Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 October 1894 — Page 7
Millions for Defense
Against the inroads of that subtle, Inrttns foe to human health, malaria, had been expended uselessly when Hostetter's Stomach Bitters appeared upon the acene and demonstrated its power as a preventive and curative of the dreaded scourge. When the “gold fever" raged in 1349 in California, malaria was contemporaneous with it at the "diggings.” and wrought dreadful havoc among the miners. Then and subsequently on the Isthmus of Panama, and wherever in the tropics malarial disease is most virulent, the Bitters became the recognised safeguard. For the effects of exposure and fatigue, miasma-poisoned air and water, sea sickness and all disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, the Bitters affords prompt relief. Invalids of all sorts will find it fully adequate to their needs. After a man passes fifty, he should watch himself with great care. Nearly every man does something ruinous after he is fifty. Whales are animatv but are fitted to live in the water.
Swelling in the Neck f “Large-knots of scrofula nature came on my wife’s neck for four years. When she had taken two bottles of Hood'sSarsaparllla we could see the swelling was going down. Now the glands have assumed their natural appearance and she is Entirely Free from this trouble. Our children were afflicted with spells of maiai la every fall, but this season they have been taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and it has purified their blood, built them up, and they have been free from all illness this winter.” E. M. Blackburn, Oregon, Missouri. Hood’s Pills are purely vegetable, and do not purge, pain or gripe. Sold by all druggists. f Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable v Compound CURES ALL Ailments of Women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. It has cured more cases of Loucorrhoea than any remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. That Bearing-down Feeling causing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern tha female system, and is as harmless as water. All druggists sell ft. Addresi in confidence, Lydia E: Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills, 25 cents.
WgW ® I KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’neeas of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. QUICKLY CURES Eyfe’ COLD IN Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N.Y. W tmr-BIOHOHKJOHN W.MORRIS, riCi!vOß WSfS Washington, D.C. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ■ Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. ■ 3 vra in last -war. 15 adjudicating claims, atty since. MENTION THIS PAPER wmbh wtmxa to tontniiu. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething: sottens ths gums, reduces inflammation. pain, cures wind colic, 25 cents a bottle. My ELECTRIC BELT senton TRIAL TJVn TSTJI Dr. Jndd.S.Detrolt.Mich. Want agents J, «li Ft Fa —VERY ONE WHO WEARS THE Owen Electric Belt —Says: “They are the Best.” Get a catalogue by writing The Owen Electric Belt Co. 209 State Street. Chicago. 111, ... GENERAL BLACKING IS UNEQUALLED. 1 Has An annual Sale of 3.000 tons. ALSO MANUFACTURE THE rn1 1> FORD^E^HINE, TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXES. THE ONLY PERFECT PASTE. Morse Bros, Prop’s. Canton,Mass.
BALL SEASON IS DONE.
