Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 December 1887 — Page 3
Hood's Sarsaparil/c This successful medicine it a cares ully-prepare extract of Hie best remedies of the regetabi kingdom known to medical science as Alteratives Blood Purifiers, Diuretics, and Tonics, such a. ■ < Sarsaparilla, Yellow Dock, StiUlngla, Dandelion, Juniper Berries, Mandrake. Wild Cherry Bark and other selected roots, barks and herbs. A medicine, like anything else, can bo fairly judged •nly by Its results. Wo point with satisfaction to. the glorious record llood’s Sarsaparilla has entered for Itself upon the hearts of thousands of people who have personally or indirectly been relieved of terriblb suffering which all other remedies failed to reach. Sold by all druggists. P ; six for $&. Made only by <3." 1. HOOD 4 CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar B Ely’s Cream Balm Is Worth •1000 to auy VIAN, WOMAN OH CHILD Miflfonng from CATARRH. Apply Balm into each nostril ELY 8E05,235 Greenwich Bt.N. Y
Doq’t! Doij’t! DON'T continue to suffer from the many ailments brought on by an impure state of the blood" when Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla will restore perfect health and physical strength. Use it, and you u-e the best blood purifier and tonic that medical science is able to produce. It cures Scrofula, King's Evil, Erysipelas, Boils, Pimples, Sore Eyes, Pains in the Bones. Joint-aches, Syphilis and Syphilitic Symptoms, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Costiveness, Saltrheum, Weak Kidneys, Liver Complaints, Female Irregularities, Sick and Nervous Headaches, General Debility, Low Spirits, Loss of Appetite, Chronic and Constitutional Disorders, and as a Spring and Fall Medicine, as a Cleanser and Renewor of the entire system, Dr. Gaysott’a Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla is far better than any other > remedy made. GOll! Clift! Soil! What is more grating to the ears and saddening to the peurtsof loving friends who thus behold their dearly beloved who have inherited consumptive tendencies approaching the brink of an early gravel 1 What effort can be counted toe great, what exertion too severe that will give to all such suffering •nes a new lease of life"! "And yet Ihe way isopen. Dr. Wistar’sßalsam of Wild Cherry will give satisfaction when all else fails. Keep a bottle always in the house; a MBglo doss will relieve a painful fit Of coughing.
&^m : H SENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU MIAKO OTHER EHUAUYEFFICIENT REMEDIES M 1 llt has stood the Test of Years, al l in Curing all Diseases of the J^j@P|* fch BLOOD, LIVER, 6TOMACH, KIDNEYS,BOWELS, &c. It Purifies the : j Blood, Invigorates and aASHL Cleanses the System. BITTERS dyspepsia,constiCURES PATION, JAUNDICE, 1 ALLDISEASES DFTHE SICKHEADACHE.BILI T IWR lOUS COMPLAINTS,&e i _ disappear at once under ) KIDNEYS its beneficial influence. i STOMACH It is purely a Medicine , < AN D as its cathartic proper ! nnuim t? ties forbids its use as a IBOWELS. beverage. Itispleasant to the taste, and as <S?by& jz“i.“S. bl ' c “ ld ‘ ALLDRUGGISTS I prickly ash bitters co £IIPR | rrl nm I ARiy Bole Proprietors, rniLLXUUUMn|H STXouifland Kansas City • AubUXiiiAsiid X>£ XUiU stomach, Liver IHF and Bowels TAKE—. ETTUOTL-Y vegetable. E'li'a COXBTIPATION, I.VDIOESTION. DYSPEPSIA f .r !.«. Sick- Hbadachb, Diver Complaints. ! - t ETC, PXICE, *S eee » r -?n WAHUrAnTtjniKR no Ter ictus, wn mm TO EVERYBODY. TTS wttl present to all who send us thetr umt and address before the Z!d of Dec ember, 1581, our elegant Holiday Edition, comprising sntteen wren of jariale nal atones, war sketches, anecdotes, fashions for dies, ocDlleinen, and chil.li'. n. - 1,'., by tiie lies, writers in the country. This edition will be equal to an ordinary book of 150 paces, and will cost only the %11 Franklin .Street, Cliioaw. 111. DCIICIDIIC to Soldier, aim Hem. 1_ UINt,rCnolUß'i h.va*. Attorney 'Wisoifia-ron, iy fkDIIIIfI ? ,O .TR lllnr tlablt Cured In J. Ilrlllm 5? aOdr.ys. \o pny till rtired 111 Wr. J. feioi.iicus.lii iiatijn.Ohjy
RUSSIAN TERRORISM.
