Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 26 September 1893 — Page 3

Miss Clark.

fiALT-RHECMiFLEgCKACKro OPEN Mm Lottie Clark, River FdUs Pierce CowUV, WUcontfn write: -It fives pleasure to eiprea my faith In the vlrtueW Dr. Pieroe'e Golden Mextical IMaoovery. Having1 iufferea for three years from salt-rheum, and after bavin been unsuccessfully treated by a Rood physician, I

the Discovery. The humor was in my hands. I was obliged to keep a covering on them for ngaQtbS at $ time, changing: the covering; morning" and night. The stinging, burning and Ucning: sensation would be so intense that at times it seemed as if 1 would go crazy. When I bent the fingers, the flesh would crack open nd bleed. It is

impossible for me to describe the intense pain and suffering which I endured night and day. After taking six bottles of the l Discovery I was entirely cured. , , I cannot praise Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery enough." Sold by Dealers. DR. KILMER'S SWP-ROOT CURED ME And Made Life More Enjoyable. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Yl Gentlemen: "It affords me pleasure to give you a recommendation for Dr. Kilmer's SWAJSP-IHHkT, of which I have taken 3

small bottles. It has nearly removed the effect of the Rheumatism of about 7 years standing, also a severe weakness of my back and kidneys of about 1 0 years' standing and has helped a severe

attack of Inflamma

tion of the bladder,

which I am sure SWAMP-ROOT

w. R. CHXX30N. will entirely cure me of in a short time. I purchased the medicine of & G. Stone, the Druggist here in Butler, Ind." March, 7, TO. W. R. Chilson. RHEUMATISM ! RHEUMATISM ! Swamp-Root Cures. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blnghamton, N. Y. "For the past twenty years I had been troubled with RheumatUir and doctored a great deal without realizing rny benefit. Two rears airo mv attention was called to Dr.

Kilmer's SWAMPROOT, which was highly recommended to me. I thouorht I

would try a bottle K

and I used fourteen bottles. It has done me more good than all the Doctors and aU the other medicines I had ever taken in the past twenty years. The past year has been one of comfort in place of suffering. A great many are using our S w A M P -LOOT in Van Wert. Yours respectfully, Feb. 19th,

ills

The Great Need of Doubting Christians.

Lli

k jam.

mi

Mas. Calviw Farlet, Van WertFOhio.

SUAUP-ROOT, tfaa Great Blood Gedicine

V M ntrofffffata, Me. p $1.00 81m. U "Iavailda Guide t Health" art I Coamltatloa Free Br. Kilmer & Co., Rngh&mton. !C. T.

U&O

Anointment Cures Piles.

Trial Free. At Druggists 50c.

Looking Better

feeling better better in everyway. There's more consolation in that than well people stop to ponder. To get back flesh and spirits is everything.

Scott's Emulsion of pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites is prescribed by leading physicians everywhere for ailments that are causing rapid loss of flesh and vital strength. Scott's Emulsion will do more than to stop a lingering Cough it fortifies the system AGAUSi coughs and colds. Prepared by Scott k Bowae, T. V. AH drnggista.

El)'s Cream Balm wiiiij cube: CATARRH Price SO Cents.

Apply Balm into each nostril

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oiMHeJ

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" For eighteen inontss I had ar eating sore on my tongue. I was treated bv beat local nhvsirinnn

ft 1 1. A . . J n

uuiiucu ii w re net ; inej sore grauuaiiv grew worse. I finally took S. S. S., and vas entirely cured after using a few bottles."

n. jbcliEuo&e, wenoerson, rex. Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis

eases mailed free. la Swift Speotfic Co., Atlanta, Go.

