Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 2 July 1891 — Page 3
Pretty strong
seasons for trying Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. In the first place, it cures your catarrh— zxo matter how bad your case, or of how long standing. It doesn't simply palliate it cures. If you believe it, so much the better. There's nothing more to be said. You get it for 50 cents, from all druggists.
But perhaps you won't beiieve it. Then there's another reason for trying it. Show that you can't be cured, and you'll-get $500. It's a plain business offer. The makers of Dr. Sage's Remedy will pay you that amount if they can't cure you. They know {that they can you think that they can't. If they're \vrong, you get the cash. If you're wrong, you're rid of catarrh.
ONB ENJOYS P: the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken it is pleasant &&d refreshing to the taste, and acta zently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys* &em effectually, dispels colds, head* aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is tha aaiy remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the dtomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from tho most idikhy and agreeable substances, its 21 any excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the moat
v-jopuIar
remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale 5n
6O0
and 01 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro* fure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any »ub&titute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
tOUfSVILLE. K1. HEW YORK. V.U
FEEL SO TIRED.
You do not feel real sick but just foel "all broke ujj,"you have no appetite, and what little you do cat lays heavy on your stomach, you have headache, your bowels are constipated and life becomes a burden. Take
WHITE'S DANDELION
It cures Dyspepsia. Biliousness and all Liver and Kidney disorders It purifies the Blood and makes ffip wpak «trnn?.
I LIKE MY WIFE
TO USE
:s
POZZOMI'S 1
MEDICATED
COMPLEXION POWDER.
Seoauso It Improves Her Looks and is as Fragrant as Violets* 1 StOXsX» BVK3RYWHBIUB. I
T=?CDF=S^r TUKATK1 FRKK. Positively Cured with V«g«»bii le'Jdto.
H**® cored man/ thojjnind cases. Can pafeenta -irtmoHttced hotieieea by the best physioians. JHya. .ttwt dose xymiitnma rauidlydisappear,ana lOMa 4*r*at l«*Ht two-U- irda of all aymptoiaaare remowL Hr.ntl tor free book of testimonial! of miraculoqji
tskiku
uoc uuv» wi iwrvr V- _::rr
euros.uonl*r
Ten day* treatment furnished free by malt you trial, sand
10
mmm§
eenta in atampn to pay
OB. H.
a.
UREKW ft DONS. Atlanta. Qa.
that ^Cleans Most is Lenox.
ASTRAY, BUT RECQYEpD. f- lf
Have "We All, like Sheep, Gone Astray?^-.f'^|
Lambs WUch Leave the' Shelter of the Fold Vaually Canter Back When the Grass Gets Short—Dr. TaL. mage's Sermon.
Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn last Sunday. Subjecti "Astray, but Recovered. Text, Isaiah liii, 6. He said:
Sit down, my brother, and look at home. My text takes us all in. It starts behind the pulpit, sweeps the circuit of the room and comes, back to the point where it started, when it says: "All we, like sheep, have pone astray." 1 was, like many of you, brought up in the country, and I know some of the habits of the sheep, and how they get astray, and what my text means when it says: "All we, like sheep, have gone astray." Sheep get astray in two ways, either by trying to get into another pasture or from being scared by the dogs. In the former some of us got astray. We thought the religion of Jesus Christ I short commons. We thought there was better pasturage somewhere else.
We thougtit if we could only lie down en the banks of distant streams, or under great oaks on the other side of some hill, we might be better fed. We wanted other pasturage than that which God through Jesus Christ gave our soul, and we wandered on, and we wandered on, and we were lost. We wanted bread, and we found garbage. The further we wandered, instead of finding rich pasturage we found blasted heath and sharper rocks and more stinging nettles. No pasture. How was it in the worldly groups when you lost your child? Did they come around and console you very much? Did not the plain Christian man who came into your house and sat up with your darling child give you more comfort than all worldly associations? Did all the convivial songs you ever heard comfort- you in that day of bereavement so much as the songs they sang to you. perhaps the very song that was sung by your little child the last sabbath afternoon of her life?
