* *nm ' ««A.«AH MM MM PS ?' .**X Twenty-five years i|o I bid a bilious Km, aad later it tuxned Into typheid fever, and tor five ^eeks l lay like MM dtid. hut a* last I pillMamdiwlfvkapiadiiinML I MOD Mie the appearaiaoe of a ring '• sleep nights, and on ac- I sorstehed the net until blood would fan. Finally my husband bonttittibatOiotllood'i ^MMptillujkil h«d not taken now than halt of it before I began to change tor the better I tov® hid tens bsttiss. Now I Am All Wall bat two little qwti on our 1M. I am now sleep and eat welL and work all the time. I tm M years *M tad the mother of eleven children, end think I can do as muoh aa any one ray ago. Hood's^Cures also taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for ~ " *" aa been greatly benefited by L. HALL. Galva, Karnai . • • My aon tea alao tak< ArmpuMBd baa it." ifts/PaxM L. Hood's Mil* act easUy. yet promptly aied* SfliStontly. on the liver and bywgls, ase. . •. '* . :• Lydia^V.^ E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound CURES Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Menstruations, Weak ness of the Stomach, Indigestion^Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility, Kidney Complaints la either sex. Every time it will relieve iackaohe, Fatntness, Extreme Lassitude, "don'tcare" and "want to be left alone " feeling, excitability, irrita bility, nervorum ess, sleeplfwsTtess, flatulency, melancholy, or the "aloes." These are aure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the Uteres, or Womb Troubles. Bvery woman, married or single, should VII ATlll Tf)ft/1 " \k/ nman'a T)a,• w Peril, , con- eveiy woman should know about herself. We send it free to any reader of this paper. Alj MS tb« Ptakhut medicine. Addrm in SMM«IIM7I.TDI* £. nxnu Men. Co.. ton, SUaa. Duty," an illustrated book of 30 pages, ( tainlng important information that ei PIN Ml AM MRU. CO.. ton, ] Uydl» «. nnktaam's Uver Puts, 36 KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet* ter tha&dtiiersand enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly it* down-stairs who sits up on the banjo' with wearisome tip and down, for I su't alsep a of "his plinkety-plinkety-pUnk 1 .Oattofioor jnst below there's a man with a tootlety-tootlety-tootlety-teot 1 .. IHMitb ' " ' " " AM the other one's HUSa^-Ptok5S5tekfnk' Whaag-wsaast ty-plinkety-tootlety-toot 1 And than tbero'1 a quartet of eeakras young HiftttfjiM' "nd anthems again and again; #e%aH UWttteTdo is so woefully queer ffcey 1*>» wood, where there's no one There's a ledy benlde* on the very first Sear, * ~' piano tne scale she runs o'er-- ^ re, me. fa, sol, and la, si. ana do, TDTBEN DOWN, EOMWMEE 4<uaa m m tSsB slow. test, i Tbe janitor, too, has the musical erase. And on the front steps an accordion plays; Oh, I'd more rignt away U I could-wouldat you?-- But my rent is all paid, and so what can I do f --Malcolm Douglas, in Bt. Nicholas. laxative principles pure liquid embraced in the remedy , Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system^ dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liter and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. 8yrup of Figs is for sale by all drag* gists in 60c anufl bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Oo.only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, imd being weU informed, yon will 90S accept any substitute if offered. Tbe Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. Vr '1 KENNEDY'S ' DISCOVERY. HUll KEMESY, OF UXMRY, HISS., 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 except in two cases (both thunder humor). He nas now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, ail within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from die first bottle, and a perfect cure is war- ranted when the right quantity is taken. When tile lungs are affected It causes like by the ducts beim stopped, and always disappears in a weei after taking it Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it wil cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Bat the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one jtablespoonful.in water at bed* time. Sold ail Druggists. B.N. «. Ka IS--OS VHH W Wash! •JIM'S GRATITUDE. • cold, bleak November day; a