Bloomington Telephone, Volume 8, Number 20, Bloomington, Monroe County, 13 September 1884 — Page 7

fndH Tftf Iw If Wm,n That shs Is frail, often in body, , Tlfltine, tistrue tity. Ajkdpitr 'tis, tit true. Dr. Pierce "WTOrtte PreBcrtptkm" Is the test restorative tonic for physical frailty In women, or female weaknesses or derangements. By druggists Frioe reduced to one dollar. Tire reason men never stop t onp jflass when takinff whisky Is because it is a cereal

drink, and always has to be tenon

necks. . t -

mm.

Merina

Wreck MenjwkL

Vfetima Af vnntliful indiscretions si

from nerrous debility, lack of self-ponfl-dence, impaired memory and kindieftjaymptoM, should etnd three letter stamps for large Illustrated treatise, givlnsr means of certain cue, with numerous tesnmoniala. Address World's Dispensary Medical Assoeia tion, Buffalo. K, Y. . , . Amah thai canto flattered .la oof neces arilyafool, buiyou can always make one of ninu " ; : ' H '

Wells. lUebjurdson Co. s imnroTecLButter

Color will be found to be the onljfcjeR, color thai'wfll not become rancid. !tMtiSamyott will prove it. It will not color t& buttermilk; it gives the brightest color f any made, and is the stronxoet. and therefire the

cheapest.

caw-

Thskb is no record that the children of Israel suffered with soft corns. This was one of the miasodaches of Moses. Drttootsts m malarial districts say that Lydia E Ptakham's Vegetable Compound is as much the standard remedy for female weaknesses as quinine is for the prevailing dulls and fever Scripture rendered In the ' prevailing fashion of speech: "The lady tempted me, and l aid eat,-' . . t Sow to Secure Health Scovttl's Sarsaparilla and StiUingia, or Blood and Liver Syrup, will restore perfect health to the physical organization. It ia Indeed a strengtheuiug syrup, pleasant to take, -and has often provert itself to be the best blood purifier ever discovered, effectu ualty curing scrofula, syphilitic disorders, weakness of the kidneys, erysipelav malaria all nervous disorders and debfHtg bilious complaints, and all diseases indicating an impure condition of the blood, liver, kktneyt, stomach, eta It corrects indigestion; especially when the complaint is of an exhaustive nature, having a tendency to lessen the vigoi of the brain and nervAs system. Pwuw" st tiMGsaUHooie. The business man or tourist will find firse daas aooommodatkmaat the loir price of $ and $3.50 per day at the Gault Houaev Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison sarects. This far-famed hotel is located in the eent& of the city, only one block from the Unions Depot. Elevator; all appointments ftrst-clti&s. H. W. Hott, Proprietor. A Woaderfal Substance. The results which are attending the administration, by Pre. Markev & Palcn, 1109 Oirard St., 1'hiUu of their ritaUzing remedy for chronic dlswe. give w surprises to patients and pbysiaae rrr day. If you have any ailment a boot which you arc concerned, write for information about their treatment, it will be promptly sent. Carbo-Hnes. Earth brings the bitterness at pain, Yet worth the crown of peace will gain; And thousands speak in accents fine She praises of our Carboline. Xbhsxak's Pkftobtixjsd Reev Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing Its entire nutritious properties. It contains bloodmaking, force-generating, and life-sustaining properties; Invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, la all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-work, or acute disease, particularly If resulting from pulmonary complaints; -Cfcswell, Hmaard Co., proprie tors, New York. Sold by druggists, ' Wrt suffer longer from Catarrh, HayFever, and cold la the Head? A sure cure is BJy's Cream Balm. It is not a liquid or snuff, and Is easily applied. 50 cents. Nervous Weakness, Dyspepsia, Sexual Be bQitgvcuredby M Wells' Health Benewer." $L Thx Increasing sales of Plso's Cure attest fts olalm as the best cough remedy. Bed-bugs, files, roaches, ants, rats, mice, cleared out by," Bough on Bats." 15a, Peso's Remedy for Catarrh is a certain cure for that very obnoxious disease. 8tlnslng4nitstlon4ufiammatton,all kidney and mjnaxyoomnmmtB, cured by "Buchu-Paiba." $L Thx Fraser Axle Grease Is the best and, i&srtnsiflaUy, the cheapest "Bough on Pain." Quick cure for Colic, Cramps, Diarrhoea, Aches, Pains, Sprains, Headache.

