Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 January 1888 — Page 3
Have You Heard Vh»t Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral has done and is doing for thousands in th<" cure of Colds, Coughs, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, and even Consumption? For this class of complaints, Ayer’s •berry Pectoral stands far ahead at all other specifics. George W. Dick, of Newton, Mass., says: “Two years ago I took a severe ■ oeld, which, being neglected, was followed by ’ ~ A Terrible Cough. I lest flesh rapidly, had night sweats, and was soon confined to my bed. A friend advised the use of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I began to take this medicine" and, before finishing the first bottle, was able to sit up. Four bottles efleeted a perfect cure. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, Preeared kvßr. J. 0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maw. Sold by all Druggists. price $1; sis beMee, fb. The Start and Finish! Slight Cold. Inflamed Nostrils. Headache. HgJBLBgMDeep Cold. Cough. EggiS fjSs!§a Catarrh. Night Sweats. Dr y Throat. Pain in Lungs. Hemorrhages. Purulent HR Matter. HMVConsumption. Life’s Thermometer. Moral: Procure at once the “Carbolic Smoke Bell” and "Dehellator Package’’ and arrest the trouble pt its present stage. <’«rc* all the above conditions of Catarrh. Complete treatment flatting four months and generally sufficient) sent to any address on receipt of 83.00 (Smoke Ball, $2.00; Dehellator, $1.00). Smoke Ball paper sent free. CARBOLIC SMOKE BALL CO, 36 W. Washington St. Boom S. , INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 30 E. Fonrteenth St.,NEW TOEK CITY.
The best and rarest Remedy for Carrot all diseases caused by any derangement of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels. (j Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds yield readily to the beneficent influence of Mil It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the system, restores and preserves health., D ■ It Is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to prove beneficial, both to old and young. OAs a Blood Purifier it is superior to all others. Sold everywhere at fll.oo a bottle. STE KETEE’S Drvßitters! Make your own Bitters Why paya Dollar for a bottle of Stomach Bitters, Containing more poor whiskey than medicine, when the undersigned will send you by mail one 4 oz. package of ROOTS, HERBS and BERRIES, whichwUl make ONE GALLON of the best TONld anyone ever used. The use of this Tonic has cured INDIGESTION,. DYSPEPSIA, FEVER and AGUE; as an appetizer none better; acts on the Kidneys and general debility, and gives Tone to the Stomach (in fact I challenge all other Tonics. It is far the cheapest Tonic known. One package will equal one dozen bottles of ordinary Bitters sold at One Dollar per bottle. Full directlttons on every package. Ask your Druggist for “ STEKETEE’S DRY BITTERS.” If your druggist does not keep them on sale, then send to ths undersigned. I will send one package to any address within the U. 8. on receipt of 25c. U S. postage stamps taken in payment. Two pack)ages 50c., and a trial bottle of STEKETEE’S NEURALGIA DROPS included. Address, GKO. G. STKKETEE, Grand Rapids, Mich. Use STEKETEE’S PIN WORM DESTROYER, cure ours. Price 85 cents, , W AAbi,iUi)URD£RS OF THE Stomach, Liver andßoweis PACIFIC plus STRICTLY VEGETABLE. CT7BB CON9TTPA TION, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA Piles, Sick Headache, liver Complaints, Lose op appetite. Biliousness. Nervousness, Jaun PIP Itc. PRICE, *S een o. PAP’vIC MANUFAfiTaBIMG fid.. ST. LOUIS. MO. W-XL NTED.— r* —- A persevering energetic Man in every 'County hi the State to engage in a profitable, honorable and permanent business. Small capital required. Correspondence solicited. THE J. B. LYNAB MED. CO. Logansport, Ind. AGENTS WANTED AjPATTERNS, for making Bun, S Tidies, Caps, Mittens, Ac. Ua- . ‘cut i,y mall for 91. Send 1 t for late reduced pdoe-liet. I J - a ROSS * OO- Toledo. Ohio. BUSINESS UNIVERSITY# 3 INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Eptabtififiod r years. Bern place to Recnre "
TRADE AND LABOR.
