Pike County Democrat, Volume 30, Number 47, Petersburg, Pike County, 30 March 1900 — Page 6
Jen. Clement Has Occupied tte Town of Philipolis—Burgers Surrendering Arms.
Lord ROBERTS' PROCUMTtOR REAR. til Viin*U at Mafektn* at Last Account* —H ounded British Officers Sant Back to 1 heir Camp-Free Staters and Trausers Turning from Friends to Bitter Philipolis, Friday, March 23, via Norvnl's Font, Saturday, March 2 b— Qen. Clements entered Philipolis "dt oon to-day. He assembled the hurghrs, addressed them and read Lord Roberts' proclamation in Dutch and English. / The ftiture of the Free State, he declared. Would have to be decided by her majesty's tdvisere, but the burgher* might be certain that the late government at Bloemfontein would never be restored. He advised all the inhabitants to accept the inevitable and to obey all the orders : of the military and other authorities duly appointed, intimating that the landrost and sheriffs had been reaj.ioinitd under the queen. The burghers have been taking the oath of allegiance and surrendering their arms. V soils Foss All WeWat JUafekln*. London, Margh 2V—The war office has received /he fallowing dispatch from Lord Roberts: b “A telegram from Nicholson, at Bulotvayo, 'states \that BadtSi-Powell reports: ‘AH well to March 13. During past few days enemy’scordon much relaxed.' T WfSll Treated by the Boers. Bloemfontein, Saturday, March 21.— TheBpers who, yesterday, killed Lieut HohF Lygon.j, of the Grenadiei guards, and wounded Lieut.-Col. Crabbe, Lieut.-Col. Codrington and Capt, Trotter, of the Coldstream guards, who had ridden eight or nine miles beyond their camp on the Modder river without escort except one trooper, were meinbers of the Johannesburg’ mounted police. After dressing the wounds, they sent them td the British camp in an ambulance. ;! i Turned Into a Loyal Demonstration. Bradford,-England, March 26.-—An open air meeting convened here, Sunday, by Boer sympathizers proved ail utter fiasco, from their point of view, and was turned into a huge patriotic demonstration. The pro-Boer speakers were unable to obtain a hearing. Violat e the Sabbath Agreement. London,‘March 26.—The Daily Mail publishes the following from Marking, dated Wednesday, March 14: “We are still being heavily shelled. Skirmishing continues in the trenches. There halve been several causalties. The native ‘food question is becoming a difficulty. The Boers have broken the arrangement to respect the Sabbath by not firing, and have seized the opportunity to extend theii trenches.’
A Wall from MnleUlntf. London, March 26.—Lady Sarah Wilson, in 4- dispatch from Mafekifig, dated Wednesday, March 14, saysr “We h£>ve received news of the relief of Ladysmith, but it serves to increase our disappointment, as there is no prospect of our relief. The town remains closely invested. The Boers are reported to be very numerous and strongly intrenched between us and Col. Plunder's force. Some of the native are dying of starvation, owing to their prejudice against horseflesh.” AUlc^araed Bitter Poes. London, March 26.—A Bloemfontein correspondent of the Daily Telegraph, in a dispatch dated Friday, March 23, says: “The late allies are now bitter foes. So strong is the popular feeling here that, were it desirable, a large body of Free Staters would take the field and fight immediately against the TrancTaalers.” 1 • Moving North of Lady Brand. London,- March 26.—The Times has the following from Rouxville, dated Saturday: “Commandant Olivier, with a strong force and 15 guns, is moving north of Lady Brand. “A large Boer convoy has been seen from Basutoland proceeding toward Clocolan. Gen. French may intercept British Invade the Transvaal. London, March 26.—A dispatch to -the Daily Telegraph from Kimberly, dated Sunday, March 25, says: • “Prisoners brought in here report tt a force of British cavalry has entered the Transvaal and penetrated to a point 18 miles north of Christiana. The British forces at Fourteen Streams are being strengthened. A movement northward is expected soon. THREE FIREMEN KILLED. They Were Precipitated Into the Basement of a Building: in Which They Were nt Work. , 1 — New York, March 25.—Through the breaking down of the first floor in the [factory building at 213 and 215 East [Forty-fourth street, which was totally [destroyed by fire, three firemen were [killed and two injured. The men were precipitated into the basement in [which was about six feet of water, [and pinned under the debris. It is supposed they we*e drcrtvned.
