Ligonier Banner., Volume 24, Number 22, Ligonier, Noble County, 12 September 1889 — Page 8

The Ligonier Buanner, THE ‘BANNKER PUBLISHING COMPANY '=—'_"'_“‘—'b‘—-—‘.—____——_—'—_'—_—_—_____‘—_— THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1889,

] THE-BESFWNIEW&AHERICE ;[IP el e 2 £ [[}oßT JAS-STIRK. : %‘?{@ @G SR Y, Gount gil WRAPPERS,_ i (\ et -{//’/ I SOV L SOME; 1 AR &M@LBUM . ~, > O m.’”l Sy v.nmmsg L )‘ ‘--~-112-am¢l- - N 2 KmsandAßesss Reßee R A A 7

Wi T A —There are forty-nine Jewish Synagogues in New York City. : " Dr. Henley’s Wonderful Tonic. -Thousands of ladies, trL.)ubled with nervousness and female trouble, have been cured by using Dr. Henley’s Celery, Beef and Iron. The purest, pleasantest, most effective tonic the world ever knew. Price $l. = —Some Parig handkerchiefs are made in the form off a leaf with a stem. i —e et ——— . : —There is nothing uncertain about the effects of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. 1t can always be depended upon, and is pleasant and safe’to take. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Eldred & Co. o 2 : | —Eighty thousand Americans have sailed from New York this season. ' ‘When Bsby waa sick, we g{v&her Castoria, ‘When she was a Child, she eried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, | e R, e P ‘ ’ ; ~~Small Boy—Papa, has plums got legs? Papa—No, you silly boy. Why? Small Boy—Then blessed if I haven’t swallowed a beetle. , d Foreed to Leave Home. - s Over 60 people were forced to leave their homes yesterday to call for a free trial package of Lane’'s Family Medicine. ~ If your blood is bad, your liver and kidneys out of order. if you are constipated and have headache and an unsightly complexion, don’t fail to call on any druggist today for a free sample of this grand remedy. 'The ladies praise it. Everyone likes it. Large size package, 50 cents. :

—There are forty-seven organiza‘tions engaged in the evangelization of the Jews with 317 workers and 195 stations. ¢

—There was a terrible epidemic of dysentery and bloody flux -in Pope county, Illinois. last summer. As many as five deaths occurred in one day. Messrs. Walter Brothers, of Waltersburg, sold over 380 bottles of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy during this epidemic and say they never heard of its failing in any case when the directions were followed. It was the only medicine used ‘that did cure the worst cases. Many persons were cured by it after the doctors had given them up. Twenty-five and 50 cent bottles for sale by Eldred & Co.

—lt is death to any person in Siam’ to mention the King's name. This is & custom that many _other tribes ~ rigadly adhere to. - i ' Ruby’s Letter. ; : A letter from Mr. J. W. Ruby, Unio Cit.j(, Ind., says: *‘l have used your < «sClarke’s Extract of flax (Papillion) “cough cure and find it a complete “‘cure for deep seated: cold. It has ‘‘done more than two of our most “skilled physicians. My children had *‘the whooping cough .and with the “ald of your cough cure, they had it . “very light compared with neighbors’ sschildren who did not take it. I-be-““lieve it to be the best cough cure m « *‘‘the market.”’ So it is. A large bottle’onlisl.oo,_ 8 ; Clarke’s Flax. Soap for the Skin.. It leads them all. Price 256 cents. | Coufh Cure and Soap for sale by Eldred & Co., Ligonier;lnd. Tech . e gl ~—The Queen of Greece is one of the - most domestic rulers in Europe. She is fond of her children and of her books. She is well read in English literature and reads the American . magazines. : : o Mr. E. Slattery, of Delhi, La., says her son, 14 zears of age, had a dreadful time with ulcers, sores and bloches ~ which followed chicken pox. After i usingmqux remedies without benefit, she gave him Swift’s 3pwfic.“ which ~ cured him sound and well. We have sold 8. S. &;Meatbafiut day we commenced the drug business, - BOTo M e Many S Wit Kgmfluw ul‘e?nfi;gfl@i\lflflq,ltom | : naor&.“a&m‘cgd diseases, it is without P g el g T Ledger. He says that & e Vil ko’ TR L SR A Rt he was_ f»%%fifpmm 5 v 'l»‘*?f Y .’.e,a;m,aa"-"« ATy 'H’\ra'www'ii)&%;fi‘%‘&g{’ ew‘:"f&wfi‘?r;‘\t;% Ahist he took 8 8, 8. and it cured him. 4 T IR R R R e ] 4;.» LR B w:,f&,\g"q& L’Jfirffii ?fi"x*{’;fi b over Iy DoQy Gurin P A / G R g e ‘k,é

