Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 June 1887 — Page 7

INDUSTRIAL.

More power, it i» stated, is distributed in Boston by electricity than in •any other American city, IT pot In the world. - . . Mr. H. Lindsay Buckall.of London, announces that the glass railway sleepers devised by him were recently tested at the w'orks of the Anderson Foundry Company, Glasgow, and resisted a falling weight of 3.1 cwt., placed, upon sleepers set in sand ballast. Crude petroleum is now used in many places for generating steam in the boilers of thrashing machines. It is preferred to any kind of fuel, as it produces no sparks which are likely to set grain stacks on fire. As the furnace for burning oil is small, the weight of the apparatus is less than that in which coal and wood are consumed. A Birmingham (Conn.) electrician has a new rat trap which, it is said, works admirably. He attaches a piece of meat to one pole of a dynamo machine, which can only be reached by the rat by standing" on a plate,, which serves as the other pole, lieport says that no rat has yet got the meat, but many have reached for. it, and the inventor is rewarded for his ingenuity with a large collection of dead rats. As a rule, in building stables too little attention is given to securing light and ventilation, two most important aids in keeping stock healthy. It is , strange that when these can be had so easily barns are so often very defective and unhealthy for lack of them. Animals should have light, comfortable quarters, not only because it is more pleasant and easier to care for them in such barns, but because they give better returns for the. food [‘consumed in such healthy quarters. An appliance, being a valve for prepcciaiting an explosion of a wa,ter-back, fchiWriccessfully used in Montreal. It " e ica ‘ '‘fits of a disk of thin sheet-lead, .led by an annular cup against a 4d nipple, which is screwed into. TT° of the water-back. In the ut of the pipes freezing, a fire being „arted in the range, the steam pressure generated will blow out this lead disk and relieve the apparatus. The pipes being thawed a new disk can be readily inserted. The nipple and cap are made of brass. —American Archited.

Sandpaper is at present made with powdered glass instead of sand. Glass is readily pulverized bv heating it red hot and throwing it into water, and finishing the powdering in an iron frame mortar. By the use of sieves of different sizes of mesh the powder ■can be separated into various grades, from the finest dust to very coarse, and these should be kept separate. A strong paper is tacked down and covered with a strong size of glue, and the surface covered with powdered glass of the desired fineness; when the glue is dry the surplus glass is shaken or brushed off. .Muslin is better than paper and lasts much longer. The Age of Steel publishes a summary of the statistics collected by the American Iron A Steel Association in the nail trade. These statistics show that exclusive of railroad spikes and hotseshoe nails our total production of cut nails and cut spikes in 1886 was 8,160,978 kegs of 100 pounds each, against 6,696,815 kegs in 1885, 7,581,379 kegs in 1884, and 7,762,747 kegs in 1883. The production of 1886 was the largest the country has ever attained. The increase in 1886 over 1885 was partly due to the settlement , of the nailers’ strike June 25 and partly to the prosperous cofidition of the country during the whole of the year. A common trouble with us all is that we fail in our business because we think little of it. No man truly succeeds in any calling who has a poor opinion- of it. No man has a good’ opinion of his business who uses it only to make money*sut of it. No man can have the best conception of his business who does not; esteem it for its usefulness. And the higher we go—if “higher" and “lower’ji are proper terms to use in considering the different honorable and useful walks of life—the more clearly will it appear that he who only festeems his business for the living or money that is in it must, if judged by any high standard, be a failure.— Dr. Hupgood. A Florida company, engaged in the manufacture of perfumery, has built a factory at 'Jacksonville, and next spring will start a 200 acre flower plantation. They now have one plantation at Ban Mateo, and are putting seven acres at Jacksonville, in. flowers. They have 5,000,000 flowering tuberose bulbs, and a good many hundred thousand rose geraniums, in addition to which they buy all the roses, yellow jasmines, orange blossoms, etc., that they can secure. This is an- industry that ought to prove profitable. It is another illustration of the diversification of the industrial interests of the South, and of the many openings for the manufacture of small things that the South offers. Some genius who is wintering in the bush up on Squaw Mountain near Moosehead Lake, Me., and corresponds for the Monson Slate, has been figuring the amount of muscular exertion required to cut 4| millions of lumber. This is the way he states it: By careful reckoning it is found that the average number of blows required to fell an average tree is about 500, and the average distance travelled by theaxetna blow twelve feet 'Bhern we have 36,000 trees, by 500 blows to ■the tree, equals 180,000,000, total number of blows; 18,000,000 by twelve feet, distance travelled by the axe at •each blow, equals 2,160,000,000 feet, total distance traversed by the axe. Or, in other words, the axe travels 40,309 mile 3 2 rods 15 feet in cutting -36,000 trees, or 4£ million feet of lumber,—industrial Journal. t &

