Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 115, 16 May 1906 — Page 5
The Richmond Palladium, Wednesday, May 16, 1906.
Page 5.
The Brethren Wy RID Eft HAGGARD, Juthor $f "Ski," "King Solomon's Alines," Etc. COPYRIGHT, 1903-1901, H T RIDEH. HAGGARD
o 29 0 0 0 How. what was this vision, that through Rosamund much slaughter rhould bo spared. Well, Jf Jerusalem were saved, would not tens of taourands of Moslem and Chrietlau Uvea ,be saved alro? Oh, eurely here was the answer, end some ar.cl Ud put It Into hU hv'.vL and now ho,. prayed for strength te plant It la tfc li4irNof Saladln tor etrengtL and cjportufljrr. This very day Cf1 via found tie opportunity. A&'li liy Av&ds: In his tent that evening; htms "tt 1o weak to rl5, a sh'fcd&w tell upou klbru, aud, opening fcia eyes, he xw tht- saltan liliusolr starsdlujr. kln by his lryflide. Not he strove to rlco ta-. Ht.lu; bur., bqt in A.lji&d volco bl Lim lie d till and, 'staring klOiSblt, beg&n to talk. "Sir Godwin," he said, "I arc come to ask your pardon. When I sent you to vpM that dead wotaac, who had suffered juntly fur her cvliiie, I did an 'act uuworthy of a klcg." "1 thank you, sire, who were always fcObW." answered Godwin. "You aay so. Yet I'tave done things to you and yours thatiyou can scarcely bold a noble," eald Baladlu. "Say, BIr Godwin, Is that axocy which they tell la the camps tru&.lhat a via ion came to you before tHe battle of Hattlu and that you wcrad?tii .leaders or the Franks not to advance against , toe?" "Yes, it Is tn?," answered Godwin, ind he told the vision and' of bow he bad sworn to It o tbVreod"Dt you wonder tWabBlr Godwin, that I also believe y' vision which curat to we thrice lab flight season, bringing with It tht picture ef tint very face of my nloce, the Princess of Baalbeer "I do not wonder; but,, sultan, I who bare seen a vision speak to you who also have seen a vision a prophet to a prophet." "Bay ou," said Saladln, gazlug at him earnestly. "See, now, O Salah-ed-dln, the princess Ilosamund is in Jerusalem. She Las' been led to Jerusalem that you imay spare it for her Bake, and thus 'make an end of bloodshed and save the lives of folic uncounted." "Never!" said the sultan, springing up. "They have rejected my mercy, nnd I have sworn to sweep them away, man, woman and child, and be avenged 'upon all their unclean and faithless race." "Is Rosamund unclean that you would be avenged upon her? Will her dead body bring you peace? If Jerusalem la put to the sword she must perish !lso." ' "I will give orders that she Is to be caved that she may be Judged 'for tier a;rlme by me," lie added grluH" "How cnu she be save J when the stonrcra are drunk with slaughter and iplic bat one disguised wetnan among JlO.000 others?" i "Then," he answered, stamping his foot, "the shall be brought or dragged out of Jerusalem before the slaughter begins." Then without more words Sftladla 'left the tent with a troubled brew. Within Jerusalem all waa misery, all jwas despair. There were crowded ! thousands, and tens of thousands of fugitives, women and chUdttem The i fighting men who were left had few j commanders, and thus it came about that soon Wulf found himself the cap- ; tain of very many of them. J First Saladln attacked from the west v between the gates of 8ti Stephen and ,'ef St. David, but hero stood , strong I fortresses, called the, castle of the nIsans and the tower of Tancred, i whence the defenders made sallies up on htm, driving back hlb.stermers; So he determined to : change his ground and caovd4Us army to tile east, eampj lag It near the valley ef the Itedroai There were In the,oity many who desired to surrender to the sultan and tferaa grew the debates between them and ihese who swore taat they would rather die. At length it was agreed tbjit on embassy should be sent 8a1-
Near
Abscess on the Hip Dreadful Suffering Hospital Treatment Failed. Another Great Cure by
Hood's SarsapariHa.