The Conflict Between Science and the Seeming Discrepancies of the Scriptures Dr, Tolmage's Sermon. In his sermon at the Brooklyn Tabernacle, Sunday forenoon, the Rev. Dr. DeWitt Talmage preached to a vast audience on the subject of wRe-enforcement," the text beinLuke xvii, 5. "Lord, increase our faith." I went to the Holy Land for the one purpose of having my faith strengthened and that was the result which came of it. In all our journeying, in all our reading, in all our associations, in all our plans, augmentation, rather than the depletion of our faith, should be our chief desire. It is easy enough to have our faith destroyed. I can give you a recipe for its obliteration. Read infidel books, have long and frequent conversations with skeptics, attend the lectures of those antagonistic to religion, give full swing to some bad habit and your faith will be so completely gone that you will laugh at the idea that you ever had any. If vou want to ruin vour faith vou can do it more easily than you can do anything else. But my wish, and the wish of most of you, is the prayer expressed by the disciples to Jesus Christ in the words of my text, ''Lord, increase our faith." The firbt mode of accomplishing this is to study the bible itself. I do not believe there is an infidel now alive who has read the bible through. But as so important a document needs to be read at least twice

through in order that it may be thoroughly understood, and read in course, I now offer $100 reward to any infidel who has read the bible through twice and read it in course.

But I cannot take such a man's own word for it, for there is no foundation for integrity except the bible, and the man who rejects the source of truth, how can I accept bis truthfulness? So I must have another witness in the case before I give the reward. I. must have the testimony of some one who has seen him read it through twice. Infidels fish in this bible for incoherencies and contradictions and absurdities, and if you find their bible you will see interlineations in the book of Jonah and some of the chapters of that unfortunate prophet nearly worn out by much use and some parts of II Samuel or I Kings you will find dim with fingermarks, but the pages which contain the ten commandments, and the psalms of David, and the sermon on the mount, and the book of John, the evangelist, will not have a single lead pencil stroke on the margin nor any fingermarks showing frequent perusal. But suppose now all the best spirits of all ages were assembled to decide the fate of the Bible, the last will and testament of our Heavenly Pathen and those memoirs of our Lord Jesus, what would be the verdict? Shall they burn, or shall they live? The unanimous verdict of all is, 'iet them live, though all else 1x1."' Then put together on the other hand all the debauchees and profligates and assassins of the ages and their unanimous verdict concerning the Bible would be, i 'Let it burn." Mind you, I do not sav that all infidels are immoral, but I do say that all the scapegraces and scoundrels of the universe agree with them about the Bible. Let me vote with those who believe in the holy scripture. Men believe other things with half the evidence required to believe the Bible. The distinguished Abner Kneeland rejected the scriptures and then put all his money into an enterprise for the recovery of that hocus pocus, "Capt. Kidd's treasures, " Kneeland's faith for so doing being founded on a mans statement that he could tell where those treasures were buried from the looks of a glass of water dipped from the Hudson river. The internal evidence of the authenticity of the scriptures is so exact and so vivid that no man honest and sane can thoroughly and continuously and prayerfully read them without entering their discipleship. Again our belief is reinforced by archaeological exploration. We must confess that good men at one time were afraid of the geologist's hammer and chemist s crucible and archaealogist's investigation, but now intelligent Christians are receiving aud expecting nothing but confirmation from all such sources. What supports the Palestine exploration society? Contributions from the churches and Christian benefactors. I saw the marks of the shovels of that exploring society amid the ruins of Jericho and all up and down from the Dead Sea to Csesarea'Philippi. ;Digaway," says thechurch of God, "and the deeper you dig the better I like it." The discovered monuments of Egypt have chiseled on them the story of the sufferings of the Israelites in Egyptian bondage, as we find it in the Bible; there, in imperishable stone, representations of the slave, of the whips and the taskmasters who compelled the making of bricks without straw. Exhumed Nineveh and Babylon, with their dusty lips, declare the Bible true. Napoleon's soldiers in the Egyptian campaign pried up a stone, which you may find in the British museum, a stone, as I remember it, presenting perhaps two feet of lettered surface. It contains words in three languages. That stone was the key

that unlocked the meaning of all the hieroglyphics of tombs and obelisk and tells us over and over again the same events which Moses recorded. The sulphurous graves of Sodom and Gomorrah have been identified. The remains of the tower of Babel have been found. Assyrian documents lifted from the saiid and Behistum inscription, hundreds of feet high on the rock, echo and re-echo the truth of bible history. The signs of the time indicate that almost every fact of the bible from "licT to lid will find its corroboration in ancient city disentombed, or ancient wall cleared from the dust of ages, or ancient document unrolled by archgeologist. Why is it that the bible, made up of the writing of at least thirty authors, has kept together for a long line of centuries when the natural tendency would have been to fly apart like loose sheets of paper when a gust of wind blows upon them? It is because God stuck them together and keeps them together. But for that Joshua would have wandered off in one direction, and Paul into another, and Ezekiel into another, and Luke into another, and Habakuk into another, and the thirty nine authors into thirty-nine directions. Put the writings of Shakspeare and Tennyson and Longfellow, or any part of the together? How long would they stay together? No book bindery could keep them together. But the cannon of scriptures is loaded now with the same ammunition writh which prophet and apostle loaded it. Bring me all the Bibles of the earth into one pile and blindfold me so that I can not tell the difference between day and night, and put into my hand any one of all that Alpine mountain of sacred books, and put my fingers on the last page of Genesis, and let me know it, and I can tell you what is on the next page namelv, the first chapter of