Did your business associates in hat day of darkness and trouble give •ou any especial condolence? Business exasperated ^you, business wore (rou out, business left you limp as a rag, business made you mad. You fot dollars, but you got no peace, •rod have mercy on the man who has nothing but business to comfort him. ["he world afforded you no luxuriant asturage. A famous English actor stood on the stage impersonating, ind thunders of applause came down (rom the galleries, and many thought ,t was the proudest moment of his ife: but there was a man asleep just ,11 front of him. and the fact that that aian was indifferent and somnolent spoiled all the occasion for him, and ie cried: "Wake up, wake up!" So jne little annoyance in life has been more pervading to your mind than ill the brilliant congratulations and mccesses. Poor pasturage for your »oul you found in this world. The arorld has cheated you, the world has elied you, the world has misinterpreted'you, the world has persecuted pou. It never comforted you. Oh! ibis world is a good rack from which horse may pick his hay, it is a good trough from which the swine may jrunch their mess but it gives but ittle food to a soul blood-bought and mmortal. What is a soul? It is a lope high as the throne of God.
What is a man? You say: "It is nly a man." It is only a man gone overboard in sin. It is only a man £one over in business life. What ic man? What is a man? The battleground of three worlds, with his hands taking hold of the destinies of ight or darkness. A man? No line an' measure him. No limit can bound him. The archangel before the throne can not outlive him. The stars shall die, but he will watch their extinguishment. The world will burn, but he will gaze on the conflagration. Endless ages will march on, he will watch the procession. A man! The masterpiece of God Almighty. Yet you say, "It is Dnlyaman." Cau nature like that be fed on the husks of the wilderness?
Some of you got astray by looking for better pasturage others by being scared of the dogs. The hound gets over into the pasture field. The poor things fly in every direction. In a few moments they are torn of the hedges and they are plashed of the litch, and the lost sheep never gets home unless the farmer goes after it. There is nothing so thoroughly lost as a lost sheep. It may have been in 1857, during the financial panic, or during the financial stress in the fall of 1873 when you got astray. You almost became an atheist. You said: "Where is God, that honest men go down and thieves prosper?" You were dogged of creditors, you were dogged of the banks, you were dogged of worldly disaster, and some of you went into misanthropy, and some of you took to strong drink, and others of you fled out of Christian association and you got astray. O! man, that was the last time when you ought to have forsaken God. Standing amid the foundering of your earthly fortunes, how could you get along without a God to comfort and a God to deliver you, and a God to help you and a God to save you. You tell me you have been through enough business trouble almost to ,kill you. I know it. I can not understand how the boat could live one hour in that chopped sea. But I do not know by what process you got
astray sojne lfi one way apdswB| in another, and if you could sf position soipeof yqu occupy ,fc God this morning your soiil would burst into an agony of tears and you would pelt the heaven's with the cry: "God have mercy." Sinai's batteries have been unlimbered above vour soul and at times you have heard it thunder: "The wages of sin is death." "All have sinned and come short of the glory of God." "By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned." "The soul that sinncth, it shall die."
But the last part of my text opens a door wide enough to let us all out and to let all heaven in. Sound it on the organ with all the* stops out. Thrum it on the harps with all the strings atune. With all the melody possible let the heavens sound it to the earth and let the earth tell it to the heavens. "The Lord hath laid on Him the inquity of us all." I am glad that the prophet did not stop to explain whom he meant by "him, I-Iim of the manger, Him of the bloody sweat, Him of the surrection throne. Him of the crucifixion agon}'. "On him the Lord hath laid the iniquity of us all." "O!" says some man, "that is not generous, that is not fair let every man carry his own burden and pay his own debts." That sounds reasonable. If I have an obligation and I have the means to meet it and I come to you and ask you to settle that obligation you rightly say "Pay yoar own debts." If you and I were walking down the street, both hale, hearty and well, I ask you to carry me, you say, and say rightly: "Walk on your own feet!"
But suppose you and I were in a regiment and I was wounded in the battle and I fell unconscious at your feet with gunshot fractures and dislocations what would you do? You would call to your comrades, saying, "Come and help, this man, is helpless bring the ambulance let us take him to the hospital," and I would be a dead lift in your arms, and you would lift me from the ground where I had fallen and put me in the ambulance and take me to the hospital and have all kindness shown me. Would there be any thing mean in doing that? Would there be any thing bemeaning in my accepting that kindness? Oh, no! You would mean not to do it. That is what Christ does. If we could pay our debts then it would be better to go up and pay them, saying. "Here, Lord, here is my obligation here are the means with whifeh I mean to settle that obligation, now give me a receipt—cross it all out." The debt is paid.