The Manner of Securing Testimony AgainA Political Revol utloniuts. The following is from George Kennan’s account of “Prison Life of the Russian Revolutionists” in the 1 December Century: When General Btrelnikoff was intrusted by the Czar with almost dictatorial power in order that he might extirpate sedition in the provinces of southern Russia, he arrested and threw into prison in the single city of Odessa no less than 118 pereons in three days. He went to Kiev and arrested 89 persons almost simultaneously, and ordered the imprisonment of hundreds ; of others in Kbarkoff, Nikolaief, Pultava, Kursk, and other South Russian cities Most of these arrests were made entirely without what is known as “probable cause,” and for the sole purpose of obtaining clews to plots which the police believed to exist, but which they had not been.able to discover. Many of the persons arrested were mere children—immature sohool-boys and girls from fifteen to seventeen years of age—who could not possibly be regarded as dangerous conspirators, but who might, it was thought, be terrified into a confession of all they knew with regard to the movements, conversations, and occupations of their older relatives and friends. General Stretnikoff’s plan was to arrest simultaneously a large number of the “untrustworthy” class; throw them into prison; keep them for ten days or two weeks in the strictest* solitary confinement, ana men subject tnem t to a terrifying inquisitorial examination with the hope of extorting scraps of information, here a little and there a little, which might be pieced together, like the parts of a dissected map, so as to reveal the outline of a revolutionary plot. If, for example, a young girl belonged to an “untrustworthy” family, and a ‘ suspicious” letter to her had been intercepted by the authorities; or if she had been seen coming out of a “suspicihus” house at a late hour in the evening, she was arrested in one of these police raids, generally at night; conveyed in a close carriage to the Odessa prison; put into a small solitary confinement cell and left to her own agonizing thoughts. No explanation was given her of this summary proceeding, and if she appealed to the sentinel on duty in the corridor, the only reply she obtained was “Frikazano ne gavarit”—“Talking is forbidden.” The eflect produced upon a young, inexperienced, impressi-* ble girl, by the overwhelming shock of such a transition from repose, and security of her own bedroom, in her own -home, to a narrow, gloomy * cell in a common criminal prison at night, can readily be imagined. Even if she were a girl of courage and] firmness of character, her self-control might give way under the strain of such an ordeal. The sounds which break the stillness of a Russian criminal prison at night—the stealthy tread of the guard; the faintly heard cries of a drunken “casual” who is being strapped to his bed in another part of the prison, cries which suggest to an inexperienced giri some terrible scene of violence and outrage; the occasional clang of a heavy door; the moaning and hysterical weeping of other recently arrested prisoners in cells in the same corridor, and the sudden and noiseless appearance now and then of an unknown human face at ihe little square port-hole in the cell door through which the prisoners are watched—all combine to make the first night of a young girl in prison an experience never to be forgotten while she lives. The This experience, however, is only the beginning of the trial which her courage and self-control are destined to undergo. One day passes—two days—three days—ten days—without bringing any news from the outside world, or any intormatiou concerning the nature of the charges made against her. Twice every twenty-four hours food is handed to her through the square port-hole by the taciturn guard, but nothing else breaks the monotony and the solitude of her life. Bhe has no books, no writ ing materials, no means whatever of diverting her thoughts or relieving the mental strain which soon becomes almost unendurable. Tortured by apprehension and by uncertainty as to her own fate and thf fate of those dear to her, she can only pace hercell from corner to corner until she is exhausted,and then throw herself on the narrow prison bed and in sleep try to lose consciousness of her misery. c At last, two'weeks perhaps after her arrest, when her spirit is supposed to beesuffieiently broken by solitSsy confinement and grief, she is summoned to the doprbs, a’prelimfnary examination, _wiihont witnesses or counsel, conducted by General Streinikoff in° person. He begins by saying to her that she is “charged with very Herious crimes under such and such sections the of PeDal Code, and that she stands in danger of years. In' view, however, of her youth and inexperience, and of the probability that she has been misled by criminal associates, he feels authorized to say to “her that if she will show repentance,and a sincere desire to reform, by making a ‘cristo-serdechni,’ —‘clean-hearted’ confession,—and will answer truthfully all quegtions pnitbTier.BhewHttnnnedlateIv be released. If, on the contrary, she manifests an obdurate disposition and thns proves herself to be tinworthy of ek money, it will become hia doty, as - v. J- ; -»-- •.. ' . ' "