RECORD OF GAMES PLAYED BY LEAGUE CLUBS. Big Haul by Revenue Officials in Tennessee—Battle with Bandits in ArizonaNew Grand Sire of the Odd Fellows Coinage of Silver. Diamond Is Deserted. One final change was made in the tables of the base-ball league by the closing- games. It was a rise of one point for the St. Louis Browns over the Cincinnatis. Comiskey's team ha i been farther from the pennant this season than ever before, bad as the Reds luck has been in former years. The Browns played their last game at home and fortunately had an easy team for opponents —the Washingtons. The Browns beat the Senators twice and as the Cincinnatis could not do better than tie with the (lovelands, the St Louis passed the Reds and finished in ninth place. At Louisville Brooklyn won one and lost one. Chicago finished in the eighth place, which is better than its early performances in the year warranted. The season of 18114 is at an end. A complete record of all the games played by all the clubs in the National League follows. It shows how many victories each club won from all the other clubs, how many lost and to whom, and the closing position of each club in the race:
5 I '■ I I ® 2 3<o* g; .3 o|J CLUBS. g.’Sia £fltf» “2 « a •= T ° a -g «!•£; «|5 • |js “ «I © i o xi >- o _ « Pm ffl □[P<|Q QQ J cl 4 0 8 «l 6 910 will 10 New Yorks C..| 6 S 7 91 Bill 7 7 10|12 Bostons 8 6 .. 669 8j 768 910 Philadelphian ....4 7 6.. 75855888 Clevelandsi 33375 4 10 98 8 8 Pittsburgs| 44 4' 458.. 86789 Chioagosl 3 15 7 6 2 6 6 6 7 8 St. Louis! 25 67 4366.. 5| 66 Cincinnatis| 2 5 4l 2 6 3 6 6 7 I 7 7 Washingtonsi 1 2 3 4 3 4 4 5 6 5 .. 8 Loulsvilles| 2 0 2l 3 4 3 8 4 6| s| 4 .. SUMMARY. Games Post- Per Played. Won. Lost, poned. cent. Baltimorel2B B.t 39 o .69.5 New Yorkl32 88 44 0 .667 Bostonl32 Bi 49 0 . 629 Philadelphia..l27 71 66 n .559 Brooklynl3l 70 61 1 .534 Clevelandl29 f,B 61 :i .527 Pittsburgl3J 65 65 2 .503 Chicagol32 57 75 0 .435 St Louisl32 56 76 0 424 Cincinnatil29 54 75 3 .419 Washington.. .132 45 87 0 .341 Louisvillel3o 36 94 2 .277
MOONSHINERS CAPTURED.
Largest Haul Ever Made in Kentucky— Men. Women and Boys. The largest gang of moonshiners that ever left the Big Sandy Valley passed through Ashland, Ky , Monday en route to Louisville, where they will be given early heavings in the United States Court. The crowd was in charge of United States Marshal “Kid ’Greer, cf Johnson County, assisted by a score of deputies, and represented the hauls of two months pa t. In the past six months Greer and his deputies have destroyed thirty-seven separate stills and thousands of gallons of their product, commonly designated “moonshine. ” They have arrested abotit J 25 offenders and spotted numerous others, who will be taken as soon as the opportunity offers. In the capture of the vari us gangs some thrilling work has been done, <wd some narrow escapes experienced. TSevenof Greer s officers are now laid up for repairs at different towns in Floyd and Johnson Counties, while anout" twenty of the moonshiners are also regaining their strength in various up-Sandy jails. These latter will follow their more fortunate lellows to Louisville and to the penitentiary as soon as their condition will permit of a change of quarters. ' In the gang Monday were 106 offenders. Their ages ranged from 15 to 50', and in the degree of their crime the: e was an equal variance. Some of the men have grown old and gray in the business, some had followed it Hut a short while, others had retailed the spirits for the makers, and others had boldly labeled it sorghum, and brought it out by the barrel in push boats. The boys were usually the sons of the old operators, who were Freed into tho work from childhood and literally know nothing else. Several women were also among the lot.
FAMOUS CRICKETER.
Lord Hawke and His Celebrated Team in the United States. The appearance of Lord Hawke in the United States, accompanied by his team of expert English cricketers, re-
vives interest in tne sport of old England in America. Lord Hawke, who is in charge of the English team, has been in America several times before. In 1892 he brought over a cricket team, and as the game was strictly their own, they expected to wipe the : platter. This was a disastrous visit for them, however, a?
they succeeded in winning but one match. Lord Hawke felt chagrined at the result, and is now here with a stronger team than before, most of them being college men from Cambridge and Oxford. The series of conte ts he proposes to have with Kew York and Philadelphia will be watched with interest all over the country.
GRAND SIRE OF THE WORLD.
John W. Stabbins Elected to High Office by the Odd Fellows. John W. Stebbins, recently elected Grand Sire of the world in Odd Fellowship by the Sovereign Grand Lodge, I.