prairie trail; a horseman in uniform, riding at a gallop. A turn in the road; a bushwhacker bidden in the bushes; a shot, and a fall from the saddle. »«:•' It was Little Jim, our third Ser geant, riding across the country to carry a dispatch. We called him Little Jim because he was small of stature and because everybody liked him. He was only a boy, and one look into his frank face and big blue eyes made you his friend. The bush whacker peered over the log and saw jhls victim lying on the stony road and tbe horse galloping away in [affright and a smile of satisfaction jcame to his face as he rose up and hurried through the woods. War is not always war. Sometimes it is as* sassi nation--murder. Twenty rods beyond the body lying in the road is a humble cabin, ten anted only by a woman and two children. War has forced the husband and father into the ranks At sound of the shot and the clatter of hoofs they rise up from their frugal noonday meal and run down to the gate. A dead man is by no means a rare sitrht to mother and children. Scores of dead have been left on that highway in the last few weeks, and at times tbe cabin has been full of wounded men who groaned and cursed. "It's a Bluenose who's been bash- whacked," whispers tbe mother as she leads the way down the road, and presently the trio are looking down upon the lifeless form of our Little Jim. No, not lifeless. The bullet btruck him in the side and inflicted a severe wound, but even while they gaze at|him he opens his blue eyes and tries to realize his situation. '•Looks jest like Uncle Ban," whispers one of the children. "Let's he good to him:" pleads the other. She would. Assisted A bit by the | children, she got him to the house and had captured a prisoner and a patient at the same time. Her hus band and her neighbors had come home with gunshot wounds, and she had helped to nurse them and send them back to tight tor the cause she believed was right Aside from a surgeon our Little Jim could not have fallen into better hands. She probed for the bullet and found it and if living to-day he wears It on his watehchain. The Eastern volunteers had been holding that road for weeks, and all that afternooa and evening the woman listened for^the clatter of hoofs that she might re port what had occurred and have her patient taken away. Not a horse man passed. There were days and nights when Little Jim was out of bis head and raving of home and mother. Thera were days and nights when his life hung on a thread. He had the care his own mother would him. Many and many called her his mother, her that she had come the old home to nurse him back to life. B? and by the crisis passed, and the soldier knew where tie was and the situation outside. He Knew mora tjje good wonmQ wjould have him. ThaTITttle^ ramTIy was being put to sore straits to And him such food as an invalid must have, and he heard the children cry out at night because they had not enough covering to keep them warm. Atter a few days, when he found there was no chance to get word to the loyal line, he begged of the woman do deliver him up to the rebel authorities and relieve herself of the burden. She ind gnantly refused, and the chil dren, who bad insisted on calling him Uncle Daniel, cried at the thought of his going away. Pretty soon a new perl! threatened. The neutral territory was given up to bushwhackers and Indians. One day a long-haired, evil-looking man, whose garb was that of a farmer, and who was probably the would-be aasas- sin of Little Jim, was seen lurking about the premises. The woman put another pillow behind the soldier, handed him hh revolver and quietly said: '1 have your carbine and shall try to kill him if he persists in entering the house. If I am killed then you must take care of yourself." The Sergeant could hear every word of the conversation as the man finally advanced to tbe house and the wo* man stepped outside to meet him. "Look yere, woman," he began, **who yo' got in yo'r house?" "By what right do you ask that?