prosecuting officer of the Crown, to treat her with all the rigor of the law.” The poor girl is well aware that the reference to Siberian exile is not an empty threat. Belonging a 3 she does to an “untrustworthy” family, site has often heard discussed the case of Marie Prisedski, who was exilpd before she was sixteen years of age because she would not betray heroldersister,aud the case of the Ivitchevitch children, one seventeen and the other fourteen years of age, who were arrested in Kiev and sent to Siberia in 1879 for no particular reason except that their two older brothers were revolutionists and, been shot * dead while resisting arrest. It is not a matter for surprise if a young girl who has thus been torn from her home, who is depressed and disheartened by solitary confinement, who is without counsel, without, knowledge of the law, without the support of a single friend in this supieme crisis of her life, breaks down at last under the strain' of deadly fear, tells the inquisitor ail she knows. She is at once released, but only to suffer agonies of Belf-reproach and remorse as she sees, her relatives and dearest friends arrested, imprisoned, and exiled to Siberia upon information and clews which she herself has furnished. It frequently happens, however, that a girl remains steadfast and refuses to answer questions even after months of solitary confinement. The authorities then resort to other and even more discreditable methods.
RELIGION IN COREA.
The Government Opposes All Worship. Bt. Louis (Hobe Democrat. In the list of the virtues of its people and the attractions of the country Corea makes a poor showing and shines negatively. With no past, no future, uq riches, no power, no warlike spirit, no art, no progress, no commerce, no living literature, no theaters, and few amusements or' social customs, one may wonder how it remains a kingdom and a people, and why it exists. Corea’s condition would seem to prove all that preachers and philosophers say about a people without a religion. In this capital of 200,000 people, and in the great plane of city roofs, there is not a tower or pagoda to tell of the worship of any deity. A scrap of paper and a hit of rag fastened to a Straw rope over the house doors propitiates the demons and keeps them out, and the Corean devils are so stupid and easily deceived that, getting hold of the rag, they think they have the whole game and the man in it, and are satisfied. This is the only -sign of any form of worship or belief to be found in the city, and there are edicts prohibiting priests from entering the city gates. Every form of religion is frowned upon by the Government, and in the treaties with other nations proselyting and missionary work are distinctly prohibited. Centuries ago the Jesuits entered the Kingdom from the Chinese frontier and made many converts among the people, but in all the annals of martyrdom nothing exceeds the stories of the tor-1 tures and punishment inflicted upon j those saintly men. It was believed that j tliey had given aid and instructions to the enemies of Corea, and the Jesuits were hunted and put to death, and edicts put forth promising torture to those who harbored or encouraged the Jesuits in their work This attitude of the Government neither discouraged nor stopped the missionary fathers, and Jesuit priests have gone about the connry in the disguise of mourners, the hgge three bushel hat, the hand screen and baggy hemp clothes effectually concealing their identity. Within a few weeks a French bishop has comejto light after living in disguise for fourteen years While the French commissioners were there completing the treaty between their country and Corea, a swarthy, black-bearded Corean, in a pea-green ; gown and black- halo hat, appeared one day and astonished them by talking French. The bishop is now often met in the foreign community, monseigneur is given precedence over all officials and the place of honor at all dinner tables. He wears Corean dress at all times, and the large signet ring on his right hand is the only indication of his not being a native and a layman.
What to Teach Your Boys.
Lecd’s Mercury. Teach them to be useful, truthful and manly. To be polite in manners. To avoid tobacco and strong drink. The value of time and money. Careful and corre ;t business habits. Teach them, by example, how to do things well. Teach them to ride, drive, jump, run and swim. Teaeh them how to get the Tnost for their money. Teach them the habits ol cleanliness and good order.