FOR. X ATTSJ,

fibeumatism,Ctfeuraigia, Sciatica,

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ley Disss Pastor sewrf hwrs. FlajGamtta

TB CHARLES A. VOCELER CO,

CREAM BALM

Causes no Patau Gires Belief at Once, Thorough Treatateut will Cure. Ifot a Liquid or SuulL Ap ply with Finger. Gire iCl Trial! 50 cents at Dru grist s CO cents by malt rw

Send far drrnUr. . , ELT BJTHB Drasgtsis, Oweo. W. T.

.lift

Die nsvTossn our

Diamine

ifzee. Taylor

iher hand stamps. Term

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Wholesale and lelsa JSsnS ror prios-Usi Goods sent C.O.0. Wiga mads to order. JLUBNHAJC71 Stats sines Chicago

A asm WAKXXDformebsssanafssteamna RcUal Books and wye,

L

ElMZetosnp

utnis wrtmia? Hct Address VALESTINK

hy, or Short-Hand sad Type

& Situations tanushea. BBOS Jansarllle. Wis.

Asmr.iA

Cured, on a new principle, to S tar ennui . Smrf lot at&m n for

TtlAftL and farm fni afJf-n-

aeatwoKsa. P. Harold Hayes, K. P., Binchmtont N. Y.

Or persons ef any profeaskm who oontsmplats sstsbBsfatnt newspsper urtnttug offices hi Nebraska or Dakota should eommmzicafts with Tn Biovz Crrx

tfifxosb Ko SIS Douglas street, Bionz

The Myrflcu This beautiful plant is a native of Persia, but naturalized in th south of Europe, being -now abundant on the sea coast from Marseilles to Genoa and throughout Italy- The leaves of the myrtle are of a rich dart-green tint. They are covered with clear dots, which secrete a highly fragrant volatile oiL Th flower has a five-ckf caOix, five white petals, numerous ffiiamena, and one style which is succeeded by a globose berry of two to thiee cells. A woody tegctursi belongs toall the myrtle tribe; but they vary in habits from that which spreads over the soil in the Falkland Islands, a the tliyme does in Europe, to tha immense eucalypti of Australia, which are among the most gigantic trees of that continent. The common myrtl e, in its usual size and height, gives us, however, a goocT idea of the average size of the majority of the myrt&oeae. Some myrtles in the vicinity of London have been known as trained plants to reach a height of ten to twenty feet, and an equal width. At Cobban HalL in

LKei aav.eiftleciiius tjprtjfeet

high. The myrtie cannot, however, be considered as more than a half-hardy shrub in Great Britan. It was introduced into England in the sixteenth century; Gerard knew the myrtle in cultivation as early as 1597. Pliny informs us that it was a rare plant in Italy in his day; he, however, makes mention of eleven sorts, and remarks that the most odoriferous grew in Egypt. In the United States the Myrtle is usually treated as a pot plant, or, when large, grown in tubs, for removal into the cellar on approach of winter. De Candolle's arrangement cf the kinds of Myrtle is considered the best. According to that there are two species, viz. : 1, M. Melanocarpa or black-fruited, common in gardens, where are varieties of it with double flowers and variegated foliage, and also embracing the broad-leaved or Boman Myrtle, the box-leaved, the upright or Italian, the orange-leaved, the acute-leaved or Portugal, the broad-leave d Dutch, and

the thyme-leaved myrtles; and 2, the i . i r t . a

wmte-Demea, m. jjeucocrpa, imwve ui Greece and the Balearic Isles, the fruit of which is rather large, edible, with a grateful smell and taste. There are several striped-leaved sorts known in Europe, of much beauty . All the varieties propagate readily by cuttings and from seeds. The cuttings should be stuck in sand, or peat and sand, and covered in the process with a bell glass. The Myrtle was well known to the ancients, and was held in high esteem for its beauty, supposed virtues, and medicinal qualities. It was employed as a symbol of authority, and entwined with laurel for wreaths in the triumphs of bloodless victory and of the Olympic and other gomes. The buds and berries were used as spices, and the latter are still employed in Tuscany as a substitute for pepper. A wine made from the Myrtle was called myrtidamun. In Greece the berries are administered to little children for

