Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 26 May 1892 — Page 3
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A CHILDLESS HOME.
Smith and his wife have every luxury that money can buy, but there is one thins lacking1 to their happiness. Both ore fond of children, but no little voices prattle, no little feet patter in their bcautiftil home. "I would give ten •ears of my life if I could have one healthy, living, child of my own," Smith often says to himself. No woman can be the mother of healthy offspring unless she herself is in good health. If she sutlers from female weakness, general debility, bearing-down pains and functional "derangements, her physical condition is such that she cannot hope to have healthy, children. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a soverign and guaranteed, remedy for all these ailments.
Worn-out, "run-down," feeble women, need Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It builds them up. It's a powerful, restorative tonic, or strength-giver—free from alcohol and injurious drugs. The entire system is renewed and invigorated. It improves digestion, enriches the blood, dispels aches and pains, gives refreshing sleep, and restores flesh and strength.
It's the only guaranteed medicine for Women, sold by druggists. DRKI LMER'S
Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure
Rheumatism,
1Disordered
gravel, ulceration or catarrh of blatHer.
Liver*
Impaired digestion, gout, billious-headaotaeu BwAIVP'BOOT cures kidney difficulties. La Grippe,
urinary trouble, brlght's disease.
Impure Blood,
Scrofula, malaria, gen'l weakness or debility. Caarantee—Use content! of On# Bottle, If not ben•flted, Drugtfsts will refund to you the price paid.
At Ilrnsgltt*,
50c.
Size,
$1.00
Six#.
"Inralldi' Guide to HesltVfree—Consultation trea
DR.
GTT.M»N tt
Co.. BIKOHJUITOM.N.
Scott's Emulsion of codliver oil is an easy food—it is more than food, if you please but it is a food—to bring back plumpness to those who have lost it.
Do you know what it is to be plump Thinness is poverty, living from hand to mouth. To be plump is to have a little more than enough, a reserve.
Do you want a reserve of health? Let us send you a book on CAREFUL LIVING free.
SCOTT &
BOWNB.Chemists,
13a South 5th Avenue,
Kftr York. Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver
08—all
druggists every where do. $1.
34
Kennedy's
Medical Discover)
Takes hold in this order: Bowels,
Liver,
Kidneys, Inside Skin, Outside Skin, Driving everything before It that ought to bo out. You know whether you need it or not. gold by every druggist, and manufactured by
DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS.
lfADinnPCI
•EST
JOHN W. MORRIS Washington, D. C.
Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner U.S.PensionBureau.e
•-%11' 8 yrs In last war, 15 adjudicating claims attysinc
Sur* Cure-
1
wiU
send the
VAnlbUbCLC recipe that cured me FREE to my one. I«. S. FRANKLIN, Music Dealer, Masball. Mich.
POLISH IN THE WORLD
SroV£Pot,uSh DO HOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, ana Faints which a tain the hands, Injure the iron, and burn off. The Rising Bun Stove Polish is Brilllast, Odorless* Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with 0T«7purchase. HAS wuu.au Of3.000TUB.
NEWS SUMMARY.
A destructive cyclone passed over St. Louis Wednesday. American pork is now admitted to all the countries of the world.
Catarina Garza, the Mexican outlaw, is said to be in Key West, Fla. Sixteen negroes were drowned at Hensley Island, Ark., on the 19th.
The tunnel on the Savannah and Western branch of the Georgia Central railroad is on fire.
Youngstown, 0., has a street car tie-up. The men ask an increase of twenty-live cents a day.
Wm. Vanderbilt, eldest son of Cornelius Vanderbilt, died at the homeof.his father, in New York, Monday night.
Fully fifty car loads of flour and other supplies will soon be shipped from South Dakota to the famine-stricken districts of Russia.
A San Francisco stevedore committed suicide, Sunday, by plunging into the furnace of a steam tug and roasting himself to death.
There was a perfect blizzard of snow throughout Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa on the 21st. At one point sleighs were used.
Rev. Dewitt Talmage will leave for England June 15, and will engage in a preaching tour through England, Scotland and Ireland.
The Missouri river, at Kansas City, raised rapidly on the 20th, and caused the waves to break over its banks into Armour's packing house.
