St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 24, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 2 January 1895 — Page 3

ARO T S PR B S, ST AL S A S O ———————————————————— A o et W My Wife’s Nerves ‘ Are weak and sh> suffers terribly from nervousness, headache and loss of sleep. Such ifs the testimony of many a man. The poor, tired woman is suffering from impure and impoverished blood. Her food does not digest. She is living on her nerves, because her strength 1s gone. Her nerves and muscles Need Strengthening by the use of loods Sarsaparilla, which makes puore, rich blood, creates an appetite, and gives tone to all organs of the body. This {s not what we say—it is what ITood's Sarsapurilla does. “My wife began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla about three months ago. She has been in peoor health for fifteen years. Hood's is doing her good. Her appetite is better and she looks better, and there has been improvement in every way." J. W. RoB-« ERSON, Greenfield, Tennessee. ood’s sarsa- - 22V parilla Be sure to get C ures HOOD'S RV * 'Hood's Pills are the best after-dinner ~—Pills, assist digestion, prevent conrtipation. -——.——-—————-———.—-—————

Artist Has His Joke. An amateur artist residing in thls‘ city has been having considerable fun | at the expense of his friends through a | little device he has originated. lis studio boasts an open fireplace, and in one of his idle moments he painted a piece of coal red on one side, shaded \ nicely into black, and laid it on the | edge of his grate. Now. when a friend | comes to visit him the artist invariably turns the conversation on stories of men who were able to pick up redhot coals in their bare fingers. He then as- \ serts his own ability to do this, and in proof he picks up the painted coal. After holding it a second he drops it on his friend, and the energetic contortions that follow the ad at of this supposed red-hot coal afford infinite pleasure to his artistic soul.—Philadelphia Record. Bounty on Kansas Wolves. TL.ast year the bounty on wolf scalps fn Kansas amounted to $60,000.

S ———————————— 1 i : 2 A Thankful Mother’s Letter to Mrs. Pinkham. : «Last winter I did not think ‘ my little ones wguld havqbld mother long. 1 suffered terribly with female troubles. «] could keep nothing on my 227 TR ' < Wil 4 .""‘“l'{:g(./- 2LA \ e ‘~.“P‘| .',_‘;,:w:")\.‘ Q‘_ SSR A R e, ) i e ‘;}:‘m‘ s § RN SN T e e %‘} §r-r‘~;:?-"».‘-flu"i- o friends hardly knew me. I suffered with severe headaches, dizziness, faintness, backache, and ‘the blues. “Thanks to ZLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, 1 am now as fat as ever, and have no female troubles. If you use my letter, hope it may be the means of saving some other poor mother’s life as it did mine.” — Mrs. Ella Van Buren, 821 Garden St., Peoria, 111

The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S WMEDIGAL DISCOVERY, DONALD KENKEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed exceptin two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken, | When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles Eassing through them; the same with the iver or Bowels. Thisis caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. . g Stomach fs foul or bilfous {t will reAmich foelings at firet, ‘ cai@hange of diet ever nece ssaty. Eat | est you can get, and enough of it. i ose, one tablespoonful in water at bed- g time. Sold by all Druggists. |

My éon was affiicted L Ely oo with catarrh. linduced B Rggfif‘"zusm.c\g ‘ lim to try Ely's Crean: 4 &‘"cfiffl%%fi 1 Balm and the disagrec- "““VERNQQA v A able catarrhal smell ol k7 o"zfis_&' | left him. He APPEATS (15 [t Sl well as any one.—J. (. ;-j” N(g\\fis_;';"-_; Olmsted, Arcola, 111, P\ T g 1 ELY’S CREAM BALM Opens and ¢ eanses the Nacal Passag: g, Allays Pain | &gnd Inflammation, Heals the Sores ’rotects the Membr.ue trom Coids, Restores the Senses o t 'laste aud smeli. The Balm is quick ¥ abso.bed and gi.eß re.iet at once. A particle is apniied into each nostril and i< agreegbie. Pricedo cent 3, at draggists or by mail. K.Y BROTHERS, 56 Watren Street, New York, - b~ - . -T R € NI S RING A ’{&E P S se L FOR DURABiLITY.ECONfiIVIY AND FCR GENERAL BLACKING IS UNEOUALLED. A HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3000 TONS. WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THZ oFF 1 JUNPASTE STOvE PoTsH| FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINE NI TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH, | ¥AKES NO DUST, IN5&10 CENTTIN BOXES. | HE ONLY PERFECT PASTE. ] MOrse Bros,Praors. CANTON,MASS,

