Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 March 1888 — Page 3
Never Despair Until yon have tried what Ayer’s Pills can do for yen. It is the Liver* that renders your views of life so gloomy. Depend upon it, a box or two of Ayer’s purely vegetable, sugar-coated, Cathartic Bills would materially change your feelings, and still make Life Worth Living. Lucius Alexander, Marblehead, Mass., says : “ I was severe# afflicted with Dyspepsia and Enlargement of the Liver, most of the time being unable to retain/any solid food on my stomach. Three boxes of Ayer’s Pills cured me.” “Ayer’s Pills are a sure cure for Uver Complaint. Nothing seemed to help me until I finally began to take Ayer's Pills.”—E. S. Fulton, Hanover, N.H. . "" Ayer’s Trills, Prepared by Dr. J.C. Ayer& Co., Lowell, Mass. Bold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine.
THE EXPERIENCE: OF A LIFETIME, Combined with attention, caution and carefulness, have enabled the proprietors of Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla to make it the best bloo.d- purifier in the world, the surest strengthener of the urinary and digestive organs, the finest alterative, the truest tonic. A lady who suffered from 'weakness peculiar to her sex, in , writing to a_ friend, said-i- — — - “I tried various kidney medicines, but only found myself growing worse. My husband brought me a bottle of Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. Its effect was quickly apparent. My complexion erelong becameelear and free from pimples; I soon enjoyed a gladsome freedom from aches and pains; I became less nervous; my habits became regular; I gained in flesh and have been made to feel tetter every way. I can not praise the remedy too highly as a true friend to suffering women and as a strengthening medicine.”" It is the safest remedy a lady can use, as it loaves no unpleasant after effects nor does its discontinuance cause a craving for its further use. flstM Sufferers a Who find difficulty in breathing a eource of much distress and annoyance should give Hr. Wistar's Balsam of Wild, Cherry a trial, for therein they will assuredly find relief and in many instances it will effect a permanent cure. It is the best family medicine in the world. A single teaspoonful will cure an ordinary cough or cold ; a few bottles will cure consumption if taken in time. The day is not far off when every intelligent housekeeper will think as much of having a bottle of Wistar's Balsam in the house AB* barrel of hour. JOHN D. PARK & SONS, Proprietors, Cincinnati. O.
a l | b » « IT ISA PUBELYVEGETABLE PREPARATION [IISENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU 4 MHanO OTHER EqUAUYEFFICtENT REMEDIES ajffl It has stood the Test of Years, S’®[in Curing all Diseases of the BLOOD, LIVES, STOMWF S ACH, KIDNEYS,BOWELS, &c. It Purifies tho 7 B GHz’ jq Blood, Invig&ratesaad ■ : H Cleanses the System. ' I DYSPEPSIA,CONSTT■i CURES PATION, JAUNDICE, i AILDISEASESOFTHE SICKHEADACHE.3ILI I IVFR lOUS COMPLAINTS,&c! , > disappear at once Rader TKIDNEI Z 3 its beneficial influence, i STOMACH It is purely a Medicine I AND as its cathan it proper - ii T? m<l JV'T c ties forbids it i use as iJ njQU MMbeverage. I; is plsas-k r' x *SfialsA hnttotnetasl!. and as I I easil y taken >•'ncrrncrc ’ rea ag ftdaltsj cILUKUUU|S|S| prickly ash betters cs AIXDISORDERS OF THE Stomach, Liver » and Boweh TA k R PACIFIC K CJTRIOTX.'sr VEQETABLH. 'TM CONSTIPATION, INDIOBSTIOK. DTSPErbtA -n lss. Sjok Hbadachb, Liter Complaints, loh-apj-btits, BilioubnbbS. Nervousness, Jal-' txc ( Jtc. PRICE, »& een ». !g <6 CO.. ST. LOUIS, !f *» Ely’s Cream Balm £Sb^^lZ> clJ SES CQ «l 18 ,ile *»rt remedy tor q.hitdren sxfferirgfrcm |wffver|| in HEAD, SNUFFLES’ CATARRH. ‘ Apply Balm into carb nostril. ByWHy us> ELT Baos.ssa Greenwich St.NY. pl EE 111 r LEO parts' wM Wf ■ ■ W Write for CA TA LOW I E. Janney & Braham Cun Ca n *ig£a%gfe r- jIW * W ■^°K Teati ’our faith we can cure yov, dsar ■ JBL ■ Bwfferer, we will trial I enough to convince, LZ3JZj B. S. L.u.tr.hH-1. Ou..