Charles L. Hutchins is well known and popular in S. Royal ton, Vt., being driver of the stage to and from Chelsea. He says of his boy Arthur, now 15, whose portrait appears below : "He fell on the mill dam and injured his hip. An abscess developed and dreadful sickness followed. The doctors lanced tho abscess and later performed an operation in the Mary Fletcher Hospital in. Burlington. Arthur cfcrao near dying after the operation, but we got him home and neighbors said he would certainly die. y In the spring I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, as usual, and gave Arthur a littlo each day. After a week or two there waa a great change in the boy. He seemed hungry, and one day surprised us by.'oxclaiming, 'How good my food tastes 1 We could soon see the color coming into his face, as day by day he got better, seemed more livelv and took more interest in things. "The sore is now entirely healed, oiere is no pain in hip or limb. Xthur goes to school every dav and sji health could not be better. To our friends bis. cure by. Hood's Sarsapafilla Beennnairacafons." . f .
adln asked "them wfTat was their wish, and they replied that they had come to discuss terms. Then he answered thus: "In Jerusalem is a certain lady, my niec, known among us as the Princess of Baalbec and among the Christians as Hosamund D'Arcy. Let her be surrendered to me that I may deal with her as she deserves, and we will talk again. Til! then I have no more to say." Now. most of the embassy knew
j r.ot'ilEg of this lady, but one or two said they thought that they had heard j of her, but had no knowledge of where j fche wag bidden. t "Tien return and search, her out," j said Saladln and so dismissed "them. : Back came the envoys 'to the council and told what Saladln ha'd said. "At; least," esciaimedjHferacJius, the ! patriarch, "in this matter it Is easy to 'Pdtiify tha sullau. Let 'his niece be ! fouad and delivered to him. Where is ! she?" i Now- one declared that she was j known by the Lnlght SlrWulf D'Arcy, j with whom she had entered the city. I So he was sent for and came with i armor rent and red sword in hand. ! "We desire to know. Sir Wulf," said the patriarch, "where you have hidden ' away tho lady known as the Princess ; of Baalbec, whom you stole from the , sultan?" "What is that to your holiness?" askt ed Wulf shortly. j "A great, deal to me and to all, seej lag that Saladln will not even treat I with us until she is delivered to him." ! "Does this council, then, propose to hand over a Christian lady to the Saracens against her .will?" askod Wulf. I "Waste not our, time," exclaimed the ' patriarch impatiently. "We understand ! that you are this woman's lover, but however taut may be Saladln demands her, and to Saladln she must go. So ! tell us where she ie without more ado, 1 SJr Wulf." j "Discover that for yourself, Sir i Patriarch," replied Wulf in fury. Then, still shaking with .wrath, the great knight turned and stalked from the council chamber. "A dangerous man," said Heraclius, who was white to the Hps; "a very dangerous man. I propose that be should be imprisoned." "Aye," answered the Lord Balian of Ibelln, who was in supreme command of the city, "a very dangerous manto his foes, as I can testify." ; As he spoke a messenger entered the room -and said that the hiding place of "I have sworn to sweep them away." Rosamund had been discovered. She had been admitted a novice into tho community of the Virgins of the Holy Cross. "I like It not," Balian said, "for to touch her would be sacrilege." Then another leader rose he was ene of the party who desired peace and pointed out that this was no time to stand on scruples, for the sultan would not listen to them In their sore plight unless the lady were delivered to him to be Judged for her offense. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood, eliminates scrofulous tendencies, cures dyspepsia and kidney troubles, gives Sound Health, Restful Sleep. It creates good appetite, relieves all Fymptoms of dyspepsia, makes one feel better, look better, eat and sleep better Spbciau To meet tbe wishes of those who prefer medicine in tablet form, we re now putting up Hood'i Srsapril! In chocolateroated tablet a well as in the usual liquid form. By riiirh flcwvVn SnrapariH to a oitd extract, we hare retained in the tablets the ruratire properties of ercrv medicinal incrredient except tho alcohol. Of drurgiat.cr !2S-d ,f rfjdrurf ist does not bavethem. 1W dotes It. Ci L Jicfid tfc, LffwtU.