WISE COUNSEL PREVAILS. Fke Rival Adjataan GcnenUa Moot and Acre** to Avoid a Conflict ot Arms.
Frankfort, Ky., March 25.—Xotwlthstanding- that troop* recognizing the dhal governors were quartered within two squares of each other, the republican troops at the state house, under ^orders from republican Gov. Taylor, and the democratic troops at the courthouse, guarding Prisoners Powers, Culton and Davis, under orders from democratic Gov. Beckham, the day was quiet. The republican adjutant general. Collier, and democratic assistant adjutant general, Murray, were together some time this morning. Gen. Collier called to disclaim responsibility for the mine which some of the soldiers made a pretense of laying, but it is understood their talk took on a wider scope, and that they discbssed and mutually agreed upon plans to avoid the possibility of any sort of a clash between the troops. The examining trial of Powers, it ia believed, will be completed either Tuesday or Wednesday, and that if Powers is held over the other defend-' ants will waive examination. Wharton Golden, the star witness for the commonwealth, whose illness on the stand yesterday forced an adjournment of the court twice, is reported by his physician as very much im- ! proved to-night, and in better condition to go into the witness box than he was yesterday. A KNOCK-OUT FOR CIGARETTES Chief Willis L. Moore Smy* Their Siuokinu by Signal Service Employes Moat Cease. Washington, March 26.—A death j blow was given cigarette smoking in the weather service Saturday, when Chief Willis L. Moore issued an order prohibiting persons , connected with the service from smoking* ejigarettes during office hours, and stating further that those who smoked cigarettes at any time would be mentioned in the ; confidential reports, which are made quarterly to him by chiefs of the several offices and divisions throughout the entire service. The order is plainly worded, and the chief evidently means that it shall be obeyed. Chief. Moore said Sunday: “The order was issued after careful consideration and a thorough investigation of the evils resulting from cigarette smoking. It will stand. In this service we are compelled to maintain a very strict discipline, in order to secure satisfactory service. Some of aur men who were regarded as themos'l thorough and competent, doing every detail of their work with the utmost promptness and accuracy, gradually became careless and lax. I sent inspectors to investigate, and in a number of cases it was found directly attributable to the use of cigarettes. I am not prudish, nor do I wish to assume any authority whatever over any privilege which the employes, of the service should have, but as a public servant I feel that it is my duty to correct any evil which may exist, even if in attempting to do so some muy make the claim that I am overstepping my authority. I can state almost emphatically that the order will stand, and that it applies to the entire force of the bureau [throughout the entire service. Cigarette smoking must cease. Cigars and pipes are not barred.” A NEWSPAPER SUPPRESSED,
Rebels In Gen. Young’i District liecoming AKKressive—American* Attacked. jtfanila, March 26, 7 a. m.—La Patria and El Liberal, Spanish organs of the extreme Filipino party, have recently been publishing articles inimical to the military government. Gen. Otis has suppressed the former journal for sedition and imprisoned the editor, at the same time issuing a warning to the members of the extreme party that they should observe greater moderation. Senor Patemo, at one time president of the so-called Filipino cabinet, having received permission from the authorities to come to Manila, is expected to present himself this week at San Fernando, Province of Union. The rebels in Gen. Young’s district are becoming aggressive. The American battalion garrisoning the town of Namagpacan-Nam&gpacan was attacked on four consecutive nights recently. Reinforcements are now arriving tjient Gen. Yq,ung purposes to pursue the rebels aggressively before the rainy season sets in. Stole Wife and Killed Husband. New York, March 26.—Edward Leasure, 22 years old, killed George Crotty, 38 years of age, an electrician, in Brooklyn, Sunday night. Leasure boarded at Crotty’s house, and his relations with Crotty’s wife were such as to cause ill-feeling between the two men. Sunday night Crotty met his wife on the street in Lcasure’s company. A quarrel ensued, and Leasure drew a revolver and shot Crotty twice. Best Seal Catch in Twenty Years. St. Johns, N. F., March 27.—The sealing steamer Beopard, which took shelter at Wesleyviile, Saturday, in consequence of the storm, is due here Judging from reports thus far received the total number of seals actually taken by the fleet is about 296,000, and the prospect is that, as four weeks of the fishiug season have yet to run, this totals will be increased by some 80,000. The entire catch lr-st year was only #47,000. Ibis year’s figures promise to be the best within 20 years.