Exodus, or while thus blindfolded, put my finger on the last chapter of Matthew, and let me know it, and I will tell you what is on the next page namely, the first chapter of Mark. In the pile of 500,000,000 Bibles there will be no exception. But I come to the height of my subject when I say the way to reinforce our faith is to pray for it. So the disciples in my text got their abounding faith. 4tLord, increase our faith," Some one suggests, ''Do you really think that prayer amounts to anything?" I might as well ask you is there a line of telegraph poles from New York to Washington? Is there a line of telegraph wires from Manchester to London, from Cologne to Berlin? All people who have sent and received messages on these lines know of their existence. So there are millions of souls who have been in constant communication with the capital of the universe, with the throne of the Almighty, with the great God himself, for years and years and years. There has not been a day when supplications did not flash up and blessings did not flash down. Will some ignoramus who has never received a telegram or sent one come and tell us that there is no such thing as telegraphic communication? Will some who has never offered a prayer that was heard and answered come and tell us that there is nothing in prayer? It may not occur as we expect it. but as sure as an honest prayer goes up a merciful answer will come down. Oh, put it in every prayer you ever make between vour next breath to and your last gasp, ''Lord, increase our faith" faith in Christ as our personal ransom from present grief and eternal catastrophe: faith iu the omnipotent Holy Ghost; faith in the Bible, the truest voPume ever dictated or written or printed or read; faith in adverse providences, harmonized for our best welfare; faith in a judgment day that will set all things right which have for ages been wrong. Oilmeal For Pigi. This is what Waldo F. Brown, of Ohio, says on the subject: Another valuable use for oilmeal is in raising pigs. Two years ago an old farmer asked me if voung pigs could be weaned and kept thrifty without milk and 1 told him I thought slop could be made with bran and oilmeal that would be both palatable and nutritious. Last spring I had nineteen pigs and but little milk, and all we had was needed in the family and to raise a calf, so I made slop for the pigs writh bran and oilmeal and never grew a more thrifty lot and they sold at 145 days old at top prices for big pork. If any farmer will try the experiment of stirring one pound of old-process oilmeal into a tenquart pail of boiling water and see how near it comes to making a mush then add this to ten gallons of slop made from bran and see what a good body it gives it, he will begin to get an fdea of the value of oilmeal as a pig food. Bran is an excellent food for any growing animal, but alone it does not make good slop, particularly the coarse bran made by the roller mills; the oilmeal added makes it far more palatable and the pigs will eat more of it.

Economically Inclined. New York Weekly. Wife Huh! Been to see the ballet, eh? I'd just like to know why you went there? Husband Merely to encourage the idea of simple and inexpensive dressing, my dear. Wife (severely) Is this the fish you caught? Husband Y-es, mT dear. Wife (shrewdly) Were you fishing in salt water or fresh water? Husband I don't know, m' dear. Didn't taste it.

Highest of all in Leavening Power. -Latest U. S. Gov't Report.

. - w-i 4

T

ABtSOuutmr pure

poigustv

IN MKUORIAM.

Tragic

Death of "Bingo" While in the Line of Duty.

M. V, " argli. in Chicago Intfr Oooai.. "Yes." said the big man with the gun case to the little man in spectacles. kTm off for a try at the birds." The small man lifted his feet out of the way of the gun case and made room in the seat beside him. "Got my dog in the baggage car,' continued the bitf man. "He's a

dandy. Best dog I ever shot over. , unless 'twas your old Bingo. Hy the wav. vou don't so out anv more I

Table Manners, Texas Sittings. Mr. Kastside I hoar vou had the

j bad luck to upset your plate of soup

over a lady's silk dress at the dinner yesterday. Mr. Westside Yes. it was pretty hard luck for me. You know it is contrary to etiquette to ask for a second plate of soup.