: DAKOTA BAD LANDS. An Interesting Section of ‘This More Than Wonderful Country. : - West of Bismarck and the river the country is generally level until the i Bad Lands are reached. They are not bad lands at all, but wonderful lands. They . constitute one of the most marvelous physical appearances to be observed on this continent. They are come upon suddenly, and without suggestion that the prairie level is to be 80 strangely broken. * All at once numberless peaks, as sharp in their formation as the fingers of your hand, rising straight from the earth, an army of massive buttes. They are of all conceivableshapes; some are circular pyramids, perfect in form. Others rise like quartz crystals, with sides as smooth as a board, and frequently from one of these straight and - regular buttes the petrified stumps of enormous trees will protrude, silicified by the action of the same waters that gave figures to the buttes themselves ages and ages ago. The Ba 2 Lands begin about one hundrei miles west of Bismarck and follow the course, north and south, of the Little Missouri river. North of the railroad their finest scenic effects are on the eastern side of the Little Missouri, and no feat of pen or brush can give any fair conception of the extravagance. - :

~ They assume hot only every conceivable appearance, but all the appearances that might be attributed to tRe hand and the .imagination of a race of mental freaks. They twist ‘themselves into ten thousand different contortions. They show you devils, plunging- horses, wolf heads, old men, cut and molded by wind and water in clay and sand and limestone, or in the: firmer substance formed by the petrifa{ction. shapes. that seem oddly harmonious with the natural life that for so long a time made these wild places their habitation. At every turn your mind is newly startled. You see devices .not only in themselves grotesque, but standing forth, shooting out, plunging down in such utterly novel and unnatural situations. . Enor‘mous masses of rock seem in the distance to be hanging by a single silken thread, poised over a plain on which a hundred figures dressed in white, blue, black, green, gray and yellow are dancing in gleeful and thoughtless sports, springing upwards, turning somersaults and performing all tricks of harlequin. The buttes themselves, with some part clad in the greenest verdure, elsewhers in the black weaving of a vegetation that has turned to coal, here in the pink trimmings of a real terracotta which lignite fires have been slowly baking, there in the creamy /laces knitted by 'the winds through great deposits of alkali left upon the surface of the soil by waters that have long since been druined away—the buttes themselves, multiplied ten thousand times and chiseled into castles, domes, spires, towers and monuments, present each its separate picture of weird but magnificent disorder. Those wise fellows who know every thing say that there was once a great lake here which was gradually drained away through #the two Missouris; and that the waters, as they swept toward the sea, cut and modeled the Bad Lands.—Cor. N. Y. Tribune. —_———— .~ TOMATOES AS FOOD. Something About the Ridiculous Charge That the Fruit Causes Cancer. I wonder how many people in this broad country have been seared out of eating tomatoes by the circulation of the ridiculous charge that they cause cancers! - But ever since they became a common article of' diet there has prevailed an idea that they have some sort of medicinal action. As a fact they are in no semse medicinal. If they were they -never should be used as an article of common diet. So far as affecting the human organism is concerned they act precisely like any other commonly used fruit, that is, merely as agreeable nutrients. Their nutritive power, compared with meats and seeds, is very slight; but it is well adapted to the warm season of the year, when a light diet is best for all, except-for those. engaged in arduous ‘manual tasks.

The notion that tomatoes are medicinal arises from the fact that they belong to an extensive family of plants in the foliage, seeds or roots of some of which medicinal principles are found. - But the potuato. the egg plant, and a few others, more or less used for food, belong to the same large family. There is a poisoncus principle on the leaf of the peach tree, but it is not found in the fruit. So with the tomato; and it is a g}"eat pi.ty that this notion should have got abroad. That tomatoes disagree with some people is no e‘videng:e of medicinal action. Strawberries’do the same.— Dr. 'T. H. Hoskins, in N. Y. Examiner. ——— Good Horsegor Farmers. | If ‘more of the farmers and business men throughout the country knew the value of and the advantages of having first-class driving horses there would ‘be more of this kind found in the hands of those who till the soil fora living. The unalloyed pleasure of being able to pull the reins over a horsd that is weu-braine% and well adapted to road pucposes ought to be incentive enough to make farmers want to pos~sess someting fine in this line, but the pleasure afforded in this connectionsis but & small part of the consideration. In cities and business eenfi:t;tho«dis— | tange from one point tQ another is often designated by‘thetgmb‘er of minutes it takes to tyavel it. Thusa residence is ’from Y t;x'fiéé;i to five minutes’ from a railread station or a street car line, meaning that it takes 80 many minutes to walk to the station or egeet-cars It éflrn;,m mlgé oned the distance they live from their. maskets, poskiomions, ohisohes, et they then might appreciatemors noarWII alue of horses n&m gg‘ BoGigbinss, rockniieg 15 10 e as Tt %{m«“g &*‘;‘%«’s e ;M{i&%%v%é SeT e TOReRE T EN rpniripma Mt oot g b bl s L o “"’fi."’&;fig‘g&i sn =,,,,’ P ,:;""w&bfifia e-‘i“ R R R R N L TR N R Y S N of horses is apparent .~—Louisville