5 - S TS T ST S S TN RS R ket ‘ CHARITY THAT CURSES. ‘1 Almsgiving Is Not Charity, It Is the Giving of One’s Self, i Dr. Jane Elizabeth Robbins has & | vigorous paper in the Forum on “Char- f ity That Helps and Other Charity,” in | which she says: ‘ l “There is many a rich man seated to- ! day with easy conscience at a table ' shining with cut glass and silver, who | would be ready to streteh out a helping | hand to those who need it, it they were * not “all so far away.” He is living in | another werld. What he does is to | make his annual contributions to our | charitable societies, and that is all ’ Some day we will begin to calculate the ' evil resulting from such contributions. \ ' Again and again is it true of the chari- | ty of to-day that ‘it cursgeth him who | gives and him who takes.! On the one hand the poor man, sinking down into the mire of pauperism, realizes dimly the bitterness of his degradation, and | takes the alms offered him with curses l in his heart; while on the other hand the rich merchant or manufacturer, who is daily disregarding the health of little children and delicate girls, quiets his conscience with a large check in the name of chavity. And society applauds the generosity of such a man, and his eyes are blinded. ‘lt is so tempting to |

the rich to think that by giving a check for the support of a social scheme poverty may be abolished, and they be ‘ left free to enjoy their wealth. They always hope that comething, not them- { selves, might meet all needs. ‘ “One is often asked the question: \ ‘ “What can the rich man do for the relief of suffering? 1 believe there is but \ one answer: Let him give not alms but | himself, and the wisdom comes with the | giving. I knew a young apprentice in ‘ a great machine shop who was stricken | down with consumption. His paients | were old and feeble, and it was «mlyi through the gifts of his employer that i his last days were made comfortable, | | put more to them all than the gifts was the fact that the employer came himgelf to the little home in the Dast Side tenement, and speke friendly words. From every such natural friendship | there grows more and more chances for haolpfulness, and for that truest charity | of all charities—the treating of others

as if they were of our own kind.” 5! R R | A Waste of Good Material, l A well-known Congressman, who was 1 a farmer before he went into polities, } was doing his district not long ago, and | fn his rambles he saw a muan in ai gtumpy patch of ground trying to geta 't plow through it. He went over to him, : and after a brief salutation he asked ; the privilege of making a turn or two ‘ with the plow. The native shook his | head doubtfully as he looked at his visitor's store clothes and general alr of gentleman of eclegant leisure, but _jhe det i take the plow. The Congressman sailed away with it in fine style and plowed four or five furrows dlde > h¢ \ 0 g Y ed the handles to the orig-"J,i:\'.grm-y‘ mister,” sald the farmer admiringly, “air you in the aggercultural business?” | :‘;(‘)1;1 .l“‘“R'.N‘('l the statesman,. aint sellin’ plows 7 : “N(\." ‘l :“'t[.lwn what in‘ thunder air you?" f m the womber of Congress from this districet.” f o "“'\il"'.\‘flu the man I voted for and |

_’that I've Dbeen readin® about in the I papers doin' legislatin' and siteh im Washin'ton 7 S¥es.! “Well, by hokey, mister,” said the farmer, as he looked with admiration [ over the recently plowed furrows, “es I'd 2 had any idea that I was votin’ fer a waste of sitch good farmin® material, I'd voted for the other candidate { as shore as shootin’."” ‘ | Leene Inspired. | { “I am not a religious man, and my f]u’uym's have been .few and far Dbe- | [ tween,” remarked ‘Khomas . Keene, | l the tragedian, 1-w.'vn'.'!_\'. “The last tima | ‘the spirit moved m2' was when I wag in Colorado over ten years ago. I h:ldf i played ‘Louis Xl." in Georgetown, then | ,’the biggest silver eamp in the State, | The editor of the local paper, a cousin | of Edward Bellamy, who wrote ‘Look-! ing Backward,’ took me for a drive over | Argentine Pass, which is 14.000 feat above the sea level, and 4,000 feot from the valley below. Snow is nearly alwiays Ivine n the «_July, | and flowers ‘appear in spots Bofwwoon | the snow banks. The peaks of the Rocky Mountains were seen in every | direction for eighty miles, and clouds | lay Dbelow them, while an occasional |

