Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 May 1895 — Page 2
The Only One To Stand the Test.
BONAPARTE AT LOPL
Rev. William Copp, whose father was a physician for over fifty years, in New Jersey and who himself spent many years preparing for the practice of medicine, but subsequently entered the ministry of the il. E. Church, writes: “1 am glad to testify that I have had analyzed all the sarsaparilla preparations known in the trade, but
AYERS
• is the only one of them that I could recommend as a blood-puritier. I have
given away hundreds of bottles of it, as I consider it the safest as well as the best to be had.”—Wm. Copp,
1’astor M. E. Church, Jackson, Minn.
AYERS HjjB THE ONLY WORLD'S FAIR m ^Sarsaparilla When in doubt, ask for Ayer’s Pills
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RAIL U'A 1 TIME T.IH/, 1> BIG FOUR.
INo. 14, Night Express
■jd’
2: 50 a m s: 42 a ni i :52 p id 4:35 p m 5:3J p in
2, Ind’pTia Accoiniuodation 8, H. Vv. Limited • “ 8, Mail ^ “ 10, Knickerbucker Speaial....
WEST.
< No. 7, Night Express 12:22 a in c “ 11, Knickerbucker Special 12:58 am • “ 9, Mail 8:42 a m • “ 17, S. W Limited 12:49 pm f “ a. Terre Haute Accomodation, e.33 p m ♦Daily. tDaily except Sunday. Train 14 hauls sleepers St. Louis to Boston and Columbus, sleeper and coaches t<* Cincinnati. No. 2 connects for Chicago, Cincinnati and Michigan division points. No. 18 hauls sleeper for Washington. I). (’.. via C. & O., sleeper for New York and connects for Columbus, O. No. 8 connects for Cincinnati and for Michigan division points to Wabash. No. 10, “Knickerbocker Special,” sleepers tor N Y Nos. 7, 11, 8 and 17 connect in Union Depot, St. Louis, with Western roads. No. 9 connects at Paris with Cairo division for points south and at Mattoon with 1. C. tor points north. Effective Sept. 30. F. P. HUE8TI8, Agt.
VANDALiA LINE.
1c J«n flO. 1K8V
tie. Ii d.,
Trains leave Qreencas-
Mo. 21, Daily..
“ 1, Daily « 7, Daily *• 5, Dally “ 15, Ex. aim..
8, Ex. Bun.,
FOR THE WEST.
...1:35pm, for 8t. Louis.
12:52 p m, .12:26 a m, . 9:01 a m, . 8:40 a m, 5:28 p in,
Terre Haute
Peoria. Decatur.
Traius leave Terre Haute, No. 75, Ex. Sun 7:0f> a m. 1 “ 77, Ex. Sun . 8:66 pm. ‘
FOR TEE EAST.
No 20. Daily DSSpn., tor Indianapolis. •• 8, Daily.—._'2:3n p m, “ •• 6, Daily—^ 8:22 a m, “ 12, Daily 2:35 am, “ •• 16, Ex. Sun.._ 6:28 u ui. “ •* t. Ex. Sun .... 6:26 t m. “ •• 2. Daily R:Kjim. • For complete Time Card, Rivin* all train* and stations, and for full tntormation as to rates, through cars, etc., address J S. DOWLING, Agent,
Ureencastle, Ind.
Or W. F. Brenner, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., 8t. Louis, Mo.
MONQN ROUTE
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oing North —1:20 a m, 12:t6 p m; local, 5 p m __ oing South — 12:17 a m, 2:22 p m; local,
J. A. MICHAEL, Agent.
There Napoleon First Realized His High Destiny.