PERSONAL AKD LITERARY, —There wore added to the Bodleian Library last year 43,951 new books or manuscripts. °

—Governor Anses, by authority of the State Legislature, appointed Colonel Higginsqr to write the history of Massachusetts soldiers aund sailors in the civil war. The Colonel may take five years to complete the work.

—Mrs. Frank Leslie has been credited with having the smallest feet of any woman in America. She wears a No. 1 shoe. But Mrs. Leslie has had to surrender the honor to Miss Minna Irving, the poetess, whe wears a size smaller than No. 1.

—Mr. Frederick E. Weatherly says that he has written between 500 and 1,000 songs, of which ‘“‘Nancy Lee" and ‘“The Three Old Maids of ILee are the most popular. He wrote “Nancy Lee’ at Oxford within an hour, while waiting for an unpunctual pupil. _ :

—Truth, of London, says of Motley that he ‘‘was a truly charlmitifiv person and the best of good company.™ Dickens liked him much and declared that he and Sir Hamilton Seymour ‘‘were the only two diplomatists he ever met who were entirely abeve humbug.” T —ln giving his consent recently to a friend who desired to inscribe a novel to him, Julian Hawthorne wrote: “I 1 shall,| of course, be happy to have you connect your new novel with my name. But 1 hope that name will, bring you better literary fortune than it has me.””—W. J. Bok.

—A new wo 'k on “Half a Century of Music in England” draws the interesting contrast between the time when Lord Chestertield warned his son against being a fiddler, even in the amateur sense, and the present, when a Prince of the royal blood is the most noted amateur in England.-

—The authorities -of William and Mary College at Williamsburg, Va., recently received a letter from R.-W. Gilder, the editor of the Century, and his sister, in which they say that they have in their possession the old bronze sun dial which was taken from the institution, and which the present owners offer to restore. -

—There died lately in Scotland Mr. George Clark, for many years in the service of the Duke of Argyll as gamekeeper. He was of literary and antiquarian tastes, and had am extensive knowledge of all matters relating to the Highlands, and especially -his native county of Argyll. He wrote long and interesting articles on topography, geography, philology, historical and antiquarian matters. -

—Cheap pirated editions of American noyels are said to be among the most popular books sold at the railway stations in India. A traveler says he has bought Lew Wallace’'s Fair God and Ben Hur for fifteen cents each. Anna K. Green’s Leavenworth Case-is offered for twelve cents. The works of Uncle Remus also are for sale in paper covers. All of Bret Harte's books are pirated and Mark Twain’s books are sold for a song. Longfellow’s poems can be had for a dime and Emerson’s essays in cloth for twenty cents. Mrs. Burnett’s novels are sold at one-fifteenth the price they bring in America.

-~ ' HUMOROUS, —Large ears are said to be a sign of generosity. This probably accounts for the mule's great profligacy with his heels —Puck. : —On a horse car. —First lady—+*Do take that seat. I don’t mind standing a bit.”’ Second lady—*“*No, you take it. You are older than L’ An ominous silence, during which an old gentleman pops into the seat.—Boston Post. —*“That failure was a terrible'shock to old Mr. Hendricks.”” *‘Yes, it must have been.” “You remember how white his hair always was?’ ¢Yes.” “Well, you'll hardly believe it, but the next morning when he got up.his hair was jet black—turned in a single night.”’— E_och. -