But the fact is we have fallen in the battle, we have got dc:-7n under the hot fire of our transgressions, we have been wounded by the sabers of sin, we are helpless, we are undone." Christ comes. The loud clang heard in the sky on that Christmas night was only the bell, the resounding bell of the ambulance. Clear the way for the Son of God. He comes down to bind up the wounds, and to scatter the darkest, and to save the lost. Clear the way for the Son of God, Christ comes down to us, and we are a dead lift, he doss not lift us up with the tips of his fingers. He does not lift us up with one arm. He comes down upon his knee, and then with a dead lift he raises us to honor and glory and immortality. "The Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all." Why then will no man carry his sins? You can not carry successfully the smallest sin you ever*committed. You might as well put the Apennines on one shoulder and the Alps on the other—hov much less can you carry all the sins of your lifetime. Christ comes and looks down in your face and says: "I have come through all the lacerations of these days, and through all the tempest of these nights: I have come to bear your burdens and to pardon your sins and to pay your debts. Put them on my shoulder put them on my heart." "On Him the Lord hath laid the iniquity of us all." "Sin has almost pestered the life out of some of you. At times it has made vou reasonable, and it has spoiled the brightness of your days and the peace of your nights.
There are men who have been riddled of sin. The world gives them no solace. Gosamer and volatile the world eternity, as they look forward to it, is black as midnight. They writhe under the stings of a conscience which proposes to give no rest here and no rest hereafter and yet they do not repent, they do not pray, they do not weep. They do not realize that just the position occupied by scores, hundreds and thousands of men who never found any hope.
Oh, my brother! without stopping to look as to whether your hand trembles or not, without stopping to look if your hand is bloated with sin or not, put it in my hand, let me give you one warm, brotherly Christian grip and invite you right up to the ceart, to the compassion, to the sympathy, to the pardon of Him on whom the Lord hath laid the iniquity of us all. Throw away your sms. Carry them no longer. I proclaim emancipation this morning to all who are bound—pardon for all sin and eternal life for all the dead.
Some one comes here this morning, and I stand aside. He comes up these steps. He comes to this place. I must stand aside. Taking that place He spreads abroad His hands, and they were nailed. You see His feet—they were bruised. He pulls aside the robe and shows vou His wounded heart. I say, "Art thou weary?" "Yes." he says, "weary with the World's woe." I say, "Whfencp comest thou?" He saysj
'1 come from Calvary." I say VWho Gomes with thee?"- He sayW "NO one I h^ye trodden the wine press, alone." I say, "Why corneal thou "here?" He says, "Oh, came here to carry all the sins anc sorrows of the people." And Hi kneels and he siys: "Put on mv shoulders all the sorrows and all the sins." And conscious of my own sins first, I take them out and put them on the shoulders of the Son o! God. I ask, "Canst thou bear more OChrist?" He anwers, ':yea, more," and I gather up the sins of all those who serve at these altars, the oncersof the Church of Jesus Christ—1 gather up all their sins and put then on Christ's shoulders and I say "Canst thou bear any more?" Hi says, "Yea, moie." Then I gather up all the sins of a hundred psopl in this house and put them on thf shoulders of Christ and ask, "Canst thou bear more?" He says, "Yea more." And I gather up all the sin of this assembly and put them on the shoulders of the Son of God anu I ask "Canst thou bear them? "Yea," he says, "more."
But He is' departii g. Clear th way for Him, the Son of God. Open the doo and let him pass out. He i. carrying our sins and bearing then away. We shall never see then again. He throws them down int abysm and you hear the long rever berating echo of their fall. "On him the Lord hath laid the iniquity of us all." Will you let Him tak away your sins now? or do you say "I will take charge of them myself I will fight my own battles, I wil risk eternity on my own account.' A clergyman said in his pulpit on: Sabbath: "Before next Saturday night one of this audience will pas? out of life." A gentleman said another seated next to him: "I dorf I believe it I mean to watch, and if it doesn't come true by next Saturday night I shall tell that clergyman his falsehood." The man seated next to him said: "Perhaps it will yourself." "Oh, no," the other re plied, "I shall live to bean old man." That night he breathed his last.
To-day the Savior calls. All may come. God never pushes a man off. God never destroys any body. The man jumps off. It is suicide—soul suide—if tho man perishes, for the invitation is, "Whosoever will, let him come." Whosoever, whosoever, whosoever! In this day of merciful visitation, while many are coming into the kingdom of God, join the procession heavenward.