The Drouth of 1813.

| From the unpublished letters of Jef{feraon, appearing recently, the following description of the drouth of 1813 is taken: ••From the fork of % James lliver and the falls pf-other rivers upward and we have had the most calamitous year ever seen since 1755. It began with the blockade, so that the fine crops of the hast year madrt in these upper parts, which could not be at market till after Christmas, were shut up by that and lost their sale. After keeping my flour till the approach of the new harvest, I was obliged to sell it, lest it would spoil on my hands, at a price which netted me only 47 cents a bushel for my wheat, of course a total sacrifice. In the year 1755 it never rained from April to November. There was not bread enough to eat, ahd many died of famine. This year in these upper regions we have had not a single rain fromApril 14 to September 20, five months, except a slight shower in May. The wheat was .killed by the drouth as dead as - the leaves of the trees now -ace— The stems fell before the scythe without being cut, and the little grain in (he head shattered on the ground. From 500 acres sowed-here I have not got in 1,500 bushels, not three times the seed. "Our corn has suffered equally. From 270 acres planted, and which in common years would have yielded from 800 to 1,000 barrels, I shall not get a barrel an acre, and a great portion of that will be what are called nubbins, being half formed ears With little grain on them. Corn consequently starts witli us at three and a third dollars, and being the principal food of our laborers, its purchase will be a heavy tax. lam told the drouth has been equally fatal as far as Kentucky. There have been a few local exceptions here from small bits of clouds accidentally passing over some farm. Should the little wheat we have made be shut up by a continuance of the blockade through the winter, we shall be absolutely bankrupt, by the loss of two successive crops. This is really the case for exclaiming '■Ofortunatimeroatores /’ ” •

A Famous Correspondent Gone.

In the death of George Wallace, Mon treal correspondent of The Toronto Mail, Canadian journalism loses a man that did much to lift it out of a rut of dead commonplace almost inconceivable to an intelligent American. "Wallace had quite an exciting time in California away back in the fifties. When the Australian gold fever broke out he was one of the earliest pioneers, and is said to have furnished Charles lleade with some of the material for his interesting romance “It Is never -Too Late to Mend.” He made a large fortune, but lost it by the smashing of a Belfast bank. When gold was discovered in British Columbia he went to that then almost inaccessible country and established a newspaper in the mountains, which he sold to the miners for 81 per copy, realizing another forturte, which he promptly lost as soon as he returned to civilization. Making a fresh start in Canada alter some experience in Russia and New York, he became city editor of The Montreal f Star, succeeding the late George T. Lanigan. He shook up Montreal in a few weeks and had The Star covered mountains deep with libel suits. He fought abuses with a vigor never before known, and while he succeeded in making himself man most feared and hated by the rings of politicians and plunderers of the city he proved too heavy a load for The Star to carry. He undertook the management of the Academy of Music, and failing in it settled down as the correspondent of The Mail. He was also Montreal correspondent of a host of . American newspapers. —Albany Argus.

A Boy’s Estimate of His Mother's Work.

“My mother gets me up, builds the fire, gets mv breakfast, a,nd sends me off,” said a bright youth. “What then?” said the reporter. “Then she gets my father Up and gets his breakfast and sends him off, then she gets the other children their breakfast and-sends them to school, and then she and the baby have their breakfast.” “How old is the baby?” ' “O, she is ’most two, but she can walk and talk as well as any of us,” “Are you well paid?” “I get |2 a week, father gets 82 a day.” ••How much does your mother get?” With a bewildered look the boy said: “Mother! Why, she don’t wotk for anybody.” “I thought you said she worked for all of you.” “O, yes, for all of us.she does, but there a’n’t no money it”— A merican Fanner. —---■ ■ - YAt Terre Haute, Champaigß County, Ohio, Sir. Charles F. Powell was postmaster, and writes:"" 1 Thave a fine lot of Polish Chickens. I gave them St. Jacobs Oil on a pill of bread for the croup. It eured them. The next morning I could not tell which of the chickens had been sick.” The BeechOr memorial fund now amounts to about 815,000.