TRADE AND LABOR NOTES.
Electricity famishes employment for 5,000,000 people. A busy season is expected in the iron manufacturing industry. Bed* of excellent'"marble cover 120 acres in Larimer county, Colorado: An addition has been made to the flynet manufactoriee at Mechanicsburg, Pa. Akron (0.) brick-layers want 40 cento an hour for a nine-hour day after May 1. Georgia negroes are said to be leaving the farmslor the towns in large numbers. The Railroader believes that 2,000 miles of track will be laid in the Northwest this year. Maine is not the only spruce-gum field. A large quantity is obtained from the Adirondacks. The carpenters and masons of New Jersey will demand nine hours as a day’s work on and after May 1. Canadian cigar-makers average |4 per week. They are required to pay for gas out of that sum, whether they use it or not.
Seattle, W. T., is importing Chinesemade brick from British Columbia, paying the duty of from JI 20 to J 2 per thousand. ~ - ■ The salt trade in Cheshire and Worcestershire has become alarmingly slack, owing to the increased development of the German salt mines. An organization of over 530 Allegheny (Pa ) women has decided to boycott every store that keeps open alter S o’clock on Saturday evenings. The underground system of railways in London, England, has a length of over twenty miles, nearly three-quarters of which is absolutely tunneling. The capacity of a locomotive is seldom rated by the horse power, but rather by the number of pounds or tons load it will haul at a given speed on a level or on a given grade. The Canada Labor Commission, after a visit to the Convent of the Good Shepherd at Montreal, says that the work done there does not affect similar work done outside.
Sigismund Spitzer is at the head of a company that intends to manufacture starch by a new process. The first mill will be erected on the outskirts of San Francisco, and othens will be built in cities along the coast. InvestigaUon by the Canada Labor Commission shows that in some factories the bosses have whij pefi boys and girls and placed them in the “black hole” for hours without food. A girl of eighteen was spanked. Flouring-mills are becoming more numerous in East Tennessee., New mills of large capacity have recently been erected at Bristol and Home Depot, and others are to be built at Whitesburg and Newport. South Carolina has had a steady growth jeince 1889. The value of manufaetures has increased by fl >,200,000 and 1,193 manufactories have been established, employing nearly 19,000 persons. The value of the State’s products has increased from $72,000,000, in 1880, to nearly $102,000,000, in 1887. The longest railway tunnel in England is the Stand Edge Tunnel, on the London and Northwestern railway, from Liverpool and Manchester to Huddersfield and the north, its length being three miles and sixty yards. The next longest is at Woodford, on the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire railway, three miles'and sixty feet long. The Ch ace thread-mill, at Fall River, employs 149 bands, turns out 6,500 pounds of material every day—s,ooo pounds of twine and 1,500 pounds of baiting. A large storehouse is being built on the grounds in the mill yard It is 109 by 9) feet and 2 > feet liigh. It in to have a capacity of 18,000 feet of floor surface. There are thr .'C gro it anthracite coal mining regions in Pennsylvania—in the Schuylkill, Lehigh and Wyoming valleys. They cover 450 rquare miles of territory, give employment directly to 105,000 men, and produce annually about 35,000,000 tons of coal, though the product varies greatly even in these big figures. The consumption of grocers’ bogs in 1886 was over 2,000,000,000; the yearly increase is 10 per cent.; hands employed, 1,569; value of materials, $8,027,770; value of products, $9,726,000. The Bethlehem (Pa) Times sayt: “The first patent ever issued for paper bags was issued to a Batblehemite in ’52, and since then Bethlehem has led the world in this industry.” Electric lights are being plac ed in the Hoosic tunnel. The men have imperative orders to cease work as soon as a train is heard approaching and to seek safety in the manholes on the eide of the tunnel. They are also compelled to remain there until the smoke shall have partially cleared awav. About sixty miles of wire will be used for main cable and lamp connections. There will be 1,250 lamps of twenty-five candle-pow-er each. The head of the firm that manufactures postal cards for the government is C. C. Woolworth, of Albany. In January Mr. Wool worth’s concern, which is the Fort Orange Paper Company, made the largest delivery to the government that it has ever made in asingle month. It amounted to nearly 57,000,000 cards, or almost one for every man, woman and child in the United States. The weight of these cards was about 160 tons or three tons to tho million-eardth
BARGAIN DAY IN NEW YORK.