—“How are/the crops doing?” said the Czar. to a favorite at court. *‘Pretty fairly, your Highness,” was the reply, ‘““although in some guarters the People are complaining of too much reign.””’ “Let them take twenty years in Siberia to dry up,” answered his Majesty, who is quick at repartee.— Time. : : —Smith—<Hullo, Johnson, you’re 'not looking well.”” Johnson—*No, I'm under the weather. I've had to leave off smoking, t0o.” Smith—- “ That’s very bad.”” Johnson—+‘Yes, but that isn’t the worst of it. I'm afraid that leaving off smoking is going to do me good.”’—Medical and Surgical Reporter. ' ~ —Too Much Land. —He— My dear, ; I believe I shall sell a lot off our front~age.” She—*‘Why, Charley! you said - when you bought the place you would i never sell an inch of that lovely lawn, ~even if we were starving.” He—*My l love, at that time I had never had any experience running a lawn mower. "’ — Burlington Free Press. ¢ ~ —Prize-fighter's second (cautiously) —*Don’t bo‘goo confident. He can’t ‘hit as hard as you can, but he’s chock full of tricks. He’s got a great head on him.” Pugilist (measuring his % antagonist with hiseye)—*‘He'll have & greater one when I've got dond };‘with him. I'm going to assist nature ‘alittle.Y —Chicago Tribune. } ~ —Joker (to new boy in his favorite grocery store) —“I see you have maple sirupin. Where is it manufactused?” fmw ‘boy—*ln the maple groves of Vermont; the sap from the trees is tun into_kettles an’ then boiled on—" ““See here, boy, I thought you just ‘wim@éimmermW R Ry sare hast Coids o bkt 60 :§ ;&;fij, A 6 bes thebte o I Bt own. . It's an infamous lie. Just *i&%@w“%?ww“w e-«f@flwafié@mw’:**gfififiugy»“g%%

—Edison’s portrait is on every wall in Paris, and in nine out of ten of the newspapers. SR : G Tlntorofiéd 'P‘io'olo. e Advertising a patent medicine in the peculiar way in which the proprietor of Kemp’s Balsam for Coughs and Colds 'does; it 1s indeed wonderful. He authorizes all druggists to give those who call for it a' sample bottle Free, that they may try it before purchasing. The Large Bottles are 50 cents and $l.OO. We certainly would advise a trial. It maysave you from Consumption. e : ey —As a general thing it requires push to rise in the world. For instance, you push a button when you want the elevator. . : A Great Surprise : Is in store for all who use Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat and Lungs, the great guaranteed remedy. Would yoh believe that it is sold on its merits and that any druggist is authorized by the proprietor of this wonderful remedy to give you a sample bottle free? It never fails to cure acute or chronic coughs. For sale by E. E. Reed, druggist. Large bottles 50 cents and $l. i B —-—‘oh——— Ao 100 Ladies Wanted, And 100 men to call on a druggist for a free trial package of Lane's Family Medicine, the great root and herb remedy, discovered by Dr. Silas Lane while in the Rocky Mountains. For diseases of the blood, liver and kidneys it is a positive cure. For constipation and clearing up the complexion it does wonders. Children like it. Everyome praises it. Large size package, 50 cents. At all druggists. ; ; —The are said to be 130,000 peonle in the United States who study the prescribed courses of instruction of the Chautauqua Association.

Saved from Consumption

Several physicians predicted . that Mr. Asa B. Rowley, druggist, of Chicago, would soon have consumption caused by an aggravated case of Catarrh. Customers finally induced him to try Clarke’s Extract of Flax (Papillion) -Catarrh Cure. He says: “‘The ‘‘result was unprecedented.” I com“menced to get well aftér the first ap‘‘plication and am now, after a few “weeks, entirely cured.” It will do the same for you. :Price s€l.oo. Try Clarke’s . Flax Soap for the Skin and you will use no other. 25 cents. :All of Clarke’s Flax remedies are for -sale by Eldred & Co., Ligonier, Ind. ° G. E. BURSLEY & (0., Wholesale Grocers W10165a16 GTOCETS, i —and dealersin— Notions and Tinware, Nos. ,129, 131 and 133 Calhoun Street, Fort Wayne, - Indiana. 25 YEARS DM to the Treatment of Chronic - Disaases.

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This extensive -xperience with thousands of patients enables me to cure every curable case, Those afflicted with diseasés of the Lungs, Throat, Heart, Liver, Kidneys, Neryes, Brain or suffering from Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Debility, Youthful Indiscretions, Cancers, Old Sores, Tumors, Fits, any Chronic Ailments, are invited to call and examine my record of CASES CURED, when hope of cure had been abandoned. Candid in my examinations, reasonable in my charges, ‘and never encourage without a surety of success. 5 BuissrieLp, Mich., April 22, 1888, . VR. F. B. BREWER—DEAR Sir: It 18 with: gratitude for my restored health that I now write you. I doctored with seweral prominent doctors of Southegn Michigan for over a year, but constantly gréw. worse, until I commenced taking your medicines. After suffering with Bright’s Disease for over two years, I am now testored to ¢ood health. I-was given up by other doctors to die, but after taking your medicine for afew weeks began to improve and continued to do so until mi: health was restored, : Miss E. E. PARKER, DR. F. B. BREWER, - 136 Chicago Ave., Evanston, Il