DUTIES OF PARENTS. Dr. Talmage’s Ad vie; on the Bringing Up of Children.
The Dangers ni Tfmftattosi Which Surround the Yoasg-A'eceultjr of Wise Training—Reepoa* slbillty of Mothers. [Copyright. 1900. by Louis Kiopsch.] Washington, March 2S. This discourse of Dr. Talmage will interest young men, while it i» full of advice and encouragement to parents who are trying to bring up their children aright; text, Proverbs, 10,1: “A wise son maketh a glad father; but a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother.” In this graphic way Solomon sets forth the idea that the good or evil behavior of children blesses or blights the parental heart. . 1 know there are persons who seem to have no especial interest in the welfare of their children. The father says: “My boy must take the risks I took in life. If he turns <out well, all right; if he turns out ill, he will have to bear the consequences.\ He has the same chance that I had. He must take care of himself.” A she|£, herd might just as well thrust a lamb into a den of lions and say: “Little lamb, take careof yourself.” Nearly all the brute creation are kind enough to look after their young. I was going through a woods, and I heard a shrill cry in a nest. I climbed up to the bird’s nest, and I found that the old- bird had left the brood to starve. But that is a very rare occurrence. Generally a bird will pick your eyes out rather than surrender her young to your keeping or your touch. A lion will rend you if you come too near the whelps; even the barnyard fowl, with its clumsy foot and heavy wing will comeJat y*>u if you approach | its young too nearly, and God certainly intended to have fathers and mothers as kind as the brutes. Christ comes through all our house- ; holds to-day, and He says: “You take ! care of the bodies of your children and the minds of your children. What arc you doing for their immortal souls?” I read of a ship tha t foundered. A lifeboat was launched. Many of the passengers were in the water. A mother., with one hand beating the waves and the other hand holding her littfe child out toward the lifeboat, cried out: “Save my child!” And that impassioned cry is the one that finds an echo in every parental heart in this land today. “Save my child! ” That man out there says: “I have fought myiown way through life. I have got along tolerably well. The world has buffeted me, and I have had many a hard struggle. It doesn’t make much difference what hapepns to me, but save my child.” You see, I have a subject of stupendous import,, and I am going, as God may help me, to show'th'e cause of parental solicitude and then the alleviations of that solicitude. The first cause of parental solicitude, l think, arises from the imperfection of parents on their own part. We all somehow want our children to avoid our faults. We hope that if we have any excellencies they wifi copy them, but the probability is they will copy our faults and omit our excellencies. Children are very apt to be echoes of the parental life. Some one meets a lad in the back street, finds him smoking, and says: “Why, I am astounded at you. What would your father say if he knew this? Where did you get that cigar ?” “Oh,.I picked it up on the street.” “What would your father say and. your mother say if they knew this?” “Oh,” he replies, “that’s nothing. My father smokes.” There is not one of us to-day who would like to have our children copy all our example. And
inax. is me cause oi solicitude on tne part of all of us. We have so many faults we do not want them copied and stereotyped in the lives and characters of those who come after us. Then solicitude arises from our con-, scious insufficiency and) unwisdom of discipline. Out of 20 parents there may be one parent who understands how thoroughly and skillfully to discipline; perhaps not more than one out of 20. We, nearly all of us, err on one I side or on the other. Here is a father who says: “I am going to bring up my children right. My sons shall know nothing but religion, shall see nothing but religion, and hear nothing but religion.” They are routed out at six o’clock in the morning to recite the Ten Commandments. They are wakened up from the sofa on Sunday night to recite the Westminster catechism. Their bedroom walls are covered with religious pictures and quotations of Scripture, and when the boy looks for the day of the month he looks for it in a religious almanac. If a minister comes to the house, he is requested) to take the boy aside and teH him what a great sinner he is. It is religion morning, noon and night. Time passes on, and the parents are waiting for the return of the son at night. It is nine o’clock, it is ten o’clock, it is 11 o’clock, it is 12 o’clock, it is half-past 12 o’clock. Then they hear a rattling of the night key, and George comes in and hastens upstairs lest he be accosted. His father says: “George, where have you been?” He says: “I have been out.” Yes, he has been out, and he has been down, and he has started on the broad road to ruin for this life and ruin for the life to come, and the father says to his wife: “Mother, the Ten Commandments are a failure. No use of Westminster cate;hism. I have done my very best for that boy. Just see how he has turned out.” Ah! my friend, you stuffed that boy with religion. You had no sympathy with innocent hilarities. You had no common sense. A man at midlife said to me: “I haven’t much desire for religion. My father vfas as good a man as ever lived, but he jammed religion down my throat when I was a boy until T srot disgusted with it. and I haven’t
wanted any of it since." That father erred on one side. Then the discipline is an entire failure in many households because the father polls one way and the mother pulls the other way. The father says: “My son, I told you if I ever found yon guilty of falsehood again I would dh**~ tise you, and I am going to keep my promise." The mother says: “Don’t. Let him off this time." Now the father and mother are waiting for the son to come home at night.