treatment of diarrhoea. The eau

d'ange, a sort of perfume sold in France, is distilled from the flowers. Medicinal qualities reside in the astringent nature of the various portions of the plant; and in Greece, Italy, and the South of France the bark is used in tanningThere are are some other species occasionally met with in collections, such as M. Tomentosa, a native of China, with rose-colored flowers, and M. Myrsimoides, a native of the colder parts of Peru. The order of myrtleworts (myrtacese) is of much interest, embracing as it does the pomegranate, the gruava, the clove, the pimento or all-spice, and many isrees producing valuable gums and important astringents. Anise. Anise grows wild in Egypt, in Syria, Palestine, and all parts of the Levant, but the Romans considered the Egyptian and Cretan anise to be the best, especially for medicinal purposes. The product of Southern Europe is now looked upon with favor. Among the ancients, anise seems to have been a common pot-herb in every garden. Although it is less used in medicine by the moderns than by the ancients, it still retains its former reputation as an excellent stomachic, particularly for delicate women and young children. The Romans chew it in order to keep up an agreeable moisture in the mouth, and sweeten the breath, while some Orientals still do the same. Some of the Persian poets have sung the agreeable qualities of the anise, and a modmi sweet ballad of Borne compares the slender grace of a young girl to the anise Anise is an annual plant growing to the height of one foot, carries a white flower, and blooms from June till August. The seeds are imported and used in large quantities on account of their aromatic and' carminative properties. The distilled plant, when used in blossom, yields a sweeter and more grateful tincture than can be obtained from the seeds. Anise is extensively used by the confectioner for the purpose of flavoring comfits and cordials. The anise seed cordial of the shops is a compound of alcohol, anise seed and angelica. The oil is obtained by distillation from the seeds, and though habitually mixed with a great many cattle medicines, and regarded by the farmers of former generations 11s one of the most potent drugs, it performs scarcely any other office than the communicating of an agreeable fragrance. The Chinese cultivate it for the seasoning of dishes; and the Japanese enploy bundles and garlands of it in the ceremonies of their heathenish superstition. Scowlsc Oftentimes we meet people whose faces would be beautiful if they were not darkened and wrinkled by scowls. It never was designed that mortals should thus disfigure themselves no, it never was. Scowls are the result of habit; we first yield to irritable emotion, and then let these wrong feelings settle into a chronic state. It is well to bear in mind that the emotions of the heart are photographed on the countenance. They will as certainly leave their peculiar impressions on the countenance as a potter's wheel leaves its impression on his vessels. Wtatt is mare beautiful than a fair