Five Ways to Stop or Cure a Cold
1. Bathe the feet in hot water and drink a pint of hot lemonade. Then sponge with salt water and remain in a warm room. 2. Bathe the face in very hot water every five minutes for an hour. 3. Snuff np the nostril hot salt water every three hours. h 4 Inhale ammonia or menthoL 5. Take four hours’ active exermae in the open air. HoaeMV ■ the bast policy and Hall’* Catarrh Cara i* aa ha nest medlaine, hence it* raeoaaa.
A HUNDRED YEARS AGO!
How Seth Warner Won d Wile and Became Famous. Colonel Seth Warner,of Vermouty the famous hero of the Revolutionary, war, was a leading fighter for the Hampshire rppantfa;..* '■ . ■ - These titles were disputed by the State of New York, and its authorities obtained an edict of the King of England in their favor. The settlers were stung by the supposed injustice. This state of things brought Colonel Seth Warner to the front. With Ethan Allen and others he actively opposed every effort of the New York state authorities to enforce possession, and he, with Allen and others, were outlawed and a price put on their heads. To circumvent New Yoik.it was nec essary that some one should go into that State and gain required information. Colonel Warner, assuming for safety the name of “Dr. Howard,” undertook this perilous and romantic journey. While on his way home he slopped at. a country inn, where an old gentleman and daughter weye enow bound. The) father fell ill and the daughter called upon Colonel Warner, who, with his wide knowledge of simple remedies, sue cessfully treated the “old man,” and he finally won this devoted woman wife. Such incidents were not uncommon in those years, When the doctor was not easily reached, months of sickness, and even life, were often saved by some unprofessional friend versed in the use of simple herbs and roots. The health of early settlers, and their powers of endurance convince us that such medicines did only good and left no poison in the blood to work as much injury to the system as would the disease itself. In time of peace the Colonel was in constant demand for his knowledge of simple remedies and their power over disease. But it was left to another of. hisnameof the present age to give to the public what was then used with such positive success. Warner for over a hnndred years has shared with Ethan Allen the admiration of the American people. Colonel Seth Warner belongs to a family of wide distinction; no less than eight members thereof won fame in the regular practice of medicine. Looking to the adoption by the people of this generation of the old time simple remedies, his direct descendant, H. H. Warner, the well-knowD proprietor of Warner’s safe cure, for many years has been experimenting with old lime roots and herbs formulse and, his search having been finally rewarded with success, he gives the world the result. These recipes and formulae in other days accomplished great things Decanse they were purely vegetable and combined so as to cure the disease indicated, without injury to the system. In harmony with their old time character, we learn that he proposes to call them Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies, using as a trade mark an old-fashioned American log cabin. We understand that he intends to put forth a “Sarsaparilla” for the blood, the sarsaparilla itself being but one of a number of simple. ans effective elements; “Eogf'Eabin Hops and Buchu,” a general stomach, tonic andinvigorator: “Log Cabin Cough and Consumption Remedy,” “Warner’s Log Cabin Scalping” for the hair; a preparation for that universal disease catarrh, called “Log Cabin Rose Cream,” “Warner’s Log Cabin Piasters;” and Warner’s Log Cabin Liver Pills,” which are tu be used in connection, with the other remedies, or independently, as required. Warner’s safe remedies are alr< ady standards of the most pronounced scientific value in all parts of the world, and we have no doubt the Log Cabin Remedies, for the disease they are intended to cure, will be of equal merit, for Mr. Warner has the reputation cf connecting his name with no preparation that is not meritorious. Pittsburg Chronicle: Keeps still—The moonlight whisky manufacturer. If a man gets drunk in New York, he stops the ill effects with a mug of “Moxie.” . It doesn’t take very much to make a geologist feel rocky. Conxuiaptlou Suroly Cured. ... To the Editor:—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the,, above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured I -hall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if the>' will’seud me their Express and P. 0. address. Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM. M. C.. 181 Pearl St., M. Y Farmers and Stockmen The only remedy that cures galls, cuts and wounds on horses and cattle,and always grows the hair in its original color, is Veterinary Car boll waive. 50c and sl, at Druggists or bj maJL Cole A Co.. Black River Fails, Wia Exporting Apples. New York Mail and Express. “Wuat can I tell you about shipping apples tp Europe? A great deal,” an exporter says: “In the first place, America is sending over 800,000 barrels of apples a year to London, Liverpool and Glasgow alone. The bulk of these go during the winter months, at the rate of from 40,000 to 70,000 barrels a week. New York ships the most, Boston comes next and Montreal third. Portland, Me., handles a great many, and .* Annapolis, Md , forwards the Southern fruit.” • How are they packed?” ‘ln barrels made for the p.urpcse. Only sound fruit is used. The first liyer is placed in the bottom stems downward, the others are put in until there appears to De one layer too many, and then the head is placed on these and forced into thg, barrel withaecrew press. The head is then nailed in, and any amount of hauling will not shake the apples.” Seeingthe World (or Himself. A sturdy 3-year old walked half a mile from his home in Middletown, Conn., to the depot and crawled on the rear platform of a train just about to start. He was found by a brakeman sitting, bare-headed and happy, on the platformfvvitlr his train whizzed along toward Saybrook. The conductor put him oft at Higganum, and he was retained to Middletown and his frantic mother.
Texas Siftings: Sight wrongs no man, but you should be careful what you write.
AN OPEN LETTER.
Which in More Folly Explain- il by One rrom B-v. J. Robert#, P.*»or First M K, Chnreh, Fremont, Mich. Rheumatic Symp Co., Jackson. Mich.; Gentlemen— From the fact that sever al remarkable cures by Hibbard's Rheumatic Syrup came under my observation, among which were those of Rey. J. Barry of Morley, and Mrs. Harrington] of Altona, I recommended Rev. J. Roberts to have his daughter give the remedy a trial. As I expected. it broke up [he disease, and to-day the young lady is free from pain and almost welE I unhesitatingly recommend Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup and Plasters as remedies of great merit. . 0. 0. Pemberton, Druggist. O. C. Pemberton: My daughter Ma id has used Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup and Plasters, which yon so strongly recommended her to try. It has now been about eleven weeks since she commenced, and her inflammatory rheumatism is nearly broken op. - He( limbs were badly swollen, and the poor girl was in terrible agony. In the midst of the pain we wound the Plasters about her limbs,and as a result, the swelling was reduced and she became quiet and rested. The Syrup corrected her indigestion,cleansed the rheumatic poison from her blood, and she is now able to be aronnd the nouse. She still uses the Symp and Plasters, and will continue to do so until entirely well. We consider Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup and Plasters as remedies ot great merit. Ret J Roberts, Pastor First, M. E. Church. Fremont, Mich., Oct,, 26, 1887. Mrs. Grant has presented the General’s famous old war horse “Challbome” to the Soldiers’ Home at Leavenworth, Kansas. Cheap Farming Land* South. It is a recognized fact that the cheapest farming lands in America to-day are in the South, and men of much or moderate means, looking for real estate investment, or permanent homes should not fail to visit the following points, where so many Northern people are now settling, viz: Jackson, Tennessee; Aberdeen and Jackson, Mississippi; Ham mond, Crowley, Jennings, Welsh and Lake Charles, Louisiana. Round Trip Tourist tickets, limited to June Ist, 1888, with stop-over privileges south of Cairo, Illinois, are on sale to New Orlearns, Jenning and Lake Charles. For rates apply to nearest ticket agent, and be sure your tickets read via the Illinois Central Railroad from Chicago or St. Louis. For pamphlet entitled “Southern Home Seeker’s Guide,” and