Seated among us during a service was a man who came in and said: "I don't know that there is any God." That was on Friday night. I said.
We will kneel down and find out whether there is any God." And in the second seat from the pulpit wo knelt. He said: "I have found Him. There is a God, a pardoning God. I feel Him here."
He knelt in the darkness of sin. He arose two minutes afterward in the liberty of the Gospel, while another, sitting under the gallery on Kpday night, said: "My opportunity is gone. Last week I might have been saved,but now the door is shut." And another from the very midst of the meeting duiing the week rushed out of the front door of the Tabernacle, saying: "I am a lost man." "Behold! the Lamb of God who taketh away the sin of the world." "Now is the accepted time. Now is the day of salvation." "It is appointed unto all men once to die, and after that—the judgment!"
SCIENTIFIC SPLINTERS.
Aluminum at $1.25 per pound is the market. A boiler alarm that keeps automatic watch at all valves is anew invention.
One of the most admirable uses to which rubber has been put is for horseshoes
By the Whetstone automatic system six hundred words are telegraphed a minute,
A white clay from the Carolinas, worked and colored to suit, is used in printing wall paper.
A method for soldering tin cans by electricity has been devised and bids fair to be generally used.
In Scotland many small vessels are now propelled by water jets, and some of the Clyde steam ferry boat, are thus driven.
A belt for a Louisiana electriclight plant takes the skins of 435 an imals and will cost $10,000. It wil. be six feet wide and 117 feet long.
Seaweed is now made into a tou^l paper, which takes the place of win dow glass. When colored the effect similar to stained or painted glass.
The life of a locomotive crank pin which is almost the first thing aboui an engine to wear out, is 60,000 mile and the life of a 33-inch wheel is 6G, 733 miles.
An electrician who has made specialty of spectacular electricity says the day is not far off when elec trical fireworks will supersede thosi now used.
The newest boiler represents 8 large heating surface and takes uj little rpom. It is made of tubes Things seem to run to tubes and tubercles these times.
Chicago has underground and successfully working 404 miles of electric light cables, 650 miles of telegraph wires and 6,080 miles of telephone wires and cables.
One of the latest proposed applica tions of electricity is a policeman's club that contains a galvanic battery. When the rowdy seizes the club, thinking to wrest, it from the policeman, the rowdy receives an electric shock which astonishes and pikralyzes him, rendering his capture easy.
How often thia aadairaUar eipreantoni are hear* from tired, overworked women, and weary, anxiona men, who do not know where to find relief For that tntenae wearineae au common and ao discouraging earnestly recommend Hood'aSaraapii ritla. It ia not a stimulant, but a true tonic, gradually building up all the weak organs in such a way as to be of last!rat benefit._A. fair trial?wHlc»n»mce you of its merit*.
N. B. Be sure to get
Hood's Sarsaparllla
Sold by all druggints, II six for 15. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Maw. IOO DOSES ONE DOLLAR.
Tiook Here, John Bull. Now look here, Johnny Bull, If you're mindful of your woal. Just keep in mind this thing,
Don't monkey with our seal. —Buffalo Express.
A Foreign Invasion.
Terrible winters throughout Europe brought forth bitter fruits that ripened in America. '•La Grippe" with varying violence broke forth here, and the mortality lists show its shocking ravages in aggravated cases. An alcoholic principle embodied as a medicated stimulant in the form ef Hostetter's Stomach Bitters .s and will ever prove the best specific. Leading continental and American physicians declare that a medicine with a spirituous basi3, such as this, affonte the surest guaranty against the tremendous inroads of this shocking malady. When we consider that a slight change of weather is apt to renew it, that it attacks thosa easily vulnerable organsy the lungs, that its progress is tremendously:swiftand aestructiv-, we must admit the necessity of repelling it at the outset with a sure preventive. Hoatettcr'., Stomach bitters is also a safeguard against malaria, dyspepsia, rheumatism, Uver and kiuney complaints.
Perhaps the reason why so many bai keepers are baldheaded is that they art such authorities on tights.
F. .7. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O., proprietors of Hall's Catarrh Cure, offer $10 reward for any case of catarrh that cauno1 be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. .Send for testimonials, free. Sold by druggists, 75c.
Almosteverybody in this unselfish work1 tak- a keen interest in having his neighbors keep their back yards clean.
