Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 154, 29 June 1906 — Page 2

Page Two.

The Richmond Palladium, Friday, June 29, 1906.

E 0(1 LITTLE Bfly Mouth and Eyes Covered With Crusts Face Itched Most FearfullyHands Pinned Down to Prevent Scratching MIRACULOUS CURE BY CUTICURA REMEDIES " When my little boy wu six months old, he had eczema. The tort extended to quickly over the whole body that we at once called in the doctor. We then went to another doctor, but he could not help him, and in our detpair we went to a third one. Matters became so bad that he had regular holes in his cheeks, large enough to put a finier into. The food had to be given with a spoon,- for bis mouth was eorsred with crusts as thick as a finger, and whenever he opened the mouth they began to bleed and suppurate, as did also his eyes. Hands, arms, chest, and back, in short the whole body, was covered over and over. We had no rest by day or night. Whenever he was laid in his bed, we had to pin his hands down: otherwise he would cratch his face, and ' Atromo XIobiatr. make an open sore I think his lace must Lave itched most fearfully. ' " We finally thought nothing could help, and I had made up my mind to send my wife whh the child to Europe, hoping that the sea air might cure him, otherwise he was to be put vader good medical care there. But, Lord be. blessed, matters came differently, and we soon saw a miracle. A friend of ours spoke about Cuticura. We made a trial with Cuticnra Hoap, Ointment, and Resolvent, and within ten days or two weeks we noticed a decided improvement. Just as quickly as the Sickness had appeared it also began to disappear, and within ten weeks the child was absolutely well, and his skin was smooth and white as never before." F. Hohrath, President ' of the C. L. Hohrath CompanT, Manufacturers of Silk Ribbons, 4 to 20 Rink Alley, June 0, 1909. South Bethlehem, Pa. ' Cnllmra Snap, Olntmonl, and Pill, arc n1t throughout U worm, rotter vtug a tntm. l.urp., nuie rrop., mr 4U1W I'm, Low la Car. loi Um Skin' 50d "ff 50c To Grand Centennial Celebration AT pON, 0. Wednesi ay, July 4th Via Da ton & Western Tr ctlon Co. Mammoth Industrial and Automobile Parade at 9 a. m. Gorgeous fleets equal to Ma'rdi Gras at New Orleans. Horse Races, 1 Foot Races, Sack Races. $3,1)00 in Purses. Base Ball Oreensf ork vs. Oermantown. j Grand Display of Fireworks in the Evening.j (All Day Band Concert. C. 0. BAKER, 0. F. & P. A. THE'CHICAGO, CINCINNATI & LOUISYILLf R. R. (THE NEW WAY) Effective May 20th, 1906. EAST BOUND,

TERRIBLE

CZEMA

aw avJllaa

V A. M. r.M. (8 P.M Usrt Richmond 05 4 00 7 65 Cottage drove. .... 5 4 40 835 Arrive Cincinnati ',11 20 0 10 10 15 Arrives from the East.' a. h. tPM. 1 p,M Leave Cincinnati. .1... S 40 4W 88o - Cottage Urove.,... 10 10 0 SO 1Q arrive KlcUutond . 10 45 0 60 M &) WEST BOUND. 4 f A. M. ffP.M. S P.M 1t Richmond.... 10 43 0 tie 860 Muncle 1167 8 10 lo 10 Arrive Marloa ...... U M oa 1105 " lru 4 1 4.S 65 13 00 ' " Oiifflth 4 a. 6 00 " Chicago 7 00 Arrives from the Wfest. a. m. 7A.M. n Leave Chicago I s je Leave Peru 00 wool 4 40 Arrive Richmond... 05 4 ouj 7 63