A Peculiar Uabbit. Texas Siftinps. Jim Nimrod, who is very shortsighted, went out hunting, and mistaking his dog for a rabbit, peppered

the unfortunate brute. The dog

yourself. What's the reason. Bing j howled dismally, but Jim turned to a

getting old and lazy? friend who was with him and said The small man opened his penknife j complacently: and . thoughtfully scratched at a j "In all my hunting experience I

splash of mud on his trouser leg. "No, I don't keep any dog now. Old Bing is dead?" "Dead, is he? Well, well he was getting along in years. A general breaking down, I suppose." There was a pause and the little man scratched away industriously. ''No. it wasn't that. I'll tell you about it." said he suddenly. "You see, the last time I had him out we were on Smith's farm. You know the place, just over the county line. You remember that big corn-

neia wnere tno winows grow over

the creek and the railroad cuts

through one corner?

i n

never octore like that."

heard a rabbit howl

Out of Sight. ! Now York Weekly. Miss Gramercy Did Evelyn bring j her new bathing suit home from Bar

Harbor? Miss Intown No. It shrunk so every time she wore it that when the maid went to get it to pack it wasn't there.

A Kennedy or General I tillty. It is among; tho follies of which the manuulai'turers or inr:.y proprietary remedies are

i truilty. to term their medicines ''panaceas," or . to I'lulm for them the quality of panaceas-

WfU wo warn ! nore is no such thin? as a "panacea," which V til, Wt Wt it j niiuris n. rmiriv mlnntPil to ;l11 dinpiiss. This

down there, and Bing, being thirsty, j -absurdity has never le-n perpetrated by the rin oenvn tho tnfl in imVmcr iho 'proprietors of Hostciter's Stomach Bitter. ian across tne Tiac u, in among me i ,4m thy do fiaim. and with justice, that it is willows, to get to the water. I : a remedy of peneral utility, and this because Ihnno-ht there micrht he huvl thm ! it restores that regular and viporous condition inougllt mere migni De onus tneie. . of lhe Bt0mHch, liver and bowels which con and I was too far behind for a shot. ! ducc to the recovery of perioral health. Thus T en lied him Yvoz Tnut thon -i ' it fortifies the system against malaria by Inso i cauea nun oacu. Just tnen a , rnsiIiRstamma aml raUsinp harmonious ac-

Dira LrOl up oevonu mm. ana J .snouts : tion or tne organs wnicn. as long astney tfo

ed to bim to charge.

' ncht. are the best guaranty against an epi- ! tlrmie m-il-Adv like chills jind fever. It aecom-

'You know 1 don't see very well. plishes a double purpose by stimulating activ

ity oi ine Kiuiicys. since it not oniy prevfrus their disease and decay, but expels from the Wood through them impurities that cause rheumatism, gout and dropsy. Use it with confidence.

but I thought that he wasn't mind

ing, so I shouted again. The ' old fellow hesitated for a moment, then he dropped down, and just then the train came around the curve and and- " The small man's voice faltered a little when he went on. ''You see I thouorht that he was farther away, but he was right on the track, and he had obeyed me at the cost of his life. Somehow I haven't cared much for hunting since then." The small man shut his knife with a snap and looked out of the window, and the biir man exclaimed.

"Ah. children," said a Frank ford schoo, director visiting one of the public schools! "how much 1 likes tor hear you sing that 'Star Speckled JJanner.'"

''Well, well.

!" Then

Binir

bv the

Jove! Poor

bi:r

old

man blow his

nose violently, muttering that that

was the only way to dislodge those cursed cinders, while the little man wiped liis glasses upon a chamoisskin polisher and sighed.

4 '.r .