The Great Victory Put Him in the Forefront of Warriors and Gave dim Ills Nickname, •'Little Corporal A Proud Day for Franco.
llonaparte wrote to the directory that he had expected the passage of the I’o would prove the most hold and difficult maneuver of the campaign. Hut it was no sooner accomplished than he again showed a perfect mastery of his art by so maneuvering as to avoid an engagement while the great river was still immediately in his rear. He was then summoned, writes Prof. Sloane in Century, to meet a third emergency of equal consequence. The Adda is fordable in some places at certain times, hut not easily; and at Lodi a wooden bridge about two huudred yards in length then occupied the site of the present solid structure of masonry and iron. The approaches to this bridge Heaulieu had seized and fortified. Northwestward was Milan; to the east lay the almost impregnable fortress of Mantua. Beaten at Lodi, the Austrians might still retreat and make a stand under the walls of either town with Lome hope of victory; it was Bonaparte's intention to so disorganize his enemy's army that neither would he possible. Accordingly on May 10 the French forces were concentrated for the advance, and marched so swiftly that they overtook the Austrian rear guard before they could withdraw behind the old Gothic walls of the town, and close the gates. Driving them onward the French fought as they marched. A decisive conflict cleared the streets; and after a stubborn resistance the brave defenders retreated over the bridge to the eastern bank of what was now their last rampart—the river. With cool and desperate courage Beaulieu then brought into action the Austrian artillery, and with it he swept the wooden roadway. In a short time the bridge would no doubt have been in flames; and it was uncertain whether the shifting and gravelly bottom of the stream above or below would either yield a ford or permit a crossing by any other means. Under . Bonaparte’s personal supervision, and therefore with miraculous speed, tiie French batteries were placed ami began an answering thunder. In an access of personal zeal, the commander even threw himself for an instant into the whirling hail of shot and shrapnel, in order the better to aim two guns which in the hurry had been misdirected. Under this terrible fire and counterfire it was impossible for the Austrians to apply a torch to any portion of the structure. Behind were three thousand French grenadiers waiting for a signal. Soon the crisis came. A troop of French cavalry had found the nearest ford a few hundred yards above the bridge, and were seen, amid the smoke, turning the rigiit flank of the Austrian infantry, which had been posted a safe distance behind the artillery on the op posite shore. Quick as thought, in the very nick of opportunity, Bonaparte gave the words of command, and the grenadiers dashed for the bridge. Eyewitnesses declared that the fire of the Austrian artillery was now redoubled, while from houses on the opposite side soldiers hitherto concealed poured volley after volley of musket-halls upon the advancing column. For one single fateful moment it faltered. Berthier and Massena, with others equally devoted, rushed to its head and rallied the lines. In a few moments the deed was accomplished, the bridge was won, the batteries were silenced, and the enemy was in full retreat. Scattered, stunned and terrified, the disheartened Austrians felt that no human power could prevail against such a foe. Beaulieu could make no further stand behind the Adda; but, retiring in haste to the Mincio, the next parallel tributary of the I’o, he violated Venetian neutrality by the seizure of i’eschiera, at the head of that stream, and spread his line behind the river from the Venetian town on the north as far as the casemates of Mantua, the farthest eastern outpost of Austria, thus thwarting one—and that not the least important—of Bonaparte's plans. As to the Italians, they seemed bereft of sense, and for the most part yielded dumbly to what was required. There were occasional outbursts of resistance to the fierce policy of levying eontributivr.s. One was threatened in Milan itself, but they were all put down with a high hand. Pavia, which rebelled outright, and unbolted its gates only under compulsion, was delivered to the soldiery as their booty. The moral effect of the action at Lodi was incalculable. Bonaparte’s reputation as a strategist had already been established, but personal courage had never been tried. The actual battlefield also was something quite different from the great theater <>f war. and men wondered whether he had the same mastery of the former as of the latter. Hitherto he had been untried either as to his tactics or his intrepidity. In both respects Lodi elevated him literally to the stars. No doubt the risk ho took was awful, and the loss of life terrible. Critics, too, have pointed out safer ways which they believe would have led to the same result; but in no other way could the same dramatic effect have
been produced.