How Big Merchant* Can Sell Good* Far Below Their Value. New York Cor. Bt. Louis Globe-Democrat. The rain was coming down in torrents. The big stores were deserted. Women in waterproofs and rubbers were hurrying through the streets. There was not enough business doing in any of the stores to pay for the gas. Ic was a stupid, dreary day, that gives one the blues and makes reasoning about suicide a positive pleasure. “Take all that velvet off the shelves and pile it all on a table near the door. Reduce the price from $2.50 per yard to sl. Have a sign painted that we kc selling velvets for the rest of the day. Don’t sell over ten yards to any one person/’ 8o spoke the superintendent or manager of one of the biggest dry goods houses on Sixth avenue, and the velvets and sign were immediately placed as ■ordered.“We haven’t done enough business to-day to pay our insurance,” he said to the chief clerk of the department where the velvet was sold, “and I want to see what attraction that sign will have.” In fifteen minutes that portion of thfii store where the velvet was on sale was crowded with men and women. They yelled like Comanches and pulled at the rich goods like giants at a tug of war. Richly dressed ladies and poor women with shawls over their shoulders were in the crush. Business men on their way home and young girls from other shops struggled to get some of the handsome goods. ‘ It’s the best velvet in the market, Madame. Our regular price is $2 50 per yard,’’.said the clerk to a would-be purchaser. “I’ll take 20 yards,” said the lady. “Can’t sell but ten yards to one person,” was the clerk’s reply. "Well,” said the lady, “I’ll take ten yards and my little daughter here will take ten yards more. You need not cut it. I’ll pay for it all.” And so the struggle went on until 6 o’clock, when the store was closed. The next day the velvet was put back on the shelf, and what remained was sold for $2.50 per yard. This, doubtless, seems very curious to a person who does not understand the methods of New York storekeepers. But it was not an unusual performance. It was simply an advertisement. Business was dull, and it was necessary to do something to attract the attention of purchasers. The old plan was to put a big advertisement in the daily newspapers and invite customers to call and examine the magnificent display of goods. The new way is to cut the price one-half on some article and thus attract shoppers with money. It is a method that works very satisfactorily, and the p ersons who were able to purchase some’ of the velvet of course told their friends store was crowded the next day, and whoever saw a woman leave a dry goods store without puichasing something? If the price on every article the store is advanced j ust a trifle, why the storekeeper doesn’t lose anything by selling the velvet so cheap. In fact, he probably gains by it. One store may run dress goods in thtf way descril ed. Another may run underwear. Still another furs, or shoes or knickknacks or umbrellas or la :es, or a score of other articles equally dear to the feminine heart. In this way New York women have become known as bargain hunters. No portion of the daily papers is read by them with so much interest as the advertising columns. They know all about every big store in town and know justwteretogotofinibaraainiL-Ifa woman be smart Jshe may drers gor geouily and furnish her house on very little money. She must, of course, know the value of goods, for half of the articles sold as “bargains” are in no sense bargains at ail. deal of old trumpery is sold on “bargain day” for double its worth, but the average New York woman is no fool. She knows a bad article, as well as a good one, as soon as she sees it.
Prudence! Prudence!
_ln medication, as in aught else, prudence should beour guide. Yet thousands cast it to the winds. Every new nostrum finds its patrons, the medical empirics or every false school have their gulls. Every change in the gamut of humbug is rung successfully—for a time at least —the notes being furnished by the credulous. In happy contrast to the many advertised impostures of the day stands Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, now in its third decade of popularity, approved and recommended by physicians, indorsed by the press of many lands, sought and prized by invalids everywhere. It Is an ascertained specific for and preventive of malarial diseases, ctrronie indigestion, liver complaint and constipation, checks the growth of rheumatism and neuralgia, is a peerless invigorant and useful diuretic. Nervous people bendtit by it.