Governor Miller has telegraphed President Harrison asking necessary aid to prevent anticipated trouble from the striking miners at Boise City, Idaho.
The high waters continue to surge in and around St. Louis, and conservative estimates place tho loss, within a radius of twenty miles, at $10,000,000.
Hop Sing, the Chinese leper, whom the New York health board dragged from his laundry, last July, and shipped to the Pacific coast, is back in New York again.
A London dispatch states that O'Brien has escaped from his French captors. The New York authorities have received no tidings of an arrest. The reward is $3,000.
Edward Parker Deacon, the ex-banker of Boston.who recently slew the paramour of his wife in a hotel at Nice, Italy, was sentenced on the21st to one year in prison.
The aqueduct commissioners of New York city will spend $8,000,030 in the construction of the largest dam in the world, to form a huge reservoir of water for the city.
A Salt Lake, Utah, citizen, has donated land near that city valued at $500,000, 041 which to locate a Presbyterian college. The General Conference has accepted the gift.
Crop bulletins from the various States in the Mississippi yalley report a practical loss of most crops planted by reason of the excessive rains and the destructive floods.
Director General Davis, of the World's Fair, states that if the Fair is opened on Sundays no machinery will be run, bu4 only the parks and art galleries thrown open.
The letter recently published purporting to have been written by Gen. Grant, denouncing the second term for the Presidency, is declared by Gen Grant's family to be a forgery.
At Sioux City, on the 20th, much apprehension was felt over tho report that a great flood was sweeping down the Sioux valley within two hours' distance of that much damaged city.
A terrible wreck occurred on the Cotton Belt railway, near Galdman, Arlc., Saturday. Nine persons were almost instantly killed and eighteen wounded. The wreck was caused by high water.
Cambridgeport, Mass., is excited by the assaults of an unknown man, supposed to be a Frenchman and an escaped lunatic, who has stabbed three women and assaulted a half-dozen more in the past week.
Andrew C. Anderson, the Swedish engineer who saved twenty-seven persons from the Sioux City flood, and was drowned while trying to rescue a woman was buried Sunday. The citizens will, by subscription, set up a fitting monument in his honor.
The only man who ever contracted leprosy in this country has been before the Eclectic Medical society at Springfield. His name is John Moe, a Swedish cabinet maker, thirty-one years of age, and he has been in America ten years. He contracted the disease shortly after he came here.
Capt. William A. Andrews Intends to cross the ocean in the smallest craftcthat has been built for a trans-Atlantic voyage—fourteen and a half feet in length, five feet beam, and will carry not more than fifteen square yards of sail. The new boat is named the "Flying Dutchman," and is six inches shorter than the Nautilaa. In which Captain Andrews made the voyage in 1878,
Two tramps walking along the Big Four track two miles east of Dayton, O., Sunday morning, discovered a brooken rail. One of the tramps hurried east the other west to signal trains. A west-bound limited express was signaled and a calamity averted. Passengers, realizing the escape, raised a purse of $100 for the tramps, and tho Big Four officials telegraphed to give the tramps a free ride to Cincinnati, where it Is expected they will be still farther rewarded.
A singular accident is reported from the village of Clifton, Wis. Isaac Myers was building a wire fence, using a horse to stretch the wire. Tommy Burke, a boy about twelve, was a looker-on. The horse ran away breaking the wire, which flew around the boy with such force that it entirely severed his arms. One barb cut the jugular vein of the neck. The boy started home and walked about six rods when he fell, and in ten minutes was dead.
In July, 1888, the bunco artist, John Price, now serving a nineteen year sentence at Dannemora, slipped up behind P. K. Dedrick just as he left his carriage, in front of the Farmers' and Mechanics' Bank, at Albany N. Y., and extracted from the seat a package containing $35,000
#1E
negotiable bonds. A few days ago the bond? were received by ex-District Attorney Hugh Rellly. The package was Intact
and the accumulated interest makes them worth about (41,000. There is no clue from whence they came, except that they were sent from New York city. The mystery lies in the fact that they were returned at all, as they were negotiable.