Tt.tlv 4 n.il v AtAint Hnnd.v - o only. A Huns to irrlffitli dully except Bunday. The 10.45 am. train from Richmond makes nirwi i"-riiiMi m 1 iirimin Willi tirttnd Trunk jorChlcas;o, arriving Chicago 7 p. 111. AH f rtst-bound trains make direct conneotlons at. Cottage Orove with C, H. a l. tor Oxford. tlamlUon, Liberty .ConuertvUle and HuihTllK. For fuiher information regarding rates end train jounce tlons, askj C. A. BLAI3, Home Phone.44. Pass, and Ticket Aot. BORATED liUIII DAINTILY .pVwFUMED. Contains no coru srivib or magnesta. ,15c A BOX. . . I M I flulnlov Court House tin uiyivjt fharmacv M44M44444

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.... Local All EVEN SPLIT AT CLE Chicago Gets the First Game and Cleveland Scores Shut Out in Second BUNCHED HITS ON RUBE WADDELL OF PHILADELPHIA WAS NOT HIT OFTEN BY THE WASHINGTONS BUT THEY COUNTED.

VELA

AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost PCt. Philadelphia 36 24 .600 Cleveland 36 24 .600 New York 36 24 .600 Chicago 32 28 .533 Detroit 32 29 .527 St. Loui3 32 29 .527 Washington 21 38 .355 Boston 16 43 .202

Publishers' Press Cleveland, June 28. The Chicago and Cleveland Americans played a double-header today, the White Sox scoring the first victory after a hard contest, while the Blues turned the tables on the vlvsitora in the second game and shut them out. Score: (First Game.) R. H. E. Chi 00020000 02 7 0 Clev .... 10000000 01 7 1 Batteries Altrock and Sullivan; Iihoades and Bemis. Umpires Connolly and Evans. (Second Game.) R. H. E. Chi 00000000 00 5 2 Clev .... 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 2 x 5 8 0 Batteries Patterson and Hart; Joss and Clarke. Umpires Connolly and Evans. BOSTON PITCHERS HARD HIT. New York, June 28. The Boston pitchers were hit hard all through today's game and the New York Americans scored an easy victory. Score: R. H. E. Bos 0 0 0 0 0 1-0 3 04 9 1 N. Y 1 1.0 0 0 0.0 5 x 7 J2 0 Batteries Harris, Dineen, Young and Armbruster; Hogg and Kleinow. Umpires Hurst and Connor. WADDELL LOSES GAME. Washington, June 28. Washington bunched their, hits on .Waddell today and although the 'Philadelphia Americans outbatted -; them ' the athtetics were 'beaten out. Score: R. H. E. Phil .... 01000100 02 12 1 Wash ... 2 0000101 x 4 8 1 Batteries Waddell and Schreck; Smith and .Wakefield; - Umpire O'Loughlln. ST. LOWIS OUTBATS DETROIT. Detroit, June 28. The St. Louis Americans outbatted and outfielded the Detroits today and earned the victory. Score: R. H. E. St. L. ... 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 05 12 1 Det 00010000 12 8 2 Batteries Jacobson and Spencer; Eubanks and Warner. Umpire Sher idan. NOW HAVE TWO MARIONS INTERSTATE TO SURVIVE Ohio City Joins League and Kokomo is Given Place of Flint, the LeadersBusiness Men Behind Organization at Marion. Marion, O., June 28. (Spl.) Local business men, who have organized baseball association, with a capital stock of $10,000, yesterday decided to accept the Saginaw franchise of the Interstate League. The deal will be closed at once, providing the league secretary gives assurances of its being on a sound basis. Marion was offered the Saginaw and Flint franchises, and was anxious to land in the Ohio-Penn sylvania League by transferring New castle here, but failing in the latter, took the Michigan team. Two Cities of Same Name. The acquisition of Marlon will give the Interstate League two cities of the same name, in different States They are Marion, Ind., and Marion, O As far as is known this is the first case on record of this kind. KOKOMO IN INTERSTATE. Anderson, Ind. June 28. (Spl.) Manager O'Neill received a telegram last tiight from President Dickerson stating briefly that franchises have been awarded Marion, O., and Koko mo, Ind., and that Flint and Saginaw Mich., would be dropped. Tile Flint players in this city had not been not! tied of the change last night. Tim Sullivan Resigns. tPublishers Prestl Washington, ' June 2S. Congress man Timothy D. Sullivan, (Big Tim) the Bowery leader, handed his resig nation as a member of the House from the eight New .York district, to jspcawer cannon today ana it was read to the House. Tim wants to go back to his old job In the New York state senate and had to resign 100 days before election because of a provision to that effect In the New York

state legislature.