A Job Lot.
Santa Barbara (Cal.) Press. •‘Look here,” she exclaimed, “this is terrible. You charge me 25 cents for that card of buttons and back East I could get them for 10 cente.” “Yes, ma’am, but just think of the elegant climate you get throwed in with every card of buttons.” Sufferers from diseases of the blood, indigestion and general ill health, who have been cured by the use of Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, should tell the good news to their friends and acquaintances. It is objectionable to nearly every one to furnish a statement tor publication, and so the proprietors of this excellent remedy only request that each one shall tell hi neighbor. - ROUGH ON PILES. Quick, complete cure. 5Cc BUCHU-PAIBA. Great Kidney Remedy. SI. WELLS' HEALTH RENEWER for weak men! WELLS' HAIR BALSAM. If gray, gradually restores color, eieganrtonic dreMing. 60c.
How to Pat the Children to Sleep. Detroit Free Press. .“I must go and bandage Hazel’s •yes,” said a young Detroit mother who was entertaining evening company. “Do her eyes trouble her?” asked one of the friends sympathetically. •’» . “No, but they trouble me,” said the mother, laughing. Just aa long as they caneee a glimmer of light she will lie awake and ask questions, but as soon as I bandage them she goes to sleep. Bare enough, not another word was heard after the little girl’s eyes were tied up. . '- J ' I never heard of such a thing,” said the friend. “Is it a punishment?” “Not at all. The child likes it. The sensation gives her something to think about and in a moment she falls asleep.” “Is it an original idea?” “It is an Indian custom,” said the handsome brunette mother, “and decended to me from my grandmother, who wag an Indian princess. When I travel I always bandage the children’s eyes when I want them to sleep. It acts like a charm.”
- V ■ RHEUMATISM. T he Case Stated.— .Tan’y 17th,1883. Messrs George C. Osgood & Co., druggists, Lowell, Mass., wrote to the undersigned aa follows : “Mr. Lewis Dennis, No. 13(» Moody street, wishes to recommend St. Jacobs Oil, and desires especially to say that: “Okin Robinson, of Grantville, Mass., a boy of 12 years, came to his house in the summer of 1881 walking on crutches, his left leg being bent at the knee for over two months, ana could not l>e bent back. Mr. Dennis had some St. Jacobs Oil in the house, and gave it to him to rub on his-knee. In six days he had no use for his crutches, and went home well without them, as he ho been ever since.” , < Corroborative and Conclusive Testimony. —Lowell. Mass., July 9,lßß7.—Gentlemen: Mr. Lewis Dennis has just called upon me, and informs me that the boy Orin Robinson, who was a poor cripple on crutches, and was cured by St. Jacobs Oil in 1881; the cure has remained permanent. The young man has been and is now at work at manual labor-fthe case certainly proves thetfllcacy of St. Jacobs Oil.—Dr. Geo. C. Osoood, M. D. Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore, Md.