An important experiment of carrying a message from Chicago to New York by bicycle relays was completed Sunday morning at 1:05 o'clock. To demonstrate the practicability of the use of the bicycle for military purposes a message was carried from Gen. Miles in Chicago to Gen. C. O. Howard in New York, There were two bicyclists in each relay, and each relay covered from twenty-five to fifty miles. The route was carefully timed so that it would require four days to perform the feat, Instead of succeeding, however, the message reached New York thirteen hours late. This was entirely due to bad roads. The mud was almost impassable, and in many instances the riders were compelled to walk, and in more than one case to abandont heir wheels. Had the roads been in good condition the last rider wonld have reached his destination ahead of time.
The thickest piece of armor ever manufactured in tliis country was successfully tested at the Indiana Head proving grounds Sunday. It was one of the ten 14-inch nickel steel plates for the Indiana, being the first of the battle ship armor plates completed by the Bethlehem iron-/ works. Tho result of the test shows conclusively the ability of American armormakers to suppiy armor plate of the higher character. None of the three shots fired succeeded in getting far enough into the plate to show at the back. Three shots were fired near the middle region of the plate, the three points of impact forming an equilateral triangle. All three shots rebounded, one of them back to the muzzle of the gun, a distance of 135 feet. Tho deepest penetrations of any of tho projectiles was fourteen inches. A 10-inch gun was used in the test.
The Columbus, O., Evening Dispatch is in possession of a letter written by Gen, Grant to Senator Conkling, a few days prior to the Republican convention in 1830. The letter is an argument not only against a third term, but a second as well, and shows that the General's silence on that question previous to that convention was against his belief and better judgment. In it, among other things,he says: "There have been exigencies that warranted a second term, but I do not believe that the best interests of the country's good ever demand a third term, or ever will. I had my doubts, even, as to the advisability of a second term, and you know that I have so expressed myself to you in our confi-1 dential talks. This 13 a big country, ful' of brainy and ambitious men, who can serve tho country eminently well as its I President, and I sincerely question tho policy of thwarting their noble ambition. I am still of the opinion that I should speak to the country, that I should break the silence in a letter declining emphatically to accept a nomination for a third term."
POLITICAL.
It Is not believed Kansas Democrats and People's party will fuse. '.v The Alliance men of Jasper county have nominated an independent ticket.
John C. New arrived at New York on Saturday. He says that Harrison will be renominated.
Nebraska Republicans on the 27th, elected a solid Harrison delegation to the National Convention.
Hon. John B. Cheadle has withdrawn from the Congressional contest in the Eighth district, and the nomination of Waugh is believed to be assured
Congressman Bynum has been brought out as a Vice Presidential quantity and should Cleveland be nominated is regarded as a winner for the nomination.
The enrollment of anti-Hill Democratic voters in New York city shows 75,060 names. This is 400 more than a majority of the votes cast for Governor Flower last November.
Chauncey M. Depew declares the socalled Grant letter an infamous forgery, printed for the sole purpose of injuring Harrison's chances. George C. Gorham also declares it to be a forgery.
It is now claimed that the Republican politicians who are pretending to desire Blaine's nomination really desire Alger. The leaders of the movement have not been recognized heretofore as Blaine supporters. Of course their real object is to defeat Harrison's renominatien.
The result of the conventions in Georgia and Virginia have led Mr. Cleveland's knowing friends to claim his nomination on the second ballot. The conventions already held gives Cleveland 415 votes, and uninstructed or anti-Cleveland 185 voces. It is claimed that Cleveland will go into the convention lacking only 9 votes to insure his nomination on the first ballot.
Col, W. R. Morrison's supporters are said to control the Illinois delegation to Chicago, and on the third ballot, unless Cleveland is nominated on the first or second ballot, will launch his name before the convention with the full vote of the State. The delegation is instructed to vote as a unit, and under this rule one candidate will control all the votes. Help is at once expected from the Southern States.