“How Can She Ever Love Him?"

Is what you often hear said when’ the prospective groom is the victim of catarrh. "How can she bear such a breath?” “How p resolve to link her destiny with that of one with a disease, that unless arrested, will end in consumption, or perhaps in insanity ?’’ Let the husband that is, or is to ' le, get Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, and cure himself before it is too late. By druggists.

Why did the Women of this country use over thirteen million cakes of Procter & Gamble’s Lenox* Soap in 1S86? Buy a cake of Lenox and'you will soon understand why.

A New System of Boot Making.

• The London (Kng.) Shoe and (Leather Record describes a system of fastening the soles to bo.ots and shoes, in which the fastenings ale driven from the insftle, the |astenings being first placed in the insole and then the upper lasted over them. The fastening is of brass, with a conical front, barbed .all around the (joint, and the head is flat and neatly formed. A machine is used' to feed and drive the fastenings at regular distances through the insole. The insole is then laid on the last, with the barbed points standing erect. The upper is lasted over these points and pushed down, leaving sullicient of the point still above the upper to pierce half way through the sole. The sole is then laid on as though upon blinders, hammered down, and- the process is complete. The heeling and finishihg are performed in the ordinary way.

Though Shaken Like a Lenf

By the most trivial causes, weak nerves are easily susceptible of invigonxtion, a term which also imports, in this instance, quietude. The nervous have but to uno Hostetler s Stoqiach Bitters systematically to overcome that super siCnsitiveness of the human sensorium, which Is subversive of all bodily comfort a’id mental tranquillity, and which reacts most hurtlully upon the systepfi. The difficulty, underlying this, as well as many other ailments, is imperfect as., similation, no less than incomplete digestion of the ipod. Tn the di>,charge of both the digestive and assimilative functions, the Bitters are the most potent, the most reliable/auxiliary. As the body- regains vigor and regularity by its aid, the brain and nervous system are also benefited. Persons subject to the influence of malaria, dyspeptic and rhfcumatic invalid*, and persons whose kidpeyyare inactive, should, k,lso, use the BltterS. \

A dish of rare old Rouen ware sold in Paris for $1,520. “Billy” Florence was recently blackballed by the New York Union C. 1 gib. * ♦ / Mr. Arthur Shurtleff, Parker, Da] foS, writes: “St. Jacob's Oil will cure one tlnbg not advertised. It cured a wart on my finger which I had for years.” Price Fifty cents. j, Jesse Grant’s yousgest son is said to be the image of the general.

To Consumptives,

or those with weak lungs, spitting of blood, bronchitis, or kindred affections of “ r i«ngs, send 10 cents in stamps for J>r. K. V. Pierce’s treatise on these maladies. Address tk-9 doctor,Buffalo, N. Y. New York’hotels employ about one thousand chambermaids. It afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c. In Philadelphia during the past year there were erected or remodeled 9,200 buildings. Fits.— All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise rmd $2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Seadt& Dr. Kli«e v^3* -Arch St It is proposed to have one general large storehouse in San Francisco, Cal., for wines.

Scrofula Probably no form of disease is so generally distributed among our whole population as scrofulaAlmost every individual has this latent poison coursing his veins. The terrible sufferings endured by those afflicted with scrofulous sores cannot be understood by others, and their gratitude on finding a remedy that cures them, astonishes a well person. The wonderful power of Hood’s Sarsaparilla In eradicating every form of Scrofula has been sc clearly and fully demonstrated that it leaves no doubt that it is the greatest medical discovery of this generation. It is made by C. I. lIOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass., and is sold by all druggists. 100 Doses One Poliar 35 MEDALS-AWARD ED-T 0 BKgSff Backache, WoaknoM, CdM« In Kimf" HHntbo Chest aud all Aches and strains, Bsmangfl Uew.ie THE-BESTMIHEWORLD-. PROF. 3 AttOhAL'KIIMcR. f*LD. BINOHARIVOM. N.V. THE INVALID* BENEFACTOR. Discoverer of Dr. Kilmer’s Complete Female Remedv u Ladies' Home Treatment Special and Specific treatment for all Complaints and Diseases peculiar to Daughters, Wives and Mothers. Bach.package contains 3 bottles. Each kind is also sold separately: Female Remedy, (Blood ami System ;81. Autumn-Leaf lixt.jfl-oon Treatm’t,s 1 . Uic O Anointment, (External “ ,50 |SF”Or the three in one Package S2.CQ. Recovers the “run-down;” bed-ridden’’ or “abandoned.” It Eliminates Humors and Blood Impurities that catiise Scrofula, Cancer, Tumor, pimples and blotches. The age for Pessaries and Exposures ia pest. Woman a Health and uaofulnesg again restored. Dr. Kilmer treat* internal Tumor, Cancer. E Ton can't afford to neglect early symptoms. ■ ; Letters of inquiry promptly answered. | 1 Dr.Kilmer’s Female Dispensary. Binghamton. N. Y. I I "Invalids' Guide to Health" (Sent Free). I SOILS BY ILL DRUGGISTS.

