Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 34, Number 74, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 May 1902 — Page 3
Lost Hair . «* came outbythebandful, and the gray hairs began to cjeep in. I tried Ayer’s Hair vigor, and it stopped the hair from coming out and restored the color.”— JMrs. M. D. Gray, No. Salem, Mass. There’s a pleasuae in offering such a preparation as Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It gives to all who use it such satisfaction. The hair becomes thicker, longer, softer, and more glossy. And you feel so secure in using such an old and" reliable preparation. sl.o# a bottle. AH draoH*. If your druggist cannot supply yon, send us one dollar and we win express you a bottle. Be sure and .give the name of your nearest express office. Address. J. C. AYER CO., Lowell. Mass.
JUSTTHINK OFIT Every farmer Ills own pBSjTsJ 1" udlord, no in cu m - g*7| trances,his bank account fl increasing year by year, ,/I Uril I ' ,nd va '"e increasing, AS Mstoc< increasing, splen- ’’ flO<* 111,1 c! 1 »1 a te, ex'c llent school, and churchos, low taxation, high prices for cattle and grain, ow railway rates, and every possib e comfort- This is tho condition of the farmer in Western Canada, Province of M .in it obi and districts of Assiuibola, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Thousands of Americans are now settled there. Reduced rates on ad railways for homeseekers and ,ett ers. New districts are being opened up thi year. The new 40-page Atlas of WesternCaunda sent free to all applicants. Apply to F. Pedley, Supt. of Immigration.,Ottawa. Can., or to C. J. Broughton, 1223 Monadnock Bldg., Chicago; Ju- Bartholomew. 306 sth -jM,,. Des Moines, Iowa; M. V. Mclnnes, No. 2 Avenue Theaterßlk., Detroit.ilich.; Jas. Grieve, Sault Ste. Marie,Mich.; C. A. Laurier, Marquette, Mich.; T. O. Currie, 1 New Insurance Building, Milwaukee, Wis.; E. T. Holmes, Indianapolis, Ind., Agents for the Gov•rnment of Canada. —; i-
' OE Buy your goods at Wholesale Prices. Our catalogue will be sent upon receipt of 15 cents. This amount does not even pay the postage, but it Is sufficient to show us that you are acting in good faith. Better send for it now. Your neighbors trade with us—why not you also ? 2 CHICAGO i The house that tells the truth. JS MANAGER WANTED Every large county. “SAME O’ SKILL" nickel elot machine for drinks and cigars; strictly lawful; takes place oHecbidden slot machines, thereby filling * long-felt want; rented or sold on easy payments; •ells nt Riaht; forty thousand now in use. CONRAD JACKSON DESK COMPANY, Chielnnatt, Okie. nENSKJNAt'I'.I'.S?, ■ SyrttnclvlJ war. 15 adj udjcatmg'claims, atty ain<x
The First Boarding-House id History
Is the basis for a unique little story in the Four-Track News for May. it is entitled “The Prophet’s Chamber,” is appropriately illustrated, and contains information that every farmer’s wife in New York and New England should —have. —__ The Four-Track News will be malleT free to subscribers in the United States for 50 cents a year; single copies 5 cents. Address Geo. H. Daniels, Publisher, Grand Central Station, New York.
Up-to-Dnte Warfare.
Lieut. Hunt —Do you see that captain Of the enemy five miles away ? -■— Gunner's Mate—Aye, aye, sir. Lieut. Hunt—Let him have one of those 10-inch shells in the eye. Gunner’s Mate —Which eye, sir?
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all Its Stages, and that l.i catarrh. Ball’s Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying tlie foundation of the disease, and giving the )»atient strengtli by building up tile constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. Tho proprietors nave so much faith In Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of Testimonials. ~ F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. tfy.sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall’a Family I*lll* are the best.
Victuals Versus Bonnets.
She—l grow tired of providing for the Inner man. He —And I am weary of providing for the outer woman. Have used Piso's Cure for Consumption nearly two years, and find nothing to compare with it.—Mrs. Morgan, Berkeley, Cal., Sept. 2, 1901. Milton’s letters often allude to his mother in the most affectionate terms.
GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS
Use the best. That's why they buy Red Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers, 5 cents. CITO Permanently Cured. Nott* or ncrvouine** after Fl I 0 flret dayuse of Dr. Kltne'e Great Nerve Restorer. Send for F HEE** 00 trial bottle and treatise. DR. IL U. KUNE, Ltd., *3l Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa. Mr*. Winslow's Soothino Sravr for Children tealbins; soften, th* gum*, reduce. Inflammation, allay* pein, eare* wind 00110. Zu cent* a bottle.
|ALABASTINE C NOT A KALSOMINE * !U>’ v I Forms a pure and permanent coatla' Lr I and <^oes not re q n * r « to be taken £ /'xSlrhir * 'ii^ r *° renew from time to time. la C y K * dry powder, ready for use by T" 1 - - mixing with cold water. i to ™° se bu,l d’h« r I We are experts in the treatment of 1 walls. Write and see how helpful we can be, at no cost to you, in getX miX* n^k^Di y A , LABA.?Tij<R , u r what W i ting beautiful and healthful home*. F asked for and what X want." X ALABASTINE COMPANY, Grand Rapids* Mich.
Long-Headed Pat.
A returning tourist says that when In Ireland on one occasion he met an Irish drover with a number of cattle proceeding to a fair in the south, and stopped him. “Where are you going to?” he asked. “To Waterford fair, yer banner.'’ “Indeed! How much do you expect to get for your cattle?” said the inquisitive tourist. “Share, an’ av I get eight pounds the head I shall not do so badly,” replied “Ah, that’s a sample of your country,” said the visitor. “Now take these heifers to England, and you could average fourteen pounds a head.” “Just so, yer banner, an’ av yez were to take the Lakes of Killarney to purgathery yez would get a guinea a dhrop.”
Rheumatism Cured at Last.
Lake Sarah, Minn., May 12th.—Thousands will read with pleasure that a cure for Rheumatism has at last been fcand. A Mrs. Hildebrandt of this place, after trying very many medicines, has recently found a successful remedy for this painful disease. This woman suffered so wittr the Rheumatism in her arms that sleep or rest became impossible. She heard of Dodd’s Kidney Pills, but having little faith in anything, was very reluctant to spend any more money for medicine. However, she decided to try one box, and this helped her so much that she continued to use the Pills. Now she says: “I am real well and I don’t know how I can express my thanks to Dodd's Kidney Pills for what they have done for me.”
An Advantage.
“She doesn’t have any trouble in keeping a servant girl.” “No, Her husband is political boss of the ward.” “What has that to do with it?” “Why, .he dms the handsomest policeman that beat.”—Philadelphia Press. CONVINCE YOURSELF that Ely’s, Cream Balm deserves all that has been said of it as a means of quick relief and Anal cure in obstinate cases of nasal catarrh and hay fever. A trial size costs bnt ten cents. Full size, 50 cents. Sold by druggists or mailed ’by Ely Bros., 50 Warren street, New York. Messrs. Ely Bros. —Please send me one bottle of Cream Balm, family size. 1 think it is the best medicine for catarrh in the world. Mt. Olive, Ark. _ J. M. SCHOLTZ. Messrs. Ely Bros.—l have been afflicted with catarrh for twenty years. It made me so weak I thought I had consumption. I got one bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm and in three days the discharges stopped. It is the best medicine 1 have used for catarrh. FRANK E. KINDLESPIRE. Proberta, Cal.
Obliging.
“Do you think you had better eat another piece of pie?” asked the neighbor lady, who had already given little Bobbie one piece for running an errand. “Yes, ma’am,” replied Bobbie, promptly. “I will if you wish me to.”—Ohio State Journal.
Home Women.
There are women who devote their whole lives to home duties, many of whom know what it is to drag along’day after day suffering intensely. The symptoms are spinal weakness, dizziness, excitability, bearing down, all-gone feeling, and sudden faintness. The only safe and permanent cure for this is Vogeler’s Curative Compound, which acts directly on the Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, and vital organs of the body. It removes all impurities from the blood. It imparts strength, vitality, and vigour in, all cases from which “ home women ” suffer. A free sample bottle will be sent on-application to St. Jacobs OU, Ltd., Baltimore.
As to Valentines.