Sunday's New York World, in double leads, gives special prominence to this announcement, which it declares Is •'official" and can be relied upon: "The leaders ol the anti-Harrison movement have adopted a plan of aotion. Neither Mr. Piatt nor Mr. Clarkson succeeded in getting definite acquiescence or refusal from Mr. Blaine be simply declined to discuss the subject. The leaders, therefore, have decided to press his nomination. They will not consider his recent letter or anything he may say or write between now and June as a positive refusal to accept the nomination. They will sparo no effort to nominate him as soon as possible after the convention meets then, if they succeed, they will adjourn the convention for one day before naming a candidate for Vice President. They firmly belleye that Mr. Blaine will deem it his duty to accept. If not, no harm will have been done. That, In a nutshell, is the plan agreed upon. The biggest and coldest member of the combination says it will be adhered to regardless of anything Mr. Blaine or anybody else may My or do. This Is official/'
Y^'\ ''TY%^J
When Traveling,
Whether oil pleasure bent, or business, take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectively on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale in 50 cents and $1 bottles by all leading druggists.
The Man Who Tramps. Lonely Walker—"I'd like to have my life insured."
Agent—"Well, there's the tontine ten-year plan, mutual benefit, oldline life and
Lonely Walker—"Well, isn't there a plan by which I could get 15 cents to-day in advance—on account?—Exchange.
Wandering William—"'Scuse my presumption, ma'am, in arskin' you ef you have any of your home-made bread I've heard so much about?"
Mrs. Tiddlewink—"You dear man! of course I have, and coffee and meat and cake, too. Come right in."— Judge.
Dusty Rhodes—"I met Tural Loo up 59th street way to-day and he, wouldn't speak to me."
Fitz William—"That's it. Agent no sooner gets up in the world and sleeps in the park than he cut3 his fren's. 'Tain't long since he was eaten' snowballs in the Battery."— New York Herald.
Seeking a Remedy.
Mrs. Pinkerly—I hear, Major Kingbean, that you area great sufferer from indigestion.
Major Kingbean—I am, madam. Mrs. Pinkerley—Are you doing anything for it?
Major Kingbean—I am, madam, I am suing for a divorce.
There ia nothing in the world such good use should be made of as one's time, and yet It's doubtful if a young man thinks of this as he puts his watch in hock.
The trouble with the sober second thought is that it so often has the bust head as a result of the first thought's actions.
First a cold then bronchitis. Check the first with
HALE'S HONEYOFHOREHOUNDAND TAR. Fiks's Toothache Drops cure in one minute. The pelican is one of the few animals that is justified in biting off more than he can chew.
Sick headache, chills, loss of appetite, and all nervous trembling sensations quickly cured by Beecham's Pills, 25 cents a box.
The trouble with April has been an attack of spring-halt. to Chicago, ... Via the Pennsylvania Line from Tndianapolis
nAiiicre —760
latest improvements and conveniences, such as Steel Wheels with Bubber Tires, Crank Propellers, Extenlion Leg Bests, Detachable Handle Bars for Pushing, Writing Desk, Canopy Shades, &c.
We are also manufacturers of Bicycles, Baby Coaches, Refrigerators, Office Desks, &c., and are offering liberal discounts to the trade. Name goods desired and Catalogue will be sent. liUBUBG MANUFACTURING CO., 881, 383, 825 North 8tb St.,
MANY LIKE THESE.
time no relief from other remedies. About 8 years ago I bought St. Jacobs Oil and made about 14 applications have been well and strong ever since. Have done all kinds of work and can lift as much as ever. No return of |?ain in^ears.
DolPhin
BRULSESI
st
E W I S 9 8 E Powderedand Perfumed (PATENTED)
The strongest and purest Lye matin. Unlike other Lye, it being a fine powder and packed in a can with removable lia, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 80 minutes without boiling. It is the best for cleaning waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc.
PENNA, SALT M'F'G CO. Gen. Agts., Phila., Fa.
8ix
Send for Free Sample of I Garfield Tea to West 46th Street, New York City.
GARFIELD TEA 2
Blcjsle Catategae .™—. -j.
Write,«re»n«. HU
)Y-Y,^W"'*
Waves Mountain High—
Or somewhat less—threaten, during a storm, to enguU the venturous voyager on the tempestuous Atlantic. Sometimes he Is torn with deep despair at such a juncture, sometimes he is rather £lad of it. The latter condition of mind obtains when he is sea sick. The diabolical qualms which he has undergone, and which are aggravated ten fold by the pitching of the ship, render him in a measure indifferent to his fate. This picture is scarcely exaggerated. as people who have been violently seasick will assure you. Travelers and tourists by sea and land should always be provided with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters as a means of counteracting sea sickness and the nervous disturbance or stomachic trouble begotten of uncomfortable transit by land or water, or unwholesome food hastily swallowed at railway stations. Emigrants should supply themselves with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters as a family safeguard against malaria, stomach, liver and bowel complaints, kidney trouble and rheumatism.