* she demanded in turn. » "By the right everybody has to kill a cussed Canuck wherever he kin find him. Stand aside and let me see what sort of a fowl yo've had cooped in yere for two or three weeks." Click: Click! sounded the hammer of her carbine, and as she brought the muzzle on a line with the (man's heart she said: "There's the road! Yo* scatter! I'll count twenty and then I'll shoot!" He backed away, muttering and cursing, and for the next three days the cabin was in a state of siege. He hung about determined to investi gate the reports which had somehow leaked out, hut finding the woman have driven a time he and blessed down from iHiMffitoi tw» out of bed bl* rocking chair to giving dinner. Tears came to bis eyes as he saw what efforts «the wo man had fat forth and bow meager the results. Mother, children, and soldier were gathered at the table when them came a «!*tter of hoofs and a clanking of swwd^and a dozen rebels galloped up to the door. At their head was a Se geant who pushed his way in and seized wife and children and kissed them before he looked at the pale-faced man at his table. He was followed by a Cor poral, who was scarcely inside the deer oefore the children cried out: "Undo Daniel! Untie Daniel! |tar other Uncle Daniel has come mme." The bushwhacker bad made his report to the nearest camp, and the bergeant had been sent to bring the prisoner In. He sat at the head of the table and heard tbe story, and when it was concluded he patten his Wife on the head and said: "You did just right Mary. When a loyalist is up, he's our enemy; when he's down we can t, strike him. wish some one eise had come, though. My orders are to take him back, and I've got to do it or stand trial " "I'll go with him; Jim:1' protested the woman. Hi* Wound has not healed yet and he's no^more Strength than a baby." « v "Volunteers Insight, slr!^ireported a man at the door. "How far away?1* "About a mile." , ^ . "That let's us oat Twelve Of hs can't tight no thousand volunteers. Good-bye, Mary; good-bye, children! I'm dog-gone glad of it! Orders is or ders, but I'd a gone back to camp and told 'em it wasn't in me to bust up a dying man's Thanksgiving, no mat ter whether he was a rebel or a loy alist!" •- Five minutes later the " Hift&way was full of volunteer half a do/en officers house, This time it was Little Jim who told the story, and when he had finished every one put out his hand to the woman and said "God bless you!" They took the Sergeant away in tbe ambulance, but on the plate on which he had eaten h)9 Thanks giving dinner they left a due reward, and many a soldier's haversack was emptied that want might be put afar off. After the war, Little Jim rode over that highway again to find the cabin in ashes, but the soldier and family alive and well. His money built a new and better house, fenced in the fields again, bought borses and plows and seed and started the ex- rebel on the road to prosperity. Well, the Sergeant feels that he can never repay the debt, and tbe fam ily think there was never such an other enemy in the world, and so take it all around, it came out as good as the ending of any story, and hasn't been concluded vet. --Kings ton Press. ' s SIGNALS FfKimcyVINQ TflAINa Sarah Bernhardt'* GitraTttsaee, Sarah Bernhardt as every one knows, is a spendthrift and has not kept one penny of the m llions which she has earned in her marvelous career, nor does she spare anything now: the fact is, she cannot do so, The otherday, writes a Paris corres pondent, as I was talking to her in a room commnnSeating w.th the dining- room in her hotel in the Boulevard Perelre, I heard the voice of a child cross and say the truth, was a very which,fto naughty voice. "My little devil of a granddaughter," said Sarah, with a sort of boasting smile. "You hear! 1 am a grandmother, though I not do look it; she is thoroughly spoiled, but so pretty!" "Does she live with you?" I. asked. "No, she only comes day for her meals with her and I have entire charge sf them all," she went on, laughing, "be cause, you see, my money must go," and she raised her long thin hands against the light to show me that be tween each of her taper fingers was a wide opening--"it must pass through wheu i get it and i shall not. leave a sou to Maurice and bis family: there fore, I have arranged things in this way: Maurice's wife, Princess Jabion- ovska, has brought him 40,000 francs a year, 1 wrtl not have them touch this income, but It must accu mulate and multiply for theca to