Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 November 1890 — Page 7

Talking of patent medicines —you know the old prejudice. 'And the doctors—some of them are between you and us. They would like you to think that what’s cured thousands won’t cure you. You’d be' lieve in patent medicines if they didn’t profess to cure everything —and so, between the experiments of doctors, and the experiments of patent medicines thaiLzare sold only because there’s money in the “ stuff, ” you lose faith in everything. " _ t . • And, you can’t always tell the prescription that cures by what you read in the papers. So, perhaps, there’s no better way to sell a remedy, than to tell the truth about it, and take the risk of its doing just what it professes to do. That’s what the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, of Buffalo, N. Y., does with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, Favorite Prescription, Pleasant Pellets, and Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. If they don’t do what their makers say they’ll do you get your money back.

SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURL The success of this Great Cough Cure is ■without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, n«e it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price lo cts., 50 cts. and f l 00. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, •se Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts, PurifvYour BLOOD. Bui do not us* the dangerous alkaline and mercurial preparations which destroy your nervous system and ruin the digesiivo power ol the stomach. The vegetable kingdom gives us the best and safest remedial 1 agents. Dr. Sherman devoted the greater part of his life to the discovery ot this reliable and sale remedy, and alt its ingredients are vegetable. He gave it the name of Prickly Ash Bitters I a name every one can remember, and to the present day nothing has been discovered thal so beneficial lor the BLOOD, lor the LIVER, (or the KIDNEYS and tor the STOMACH. This remedy is now so well and favorably known by all who have used It that arguments as to its merits are useless, and if others who require a corrective to the system would but give (t a trial the health of this country would be vastly Improved. Remember the name—PRICKLY ASH BITTERS. Ask your druggist for it. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO,, st. louts. KO To You, GENTLE READER. If yon have Dyspepsia, you have heartbnrn with pain In the stomach after eatlnc, you have headache, are billons nt times, yoar bowels are con. stipated, your shin is yellow, yonr tonipne Is coated, yon have dark circles aronnd your eyes, you can noS -eat what you like, yon do not stoop well, yon are USED UP GENERALLY. Get a bottle or DR. WHITE’S DANDELION ALTERATIVE. It will cure yon. You can eat what you like, you will sleep like a child, your skin will pet clear, your eyes will iret briulit, yon will get FLESH OSf York BOXES and will feel vigorous enough to tnke anything you can Kay your hands on. Very large bottle for 91, and every bottle warranted.

G K A i c.r UL-CUiVir OKTINQ. EPPS’S COCOA BREAKFAST. ••By . thorough knonrledte of the natural law wb <ih govern the operatl ms of dlge tlon nnd nun • tl >o, and by a ear* ul appllu attoi of the fine rrorct, rt»3 of el-s lecte t Cocoa, Mr. Ep ■» ho* prpvlfl • our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured hm erago wulon nay save us many neavy doctors' bill? It Uoy tut) judlntoas uso of *uou articles of dl ■ thatacoastliutlou nay o» gr dually ouilt up mill strong enough to resist every tendency to ril-eao Hundreds of subtle maladies ars Uoatlnz around t:. ready to attack wherever there Is a weak |w n;. V.’e may escape mans' a fatal shaft by keeplrtgournolyes well forcUel with nure blood a <1 n properly flourished fra ne."—“Oiefl S erviqe ’iaectte." z Made gfmplv with ball In,' water or niil'r. Fold onlv In hair-poun 1 tin-, y Grocers, labelle l thusJ Adi Er> IiPHS dfcCU.. Homreopathlo Cbemuts, London, England . Syr. mIS Tar THE HOUSEHOLD REMEDY For the Cure of Coughs, Colds, Croup Whooping Cough and LA GRIPPE. It never fails to effect a speedy Cure. Price 25 and 50 Cents. Eor Sale by all healers. Prepared by the Roosa & Ratliff Chemical Co., Ciaelnatl, O.

PLOT OF A MASSACRE.