it 18 12 o’clock, it la half-past 12 o’clock, it is one o'clock. The son comes through the hallway. The father says: “My son, what does all this mean? I gave you every opportunity. 1 gave you all the money you wanted, and here in my old days I find that you have become* a spendthrift, a libertine and a sot," The son says: “Now, father, what is the use of your talking that way? You told me to go it, and I just took your suggestion.” And so to strike the medium between severity and too great leniency, to strike the happy medium between the two and to train our children for God and for Heaven is the anxiety of every intelligent parent. Some go to work and try to eorrect all this, and the boy is picked at and ^picktMi at and picked at. That always ;is ruinous. There is more help in one good thunderstorm than in five days of cold drizzle. Better the old-fashioned style of chastisement if that be necessary than the fretting and the scolding which have destroyed so many. There is also a cause of great solicitude sometimes because Our young people are surrounded by so many temptations. A castle may not be taken by a straightforward Siege, but suppose there be inside the castle an enemy, and in the night he shoves back the bolt and swings open the door. Our young folks have foes-without, and .they have foes within. Who does not understand it? Who is the man here who is not aware of the fact that the young people or this day have tremendous temptations? , Some man wjll come to the young people and try to persuade them that purity and honesty and uprightness are weakness. Some man will ta^eapramatic attitude, and he will talk to the, young man, and he will say: “You must break away from your mother’s apron strings. You must get out of that puritanical straightjacket; It is time you were your own master. You are vetsdant. You are green. You are unsophisticated Come with me; I’ll show you the world. I’ll show youlife. Come with me. You need to see the v/orld. It won’t hurt you.” After awhile the young man says: “Well, I can't afford to be odd. I can’t afford to be peculiar. I can’t afford to sacrifice all my friends. I’ll just go and see for myself.” Farewell to. innocence, which once gone never fully conies back.; Do not be under the delusion that because you repent of sin you get rid forever of its consequences. I say farew ell to innocence, which once gone never fully comes back. Oh, how many traps set for the young! Styles of temptation just suited to them. Do you suppose that a man who went clear to the depths of dissipation went down in one great plunge? Oh, no! At first it was a fashionable hotel Marble floor. No unclean picj tnres behind the counter. No drunken hicco ugh while they drink, but the Click of cut glass to the elegant sentiment. You usk that young man now to go into some low restaurant and get a drink, aqd he would say: “Do you mean to insult, me?” But the fashionable and the elegant hotel is not always close by, and now the young mqn is on the down grade. Further Snd further down, until he lias about'struck the bottom of' the depths of ruin. Now he is in the low restaurant. The cards so greasy you can hardly tell who has the best
• hand. Gambling for drinks. Shuffle away, shuffle away. The landlord stands in his shirt sleeves, with his hands; on his hips, waiting for an order to fill up the glasses. The clock strikes 12—the tolling of the funeral bell of a soul. The breath of eternal woe' flushes in that young man’s cheeks. In the jets of the gaslight the fiery tongue of the worm that never dies. Two o’clock in the morn- | ing, and now they are sound asleep in their chairs. Landlord comes around and sajrs: “Wake up, wake up! Time to shut up!” “What?” says the young man. “Time to shut up?” Push them all ou t into the night air. Now they are going home. Going home! Let the wife crouch in the corner and the children hide under the bed. What was the history of that young man ? He began h is dissipations in the barroom of a Fifth avenue hotel and completed Mg damnation in the -lowest grogshop. Sometimes sin does not halt in that way* Sometimes sin even comes to the drawing-room. There are leprous hearts sometimes admitted in the highest circles of society. He is so elegant, he is so bewitching in his manner, he is so refined, he is so educated, no one suspects ithe sinful design, but after awhile the talons of death come forth. What is the matter with that house? The front windows have not been opened for sb: months or a year. A shadow has come down on that domestic hearth, a shadow thicker than one woven of midnight and