A Trade Secret, It does not pay to dress well when trying to get orders in the rural districts. It may seem funny, also, that a man without a shave can make more monev than one with a clean face. That is a fact, however. Just as soon as I strike a little town 1 take oif my necktie, throw dust on my shoe shine, doll my derby for a slouch, and fasten my watch chain to my suspender. 1 am always careful to have about two weeks' beard in my chops. By paying strict attention to these details I have managed to work up a pretty good trade, and only last week was made one of the hog judges at a county fair. This is regarded as an especial mark of favor, and was worth a good many dollars to me. Straighten Up. Anybody can cure round shoulders by a very simple system of ex-

ercise. I lie rcnma-siiouluered man should go into the ope;i air three or four times a day. let his hands drop to his sides and then, while inhaling fresh air. raise himself on his toes as high as he can. The filling of the lungs pushes the shoulders back to their normal position, and if the practice is steadily followed for a couple of months, the worst pair of stoop shoulders in time will become as straight us a drill sergeant's.

V s.

Praise is Good.

it

A

and uave mt- pcrfi

Lampson Court. Kansas City, Mo.

For any medicine vou hi-WT about, but to be marie well by its use Is still better. I have for many years suffered with an irrit-ihle itchin ail over my body, and my left ley swelled and leeame so sore I hud to pive ip work. Physicians r ascribed tor me for serjfula, but did not en re me. Hood's arsaparilla gave me in mediate relief, drove all

disease out of my blood cure " W. o, Dunn, 21

Hoods

sv Cures

Hood's Rills i-ure constipation. Try a box.

KNOWLEDGE Brines comfort and improvement and

j tends to personal enjoyment when i rightly uea. The many, who lie betI ter than others and enioy life more, with

j less expenditure, by more promptly

adapting the world's best products to the4 needs of physical being, will attest the value to heultn of the pure liquid

J laxative principles embraced in tha

remedy, feyrup ot i?igs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, tho refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches aud fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acta on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every

pactage, also me name, cyrup iu JMgs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. Every time a man kicks up a newspaper ho reads of some kind of new food for young babies. AVhat has become of the old-fashioned homo-made kind? The principal causes of sick headache, biliousness and cold chills are found in the stomach and liven Cured by lieecham's Pills. It is reported by Bishop Hood that only one colored minister in this State uses tobacco, it i? a pity that more of the white clergy do r,ot eschew it. One Small Bile Bean every night for a week arouse Torpid Livers. 25e per bottle. A seated distress is as properly spoken of as one of long standing. So more old pills for me. Small Bile Beans if you please; There is something to bo said in favor of indolence when a man is too lazy to run in debt. Economical, easy to take, Small Bile Beans During an epidemic of mumps even the dispensary doctor can boast of his "swell" patients. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for

any case or catarrh that cannot ue cureu oy taking Hairs Catarrh Cure.

J

him

3 a

5

TfciiTraJ Mark is on thb

BB ark la on tl

WATERPROOF COAT

EiSSSSf1 th World I A, i IQWfR, BOSTON. MASl

F. J. CHKNKY & CO., Props, Toledo, O. We lhe undersigned, have known F. Pt,AnoT liiK tVin Liul Id itoovu n vwl VwHV hi

perieru.y uunora Die in uji nusiiien auoav uuhb

ana nnunciuuy aoie 10 carry ouu uj vuufcuTii'tis made bv Their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale drupRlstfi.Toldo, O., Waldinp, Kiriimn & aSrvin, Wholesale druggists. Toledo, O. Halt's Catarrh (Hire is taken internally. acting direetlv upon the Mood and mucous surfaces of t tie system. Testimonials sent free. Price 76c. per bottle. Sold bv all druggists. "While tho man who seasons sausage may not be a philosopher, he often has a sage air about him. WANTKD-Fainti rArti.sts and Decorators to send 10 cents in silver for ihc '"Color Ciiiide." correct formulas for all colors, tints and paper hangings- Address, K. W. Hedges, Judianapolis, lud.