circulars concerning the above named points, address the undersigned, Manchester, lowa. A runaway couple, seated on the back of a small mule, rode tip to the Court HonSe at Milton, Fla., r the other day and were married by the County Judge. Great Excitement on the Bank* of the Ohio River. Tell Citt, Ind., Aug. 9, IBBf. G. S. Dufch: V That medicine you advised me to try —“Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup”—is the best iD the world, I believe, i have not" been well for over six years, and since taking Hibbard’s Rheumatic Svrup can eat a hearty meal, something I have not done in over a year, and I believe it will permanently cure me. You need not hesitate to recommend this remedy as a good family medicine. Mbs. Elbabeth Fkcbhxash. De stick dat’ll make a good flute am useless ez a club. It is a matter of surprise to many that Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla wilLcureauch a, multitude of diseases. The reason ia simple enough. It is allowing to the fact that ibis remedy is a perfect blood purifier, and a true strengthener of the urinary and digestive organs. When the blood and these great organs of life are healthy, there are very few ills of life tha can fasten them selves to either man or woman. Remember this and nse the remedy whenever you feel unwell. Texas Sifting* A. well-wisher is one who invests in oil territory. Whatever name or designation is given to Fever and Ague, or other intermittent disease* it is safe to say that Malaria or a disordered state of the Liver is at fault. Eliminate the impurities from the system and a sure and prompt cure is the immediate result. Prickly Ash Bitters ig the safest and most effective remedy for all biliary troubles, kidney diseases, and like complaints that has ever been brought before the public. A trial is its best recommendation. A great many people are troubled with disease of the l : s. Ho opium in Pi»o » Cure for Oon»«inptji*B. Core* where other remedies fail. 25c PATENTS obtaiueu br Boms bagger A 00., Attorney. Washington. D. ().. IC-r*d IHm Advteefree.
WANTED. A pentTering energetic Man in every’County in the State to engage in a profitable, honorable and permanent business. Small capital required. Correspondence solicited. . THE J. B. LYNAS MED.CO. - Loganaporr, Ind. Bro* oldest nealctM m itn world is pi«bat4y M Dr. Isaao Thompson’s ftf Ef.EKRATED EVE WATEII This article Is a carefnlly prepared Physicians pro icrlptloa, and has been la constant nse nearly scent* ry, and not withstanding the many other preparatkm 4*t hare tieealntrodneed Into the market, the *l« 1 this artl.le la eoutantly Increasing. If ths <Br*. jobs are ft Bowed it will never fall. We partloolvfr arlte the at tention of physicians to Its merit* JQHW 1* THOMPBOM. BOMB * CO- TROT, *. 1 8 S djotl #»i7h<TOq» So1 V> , a ;s£*?6W«<k«v?«S \T\7IS.VWWWAt JOSEPH Cl LLOm STEEL PENS GOLD MEDAL PARIS EXPOSITION 1878. ; Nos. 303-404-170-604. -(THE MOST PEBTECT OP PENS., am oLILpI ■ N»M rrotme Mita D»r.'t waste rnur money on £ with o>e stove isnii-r-l;ttelyK<r(«-amltrtJWltE ■ tuetstits. >_ tor the •'USE BRAMD" < B r]«n Basivn".send ytjeyrcj'y'.ataj;
l-FOS- gat BEAST! Mexican Mustang liniment PENETRATES MUSCLES to the VERY BONEB. TRY IT! ) CARBOLIC Smoke Ball a Has succeeded all otter remedies and stand* without a rival in permanently curing Asthma, Catarrh, Head, Throat and Lung diseases, Croup, Cold in Head aud Chest It is a fa'al delusion because other remedies have failed, to think that “Carbolic Smoke Ball” Will not cure you. Thousands of testimonial* substantiate our claims, and you need not di* pair. Our remedies have permanently ouied these diseases in all their varied forms. The "Carbolie Smoke Ball” is not an experiment, but a reality and a i Common Sense Remedy! Reaching the disease, destroying the germ,relies | ing congestion and restoring health. We hav* also formulated a supplemental remedy to b* used with the “Carbolfc Smoke Ball" in chroeie eases, viz.: The “Debellator,” Which assists nature to eradicate from the system all causes of constipation, debility, torpid Jive* and malaria] diseases. This remedy has no peer in medical discovery. It U not only your right, but your privilege to try other remedies: but before you pass the fatal period would it not be prudent to use the never-failing remedies--Cm-bollc Smoke Ball” and "Debellator?” Reed