Bow Braoki «ad HU Troop* Wore to B« X.MI Into Ambush and Slaughtered, The first knowledge that the ghost dsn eeis had commenced plotting to entrap thi soldiers was brought to Indian A gen Royer at Pine Ridge Agency, Sunday, bj William McGaa, formerly an Indian scout and now a wealthy ranchman living in th< vicinity of Buffalo Gap. : McGaa was trav cling overland on horseback and alone He enjoys a wide friendship among thi Indians generally, and Saturday night staid at one of the tedges about midwaj between Pine Ridge and Buffalo Gap. Hi bad placed very little dependence in ttu reported scare, and therefore felt ne feai in laying down and going to sleet in a tepee full of bronze-faced In. dians, notwithstanding he noticed that they were all fully armed. A little curiosity, however, prompted him tO feign sleep and keep his ears open during the early part of the night. The result was that he secured information as startling as it was valuable and that removes every vestige of doubt as to the blood-thirsty villainy which has taken possession of the ghost-dancers. After he had been in bed some little time, a couple of hours or more, one of the redskins bent over him to discover whether he was asleep. To all appearances hewas. Then he heard them gel up and begin a whispered consultation. For the first time in his life, McGaa says, he almost doubted his own ears. The Indians vfith whom he had lain down to sleep with the feeling of the utmost security were deliberately plotting to lead General Brooke and his soldiers into an ambush and shoot them down. Their plan, as McGaa heard from their own lips, is to continue the ghost-dance till the troops try to stop it. The place selected to carry out their murderous design is a place,sixteen miles and a half north of Pine Uidge, and a more advantageous locality for so devilfish a dead probably does not exist anywhere else on the face of tho entire continent. It is where the White Horse creek empties into the Wounded Knots, and lies in something of an amphitheater shape. The only practical wa.y of leading up to it is by a road that follows along the bank of White Horse creek. Upon either side of this road and creek are dense clumps of trees, so many a&to almost form a wall on either side of the approach. The plot is to have a ghost dance ib the center of this amphitheater and have-the woods on either side of the road full of Indians when the militia comes up to stop the dance, and they will be easily shot down by the Indians in ambusli on either side. By lining the road with their Winchesters for the distance of a mile and letting the troops get well into the amphitheater, they were calculating Ihey could wipe out every spldier that enr-.e, and the calculation was a perfect j ono

TJrtr following somewhat improbable special has been received from Pine Ridge: “It is reported that a band of Indian war' riors, mostly Sioux, numbering about 0,000, has cut loose from the reservation below and is heading westward.” General Merritt,commander of the de» partment of the Missouri, received in*. Btruotions from tho headquarters of the j nrmv iu Washington to send troops at once jto Pice Ridgo agency. Gen. Merrit ac^ , cordiDglv ordered n regiment of the | Seventh cavalry, consisting of eight companies of about (100 men under command of Got. Forsythe, and a company ot artillery with a battery of four guus. commanded by Capt. Capron, from Ft. Riley, to the scene of the troublo. Tho troops left Sunday by special train. Gen. Merritt said: *T do not know bow serious the trouble is. and of course can not now say whether more troops will bo sent or not. Of course they will be If necessary. I have really no information to give further than that the orders were received from headquarters at Washington and 1 have acted accordingly.” it is learned that every soldier in the depertment of M ssouri is in perfect readiness 10 start for Dakota at a moment’s uotice. Excitement at Blunt, S. D., In reference to the Indian trouble is at its height. Gen. Bowers and members of the Midland Pacific survey at work eight miles west of Pierre have reached Blunt. They say that the Indians are in a frenzied condition and are liable to commit murder at anytimeFriday night, at tl o’clock, fifty Indians surrounded their camp, burst into the tent and took possession. They were all well I armed and could have massacred the whole outfit, but after a pow-wow the reds left, telling them to be many miles away before the sun rose. The people will ask the Governor for arms and ammunitionIt is feared that much damage will bedone if proper precautions are not taken. The Indians on the Winnebago south of town have left for the ghost dance at Rosebud. James Terrell was killed {by John FelU ner, known as “General” Feltner, at Huron, Lawrence county, at 5 o'clock, Saturday evening. Both were residents of that village. They had had a quarrel during the campaign, and had been enemies ever since. The murdered man was a Republican, the other a Democrat. They had a fight Saturday afternoon In George Felt ner’s saloon, but were separated. Terrell went out in town, but soon returned and renewed the quarrell. He -hot at Feltner bub failed to hit him. He then began beating him over the head with the revol ver. James VVotford, a frieud of Feltner, then interfered, and while he held Terrell down Feltner stabbed him, Terrell died In ten minutes. Feltner is under arrest Terreli was about forty years of age, and leaves a wife and four children in destitute circumstances. More trouble may follow, as very bitter feeling has engendered. The Lawrence county Farmers’ Institute was held at Mitchell Friday and Saturday last. Thb President declared that tho farmers ought either avail themselves of the liberal provisions of the laws made for them or stop complaining. The papers and addresses were practical, and the exercises in general were interesting and Jaeueflcial. -