O. O. F.. at Chattanooga, Tenn., is 75 i years of age. He is ' a native of New ' York, and resides at Rochester. After graduating from Union College he became principal of Macedon Academy. ,He studied law, was admitted to the bar and in 1856 was elected to the State Legislature. He was one of the committee of
JOHN W. STEBBINS.
fifteen, of which Horace Greeley was a member, which drafted the terms of agreement that led to the uniting of the old Whig party with the Republicans. Mr. Stebbins became an Odd Fellow in 1850. He was Grand Master for two terms: seventeen years ago became a member of the Grand Lodge and was successively Grand Warden. Deputy Grand Master, and Grand Master. He has risen from Chairman of the Appeals Committee to the office of Grand Sire. The Grand Sire in his annual report said that since the last contention in the South, held in Atlanta twenty years ago. the membership in the Southern States had increased from 6.000 to 53.000, and to the people of the
South Odd Fellowship had become an established institution. The total membership of the order was now 780,OtO, or, inc uding the sisters of the Rebekah degrees. 889,000. To this should be added a membership of 25,OJO in foreign jurisdictions, making a combined membership of 900,000 men and women. The net increase in membership during the year had been ;-3,000. This was less than the year previous but this might be accounted for in the United States by a season or financial stringency that lessened the resources of the people. In Canada the order ha? made greater progress than in any year of its history. In no department of the work had there been such decided progress as in making provision for the aged members and orphan children. In many States new homes had been opened, while numerous jurisdictions were accumulating fundsand preparing buildings for the laudable work.
Great Anxiety for the Health of the • of Sia m. Tho absorbing subject of conversation in Bangkok is the condition of the Siamese monarch. When will he die?
the general ignorance on the subject, and J. G. Scott, British charge d'affaires, deemed it alvisable to bring down another gunbeat from Hong Kong in view of the alarming rumors in high circles. The state of the city is thus one of intense e citement. It has been asserted that the King is but suffering from an attack of fever, brought on by residence at Col-ei-Chang an island in the Gulf of Siam. The real cause of ai ment, however, is
indulgence in anasthetics. For years chloral has been the favorite drug of the Siamese mo n a r c h , and now its poi ouous effects "are felt with a severity that' leaves small hope of 1 ecovery. Maha Vajirunhis is the Crown r r in co, eldest FO.l of Chulalongkorn, who will probably succeed hisj
father. In Siam, however, the right of primogeniture is not fully recognized as a fundamental law of the realm, and the Sei abodee. or Council of State, upon tne death of the reigning sovereign, may elect a king. The Crown Prince, whose full name is Somdetch Chowfa Maha Va irunhis, is but 16 years old.
Dollars to tho Number of 1,597,223 Turned Out of the Mint. Secretary Carlisle made a statement concerning the coinage of silver dollars unde this administration, the coinage being under the uni epealed portion of tho Sherman act. It shows that since the administration came into power if 1,59 i, 223 standard silver dollars have been coined, of which $520, <>79 have been seigniorage. Tne Secretary says: Wulle tue law provides that redeemed treasury notes may be reissued, It also Imposes an express limitation upon the power to reissue by declaring that “no greater or less amount of such notes shall bo outstanding al any time than the cost of tho silver Lu.lion and the standard silver dollars coined therefrom then held m the treasury purchased by such notes.” When such notes are redeemed in gold there is no obstacle In the way of their reissue, because such redemption does not affect the stock of silver held in the treasury under the act of July 4, 1890, but when they are redeemed with silver coined from the bullion purchased under that act, they must bo retired and cancelled, for otherwise there would be, after the redemption and reissue, a greater amount of notes outstanding than the cost of the silver originally purchased and then held in the treasury, and this is expressly prohibited by the stat ute. Tao purpose of Congress was to prevent the duplication of tho currency, which would be the case If the notes and sliver purchased with the notes could be outstanding at the same lime. Treasury notes received in tho ordinarycourse of business, or redeemed in gold or exchanged for silver dollars not coined from bullion, purchased tinder the act of July 14. 1890. are not retired and cancelled. AU such notes are reissued. Prior to tho last day of July, 1891, silver dollars to the amount of J 36.318.204 were coined from the bullion purchased under that act. Tho socalled gain selgnoirage arising from this coinage was £0.867.803, which waspaid into the treasury as a miscellaneous receipt, leaving. 529.480.461 to be held as a fund to provide for the redemption of the treasury notes, as provided by law.