the following: I believe it to be tbegreatest medical discover of the age. It has cured ray catarrh completely You can use this in any way you like—J. W. Luat of the firm of Hendrickson, Lefler & Co., wholesale hatters, Nos, 89 aud 91 South Meridian St Indianapolis, lud. I have tested the merits of the Carbolic Smoke Ball on my family ana relatives, and pronouneeS it the best remedy for the head, throat and lump that f ever saw—Wm. T. Steele. Purchasing Agent Citizens Street Railroad Co., Indianapolis. Carbolic Smoke Ball cured me of asthma -John F. Wallick, Supt. Western Union Tel. Co., Indianapolis. For many years I have been afflicted with catarrh, bronchial affections and and deafnes*;permanentlv cured by the use of Carbolic Smoke Ball, and consider it the greatest known remedy for these diseases.—Harry Craft, Indianapolis. I have suffered untold agony for twelve jea*f from the dreadful disease—asthma. I used everything could bear of without relief. Finally used the Carbolic Smoke Ball and Debellator, and I am a cured man. I certainly feel grateful for my miarculoiv* restoration to health.—James L KidJ Indianapolis. (Subscribed Jr entile and sworn to before me this MnSP* 19th day of May, 188 V.—B. F. BALL” WUt ’ N ’ P *___ u l k djK One Carbolic Smoke Ball H&TWW lasts {oT months, and onehalf of a "ball” has cared stubborn cases of catarrhs Sale by All Druggists, \ m .fK.” / Bent by mail upon receipt of / price. Smoke Ball si.o6, DeV/T * Home office and laborstories Indianapolis. Indiana: 0 TREATED FREE. oit.. i*. ’-i Specialists for Thirteen Years Past, flare treated dropsy and its complication* with th* most wonderful success; use regetable remedies, entirely harmless. Kemovcd al) mptome of drop*? in eight to twenty days. ~ Cure patients pronounced Uelpiesa by the best ot physicians. From the first dose the symptoms rapidly disappear, and in ten days at least two-thirds of all symptoms are removed. Some may cry humbug without knowing anything about it. Remember it does not cost yon anything to realize the merits of our treatment for yourself, fa ten days the difficulty of breathing is relieved ‘he pulse regular, the urinary organs made to ditchi g* their fall duty, sleep is reetered r the swelling all ol — nearly cone, the strength increased and appetite mad* 1 good. We are constantly curing cases of long standing—cases that have been tapped a number of time*, and the patient declared unable to live a week. Give full history of case. Name sex, how long afflicted, how badly swollen and where, are bowels costive, have leg* bursted and dripped water. Send for fre* pamphlet, containing testimonials. Question*, etc. f Ten days’ treatment furnished free by mail. P-If yon order trial. Bend to cent* in stamp* to pay ss.it etlastwet. Atlanta. B*. Offer No. 176. FREB-To Merchants Only: One WilK»m* ‘Perfeci ion” Eleetro-Magneti* Battery. Addiea* at once. R. W. Taksiu & Co.. Chicago. I CURE FITS! When 1 say cure 1 do not mean merely to (top them for a time and then have them return again. I mean a radical cure. I have made the disease of FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long stady. I warrant my remedy to cure the vorstoaeee. Beeaoae others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Seud at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my infallible remedy. Give Express and Poet Office. H. 6. ROOT, ,)I. C- (83 Peart cit. New York- ■ Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh ia the I Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. H ■ Sold-by druggists or sent by mail. B 59c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. | ' business uiyersiiY^ggi EitablisHcd 37 yearY Best place tosecurea tbarughly practical and sound Business or Shorthand -.'location. Catalogue &. Commercial Current. r**" oy return atari full tfoeorsottw* -*’■ Pe£: Moody's .Sew Taliur Syetetu ofitres* c WtC.l. <;.inin g . htoonv *no a UAMUSTUDY Secure a Business Education bt mail JIIUHHj: BEY ANT’S Buslaess Collbks Baffale, ■ T INC 51-87 INDFLS When writing to Advertiser* readers wiil confer tt lavot oy mentioning uns Pape*. DATsk. ro obtained by L. 3INUHAM. Patffll C.H IQ eut Attorney, Washington. D. G. I# V s Vfe iniciU , ” If t H Waterproof Coa^ IVLit M»T 1 ram or rubber cuau oor. and will keep yon dry to the hardc-t - ujcxxgrrd take no other. If your storekeeper •wiie’cA