THE DEADLY CIGARETTE.

Discoveries Made by a Man While Manipulating Cigar Stubs. New York Special. The deadly cigarette never seemed more poisonous than when viewed in the light of the latest story that is going the rounds of the local tobacco trade. It is to the effect that one Memm, a cigar stub picker, died recently in one of the lo egn quarters of the city, leaving a fortune varying, as the story runs, between $15,000 and $25,000. It appears that Memm had a smattering of practical chemistry of his head, which he applied 1 to his stubs, emulating tho example in modern chemical discoveries which make wine without grapes, and pigs’ feet from clothes-pins. He invented a small oven, in which were burned the accumulating stub pickings of several score of boys. In the process of reducing the stubs to ashes he contrived to retain a great quantity of the gases and salts that escape in smoke, and the cremated material thus became impregnated with them. The stubs, reduced to ashes, were next ground to a powder and washed to a whiteness. This deposit he found acted like magic on the enamel of the teeth, dissolving tarter and removing discolorations in the twinkling of an eye. Having successfully demonstrated this discovery, Memm made a deal with a well known chemist, by whose agency the stuff was put up iii elegantly scented boxes and advertised far and wide, but the real magnitude of his success was attained by a subsequent process which Bavors more strongly of fact. Certain of the stubs turned in by his army of gatherers were unrolled and the burned edges clipped off. The remnants of leaves were then thoroughly rinsed and steeped for a day in a strong decoction of tea and scented herbs, whence they were removed smelling sweet and aromatic, When dry the leaves were cut into fine scraps, and rolled into cigarettes. which were afterward sold in the case of the city as the purest and best of cigarettes- It is not told how this ingenious fellow contrived to escape the authorities, but that information is not necessary to the moral pointed by the ,tale.

The First American s orpetlo Boat*

John M. Ellicott in St. Nichols. European countries havo built large numbers of these boats. Italy has now about 200; England, 175; France, 150; Russia, 130; Germany, 100; and Spain, 20. On this side of the Atlantic, 'the Argentine Republic has 18; Brazil, 16; and Chili, 10. Of course you wish to know how many our own nation ha 3. , Well, we have one. It was recently launched, and if you read the papers you will no doubt see. accounts of its trials for speed. It is a big one a-“deep-sea’' boat—very much like tho Italian Nibbio in appearance, but not in any way designed alter that boat. It was built by the Messrs. Ilerreshoit at Bristol, R. I. This firm has built some very first launches and yachts, and can no doubt prove equal to the best .foreign builders in constructing torpedo boati should others be demanded. Our torpedo boat is named the Cushing. after a famous naval officer who during the Rebellion sank a Confederate ironclad with a torpedo rigged out on a spar projecting from "jf'steam launch. Torpedo boats are not’always named. It is the custom of foreign countries to give names cn’y to tbeir ••deep-sea” torpedo boats. The smaller ones are simply numbered. I know you are wondering why we have only one torpedo boat and would 1 ike to ask me if we dbn’t need more. Perhaps'we do. The United States has a longer sea-coast and more important sea-ports to protect than any other country; but the United States is deliberate and thoughtful-- - ~—— The presant Secretary of tho Navy has asked Congress to appropriate money for five torpedo boats in addition to the CuilhKng, and no doubt successful trials of these will bring about the immediate building of many more. Prof. E. Stone Wiggins is at it again. He predicts an earthquakes in Pennsylvania and the maritime provinces ol Canada August 17, IDOA. and another one in 1920. A Governor Hill’s private secretary if .ColonelT. S. Williams, a graduate of Cornell and formerly a newspaper man. He serve! at Albany and at Washington..