Three Men Hold Up a Southern Pacific Express In Arizona. The boldest express robbery- ever known in Arizona was committed near Maricopa Monday night. The train held up was the enstbound Southern Pacific, and the desperadoes are believed to have secured $20,050 in gold. The robbers were pursued and in a desperate fight with the Sheriff s posse one robber was shot and another " captured. Two of the bandits who attacked the train were masked and the third, who was a more boy, was not. Tho robber who pre j viously climbed upon the train captured the head-brakeman and compelled him to turn on the air brakes and stop the train. The other bandit covered the engineer, who with the brakeman was compelled to go back to the express car and induce the messenger to open the door. The boy was then shoved into tho car. While he was searching for express treasures the two bandits guarded each side of the train. When the bay came from the car the trainmen, who were under the bandits’ guns, were compelled to march, with the bandits a short distance into the bushes. There the robbers released their prisoners, and, mounting the horses, rode away. Penalty Im De <th. The penalty for robbing trains in Arizona is death. The pos-se, led by Sheriff Murphy of Maricopa found the trail of the robbers at the point where they had crossed the Gila River, seven miles oast of Pho nix. Soon afterward they came upon a camp which the robbers had hastily abandoned. There they found three Winchesters and three horses. Kot long after this they overhauled one of the bandits, whom they called upon to throw up his hands. Instead he turned upon the officers and fired, but a charge of buckshot from the sheriff s gun brought him to the ground. Another was afterward captured, but the third e caped. 1 In the year B. C. 436 there wai a drouth extending all over Eurone. All the crops failed, and whole districts were depopulated. At Rome thousands of people drowned themselves in the Tiber, and a pestilence ensued from the oead holies in the river and on the banks.
LORD HAWKE.
WHEN WILL HE DIE?
What will happen afterward? (questions like these are heard on all sides. Bis death has been repot tid at least ha f a dozen times. Indeed, not a fetv believe he is dead ■and the intimation withheld for state rea-ons from the ge eral public. The foreign representatives even share
KING OF SIAM.
MAHA VAJIRUNHIS.
COINAGE OF SILVER.
BATTLE WITH BANDITS.
ELECTRICITY.
Mure Marvelous Than steam in the Industrial World. Large results are produced by the employment of great forces. In early days, as in Egypt and in Rome, the only great force at command was a large number of men working as slaves. Our modern civilization may be said to be based upon steam, but is not steam soon to be displaced by the new force, elect! icity? While little more than a portent now, it will condition the progress of civilization during the new century so near at hand. It is more in the nature of a logical deduction than of a prophecy that we outling the possibilities and probabilities Of this mysterious force within the coming decade. The human family are soon to come into possession of conveniences of which they have scarcely dreamed. The present trolley system for operating street cars is certain to give way to some conduit plan or to improved storage batteries, thus removing unsightly poles and wires from streets. All telephone and telegraph wires within city limits, if wires are needed at all, will be laid under ground. Incandescent lamps now in use will be laid aside for greatly improved ones having no filaments, but which will glow by means of high frequency currents, or for devices placed in walls and ceilings, which will be made to diffuse plentiful light throughout our rooms. Small boats on lakes, in parks, and on rivers and canals, will be moved by electricity. Typewritten copy is now successfully transmitted to a distance by wire, and an entire page of a newspaper may soon be printed simultaneously in a hundred different cities, and slips so printed which describe the progress of a battle in Corea may lie delivered to us hourly. The electrical transmission of power will be rapidly extended, and for this purpose distant mountain streams and water falls will be utilized. Coal, too, will be burned at the coal