Philadelphia Record. An electric elevated railroad for the conveyance of newspapers and small parcels at a very high rate of speed is under consideration at Baltimore. Popular science lectures are being delivered in various towns and cities of England, at which the admission is two cents. They are doing much good. Textile manufacturers are devising numerous things to increase the pro* duction of their mills and add to the convenience of handling manufactured goods. The turtle-canning industry is assuming large proportions in Florida,and vessels are being employed to bring turtles from Yucatan and the West India islands.
Georgia gold fields are being worked more industriously than ever. The cost of working has been reduced to. thirty cents per ton. The deepest mine is 250 feet. Daring the past year the distribution of lumber at Chicago was 100,000,000 feet in excess of 1886. Prices did not move up through the year, as had been expected. Manufacturers are discovering in a great many instances that more work can be obtained out of factories that are lighted by electric light than where gas is ÜBed.
A Lockport (N. Y.) engine-builder has just .booked an order for a 10,000,-000-gallon engine for Kansas City and a 2^ooo, 000-gallon engine for McCormick, of Chicago. A coke manufacturing syndicate has purchased 15,000 acres of land in the Connellsville region. Another syndicate has purchased 5,000 acres of land in Washington county. It is quite encouraging to note the number of shops and factories that are running at night. Most of them are running on patent devices or appliances of one kind and another. French and English ship-building firms are negotiating with Spanish capitalists with a view of establishing shipyards and marine engine-works on the banks of the Bilboa river.
In four y< ais the commercial efficiency of electric machinery haabeen increased from 60 to 90 per cent, and the cost of a given current ia not 25 per cent, of what it was a year ago. A syndicate has just purchased 50,000 acres of well trimmed land in Florida. Most of ’he timber is black cypress. A mill with a capacity of 160,000 feet per day is to be erected on the land. A car-maker at Fullerton, Pa., is building 100-ton gondola cars to be used in transporting heavy foreign machinery from New York to Bethlehem. The axles are seven inches in diameter. Rome has 1,835 telephones in use, London 1,200, Glasgow 1,472 and Liverpool 1,399. There are as. many telepnones in 5$ ew i or& as m aii itwiy, ana twice as many in New York as in London. An engine for a Sound steamer has just been ordered from Detroit enginebuilders that will have forty-inch cylinders, twelve feet stroke, and feathering wheels twenty-six feet in diameter.
The boot and shoe manufacturers are running full time in nearly all establishments throughout the East. Gutting of stock is going on vigorously everywhere. The traffic in morocco is heavy. On account of the great care taken in silk weaving and SDinning in Italy, it is claimed that Italian raw silk possesses an evenness and finish which make it superior to hand-reeled Chinese silk. Thirty million pounds of copper are used annually in Waterbury, Conn Orders* for goods in whieh eopper is largely used have fallen off 50 per cent, on account of the advance from 10$ to 18 cents.
Manufacturing enterprise has broken loose in North Carolina. Subscription lists have been started in about a dozen towns within thirty days for factories and shops. The preference is for cotton factories. The Illinois millers have taken the credit question into hand and propose to demand more prompt payment. They want a system by which they can know something about the character [of the flour dealers everywhere. Notwithstanding all that has been said about the damage done to the shoe business it is 80 per cent, better in several Eastern establishments than it was at this time last year. There are no labor troubles at the present time. A recent Westingbouse circular states that every consideration of efficiency, convenience and economy, not to speak of humanity, urges the substitution of mechanical for animal power npon the numerous street-railway lines ot the country at the earliest practical moment. There is a great demand for small boilers to suit the numerous small shops and factories starting np over the country. The Philadelphia boiler-makers are oversold, and business is coming in frequently without being sought. A Chicago company proposes to make and sell a mixed water gas and coal gas at prices ranging from 50 cents per 1,000 feet;to 25 cents. The company also agrees to furnish incandescent electric lights at a cost not exceeding f 1 per 1,000 for illuminating gas. English electricians are trying to make an incandescent lamp which will bum without vacuum. It will be necessary to find a conducting material of high specific resistance. A great many doubt the possibility of such a lamp.
The production of hard wood during last year, it has been estimated, will be fully 25 per cent, in excess of that of any former year, and the heavier demand for it will, it is believed by lumber authorities, prevent any decline in prices.