How a Tourist Makes money, Drab Readeks:—-While visiting place
of interest, I spend my leisure time platinj tableware and jewelry and selling plater? 1 make from $5 to Si5 per day. The work is done so nicely that every person wants it. I paid &! for ray plater to H. IC Delno & Co., Columbus, O. Why not havo a good time ir'd money in your pocket, when for S5 vou can start a business of your own. Write above ttrm for circulars.
A Toubist.
The reason it is so hard to speak of a musical composer's work as a whole is because it is generally in pieces.
Cheap Rates to Minneapolis.
The Pennsylvania Lines, in connection with the C.j B. & Q., have been selected oy the Indiana State Committee of the Young Peoples' Society of Christian Enlea vor as the official route to Minneapolis, Minn., for the Tenth International Con/ention to be held there July 9th to 12th Tickets will be on sale July 6th to 8th ndusive, good returning uutil the 15th it one first-class limited fare for the round rip.
For the benefit of those not desiring to return prior to this date, the terminal ines at Minneapolis will arrange for the ieposit of tickets for safe keeping until uch time as the holders may wish to com* nence the return journey, such date, however, to be not later than August 36th.
Tho Indianapolis delegation will leave it. 11 0i a. m., July 8th, and all delegates who possibly can are requested to come to Indianapolis and go with them, as ample tccommodations will be provided for all For further information in relation to •ates and train service apply to any ticket igent Pennsylvania Lines, or address W. •P. Bruner, Dist. Passenger Agent, or G, j. Rockwell, Local Passenger Agent.
Rev. Phillips Brooks's election to a bish ipric is a fine illustration of the natural aw that brooks ultimately Gnd tLeir way »the sec.
Fourth of Jul}' Excursions Via Che Penn sylvania Liues.
The rate from any ticket station to any ther station on the Pennsylvania Lines jvithin two hundred miles thereof will be ne fare for the round trip .July 3d and l:h, good to return until July 6th. No ex:ursion tickets to adults for less than •jwemy-five nor to children for less than jfteen cents.
The reason why so many men are not married long is because they are married 'short PITM.-AI1 Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Oreat Nerve Beotorer. No Fits after tirstdays use. Marvel Iuuhcurns. Treatise end #2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Ir. Kline,W3I Arch St., Phila.,Pa
Gushley—As they roamed over the uall room her liquid eyes met mine. Sympathetic Friend—And asked 'em io take a drink, I suppose,
Bekciiam's Pills cures Siek READ ache, Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Fiso'a ttemedy for Catarrh. By druggists 50c.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried tor Castoria, Wh«n she became Miss, she clung to Castorte When she hod Children, she gave them Costofio.
ADVICE TO THE ACED.
Age brings inflrniltlea, Mich i« sluggiah bowels. kidneys and torpid liver.
futi's ftiis
have a specific effect on these organs, stimulating the bowels, gives natural disrhargea, anil imparts vigor to the whole
Anew *eUw.t oow0onadJn«T»r
SURt CURE for PILESi SALT RHEUM
Indiana l«rw«is*s supplied by D. Stewart and A. S7-U1 IN
KeiferA l».. ludleaapolia. 180,8
Ortdln^sUead It has nocquaL
I have been a great
Asthma. sufferer from Asthma and severe Colds every Winter, and last Fall my friends as well as .myself thought because of my feeble condition, and great distress from constant coughing, and inability to raise any of the accumulated matter from my lungs, that my time was close at hand. When nearly worn out for waiit of sleep and rest, a friend recommended me to try thy valuable medicine,
Boschee's German
Gentle, Syrup. I am con-
DafvnoklrMV
fideIlt SaVe1
Refreshing jjfe Almost the first Sleep. dose gave me great relief and a gentle fefreshing sleep., such as I had not had for weeks. My cough began immedi* ately to loosen and pass away, and I found myself rapidly gaining in health and weight. I am pleased to inform thee—unsolicited—that I am in excellent health and do certainly attribute it to thy Boschee's German Syrup. C. B. Sticknhy, Picton, Ontario." 7
WHEN
You feel "all run down" and lite Becomes at urden, and you can hardly Drag yourself around, you feel that You would give half you possess If You co-ild only feel well again, take
White's Dandelion,
And see what a lift it will give you. It purifies the blood, and tones up The system as nothing else will. Your druggist sells
Bit.<p></p>ASELINE-
FOR A OXK-DOLf. All BILL sent us by mall
we will deliver, free of all charges, to any person io the United States, all ef tlie following articles.esse* fully pecked. One twe-ouace bottle ot Pnre Vaseline, 10 Ots One twe-onnce bottle of Vaseline fumade, IS Ooe jar of Vaseline Cold ('roam. IS Oue Cake of Vaseline Camphor Ice, IS One Cake of Vaseliae3oap, unsreaied, 10 One Cake of VaeeHae SoaB.extiUwtelyscsated.Jt One two-eanee botUe of White Vaaaliae, --a
rPU.H.SHUtTzS
•1.1*
(ft forBoatagestanpa a*r slatle article at tkeprteee •ameif. On no account he nereuaded le aeeepifroos reur drnuist any Vaseline or preparation therefresa en lees la Del ted with our nanie.liettiisa yon will eer* talaly aeeeive an imitation which has little or ne value. Cheesbrengh Mfg. Co.. Stale St. N. f.