HOW WOMEN WOULD VOTE.

Were women allowed to vote, every one in the land who has used Dr. Pierce’a “Favorite Prescription” would vote it to be an unfailing remedy for the diseases peculiar to her sex. By druggists. A new postoflice in Virginia is named Malaria. A young man belonging to an eighteen million family in New York, was made a perfect mental .wreck by overstndy at college. After four years of doctors to no account, this Moxio Nerve Food that is talked so much about on the street, cured him in two months. Russia imports annually raw cotton to the value of $43,000,000. Plan’s Remedy for Catarrh Is agreeable to use. It Is not a liquid or a snuir. 50c, Since November fifteen thousand families have settled in California. The farmers,, in their swamps, we’re sure, Could find the roots an(J plants that cure; If by their knowledge they only knew For just the disease each one grew. Take courage now, and 44 w amp-Uoot” try — (for kidney, liver and bladder complaints). As on this remedy you can rely. * There are said to be over two million gypsies in this country. When Baby was sick, w- pave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Mies, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gavo them Castoria Cattle are reported starving to death on the lower S'an Pedro, Arizona.

WOMEN E Needing renewed strength, or who infer from Infirmities peculiar to tnelr lex, should try BRff gm flhl Pm-S This medicine combines Iron with pure vegetable tonics, and ia invaluable for Diseases peculiar to Women* and all who lead sedentary lives. It Enriches and Purifieg the lllood, Stimulates tho Appetite, Strengthens the Muscles and Nerves—in fact, thoroughly Invigorates. Clears the complexion, and makes the skin smooth. It dqes not blacken tho teeth, cause headache, or produce constipation —all other Iron medicines do, Mrs. Elizabeth Baird, 74 Farwell Ave.. Milwaukee, Wis., says, under date of Dec. 26th. 1884: 4 * I h".ve used Brown’s Iron Bitters, and it has been more than a doctor to me, having cured me of, the weakness ladies have in life. Also cured me of Liver Complaint, and now iny complexion is clear and good. Has also been beneficial to my children.’* Mrs. Louisa C. Bragdon. East Lockport. N.Y., Bays: “ I have suffered untold misery from Female Complaints, and could obtain relief from nothing except Brown’s Iron Bitters.” on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by SHOWN CHEMICAL CO.. HALT I MOKE. MU fa F TO 88 A BAY. Bam pies worth 81. .TO JkiTl FREE. Lines not under the hOrse’sfeet. Write IjPlr bßfctthTKK bAEJhXY HEIN lIOLDKB CO. , Holly, 31icU.

| BTV, THE ORIGINAL little liver pills. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS! O Q \\ l\\ (L Always ask for Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, or Little 7O Q Q \WS Sugar-coated Qranules or Pills.

BEING ENTIRELY VEGETABLE, Dr. Pierce’s Pellets operate without disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. Put up ip glass vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. As m LAXATIVE, ALTERATIVE, or PURGATIVE, these little Pclldts give the most perfect satisfaction. .

SICK HEADACHE Bilious Headache, Dizziuess, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the stomach and bowels, are promptly relieved and permanently cured by the U9e of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets. In erplanation of the remedial power of these Pellets over so great a variety of diseases. It may truthfully be said that their action upon the system is universal, not A gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence. Sold hy druggists, for 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the Chemical laboratory of W r child's Dispensary Medical Buffalo, N. Y.