Perhaps, being Els own niece, she would. In fact, suffer no harm at his hands, and, whether this were so or not, it was better that one should endure wrong, or even death, than- many. With such words he overpersuaded the most of them, so that in the end they rose and went to the convent of the Holy Cross. The stately abbess received them In the refectory. "Daughter," said tho patriarch, "you bare in your keeping a lady named Rosamund D'Arcy, with whom we df sire to speak. Where is she?"
The novice . Rosamund." answered the abbess, "prays by the holy altar in the chapel." ". :'V. .., ' V Now one murmured, "She has taken sanctuary," but the patriarch said: "Tell us, daughter, does she pray alone?" "A knight guards her prayers," was the answer. "Ah, as I thought He has .been beforehand with us. Also, daughter, surely your discipline is somewhat lax If you suffer knights thus to Invade your chapel. But lead us thither." Presently they were in the great, dim place where the lamps burned day and night. There by the altar, built, it was said, upon the spot where the Lord stood to receive judgment, they saw a kneeling woman who, clad in the robe of a novice, grasped the stonework with her bands. Without the rails, also kneeling, was the knight Wulf, still as a statue on a sepulcher. Hearing them, he rose, turned him about and drew his great sword. "Sheathe that sword I" commanded Heraclius. "When I became a knight," answered Wulf, "I swore to defend the innocent from barm and the altars of God from sacrilege at the hands of wicked men.
Therefore I sheathe not my sword." "Take no need of him," said one, am5 neracllus, standing. back in the alslo addressed Rosamund. "Daughter," he cried, "with blttc. grief we are come to. ask of .you a sacrificethat you should give yourself for the people, as our Master gave himself for the people. Saladin demands you as a fugitive of his blood, and until you are delivered to him-he will 'not treat with us for the ; saving of the city. Come forth, then,' we pray you." "I risked ray life arid I believe another gave her life," Rosamund said, "that I might escape from the power of the Moslems. I "will not come forth to return to them:" "Then, our need being sore, we must take you," answered Heraclius sullenly. "What!" she cried. "You, the patriarch of this sacred cHy, would tear mo from the sanctuary of its holiest altar? Oh, then, Indeed shall the curse fall upon it and you!" Now they consulted together, some taking one side and some the other, but the most of them declared that she must be given up to Saladin. "Come of your, own will, I pray you," said the patriarch, "since we would not take you by force." Then the abbess spoke. "Sirs, will , you commit so great a crime? Then I tell you that it cannot go without its punishment. With this lady I say," and she drew up her tall shape, "that it shall be paid for in your blood and mayhap in the blood of all of us." "I absolve you from the sin," shouted the patriarch, "if sin it Is!" "Absolve yourself," broke in Wulf sternly, "and know this: I am but one man,' but I have some strength and skill. If you seek but to lay a hand upon the novice Rosamund to hale her away to be slain by Saladln, as he has sworn that he would do ' should she dare to fly from him, before I die there are those among you who have looked the last upon the light." Now the patriarch raved and stormed, and one among them cried that they would fetch bows and shoot Wulf down from a distance. "And thus," broke In Rosamund, "add murder to sacrilege! Oh, sirs, bethink what you do aye, and remember this, that you do it all In vain! Saladin has promised you nothing, except that If you deliver me to him he will talk with yon, and then you may find that you have sinned for nothing. Have pity on me and go your ways, leaving the issue in the hand of God." "That is true," cried some; "Saladin made no promises." Now Dalian, the guardian of the city, who had followed them to the chapel and standing in the background heard what passed there, stepped forward and said: "My lord patriarch, I pray you let this thing be, since from such a crime no good could come to auy of us. That altar is the holiest and the most noted place of sanctuary in all Jerusalem. Sir Wulf, put up your sword and fear nothing. If there is any safety in Jerusalem, your lady is safe. Abbess, lead her to her cell." "Xay," answered the abbess, with fine sarcasm, "it is not fitting that we should leave this place before his holiness." "Then you have not long to wait," shouted the patriarch in fury. "I say that if Saladin asked for half the noble maidens in the city it would be cheap to let him have them in payment for the blood of SO.O0O folk." And he stalked toward the door. So they went away, all except Wulf, who stayed to make sure that they were gone, and the abbess, who came to Rosamund and embraced her, saying that for the while the danger was past and she might rest quiet. "Yes, mother," answered Rosamund, with a sob. "But. oh. have I done right ? Should I not have surrendered myself to the wrath of Saladin if the lives of so many hang upon it?" ."Daughter," answered the abbes, "that tore choice has not yet been thrust Upon you. When Saladin says that he sets you against the lives of all this cityful. then you must judge." "Aye." repeated Rosamund. "Then I must judse." The siege went on; from terror tc terror It went on. The soldiers within cov.ld not sally because of the multitude of the watching horsemen. They could not show themselves, since he who did so w? at once destroyed by a thousand dart, and they could not build up the breaches of the crumbling wall. As day was added to day the despair grew ever deener. The commander Bnlian , called the knights together in conncil and showed them that Jerusalem was doomed. iTo be Continued,! . .