Now Advertisamsants. Al d s U s TO ADVERTISERS. A list of 1,000 newspapers divided into STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on application FREE. 3 To those who want their advertising to pay, we can offér :no better medium for thorough and effective work than the various sections ot our Select Local List. . : ’ 2 GEO. P ROWELL & CO., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, . ; 10 Bpruce street, New York

ALESMEN WANTED! 5 S AT ONCE. Permanent position the year round! Good weekly pay gua.rant.eedl No exPerience needed! Onfl7 good character and willingness to work required. Outfit free. Sead for terms and commenc?t‘oncfim 5 : J. AUSTIN SHAW &€O., Nurserymen, 21-91, : Rochester, New York. .

ot g A il S el et : CURES PILES, i ~_{s%yr RHEUM, : ,45;‘{:‘-\-s\\? TTER, BURNS et N - ‘*v,‘i—‘-'..”gx‘\"-.f-’\"'“‘ ) WG DS, INTfi"l R v’?"‘l-; FANT'S SORES R W Avo TR, & & : CHAFING, N w‘i{;% {V SORE NIPPLES. B O OX J- AN INVALU(,%\_!.‘!..fi"fi ABLE REMEDY P S [I\YY FoR CATARRH. ; ‘ | 8> s £2CTB. ' Rii e 265 , s i Fer sale by Eldred & Co. Ligonier, Ind.

- THE INNOCENT READER. Hew Ho Is Fosnared By the Makers of g Nostrums and Toflet Articles. - s ~ {The popularity of the ‘reading notice” exceeds any craze which has ever possessed advertisers or seekers after notoriety. Exciting and thrilling incidents of contemporary or historical record begin by chaining the .attention of the most casual re der and terminate in a touching appeai .~r Boggs' soap. Captain Burnaby is said to have made the fortune of Squeers’ pills by a mere mention of them in his *Ride to Khiva.” If this sort of thing grows with the years as it has with the past, we may look’ for a new edition of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” containing something of this sort]: “Uncle Tom,” said little Eva, as the two sat side by side in the diminutive ‘summer-house, ‘““won't you tell me about the New Jerusalem?"’ i *‘L.or’ bress yd‘ soul,” exclaimeagd the faithful darkey, ‘‘what makes yo’ gwine ax sich questions all o'er heap?” ‘ **Because,” said the child, as a beautiful blush o’erspread her brow, “I want to know if a little white girl can get there, or if only colored people will pass the beautiful gates?” «T gpecs,” replied Uncle Tom. *‘dat dey’ll be mos'ly bracks dere, but dey’ll let you in sure 'nough, honey,” and he sang in a clear, musical voice fourteen 'verses of the old plantation hymn: : *‘De gospel train 4m movin’, : ] ; - Hop aboard.” _“I often thing,” said Eva, after Tom had finished his melody, *‘that I shall not be long in this world. I shall not be here when the spring comes and the flowers bloom., and then, dear Uncle Tom, what will all you poor people do without me? I wish you would gather them all about me so I may tell them how to be good.” . The faithful African departed, and in a few minutes returned with all the servants, who ranged themselves about her, wondering what she was going to say. . : - “Dear, good friends,” said little Eva. “I am afraid I shall soon go away to join the bright-winged host on high.” " The negroes prostrated themselves on the ground, and, with piteous cries and lamentations, besought their young mistress to remain with them. Uncle Tom stood up, with the tears streaming down his honest black face, rand. shouted: L “Dere’s just one ting, Missey Eva, kin fotch yo' back when you’s mos’ gone, and I’se got it right hyar.” ““What is it?” asked the child; ‘‘the Gospel you sang about?” ¢No, honey, it am dat ar medicin’ I done bought down .at de store,” and with these words he produced a small bottle of Dr. Gander’s Golden Godsend and Restorer of Lost Health, and administered a teaspoonful in a wineglass of water to the sainted child. Eva immediately arose, completely restored to strength, and signed a certificate< setting forth the wonderful nature o\ her cure. She is now practicing for a race bn one of - Blobbs’ bicycles. [This may be regarded as a combination ad., the expense borne mutually by Dr. Gander and the bicycle manufacturer, between whose wares there can, of course, be no competition. Then there will probably be something in this vein]: “Like a ray from far beyond, aslant the golden, mellow dawn,” said Sybil Craydocke, in her quick, original way, as they all stood watching the shadows fall on the distant heights of Old Graylock. Harry Thorne sa nothing, but he glanced at Rosalind, and the bright color flitted across her cheek; she did 'not speak at once. Her sweet face was aglow with enthusiasm, and as she turned it toward the young man, there was a swift, answering light in his eyes that deepene: her rosy blush. *“lt seems to me,” said Sybil to Uncle Marmaduke, as they stood apart, “that those two were made for each other—made from' the beginning, and have been growing nearer and nearer ever since. They are the true poles of a battery, and there is a shock and a spark whernever they meet." How wonderful is the power of true love!” ““And how wonderful the forces of nature;” said Uncle Marmaduke, ‘‘the electric-battery of which you speak! Is it not a perpetual reminder of the faroff gates where the:countless throngs: are passing to and fro?” e ~ “Yes,” murmured Sybil, turning toward her compgnion with one of her rare smiles; ‘‘and the crystal stream, with its golden lilies, too.” They were ‘silent for a moment, and’ then the old man said, impulsively: - *Sybil, you've got the right stuff in you. You'll excuse the liberty I take, . remembering that I'm odd “and eccen-. tric, and have been known as 4 crank. I'm going to give you something as a remembrance of this sanctified hour. Herelb dw? o . o 0 “A present! How good of you™ She took the small parcel and opened it eagerly. Thensheclasped his hands eagerly in hers, and exclaimed, with trembling voice: G L ~ “How can Iltixank youp?? -- ¥ : . Do you know what it is?” = _ She lifted her face to his, radiant with emotion. Her eyes were moist and her voice wavered ‘like the windswept forest, as she answered: - *lt ig Dr,fimnus’fi;mcneamifi%r.f it opens the pores of the skin and gives: owemnpi»finflke the rose dawn. Oh, how can I thank yout” - m ok mmwwmfig"mh insures success and commands a high b