State or Ohm, City op Toledo, i Lucas County. / 55 Frank J. Ciiexky mates oath that he Is thf senior partner of thefirm of F. J. Ciir.NEY & Co. doing business In the City of To edo, Count} and Slate aforesaid, and that said firm will cuv tna sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eacli and every ease of Catarrh that c innot be cured by the u.-e of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. „ FRANK J. CHENEY. Bworn to before me and subscribed in mi presence, this 6lh day of December, A. D. lliSti f 'T*—', A. W. GLEASON, 1 I t Notary Public. Hall's CataTh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the b ood and muoo g -urfa es of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. by Druggist*, 75c.

Catarrh In a complaint which affect- nearly everybody, more or h-as. It originate* in a cold, or succession o! coirie. combined with impure blood, Disagreeable .low' from the nose, tickling in the throat, offensive breath, pain over and between the eyes, ringing and bursting noises In the ears, are the more common symptoms. Catarih is cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Which etgikes directly at Its cause by removing all Impurities from the blood, building up the diseased tie*ues and giving healthy tone to the whole system. Nr It. If you hare decided to buy Hood’s Sarsaparilla do n,ot be induced to take any other. Hood’s Sarsaparilla fL sixfor|s. Prepared only by C. L HOOD & CO., Howell, Mas*. 100 Doses One Dollar

The Child of an Evil parent.

Malvolio i«yi in Shakspeare’e Comedy of Twelith Night, “Some are born g>ea, some achieve greatness, and some have gre there throat npon them.” So it la with nervou&ne a. Some are born nervous, some achieve nervousness by their own imprudence and neglect, and some cave nervousness thrust upon them by disease. The basic starting point of thiaailmcn’. which grows rapidly and assume* a arming proportions when it reachis the stave of hypochondira and ebronic sleeplessness, is w- akness. the child of indigestion, parent of many evils. For the Incapacity of the stomach to digest food, and of the system to a si collate It after digestion, Hostetler’s atonuch Bitten has ever proved a sovereign remedy. Sleep becomes tranquil, appetite improves, abnormal sensitive' ess of the nerves is succeeded by steadiness and vigor in those delicate tissues, bodily substances increases when that signal rest rative of digesiion,is systematically used. Conquer also with it malaria, rheuma’ism, kidney inactivity, liver comDlaint and constipation. The Princess of Wales wears a No. 6 shoe, yet she is a number one woman. An extraordinary advance in the use of cocoa seems to have taken at lato years in England. In the HCu»e of Commons, this last session, the Right Hon. G. J. Goschen, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, called attention to it as a cause for much of the falling off of the use of coffee. He attributed it in a measure, to the position a preparation ofcocoa known as “Grateful and Comforting” had taken. In accord with this suggestion, itm ty be interesting to follow the course cocoa has taken in England since 1832, when the fluty, which bad been standing at 6d. per pound, with an importation of under ti half million pounds, was reduced to 2d. per pound, and not long after vve find the homoeopathic doctrine of medicine introduced into the kingdom, and that the use of cocoa was specially advocated by physicians adopting that mode of practice. Soon after we find the first homoeopathic chemists established in England (the firm of James Epps & _Co.) produced a special preparation Which only needed boiling water or milk to be at once ready for the table, and the superior character of this production has, no doubt, done much, as the Chancellor of the Exchequer said, to bring about (backed as it was by a further reduction of the duty to la. per pound) the advance made Never stroke a boy’s beard when itis down. Doctors prescribe Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers, because children like them and they never fail. George Gould has some peculiarities, but he is no Jay. Are any of the new-fangled washing compounds as good as the old-fashioneu soapi Dobbins’ Electric Soap has been said every day for 24 years, and is now just as good as ever. Ask your grocer for it and take no other. It is his exalted position that makes tbe weathercock vane. Bronson—They are trying very bard to brat the lottery down in Louisiana. Johnson—Well, it can’t be done, I know; I’ve tried it. Auot;t a Stand Off. -If there is anything in the world more fidgety than a man with two cigars aud no match it is a boy in the house on a rainy day. This has no especial reference to “that tired feeling,” out if you are “out of sorts,” with dyspepsia, biliousness, headache and constipation, and fe=i tired all over, there is nothing that will bring you out as gently and effectually as Dr. White’s Dandelion. It is i perfect system renovator. It purifies the blood and makes the weak strong.