countenanco? The features may be a little irregular; but if they wear smiles and good cheer, they will? istoon lose their plain appaaranqf and "become attractive. . f :m . I feel so bad a&d siclr,w niany a one says, aI can't help-soowlhig" We cannot ag$e trifcV youf you can help it; for if the minister chances to call, your scowls will vanish like the dew before the morning sun. Custom tells us that we must wear srailestwben we have visitors; and if, we osiyne them tpleasdsitgfs, let d keep j&em on to lipase ojf frids.-U.fi.on. , w Extte for the Evangelist IjMi'etMeiisIt ttexnade a tour to Texas tbx the purpose of saving some of the desperate denizens of the Lone Star State. He opened his first meeting in what is known in the State as a "tough town. " About thirty hardlooking male citizens comprised the audience. After the good man had discoursed a little and sung several revival hymns he requested that a collection be taken up to carry 1dm further into the State. A tall and fierce-looking Texan, armed to the nape of the neck, passed his sombrero around, with Ijhe significant remark-: ? "Guv liberally, boysj you'te seen the show, and we ain't the men to beat any snowman. 1 The result was that every man contributed something, and when the hat was passed to the evangelist he examined the contents and then remarked : "I find in this hat $4.15 and two overcoat buttons." Holding the supposed buttons in full view, "I will n A shout and considerable -laughter cut off the evangelist's remark, and the tall man said : "Mister preacher-man, you're clean off on overcoat buttons. Them ain't no buttons; them are chips, good for 50 cents' worth of licker in any ginmill this side of the Bio Grande. They'll also git you cooked grub, stranger, if yer appetite needs it," The explanation was satisfactory and the meeting closed. Was king ton Hatchet The Chernbs. Ton did not pay very close attention to the sermon, I fear, this morning." "Oh, yes, I did, mamma. 99 . "Well, what did the minister say2w "He said that the picnio would start at 10 o'clock Thursday morning and oh! ma, can I go? New Orleans Times-Democrat. "Pa, what is it yo i've got ? "That is a peach basket, my daughter." M Ain't it cunning? Will you gpe it to me when you get through with it? "What do you want to do with it, my dear V9 "I want to use it for a thimble-case for my little doll. "New York Graphic. Mamma "Johnny, what is the baby up to?" Johnny "He's up to the jelly shelf." Philadelphia Call. "Oh, ma!w exclaimed a little girl, running breathlessly into the house from the garden ; "you know my beans that I planted, don't you? "Yes, deari "Well, there's peas on 'em.w Som erviUe Journal A Curious Discovery. Prof. Bitchel, of Bridgeport, Conn., believes that he has, through some novel experiments with the common household moth, discovered the method employed by the ancients to produce their indelible and brilliant colors. Prof. Bitchel claims that the worm which hatches from the egg of the miller produces an excrement the exact color and shade of the material it has eaten. Bed flannel given to some worms on trial produced a sldny substance of the exact hue of the. flannel; gray hair eaten by the worms produced a gray color, etc A very small quantity of this excrement colored a large quantity of white lead with which it was mixed. A test for the indelibility of the coloring matter was made by exposing a plate of it to the rain and weather for two months. According to Prof. Bitchel's report, this exposure did not fade or change the color. Couldn't Stand Familiarity. Mr. Hacklin went into an unhealthful neighborhood and started a newspaper. Several months afterward he was seen in the vicinity of his old residence. "Hello," said a friend ; "back so soon ? "Yes; I got restless. "Didn't like theneighborhcod?w "Not af tec the people became too familiar. I had not been there long until it became evident that I would not like the place. I did not mind them shooting at me very time I went out of the office, and I even tolerated their blazing away at me whenever I'd stick my head out of the window; but when they fell into the habit of climbing on the house-top and shooting down the chimney, why I became disgusted at sucix familiarity. Arkansav) Traveler. ! There are said to be 36 varieties of oak in the United States, 34 of pine, 9 of fir, 5 of spruce, 4 of hemlock, 12 of ash, 3 of hickory, 18 of willow, 3 of cherryl 9 of poplar, 4 of maple, 2 of persimmon, and 3 of cedar. The New York Museum of Natural History is to have a complete collection of the native woods of our entire country. The logs are being prepared for that purpose. They will be for the most part five feet long, a section of half the thickness of the logs at or e end being removed. In this way both the longitudinal and transverse gxainings are shown. There is also a diagonal cut on the section, which displays the graining also. The remainder cf the log remains in its naural condition, with the bark attached. i , ii" - i " Dr Nachtigal has described some curious trees of the region about Lake Chad in Africa. The butter tree bears a peculiar nut whose oil is much used as a substitute for butter; a leguminous tree Parkia biglobosa produces seeds from which a meal is made which is an excellent food; while the wood-tree has a fruit which bursts like the pods of cotton and reveals a soft and lustrous mass of fibers, which may be used for a variety of purposes, such as stuffing cushiews and mattresses.