THE MODERN OYSTER STEW.
LN HAT LININGS.
JOHNSON WAS DRUNK.
The Middle-A;;cd Man Contracts It with
the Stew of lie fore the War.
“When I was a boy, before the war," | said a middle-aged man to a New York 1 Sun reporter, "the price of an oyster | stew in a good ordinary restaurant was twelve and a half cents. The price has , gradually gone up until now in a good restaurant an ordinary stew costs a quarter. In the old restaurant there [ was a cloth upon the table, but this cloth, unless you happened to find it ‘ when it had just been put on, was apt to he frescoed with coffee stains. There j were catsup and vinegar and so on. ‘ some of them perhaps in bottles in a castor. Perhaps the waiter gave you a !
Condition of Llnroln’a Vtca Preulriant at
Love Notes Thus Sent Forth by Reading Factory Girls.
By Thla Bltaii* Iluihand* llnrr llnrn Hocured—Funny of the Correapondeure Which Sometimes Follows.
As in all other manufacturing towns, the factory girlsof Heading have lots of fun inserting little notes in packages or articles they manufacture and send out to all parts of the world. The best fun of this kind, writes a Beading (Pa.) oorre-
piekle or two. The light was not very spondent of the New \ ork Sun, is en1,right. The waiter brought the stew ' J°y e<1 b .V the girls who work in factories
ia an oyster plate, and as the hot broth washed about a little in the plate, as he
1 turning out articles used exclusively by men. Hence hat factory girls receive
carried it and set it down, you were j afraid it might burn his thumb. Hut the oysters were good. Let mo pause to remark that the oyster is something |
to be grateful for.
"To-day the table, without a cloth, perhaps, is of cherry or mahogany, | tiucly polished. For a cloth there is spread before you a napkin of ample dimensions and bright and fresh. The pickle is chopped up celery, and very gixxl. You get two kinds of crackers and plenty of them, and a generous portion of French bread. The butter comes ia a sightly little cone. The table furniture is all good — dishes, glass, everything; the spread before you i is agreeable to the eye, and the whole scene is brilliantly’ lighted with the modern incandescent electric lamps. The stew comes in an oval dish that rests upon a plate; I don’t like to eat out of such a dish so well as I do out of a plate, but you know, at least, there’s no danger of burning the waiter’s thumb. The oysters are good, the whole arrangement is away beyond the stew of before the war. It costs more, but are we not better able to {lay for it? For general got up and get, ami dash and style and comfort, the old stew couldn’t begin to compare with it. The modern oyster stew Ls ona of many things that we do an everlasting sight
better than we did.”
MOUNTAINS ON FIRE.
i’lctureaque Scene at the Village of Crannae, In France. A communication from Aveyron, France, says: "The village of Cransae is surrounded by burning mountains. The Montet, which, according to local chroniclers, has been on fire for more than a century.has now the aspect of a veritable volcano. From its crater-likc summit an intense volume of smoke rises during the day, while at night a multitude of vari-col-ored Humes furnish the glorious spectacle of a mountain on tire. Actuated doubtless by the strong winds of the last few weeks, the fiery element, which had been consuming the entire Montet mountain proper, has spread to the range, and has assumed proportions which are very grave. During very dark nights the blaze illuminates the horizon as that of a great conflagration. At times blue white flames shoot up to a considerable height, giving the effect of lightning during a storm. A curions fact about the burning Montet is that whenever a period of very cold temperature ensues, the
mountain fire seems to grow in intensity. All efforts to extinguish the blaze, or even to retard its progress, have been in vain. All that has been done to smother or quench the fire appeared to but increase the fury of the devouring element. Its progress is increasing, anil the blaze never was as fierce as it is now.” We add that this fire is the sequel to a conflagration that broke out in the coal mides of Fontaines and Montet many decades ago. Joanne mentions the burning mountain in his “Geographical Dictionary of France, 1841,” as having been on fire a long time.