P —>Safe From Exposure.—*l am from Bt. Louis,” raid » "young, man as he registered 'at a' Chicago hotel. “Oh, well,” réplied the clerk, compassions' ately, ‘‘put your nddress down as from New York. Your awful secret will'be safe with me.”—Harper's Bazar. .~ —A Dutitul Eon.—‘‘John, this is & very bad repoit you bring me from - school” “I know, fathei, but you know you sald i I would bring you & first-olass report, you would give mea dollar, and I wanted t 0 save you tha

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4 AL £ . g , f 2 e I e —— TEL ]} —i e e ——— MHLRIBICRNT * ) «fll!lj' ; [E'B;i“'iulmiu b .im;}l‘}}&i’ b ‘ PeopUER MPEOPLES H PEOPUENS PEOPLES (I cYcl.uP ‘ Dl A et | bl 4 - TR 4 . * LOPEOASIC “:L}i” CYCLD PEEBICYCLOPE "; sl Vi ; ; :gfié WP ‘*“{:’fz‘ g;jgmag:f*-,:_:i;[IM:‘;;\:W&:. A . St : EHSAh Gt e b SRR R Mow 57;,%- i.' i Knowled it Knowlecge bl ibCuiie Alm l - ltt d tfi eil 6 OOLY 016 COMPIGIS 10 date. : K 0L YUL AR S e . AR :;””1 i il The Cheapest and the Best. ol ffi'i T e ‘“l"‘9‘?'?“ii?i%fififififil*w : ‘ —_— : Ad ;l',lfi bw b T-APPENL M , , : L TR lgeags LI el -2 §H;Tn>§s~ n"# r:‘ij?jr;r“;ilF?{;&%&M?;;{;L OVEI‘ 100,000 Sets Sold. X 9 5 O st~ 3 0 00/ =— 100 il ISR et == : | %ml enonaiES Y DiacranS IR & Bo= o = il FOR TERMS ADDRESS =1 sooq’ @ ropEl Aturcncy il ee gl lEEESESSS . Ao AL AR AR N L e W L SQUIRE Tflleflfl l] B e e et~ v e e = ey é L 3 3

PERCHERON HORSES! o SATVAGHEH & FARINTNM, S s ISLAND HONE STOCK FARM, Grosse Isle, Wayne County, Michigan, & B zfi“\ ‘ About 200 %urg-bred aflrrnall 0311 hand. l_’gcgaix r&asom;b‘lg; %eu-; e:y.bnam AT\ OT, L e ALV AGE & PRI Doty emy mall (3 e FRENCH COACH HORSES. RTR S BN oottty formea T Epvt iol TR IR Digh-stepping Stal- » ey PR AU RL S RK6 lions and Mares, su- T e SRR &2 LSR AN \'» \“ M perb action, bred Wi (7 i SNy R eR o I !:\\ll\ under the patronage & Rr eoßl i AR - filigd of the French Gov- A SR b =W oo TR eoe TR F - = E W | BRe S o « 1B I Woumitmm ¥ o BT AR Defxoit,Mich, | QuenesrT S

B i v. -‘. a:“ ) V .%n FOR PITCKER'S A & Gy i o s Castoria promotes Digestion, and overcomes IFlatuliencyy Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhcea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep matural. Castoria contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. * Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me.” H. A. ArcuEr, M. D., 82 Portland Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. I use Castoria in my practice. and find it specially adapted to affections of children.” ALEX, RoBERTSON, M. D., . 1057 2d Ave., New York. TaE CENTAUR Co., 182 Fulton St., N. Y.