A CASE GF CATARRHCAN NRT CDRE. • ■ H? .\ • '

SYMPTOMS OF rtATARRH. - ...... ''• • ' ... 'V '■ /-V - '' ■ ■ Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes-are weak, watery, and inflamed; there is Hfliriqg in the ears, .deafness, hacking or ■ coughing to clear the throat, expectoration,of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulcers; the voibe is changed and has a nasal twang; the breath is offensive: smell and taste nre impaired: there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depression, a hacking cough and sjeneral debility. However, oplv a few of the above-named symiJtoms are likely to be present In any one case. Thousands of oases annually, without manifesting half of the- above symptoms, result In consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. By its mild, soothing, and healing properties, Dll. SALE’S CATARRH REMEDY CURES THE WORST CASES OF Catarrh, “Cold in the Head,” Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. PRICE, 50 OZDMTS. ' /

t LIDIA E. PINKfIAM’S VE6ETABLE # # COMPOUND !• a Positive Cure Far r«mli Cißfblib iml WtitacHao nmumUmp b— t f— la popmlattoa# It will cure entirely the wont form of Female Complaint*, ail Ovarian troubles. Inflammation and Uk ceratlon. Falling and Displacements, and tho consequent Bplnaf weakness, and ia particularly adapted to tho Change of Life. * It will dissolve and expel tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development. The tendency to cancerous humors there ia checked very speedily by its use. It rrraoies faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulants, aud relieves weakness or the stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches. Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, cauning pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by ita use. It will at all times and under all circumstances act In harmony with the laws that govern the Female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either mr this Compound is unsurpassed. Price fl. Six bottles lor fill. No family rhould be without LYDIA C. PINKHASTS LIVER PILLS, They cure constipation, biliousness and torpidity of the liver. 26 cents a box at oil druggists. B STOPPED FREE Afamfcu tucetf . Insane Pen mi Pi: bred Dr.KLINES CtXSAT NERVEREBTORER VI DISBASBS- Only sure lions. Fits, P.yilepxy, etc* * directed. No Fits uft<* : sad $2 trial bottle free fee :xpresschargescubox whaa . O. and express arfdres* *| li Arrh St..Philadelphia.Fa. ► I KIT A TING FJtA ÜBS. PENNYROYAL PILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH/* The Original and Only Genuine. Safe and always Reliable. Beware of worth leas Imitation. Isdlftpcosablc to LADIES. Ask your Druggist for “Chichester’s English* and take no other, or facloM ia. fatjumo*) to os for particulars in letter by return raalJL NAME PAPER. Chichester Chemical Co.. 2818 MudUon bqcara, I’lillada., P* DruggUu everywhere. A»k for "Chlcbea •ssr»a Xbagliah” Pennyroyal Pills. Taka so oUw.

Out- Agent 'Merchant onlv > wnn'<-*l In every town f. r Everybody wants “TansiU’s Punch” 5c cigar now; they were always good but of late they have improved. 1 heartily approve of your way of doing business, you are sure to hold and increase your trade. A. Arend, Druggist, Chicago, 111. Address P. W. TAX HILL A CO„ Chicago gin li | ill MORPHiNt HABIT m Jg BJ§ i9BIf I n »g:r at hour, no fain, « « MB' D a# Wervoura**, Lost nltrp or inUrferenw with {-( B bu*in«m. Directions citcple. Terms Low. Treat* MB ma ■ B roent s*ut on trisU and NO FAT wked until you »re 35 SI V ben.«u«l. 1,000 Cur*. In Six Month*. ■ 1 FREE. THE HUMANE qg REMEDY CO.. LAFAYETTE. IndT DETECTIVES Wanted in every County. Fbrewd men to act under ox 2 instructions In our Secret Service, Experience not necessary. Bend stamp for particulars. ORANNAW DETEC* TIVE BUREAU; 44 Arcade, Cincinnati, O. TELEPHONES—’ Crooked. C.II Belle. Ear-Phore, etc. Four Styles, 5 Patent*. Prices Low. Send for Illustrated Circular. E E. Harbert & Co.. 157 LaSalle St.. Chicago. ~ DR. JOSlft A. SEWELL’S TREATISE ON HOC CHOLERA. , "..rjr , °" Sent Free. C. S. Jones A Co., Bloomington, 111. Odlcer’a pay, bounty pro fUr r II.N 11 I rt, refl; deserters relieved. § UllvlvllW| 21 years’ practice. Success ■ or no sere. Write for circulars and new laws. A. W, McCormick ft Son. Washing ton, D. C. a ClncU.afl, % ■ ■ make rs per dayselUns Improved a Bn Si ■ Ideal Hair Curler k Frizzer. Sample Soc. LNU | O. L. Thompson, 123 Qijlilcy St., Chicago. DOTCMTC Obtained for S2U by R.B.Miafwa ruEB, I A I Eli I U Attorney, St. Louis, lia Advice free.