TRAVELING LIFE MONOTONOUS.
Wrong Idea About Experience of Salesmen Always on the Go. People who do not travel are in the habit of speaking of the lives of traveling men as full of pleasurable excitement. The traveling men say that it is almost unbearably monotonous, says the Atlanta Constitution. “I travel the entire south, from Washington to Texas,” said a traveling man to me the other day, “and am constantly on the rail, and the monotony of it is making me grow old before mv time. I have a pretty large territory, but would you believe it if I told you that 1 can wake up at any hour of the night, no matter where 1 am, puli back the curtain of the sleeper, and tell what place the train is approaching? I know the country so •well. The dreary monotony robs it of novelty or interest. I have been over the ground so often that I believe I know every forest, every cotton patch and every crossroad on the entire circuit. The only compensation that a traveling man has in asocial way is in the fact that he meets people in every city that he visits and wherever he goes he finds friends. Hut he is off and away before he has time to enjoy their society. No, it s a big mistake; the traveling man’s life is frightfully lonely and monotonous.”
The •• lUgulator." A Lohdon omnibus-driver is reported ns a punster by the Telegraph of that
city.
A gentleman who occupied a front ( garden scat on a ‘bus was complaining
France went wild with joy. The poo- ' of the snail-like pace. “Anything
pie of Italy bowed before the prodigy ! wrong with the horses?” he inquired of
which thus both paralyzed and fusein- | the driver,
ated them all. Austria was dispirited, I ‘‘Bless me, no,” was the reply
(Hissibly the largest mail “I have known at least a dozen girls who have become the wives of men who found their little notes in the hats they bought,” said the forewoman of a hat factory. “Several girls have their sisters at work at home making copies of the following note; “ ‘I hope you will be well pleased with this hat. I have tried to line and trim it satisfactorily. If you have a few minutes’ time to spare and care to do it please write and tell me how you like your hat. Of course, you must be a single man, as I am a single girl. Lovers are scarce in this town.’ “The girls slip the notes under the lining of the hats, allowing just an end to stick out under the sweat band. A note so placed would not be seen unless the sweat band were turned down. Of course hundreds of hats are sent out, and possibly the notes are never seen, but very many are found and answered. The girls receive answers from all over the United States, principally the west. The letters they receive would make quite a collection. Generally they are read out aloud in the shop. Very many replies from the west say that girls’are very scarce out there. Some men want to correspond with a view to matrimony; others just for pastime. One roan recently wrote that he wanted a hat trimmed by the same girl. “A few days ago a letter was received from southwestern Colorado for a girl who died here eight months ago. She had put in her trimmed hats a lot of notes. The writer had nearly worn out his hat before he discovered the note. He offered to send the girl money to come out to him if she’d marry him. I’oor Mary, she had died of pneumonia. The picture of the man in the letter looked as if he would make any girl a good husband. Mary’s sister had opened the letter. She answered it. They are now correspond-
ing
“if a girl exchanges a few letters with an unknown correspondent, and the man's answers suit, she generally semis a letter to the town's chief of police or mayor and asks confidentially all about the character of her correspondent. In nearly every instance the officials send courteous replies and tell the girl allshe wants to know. Photographs are exchanged and little gifts are received, generally curiosities from far-away states.. Oneof our girls receives letters from a man up at i’uget Sound, and from another in southern California. and from another in Havana, and from another now in Yucatan. The girls have gone into the stamp collection business, and our factory album is quite a curiosity in its way. Of course the girls can't answer all the letters they receive. The cowboys write very odd letters. One ranchman said he owns one thousand acres and five thousand head of cattle, and wants a wife. The letters generally have full descriptions of the men. They all ask for photographs of the girls. Some of the girls send pictures of actresses, as handsome as they can get them, but very often the girls depend upon their own faces, because many of them are really pretty and winning. “One factory girl made a practice of sending photographs of a deceased maiden aunt, with side curls and fancy headdress, telling her correspondent she has a kind heart and is very respectable. One correspondent returned the picture, saying he was not making a collection of freaks. “Some girls who have been married a few years receive answers to their notes. “I know two young Indiana men who came east for brides and secured them. In all other instances the girls went west or south and became happy wives, so far as I know. Last yoar two girls who made vests for a wholesale house, and slipped noU-s into the bottoms of the watch pockets, secured husbands. Another girl of my acquaintance, who works in a stocking factory, slipped a note into the toe of a No. 11 sock, and about sixteen months later heard from the buyer, who was an iron ore miner up in Michigan. They are still corresponding, I think. Girls who pack note paper occasionally write their name and address with lead pencil on one of the sheets. Sometimes they get replies if th<> note paper falls into the hands of romantic young men. But frequently married men answer these notes.”