Briggs—Silly custom this of sending valentines, don’t you think? Boggs—Worse than that—it’s dangerous. It often leads to matrimony.— Judge.
Yon Can Get Allen’s Foot-Ease FREE.
Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y., for a FREE sample of Alien's FootEase, a powder to shake into your shoes. It cures tired, sweating, damp, swollen, aching feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All druggists and shoe stores sell It. 25c
There were 150,000 children at school In India sixty years ago. There ars 4,000,000 now.
DON’T SPOIL YOUR CLOTHES.
Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white as snow. All grocers. 5c ■ package.
DEATH FOLLOWS EXPLOSIONS.
Catastrophe in Pittsbnrg Causes the Loss Of Many Lives. Two terrible disasters, killing about twenty-five people and burning ami injuring hundreds of others, occurred at Pitt?burg about 4 o'clock and reached a full climax nt G:ls Monday evening. In the ranhaudie yards nt Sheridan, about four miles from .the .Union station, Pittsburg. a train crew was switching cars. Minong them were two tank ears filled with refined oil and one with naptha. The two oil ears, in being ‘ kicked” along the track, came together with a crash wrecking one tank car and breaking ft switch light. The wrecked ear sprung a leak -ftml the oil soon flowed to the switch light. It com mu n ica ted to th e tank and it blazed skyward. The heat caused an explosion, but not of much ‘ force. The trainmen could do nothing. Its the oil spread over the ground, making it impossible to reach the burning car. About*s:ls the second tank ear containing refined oil exploded. It. caused the crowd that gathered to fall back th the hillsides on each side of the track. In tranquility about a thousand persons watched the oil burning. Fire departments from neighboring boroughs responded, but they could do nothing. About 6 o'clock a terrific explosion rent the naptha car asunder, Winch everybody had evidently forgotten about. The dome of the tank lit in the hillside about a hundred set away, and the blazing naptha spread like a fountain of fire, decorated the hillsides with its drippings, and as the fluid descended it fell on the unfortunate multitude which had come from their homes and work and paused to look at the spectacle. Among them were thousands of Italians and their numerous families. Scores of these were soon ablaze. Immediately there was a rush for safety. Hundreds who were sprayed by burning oil tore their clothes off their bodies. Women were soon denuded, children screamed;- men -ran—hither—and—thither like wild beasts. People set fire to each other. Some crawled in the dirt, others ran and fanned the flames with wind. Dozens of naked men beat their bodies among the bushes seeking to relieve the pa-in, others sank exhausted never to rise again. At 10 o'clock the firemen had succeeded in subduing the fires in the freight cars in the yards. The property loss will amount to fully $1500,039.
REIGN OF REGENT ENDED.
Mother cf Spain’s King Bids Ministers Farewell. Queen Mitria Christina resigned her regency at Madrid on Monday. The scone in the palace was extremely pathetic. While the streets of Madrid were gay with merry-makers the mother of .King Alfonso XIII. was sorrowfully taking leave ot' her ministers, pud placing in the hand of her young son the fulfillment bfthe arduous duties which she had performed with much tact and zeal for more than sixteen years. The Queen, though only 42 years of age, looked much older and showed signs of deep grief and emotion, as Premier Sagasta and his cabinet entered the grand salon in the palace for thetformal leave-taking. Her hands trembled and tears flowed freely down her cheeks as she signed the last royal decrees. The two last decrees to which she atffked her signature were the bestowing of the order of the Golden Fleece on the Duke of Cumberland and the fixing the day on which her son will assume the throne of Spain. Th e m blisters were received - bythe Queeq, with King AlfonsoTrE "ber side. Premier Sagasta, in his farewell speech to her as regent, depicted the loving contideace with which she had intrusted him and how. despite the grief of her widowhood, she had proved herself a woman of remarkable fortitude and administrative ability. It was some time after the Premier finished his speech that the Queen was able to respond. She spoke briefly and with tremulant voice. She said: “1 thank you and your colleagues for the loyal devotion which- y on ha venhwa me. However short of my own ideal I may-. have fallen. I have always had the welfare of my country at heart, and 'nave done sincerely what I could to repay the loyalty of my councillors. I hope you will help my son as you have helped me, because’ although the King might possess natural gifts, he is still young, and needs the help of good advice.”