hurricane. The agony of that parent makes him say: - “Oh, I wish I had buried my children when they were smalt!” Loss of property? No. Death in the family? No. Madness? No. Some villain, kid-gloved and diamonded, lifted that cup of domestic bliss until the sunlight struck it and all the rainbows played around the rim and then d ashed it into desolation and woe, until nhe harpies of darkness clapped their hands and all the voices of the pit uttered a loud “Ha, ha!” The statistic has never been made up. in these great cities of how many have been clestroyed and how many beautiful homes have been overthrown. If the statistics could be presented, it would freeze your blood in a solid cake at your heart.. Our great cities are full of temptations, and td vast multitudes
of parents these temptations becoi le a matter of great solicitude. But now for the alleviations. Fix st of all, you save yourself a great deal af trouble, O parent, if you can ear ly watch the children and educate them for God ahd Heaven. “The first ire years of my life made me an infidel ," said Tom Paine. A vessel puts out ;o sea, and after it has been five days o it there comes a cyclone. The vess el springs a leak. ^The helm will not wor t. What is the matter? Is it not se iworthy? Can you mend it now? It is too late. Down she goes with 250 pa *- sengers into a watery grave. What was the time to fix that vessel? What w; ,s the time to prepare it for the storn ? In the drydock. Ah, my friends, to
noi wail unui yourcmidren get out in o the; world, beyond the Narrows and oi it on the great voyage of life. It is «o late then to mend their morals aid their manners. The drydock of ti e Christian home is the place. Correct the sin now, correct the evil now. Begin early with your children You stand on the banks ol a river as d yon try to change its course. It hi a been rolling now for 100 miles. You cannot change it. But just go to ti e source of that river, go to where ti e water just drips down on the rocl:. Then with your knife make, a chanm 1 this way and a channel tha£ way, an I it will take it. Come out and stanl on the banks of your child’s life whe iit was 30 or 40 years of age, or eve l 20, and try -to change the course of that l^fe. It is too late! It is to» late! Go farther up at the source of life and nearest to the mother’s heart, where .the character starts, and try to take it in the* right direction. But, oh, nay friend, be careful to make 4 line, a distinct line, between innocen hilarity on the one hand and viciouii proclivity on the other. Do not third your children are going to ruin be cause they make a racket. All healthy children make a racket. But do no1 laugh at your child’s sin because it is, smart. If you do, you will cry after awhile because it is malicious. Remember it is wbat you do more than what you say that is going to affect your children. Do you suppose Noah would have got his family to go into the ark if he staid out? No. His sons would have said? “I am not going into the boat. There's something wrong. Father won’t go in. If father stays out, I’ll stay out.” An officer may stand in a castle abd' look off upon an army fighting, but he cannot be much of an officer, he cannot excite much enthusiasm oil the part of his troops standing in a castle or on a hilltop looking off upon the fight. It is a Garibaldi or a Napoleon I. who leaps into the stirrups and dashes ahead. And you stand outside the Christ Fan life and tell your children to go in. They will not go. But you dash on ahead, you enter the kingdom of God, and they themselves will become good soldiers of Jesus Christ. Lead if ypu would have them follow. Have a family altar. Do not with long prayers wear out your children’s knees. Do not have the prayer a repulsion. If you have a piano or an organ or a melodeon in the house, j have it open while you are having prayers. If you sdy: “I cannot construct a prayer; I am slow of speech andi never could construct a prayer,” then take Matthew Henry’s prayers, or take the Episcopal church prayer book. There is nothing better than that. Put it down on the chair, gather your children about you and commend them to God., You say it ' will not amount to anything. It wiH. long after you are under the soil. That son will remember father and mother at morning and evening prayers, and it will be a mighty help him. And above all, in private ffbmmend your children to God. Say: “HPre; Lord, I am—all my imperfections of discipline and government— here are these immortals—make them thine forever. The angel that redeemeth us from all evil,, bless the lads.” “iT > ?