zig-zag of lightning played around, 'lightiug up the Mount of the Holy | Cross. [ “The grandeur of the scone moved ma [ to recite something, and when I had | finished Editor Bellamy, with tears !stromning down his face, dropped on ! his knees in the snow. I couldn't help ' doing likewise. It was the inspiration ‘ of a lifetime.” | S Ll oD ‘ Incorrect Uses. ‘ We lately took occasion to criricisa | [ the writing of anyone or someone Mi louc word. It-is suggested to us that | there are one or two other similar and | worse instances of the same gort. Thyg 1 we occasionally see oneself instead of one’'s self, and this is apparently tha | !(-omm(m method of writing the worslsll in England, and is, of course, liable to | !CX‘(‘(‘[) into our own Engiish. Another ] Instance is whatever is used as an iu-‘ ’t()rrn;,:zltivv. This is a Very recent . | novation, but I‘ruqm-nfly appears nfi i late. For example, “Whatever dia you do it for?’ There is certainly no au. | }t]mrity for thus making an illl’(‘l'l‘(;g:l-I tive out of the relative pronoun, andg ' i the use ought to Le frowned on.—Tha ! ’ Independent. | | e , A gir] thinks it g sign of bad luck | when a girl is married in black. :

Lincoln's Views on Assasninatiof — «rhat night as we walked back to th pe. White House through the grounds bsje : tween the War Department bulldln and the house, I fancied that I saw 15gs the misty moonlight a man lodging bdin hind one of the trees. My heart for &+ moment stood still, but, as we PASSOE in safety, I came to the conclusion thag the dodging figure was & creature o the imagination. Nevertheless, as parted from the President at the doo of the White House, I could not helj saying that I thought his going to ang fro in the darkness of the night, a8 was usually his custom, often alone an unattended, was dangerous reckloss ness. That night, in deference to hig wife's anxious appeal, he had provideds himself with a thick oaken stick. He laughed as he showed me this slight; weapon, and said, but with some seri ousness: ‘llong ago made up my min that if anybody wants to kill me, he will do it. If I wore a shirt of mail, andj kept myselfl surrounded by a body guard, it would be all the same, There are a thousand ways of gettin®wi o 4 man, if it is desired that he should g, killed. Besides, in this case, it seemigs to me that the man who wouldl CO B after me would be just as objectionavigEy | to my enomies—if I have any.’ »_Noah] ! Brooks, in the Century.

N 3 T A NOBLE FIGHT. AN EMINENT SOUTHERN LAWYER'S LONG CONFLICT WITH DISEASE. Twenty-five Years of Prosperity, Adversity and Suffering—The Great Victory Won by Science Over a Stubborn Discase. ‘ (From the Atlanta, Ga., Constitution) | Foremost among the best known lawyers | and farmers of North Carolina stands Col. ! Isaac A. Sugg, of Greenville. Mr. Sugg has ! resided in Greenville 22 ycars, While | nearly everyone in Pitt Co. knows Mr. §'s ' history, perhaps all do not know of his return to business again after an illness of 15 yvears. Noman has gone throuZh more than | he, and lived. It was a case of the entire breaking down of the nervous system, attended by excruciating, agonizing, unendur- ' able pain. Opiates and stimulants only | quieted temporarily, and all treatments | failed him. Only his love of family and | friends prevented suicide. e told a reP 5T T e gaeß ae 2onbaneniandfas i aebatioey §

porter the 101OWINE INTCTESLIE SO « “[ kept at my work as long as | could 1 3 )ud but nature gave way at last and [ suceuml to the inevitable. My entire nervous sys“tem had been shattered by the stimulants and opiates I had taken, my blood had actul ally turned to water, my weight had drop‘i ped from 178 pounds to 123, and it seemed 1o i everybody that the end was in sight. W l?' ' 1 could not bear the gentle hand of my wife |to bathe my limbs w ith tepid water. I was :simrl,\' living from hour to hour. 1 had | made” my will, setéled my busiiess and | waited for the last strand of life to snap. | “Itwasat this time that a somewhat simi- | lar case as my own was brought to mo% | notice. This man had suffered very mu l as I had, his life had been ll(‘s“aiml of as | mine had, and yet he had been cured Think what that little word meant to me- ‘ CURED. ‘i‘hem mmm I had JOCIL oot plishies » a3 known as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Fal Aalia bl s report thorot . fl)‘ g . . i 3 | ]L\ iln'l ‘H"L'"" taki . i ’ p——~ ‘”‘ | to get better, | 1)“,‘;3::*‘15_‘(!!_« m and l.:o{:an | ful child, sound, calm, and : »;:'M f honl | appetite came back, and peacelul. My | soothed and restored my nerves wer | &3 { restored to their normal o [ tioh and I felt like nal condii (“ ]qu 1 » . » | greatest blessi 4 new man. Buot the | R 2 ' essing was the mental improve- ! . egan to read and digest, t f' = | late new plans, to take interest it 0 lormul”'c’“““fl‘. which began to come ”.' .'?l"' law g ne back t { B 8 soon as my clients realized t.h t ;) o rair ialh " ke 8 realiz at I was ?if'.'."r'..'.',.'f.'f. le‘v After a lapse of tén w‘arfln‘l . lorseback every d: : hA ! | That Dr. Wibiame piithout fatigue. e tiams' Pink Pills saved my ; A8 evond doubt, and lam spreading i their praise far and wide ' spreading