pOroiTDg SIlRfS General

oaseDan Kesuits Testemr.v. NATIONAL LEAGUE. New York 4; Boston 2. Brooklyn 1; Philadelphia 1( Cincinnati 2; Chicago 1. Pittsburg 1; St. Louis 3. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Boston 4; New York 7. Philadelphia 2; Washin. St. Louis 5; Detroit 2. (First Game.) Chicago 2; Cleveland 1. (Second Game.) Chicago 0; Cleveland 5. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Milwaukee 4; St. Paul 5. Louisville 4; Toledo 2. Kansas City 2; Minneapolis 7. Columbus 4; Indianapolis 0. INTERSTATE Flint 2; Lima 4. LEAGUE. AMERICAN ASS'N CLUB STANDING.

Won. Lost. PCt. Toledo 40 27 .697 Milwaukee 37 27 .578 Colmubus 41 29 .586 Louisville 36 30 .546 Kansas City 31 33 .472 Minneapolis 31 36 .463 St. Paul ....4 23 40 .285 Indianapolis 24 41 .369

AT ST. PAUL. Milwaukee 4 St. Paul 5 9 6 AT TOLEDO. Louisville 4 Toledo 2 6 6 AT MINNEAPOLIS. . Kansas City 2 8 Minneapolis 7 11 AT INDIANAPOLIS. Columbus 4 Indianapolis 0 7 6 INTERSTATE LEAGUE Club Standing.

Won. Lost. PCt Flint .. .. i. 33 18 .647 Ft. Wayne .. 31 19 .620 Marion .. .. 28 20 .583 Anderson .... .25 25 .500 Lima .. ...r:. 18 31 .370

HARVARD

L COLORS OF YALE First Time Since 1899 Crim son Beats Old Eli in Annual Boat Race. WAS A GRAND CONTEST HARVARD STOOD THE PACE IN FINE STYLE, BUT THE YALE OARSMEN WENT TO PIECES IN LAST HALF MILE. Publishers' Press New London, Conn., June 28. Row ing a straight, even, but most power ful stroke, which sent their boat through the water at well night record speed, the eight watermen of Harvard University, this afternoon for the first time since 1899, defeated the crew representing their old time adversa ries from New Haven and the Harvard crimson tonight waves triumphantly over the Yale blue. It was a grand race throughout, one of the kind that will be told of in song and story for many years to come and actual brawn and beef won, the Harvard crew being heavier than the Yale representatives and their superiority a condition told at the end. Withal, the race was contested to the last foot and although the Massachusetts representatives won, their margin of victory was but a scanty two lengths and until the pair were well within the last quarter of a mile the issue was in doubt The official time of the finish was: Harvard 23:02. Yale 23:11. Harvard stood the pace in splendid style, and the prophesies made last year that Coach Ware could develop a winning crew if he could get men heavy enough to stand his stroke were realized. The Yale men went to pieces in the last half mile and at the end many of them were In a state of collapse. R. H. Noyes, who rowed at six in the Yale boat, was in a state of coma when the launch picked up the Yale shell, and it was found lm possible to revive him until he was taken back to the Yale headquarters, New Cure for Epilepsy. J. B. Waterman, of Watertown, O., Rural free delivery, writes: "My daughter, afflicted for years with epi iepsy, was cured by Dr. King's New Life Pills. She has not had an at tack for over tw years." Best body cleansers and life' giving tonic pills on earth. 25c at A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug store. Fanners, mechanics, railroaders, la borers rely on Dr. Thomas Eclectric Oil. Take the sting out of cuts, burns or bruises at once. Pain cannot stay