mines, thus saving the cost of transporting that bulky fuel, and Its energy will appear In heat and power in homes hundredsof miles distant. By the year 1900 electric street and suburban railway traction will have taken the place of all other forms of traction. Telephoning around the world will soon be an easy matter. Already our long distance telephones have brought half of our country’s population within speaking distance. Any man in St. Paul can now bold a conversation with any man ip .Boston. The writer has talked over wire in which the resistance was such that to overcome it would be equivalent to talking by telephone with a friend In Constantinople, and the voices could be distinctly heard. Not only will such conversations be easy, but, in all probability, distant conditions will be accurately reproduced, and we shall be able to see our friends face to face while conversing with them. We will be able soon to inspect goods in New York, examine a farm in the State of Washington, read a book in Boston, listen to a sermon in New Orleans, seeing the clergyman and the congregation, hear an opera in Baltimore; and all this “while you wait,” and are comfortably seated in a room in Chicago. Electric heating, though costly now, will soon be so cheapened as to be brought into quite general use. The convenience of such heat for homes and for cars is at once apparent. From any desired point, as h s sleeping room, a man, by proper direction to his wife about buttonsand switches, can turn such,heat upon any portion of his house,, light a tiro in his kitchen range, or have all this attended to by clock-work. He can be awakened at any hour by a shock, and can have his house lighting so arranged that he can illumine any room in it from his bed, or, on coming home from the theater, he can light the lamps before entering the house. Electric motors will come Into general use, and in place of our present costly shafting, pulleys and belting, wires will connect our 1,040 machines with dynamos, and in order to use any machine the operative will simply have to turn a switch or press a button, thus using only -the power his work calls for. Should a method be devised of getting electricity directly from heat, a possibility, no doubt, a revolution in mechanical industry will be inaugurated whose benefits to the human race would be beyond calculation. We may also be able to transmit our thoughts and feelings to distant friends. We are only at the datfn of the age of electricity, and its marvels are to come.—Pullman Journal.
THE WINE INDUSTRY.
Some Figures on the Products of European Vineyards. Viticulture in this country represents only about one-twentieth of the product of France or Italy. France leads In quantity produced, and Italy in area of vineyards. The vintage ol 1874 was the greatest ever known in France, the product exceeding 1,800,000,000 gallons, although fiercely attacked by the phylloxera. The yield declined rapidly, and has not risen to 700,000,000 in many years; yet rose last year to 1,125,000,000 gallons. In 1877, the acreage was 5,860,242; in 1892, only 4,527,500; but last year an increase of about 25,000 acres occurred. There are no vineyards in the northern countries of Europe—the British Isles, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, and Belgium. A recent statistical statement credits Europe with 23,000,000 acres in vineyards, and all other parts of the world with 1,000,000 acres—a very round and doubtless uncertain estimate. The total area of Italian vineyards is placed at 8,666,000 acres. The average production of the past ten years, in millions of gallons, is thus stated: France, 681; Italy, 630; Spain, 562; Austria, Hungary, and Germany, 83; Portugal, 78; Russia, 72; Servia, 60; Bulgaria, 56; Turkey and Cyprus, 45; Roumania, 40; Greece, 31: Switzerland, 22. The larger part of the product of the United States is on the Pacific coast, where alone the European vines will grow. On the Atlantic coast, by far the greater portion of the product comes from the vineyards of Western New York. Advertising to a well-stocked store, like rain to a thirsty plant, enlivens and leaves “silver drops” all around. i
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U.S. Gov’t Report Royal ABSOLUTELY PURE
Dogs and Their Playthings.