In some places tnnnels with endless, belts or aprons Dave been constr jeted through yards and across streets between the mills, through which the cloth from the different weaving-rooms is delivered directly to the finishingrooms. J Eastern mills are storing up with cotton as fast as they can get it. About 100,000 of the 200,000 bales of cotton consumed at Fall River have already arrived, and there is a great want of storage capacity. It is proposed, to bnild sheds for that purpose. The gossamer rubber pool is in trouble over the fact that there are more mills than are Deeded, and unless they shall be bought up by the trust they will startup and turn out goods. The manufacturers are as yet nnable to agree upon the percentage of restriction. The Rochester shoe manufacturers ai*B throwing their hats in the air over the defeat of their workmen. It was brought abcut by sending to several shoe-manvfacturing centers and employing non-union labor. There are twentyfive manufacturers there, employing 3,000 hands. The number of permits taken out since Dec. 1 is something larger then that of a year ago, and a good many of the buildings are costly. Those in the Weet are for manufacturing, railroad and grain handling purposes. In the Southern States the bulk of the new work is mostly of a manufacturing sort. In the smaller towns in the New England and Middle States a great deal qf small house building is projected for the coming year.
Why Base Ball is Popular.
New York Tribune . “Do you really know what makes base bail so popular?” was asked of a wellknown manager the other day. The question made him pause in praising his team and settle down to sober thought. After a while he said: “I think I can solve it. You man and boy, or I mean most of them, play or did play base bail. You see it in the streets and you hear it cn the cars. Then there is another thing. Don’t you know that every man and boy who takes a lively interest in the game, thinks, with a little practice he would be a great player too. Did you ever circulate around the grand stand and free seats at the polo grounds? Well, it you had or will next summer you will find out that I don’t exaggerate. You will see the pompous banker or merchant, the quiet looking minister of the gospel, the clerk, mechanic and small boy all together. If a phrenologist would study the faces ~of~airTh~6Bß~peoplc he would gather
enough ideas to make a telling lecture. Don’t you know that nearly every one of those people sitting there believes that ne could with a little practice go out and play just as well as any /of the green diamond kings? When a player makes a blunder, did you ever see how it is reflected on the faces of the spectators? Well, you ought tol Why, every mother's son thinks he can go right out and play base ball better than that ‘duffer.’ Baseball is a healthy,honest game, too; that is, of course, a big reason Tor its popularity.”
Will 1888 be a Year of War.
Philadelphia Inquirer. —■ : ’ The present year is the fifth year of modern times in which the aggregate of the figures is twenty-five, and there will be but five more years in which such a combination is possible prior to the 3 ear 2199. Probably but few have ever heard of the old prophecy, which iuns as follows: " In every future year of our Lord, When the sum of the figures is twenty-five Some warlike kingdom will draw the sword, But peaeeful nations in peace shall thrive. Students of modern history will readily recall how faithfully this prophecy has-been fulfilled in the four previous years to which it applied. In 1699 Russia, Denmark and Poland formed the coalition against Sweden which inaugurated the great war that ended in the disastrous defeat of Charles, XII. at Pultowa. The year 1789 will ever be memorable on account of the breaking out of the French Revolution. - 1793 witnessed the campaign of Bonaparte in Egypt and the formation of the second European coalition against France.
In 1379 war broke out between England and Afghanistan, followed by the invasion of the latter country by British troops. In what manner the prediction is to be verified in TBBB remains yet to be seen, but the present condition of Europe seems to promise an abunant fulfillment of the prophecy. Remember that languor, weakness, aches, pains, sores, pimples, etc., are among the uncalled for ills of life, and result directly from an impnre state of the blood. Be wise in time and aim to keep the blood rich, red and pure by occasionally using that strictly vegetable tonic and blood purifier, Dr. Guysott’s Yellbw Dock mid Sarsaparilla. It will save much distress, and Is a safe cure for all blood diseases. The Goddess of War shows no bangs on her forehead, ___ H afflicted with Sofa Ryes, nee Da. MaM Thompson’s Bya Watar, Dragg* set It. 28c.
OUR CONFESSION OF FAITH.