William Ramich, Esq., of Minden, Kearney Countv, Rmie Nebraska, writes: “I was troubled with boils for UUILo thirty years.® Four years ago I was so afflicted with RllDCn them that I could not walk. I bought two bottles UUntil, of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets, and took one ‘ Pellet ’ after each meal, till all were gone. By that time I had no boils, and have had none since. I have also been troubled with sick headache. When I feel it coming on, I take one or two * Pellets,’ and am relieved of the headache. Mrs. C. W. Brown, of Wapakoneta, Ohio, THE BEST says: “Your ‘Pleasant Purgative Pellets’ are * 1 without question the best cathartic ever HITUIDTin sold. They arc also a most efficient remedy UB i lian I 111. for torpor of the liver. We have used them ——l for years in our family, and keep them in the house all the time.” • **

Prof. W. Haubnkr, the famotu meaner* Untold Arony fet * ° f write*: "some tea uniULU Howni years ago I suffered untold agony from nnu Catarrh rnUltl UR I nnnn. Clan gave me up as incurable, and said I must die. My case was such a bad one, that every day, towards sunset, my voice would become so hoarse I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my cough* ing and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. By the use of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, In three months, 1 was a well man, and the cure has been permanent.” Thomas J. Rusmwo, Esq., *9ot Pine Street, CONSTANTLY St. Lou** Mo.. writes: “I was a great sufUURoIJUIILI f f >rer from catarrh for three years. At nAWYINR AND ti,nes 1 could hardl - v breathe, and was conlln IT kina nnu stantly hawking and spitting, and.for the \DITTIII6 last eight months could not breathe through Or 1111”0. the nostrils. I thought nothing could oe done for me. Luckily, I was advised to try Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, and lam now a well man. I believe It to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now manufactured, and one has only to give It a fair trial to experience astounding results and a permanent cure.” _ ' Eu Robbihs, Runyon P. 0* Columbia Os. THBPP HnTTI PQ Pa., says: “My daughter bad catarrh who* Itintt DU 11 Ltd Bht was five years 61d, very badly. I saw PitßP PlTinnu Ur. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy advertised, and Uunh UATrKKH. procured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it helped her; a third bottle effected a permanent cure. She is now eighteen yearn old and sound and hearty.”

o^l /conquerm\ Is WAYNE’S / /yESMIFUO/i.exercisedaicAPANACEal ' (‘ rom9 D PWRES \mj|DREjW 3BE CHEERFUL jjypuiiyTwi O^/ I ot RESTORER \ I-(ENGLISH) I THE GREXr^CUREFOft IICHINE PILES itching and stinging, f (Lti most at night-worse by o>^scratchlng—very distressing. to continue tumors form whlcn>L /often bleed aud ulcerate, becoming JJa onavN.-o Ir. IIVIUIS 1 the Itching and ulceration, and c,w f. %inS.many cases removes/^0” h A Bkin of Beauty Is a Joy Forevar DE. T. FELIX SOUBAUD’3 Oriental Cream, or Haiical BeantiOer, „ m o Removes Tan, PlmplM » « jg i WHKESIfo 1 lecKlcs,Moth-Patches £ 1-,=-- l.asu »ml Skin diseases to £ S ?» fljM:-- 'w >*ha eveiy blemish oi WPWjfg ft* * »io<ml the test sald to alady of the haul lon (a patten?’Indies wilt vse them. I recommend 'llouraud’t Cream • asthe least harmful 0 ) all the akin Preparation».’* One boitle will last six months, using jt every day. Also Poudre Subille removes superfluous hair without Inlury to tlie skin. FRED. T. HOPKINS. Manager. 4H Bond St., N.T. For sale by all Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers throughout the u. S., Canada and Europe. tyileware of base Imitations. JJLDOO Reward for arrest and proof of any oue selling thesame, ■ Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is'the Best, Easiest to ÜBe, aud Cheapest. ■ Sold by druggists or sent by maiL 50c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. |B| M. nTp. Co., Chicaoo. Vol. lI—No. 9