BRIGHTINE. .. 3 ‘N ] AiN LN BA Blrsl'f's DISE{SE. OMINERT B R e IDIABETES m. Vitcaste JLIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES. ‘“'“‘b"“ Bottle 81, - Ask Drugglst or write MAILED FREE WM. T. LINDLEY & €O., . i 3 1214-224 La Salle Bt.s Ohicago, IIL 81. Louis,Mo., Aug, I,°BB. BRIGHTINE curedme of Diabetes, and to-day am hearty and well. - Mes. A.A.GILLIAM, Treas. Woman’s Exchange. CHICAGO, Dec. 1. ’B7, My Kidneys troubled me seyeral sears BRIGHTINE entirely cured me. A, C. SM’ITH, Western News Co. 8 . Jos.M.Norris, Agt. C,, R. I. &P, R. Re BurrFALo,N, Y..Mafill, 288, Suffered from Lum"bago several years. BRIGHTINE cured me, Shannan, Capt. Steamer Chemung, Un. St’boat Co. St. Louts, April 24,°88. BRIGHTINE gives gat. {sfaction. STAND’D DRUG Co. 900 Franklin Av, St Louis, Dec. 12,88, BRAIGHTINE hasall the virtues cIaimed.MAsTBROOK, D’gs 109 8. B’ way. I Rockville, Ind., Nov, 1% 787, . Can recommend BRIGHTfNE highly. REv. JOHN HAWKES. Chicago Times, March 28, ’BB-Globe, Nov. 17, 'BB | JHustrated Century, Jan, 28, ’BB, —Commercial Traveller, Feb. 16,88, PRAISE BRIGHTINE. Refer to Mut. Inv. & Loan Asgn., Bullock Bros; J;mgard,Snpt.U.s.Ex. G.F.KimballGlasslmp, !

3L gpe—C, COMFORTABLE and ELEGANT. For Sale by Leading Dealers. 2'74 Solely by WM. BARKER, Troy, N.Y. : . PEN!&A\'R?hYALedV.V#FEIfiyBx.! | - The remedy & siclan @ e having 50 yearg üba%lute spes f olal, and' private, experience - &~ treating female dlseases. lls e A\ used monthly with pleasiag success by over 10,000 ladies, o aou_ng married “or at change, uaranteed safe, always. effecX j -tual*? take no substitute for: &N }\ Wafers. Your druggist has . N Q IR LR TR s L udtiress : for seale CU= fl':g,!x uuciu CHERICAL fgfgnggml mgx‘f g _For sale by D, 8. Scott & Son. e e e e e s.. = “' - - ’,vv e- - LR aothmn LG VAR oo ot e men s PRV - V 4 i“ Ychotpas g v Gold | b g 2 = ‘,‘:fi"‘ ad 2 Let 4&'& ) :fi"« :::—'g;;‘ a\- T .4"’ i : ’;-% /) A\ w,-vmw}" i} 'i‘var? SIS # ; DRLY r 4 | W, '.‘ IR NV EES, i _,&.: s, 2 co WORUNRR oy BIR 3_}.& e D """:ifi. i my‘%"'{,flw,t,&;r TR et Bty g S b O R e R e @?t?fi-fi%’fi”g S W§‘7§3§‘ iRy y ';"“M'&?; ”"1 BAk ona ] 3o miay have catled, they become your own giroperty. - Those | %“@%’Wg en & Co. IBox 815 Portiand, Maine iy e S RPRIR S s D e N e