ANOTHER LAND LOTTERY.
Three Hundred Thousand Acres in Soijth Dakota to Be Disposed Of. There will soon be another wholesale lottery conducted under the management of the federal government with valuable homesteads as the prize. There will be no blanks in the drawings, although some of the prizes will be more desirable than others. About 309,009 acre? of land of the Rosebud Indians in South Dakota were recently purchased by act of Congress, the law providing that the territory should be prepared for settlement by the Department of the Interior. Secretary Hitchcock, in making arrangements to open up this land, has decided to follow the plan that was followed so successfully a year ago in connection with the Kiowa and Comanche lauds in Indian Territory. As soon as the land lias been surveyed and divided into homesteads, annouDcement will be made of the conditions governing the awarding of lots.
Lake Shore Breaks Speed Records.
Lnkc Shony and New York Ceiitrsl officials made a record run between Buffalo and Cleveland the other dny. The distance, 183 miles, wns covered in 180 minutes. The run from Springfield. Pa., to Kingsville, Ohio, fifteen miles, wits made in eleven ininntes and a half. From Ashtabula to Cleveland, fifty-four miles, the run was made in fifty-three minutes.
Told in a Few Lines.
Fire in a lumber yard at Terrell. Tex., caused a loss of 113.000, partially covered by insurance. . The Army Relief Society of the United States has elected Mrs. Daniel S. Lamont as its president. The corner stone of the new Cnrnegie library at Houston, Texas, was laid with much ceremony. «.Daniel O. Reid ot the tin plate -company, paid $8,050 for Cardiff and Walea, carriage horses, at n Chicago auction sale _2
COMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL
“Two large strikes, scheduled to commence on May 1, were averted, at least
He* York.
temporarily, and a number of smaller ones were settled, but many new controversies have begun. This labor factor is the only seriously unf avorableone Jn the industrial situation, exerting considerable influence over the volume of transactions, and also tending to unsettle confidence. In seasonable merchandise, especially dry goods and clothing, warmer weather has stimulated dealings, while outdoor work is prosecuted vigorously. Collections are more prompt as a rule, fewer extensions being asked. Shipments are less delayed by traffic congestion, and railway earnings thus far reported for April exceed last year’s by 7;2 per cent.” R. G. Dun & Co. thus sum up trade conditions in their weekly review. The review continues: Consumers of finished steel products are compelled to place orders subject to the convenience of manufacturers, and it is the exception when any nearby deliveries are promised. An unprecedented amount of railway work is being done, while the erection of new buildings would be much more extensive if material were available. This structural work is on a record-breaking scale and promises relief to the situation hereafter, since most of the plants under construction will add to the productive capacity when completed. Pig iron has worked up to a higher point, Bessemer commanding S2O at Pittsburg on deliveries within six months, owing to the full contracts held by the furnaces. Foreign dealers have shown much wisdom by making concessions in'this market; r~ Cereal prices have been less inflated by speculation-than they were last week, yet a high level was—maintained, and only slight reactions occurred. The general tenor of crop news was much more encouraging, aside from Kansas dispatches, which indicate that wheat needs moisture, although corn and oats have good prospects. X Good foreign crop conditions were calculated to weaken the tone, yet exports of wheat from the United States, flour included, amounted to 5,579.037 bushels, against 4.132.357 a year ago. Recent attractive prices have brought corn to market more freely than in preceding weeks, but receipts of 1,080,050 bushels for the week fall far short of the 2,378,504 in the same week last year. The comparison as to Atlantic exports is still more striking, only 154.704 bushels going out during the week, against 2,500,211 a year ago.