By Which It la Hoped Any Injustice May be Corrected. To Our Rkadrbs: In common with many publishers and editors, we have been accnstomed to look upon certain statements which we Pave seen in our columns as merely adroit advertising. ; Consequently we'feel j ustfied in taking the liberty of printing a few joints from a private letter recently received from one of our largest patrons, as a sort o,f confession of faith to our readers. We quote:
“We have convinced ourselves that by telling what we know to be true, we have produced at- last a permanent conviction in the public mind. Nine years ago we stated what the national disease of this country was, and that it was rapidly inor toeing. Five years ago we stated that a marked oheck had been given it. “The statistics of one of the largest life insurance companies of this country shows that in 1883 and 1884, the mortality from kidney disorders did not ineroaee over the previous years; other comDanies stated the same thing. It is not presumptuous for us to claim credit for aheeking these ravagee. 1 ’Seven years ago we stated that the conditionof the kidneys was the” key to the condition of health: within the past five years all cartful lift insurance companies have conceded the truth of this statement, ior, wnftreas, ten years ago, chemical analysis to determine the condition of the kidneys was not required, to-day million* of dollars in risks are, refused, because chemical examination discovers wmupeeted diseases of tne kidneys. “ihne years ago we stated that the ravages of Bright’s Disease were insignificant compared with other unsuspected disorders of the kidneys of many misleading names; that ninety-three per cent, of human ailments are attributable to deranged kidneys, which fills the blood with uric acid, or kidney poison, which causes these many fatal disgMw.
“The xric aeic, or kidney poison, is the real cause of the majority of cases of paralysis, apoplexy, heart disease, convulsions, pheumonia consumption, and insanity; over half the victims of consumption are first the victims of diseased kidneys. “When the recent death of an honored ex-official of the United States was announced, his physician said that although he was suffering from Bright’s Disease, that was not the cause of death. He was not frank enough to admit that the apoplexy which overtook him in his bed, was the fatal effect of the kidney poison in the blood, which had eaten away the substance of the arteries and brain; nor was Logan’s physician honest enough to state that his fatal rheumatism was caused by kidney acid in the blood. “If the doctors would state in official reports the original cause of death, the people of this country would be alarmed, yes, nearly panic stricken, at the fearful mortality from kidney disorders.”
The writers of the above letter give these facts to the public simply to justify the claims that they have made, that “if the kidneys and liver are kept in a healthy condition by the use of Warner’s safe cure, which hundreds of thousands have proved to be a specific, when all others failed, and that has received the endorsement of the highest medical talent in Europe. Australia, and America, many a life woald be prolonged and the happiness of the people preserved. It is successful with so many diforent cases because it, and it alone, can remove the uric acid from the blood through the hidneys.” Our readers are familiar with the preparation named. Commendation thereof has often appeared in our columns. We believe it to be one of the best, if not the best ever manufactured. We know the proprietors are men of character and influence.
We are certain they have awakened a widespread interest in the public mind concerning the importance of the kidneys. We believe with them that they are the key t 6 health, and that for their restoration from disease and maintenance in health,there is nothing equal to this great remedy. The proprietors say they “do not glory in this universal prevalence of disease, but having started out with the purpose of spreading the merits of Warner’s safe cure before the world, because it cured our senior proprietor, who was given up by doctors at incurable, we feel it our duty to state the facts and leave the public to its own inferences. We point to our elaims, and to their public and universal verification with pride, and if the public does not believe what we say, we tell them to ask their friends and neighbors what they think about our preparations.” As stated above, we most cordially commend the perusal of this correspondence by our readers, believing that in so doing, we are fulfilling a simple public obligation.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she eried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she dung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.
Catarrh Cared.! A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disease, Catarrh, and vainly trying every known remedy, at last found a prescription which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dreadful disease sending a self addressed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, 212 East 9th St., New York, will receive _the recipe free of charge. Old pill boxes are spread over the land by_ the thousands after having been emptied hr , saflering humanity. What a mass of sickening, disgusting medicine the poor stomach has to oontend with. Too much strong medicine. Prickly Ash Bitters is rapidly and surely taking the plaee oi all this class of drugs, and in curing all the ills arising from a disordered condition of liver,kidneys, stomach andjaowels 4 Consumption Sarely Oared.! — - 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. 1 {shall be glad to send two bottles of my. remedy 1 raps to any of your readers who have consump- [ tion if they win send mis thair Express and P. 0. m.a,in pmjswH.T
BREEZY BRIEFS. A Mere Shadow—A detective. A foot rule—wear "overshoes. Capital Letters—Letters of credit. She stoops to conquer—The washerwoman. Most ’gold and silver is chased—by burglars..-* , Detroit Free Press: A Current TopicElectricity. The dead-letter offioe—The£hnsband’s coat pecket. Goodall’s Sun: [Printers havejset determinations. The rabbit is timid,[but the cook {can’t make it quail. Detroit Free Press: A [Swell Affair | A champagne supper. A fountain of universal [knowledge a first-class hotel clerk. - A great man’s fanlta am alias looked at wid magnifying glasses.
