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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Oct 1891, p. 7

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m %-IV ^ v ¥*}J* -V-*,!"^/- • tfaj-•-<vt:>-'.**•?.•^-:>v••.'<* - -^^<0 j. • d ^ / » «, ,»* ,M i „ ,4 i t * ,**^ • v *,,»»^it-s » rv.n >, >vy ;<,- > * 4>;' JJ^pipil^H'l J! I. •, 1^1, 1 , III HI 111 rr; - A/"' ':•; -. ^Wv; (W leal Brought back £§ kealth--•offerers from tne worst^ forms of Skin . and Scalp Diseases, Serofttloas Sores and Swellings, ana^ all manner of blood-taints. ItV bv Dr. Pierce's Golden Med- Ducovery, which purifies and the mood, ana through ifc •isanses and renews the whole sys­ tem. Bren Lung-aor6fula (known M Pulmonary Consumption) yields to it, if taken in time and,given & fair trial. It's guaranteed to bene­ fit or cure, in evenr case, or money paid for it is refunded. Only a medicine that does what is claimed; it, could be sold on such terms. o other medicine, besjges (he "Discovery "has undertaken it I So .positively certain is it in "its carative effects as to warrant its mak^s in tailing It, as they are do- fa ̂ through djruggistsp 03 trial/ curing Glands, Tumors and Swellings,. Great Sating Ulcers rapidly heal. voider its benign inflneaga. -- -- ********** i n i f. | ( w, - > * -t..', , i • 1 - ̂ < * ' ' •& <- •<; > ̂ ' - a "*$*«•«'• 1 •'• Cleans is Lenok. pj$T®^KPDf|^ ®fenVE"BltfO & SlMplmsneia Cared. IV ' X am glad to testify that I used Pastor Koa- ^8*8 Nerro ®onis with th* best success foe ttsaplessneaa, and believe that It is rssTtj a (paat relief for saff*ring humanity. E. FRANK, j. Barter St. Sever In, Keylerton P. O., Pa. ;;f:: A Preibyieriaa NiatstM* %%h PEORIA, I1L, September, M90. , • Pays Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic baa beooms ft boaeebold nooessity in bia family. It lata' JaltuMo for nervous disorder a, Is easy to digest, ip* b** no bad after effects. A. RE1NHAR1), FUSPORT, 111., Oct. 96, 1890. ."We used 12 bottles of Pastor Koenig's Nerve jprtslof WWOMMM, and found it to nave the •'•jplpSBaa • for MnOBMIMS, 1 effect in every oaae. DOMINI OAK PUPf-A ValoaUe Book mm Nerrom L ||L L VIMUM sent free to ssyaddresa W (I w r and poor patients can also obtain | llWitn this medicine free of charge- _This remedy naa been prepared by the Beverend Pastor KoeniK. of Fort Wayne, lad. since 18% soa is now prepared under his direction by the KOENIC MED. CO., Chicago, III. - itoldlijrBniggista at per Bottle. 6te9S .liar** Blaa. S1.7B. 6 Bottles for «9. DONUO KEMSOr Of lotah Mao, op Kennedy's Medical Discovery Cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years' Standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, ex­ cept Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root. Price |i.5a bold by every Druggist in die U. S. and Canada ; Ely's Cream Balm ,r QUICKLY CUBES COLD IN HEAD. [ Price 80 Cents. 3 ANAKESISll PILES unum relief, and is an BLK CUBE ' Price. $1; st by maiT Address BoxiHU. -4m NBW Tons Caw. m " 1 HATE TO ASK MY DOCTOR." • V -False modesty and procragtinatsoo are ••sponsible for mach female suffering. We tea excuse the instinctive delicacy that sug­ gests concealment to the young, but there is no excuse for those who reject the assist­ ance of a woman. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S Compound la an entire and permanent core for the worst forms of female disease, and Instantly re­ lieves all weaknesses and ailments peculiar to the sex. It is sold by all Drugefsts as a Standard article, or seat by mail, in foza of Fills or Lunges, on receipt of tl.00. a !• I Pi a. t|i )l gi.i'i fcsafc.oOeMneaMMI ••Itilssini." .. I^I»ai^<fca*w*a.iiiiliaiiiigut»»»»a.«*^. Hajfi** THE AFTER TlMfi^ BT nun L, STA5TO* • Hwe eometb a time for laagbt And Joy for the dars end yi Bat e*er then oometb after A time sad a place for tears. Weary of revel and riot, ••j Pick of rhe woiIdly strife, n-^-a- Cometh the peace--the quiet--< * - That quicken the founts of Kp; * < And the spirit is disenchanted W ith Joys that are bi t ter-sweet, *nd the jKml which fot rest hath r*"tM I'all down at the Maatcr H feet; Xhe world and its -ways eeein lonely • _And lore at the be-t Eeems loss-- What belp is there tlien but only ; To cling to the criingon cross? ;SM: .To cling to the cross that blossoms •With blood for the erring shed; On the