AAt o e e T(T YSR i L | Inquiry about the town of Greenville sub- | Stantiated the above facts of Col. Sugg's case, | and that many others are being benefited by | Dr. Williams Pink Pills, | Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are for sale by | all druggists, or may be had by mail from { Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Scheneei tady, N. Y., for 50c. per box, or six boxes | for $2.60. | German Ministers® Beggarly Pay. | The Methedist annual conference in | Germany has been fixing the salaries | of all preachers within maximum and [ minimum figures. The largest sum | given to any preacher is SBOO and the | lowest $l5O. There are gradations ae- ; cording as the preacher is married, un- { married or has children. In Berlin | | the conference owns property worth { e | 250,000 marks, a large advance on the j original cost. The churches are rapid- | Iy approaching self-support, amnd as | soon as that is reached the state will grant corporate rights enabling them to bury the dead without consent from the state church, The Unexpected Dischargeofa Cannon | Close by would not have a more distur!_g%’ effect upon nerves which are vigorous than | an ordfmary-nofse upon those that are weak and uustrung. As a nervine, Hostetter's Stomach Ritters is unrivalled. By promotIng digestion and assimilation they overcome that gastrie disorder, which is the most proTG oBNBE il BESrRra At L e S

p AR LN DL BSLVORE GCUIULY, AR iie i . [ so long as it exists, defeats in large measure | the action of sedatives and opiates. Such remedies, moreover, necessitate the use of increasing doses, and finally cease to act al- || together, except in dangerous quantities. | They never reach the fountain head of the | trouble, and quiet the nerves only by semi- | baralyzing them. Equally objectionable are { tiery unmedicated alcobolic stimulants. Kid- { ney, bladder and liver trouble, malaria, coni stipation and rheumatism are relieved by the { Ritters, which also promotes appetite and : nightly repose. Score One for the Chinese. According to a telephone authority | i g 3 | the easiest language for telephoning is | Chinese. It is prineipally monosyla- | bles and is made up of rising and fall- | ing inflections. German, it seems is { s . ¢ l | not a bad language for telephoning as | | might be thought. I'rench is not bad, 1 | but it is almost as sibilant as English. | | et e e e ettt et ettt ettt [ L . | Going to California? ] ] The Burlington Route is tho only rafl- | ¢ | "8y Trunning “personally conducted” Exei cursions via Denver to (olorado Springs, | salt Lake, Ogden, facramento, fan Fran- | 1 ; cisco, ttockton, Merced, Fresao, Bakers- t % ! field and Los Angeles at the lowest rates, | Tullman tourist sleeping car through with- | out change, } Leave Chicazo every Wednes iay. Write i or call ¢n T. A. Grady, Excursion Mana- { gor, 211 Clark st., Chicago. i No man is always wrong. A cloek | that does not go at all is right twice in i the twenty-four hours.