“Every work requires a proper method.’’ Half the trouble of house-cleaning results from lack of common-sense means. Use SAPOLIO.' It is a solid cake of Scouring Soap. Try it. FOR BRONCHIAL, ASTHMATIC AND PULMONARY COMPLAINTS. "Brown’s Bronchial Troches” have remarkable curative properties, So;d onlyin b^tes. Bronchitis is Cured by freqnent small loses ol Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Four, poisons that accumulate in the blood and rot the maehinery'of thesystem, ire eradicated and expelled by using Prickly Ash Bitters, a medicine that will not irritate the stomach or bowels. It acts in a gentle manner on these delicate organs, and restores health in every case.

REMEDY FORram Dyspepsia is the bane ot'thei present generation. 11 is for its cu re am t Its attenda 11 ts, sick headache, constipation and piles, that full’s Nls have become so famous. They act gently on the digestive organs, giving them tone and vigor without griping or nausea. Hoc. A~ ROBBER OR THIEF Is better than the lying scale agent who tells yon as gospel truth that the Jones’ $60.5 Ton Wagon Scale is not a standard scale, and equal to any made. For free book and prioe list, address Jones of Binghamton, Binghamton, H.Y. BORE WELLS !I moh!y! Oar Well Machines are the most JfT SHVSStaI « tIKLIAKLX, HCKaAI.*, SCCOKBR WI- 1 UjS . STV TheydoHUUK WeUKtnd A-fOT IPeC"*TK n-IaCUtEATER PROFIT. /V R+ nicy FINISH Wells where Wft HI Yl '.then FAIL! Any slie. W riches to U inches diamatr. Bfjg a. .OOBIS & NYMAN, TIFFIN, - Memory Mind wandering enr<vl. Books Wrned in one rea« imp. Testimonials from all parts of the jrlobe. Prospect aa TOST PBEK, sent on eppHnation to Prtif. A. Iy>iset'.«._Xn Fifth Ave. New York. fill I rsEnteCTiyi:; usd. For-ale try ail dnigui.it* or at office, ror circu »r» ond testimonials address, with stamps. Dr. O. W.F. ■iNTDSK, 243 State St., Chicago. * jjsr Ask your Druggist to order it for you. MENTION Tills PAPER. nu «UIJ» To inunu. t .II.T’IJ/.l IT IS CSF.ObyCfIII.It2KN Btl Him MLM CHltl)h.,.i, Thousands JV A 111 Cl fa* 1 young luen end women In t: ■ a >1 B ’aMt-Sr” 1 ! 1 ountry owe their liven, th-; ! ■ J■ HN 9111 tj Ridge’s Food, their daily diet i BbJa»H Infancy and Childhood havir been Itidges food 35 *axis ,1. -1 Druggist*. WOOL RICH At CO- Palmer, Sto ANT ENERGETIC MAN CAN MAKE YISOOn YE AIL We want re lib’e TlI L UliriftlL men in every county m the Ir I r rnilnr HI Duit-d sute». baraule X I LLU IIUiILU. mile line-. IGA*. Erpress Paid. Send -tamp t- r circular-. Territory FREE. MECHANICAL TELEPHONE CO., Albiou.llL PCai ft IA SI JOiTn w. kobki BLIsCMCsds waHi.iugtoo, v. c Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner U.B.Peftnion Bureau in » yra laat war,isadjudicatingclaims,attyolar