I have been troubled with dyspepsia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble J. B. Young, daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. One bottle of August Flower cured me. It was positively worth one hundred dollars to me. J. W. Smith, P. M. and Gen. Merchant, Town send, Ont. 1 have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me. It is the best seller I ever handled C. Rugh, Druggist, Mechanics burg. Pa. A Dangerous Boarder. Texas Sittings. The widow Flapjack got a new boarder the other day. At th? first meal he took he choked and had a terrible time trying to swallow some coffee. "What's the matter, stranger?" she asked kindly. "Nothing, except that coffee went down the wrong way." "Good heavens! It isn't possible that I have secured a boarder with two throats," exclaimed the widow Flapjack, who has been complaining very bitterly of food a man with one throat can destroy. We Can't Help It. There is as much character to be seen in the mouth as the eye. Thin lips indicate a bad temper. Full, thick Hps indicate too great an appreciation of the good things of this world, A mouth that turns up at the corners shows a merry, goodhearted temperament; corners that turn down show a dismal, gloomy and often cruel disposition. A mouth

too large is coarse: one too small betokens lack of character. Commercial Statistics Texas Sittings. A Texas merchant, as a personal favor, took the son of a wealthy gentlemen into his office to learn the business, giving him the cash book to keep. "Does the cash account balance?" asked the merchant at the end of the first day. "O, yes, splendidly. There are even forty or liftv dollars too much." A Delightful Way to Be Entertained, Realizing the fact tnat light literature Is an clmost necessary traveling companion, to those contemplating a ''Summer Outing,'1 or those who are cesimus of visiting some of the many Resorts nit Fishing (Grounds located along the line cf the Wisconsin Central Lines, we take pleasure in advising our friends, that we will send any one. or all of the following valu able and interesting books to any address by mail "Free" on receipt of 12 cents each, la stamps, to cover postage and packing. These books are printed on good paper, well bound, the covers being illuminated in color. The entire list of ten books, will be s;nt prepaid, for fl.'JO in stamps oi otherwise. The amount asked is to cover charges and. cost of packing. 3 "John Halifax. Gentleman. ' By Miss Mulock. 5 -The Last Days of J'ompeii.' By Bulwer Lvtton. -Searlet Letter' Hy Xathnniel Hawthorne. 10 - Tom Brown's School Days."' By Thomas Hughes. 15 "Dora Thorn." By Bertha M. Clay. m"Very Hard Cash.'1 Bv Charles Reade. 21 "Tour of the World in 83 Days." By Jules Verne. 'A Dream of Love." By Emile Zola. 25 "Beyond Pardon." Bv Bertha M. Clay. 37 "A Mad Love' By Bertha M. Clay. Preserve this card, mention the paper cut from, mark the books you wish, enclosing 12 cents for each book, or fJ.L'O for the entire list, and send with youraaddress to .IAS. t POND, . Gen'V Pass, and Ticket Agent, Wis. Cent. Lines Chicago, 111. Mark your envelope "Advertising D'p't."

Harvest

Excursions

To all principal points in the

West, Northwest, South and Southwest. October lO, at vettrate8' Big Four Route Tickets good Twenty Days from date of sale. Be sure your ticket reads vi. BEG FOUR ROUTE For full information call on or address H. M Bronson, A. D. P. Apent Big Four Route, Indianapolis; D. B. Martin, Gen. Pass. Agent, Cincinnati, O.

Nerve Prostration Iyspepsia and other Functional Disorders Oi Daily Life are quickly and permanently CURED By the new and effectual Home Treatment, Originated and perfected by Dr. C. A. Whlsoh (Faculty priie. Medical College of Ohio, 1S79J for ten years Surgeon of the National Surgical Institute. Consultation free aud solicited. ROCHESTER, IND.

au mm ciuiiv ueniftiuc I

HH IUCHL rHmiL i nituiuinc

For Indigestion, BUfatunrM Headache, Conotlpatlon, Bad Complexion. OfienlT Breath, and all disordors of U&O Stomach, Liverand Bowels. Rl PANS TABULES

act ffeutly yet promptly. Perfect diarostlon followB their uao.

May bo obtained by application to nearest dvuegfat.

I

PATENTS.

TRADE-MARKS.

Examination nod Ailelee a to Patoi-ility oi invention St'nd for Inventor's OxiUU t "? v to Urn Patent Patrick (VFavrkll. W.wu ncun. 0. t

PATENTS

THOMAS P. SIMPSON.WashJtegtOB, D, C. No Ttv'K fee until Patent obtain xl. Write for Inveutor'sGulda.

tNUt 3S 93 INOPL&

If

Consamntlvfi and people

who have weak lunsor Asthma, should use P:o's Cure for Consumption. It has cured fhftusnniW. ft has not injured one. U is not bad to take, it is the ben cough syrup. Sol"! everywhare. B5e.