A MICHIGAN Central Railroad Employe Wins Qli Case After a Seven Yea re* Contest’. Albion, Mioh., Dec. 20,1887. “While employed as agent of the Michigan Central Railroad Company at Angusta, Mich., about seven years ago, my kidneys became, diseased,'and I have been a great sufferer ever since. Have consulted the leading physicians of this city and Ann Arbor, ana all pronounced my case Bright’s disease. After taking every highly recommended remedy that I had knowledge of to no pnrpose, and while suffering under a very severe attack in October last, began taking Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, and am to-day a well man. It affords me pleasure to render suffering humanity any good that I can, and in speaking of the remedy, allow me to say that I think it the greatest medicine in the world. E. Larhlhrk, Agent M. C. R. R.
A misfit—hysterics. ~ SYKES’SURE CURE. The Great Remedy for Catarrh. The large number of certificates received of the virtues of this preparation in the treatment of this unpleasant disease,' abundantly attested its efficacy. It is without a rival. It is the only medicine now on the marxet adapted to Catarrh that what promises and effects not only speedy relief hut a permanent cure. Unlike many nostrums now before the public, it does not dry np temporarily the nasal discharges, but eradicates the producing cause, thus leaving the system in a sound and healthy condition. Ask your druggists for a bottle of Sykes’ Cure for j Catarrh and you will be healed of the malady. . / -
QWE their origin to an impure state of the blood, the urinary arid - digestive organs' being first to suffer. Therefore, medicines that will strengthen these organs and at the same time cleanse and purify and renew the blood, will have a tendency to cure the majority of human ailments. Such a remedy is Dr. Guysotfs Yelloit Dock and Sarsaparilla, and, although producing no active cathartic or diuretic effect,its use will soon establish a painless regularity of urinary and digestive functions- It hasloßg ago proven itself a specific for scrofula and other syphilitic disorders, curing such diseases even when all other treatment, including Hot Springs, failed. A great point in its favor is that it contains no mercury or any mineral poisons, and will never harm the most delicate com* stitution. It merely makes one feel buoyant and rids the system of blood impurities and other internal and external indications of failing health.
Why? Why? Why? TS it that so many neglect coughs A and colds until they get consumption ? Why is it that so many die of consumption ? It is because they will not come and be healed. Every one knows a Bure conqueror of throat and lung diseases is Dr. Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry, and that it is obtainable throughout the length and breadth of our land. Reader, if you suffer, hasten and procure a bottle. Ris pleasant to take and never fails to give satisfaction. *A single dose will cure an ordinary cough. A - few bottles will cure consumpfiou if taken in time.
W,N E NTION « Cord* of Beech h»we been »»we4 br one mtn 1n 9 hour*. Hundred* h»ve p»wed 5 and 6 cord* d&ilr. c“ Exactly " wbal every Former mart Wood Chopper wants. First order.from four Ticinity ooeurto ibe Agency. Illustrated Catalogue FREE, '▲ddiCM FOLDING HAWING MACHINE COm 803 8. Canal Street, Chicago, 111. I CURE FITSJ When I Bay cure I do not mean merely to stop them for a. time and then have them return ag*in. l rnwan a radical cure, I bare made the disease of FITS, EPPf KPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-lon« study. I warrant my remedy to cure the -corst cases. Because others have failedw no reason for not bow reeeivujjra earn. Send at once for a treatise and * Free Bottle of my Infallible remedy. Give Express and Poet Offloe. arc. HOOT, M. C.. 183 Peart *t. New York- - ' — ll ~ - mpp By return mail. Fall Deseriptloi EBIs |i Moody's New TaUor System, of l»res. rllCbCitttx. HOODT * CO., Cinuaaati,tt.