The Companion Calendar | For 1891. 1 Wednesday the Beit Day of All; Paaee ****'■' y j Thla Beautiful and Unique Calendar and Announcement la called "The Book of Days.” It has Fourteen Pages finely printed in Colors, the design being selected from nearly Two Thousand received in the Prize Competition. It Is considered ■ the mo9t novel and attractive Calendar of the year. Mailed on receipt of ten cents. Offer to New Subscribers. This Calendar will be sent to each New Subscriber who WILL CUT OUT and send ns this advertisement, with fi1.75 (or a year’s subscription. I The Youth’s Companion wlfl be mailed from the time that tbe subscription is received to Jannnry, 1891, F REE, and for a fall year from that date. A r o other weekly paper giret to large a variety 0/ entertaining reading at to low a price. Doubla Holiday Numbers-Illustrated Weakly Supplements, The Youth’s Companion, Boston, Mass. 43 Send Cheek , Pott-office Order or Pegittered Letter. t-

He hdbd smdkll skill o' horse flesh i who bought at goose ho ride onVDorihhdkke ■a^^^^ordir^^oatps^j is CD LI CD “Try &c&he be convinced.* 3 -a Rsyn gr* aecQm pUsh satisfactory 'U’ B 111 IBC. IB a# Oi LI results in scouring and cleaning, and necessitates a great outlay of time and labor, which more than balances any saving in cost. - Practical people will find SAPOLIO the best and cheapest soap for house-cleanincf and srourin^. fitJggg&SS ET.Y BHOTHERS. &* Wa’ ’on New York. PriceSOcta.gßßL Bjl Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. Rib jk>-4 Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreoable to the BJg taste. Cliildren take it without objection. By druggists. Pi

{oj&o i ''j&AL 9 i I PETERSON’S i 1 - MAGAZINE I NOW BEGINNING ITS SOth YEAR H OF PUBLICATION, IS UNDOUBT- K, EDLY THE BEST LADY'S MAGAZINE PUBLISHED. W Its ntoricn am from tom* of pSi '•N| America’s most popular authors. I’n miscellaneous articles, profusel y illustrated, are ol ways IoNP entertaining and instructive. til Its fashion netes and illustra-' K-j tions are fresh and complete, IWV combining beauty, utility, and psis O economy. . , If - - ah?! Its full-size dress-patterns ert- Jfcyl able every woman to cut and Jit raw *4| her own dresses. iojj K»| Its numerous designs for needle- M work, fancy-work, etc., are novel, yU handsome, and useful. Its household department and jTV, table recipes are invaluable to KK' every housekeeper. J*® $3 Its long-continued prosperity V® attests its worth. p|?| TRY IT FOR 1891. « iLy Terms: $2.00 per year, with k* large reductions to Clubs, and ■-*) wJ elegant premiums to those, who IS® grt up Clubs. A sample copy, with j!L3 full particulars, to Club-raisers. UJ Kj Addreis, PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, KJ Wn xntion thb psp«r. Philadelphia, Pa. ©Popham’s Asthma Specific gives immediate relief. it Is believed to be the Best ASTHMA Remedy known lo humanity. As evidence we »ive a TrialJ’ackaite FREE. for *! Box.’*Ad«f ess! TIIOS. PwPHAM, 2All Uidge Avemie.Philadeiphia. NEW Pension Law THOUSANDS NOW ENTITLED WHO HAVE NOT BEEN ENTITLED. Address or forma of application and Tull information. WM. W. DUDLEY, LATE COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS, Attorney at Law, Waahiugton, V, u. (Mention thia caper.) SAKBIiIt attention to private M : .'Vdisenaes of malo and female ® Regulating remedies for ladiea rif AQgp (Bu furnished. Cures Sterility. Rupm, ’ture. Files. Fistuirf, Fissure. Sperqa inatorrlxca, liu potency, Gonor- ' mTOi-v rluptt and .Syphilis. Cull on or him, al %' i S. Illinois sHanHeHB s I-, Indlanapoils, Jnd. Altlette a Kota Inlng 2c In stamps answered confld ntial. rarniMC th» rrsst foot remedy fbr makrtUllMt, lug tha fast -auxin. In.tant relief for eold or peripirlng fcrt On ule evarywhara. or taut fraa on receipt of Meta. Bampla paelaga (tea at lUuia, or maUadlar a dlma. Illuatratad eamphltt Vraa. THB rLDINM CO. WUUUI S LDM, H. T,