the Inausuratlnn. Noah Brooks tells the following story in his personal reminiscences of Lincoln in the Century: “All eyes were turned to the main entrance, where, precisely on the stroke of twelve, appeared Andrew Johnson, ; vice president elect, arm In arm with | Hannibal Hamlin, whose term of ottice • was now expiring. They took seats together on the dais of the presiding officer, and Hamlin made a brief and sensible speech, and Andrew Johnson, whose face was extraordinarily red, was presented to take the oath. It is needless to say hero that the unfortunate gentleman, who had been very ill, was not altogether sober at this important moment of his life. In order to strengthen himself for the physical I and mental ordeal through which he was about to pass he had taken a stiff drink of whisky in the room of the vice president, and the warmth of the senate chamber, with possibly other physical conditions, had sent the fiery liquor I to his brain. He was evidently intoxiI eated. I As he went on with his speech he l turned upon the cabinet officers and addressed them as “Mr. Stanton,” I “Mr. Seward,” etc., without the official handles to their names. Forgetting Mr. Welles’ name, he said, “and you, “Mr. Then leaning over to Col. Forney, he said: “What is the name of the secretary of the navy?" and then continued as though nothing had happened. Once in awhile, from the reporters’gallery, 1 could observe Hamlin nudging Johnson from behind, reminding him that the hour for the inauguration ceremony had passed. The speaker kept on, although President Lincoln sat before him, patiently waiting for his extraordinary harangue to be over. The study of the faces below was interesting. Seward was as bland and serene as a summer day; Stanton appeared to be petrified; Welles' face was usually void of any expression; Speed sat with his eyes closed; Dennison was red and white by turns. Among the union senators Henry Wilson’s face was flushed; Sumner wore a saturnine and sarcastic smile, and most of the others turned and twisted in their senatorial chairs as if in long drawn agony. Of the supreme bench, Judge Nelson only was apparently moved, his lower jaw being dropped clean down in blank horror. Chase was marble, adamant, granite in immobility until Johnson turned his back upon the senate to take the oath, when he exchanged glances with Nelson, who then closed up his mouth. When Johnson had re{X'ated inaudibly the oath of office, his hand upon the book, he turned and took the Bible in his hand, and facing the audience said, with a loud theatrical voice and gesture: “I kiss this book in the face of my nation of the United States.”
and her armies were awc-strlckcn. When, five days later, amid silent j but friendly throngs of wondering men, Bonaparte entered Milan as the liberator of Lombardy, at the head of i his veteran columns, there was already i about his brows a mild effulgence of ] supernatural light, whiih presaged to the growing band of h ! s followers the full glory in which lie was later to shine on the imagination of millions. It was after Lodi that his adoring soldiers gave him the name of “Little
Corporal.”
their fust journey.
Not satisfied, the complainant again protested against the conveyance being turned into a funeral car, and asked with some irony whether it was a “fa-
vorite.”