e e eT T EEEEEEEEE:EEEEEEEE X - ‘ You can make better food with \ :: o £ Pa” 0 | @D 3 £/ g TR -ByAl i) d i bl @, Y yemmms Ow ex ABSOLUTELY PURE Lighter, sweeter, more wholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. 106 WALL 6T., NEW-YORK. A

| DIET OF HORSE MEAT. | Ruors of horse et 1 the Chicago markets, estaurants and domestic cui- | | sine have of late pervaded theairof that | region, giving rise to a sentiment of | insecurity as to the component ele- ! ments of ragouts, entrees and side 1 dishes which has been found very perI plexing and occasioned a good deal of dietetic bewilderment and confusion, Horses have been cheap lately, and Chicago has her own opiunion of her own commercial morality, and recent steaks, both porterhouse and sirloin, have In many cases exhibited a pc-‘ culiar flavor—and in short the condition of things wears an aspect of firregularity. It is not probable that the objection there is to horse meat | as an article of commerce, but only as { ' in element of local consumption. l(“ Wit were canned, or made into bologna Bsausages, or jerked in the similitude | of beef and shipped away for the susentation of the ethnic and the heathen yond her boundaries, it would be nother matter. l There is in Paris a Society of thv} Hippophagl, which meets annually and ‘ dines exclusively on horse meat, demonstriating by the well-fed appear- | |lance of its members that it is nutritious | land asserting that it is palatable. On f this testimony Chicago might affirm . \thnt the substance is wholesome and ‘ ) Hfit for export, though she v\'iduml.\'! " | floes not wish to have it infiltrate and ; 3 11 : | permeate her own Dbills of fare. But | 1 { herhaps it is a false alarm altogether, l Lihna her surplus horses are still, as . {Jormerly, shipped on the hoof or conz; verted exclusively into glue, isinglass . 1l sole leather, according to precei sut, usage and the statute in th:lt‘ =4 ade and provided.—New York Out All Night. man, duly sober and in good shape & nerally, was hurrying along the n reet shortly after midnight, when he = | Het a policeman, | g 1*“Good evening, Mr. Officer,” he sa - | lited politely; “it's a pleasant night to ¢| Le out.” § _ | (YQuite sO,” replied the officer, eyeing v *lll suspiciously. ¢ { %] presume you are out every night, 1 S | aren’t you?” l R , HEvery night,” and the officer got up | v | a little closer to hinm. | ] “All night?’ asked the passenger. i #All night.” . “That's the difference between us,” | " | explained the suspect. “If 1 should be ] .| ot half the night, I'd ‘hark’ from my , | Wiife, and 1 suppose if I stayed all night 13 be churched at the next meeting. ' | Ypu ought to be thankful you are :11 pgliceman. Good night,” and the intrud@r hurried on, leaving the policeman infa state of great uncertainty.— Detroit | Fgee Press, } SIS | Deatness Cannot Be Cured i By loeal applications, as they cannot reach the | di #ed portion of the ear. There is only one w 4 to cure deafness, and that is by c nstitutiommal remedies. Deafreas is caused by an infialimed condition of the mucous lining ot the Existachian Tube. When this tube {is inflaged. yoa have a rumbling sound or imperfeo bearing. and when it is entirely closed Dellfness is the result, and unloss the intlarnmaiß can be taken out and this tube restored to fra@ormal conditfon hearing will be destroved so yer ; nine cases out of ten are gaused by catargeh, which is nothing but an inflammed condi{io of the mucous surfaces e will give One Hundred Dollars for any casl® of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that caunotllE be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Sen@il for circulars, free. | ‘oB F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. % Sold by Druggists, 75c. l X Good Advice. | o Mcn of Orange, N J., who forgot { Jofßump fIOM the pocket of his overcoat a '3 gémorandum of his logses at the race 1 tri bk Tias receivedadvice from an unexp f’_(‘ted quarter. A burglar who gath- i erec 1 UD SI.OOO worth of silverware in hig, House the other night took the over- l coal ¢ also, but left the memorandum | thug ¥ Indorsed: “Don’t play the races | thoey * caused my downfall.” | : Spitting ¢n the Hook. W hen an Egyptian went fishing he spat . in the Nile in honor of the deity, hene ‘¢ the custom of spitting on the hook :dor good luck. » Health Is [lconomy. A r==vell man can do as nuch work astwo men . Wwho are ‘uader th> weather,” and do it beg §Ae§'. A box ur. Ripans Tabules in the officer B Will save clerk-hire. A B &roverb for these times, or any otliotg_ times: Speak but little, and let that Pelttle be the truth; spend but little, and Bekt that little be cash down. 58 - I *2Bg Cure for Ccnsumpujon s an A No, 1 hégmna medicloe —\WW. R WiLLiams Autio;;g'.b. kil April 11, 180 L Th% ‘e are no real strong people in I’ ~fl_l\ls )g’()rld but good people. :