-YASELIHE- ■ I OR AONF-DOLY ARBILT. sent us by rraf we will deliver, free of all charge*, to any person l» the United State*, till of the following artieles.carefnlly packed. On* two.«innn*,Wt,jefff Pnre.Vas-iino., - - 18-eta. One twn-onnee hotfln of Vaacline Foiuado, - IS “ One jar of V»»ollna Cold Cream. - - - - U “ Olio Cake of Vaseline Camphor Ice, r - - 10 ** One t'akc of Vaseline Soap, ntiscented, - - 10 “ One C«ko of Ysseline Soai>.exqui*itelv*nontod.lS “ One two-ounce bottle of White Vaseline, :5 '* *t.to Or for postage stamp* any single article at the prie* nnnied. On no acconnr lie p-rstiKdcd to nerept from* your druggist any Vsm-lino or prcraration therefrom unless labelled with our name.because you wtlt cs»tninly receive on imitation which baa little or no , value. „i, r> o, vt n te Si-. N. Y. fSr&fW. FOLKSHEBSSEP W “I write to inform yon of the aim-V-wr-dP V-A oess of ronr treatment. lam redncod 1 pound*,and tho most important (W ' point is, that the re*olt la permanent. Sinoe discontinuing treatment, I have eaten everything, whother it contained sugar, starch or fata but nave not increased a pound, thus proving that your remedies remove the cause of Obesity. I can recommend yonr skill as a Specialist for Obesity.’ Jr. S:las Leas, of Barnard k Leas Mfg. Co., Molina, UL^ PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. „ No starring, no inoonvenienoe, harmless and no ba< -Sects, fitnot ly confidential. For eirculaia and testimonials address with Go. in stamps. Dr. O. W. F. SN YDER 243 State St.. OHfCAaa ..... - ..iji'.. -«... i- -M-kCaa. MOTHERS’ FRiENR MAKES CHILD BIRTHM IF USID BEFORfi CONFINIM■ NT. Book to •'Motbiu*'’ JlAn-rrirFarm. ■RUDIKLI) RKDI LAT4»B (Ml. ATLANTA, 04 •«>.» BT ALL DaULOISTS. PENSIONS The disability bill is a law. Soldiers disabled since the war are entitled. Dependent widows aud parents now dependent whose sons died from effects of army service are included. If yon wish your claim speedily s?nWrSir JAMES TANNER, Late Commissioner of Tensions, Washington, 0. C. .DC ||TO ofervry kind, Mifn and Women seeking . fl ULl* Id “business change, tlito tluo monthly ** Send for our •‘Copyrighted Methods” and double your profits or salary. Big pay for spare hour* at home. Particular* free. Address, Trrasvet Puk-c-iasixo Anuxv s C«' rv« Uxmx hiw Yoga. ■% m TrllTA ■ i' structious FKEB □ft I I ft ll* to Inventors. Write at rftl Ui 101 sasaas 4 * 0^ J. r. CRALLE A CO., Wa-hingtbn, D, O RIFUSO-U U n Qn.m.mne. PISTOLSIS< slri-m rlWl Olwrlanatl, Ohio. ft ITTIITA Invenort’ Guide U!l I Pnl I \‘>v How to Obtain » 111 I Lll I U wnt free. PATRICK O’FARRELL. Att'jr at Law. Wash. D.O PATENTSU',S M^ - Send for circular. Gft.rAßßfi FREE JlUnwilU tnr , Newark, New Jemtj. « ' IN O iihW INDFXM