“No, not exactly, sir,” was the answer, "but it’s known as the ‘regu-
lator.’ ”
Asked to explain bis meaning, the imperturbable occupant of the box re-
torted:
"Why, ’cause it’s the ’bus all the others ’go by. ’ ” .... ,
Judcln~ Japanese Ilrltles. It appears that in Japan one factor entaering into the problem of the choice of a daughter-in-law is her skill in raising silkworms. The thread spun by the silkworm is said to be regular and oven in proportion as the worm has been regularly and carefully fed. The prospective mother-in-law carefully and minutely examines the evenness of the silk thread in the material of the garmvnts worn by the young lady before giving her assent to the betrothal.
Grailrt of Gold. Twenty-four-karat gold is all gold; twenty-two-karat gold has twenty-two parts of gold, one of silver and one of eopner: eighteen-karat gold has eighteen parts of pure gold ami three parts each of silver and copper in its composition; twelve-karat gold is half gold, the remainder being made up of three and one-half parts of silver and eight and one-half parts of copper.
riOTHRRfl and those about t< I become mothers J should know tluu Dr. Pierce’s Fa vorite I’reseriptifJ robs childbirth its torture, terro| and dangers both mother am. child, by aiding Nature in preparing the system for parturition. Thereby “labors and also the period of confinement greatly shortened. It also promote^ abundant secretion of nourishment the child. During pregnancy, it pre -L: vents “morning sickness” and those j distressing nervous symptoms from j which so many suficr. ja
Tanks, Cottlr Ci>., Texas. Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N Y. : Pear Sir—I took your “Favorite Pre 1 scription ” previous to confinement am never did so well in my lifr. It is onl two weeks sine- tny confinement and I an able to do my work. I feel stronger than ever did in six weeks before.
Yours truly,
da.,
1 i
A MOTHER’S EXPERIENCE. — South /tend. Pacific Co., H'ashftj
Dr. R. V. Pi: ucn. Buffalo, N. Y.: 'Ni
Pear Sir—l began taking your “ Favo j
ite Prescription ” the first month of pref 1
nancy, ami have continued taking it since confinement. 1 did not experience the nausea or any of the ailments due to pregnancy, after 1 beg m taking your “Prescription.” I was only in labor a short
time, and the physician said I got along un-
usually well.
We think it saved me a great deal of suffering,
great di il with leucorrhea also, and it h jq done a world of good for me.
Yours truly,
Mrs. Raker.
I was troubled to
Mrs. W. C. BAKER
G. M. BLACK’S
to
LifBfy, Sale M FggiI Si’
Franklin St., near northeist corner public square. |
Best Livery Rigs. Fanners’ Teams Fed. . Horses Boarded. Call and see. tf 2
roIlTLAND A XI>
lonsvilli: ci:mexts Royal or Acma Cements, Wall Plaster, Plas^ ter Paris, Lime ami Hair, always on baud ami Cheapest prices. Wareroom, 416 East Seminary St. Box N XT.. 33. HXTm_.3T3'5 el GREENCASTLE, IND. lj fcj
WELLINGTON WAS CHEERED.
fie Whipped the I rerich, lint He Did It Like a Gentleman. While Wellington was still a marquis he went to Paris from Toulouse, where he had fought and won the last battle of the Peninsular war. He went to the opera the same evening, and, though he wore plain clothes and sat in the back of the box. he was almost immediately recognized by some one in the pit, who cried out: “Vellington!” The name was taken up by others, and at last the entire pit rose, turned to the box and called: “Vive Vellington!” Nor would the people be satisfied until he had stood up and bowed to them, when he was cheered and applauded again, sa3’s Frank Harrison's Family’ Magazine. At the end of the performance the passage from the box was found to be crowded with people. The ladies of the party drew back nervously, but the duke said: "Come along!” in his brusque way, and conducted them on. While they were still in the corridor a man in the crowd was heard to say'to his companions: “Hut why are y’ou applauding so much? lie lias always beaten us!" This was very true, and the question seemed a natural one, but the answer was charming: “Yes, but he has always beaten us like a gentleman!”