A | . & f For twenty years folks all over the world have cured g | o . . . s < | : rheumatism, neuralgia, and all other pains and aches by BY | : 6 Y. using St. Jacobs Oil. There must be something in it, §@ | |7 4= for you couldn’t fool all the people for so many years. - [ : ’-:; ] a3 ". SRATTB IR 2T BN LN D o-': M. "Z-fl » i

gl Ao—— : Popular and Kconomical. ~ Mush and mllk surprise parties are popular 100 miles to the southward. Those who make the.pagty swoop down | _upon the subject of the surprise with a box of corn meal and a jug of molasses. The mush is set to boil, the molasses is turnedinto taffy and abundantly pulled, cakes are baked, apples pared, and the mush is eaten along with fresh milk and rich cream. The mush and milk surprise furnishes a maximum of fun for a minimum of expenditure. In Olden Times ‘People overlooked the importance of | permanently beneficial effects and were i satistied with transient action; but now that it is generally known that Syrup of ' Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will l not buy other laxatives, which act for a | rime, but finally in ure the system. ‘: e L i Disbanded the Porters. | “The Six Jolly Fellowship Porters” | tavern of “Our Mutual Friend" has lost ;its meaning, as the London county im»unly council recently disbanded the corporation of Fellowship Porters. ' SEXD your full name and address to Dob- | bins' oaup Mfg. Co. Philadelphia. Pa. by { return mail, and get, free of all cost, a | coupon worth several dollars, if used by ‘lyou to Its full mlv.npmge. Don't delay. i This Ils worthy attention. | —There is no use in trying to reason ’ with people who are governed by im-§ | pulse or appetite. I; Rovan, WINTRY, CHANGEABLE WEATHER ! produces Caturrhs, (oughs, Disorders of ! the Lungzs, etc.,, which Javne's Expec- | torant promptly cures if falthfully admic- ‘ istered. l —As long as a sin can hide its head % it feels safe. o b e oet S R —————————————— —— "U T ———— i PHYSICAL STRENGT!I, ; cheerful spirits and the ability to fully enmjoy life, come only with a healthy

ST The young man who suffers from nervous debility, impaired memory, low spirits, irrita- | ble temper, and the | thous.'uur.:md one de'k rangements of mind

| ; %1

| Zh oy ; & ‘ ~ e ! w 4 %‘- .j:‘; ] - b b e aehe

! should ; the will power is weakened, I morbid fears haunt him and may result in confirmed hypochondria, or melani cholia and, finally, in softing of the brain, epilepsy, (““fits’"), paralysis, locomotor ’ ataxia and even in dread msanity. To reach, re-claim and restore such unfortunates to health and happiness, is the aim of the publishers of a book of 130 pages, written in plain but chaste language, on the nature, symptoms and ! | curability, by home-treatment, of such | diseases. This book will be sent sealed, | | in plain envelope, on receipt of this no- ! | tice with ten cents in stamps, for post- | | age. Address, World’s Dispensary Med- l | ical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. ! | For more than a quarter of a century i | physicians connected with this widely | | celebrated Institution have made tlie ! [ treatment of the diseases above hinted at | | their specialty. Thousands have con- | { sulted them by letter and received advice , { and medicines which have resulted in! permanent cures. | Sufierers from premature old age, or | loss of power, will find mmch of interest | in the book aboveanentioned. l | ! g PILLS, 9 | Purely Vezetable, Miid and Reliable. Regu- I late the Liver and Digestive Organs., The safeat and best medicine in the world for the i of &1l disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseages, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Constipation, Costiveness, Indigestion, Biliousness, Fever. Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all derangements of the Internal Viscera. PERFELT | DIGESTION will be accomplished by taking | RADWAY'S PILLS. By so doing j DYSPEPSIA | SiA, | Sick Headache, Foul Stomach and Biliousness : will be avoide, as the food that is eaten con- ’ tributes its nourishing Iroperties for the sup- ' | port of the natural waste of the hody. j ~ Price 25 cts. per box. Sold by all drugeists. | J RADWAY & CO.. NEw Yorx = Mrs. Winslow’s SooTtniNne Sysup for ('!nldrex; ‘ t(‘("tf'l%[lfl;. Boltens the ‘gums, reauces inflammation, | allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. WANTED &ric st folsoman dgr fauor Trad [

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and body that result from, un-! natural, pernici,ous habits usual- ‘ ly contracted in | youth, through ignorance, is thereby incapacitated to tLor- l oughly enjoy| life. He feels | tired, spiritless, and drowsy ; his I sleep isdisturbed and does not refresh him as iti