Wrong Omaha World. Good Minister—What? weeping? I have c ime j-ust in time. You are experiencing a change of heart. Unregenerate girl—N-o, my heart hasn’t cbaaged, but, boo, hoo! his has. SPRING DEBILITY. The Best Spring Medicine Ever Discovered. Everyone needs a Spring tonic—a remedy which will strengthen and invigorate the system and tone up the Action of all the organs. The Spring ia the time above all others for the sick to get well; it is the time for the comparatively well to keep in good health bythe of a j udiciously selected Spring medicine. With the advent of Spring comes malaria, nervousness and debility. A weak and tired feeling, if neglected, always results in nervous and physical exhaustion. Cure these diseases, or guard against them by the use of Dr. Greene’s Neivura Nerve Tonic, which is the greatest and best of all Spring medicines. This wonderful remedy is recommended by physicians, druggists and the people everywhere as being the most marvellows in its effect of any known medicine. If you are nervous, irritable, depressed and cannot sleep nights, use this remedy by all means, and your nerves will become strong and steady, and your sleep calm, natural and refreshing. Il you wake tired mornings, with dull head, bad taste in the mouth, no appetite for breakfast,and feel weak, languid and exhausted, this remarkable remedy will clear your head, give you an appetiteand restore your T Btr£Dgth,vigQrand energies If you have dyspepsia, indigestion, biliousness, constipation,kidney complaint, pain and weakness in the back, this remedy will give you sure relief and cure. I tis a perfect specific for nervous debility, neuralgia, nervous or sick headache, heart disease, palpitation, paralysis, numbness,trembling and all nervous diseases. Use this remedy and you will never regret it. It is purely vegetable, and its wonderful effects afford a safe, sure and positive cure. Do not be persuaded to take anything else, for this remedy has no equal. It is the greatest medical discovery cf the age. All druggists keep it Price $1 per bottle. I f your druggist does not have it, he will ger. it for you. Its discoverer,Dr. Greene, 35 West 14th street, New York, the great specialist in curing nervous and chronic diseases,can be consulted free,personally or by letter. Brunswick, Ga., has an oak tree which can shade 100 teams, it is eaid.
A LETTER. From the Pastor of the M. E.Church. Franklin, Oakland Co.. Mich., | Dec. 2, 1887. I Rheumatic Syrup Company: Dear Sirs—Mr. A. A. Rust, of this place, furnished me one bottle of your Rheumatic Syrup. Have taken about two-thirds of it. Before taking it the slightest change in the weather affected me very much. lam now almost entirely free from the awful twinges of rheumatism, and changes in the weather do not affect me. S. A. Lose. Pastor of Methodist Church, Franklin, Mich. - ROUGH ON ITCH” Ointment cures Skin Humors, Pimples, Flesh Worms, Bing Worms, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Erosted Feet. Chilblains; Itch, Ivy Poison. Barber’s Itch. Scald- Head, Eczema. 50c. Druggists or mall E. S Wells, Jersey City, N.J. . PILES, Itching or Bleeding, relieved and permanently cured by Cole’a Carboll•al ve. Get the Genuine, 25 and 50 cents at druggist? or by mail. J. W. COLE & CO., Pr outlet ora Black River Falls. Wia. -ROUGH ON RATS,” for rats, mice, bugs. 15c. -Rough on Catarbh.” Only absolute cure. Me. -ROUGH ON CORNS ” Hard or corns. W--ROUGH-ONTCOTHACUft- instant redef/ lSe.
Makes the Weak Strong
It you feet tired, weak, worn out, or run down from hard work, by Impoverished condition of the biood or low state of the system, you should take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, The peculiar toning, purifying and vitalizing qualities of this successful medicine are soon felt throughont the entire system, expelling disease, and giving quick, healthy action to every organ. It tones the stomach, cieates an appetite, and rouses the liver and kidneys. Thousands who have taken it with benefit, testify that Hood's Sarsaparilla “makes the weak strong.” Hood’s Sarsaparilla “I have taken not quite a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and must say it is one of the best medicines for giviug an appetite, purifping the blood, and regulating the digestive organs, that I ever heard oi. It did me a great deal of good.” Mas. N. A. Stanley, Canastota. N. Y. _ “I took Hood's Sarsaparilla for loss of appetite, dyspepsia and general languor. It did me a vast amount of good, and I have no hesitancy in recommendingit ” J. W. Wii.lefobd, Qulney, 111.