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HENRY CABOT LODGE, ADMINISTRATION LEADER OF THE SENATE. Senator Lodge has written historical works innumerable, Is a member of all sorts of learned societies and is a man of many degrees conferred by Harvard and other institutions. He is serving his third term in the senate and before his election to that body had been for nearly four terms in the house. He was permanent chairman of the Republican national convention of 1900. He is likewise generally credited with being the head of the Republican "machine" in Massachusetts,
NEW TRIAL The Colored Man who Poisoned Father-in-law Must pay the Penalty. COURT DENIES MOTION THURMAN SENTENCED TO LIFE IMPRISONMENT AND HE WILL BE TAKEN TO MICHIGAN CITY TODAY. Palladium Special. New Castle, May 15. The attorneys for the defense in the Frank Thurman case yesterday filed a motion for a new trial on the grounds that evidence fvas permitted to go before the pury that was not admissiable, and that the jury returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty of murder In the first degree for killing Reuben Bailey on the strength of this evidemce, which was the statement signed by Thurman while in jail. The motion was Immediately overruled by the court who proceeded at onca to pass sentence upon Thurman. The news was no surprise to him and he conducted himself in the same manner that he did during the trial. He had absolutely nothing to say t and when the sentence was pronounced he did riot so much as move a muscle. According to the 'state law he must j be started for the psnitentlaVy Inside I of flvo days from the date of his sen- ' tence. The date of starting for the j pen is discretionary with the sheriff but in all probability he will leave at (once for' Michigan City where all life ' prisoners are taken. I Thurman's stolid Indifference to his fate has been noted upon many oci cations and every onewho attended the trial is familiar with his demeanor. It was stated by court house habitues that they had never witnessed the . narve displayed by this man who real- ! ized from the very first that his , chances were- mighty slim. I Thurman's attorneys will immediately take an appeal to the supreme i court upon the same grounds upon ! when tho motion for a new trial was j based. Sheriff Burr will leave for the ! northern prison with Thurman either , today or tomorrow. TO TOUR WITH QUARTET Rev. Earle Naftzger Obtains Leave of Absence to Accompany Musical Organization. The Rev. Earle Naftzger, of Grace M. E. church at Hartford Citr, has obtained a leave of absence ar.d w!ll accompany the Muncie district conference cuartet cf which his father, the Rev. L. J. Naftzger, of Muacle. Is a member, to Kansas City, Indianapolis and Denver, where they will sing at the missionary meetings to be held at those places. Were Nearly Drowned. Publishers' Press Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y., May 15. Only the fact th?t they were able to r.wim. prevented the death by drowning in the Hudson river oppesito this ! villa this afternoon cf Leo Stevens, the well known aeronaut and his as- ; sistant. Tracy Tisdell, who made an j rscension from the plant of the New York Gas Company at Locust avenue and East ISSth street, New York City, in Dr. Thomas's recently purchased ballcon. .