find a good lump after my death--oh, the ugly word," she said, shivering; "till then 1 defray all their expenses and have their bills sent to me. ThM is so much saved out of the lire." Tto t^QAMy ot tallwijr ssddent* 4»rin* lsstjear would appear to have acted as a stimulus to Inventors in the field Of railway signaling, for an unprecedented number of warning devices have been patented within the last fen months. One of these, which is regarded tar the Pittsburgh Dispatch is specially worthy of at tention, has been sttcoenfdtly tested on some ot the military liues ID Ger many. The system Is ,automatic, and is actuated by electricity. The circuits are 60 contrived that two trains traveling on the same metals, whether in the same or opposite di rection, are warned of each other's position by the ringing of a bell on each foepmotive, while at the same time the two drivers are brought into telephonic communication. The same thing occurs if one of the trains be stationary, so that if there is any breakdown on the line In front, the driver receives notice. The break ing away of a bar or cars froft the rear of a train is also notified, both to the driver and to the station which the train has last passed through; and the distances at which all these warnings are given and received can be varied in such a manner as to pro vide either long or short, "blocks," according to the requirements ot the traffic. In fact.the system seems to have provided effectively agaiftst all ordinary contingencies; and Its em ployment should greatly reduce the risks of railway travel. The German Government experts speak highly of the apparatus in their official report. Among other experiments a train en tering a station was warned of an obstacle on the line; two locomotives approaching each other on the same track were warned; two trains pro ceeding in tbe same direction, the second at greater speed than the first, were euabied to give each other au tomatic notice of their respective speed and position, and a train whicn was entering a station received warn ing that points were in a wrong po- w sition. In every case notice was cavalry and Kiven in ample time to prevent dan- were In the ' *er and 4,0 render a collision impossi ble. Wealth of the United Statos. According to a bulletin just testied by the Census Bureau, under the su pervision of J. K. Upton, on the wealth of the United States, the true valuation of all tangible property in this country in 1890 was $h5.037,001,- 197, an Increase since the census of 1880 of about 822,500.000,000. The per capita valuation is placed at 11039 in 1890 against $870 in 1880, $780 in 1870, and 8514 in 1860 The i>rue valuation of all property in the United .vtates, exclusive of Alaska, in 1890, is classified as follows: Real estate and improvements, $39,544,- 544, :i.<3, live stock on farms and ranges, farm implements, and ma chinery, $2,703,015,040; mines and quarries, $1,291,291,579; gold and silver coin and bullion, $1,158,774,. 948; machinery of mills and product on hand, $3,058,593,441; railroads and equipments, including street rail, roads, 8^,685,407,323; telegraphs, telephones, shipping and canals, $701,755,712; miscellaneous, $7,893,. 708,821. In the valuation of differ, ent States New York ranks ilrst, with $8,57«,701,991; Pennsylvania second, with $6,190,746,550; Illinois third, with $5,0«0,751,719. and then Ohio, $3,951,382,384, and -Massa chusetts, $2,803,645,447. The wealth of the New England States, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania aggregates $21,500,000,000, or nearly one-third the satire wealth of the country. Tho Boom In Wild Beast*. There is a sudden and unpre- oedeoted increase in the demand for wild animals at present, not only ror the Continent, but for the United States. The stocks in most of the European zoological gardens have de creased of late, a shrinkage partly caused by the closure of the Soudan by the dervishes. In America the popularity of the great menagerla at tbe World's Fair has created a sudden demand for wild animals of all kinds. Circuses and private meagerles are competing with the zoological gardens and scientific societies for rare and inter, estlng animals, and the demand for America is far greater than for the