations. Don't buy a coat If the “Fish Brand" la not on IL Illustrat*d Catalogue free. A, J. TOWER. Boston, Mass. MENTION THIS PAPER WWW warns# to
Saccharine. Saccharine is the new product that is 223 times sweeter than sugar. It is a product of common coal. Besides this, there are some fifteen other substances all obtained from this commodity, all useful in the arts or the sciences, running from ammonia and common pitch to naphthaline. Most of our colors are derived from this source. In fact, the product is being analyzed from day to day, and every week almost something new is discovered or some new use found for an old one. A few years ago people used io say that there would shortly be nothing left to discover. Since that time the whole domain of electricity has been opened to the use of man and the industrial methods of our fathers have been revolutionized. Among these discoveries is that ot Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cube. Formerly our fathers thought that it would be impossible to have a cough remedy without the use of opium in.spme form. But modern science has shown that not only is opium unnecessary, but it is positively injurious, in treatment for colds, or maladies that arise from colds Get this great remedy of any dealer. The small bottles cost 25 cents, the large ones 50 cents. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111. $40,000,000 Earned by the Bell Telephons Patent In INt. Von* invention may ba valuable. Yon should protect it by patent. Address for full snd intelligent advice, fret tfchargt, W. W. DUDLEY « CO., Solicitors of Patents, Pacific Bldg., ea F St. R. W., Washington, D. Ct MtnUon lUt paper.
JOHN WANAMAKER, Potlmailer-Gentral of the United States, Is usually considered, and rightly so, one of the. brightest business men in America; and when he writes to the Editor of Arthur’s New Home Magazine as follows: . ' • • . |v ' --• '' >■ .■ . r.i • , Ornes OF the Postmaster-General, > Washington, D. 0„ Fob. 17,1892. Mr Dear Mr. Reed: As your Magazine gets thicker, it gets brighter. Like the big wood fire on the hearth In my library when I pile more logs on. I knew Mr. Arthur very well from way back, but I doubt If he would know his old monthly since you’ve put out the dead wood, » and put in so many more pages and departments, and taken on so many young and sparkling writers. / If you keep on giving such good picture* you’ll have 200,000 subscribers. I fear advertisers will crowd you (for some things can be well advertised in magazines), but don’t drop any of the reading pages, and don’t let a dry or dull line creep In. Don’t raise the price either, If you can hefp It, even if It U half the price of other no-better magazines. I congratulate you on * doing what po one else has done in putting out two copies at the price that others charge for one. The old homestead and the young daughters' new home can each have your Magazine without pacing more tffan others charge for single copies of their publications. Yonr old friend, JOHN WANAMAKER. ■> >., . ’ . t ?. 4 . It should indicate to the average American citizen that under the new management it is at least awake, and when we know that they have more than trebled their circulation within the year, and that among .the very best people of the land, we may admit, without further argument, it has been the jbtirnalistic success of 1892. — "Building Business" Boston. One Dollar a Year. Sample Copy Ten Cents. Each copy contains nn order for 25 cents worth of McCall’s GloveFitting Patterns, so that every subscriber for a year gets *3.00 worth of Patterns Free. Bend Ave two-eent stamps forgone. g THE ARTHUR PUBLISHUG COMPANY, PMIi, Pt
‘August Flower” Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green’s August Flower and took it lam to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gaveme my health. Mrs. Sarah J Cox. Defiance, O. S A FjF 1 take BR* THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND lAlf COMPLEXION IS BETTER. Ky doctor says it acts gently on the stomach, Uver (Uid kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative. This drink is mads from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily LAKE'S MEDICINE All drunrta* mH It Di BOc and $1 per package. If yen Mud gel H, tend your addrsu for a A<m fiainpla. Lane's Family Mediefae mevM the bowala earh day. In order to bo baalthy. tits U neooa* •ary. AddroM ORATORP. WOODWARD, Lißoy, N. Y. P MENTION THIS PAPER wnaw warriao to abvibtisbm. ir m i Wr Sr WL uLLL PRINTING OFFICE OUTFITS at reasonable rates and upon liberal terms. Warn roa I*Aarion,AM. CHICAGO NKWSPAPKK UNION, 03 South JeffiMraon Street Chlimgo. ■■DEC wItW a P 8 If W Montan., ■ Uh Im Idaho, Wasbiagtau .udUnav., tbs ■ FREI GOVERNMENT' ramLANDS ■ JEF-Th. best AgrinltaHil.GrMlng and ■■ Lend, now own t»,.ttl.n. Msll.d FREE. Addrws CHAS. K UMBOM.Iaad Cew.,«. y.8.8.,5i. rswl, ktaa. MIXTION THIS rarax wean warns. ro ..nmaau. • the best medicine known for bilious-' ! •Ay constipation, dy.pqp.la, foul • "roalh.noadaoho.uiental depromlon, ! and all dIMMM oauud by failure o/ > e tbs stomach, Uver or bowels toper- 1 I form their proper functions. Parsons given to over-' acriptlon, and has been in constant use for nearly s century. There are tew diseases to which mankind are subject mors distressing than son eys*. snd attKKsniax ttdirtoaferfySAtt invite the attention of nhy.lpiami to Ita merlts. jfor ® ® FIT FOLKS REDUOED mutts rbatereaComplexTon teMreaCeaetf patten. Baad for 9 CM ba**fo MMb W«M tttb jHSMb Mg* Qto. MENTION TMtt PAPER woy ahiimhi . UIQHFIVK OR KyOHRE PARTIES per pack for tbe slickest cards you over shuffled. For 014)0 you willroceive free by OKpress ten packs. ■■ MltkYtW w' Wbb' MENTION THIS TAPER ww warrtM to ApvaaruiM. PATENTS! PENSIONS! MENTION THIS rarxa wsmse to seraswsens. u. n. u. ao. ee-tis WHEN WBITING TD ADVKRTISEBB. VV nUase say yon lew the atdvertiMment in this paper.