I CURE RUPTURE
DR. HOME'S ELECTRIC TRUSSES
Bafe Cured
10.OOP
Bnpturw In .15 Tear*.
"I suffered with a doable r'uptnre 9 y?w* Hforr ITleo ale Tnisti cured me In 3Yz months. J.O. Pim.voT." Sept 24. '90. Chattanooga. Tena, "Tonr El»ctMe Trass cured my rapture after snffertnt years. Mes. a. Douqhtt." Abaecon. m. J. Oct 8. DA •T am cured sound and 'i by wearing your Elertrl* Truss. R. Haktbt." Davis City. Iowa. Aug. 1?, 'CO. Tl« anly »nn*ne Elrefrle Trww and Belt Oonblne4 lathrworld. IA-peceIllustrated kMhwatfteamM
Or. HQBNT, lUVEHT-n.180 WABASH AVE.. CHICAGO*
A\
WILL CORE^^
CWWlDip31
FnfC^E^^WHOOPiiio COUGH. BRONCHITIS. /%HTAPPU
1(412
FOU«T» ST.
vftl AH ii'JLLoeAMsrow.
Ind.
CORLtTTE
burnt ic ting
yuut hair up
on
•'orimpa" or using I'i'r'jng Iron#.
WW dampen it with Curette, and it witt retain that riu.fy anee 3 to ft
a*/*.
toilet. Price 50c. per bottle, at
CATARRH
L* poaiUveJy
chair and scalp. An eiceUeet hair
tonic, leading society and Theatrical I.ndlea record
Cnrlette
a» India p^nni
Me W tfie
HforeB
malt. Agents wanted, address
ana by
Dire. Jennie Mark ley, Uigaoaport, Ina.
I E S
r\00T BEE T\ u" THE GREAT "HEALTH r\ Pi ft.
ipirfctiBS Book tnaJ
IDd
UftMNBdiDi U«!r addeti* t© Tkt C. K. HlBiS Wi
"WOMAN HER DISEASES^ AN!) lit IK TKEATJlWT." A Vinub'fl uUi» rated book of s«veoty-two rr1® eceiotof I0i*uw to cover coat of of nsuUltag tc. Addrens, P. O. Hoi 106d, Phiti*,
Dr. SnyJw'i fflditojr Balaam cures Enortiil
...w -T iBEDwmmc.) .for circulars ana testimonials address, with stamp* Dr. O. W. P. Sktpkb,Movickert Theatre,
Chicaso.EH.
pt~For sale by all Druggists. Price $1.00. throat and IJLUNQ DIS6ASB9
quickly and permanently cared by the novr ANTlSBPTIO HOME TKEATMEST thousands of .TTnSS Oiirea. For fr»e book address wit.li16rt«.1HR NATlira* AL ANTISKPTIO CO., 1*6 STATE
I
roton
and reliable •Washington,D.C
ST. CHICAGO. ILl* sire the oldest,
OUIS BAGGER & CO.
PATENT SOLICITORS
Illustrated Hand Dood Free. «1 It. Cralle Ac Co.. Washingtw. D. C. Please mention this piper every time you write.
Pnjfazojvs.—DaeA
disabled. t2
t» to an nintmpnt of which a anuill particle Is applied to the "S? drufflffl^n. Pa.
nil SOlDIMil
let
lor increase. J8y«ara ex
perience. WrTta for J.awe. A.W.McCossirt A SONS. WMHINQTON P. C. biMciNNATI. O.
IJ
DIAMOND BHANO