WR

where it is

REDS TAKE DOWN LEAGUE LEADERS

Weimer Holds Chicago to Three Hits and Cincinnati Gets Hard Game. TABLES TURN AT PHILA YESTERDAY IT WAS ALL PHILADELPHIA WHILE THE DAY BEFORE IT WAS NOTHING BUT BROOKLYN.

NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost. PCt. Chicago 45 20 .692 Pittsburg 40 20 .666 New York 42 21 .666 Philadelphia 33 33 .600 Brooklyn 24 38 .375 Cincinnati 26 40 .393 St. Louis 25 41 .378 Boston 21 43 .327

IPubllshers' Press Chicago, June 28. In a close game today the Cincinnati Nationals defeated the leaders in the pennant race, Weimer holding the Chicagos to three hits. Score: R. H. E. Cin .. ..0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 1 Chi. ... 1000000001 3 2 Batteries Weimer and Livingstone; Brown and Kling. Umpires Klem and Carpenter. HIT DORNER HARD. Boston, June 2S. Supporting Tay lor in faultless style, an dhkting Dorner hard, gave the New York Nationals the victory over Boston today. Score: R. H.E. N. Y. .. 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 4 10 0 Bos 0 0000002 0 2 4 4 Batteries Taylor and Bowerman; Dorner and O'Neill. Umpires Emslie and Conway. PHILLIES WON THIS TIME. , Philadelphia, June 28. It was Phil adelphia's turn to slug the ball today and the Brooklyn Nationals were easily defeated. Score: R. H. E. Brook.. . 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 3 Phila. .. 01013131 x 10 13 ' 0 Batteries Pastorius. and. Bereen: Duggleby .and Dooin. Umpire John-1 stone. ST. LOUIS BUNCHED HITS. St. Louis, June 28. St. Louis bunch ed their hits in the eighth inning and the Pittsburg Nationals went down to defeat. Score : R. H. E. Pitts. . .0 001000001 5 2 St. L. .. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 x 3 7 1 Batteries Leifield and Peltz; Tay lor and Grady. Umpire O'Day. CONCLUDE ARRANGEMENTS Secretary of State Root All Ready for His Trip South AmericaOne Change Made. Publishers' Press Washington, June 28. The arrange ments for Secretary of State Root's trip to South America are practically concluded. 'But one change has been made in the plans. Mr. Root has decided to take with him a secretary, and has selected William T. S. Doyle, of Washington, to act in that capacity. Mr. Doyle is a Californian, a law yer by profession and speaks Spanish fluently. He was in Venezuela as an agent for the state department during the negotiations preceding the arbi tration of the Britfsh, German and Italian claims. LONGWORTHS AT COURT ARE PRESENTED IN LONDON Mrs. Whitelaw Reid Gave a Reception Last Night That Was One of the Most Brilliant in London SocietyKing Edward There. Publishers' Press London. June 29. The wife of the American ambassador, Mrs. White law Reid, last night presented to the court at Buckingham Palace, Con gressmaji Longworth and his wife, nee Alice Roosevelt. The reception that followed was one of the most brilliant in London society, many members of the royal family and no bility being present. King Edward and Queen Alexan dria both spoke a few words to the datighter of President Roosevelt. . Mrs. Longworth was dressed In a white satin costume when she was presented to the court. The Indiana Retail Furniture Deal ers have elected C. A- Knollenberg of this city a member of their executive committee. Everybody's friend Dr. Thomas Eclectric Oil. Cures toothache, ear ache, sore throaL Heals cuts, bruis es, scalds. Stops any pain.