FOR
THURMAN
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
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T, J' 1 ' w 71 INDIANA COMPANY LOSES CHARGES MADE AND DENIED Representative of Llpplncott Company Tells Board of Education That Hoosier Concern Has Been Selling Cheaper Elsewhere. Pall-idlutn Special. Indianapolis, May 15. Contracts for school books to be furnished for use in the public schools of Indiana for the next five years have been let by the State Board of Education as follows: Physiologies, to Silver, Burdette & Co., Chicago, the price for the advanced books to be 50 cents and for the primary books 30 cents; grammar, to Benjamin K. Sanborn & Co., Chicago, the Scott-Southworth book being chosen, at the retail price of 25 cents and the exchange price of 17 cents; histories, to Glnn & Co., for the Montgomery book, at the retail price of C5 cents; spelling books, to Longmans, Green & Co.. for the book by Miss Georgia Alexander, supervising principal of school No. 45, Indianapolis; the retail price of the book to be 10 cents and the exchange price 7 cents. The contract for furnishing physiologies has for years been held by the Indiana School Book Company, and It was charged before the board by a representative of J. B. Lippincott & Co., of Philadelphia, that the same physiology that is now in use in Indiana has been furnished to the schools of Tennessee at a lower price than is now being paid in Indiana. It was also charged that the Indiana School Book Company wa3 connected with the American Book Company, but Edward Hawkins, manager of the Indiana School Book Company made denials o? these statements. CENTERVILLE. rPallu. Vi;n Special. Centerville, May 15. Mr. and Mrs. John Townsend and Charles Haisley and farniyl all of Richmond, were guests on Sunday of Thomas Clark and family. Charles Brumfleld is working in Richmond with Louck & Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Jamvs Hill of Liberty, Ind., visited Joseph McConaha and family on Sunday. Mrs. Sarah Gentry and Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Hurst attended the funeral of Mrs. Cyrus Clark, near Milton on Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. William Barton entertained at supper on Monday, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ear ton of Richmond. Edward King is able to be out again after an illness of fourteen weeks. Mrs. C. M. Walker entertained Tuesday Mrs. Alice Walker of Charlotte, N. C. Mrs. Howard Dill and j ?Irs. Frank Land of Richmond. j Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brumfleld ; five n snoper on Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. Beaton Woodward, and their 1 dnuehter, Mrs. Brooks Demoree, all j of Dublin. I Mr. and Mrs. William Hart of Hunj tineton, Ind.. are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Dur?bar. . !3. Fred Campbell of Richmond s tr fruerjt of her mother, Mrs. Ho mer P-'-nfield. A. F. Siirrleton and son Paul of In-dl-nn polls v!s!ted Mr and Mrs. G. W. Cornelius, on Saturday and Sunday. State of ladiaca. Wayne CountyyBs ;To When it May Concern: Iotic? is hereby given tkft I havapriled to the Wayne CI Court Indiara to have rev armf e changed from Mar Idell DiekT to Mary IdP 'Chestnut; knd thaszid applicatior w!l come d3y of the faring ct the firs etc Term. 2S0C. cf sal Court, tho &jmn hvlnz the Rrzt Mo? day of Octob-. "SOf:. - 7IAT?Y IDELL DIEHL. Dstei llav 8. 1931 Robbins & Starr, Attorneys.
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I AVegelabie Prcparalionfor Assimilating fceroodandBeguIa-j ling the 5lcmaclis andBcywels of Promotes DigcstionjGhcerrurness andRest.Contains neither 0piumlortiunc noltluicraL' 'Sot Narcotic. Aperfecl Remedy forQiB&oalion. Sour Stotnach;Diitniea J; ll'nrmt fnmn iIciaiw Dii.MiK -T -W li-i-Ji .5 ncss ana liussuruuir. FacSimlc Stgnqrgre of XEW-YOSK. fXACt COPY or WBABPCH.
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NATURE'S ESSENCE Extracted from tho Hoots of Native, Forest Plants. Go Straight Back to Nature for Your Health. There is Your Strength.