Wool Wanted
^ OOOOOQ 1 ISrulgcs A: Himleif FILLMORE, IND., \ Pay the highest market prices for wool. S* them before selling. * |
Suicides in St. Petersburg, Russia, la, year numbered 443. i
RETURNED THE COMPLIMENT.
Glory to Gidron find Glory to I'ncle Harden AUo. One seldom hears a story more piquantly flavored with the real old New England humor than that told about Uncle Gideon Good .tin, who, eighty years ago, was one of the characters of the town. At that time the Methodists used to gather at the houses to hold their prayer meetings, and as Gideon was a devout worshiper of that creed he was a regular attendant. <>ne night the meeting was held at the house of Harlow Harden, and Gideon was there. In those days excitement ran high, and just as the enthusiasm of the assemblage was wrought to the highest pitch, Uncle Harden, us he was always called, arose to his feet and, lifting up his hand, shoutc 1 in a voice full of fervor: “Glory to Gideon!” Hardly had the chorus of amens which this utterance called f irth died away, when Goodwin, who thought that the praise was meant for him, and was bound to return the compliment, jumped up and said: “Glory to you, too, Uncle Harden!” That broke up the meeting. The solemnity of the occasion, so thoroughly shaken, could not he restored, and there was a speedy adjournment.
Destructive Net F'Utilng. Ocean net fishing such as is to be operated off Bay Shore, L. I., Is a near equivalent to the pound-net fishing of the Chesapeake. The Chesapeake : pound nets are tended twice a day by men who drive great flatboats with i enormously long oars, anchor their ! craft beside the pound and scoop out the fish by the bushel. The business Is | regarded as peculiarly destructive to the fine game fish of the Chesapeake, for the pound netter takes whatever I comes and spares nothing that is big enough to fry.
Tired, Weak, Nervous,
Means impure blood, and overwork or h i much strain on brain and body. The on f >vay to cure is to feed the nerves on pu § blood. Thousands of people certify that tL best blood purifier, the best nerve tonic i 8 length builder is Hood's Sarsapar J What it has done for others it will also dcV you—Hood’s Cures. I Nervousuess, loss of sleep, loss of appeal ami general debility all disappear wiTj Hood's Sarsaparilla is persistently talc U and strong nerves, sweet sleep, strong bo J sharp appetite, ami in a werd. health I happiness follow the use of Hoc |
Sarsaparilla.
The strong point about Hood’s Sarsapa: f is that they are permanent, because f ,*
i v, uruause I W
start from the solid foundation of puri§
vitalized and enriched blood.
There is more power in gentleness tj there is in dynamite.
It Min/ thms Mrrh /or You, Jlr. F red Miller, of Irving, III. writes he had a Severe Kidney trouble for m. jears, with severe pains in his back and «| that his bladder was afiected. He trj many so called Kidney cures but with.] any good result. About a year ago he! gau use of Electric Bitters and found rej “a Kleclrl ° Bitters is especil adapted to cure of all Kidney ami iiiV ,b o* a ' 1 .' • o r u '" . K'VC" almost instant i ()n . e "'HI prove our statemtrj I rice only jOc. for a large bottle. At Alta Allen s Drug Store.
Nearly one half the farms in the UnJ States are mortgaged.
Relit/ in sij- //ours. Ivilllts.v A .1 TJ ' .1.4 1 ’ . . JHj
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irl
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The man who becomes a succftw hypocrite has to work at it every day i D |P
week.
Children Cryfi Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cryf Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cryf Pitcher’s Castoria.
Wben Baby was sick, we pave her Castoifc 1 TVh'n she vns a Chi!.!, she cried for Pa** [ When she Locarno Miss, she clung to < ’asw*! When she had C'UUdrjL, she gave tbam
i