HUMPHREYS’ R P AP O T TSTS SO TRV T- T T TT R W DR. HUMPHREYS’ SPECIFICS are scientifically and carefully prepared prescriptions ; used for many i’ears in private (fractice withsuccess,and for over hirt{ yearsused by the péople. Every single Specific is a special cure for the disease named. These Specifics cure without dm%ging, g)urgs ing or reducing the system, and are in fact and deed thesovereign remedies ofthe World, p____—-——’m_____fi LIST OF PRINCIPAL NOS. CURIS. PRICES. 1} Fevers, Congestion, inflammations.. .25 2§ Worms, Worm Fever, Worm C01ic....'23 2 Cg‘yinfl Celic, or Teething ?fi-lm’ants <23 Diarrhea, of Children or Aduits.... .25 3 D{senterfif Griping, Bilious C01ic.... .25 G6fCholera Morbus, Vomiting........ .25 Coughs, Cold, 8r0nchiti5.............. 25 ) Neuralg&a, Toothache,Faceache.... . .35 Headac es, Sick Headache, Vertigo .23 10§ Dyspepsia, Bilious 5t0maeh..........25 i 1 Sufi;{)ressed or Painful Periods..2s 128 Whites, too Profuse Peri0d5.......... .25 13 Crouß Cough, Difficult Breathmg. cos 02D 148 salt Rheum, Ersyipelas, Eruptions. .23 , 15§ Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains.... 225 ; : 16 pKever and A gue; Chills, Malaria. ..., 17 fPiles, Blind or Bloeding ... o' §3 18 Ophtlsl_almy, or Sare, or Weak Eyes .54) §l9BCatarrh, Influenza, Cold in theHead .50 20§ Whoeoping Cough, Violent Coughs. .59 21 EAsthma, Suppressed Breathing...... .50 22 Ear Discharges, (%m{:aired Hearing .30, - 23 EScrofula, Enlarged Glands, Swelling .50 24 Generul.fiebilitv,PhysicalWea.kness. 3 %5 Dropsy, and, Scanty Secretions. ..... . : Gisen bic’lm,ess, Sickness from Riding .50 27 i Kidney Di5ea5e......................«50 28 Nelll'vousf I]gelixhty Sfixix;inal Weakl- o ess, or Involuntary Discharges....l. 29 BSore Mouth, Canker................. .33 gfl gri_nar{ Weakness, Wetting Bed. . §3l §Painful Periods, with 5pa5m......, 3 32 hDiseases of the He{ut,l’algimtionlf.fl 33 E}nlelilsy,.Spasm, S#. Vitus’ Dance..l.oo 34§ Diphtheria, Ulcerated Sore Throat..,so 35 §Chronic Congestions & Eruptions .50 Sold by Druggsts, or sent fiostpaid on receipt of l{lrice. Dr. BUMPHREYS’ MANUAL, (144 pages) . richly bound in cloth and gold, mailed free. Humphreys’ MedicineCo.lo9 Fulton St. N Y

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HUM'PHREYS’ YETERINARY SPECIFICS.— Used by all owners of Horse and Cate tle. A Ooxfiglimentary copy of Dr. Humphreys’ Veterinary Manual fl i)sages) on treatment and care of Domestic A als—Horses, Cattle, Sheep‘ Hogs and Poultry — Sent free. ' HUMPHREYS MeDICINE CO., 109 gulton Stus N, Y.

?‘, A B : @ e = bYO ’ : .‘:}r“ 'Q: :{-“: B bl L ) ; g S EE When T say CURE I do not mean merely to stop them for a time, and then have them re. turn again. I MEAN A RADICAL CURE.» - I have made the disease of ‘ FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, A life-long study. I WARRANT my remedy to CURE the worst cases. Because others have failed isno reason fornot nowreceivm%a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a FREE BOTTLE of my INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give Exgreua and Po<t Otfice. It costs you nothing for a trial; and it will cure you. Address H.G.ROOT, M.C., 183 PeanL ST., NEw YORK

’ Av lS ‘ Joi ¢ BLANKE l s ARE THE STRONGEST. NONE GENUINE WITHOUT THE 8/A LAREL - Ma.nut_’d;bf;‘wm AYRES & Sons, Philada ~ who make the famous Horse Brand Baker Blanketa _:-_\::';’«." N “m u" nebllle " 5 S £ w‘g;‘,qngemnqiflr:flig 11 A SRS et them, wo willsend free toone B == PEg R ‘ILMM’.V? . SRR ¥A 3 m«m nd ; L| § RIS samples. tn retim we ask that you - BERE RLa "@ *i“"' e r i 20 thsee wh o R MNP IR vonths all shall become our re SR R %&Jfi” Frind machine o ae g*%w A e (made after the Singer patents, A S\ out it vold for DB, with the 53 RN BE IO S e R Bst ety Bhiod i % P h‘l #Hd ‘3*-"'_ .;v"»".‘“*'%:“ l‘\; g '.w:?‘gy;vig:fi«gfiaus»§ ;. g % 3 % s €Bl """""“~:‘:*’"‘::? e e R . ;“f‘i | 81% &%,‘ | 3@“ v -v‘?*fi“uh x;;:}g,fi;%g ' brief instructions given. Fhose who wilte to us at onoe can s, PRUER &, I jox 740, Augusta. b TS T T W W AT SR ANgGuSLL, DEnlDgy