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THAW IIIDICTED;

WHITE S B R

Things Moved with Great Rapidity in the Great New York Murder Case. ANTHONY C0MST0CK IN IT HEAD OF THE SOCIETY FOR SUP PRESSION OF CRIME TAKES A HAND MRS. THAW HAS NER VOUS BREAKDOWN. Publishers' Press New York, June 28. In rapid suc cession today Harry Kendall Thaw was held by a coroner's Jury for the murder of Stanford White, the noted architect, was indicted by . a grand jury on the same charge, and sent a hurry call for a conference with An thony Comstock. The hitter's entrance into the case was perhaps the most important development of the day, fraught as it is with possibilities for the friends and associates of the dead architect. The head of the Society for the Supression of Vice will call at the Tombs to see the prisoner tomorrow. Eighteen months ago. or thereabouts, according to Comstock, Harry Thaw sought Mr. Comstock and since then has had many interviews with him in regard to White and his associates. On the strength of the information given to Mr. Com stock by the accused man, the former ustly instituted an investigation, the result of which was to corroborate many of the stories which had long been in circulation regarding the ar chitect and the coeterie of men who were associated wit hhl mln what, it is asserted were orgies. Comstock's Statement. Mr. Comstock is alleged to have said: "Thaw came to me and told me startling stories of Stanford White and his friends. I tried to engage an aparement in the Madison Square Garden tower, but failed. I tried in many other ways to get evidence against White, but some on must have 'tipped him off' as he stayed away from his studio in the tower. I then heard that White had engaged rooms in another building. When I told this to Thaw he seemed much discouraged. If I had more time I would have accomplished more, probably. I will visit tyr. Thaw in the Tomh's tomorrow." Coroner's Jury's Verdict. Today developments in the noted homicide case were rapid. Harry Kendall Traw was adjudged guilty of killing Stanford White after a deliberation of two minutes by a jury before Coroner Dooley in the criminal court building. The inquest took but 44 minutes from the time it started until the jury returned their verdict. The defendant was Immediately sent back to the tombs to be held to await action o fthe grand jury. As the clerk of the court read the verdict Thaw hung his head listlessly and crushed a cigar between his fingers until it fell in shreds upon the floor. Grand Jury Began Work. Meanwhile the grand jury had be gun work In the case, the district attorney having sent for Mrs. Thaw, and those witnesses who had testified before the coroner. When Mrs. Thaw appeared she was extremely nervous. Assistant District Attorney Garvan es corted her to the witness chair and by his courteous treatment quieted the wife of the murderer considerably. After asking her regarding her name, and age, whether she was present at Madison Square roof garden on the night of the murder and driving the reply, Mrs. Thaw said: "Gentlemen, I wish you would not ask me any questions on that subject. It is too painful a matter for me to talk about. I wish you would not ask me any more questions about the case. You must understand- that I can not testify against my husband." Mr. Garvan then said to the mem bers of the jury: "Gentlemen, I think we are a unit on the proposition as to how we should treat the witness, and I would suggest that the witness be allowed to go." Mrs. Thaw Allowed to Go. The members of the grand jury all appeared to be of the same mind, and Mrs. Thaw was told that she might leave. At 1:25 o'clock a true bill of indict ment against Thaw for murder In the first degree w drawn up, and the jury reported to Judge Cowing, in part 1 of the court of general sessions. Judge Cowing ordered that Thaw be brought- before him tomorrow morning for arraignment and the date for the trial will then be set After she had left the grand jury room Mrs. Thaw went by a roundabout route to the Tombs, where she paid a visit to her husband. She went alone to his cell and remained with Thaw for forty minutes, after which she returned to the hotel Lor raine, where she collapsed completely, and tonight she was attended by her husband's brother, Josiah C. Thaw, her maid and two physicians. It was a complete nervous breakdown, and she is in a serious condition, but in no immediate danger. The Funeral of White. Even while the events were proceeding in the criminal courts, the body of Stanford White, Thaw's vie tim, was lowered In its-grave in the church yard of St. James church, at St. James, Long Island. When the funeral party and the throng of morbidly curious left the scene, only great banks of flowers, that completely cov ered every vestige of the grave, marked the last resting place of the murdered architect. The ceremonies were formal and the funeral services were conducted by Rev.Leighton Parks, pastor of St. Bartholomew's church, this city, as-