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. 11; six for J 5. Prepared only I Sold by alldrugnistsM; six for 15. Prepared onlv -by CJL HOOD. A CQ„ Apothecaries. Lowell, Mass, by C. I. HOOD & CO* ApmheearitaKn Mai 100 Doses Ono Dollar | 100 Doses One Dollar IftOQOSTCMWMHNaWATOgSraff •yHMw ttrnr VmihossnAStem WJnfinff erg Stem VrAcbes tree to Ibawjnrhowill wnUt In procuring acwsub•ertbera to TSIE HOUSEHOLD JOCIWAL. * Vte will aUo send free to snbucribcrs cne of cur CkmeTß WHSBormraß find family paper, Dow la 1 b tenth ver.r, end without question tho moot popular Dorna paper Tmblbhed fa the United States. Elegant J/ printed cn lino pope r, and hnicely ElcstrahM. Its contrfbutorsnra tho bee; that money can prccuro. Every year it has beca CfxT c-xka to giro come c?cgcnt rremlrm. worth tea many times tho snb*crlptlQ.i price of th® Joumni, Inorder to rxeurenevz eubscritem, vreil knowing chafe ©nee a subscriber yen vrill clv.-nyji remain with ar. WE W AJiT JOO,COO NEW SUBSCRIBERS AT ONCE, if mooep and enterprlv* will sccnro them. This yesr we offer this ELE> cat, plated with PURE GOLD on solid yellow metal (abmettaxo called “Atanlaani Cold,”) and in appearancei to similar to ■ tto ewdwteK ptataa and bearings are perfectly made ca the moot improved and expensire machinery, and each tart is carefally fitted by skilled and. competent workmen. ImcS one is carefully iaqecW, regulated for I? year’s raßrlpdoa to TH°E HOUSIMOIS Eemember we c&rge yoa nothing tor th* premium, ea./ WiFi HDT *•*“! or SiSraAgent in New York esn telfyouofZr abwlnto reliability. Address, THE HOUSEHOLD JOURNAL. 841 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. iStsnCKEW' 9 P • XI " "xSir The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof, and win keep you dry fa WYI in the hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect riding coat, ta A* / Vfy T) Tv R and covers the entire saddle. Beware of imitations. Nonegenuine without the H J -Fieh Brand” trade-mark. Elustrated Catalogue flee. AJ.Tower, BostonM««».
At Los Angeles, Cal., coal is S2O per ton, butter 11.50 per roll and egg? $1 40 per dozen. *\ ' ■ Important lie turns from Wabash County." Wabash, Ind., Aug. 7, 1887. J. T. Graden: _ Dear Sir—This is to certify that I have been using Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, purchased from you, for inflammatory rheumatism, and I cheerfully recom mead it to any one suffering from this dreaded disease, as I have been cured by its use. Very respectfully, ; * — riSosuoir Weesn er. Those who are trying to break up the baneful habit of intemperance will experience great benefit from the use of Prickly Ash Bitters Liquor deranges the system Prickly Ash Bitters will remedy the evil resuits and restore the brain, stomach and liver to healthy action, thereby strengthening the will power thoroughly cleansing and toning up the system and remove every of taint disease. It is purely a medicine and while pleasant to the taste, it cannot be used as a beverage by reason of its cathartic properties. Consampdon Surely Cured.'' To the Editor:-Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the abovenamed disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free t ■ any of your readers who have consume tiou if they will send me their Ex-re and P. O. addresses. Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM. M. C.. 181 Pearl Bt.,N. Y LOOK YOUNG, prevent tendency to wrinkles or ageing of the skin by using Leaurellb Oil. Preserves a youthful, plump, fresh condition of the features. A transparent, alabaster skin. #I.OO. Druggists or exp. E. S. Wells. Jersey City. N. J. d _ Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. ;J" ' ~ ‘ ." When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, stie cried lor JJastorla, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. 