Continent of Europo. After five or six years of neglect; there is such a boom in the wild- beast trade as is hardly remembered. Until the expeditions wnich Hagen- beck and others have dispatched into Central Africa, via BerDera, and into Borneo and the West Coast of Africa, return, there is little to fall back upon but the average supply which arrives without system and in chance ships, A single purchase by an agent from the Philadelphia Zoological Gardens included/a leopard, a hyena, a pair of cheetahs, a Borneah bear, antelopes, emus, and other blrda-- The Spectator. ! % .' * lit, v*. ilm When the &oyal Bafctng Powder makei finer and more wholesome food at a less cost, which every housekeeper familiar witl§ it will affirm, why not discard altogether th|| old-fashioned methods of soda and milk, or home-made mixture of tartar and soda, or the cheaper and inferior baking powders, and use it exclusively! i" £!<! CUf. W.Ms--l tm a»n••!.**>» wta •Cafe. We ataa* UA J snS fesve pest Hfe J fnwli mlir to tea «ekUL h hcS, vest* J rcptriar toisic*. ta*-Int h eat m snSl ownrtVeiinwil; SB tmmj a litt eaS j tewMS i>w tm Ihvnceteryehew. every parents her--of SOVAL BAKING POWDER OO., 10S WALL ST., NEW-YOWC. Charles 1. The anniversary of the death of Charles 1. calls attention to the fact- that there are several relies still ex tant of his trial and execution. Sir H. Palgrave, the learned Clerk of the House of Commons, has been able to specify the exact spot occupied by the King during his trial in Westminster Hali; the chair on which he sat is in the board-room of the hospital at More- ton-on-the-Marsh, Gloucestershire; the hat of the president of the court, Brad- shaw, who remained covered through out the trial, is in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford; the footstool on which the King knelt, or more proper ly supported him, when he laid his head on the block, lying down prone, is, with an escritoire and other relics of Charles I., in the possession of Mr. Martin Edmunds, Walmer, Kent, and the room where the death warrant was signed is a little compartment off the members' cloak room in the House of Commons, and is commonly known as Cromweii e C hapel. THE less of government the better, if society be kept iu peace and prosgtsrity. --Ch^sniny. tr • • * ' ' 8om«t>ody*» Good. To make our own troables the means of helping the troubles of others is a noble effort for good. A well-illustra ted instance of this kindly sympathy is shown in a letter from Mr. Enoch L. Hanscom, School Ageut Marshfleld, Me., an old Union soldier. He says: "It may d® ito«ielbody*®ome good 'to state, 1 am a man of 60, and when 40 had a bad knee, and rheumatism set in. I was lame three ve&rs and very bad most of tho time. J got St Jacobs Oil and put It qn three times, and it made a our*. I am now in good health. * - - THE ESSENCE of knowledge is, having it to apply it; not having it to confess your Ignorance. Save Money on Lnmbcit Of tfouree, whew you toUild you wrrefit to cost aa llttli u poeefMfc Then, why pay The KM of Maecle. j your local deaiet a coosnlaalon when you Thi. fe an athletic age. Everybody weWtT rh'Z 1*!® !>U: be strong. The cra*e--for it has well nigh reached that stage---affects both sexes and even childhood. The pngilistic phase of thla fad in young America is by no means morally prom ising:. Bnt it is one thing to be endowed With vigor and another to be Nan (lowed with muscle. Super muscularity is often induced by physical efforts perilous to health and calculated to shorten life. The vigor which means a regular and efficient discharge of the physical func tions is the first medium at which all may safe ly aim without causing ruptures or breaking blood vessels. Hoatetter's Stomach Bittern is largely conducive to a gain in vigor of this sort, since it stimulates and assists digestion, pro motes regular billons seoretlon, and keeps the bowels in order. Bleep, that grand recuperator of nervous vigor,is encouraged by it, and it rem edies malarial, rheumatic and kidney trouble. sen Lumber Company, corner of Laflln and 2-d streets, Chicago. 