Are your children safe? I know it is a stupendous question to ask, but I must ask it. Are all your children safe? A mother when the house was j on fire got out the household goods, many articles of beautiful furniture, 1 but forgot to ask until too late: “Are j the children safe?” When the elements are melting witk fervent heat and God shall burn the world up and the cry of “Fire, fire I” shall resound ! amid the mountains and the valleys, ] will your children be safe? I wonder if the subject strikes a chord in the heart of any man who had Christian parentage, but has not lived as he ought? God brought you here this morning to have your memory revived. Did you have a Christian ancestry? “Oh, yes,” says one man. “If there ever was a good woman, my mother was good.” How she watched you when you were sick! Others weaned. If she got weary, she nevertheless was wakeful,, and the medi<rine was given at the right time, and when the pillow was hot she turned it. And, oh, then when you began to go astray what a grief it was to her heart! All the scene comes back. You remember the chains, you remember the' table, you remember the doorsill where you played, you remember the tones of her voice. She seems calling you now, not by the formal title with which we address you, saying: .“Mr.” this or “Mr.” that or “Honorable” this or “Honorable” that. It is just the first name, tyour first name, she calls you by this morning. She bids you to a better life. She says: * “Forget not all the counsel I gave you, my wandering boy. Turn into paths of righteousness. I am waiting for you at the gate.” Oh, yes. God brought you here this morning to have that memory revived, and I shout upward the tidings. Angels of God, send forward the news! King! King! The dead is alive again, and the lost is found/
*• w*« !e» Be See ell #4 It, A commercial traveler whose wife » one of those women who borrow trouble indiscriminately hacl occasion to make a trip east recently. Hia wife was very anxious about him and felt certain that he would fall a victim to mnallpox, which was reported to be prevalent in the city to which he was going. She begged him to carry a little lump of asafetida an bis pocket to ward off contagion. Naturally he objected and positively refused to be made the permanent abode of such a persistent odcr. * When he camwhome from his trip he said to his wife: ^ “It is wonderful, the power of imagination. "Why, don’t you know I imagined that 1 smelled asafetida the whole tune' 1 was gone!” ' * “It wasn’t imagination at all/* quietly replied the wily little woman 1 sewed a bit of asafetida in the corner of your coat before you went away*”—Memphis Scimitar.
Beware of Olttaciti for Catarrh That Contain Mereary. as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mneous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is often ten fold to the ftood you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Care, manufactured by P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0-. contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces: of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold bv Druggists, price 75c per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best. SlgnlScsst Signal. • “I was much amused,” said Cawker to Cumso, “at what a returned Klondiker told me of the customs of the gold mines.” “Interesting and funny, were they?” "He said that in his shanty six men slept together. They all lay in a row, like spoons in a case, facing one-way, to keep warm. \v hen one of them became tired of lying on one side he would call out ‘Lawyer/ and they would all turn at once.”“Why did they use the word ‘lawyer?* ” “That meant Lie on the other side/ **—• Judge. It is not always the most successful fisherman who can tell the most catchy story.— Star of Hope. From Washington — f ‘How a Little Boy Was Saved. Washington, D. C.—“When our boy Was about 16 months old he broke out with a rash which was ihbught to be measles. In a few days he had a swelling on the left side of his neck and it was decided to be mprnps. He was given medical attendance for about three weeks when the doctor said, it was scrofula and ordered a salve. He wanted to lance the sore, but I would not let him, and continued giving him medicine for about four months, when the bunch broke in two places and became a running sore. Three doctors said it was scrofula, and each ordered a blood medicine. A neighbor told me of a case somewhat like our baby’s which was cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I decided to give it to my boy and in a short while his health improved and his neck healed so nicely that I stopped giving him the medicine. The sore broke out again, however, whereupon I again gave him Hood’s Sarsaparilla and its persistent use has accomplished a complete cure.” Mbs. Nettie Chase, 47 K St., ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter’s little Liver Pills. |T7 ■- * Must Bear Signature or I i 5m Fac-Sisslle Wrapper Below.
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