Consider your body as an engine which supplies you with all activity of mind and body. Keep the madkiaery well oiled and it runs smoothly. It does not groan in doing its work. Bnt let the stomach, which is the fire-box to the human engine, get "out ef kilter" and we soon meet with disaster. The products of undigested and decomposing fcod is potion to the system. We do not live on what we eat but on what we digest, assimilate, and take up in the blood. Tho blood in turn feeds the nerves, the heart, and the whole syGtem, and all goes well with us if the blood be kept pure and rich. If not, then the liver, which is the human filter within us, gets clogged up and poisons accumulate in the body from over-eating, over-drinking, or hurriedly doing both. The tmmsh-up occurs when the blood is poisoned by the stomach and liver being unable to take care of the over-load t The red flag ef danger is thrown out in the shape of eruptions on the skin, or in nervousness and sleeplessness, the sufferer becoming blue, despondent and irritable, because the nerves lack nourishment and are starved. Nature's laws are perfect if only we obev them, but disease follows dis obedience. Go straight to Nature ferl the cure, to the wrest jther are mys-i tenes mere, some oi - wnica we can fathom for you. Take the bark of the Wild-cherry tree, with Mandrake root, Stone root, Queen's root, Bloodriot and Golden Seal root, make a scientific, Glyceric extract of them, with just the right proportions, and you have Dr. JRerce' Golden Medical Discovefy. It took Dr. Pierce, with the assistance of two learned chemists and pharmacists, many months of hard work experimenting to perfect this vegetable alterative and tonic extract of the greatest efficiency. To make rich, red blood, to properly nourish the nerves and the whole body, and cure that lassitude and feeling of weakness and nerve exhaustion, take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It bears the badge or hoxebty upon every bottle in the full list of its ingredients, printed in plain English, and it has sola more largely in the past forty rears than any other blood purifier , and stomach tonic. The refreshing influence of this CLEANING OUT BACK
Thousands of tons of refuse, the accumulation almost of centuries, hav9 3ca cleaned away and destroyed by the sanitary force that haa cleaned the ana ma canal district. The view shown here is of a portion of the section ack of Colon where disease raged rampant before the Americans tools :;arge. This section is peopled almost exclusively by negroes.
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extract is like Nature's Influence th blood is bathed in the invigorating tenia which gives life to it and the vital fires of the body barn brighter and their increased activity consumes the tissue rubbish which has accumulated in the system. The w Discovery" cures all skin affections, blotches, pimples, eruptions and boils: heals old sores, or ulcers, "white swellings,'' scrofulous affections and Kindred ailments. The Golden Medical Discovery" is just the tiaue builder and tonic you require when recovering from a hard cold, grip, pneumonia or a long siege of fever or other prostrating disease. No matter bow strong the constitution, our stomach itnd liver are apt to be "out of kiiter" occasionally. In con sequence our blood is disordered, tat the stomach is the laboratory for tb censtant manufacture of blood. It is a trite saying that no man to stronger than his stomach. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery strengthens the stomach puts it in shape to make Eure, rich blood helps the liver and idneys to expel the poisons from the body and thns cures both liver and kidney troubles. If yen take this natural blood purifier and tonic, yoo will assist your system in manufacturing each day a put of rich, red blood, that is invigorating to the brain ana serves. The weak, nervous, run-dewn, . debilitated condition which so many WCPUiC DUUC1, IIWIUi tm UIUIUI IDS CUCGI Vi IIV1BHUO Ui WIS UiUVU . J. U1IC11 111dicated by pimples or bolls appearing n tne sain, tne iace becomes thin apd the feelings "blue;" Dr. Pierce's "Discovery " cures all blood humors as well as being.a tonio tkat makes one vigorous, strong and forceful. It is the only medicine pot op for salt through druggists for 'like purposes that contains neither alcohol nor harmful drugs, and the only one, every ingredient orwhich has the professional' endorsement of the leading medical writers of this country. Some of these endorsements are published in a litfte book of extracts from standard mtcej works Fierce, Buffalo, N. Y. It teuYjust what Pr. Piercers medlcinss afe'jfrade?f. The "Words of Prsisebr' the several ingredients of wnich lDr.tFieroe'n medicines are ccnuMeed, byaeadfrs in tice, and recommending 'them fir' the . . . . , - . .I. . . cure oi toe diseases iqr wmcn me "Golden Medical Discovery" is advised, should have far more weight with tho sick and afflicted than any amount of the so-called "testimonials" so conspicuously flaunted before the pubUo by those who are afraid to let the ingredients of which their medicines are composed be known. Bear in mind that the "Golden Medical Discovery" has the badge or H05E8TT on every bottle wrapper, in a full list of its in gredients. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets euro constipation, invigorate the liver regulate stomach and bowels. YARDS AT COLON.
ana win oe sent ,w any aaress fret, pn receipt of request therefor bxHetter or fMMtkl eird. iddrAJUMd iiii T)r JR. V.