It was hardly to be expected that the week would pass without a more
Chicago.
serious turn in the labor situation. Trouble has been in the air for a time and the beginning of the new month brought the culmination ot some long standing disputes. Strikes occurred in many places, yet, in the-main, they were local troubles involving no great body of men. It is gratifying to note an exceptional freedom from the bitterness that too often characterizes disputes between capital and labor, a tendency to avoid demonstrations liable to lead to violence, and a marked disposition to adjust the differences by arbitration. The building Trades have -suffered, and in some .places, new building plans have been hung up pending a settlement. This delay to spring building is the most serious aspect so far. I n all tbe erttes of the tuterior bank clearings are running far ahead of last year. Deliveries of wheat by elevators to millers on May contract helped swell the total. The grain markets held between the counter influences of unresponsive foreign markets and home conditions. tending to make a high price range. In the Northwest the season is hnekwjuaL Xbe fact that the- crop will, start uneven and generally late is not necessarily bad in Itself, as one of the largest wheat crops ever raised in the
THE MARKETS
Chicago--Cattle, common to prime, $3.50 to $6.90: hogs, shipping grades, $4.25 to $7.35; sheep, fair to choice, $3.00 to $6.00; wheat. No. 2 red, 81c to 83c; corn, Np.. 2,61 cto 62c; oats, No. 2,40 c to 42c; rye. No. 2„ 55c tp 56c; hay, timothy, SIO.OO to prairie, $5.50 to $13.50; butter, Aibfljfcreamery, 20c to 21c; eggs, fresh,43c, to 15c; potatoes, 90c to 93c per bushel. Indianapolis—Cattle, shipping, $3.0? to $6.75; hogs, choice light, $4.00 to $6.90; sheep, common to prime, $2.50 to $5.50; wheat, .No. 2,80 cto 81c; corn. No, 2 white, G4c to 65c; oats, No, 2 white, 44 c to 45c. St. Louis—Cattle, $4.50 to $6.50; hogs, $3.00 to $6.85; sheep, $2.50 to $5.60; wheat, No. 2,81 cto 82c; corn. No. 2, GOc to Glc; oats, No. 2,42 cto 43c; rye, No. 2,58 cto 59c. I Cincinnati—Cattle, $3.00 to $6.50; hogs. $3.00 to $6.95; sheep, $3.25 to $5.75; wheat, No. 2,84 cto 85c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 65c to 66c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 43c to 44c; rye, No. 2. Glc to G2c. Detroit—Cattle, $2.50 to $0.30; hogs, $3.00 to $6.85; sheep. $2.50 to $3.00; wheat, No. 2,85 cto 86c; corn. No. 3 yellow, 63c to 64c; oats, No. 2 white, 45c to 46c; rye, 59c to 00c. Toledo—Whreat, No. 2 mixed, 83e to 84c; corn, No. 2 mixed, GOc to 61c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 42c to 44c; clover seed, prime, $5.00. Milwaukee—Wheat. No, 2 northern, 75c to 76c; corn. No. 3,60 cto Glc; oats, No. 2 white, 43c to 44c; rye. No. 1,57 c to 59c; barley, No. 2,70 cto 71c; pork, mess, $17.00. New York—Cattle, $3.75 to $7.00; hogs, ■53.00 to $6.75: sheep, $3.50 to $6.00;' wheat, No. 2 red, 87c to 88c; corn, No. 2, I 07c to 68c; oats, No. 2 white, 50c to 51c; butter, creamery, 22c »o 23c; eggs, western, 14c to 17c. Buffalo'—Cattle, choice shipping steers, $3.00 to $7.00; hogs, fair to prime, $3.00 to $7.40; sheep, fair to choice, $3.25 to $6.00; lambs, common to choice, $4.00 to «$7.50. The fourth monthly installment of ths Chinese war indemnity, amounting to $1,292,200, has been paid.
WORTH A KING’S RANSOM. 6avedJ^(rm/y^HowPeruna
MRS. COL. E. J. GRESHAM, Treasurer Daughters of the Confederacy, and President Herndon Village Improvement Society, writes the following letter from Herndon, Fairfax County, Virginia: Herndon. Va. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen—“l cannot speak too highly of the value of Peruna. I believe that I owe my life to its wonderful
Egyptian Women.