The Kind Ton Itave Always m as lor over 30 years, Allow

All Counterfeits, Imitations and Jnst-as-greod' are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health, ef Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTQRIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narctio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fererishness. It cures Diarrhoea and TTind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constlpafioa and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates th Stomach and Sowels, giving healthy and natural sloejp The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS

7

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Opejt to evebybodt is the fullest Information as to the properties and uses of the several ingredients entering into Dr. Pierce's family medicines. Not only are all the ingredients printed in- plain English on each bottle wrapper, but a little book of extracts from numerous standard authorities of all the different schools of medical practice, extolling these sewral ingredients and giving their properties and uses, has been compiled by Dr. R. V. Pierce, and will be mailed free by him to the address of any one sending a postal card or letter to him, at Buffalo, N. Y., and requesting a copy of the same. In this way the afflicted, who may think favorably of using these non-secret medicines, are taken into Dr. Pierce's full confidence and are informed as to the properties and uses of each of the several vegetable ingredients of which they are composed. xnus you do not nave to rely upon Dr. Pierce's recommendation alone as to the marvelous curative properties possessed by his "Golden Medical Discovery" for the cure of weak stomachs, dyspepsia, torpid liver, or biliousness, impure blood and kindred ailments, nor of his "Favorite Prescription" for the cure of weak, nervous, invalid women, for you have in addition the strongest kind of endorsement of each and every ingredient entering into the composition of these worldfamed medicines by numerous leading medical writers of the several schools of practice. In fact nothing which Doctor Pierce has ever said in recommendation of these medicines is quite so strong and laudatory of their merits as what has indirectly been said of them through the numerous unqualified endorsements and recommendation of each of their several Ingredients by the leading writers on Materia Medico. Of course these endorsements were written from entirely disinterested motives and are therefore the more valuable. They were written to instruct medical practitioners in the properties and uses of the several ingredients which enter into Doctor Pierce's medicines, the writers not being aware that they were extolling and endorsing ingredients which are used In these medicines. Hence the great value of these highest possible endorsements, coming, as they do, from leaders of the medical profession in the matter of Materia Medico, Among the well-known authorities will be found Drs. Bartholow. Hare, Johnson, Wood, King, Scudder, Hale, Coe, Ellingwood and many others. The ingredients are all indigenous, or native, medicinal roots. Dr. Pierce believes that medicine can cure disease only as it assists Nature to overcome the abnormal or diseased conditions. For thus assisting Nature In throwing off disease. Dr. Pierce believes the best and only real remedies are to be found In Nature's Laboratory. In the roots of medicinal plants found In this country, Providence has stored up most valuable, active, curative principles, which, when scientifically extracted and combined in iust the right proportions, as In Dr. Merce's Golden Medical Discovery, are most effective in curing a long list of chronic or lingering ana most obstinate diseases. In chronic, bronchial, throat and Inng affections, accompanied with hoarseness or loss of voice, cough, profuse expectoration and even bleeding from lungs, "Golden Medical Discovery" has proven a sovereign remedy. In cases of weak stomach. Indigestion, dyspepsia, ulceration of stomach or bowels, torpid liver, or biliousness, the Golden Medical Discovery" has never been excelled as a tonic and Invigorator which puts the affected organs "in tune" and enables them to perform their proper functions. It purines and enriches the eisted by the Hev. Dr. Horder of St James church. Outside of the son and his widow, very few persons attended the burial of the dead arcnitect Palladium Want Ads Pay.