The d g, the greatest friend of man. Is known to emulate the virtues and even the vices of mankind; but few would suspect the intelligent and stately Newfoundland dog of as great a love of playthings as any child for its dolls. An owner of as splendid a Newfoundland as ever gladdened the heart of Landseer records the fact that it was intensely fond of its playthings. “It was in the orchard,” said this dog’s master, “that it usually’ found its playthings and conveyed them to its sanctum. These consisted chiefly of sardine tins, balls, flower-pots, chunks of w cd, etc., but the prime favorite of all its possessions was a large teakettle. “This it would 1 ark to and play with for hours together. By day it kept it in a corner of its stall and carried apples to it from the orchard. At night it sleeps close to the doggie’s side, sometimes quite buried up with straw." It was clear that there was nothi' g half so sweet in life to this Newfoundland dog as that old black kettle, as anyone soon discovered on making any attempt to deprive it of its loved plaything.
As of Old.
A Hebrew aspirant for medical honors, named Jerusalem, was cnee among the candidates examined by the late Professor Hyrtl. His relatives and friends crowded about the door, awaiting with impatience the end of the examination. At last the door opened, but instead of the candidate, Proses.-or Hyrtl emerged from it. At the sight of the crowd, ho raised his hands, and then with all the seriousness of a Luther, broke out in the words of Jeremiah: “Weep, Israel, for Jerusalem has fallen.”
Everybody Is Going South Nowadays.
The only section of the country where the farmers have made any money the past year is in the South. If you wish to change you should go down now and see for yourself. The Louisville and Nashville Kailroad and connections will sell tickets to all poluts South for trains of October 2, November 0, and December 4. at one faro round trip. Ask your ticket agent about it, and If he can not cell you excursion tickets write to C. P. Atmore, General Passenger Agent. Louisville, Kv.. or Goa L. Cross. N. W. P. A. Chicago, HL
Philosophy of a Five-Year-Old.
A 5-year-old Boston boy's ethical philosophy was brought out the other day. when his father tod him how glad ho was that he had bbon such a good boy all through Sunday, when he was left much to himself. The boy answered in a matter-of-fact wav, “I haven’t been thinking about good. I think I'm better when I don t think about it. I don't think of anything—naughty or anything; I just think about what a good time I’m having. "—New York Tribune.}
Hardly Worth Mention.
A canvas booth was noticed on Broadway, New York, the other day. within which sat a stone-cutter at work. The canvas was to protect the passers-by from the flying granite chips.
Should Be More.
There are in this country eighteen incorporated cremation BOcietiee, and during the past ten years about .'*,ooo cremations have ‘aken place.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure
Is a constitutional cure. I’rlce 75 cents. Dealers in wild animals receive •normoua profits above the flrat cost, but the expense of transportation and the losses by death are ho great that very little money is made in the business. Those who have the most merit see the most in others.
Sure Cure for Sprain, Bruise er Hurt! . ft ST. JACOBS OIL You’ll Use it Always for a Like Mishap.
I Weather Forecast for October, | | BY PERMISSION OV THE S | REV. IRL R. HICKS (The Storm Prophet/. n § Copyrighted by the Word 6r Works Pub. Co., St. Lniie, Mo. OCTOBER, 1894.—October begins bright and cool, growing warmer in west, with S secondary storms crossing from and to 4th. Frosty nights will follow. Another warm > S storm wave will start from west about sth, bringing raiS along its path to the east * S during 6tb to 10th. Cold and frost win attend clearing conditions following. The * S 13th, 14th, are reactionary storm dates, with Full Moon 14th. Cold and frogty weather s S will follow storm flurries, about these dates. The 18th to a 3rd is a storm period affected s S by both Venus and Mercury. Storms on lakes and seas will be dangerous. This is 2 S especially true of the reactionary storms qn and touching the ajth, a«th. Venus on J s 31st, Mercury on a6th, New Moon aßth, and "Vulcan’’ 30th, compose a combination that g S renders the closing days of the month precarious on land and sea. Rain, turning to 2 S sleet and snow, attended by dangerous gales on the waters- Cold and freezing follow J | The DR. J, H. McLEAN $ A-lma-na-o fox* tlxe lE’ea.x* 1895, * Tke only one containing the wonderful predictions of the | REV. IRL R. HICKS, (The Storm Prophet) | IS NOW READY. - * S If your dealer has not got one, send a two cent stomp to n § Tixe Dr. T. EC. MoLSAW MZDICttMB CO., off St. Zxj-uJjb. N and you will receive one by return malt Health Forecast for October. § This is the season to clean up the system by using § Dr. J. H. McLEAN’S Liver and Kidney Balm. | S No time should be lost in taking it. There are no diseases so insidious as kidney S »4 troubles. Keep warm. Now is the time to put on heavier clothing. Follow up the S S gc?d work on the liver and kidneys by a course ot Dr. J. H. McLEAN’S Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier. § Hr They Never Jbkrtl, :.»•