The Egyptian beasts of burden, the camel, the ox, the donkey, have the same patient look as the people. It may not be improper to add another beast of burden—woman. There is the look of sad patience In every Egyptian woman’s eyes as in the melancholy river boiling at its great task and in the face of the camel, the donkey and the ox. They all look at you with the same expression of patience. They seem content to live, no matter what the condi tlons of their often wretched life —and not desirous of making change or resistance. The long swing of the camel, the- measured strldc of tßq * f'haTUtrotof -the- donkey, —areseen everywhere. The woman’s face is covered —at least her mouth is always—for ho Ylbhammedan woman majr expose her mouth to the vulgar gaze of passers-by. All have the same expression in their eyes as the camel or other animal. The calamus grows wild on damp soil in most parts of the world; its use as a medicine antedates written history, and during the Middle Ages many superstb tlons were attached to its employment as a remedy.
THE SURGEON’S KNIFE Hrs. Eckis Stevenson of Salt Lake City Tells How Operations For Ovarian Troubles May Be Avoided. “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham :—I suffered With inflammation of the ovaries and womb for over six years,enduring aches and pains which none can dream of but those who have had the same expo(wyn®) MBS. JtCKIB STEVENSON. Hence. H undreds of dollars went to the doctor and the druggist. I was simply * walking medicine chest and * physical wreck. My sister residing in Ohio wrote me that she had been cured of womb trouble by using Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and advised me to try it. I then discontinued all other med icinea and gave your Vegetable Compound a thorough trial. Within four weeks nearly all pain had left me; I rarely had headaches, and my nerves were in a much better condition, and I waa cured in three months, and thia avoided a terrible surgical operation."—Mrs. Eckis Stevenson, 250 So. State St., Salt Lake City, Utah.— (5000 forfait If abovo tootlmonlal Io not fonulno. , Remember every woman Is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anythto? about her symptoms does hot understand. Mrs. Pinkham’s address is Lynn, Mass.
merits. I suffered with catarrh of th* head and lungs in its worst form, until the doctors fairly gave me up, and I de* spaired of ever getting well again. "I noticed your advertisement and th* splendid testimonials given by people who had been cured by Peruna, and determined to try a bottle. I felt but littl* better, but used a second and a third bottle and kept on improving slowly. “It took six bottles to cure me, bat they were worth a king’s ransom tn me. I talk Peruna to all my friend* and am a true believer in its worth.** —•Mrs. Col. E. J. Gresham. Thousands of women owe their live* to Peruna. Tens of thousands owe their health to Peruna. Hu.vlfeds of thousands are praising Peruna in every Stat* in the Union. We have on file a great multitude of letters, with written permission for use in publie print, which can never be used for want of space. Address The Peruna Medicine COk, Columbus, 0.. for a book written especially for women, instructively illustrated, entitled “Health and Beauty.” Seat free to women.
Compile Treatment FOR EVERY Humour Price SI.OO CUTICURA SOAP, to cleanse the sHa of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICURA OINTMENT* to instantly allay itching, inflammation, and irritation, and soothe and heal, and CUTICURA RESOLVENT PILLS, to cool and cleanse the blood. A SINGLE SET of these great skin curatives is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, crusted, scaly, and pimply akin, scalp, and blood humours, with loss of hair, when all else fails. Millions of People Use CUTlcukA Soap, assisted by Cuticvxa Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp ofcrusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and seothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, Itchlngs, and chafings, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use Cvticuha Soap In the form of baths for annoying Irritations, inflammations, and excoriations, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women. 'CunocaA Resolvent Pills (Chocolats Coated) are a new, tasteless, odorless, eco nomicalsubstitute for the celebrated liquid Cuticcra Resolvent, as well as for all other bloo<l purifiers and humour cures. In screwcap rials, containing 60 doses, price 25c. Sold C.rooahout tk* world. Bo»r, Z 3«., Oirnsnr* {Ot .Hills, *%. BrttUh Drpot. 17-3 A Cb.rtarUoStafcJ : London. French Depot, I Hue de la Petx, Pule. PM rsa Daun a Casa. Co»r, Sole Prop*., BoUoa.tT.a3 FREElabsolutelyFßEE! Die*, any dmlred ehade, in ota*r i* •nArnlA-ildin of the land acqsao ted with th* £r*.|k* die* fo< **er. economic*, and suocadm Plnirf IWrf pnck.se o lor* wool or cotton, el k or Lather* ata. : life “A Lake of Oik” U/UN WRHINO TO AMnnSERS PLEASE SAI T ttq stvylfa