33

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no one to deceive voa in tltis. , Signature of FR SALE. Richmond roperty a specialty j PorterfleldlKelly Block. Phone 82V1 it FOR SALE Upright Piano, used one year. Call 417 N. 17th street 22-6t CCrSTSmainflower , pin' With ame" thyst center. Return to Palladium 1 and receive reward. - '' ' . 29-3t FOR RENT Furnished rooms "or a suite of rooms fir V.ght housekeep-( Ing, 1112 Main treet 29-4t RENT -Furmsnel looms a. iuo uruuU for gentlemen only. tf ! Everybody buys property from Wnnrihtirst' Q19 Main St Telonhnna 491. " June5 tf blood, curing all manner of humors, t blood taints, scrofulous and skin affec-J tions. r j In all irregularities and painfnl periods to which women are subject, also lot leucorrhoea, or "female weakness," dls-1 placements, as prolapsus, ante version' and retroversion of the uterus, ulcera-j tion of uterus, inflammation of ovaries, and kindred maladies. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription has more real cures to its credit than any other medicine ?ut up and sold through druggists for he cure of this class of weaknesses and diseases. I wnen a woman i&Hes r voii t inscription," she knows Just what she is. using. Dr. Pierce takes bis patients into; his full confidence, ills medicines are not secret compounds, are not patent medicines, but the favorite prescriptions of a regular, graduated physician of large experience in actual practice. You can not afford to experiment with your health by accepting and taking free, 'trial bottles "of Cheap John Fake MedM Cines, - ik irwir giveu away iu wia country. Health is a heritage too sacred to be trifled with in that way. Take only Medicines of Known Composition those made after formula? so choice that the makers take you fully Into their confidence and feel that they can afford to tell you Just what you are using when you employ their medicines. . Dr. Pierce never believed it necessary or advisable to use alcohol In the prepJ aratlon of either his "Favorite Prescript tion" for weak women, or his "Golden Medical Discoverr," the well - known alterative tonic, which is so largely used as a remedy for Indigestion, torpid liver, bad blood and kindred ailments. Over forty years ago, be discovered that chem Icaliy pure, triple-reffhed glycerine Is a far better solvent of most of the active principles residing In our native medicinal plants when used at a proper and sustained temperature than is alcohol; and,' furthermore, he found that a glyceric extract kept much better than an alcoholic one, and that the glycerine possessed intrinsic remedial value, being demulcent, nutritive and an effective, antiseptic and antifcrment Although costing somewhat more, Dr. Pierce predicts that glyceric medicinal extracts will. In the not distant , future, largely replace alcoholic ones sor generally prescribed by physicians and put out by proprietary or " patent medicine" manufacturers, as being more efficient and entirely free from the serious objection of making inebriates when used In lingering or chronic cases, where a somewhat protracted use of medicine is necessary no matter how good or well adapted to the case it may be In order to obtain permanent results. Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure biliousness, sick and bilious headache, dizziness, costiveness. or constipation of the bowels, km, of appetite, - coated tongue, sour stdmach, windy belchings, "heartburn." pain and distress after eating, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Put up in glass vials, tightly corked, therefore always fresh and reliable. One. little "Pellet "Is a laxative, two are cathartic They regulate, invigorate and cleanse the liver, stomach and nx) we Is. A good medical hook, written in plain English, and free from technical terms is a valuable work for frequent consultation. Such a work is Dr. Pierce' Common Sense Medical Adviser. It's a book of 1006 pages, profusely illustrated. It is given away now, although formerly sold In cloth binding for tl.50. Send 21 cents, in one-cent stamps, to pay for cost of mailing only for papevered copy, addressing xjt. tz. v. .rarce, Buffalo, N. Y. ; or 31 cents for aa elegantly dothDouna copy. W. P. O'LElRY ,...Th Frblt MeJchanL... 10 MAIN BTFSCET A full line of FruitJv'egetables. Candies, Cigars, llbacco and Groceries. FREE DELIVERY. "1