111. at wholesale prices? Write tSsm for terms. WHEN in the crowded thoroughfares of city life you see young maidens with cheeks fair as country roses, give them credit for using Glenn's Sulphur Soapi Eiuoa's Cons0MFTiojr CURS is sold on a guarantee. It cures Incipient Ooiviump- tlon. It is tb» best Cough Cure, 29 cents, SO cents and Sl. Ott EIQHTBEN DOLLAR «Ar»; we pay freight AJdress ELGIN SAFK OO., KbOM, Iu* W)«l hMtlnalan I than M&daT(!*U» jw *• u* ••ttr- j fasiawr *>r M *J(M. I in »--ilnl h«-rwi aayttuac « »• MMk «r hat i m buUImj. fir1**?' Wrtt»««M,** You don't have to foe#* twice to detect theniK-bfigli* , « eves, bright color, bright' smiles, bright in every ac tion. Disease is overcome only when Mil [ j l weak tissue w 1 is replaced by the healthy kind. Scott's Emulsion of I! cod liver oil efferts cure by building up sound flesh, is agreeable to taste easy of assimilation. JPraparsdbr Seett* Bewa*»X T. Alii SOME men have the key of knowl edge, and never use it. SUFFERERS FROM COUGHS. SORE THROAT, etc., should try "Brown's Bron chial Trochet," a simple but sure remedy. Sold only in borr*. Price 25 cts. A Cremation Rook from Michigan, In the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, there is a lame bowlder of almost solid copper, which if it could talk, would tell many a dark taieof superstitious rites and sacri fices. This bowlder came from the upper peninsula 'Of Michiganr shout twenty miles from Lake Superior. The Indians in that locality held it in great veneration and were ac us- tomed to offer np human sacrifices on it. According to their $Uadition it had been sent to their forefathers by the Great Spirit as :a tokett of his favor. They asserted .that It some times spoke to them with a voice of thunder demandtng-Sacrlficea. A vie- viuj, usually » ptiwuor oij war from some other tribe# rwas then# bound fast to the rodk and speared or shot 10 death with arrows, after which a fire was built upon the bowlder and the body burned--St Louis <Qiob$- Democrat. Conlda*t Fill th* Or A few weeks ago an American pub lisher wrote to Oscar Wilde, asking him for a story of 100.000 words," for which he offered to pay "so and so." The gentle soul of the artist was disturbed. He did not take it kindly that his wares should be ap praised by the yard, like ribbon. He wrote back to the New York pub lisher: "Dear sir: I have rcuciveu your charming letter, and have spent two or three days in delightful con templation. I should like to write the story, but I do not see how I can do so Unfortunately, there are not 100,000 words in the English lan guage.* ' IT isn't getting a holiday but for getting It that is 90 diflcutt thtoHa* be Is initial*!^ of year, -f- ^ FILTH, disease and moral death are associated together in all times and places. If. L THOMPSON a OO., Dmgglats, Condars- port, Pa., say Hall's Oat*rrh Crare la tit* beat and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it, 75c. CAPTAIN BRADIXX'K CHESTER, the oldest whaling captain in New En gland, died recently at Groton, Conn., aged 84 He had commanded vessels from New York, New London, and Mystic. He began his voyages at the age of 15 years, and when 19 years old commanded a whaler ;• - pm Piles. Btriofatr* J: of Prostate Henna TI.OOOINIOS. P.O.Boat Lessens Pain & insures Safety Life of Mother and Child. "My the ordeal with tittle ter using 4 Mottmt's FRIBND,' passed th ain, was stronger la one hour thsa in a week after the birth of her former child. J. J. MCGOLDRICK, Bean Station, Tain. F*1KM> " robbed pain of its tenor and shortened labor, I save tbe healthiest child 1 ever saw.--MRS. L. M. AHERN, Cochran, Ga. Sent by expr eMWc® f̂*5,Lpre&aid'on rcceipt a* price. *i jo per bottle. Book "To MOTHERS" mailed free. To MOTHERS BRADROB ffiNUTOR *, Iftto, *. Sutf fey An Dragcists. " *<7 t 0| f- %'v a' *- • K / f 'a.f-!S Hairy People of Yen. A. fl. Savage Landor, grandson ol the poet of that namc^h^s quite re. cently returned frop a loog sojourn among* those remarkable people, the hairy Ain us of Yezo. There are., he estimates, about 8,004 pure bred Ainu in Yezo at the pres ent time, while the Japanese estl. mate the whole Ainu population, in* eluding half-breeds, at from 11,000 to 18,000. The average measurements of the pure Ainu--five men and five women--give the following mean: Height, inches for men, 58$ inches for women; length from tip to tip of fingers, with arms outstretched, 