500,000 TIMBER acres iiiinii OF FIRST-CLASS. Loll MU I In Northern Wisconsin Will be sold at IMS OO as.ucrr, o<« ro>-g nine, to Actual Bsti'«rs. Rich soli —bea’thful climate—good drinking water-fine market facili-ties-steady demand for labor and good wages. Purchare now and have choice of lands. Pull information, with map«. pamphlet, etc., furnished FREE. Address LAND COSLMISSIONER, W. <J. R R., Milwaukee, WU. O s tsood sotb xUBSYEMBD YVS.'E- ■ I prescribe' and fully endorse Big as lbs only XQBf Careiln Wwfi specific forth : certaincure AHMfI TO 0 dats.XM of this disease. jnSburaoiMd not W® G. H. ING RAHAM. M. D.. ocanStrietan- " Amsterdam, N. Y. Q Mfd only Sy tbs We have sold BigG fc. ■MW*..-.tu many years, and It hat „ lveD t )j e pest o f satis Faction■ Yfflk Ohio. D. R. DYCHEiCO., W Chicago, 18. ~ 81.00, Sold by Druggists. I CURE FITS! When l eaj core I do not. mean merely to stop then: for a tune and then have them return again. I mean a radical cure. I have made tho disease of FITS. M*Ur EPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long Matty. 1 warrant my remedy to care the .rorst cases. Beynae others have failed is no reason for not now reeefijßg a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Ree Bettis of mv InfftHinipi 1 rive FxT’f’riM juju rest vHSc H.fc, ROOT, Myth. IS3 Feurlau aew 1 ariu
At thia seuon. m zpring approaches, * good ze liable tonic and blood purifier la needed by nearly everbody. Hood’s Sarsaparilla fa peculiarly adapted for this'jturpoM and becomes mon popular every year. Try it thia spring. > “When I took Hood's Sarsaparilla that heavinew in my stomach left; the dullness in my bead, and the gloomy, despondent feeling disappeared. I began to get stronger,my blood gained betterefr- > culatlon, the coldness in my nsnds and feet left me, and my kidneys do not bother me as before.” G. W. Hull, Attomey-at Law, Millersburg, O. Health and Strength “A year ago I suffered from indigestion, had terrible headache, very little appetite; In fact seemed completely broken down. On taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla I began to improve, and now I have a good appetite, and my health is excellent compared to what it was. lam better in spirits, am not troubled with cold feet or hands, and am . entirely cured of indigesilon.”. Minnie Man- | ninu, Newburg, Orange County, N. Y. i N. B.—Be sure to get only
The Start and Finish! Slight Cold. Headache. Deep Cold. Cough ' Catarrh - flight Sweats. Throat. Pain in Lungs. Hemorrhages. Purulent H wiwl Matter. swnptlGii. Life’s Thermometer. Moral: Procure at once the “Carbolic Smoke Ball” and ‘•Di?b<-ll>Uor Package” and arrest the trouble at its present stage. Cures all the above conditions 01 Catarrh. Complete treatment (lasting four generally sufhetaaw sent to any address on receipt of 53.00 (Smoke Ball, #2.00; Debellator, #l.OOl. Smoke 801 l paper seat free. CARBOLIC SMOKE BALL CO., 30 W. VValdington St. Room ». INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 30 E. fourteenth St., NEW YORK CITY. AWell Dribs /f f VA FoR EVERY Purpose / I PX SOLD ON TRIAL. I " \wt A Investment # ,1 AVA WAtjy, small, prof- // I its large. er I Send £O. .for & H I I A mailing tgjjL W* large liiustrare.l ( ata log uc vitu : ! - Manufactured by ®WGOULDS& AUSTIN, gEAgfIP 167 & 169 LAKE ST. ILLI2TCISec ET AWAY! Apk g. Va E, Ea Flower seeds (500 k’nd) with Pabks Flojul Gude, all for J stamns. New flowers, new engravings; teems with floral hints. Everybody delighted. Tell all your friends. Send now. G. W. Park, Fannetuburg, Pa. MEHTB a,PAITKI;NB. for making Bun, ffTidisi, Cape, Mitrens, etc. Mainn, sen: I y mall for 91. band |UnlHflP?P tot late reduced price-list. 1 J" A 8088 h CO. TUado. Ohio. SOLDIERS V relieved; success or no fee. Laws sent free. _ AW.MaCormiek ABon.W«»M*s»«w.a.C-*r>»vt—<* DCIICiniiC w tWldtem and Heirs. L.BINGr Lflululiu r. A M art ore av Washington. D.f! fl-A XTf Treated and cured without the vyAlt V jTbJlknife. Book on treatment sent, free. Address F.L.Pond.M.D. Aurora, Kane Co.TU. By return mail. Full Deacrlptios. , S’ S 8 Moody’S New Tailor System of lire* 5r BPX.E. CaUtwar. MOODY * >o.. ft X. Stephens. Lebaaoa Ohio. niTtlifC obtained by L. BINGHAM, Pat IA lUH I Q ent Attorney, Washington. D, C I IK® 10-88 INDPLS When writing to Advertisers readers will confer a favor or men tioulug this paper. HSHKIroiU BiYAHT’b Buluu Colhuta BuXsla, ■