A TOLCH LNG INCIDENT,

Young Girl's Dementia How It Wm Occasioned Some New and StartThe St. Louis express, on the New York Central fioad, waf row4ed one evening recently, when at one of the way stations, an elderly gentleman, accompanied by a young lady, entered the cars and finally secured a seat. As the conductor approached the pair, the young. lady arose, and in a pleading voice said: piea, $ir, dofftLfbt hii carry me to the asylum- I-tn not crazy; IanVa little tired, but not mad. ohino, indeed. Won't you please hare papa take me back home?" riue conductor, accustomed though he was to all phases of humanity, looked ith astonishment at pair, as did the -other passengers In their vicinity. A few words from the father, however, sufficed, anil the conductor passed on while the young Jady turned her face to the window. The wnter chanced to be seated $ust behind' the old gentleman, and. could not forego the desire to speak to him. With a sad face and a trembling voice the father said: "My daughter has been attending the seminary in a distant town and was succeeding remarkably. Her natural qualities, together with a great ambition, placed her in the front ranks of the school, but she studied too closely, was not careful of her health, aud her poor brain has been turned. 1 am taking her to a private asylum vbere we hope she will soon be better," At the next station the old man and his daughter left the cars, but the incident, so suggestiveof Shakspeare's Ophelia, awakened strange thoughts in tte mind or the writer. It is an absolute fact tliat while the population of America increased 30 per oent. during the decade between 1870 and 1880 the insanity increase was over one humlred and thir-ty-five per cent for the same period. Travelers by rail, by boat, or in carriages in any part of the land see large and elaborate buildings, and inquire what they are. Insane asylums! Who builds them? Each State; every county; hundreds of private individuals, and in oil oases their capacity is taxed to the utmost. Why? Because men, in business and the professions, women, at home or in society, and children fit school overtax their mental and nervous forces by work, worry and care. This brings about nervous disorders, irdigestion and eventually mania. It is not always trouble with the head that causes insanity, it lar oftener arises from evUs in other parts of the body. The nervous system determines the status of the brain. Any one who has periodic headaches; occasional dizziness; a dimness of vision; a ringing in the ears; a feverish head; frequent nausea or a sinking at the pit of the stomach, should take warning at once. The stomach and head are in direct sympathy, and if one be impaired the other can never be in order. Acute dyspepsia causes more insane suicides than any other known agency, and the man, woman or child whose stomach is deranged is not and cannot be safe from the coming on at any moment of mania in some one of its many terrible forms. The value of moderation and the imperative necessity of care in keeping the stomach right must therefore be clear to all. The least appearance of indigestion or mal assimilation of food should be watched as care fully as the first approach of an Invading army. Many means have been advocated for meeting such attacks, but all have heretofore been more or Jess defective. There can be little doubt, however, that for the purpose of regulating the stomach, toning it up to proper action, keeping its nerves in a normal condition, and purifying the blood, Warner's Tippecanoe The Best, excels all ancient or recent discoveries. It is absolutely pure and vegetable; it is certain to add vigor to adults, while it cannot by any possibility Injure even a child. The fact that it was used in the days of the famoiis Harrison famUy is proof positive of its merit, as it has so thoroughly withstood the test of time. As a tonic and reviviner it is simply wonderful. It has relieved the agony of the stomach in thousands of cases; soothed the tired nerves; produced peaceful sleep, and averted trie coming on of a mania more to be dreaded than death itself.

DR. JOHN BOLL'S

The British I JoteL The ensuing autumn will probably be the finest season ever known for the Eroprietors of British hotels. Let us ope that the landlords will do something to deserv e this extraordinary bit of good fortune, and abolish some of their customary extortionate charges. The fine of sixpence for every one who has an ordinary "tub" in his bed-room is a disgraceful imposition, and ought to be at once discontinued. Since Albert Smith wrote, many years ago, his "English Hotel Nuisance, attendance has been charged inhe bill. This means that yfa hare to pay double for attendance which should cost nothing. The old system, after all, was the best. You tipped the servants for services rendered, and they were content Now, you tip the landlord and the servants; neither is satisfied, and you seldom get proper attention. In addition to this, the commissariat of most hotels throughout Great Britain wants improving, and their tariff is in need of revision. London World. All for 50 Cents, Mr. E. O. Walker, Editor "Track and Road," The Spirit of the Times, New York, after an exhaustive interview with all leading horsemen, sfcablemea, sportsmen, drivers, and breeders of horses of the country, states that St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain cure, will do all that is claimed for it in the cure of aches, pains,, and suffering in man and beast. To Cook and to Sew. A lady writer in the Rural New Yorker says: WA mother who allows her boys to grow up ignorant of wholesome cookery and the fine art of sewing, fails in her duty. Henry Ward Beecher's mother taught him at an early age to sew ; and for lads full of activity, who cannot be kept quiet, sewing is an excellent pastime or discipline. If boys sewed more and romped less, and girls sewed less and romped more, the gain would be mutual. Then, too, if every member of the family knows how to prepare a meal the relief to the mother or wife is almost immeasurable." Another life Saved. About two years agro, a prominent citizen of Chicago was told by his physicians that he must die. They said his system was so debilitated that there was nothing left to build on. He made up his mind to try a "new departure." He got gome of Dr. Pierce's 'Golden Medical Discovery" and took it -according to directions. He began to improve at once. He kept up the treatment for some months, and is toduy a well man. He says the "Discovery" saved his life. What Is the most unfortunate vegetable they could have on board a ship? A leek Horsford's Add Phosphate FOB WAKEFULNESS, Dr. Wm. Clothier, Buffalo, N. TM says: "1 prescribed it for a Cadholic priest, who was a bard 6tudent, for wakefulness, extreme nervousness, etc. He reports great benefit. Grnis look upou the engagement ring as a very promising affair. Philadelphia CirouK cle-Herald. . I recommetto to those suffering with HayFever, Ely's Cream Balm I havef tried nearly all Use remedies and give Uis aUeclded pref