651 inches for men, til 4 inches for women; chest measurement, 37 1-16 for men, 34$ for women. The pure Ainu physiognomy is thus described: ••When seen full face tbe forehead is narrow and sharply sloped back ward; the cheek bones aie prominent and the no*e is hooked, slightly flat tened and broad, with strong nos trils. The mouth is generally large, with thick firm lips and the nostrils well developed. The space from the nose to the mouth is extremely long, while toe chin, which is rather round, is comparatively short and not very prominent. Thus the face has the shape of a short oval. The profile is concave and the mouth and eyebrows are prominent" . THE higher the degree in a lodge, tbe worse a candidate is treated when '0. '3 9tm teby PMtaMftw. Yon get |;f| fcaiaain* of dealers wfco poakowr shoes. MERN PAeiRifr • hop, grail** 1 P. I When wrtttng sseation this yaper. Mo, a. 1,000,000 ASSAAST JLmmmphb 4 BCLOTH ^ OMmjrr In Mtonwu. Saad fax Mapeaaft Qln» tarn. They wUl be sent te you PATENT fit ths following Mtn had bso written by your best known and moat esteemed BM(abors they ooold be no more worthy of your oonflrtsnns than they now art, coming, aa they do, from well known, intelligent, and trustworthy cMsana, who, in their eeveml " ' ds, eoJey tbe fullest confidence 01 a11 who know them. Tbe subject of tbe above portrait is a well known awl much respected lady, Mrs. John O. Foster, reskiinra£ ifo. SSCbapln Street, Cananrtalgna, N. *. She writes to Dr. R. V. Pieroe, Chief Consolting Physician to the lnvfclUfc* Botsl and Donlod Institute at Buffalo, N. Y., as follows: "I was troubled with or salt-rhenm, seven with a number of physicians and received no whatever. I also took treatmsot from physicians in Rochester, New York, Philadelphia, Jersey City, Binghamton, and received no benefit from them. In fact I have paid out hundreds of dollars to the doctors without bsneflt My brother asms to visit as from the West and he told- me to gl)r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, had taken it and it had oorsd hint. I have taken ten bottlae of the 'Dfawiwy,' and am entirely cured, and if there should beany one wishing any information I would gladly corraqxmd with thsm, if thsy enclose return stamped envelope." Not less remarkable is tbe following froaa Mr. J. A. Buxton, a prominent merchant of Jackson, N. CL, w#o says: " I had been troublsd with skin dlswiss all my llf« AM I amnr older th* disesss wwsri tob© taking a stronger hold upon mal tried For a while I saw ao ' sngi or bsntii from taking tbe 'Discovery,' bnt I persisted ia its nss, kerning my bewals open sy taking Dr. Pierce's nsSanv Ptlfals aadtakiiut as muoh outdoor exercise as was possible, until 1 began to gate in flesh, and aaduaOy (he dissass rslsassd Us hold. I took during the year somewhsre from fifteen to eighteen bot tles of the 'Diaoovsry.' It has now been four ysars since I first ossd it, and though not nsinc soaroaly any sinoa the first year, my hsaMi oonttsuee good. My average weight being UK to 100 pMutdeTlertMl «f 125, as it was vHMn I began thenae of the Discovery.' Many persons have reminded me of my ksntwed appearance. Borne say I look yoonger than I did six years ago when I was married. I am now forty- eight years old, aad stapr, bmer health than I hav® ever ia my life." Yeocntndy Thoomndsbsarl terms, to the efficacy of edy in curing the most obstinate itissaasa many advertised remedies with no benefit, until I - - - - it my health waa very poo-: in fact, several since told me that tbey thought was lad to try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, when I I began taking in fact, several persons have tincetold me tnat they thought I had the consumption. I weighed only about , 12S pounds. The eruption ea my skin was aconmpaniad by severe ttchiag- It waa first I confined to my faoe, bat afterwards spread ' over the neck aad head, and the Meidngbe- i^mpiy unbtaraible. This was my COSH dttfop whan I begaa tsking tbe 'Discovery.' . When I would rah the Marts affseted a Had : of bmaay seals would all eff. worst scrofula are cured by it Vbr tetter, IS rOODM OT IV VHTTXL BR and by its psrsev ' "Book an Mn nil et the Attn, with eel- . - •> •• 'V - • . Remove* Soft «nd White How to make Ma ta-e*