Experience has black eyes and is a very ame cripple. Tor some time I had been troubled with Tire Complaint exhibited all the common symp. toms, biliousness, headache, poor digestionfurred and coated tongue, bad taste in mouth etc. Swamp-Root cured me. Am having great sale on your remedies, J. McCullough. the Druggist. Lawrenceburgh, Ind.
A fellow can't get a pull unless he has some push about him. I.
R. BRANHAM,
Balto-. Md-»
editor Christian Index,
Atlanta, Ga., writes: "I have used Bradycrotiue with unfailing, prompt, decided relief for headache." Of all Druggists. 50 cts.
It isn't much trouble for a man to make his mark in politics—the trouble is iu removing it.
FITS—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first days use. Marvellous cures. Treatise and 82.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch jjt., Philadelphia, Pa.
I Had Goitre
Or swellings in the neck since I was 10 years old am now 53, I used Hood's S a a pa a and the swelling has entirely disappeared. It has been very troublesome. When I began I was feeling so. discouraged with the goitre and rheumatism I felt that I would as soon be dead as alive. Whenever I
Mrs. Sutherland.
caug
HOOD'S PILLS
ht cold I could not
walk two blocks without fainting. Now I am free from it all and I can truly recommend
Hood's Sarsaparilla MRS. ANNA SUTHERLAND,
Kalamazoo. Mich.
are the best after-dinner
Pills assist digestion, cure headache.
•Tutt'sTiny Pills
A The dyspeptic, tlie debilitated, wlieth- A er from excess of work of mind or body or exposure in malarial regions, will find Tutt's Pills the most genlalf®? restorative ever offered tlie invalid.
MCIDAI oiA Bethany, Mo., Aug. 4, 1888: liEiUnAbVIAi "Suffered for years with neuralgia, but was finally cured by St. Jacobs Oil."
T. B. SHERER.
Constantine, Mich., Feb. IS, 1887: "Was troubled 30 years with pains in the back from strain in bed for weeks at a
Jan 18 1890: 141 fel1 down
the back stairs of my residence in the darkness, and was
bruised badly in my hip and side suffered severely, St. Jacobs Oil completely cured me." WM. C.
siny
have visited oar salesrooms, that we have provided for the comfort of invalids more than for those in good health, which is probably the case, as we have studied the wants of those who have been unfortunate for many years. In oar catalogue, we describe and illustrate a very large assortment of Invalid Soiling Chairs with the
HARDEN,
Member of State Legislature.
S40,000,000
Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in 1S91. Your invention may be valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and intelligent advice, free of charge,
W. W. DUDLEY & CO., Solicitors of Patents,
Pacific Bld'g.523F St. N.W., Washington,D.C. Mention this paper.
O N A O E S
And Cyolones will como, and the only safe way is to have a polioy In the
IX
PHILADELPHIA*
Northern Pacific R. R.
rer.
met
results «h*|
ofbsd ntiai car«i Sick Hndai rMtorMC*mplMlon cmreaConatlpat!on« fiigton, n.
v. .'
I
of Brookly, which has "Agents everywhere. J. IKYING RIDDLE, State Agent, Terre Haute, Ind.
Established 1850.
NATURE'S SUMMER REMEDIES, "The Lord Created medicines out of the earth And hs that ii wise will not abhor them,"
Dr: O: P: Brown's BLOOD PURIFIER
fREE
HEKKT THOMMON,
the
most noted physician of England, says that more than half of all diseases come from errors in diet
Si
LIVER INVIGORATOR Old Reliable Remedies Standard as flour in all markets. 1 composed of best blood herbs. $1. 2 of herbs which act on the liver and bowels. Cures biliousness,LiverComplaint Jaundice. $1. Druggists, or 74 Grand St., Jersey City, N. J.
lUumratedJfubiioauoii*, win, MAPS, describing Minnesota. North Dakota, Moutana. Jdalio, Washington and Urezon, tbe Free Government and CHEAP
Best Agricultural, Grazing au5 Timber Lauds now open to settlers. Mailed FKEK. Address CKIS B. lAMBOtt. Land Com. N.P.K.B., ttt. .Paul, Minn.