Purify the Blood. * We do not claim that Hood’s Sarsaparilla la the only medicine deserving public confidence, but we believe that to purify the blood, to restore and renovate the whole system. It Is absolutely unequalled. The Influence of the blood up ) the health cannot be over-estimated. If It \ , comes contaminated, the train of consequent j by which the health is undermined Is Immeasurable. Loss of Appetite, Low Spirits, Headasho, Dyspepsia, Debility, Nervousness and other “little (?) ailments’’ are the premonitions of more serious and often fatal results. Try Hood’s Sarsaparilla 3 Sold by all druggists. $1; six lor $6. Mate only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mess. 100 Doses One Dollar
The treatment of many thousands of cases of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. X-, has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapting and thoroughly testing remedies for she cure of woman’s peculiar maladies. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and valuable experience. Thousands of testimonials, received from patients and from physicians who have tested it in the more aggravated and obstinate eases which had baffled their skill, prove It to be the most wonderful remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of suffering women. It is not recommended as a “ cure-all,” but as a most perfect Speciflo for woman's peculiar ailments. As a powerful, invigorating tonic, it imparts strength to the whole system, and to the womb and its appendages in particular. For overworked, “worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, “shop-girls," housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaMd as an appetizing cordial and restorative took. As a soothing and strengthening nervine, “Favorite Prescription” is uac qualed and is invaluable In allaying and mfcduing nervous excitability, irritability, exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the womb. It induces refreshing deep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a legitimate medicine, careftnfer compounded by an experienced and skilHßl physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate organization. It is purely vegetable la its composition and perfectly harmless la fts effects in any condition of the system. For morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dgapepsia and kindred symptoms, its use, in snmEl doses, will prove very beneficial. “ Favorite Prescription ” is a positive care for the most complicated and obstinate eases of leucorrbea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak bath. " female weakness,” ante version, retroversion, bearing-down sensations, chronic congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb. Inflammation, pain and tenderness in orarieo, accompanied with “ internal heat.” ——L As a regulator and promoter of functional action, at that critical period of change from girlhood to womanhood, “Favorite Prescription ” is a perfectly safe remedial agent, and can produce only good results. It b equally efficacious and valuable in Its effects when taken for those disorders and derange ments Incident to that later and most eritfcfcl period, known as “ The Change of Life.” “Favorite Prescription.”when taken In connection with the use of Dr. Piertgfe Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxafip doses of Dr. Pierce’s Purgative Pellets (Lib Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and BhuUMr diseases. Their combined use also removes blood taints, and abolishes cancerous sot scrofulous humors from the system. “ Favorite Prescription ” Is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, unair a positive "’guarantee, from the manufacturers, thatit will give satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle- wrapper; and faithfully carried out for many yean. Large bottles GOO doses) SI.OO, or six bottles for $5.00. For large, illustrated Treatise on Disease**? Women (160 pages, paper-covered), send fen cents in stamps. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Associate
Barnes' Patent Foot Power Machinery. A Workers of Wood on Mctal, In wittaont Hearn paver, by Ming ovtflu O ItkM Machine,,aan Mdlower.and »»-»more—money from their J ob,. than b j enr ether 1 T .tfgTflU ' mean, for doing their work. Aha lor Isiutrial Schools or Esas Tnislaj, *iaSoß With them beye een uxjolre practical MM journeymen ■ trades before they “gofer Vt BE thermelree." Priee-LletCatalogue free. .AjS/NJE. Eg W. F. A JOHN BARNES CO., Ko-68».2uhy St. Boddbrt. HL Fill Your Own Teeth with Sllnr. wrlcTiVEi Wanted In every County. Shrewd men to aot wader Inrtrnflif In oar Secret Service. Experience not noessaary. ParHoolars fra*/ fliaia Detective Bare— Co.M Aicil«.CtiaksaMJX) HOME DATCNTC obtained by L. BINGHAM, Fatrflltnio ent Attorney, Waahlngttw, 9. O. opiuMswr’&rsi’Jsaajiie I. Mepheu. ÜbuM Okk IMP 8 -88 ~ HTDFIS Whan wrltag to Adtertmw riniw wfi confer n favor by mentioning thlg Pay#. PENSIONS WiubhTpgto^^a BEAST! Mexican Mustang Liniment | <ENETRRTES MUSCLES to Mr —1 VERY SIRES. TRY IT I