erence. It gave me lmmeaiatef relief. C. TStxphsns, Hardware Merchant ithacaN. Y.

m m m m

snutn sionicsyrnp

FOR THE CURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILIS and FEVER, AND ILL MALARIAL DISEASES The proprietor of this celebrated medicine justly olaims for it a superiority over all remedies ever offered to the public for the SAFE, CERTAIN, SPEEDY and PER If AN ENT cure of Ague and Fever, or Chilli and Fever, whether of short or long standing. He xefen to the entire Western and Southern country to hear hi m testimony to the truth of the assertion that in no oase whatever will it foil to onre if the directions are utriotly followed and carried out. In a great many cases a alngie dose has been sufficient for a onre, and whole families have been onred by a single bottle, with aperfeot restoration of the general health. It is, however, prudent, and in every ease more certain to oure if its use is continued in smaller doses for a week or two after the disease has been oheoked, more especially in difficult and long-standing oases. Usually this medioine will not require any aid to keep the bowels in good order. Should the patient, however, require a cathartio medioine, after having taken three or four doses of the Tonic, & single dose of BULI.'8 VEGETABLE FAMILY PILLS will bo sufficient BULL13 SAEBAPAEELLA is the old and reliable remedy for impurities of the blood and Sorofulous affeotiona the Xing of Blood Purifiers. DE. JOHN BULL'S VEGETABLE W0BJE DESTB0YER in prepared in the form of oandy drops, attractive to the sight and pleasant to the taste. DR. J OX XT 8XTXZ.B i SMITH'S TONIC SYRUP, BULL'S SARSAPARILLA, BULL'S WORN DESTROYER, The Popular Remedies of the Day rrfncliJrt Office, 8Si Main St., LOUISVILLE, KY. THE HARLEM RAILROAD. Valuable Suggestion of Interest to Men Employed on All Railroads Bead It, if You Would Bo Benefited Conductors' Room, Harijem Depot, New York, February, 1884. J Dear Sir-T take pleasure in eaying- a good word for DR. KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY. I have used it for two years for Dyspepsia and derangement of the Livsr, and can say with emphasis that it always affords prompt and complete relief. FAVORITE REB05DY is pleasant to the taste, thorough in its effects, ne per producing the slightest disagreeable or sickening sensation. Yours tnuy, B.C. TROWBRIDGE. Bat Mr. Trowbridge Is not arffae in his praise cf Dr. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY, Favorite Remedy is a positive cure for Malaria as well as Indigestion. Read the following from R. A. Campbell, foreman of tho sorting room in the Montgomery Paper Mil: Montgomery, Orange Co., N. Y March 4, 1 384. Dr. Kennody, Rondout, N, T. : Dear Sfa I have used for some time your valuable medicine. FAVORITE REMEDY, for Malaria, and it lias proved an effectual cure. After having tried a tfreat many other ta idirines tor a disorder of this kind without avail, f find DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY affords complete satisfaction, and I do -heartily recommend it for all who suffer as I did. R. A. CAMPBELL. DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY is a positive cure for Malaria, Kidney and liver Diseases, and for all those ills peculiar to women. Matawav, N. J March 3, 1S81. Dr. Kennedy, M. D.f Rondout, N. Y.: Dear Sir I have used your valuable medicine, FAVORITE REMEDY, in my family for liver difficulties, and find it an excellent preparation, worthy of the reconim!nd&tion it bears. MRS. MARGARET HAYES.