PATENTS! PENSIONS!
Send for Inventor's Guide or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Laws. PATRICK O'FARRELL, Wash-
LflVELL DIAMOND CYCLES
For Ladles and Cents. Six stylo In PnsumatleOushlon and Solid Tires. Dbmond Frame, Steel Drop Forgings, Steel
Tubing, Adjustable Ball Bearings to all running parts, including Pedals, Suspension Saddle. Strictly HIGH QUADS
in
KRERY
JOHN P. LOV1LL ARMS CO., Mfra.,147 Wwhlngtcn St,BOSTON, MASS-
Pwtieulan,
Send 6 cants ia stanps fer oar 100-aagt illaitratsd cat*. legas of Bans, Blfles, Beroh^n, Sporting fteods, eto.
Will find it to their advantage to
BOY THEIR CIGARS
From a House Engaged Exclusively in the Business.
CROSS dt CO.,
Sole Agents for che ADEUNA PATTi AND THE QRAND
The Finest 10-oent Cigars on the Market
I
,4 j-
"German Syrup"
My acquaintance with Boschee's German 3y rup was made about fourteen years ago. I contracted a cold which resulted in a hoarseness and cough which disabled tne from filling ray pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After trying a physician, without obtaining relief I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. I received quick and permanent help. I never hesitate to tell my experience. Rev. W. H. Haggerty, Martinsville, N.J.
It CnresColds.Ccrashs.Sore Throat,Cronj,In4ne«» aa, Whooping Cough,Bronchitis aud Asthma,
A MT»
lain cure for Consumption to firit 1U|H, and a iisr* nils! Is advanced stages* u*e at •no*. You 'will see tho excellent effeot after taking the first dose. Bell bj dealer} (Ttrjwhare. Large battles, SO ceats and I1.MI
111
world for all naliss arising a
SYLVAN REMEDY CO.
PEORIA, ILL.
A LIMITED NUMBER OF OUR
HIGH GRADE "PLANET"
Safeties will tie sold at
S E I A I S O O I for tho purpose of broadly advertising and introducing a Superior Wheel. Only One Wheel goes to any one person or place, and the first person to apply from any city, town or hamlet where we have no local agent, secures this valuable offer. "RIGHT QUICK."
Agents Wanted.
STANDARD MFG.
ODBURYJS
v#
I
"'j
CO.,
B—243 VIRGINIA
AVENUE,
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
DYEING
CLEANING
—AITD—
Men's clothes cleaned dyed and repaired.
terial or color.
/'(J
La
dies' dresses, shawls, jackets, cloaks,etc.,beau* tifully colored or cleaned. A specialty of oleaning fine expensive garments by the French Dry Process, will not injurs the most delicate
ma
CAPITOL DYE WORKS. 26
and
28
North Mississippi St.
INDIANAPOLIS, IND. £®~Send for circular and prices.
A Sample Cake of Soap id US pfcge Book on Dermatology and Jtaantr- Illustrated. On Skin, Scalp.
Nervous and Blood Diseases. Sent sealed for 10c. also Disfigurements like Birtb Marks, Molos, Warts, India Ink and Powder marks, Scars Pittings,Redness of Kos* Superfluous Hair, rimple«, etc. JOHN M. SWOODBlIRTj
nD
Dermatologist, Itf
0R
West 42d street, X. T. City. Consultation free, at office or by letter.
BORE
WELLS
ih
oar
TH oHur WELL DRILL
famous Well
wftb oar fiamo Macl fiut-dropping tools L00MIS NYHAN, flVFIN. OHIO.
ins tools (Bass.
I"i
FAT FOLKS REDUCER
I
N
22—92
INDPLS
PISO'G CURT F"0TR Consumptives afod people who have weak lungs or Asth* ma, should use Piso's Cure for Consumption. It has esired thousands. It has nstinjur-
ItIs
one. It is not bad to lake, the best eongh syrup. Bold svsnrwhers. Me.
N I
I