For Twenty Years Scott’s Emulsion has been endorsed by physicians of the whole world. There is no secret about its ingredients Physicians prescribe Scott’s Emulsion because they Know what great nourishing and curative properties it contains. They know it is what it is represented to be ; namely, a perfect emulsion of tho best Norway liver Oil with the hypophosphites of lime and soda. For Coughs, Colds, Sore Threat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Ansemia, Weak Babies, Thin Children, Rickets, Marasmus, Loss of Flesh, General Debility, and all conditions of Wasting. The only genuine Scott’s Emulsion is put in salmoncolored wrapper. Refuse inferior substitutes I Send for pamphlet on Scott't Emulsion. FREE. Boott & Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. BO cents and sl.
Improving Their Channels.
The bar at the entrance of the River Mer cy, and which has been such a source of trouble to the city of Liverpool, has now,been so far lowered that there is a minimum denth of nineteen feet over a channel 1,000 feet wide, and a minimum of twenty feet over a width of 500 feet, and the river authorities sav that at no distant date the channel to Liverpool will be oven to all vessels at all states of the tide. It is also stated that vessels drawing 21 feet << inches can now successfully navigate the Manchester ship canal.
A Cure that Cures
Is the kind mod people desire. Buch a cure is Ripens lobules, but not u cure for everything. They »re for all liver and stomach disorders.and one tubule gives relief.
Water at a high temperature cannot be raised any considerable distance by suction, as the vapor discharged from the water so heated follows the recoding pistons of the pump and resists the entrance of the water; consequently, to pump hot water always place the supply above the pump, so that it will be supplied from a hood.
Send jpiur full name and address to Dobbins* boup Mfg. Co, Philadelphia. Pa., by return mall, and get, /re. of all cost, a coupon worth several dollars. If used by you to Its full advantage Don't delay. This is worthy attention.' •*
Beats a Diamond.
The Sultan of Johore wears an electric light in his dhirt firont. When in the crowded thoroughfares of city life you see young maidens with cheeks fair as country rosea, give them credit for using Glenn’s Bulphur Boa;). While the elephant appears clumsy, it is in reality one of the most nimble animals .of Asia
TAKE STEPS in time, if you are a sufferer from that scourge Yj U: A? of humanity known as consumption, and you can be cured. There is ( , BaaHs the evidence of \ hundreds of liv- ' ing witnesses to Jpaß • the fact that, inIjMMF all its rnrlyjMMv / TavCnß' stages, consume- -/y'l //MtSKS tiou is a curable Li / f /WKM diseas if. Not * / ’KfIHF every case, but a I large percentage of I I /y. cases, and we believe, l L fully 98 per cent, are cured by Dr. Pierce's mfc Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so far as to induce repeated bleedings from the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious expectoration (including tubercular matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakuess. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases reported to us.as cured by “Golden Medical Discovery ’* were genuine coses of that dread and fatal disease f You need not take our word for it.' They have, in nearly every instance, been so pronounced by the best and most experienced home physicians, who have no interest whatever in misrepresenting them, and who were often strongly prejudiced and advised against a trial of “Golden Medical Discovery,’’ but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted. Nasty codliver oil and its filthy “emulsions'* and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these cases and had either utterly failed to benefit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypophosphites had also been faithfully tried in vain. •The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to you, on receipt of address and six cents in stamps. You can then write to those who have been cured and profit by their experience. Address for Book, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
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