Fain If supposed to be the lot of us poor mortals, as inevitable as death, and liable at any time to come upon us. Therefore it is important that remedial agents should be At hand to be used in an emergency, when w are made to feel the excruciating agonies of pain, or the depreosit g influence of disease. m mm Such a remedial agent xiftte in that old Reliabla Family Remedy, PERRY DAVIS;' Pain-mHer It was the first and is the only permanent Pain Believer. ITS MERITS ABE UNSUBPASSED. There is nothing to equal It. In a few moments it cures Colic, Cramps, Spasms, Heartburn, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Flax, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache. Itia found to CURE CHOLERA When all other Remedies fail. WHEN USED ECTERNAIXY, AS A LINIMENT, nothing gives Qvicker ease in Burns, Cuts, HrulMes, Sprains, Stincs flrom Insects, and KcaM. ItremoTSs the fire, and the wound heals like ordinary sores. Those suffering; with Rheumatism. Gout, or Nuuralgia, if not a posit ye cure, they find the PAIN-KILLER gives them relief when no other remedy will. In sections of the country where FEVER AND AGUE Prevails there is no remedy held in greater " esteem.. Persona traveling should keep it by them SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.

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Ctom pomaded from the well known Cuntfres Hops, Malt Bactra, Handralta. Dandelion, grsaparilla. Caa cars Bamula, etc.. combined with an agreeable Aromaao Elixir, THEY COSE BYSPEPSIA k IMGE3TM, JUt vfoa the liver and Kidaejre, AND BaatriiATB this bowels, They cure Rheumatism, and all Urinary trouble. They Invigorate, nooriah, strengthen and ulet the Nervous System, An a Tonlo they have no Equal. Take none but Hope and Xalft attterc FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS.

Hops and Malt Bitters Co. DETROIT, MICH.

I

JONES I ' OF I BsHairrad

5 TON WAGON SCALES, Iron ITn, 8m1 Btariaf, Bna Tr ftui m4 Bwatita.

and

JOltM fa yr ttofmlfM-for fre

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Advertising Cheats II) , "It hair become bo common to tngiifan article in an elegant, interesting etyirf. "Then run in into some advertisement that we avoid all such, . "And Dimply call attention to the merits of Hop Bitters in as plain, honest term a possible, "To induce people "To give them one frtoZ, which so prove their value that they will never use anything else." mTrb Rkh&dy co favorably noticed in all the papers, BeliffiouB and aocular, is "Having a lara sale, and Is supplanting aQ other medicines. -There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bitters have Shown great shrewdness and ability "in compounding a medicine whose virtues are so palpahle to every one's obtervattop."

"No!

Did She Die?

away all the time for years, "The doctors doing her no good;9 "And at last was cured by tins Hop Bitten the papers say so much aboal" "Indeed! Indeed!" " How thankful we should be for thai medicine. A Daughter's Misery. "Eleven year our daughter suffered on bed of misery, "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, "Under the care of the best physicians, "Who gave her disease various uamee, "But no relief, - ' "And now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Hop Bitters, that we had shunned for years before using it. n ThbP abbxts. Father is Getting Well "My daughters say: "How much better father is since housed Hop Bitters. "He is getting well after his long suffering from a disease declared inevitable." "And we- are so glad that he used your Bitters." A Lady of Utica, N. Y. 49None genuine without a bunch of green

iiops on tne wiute taoei. nun autnevue, povonouft stuff with "Hop" or "Hope" in their name

GADN

Health andHappiness DO AS OTHEES CCnAf J- SAVE DOSE.

Are your Kidneys disordered?

Kidney Woirt brought xne from my ctv, as it were, after X hiwtbeen given up by 13 beef doctors in

Are vour nerves weak?

"'Kidney- Woji cured me from nerrocs weafcnemi

arc. arter l was not expected to lire," Mr U. JLB. Goodwin, kL Christian Monitor t CtoraUod, O.

Have voa Bri&htfs Disease?!

"Kidney wort cared me when WT WMr wu las like chalk and then like bloodX

Suffering from Diabetes ?

"KJ dney-Wort is the most succccKful reiandr I ban

ivrcr useo. tnes aimosc iranieawte reitec."

Vr. Phillip C. Ballon, Mo&ktoa, Vt

Have vou Liver Complaiiit?!

luancv-wori; curea mo or Lmr .

after I Draved to die.'

Henry Ward, late Col 6a Bit. Guard, H. T.

Is your Back lame and aching? i

-Kidney-wort;, a bottle) curea warn wtwa t wao

lamo I bad to vol! out of bed. a M. TaIlaiagltDwmakea,Wla

Have you Kidney Disease?

"IuducY-wcrij made me sound fnllrer a

after years of unsaooceBful doctoring;

'luaucy-wcri; maae me sound In liver and kidneye bcr Tears of unsooocasful doctorlmr. its worth!

aio a box."aftm'l Hodge, WilUamstowa. wa Va.

Are you Constipated?

'Kidney-Wort causes eosr evacuation and cured

me after IS ynra use of other Kedfctota"

Aouon Falrcouc Bt. Albans,

Have you Malaria? "Kidney-Wort has done better than any

rem ear I nan aver naed in my waetieeJ

' Dr. Clark, aeaiaHsro, Ti i

Are vou Bilious P

"KidneT-Worthas don me mors scosd than any I

s1i. Tunuiln V taM avac ialMM M

-T m I J .i 1 vmimium

jua Y. uauoway aw ts vssgsav

Are you tormented with Piles?

"Kidney-Wort oerwianrnly ewrsd me of Hauling pile. Dr. w. C. Kline recommended It t me, Qeu g. Htrat Cashier M. Baa, Mym ! Ussy Pa.

LAre vou Rheumatism racked?

"fudney-woiT curea me, arter i was arrai up w

die by phyatcifins and Z-had suffered: tnlrty years.' ElbridJlaloolzD.WssttiUai Ladies, are vou suffering?

"Kldney-We-t cured me of peculiar trouhtoe of

several veera standing. Manr friends uae and Praia

Ilk'9 MxaJLUmoresni. Isf Motes, Vt j

- - i

If you would Banish Disease

i ana gam ueaiw, rase

Thb Blood Clkanscii.

DR. SMITH'S 6ERMAN WORM REMEDY. Never failing-. Pleasant and tate. J. a XING OO Chicago, wholesale agents. gRnmnr kevtspapecs Bnpplied with partly-printed sheets in the most satftv fat-tor:, ni&nnor. Send for samples and prices to THB NEWSPAPER DSIQN. Nctaattd KB fottkta Street. Chicago. The Buykhs Guidk is issued Sept and March, each year: 224 pages, 8x11 inches, with over 3,300 ilhntrsilkxks a whole pi cttra gallery. Gives wholesale prices direct to eomtumen on all goods for personal or fkadlj rise. Tells bow to f g""N1 and gives exact if cost of everything you 11 II use drink, eat, wear, or V v- J hate fun with. These invaluable books contain information gleaned from the markets of the world. We will mail a copy Free to any address) ttpon receipt of the postage 8 cents. Let us hear from you. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD A CO. ear A aa Cat ui.

CThe 01 Sett Heeicfo In tfcs WerM is 9 protaMy Dr Isaae Thompson's 101 elebrafod Eyo IVatoDQ

Thin article Is a carefully prepared physician's

onstant

I

rections &r fallowed It win noTor raft, we narlcn

srrlDtion. and. has bean In coi

century, ard notwithstanding the many other Dre

Stions that hare baan inbwinwf fnfn ih MMi

sale of this artiole Is constanUj increasjnsT. 11 tbelC

use for nearly a

other prepar

larlv invito tTria attAntion nf nhmiuM 4n M wrf

John X. TIowjsits, Sena a Cp Tiov. N. T

E

Consumption Can B CufM.

DR. WM.

FOR TEDS

LUNGS

nsumption can Be t a Alls

. BALSAM

PimunoBla, Infle

Curen Contmraption Colds

enaav vroninial inmoulaes, &ess. Astluna. Crouo. Who

all Dtseaseftof the BriwthtnaxOrnaa X and heata tite Membrane ofttn Cunars,!

and poisoned by the disease abd ptwesHa the) nJffnt swecits and tihtneas smjtoss the chst wlUch accompany it. Consamptfoa Ss &ot an

incuraniemaiaay MAJuyg ba em Am wiuei

out even tnousrn proiesakMMU aia OUrs

fSl

MaBnHeMHsnpva

ClltS WSCK all fitt vain.

Best Oong-hfiy run. TtSfto4

BMUHttiuma ia&yariiaims.

WHKN WRIf.TNO TO AD

1. 4P,5W SSf W