tendereet of tender bosouiS " _ To pillow the wearv head ; To feel the love that is gin-wing r *, ^roEQ llie lifnrt that in quick to With even the harsh nails going In the beantiiul scarred white feet I . O, bind by the storm-winds driven, - , Where Lever a sweet bird *ings. From the wild and the ausrv Heaven , Hy homeward with weary wings) ' And ye that are worn and weary-- .Who faint by the way and fell, *ly fast from the darkness dreary To the rock that was cleft f r all 1 WHAT THE CABLE •J'f'-S' Iff tAltKV OXEAKT. Charlie Templeton hurried along the crowded street with thp crowd. Just as he reached the crossing he waTtninkiuK: "This is Thursday, To-morrow I shall leave Chicago and in six hours shall be in Green Valley with dearid, bless her heart. I have nevs to tell her, {go. Lhnve proved uy. claiifl/' 4,Dearic" was Chaiiie's betrothed. Her real nam? was Mattie, but he used the other just as rilueTL At the intersection of the streets there were three tracks for cable cars, two of them going into the tunnel. The crossing is always a djmgorous one and the passers-by are accus­ tomed to look sharply for trains. Charlie had no thought of this. He simply hurried on as rapidly and as happily as he could. Suddenly there was a shout--rather a dozen shoufs, "Jump." A car was coming around the cor­ ner to go into the tunnel. The ground was slippery for there had been a freeze after a rain. Charlie tried to jump out of the way but, his foot slipped, he fell, was struck by the car and thrown bleeding from the track. A crowd gathered at once. The injured man lay there in the gutter. Blood was flowing from a wound in his head. His arm was broken, A few moments sufficed for a patrol wagon and an ambulance to arrive. Charlie was put into the latter and hurried away to the hospital. The crowd dispersed and immediately for­ got all about it. Charlie had been struck a terrible blow. I was many days before he re­ turned to consciousness. When he Anally sat np and looked around him it was with a very stupid look. "Tell us who you are," said the nurse who sat by him. He did not answer, only persisting ta stuped silence. 4'You see we do not know who you are," the nurse continued. "Your valise was picked up in the street after you were hurt, but there.was nothing in it or in your pocket by which we could tell who you are. So one has inquired for you. Your friends are no doubt wondering what has become of you. Tell me your name and .ad­ dress." Charlie only tubbed his head and looked around. He did not under­ stand. He could not quite tell who he was and what he was doing in that long room filled with cots. The nurse was thinkini "This is Thursday. To-morrow I remember Green Valley and--Mat- tie?" . In answer he would shake his head. Then the girl would look sad and walk away while he would follow her dreamily with his eyes. He adored her. She was a vision. She was as high above him as the stare above the earth, and he .worshiped her as he woula a celestial being. The winter with its coating of Ice on the streets came again. Charlie-- or rather Jim, as the doctor called him, not knowing his real name, was able to find his way around^ the city and was occasionally sent out on er­ rands. One day he wash again walking down the street, where he was first hurt. It was nearly 6 o'clock and dark, and the street was filled with men and women hurrying along from their work. Charlie was thinking of his goddess in his vague, misty way. She was enveloped in a cloud in his mind. He did not even know her name. He knew that she worked somewhere in that part of the city, but he did not know where. He wished she would come along so that he could stand by and look at her. Suddenly there was a shout--rather a dozen shouts, "Jump." Strange things happen sometimes. Charley was struck by a car just as he had been a year before and was t hrown violently from the track. There was an ugly wound on his head from which l?loo1 flowed, making his hair a dark red clot. For a time Vie knew nothing. Then there came faint gleams of retufnTriff consciousness like the streaks of dawj^ on a December morning. He felt himself sitting there in the oold street, held in someone's arms. He king; is Tfi shall leave Chicago and in six hours I shall be in Green Valley with dearie, bless her heart. I have news to tell her too. I have proved my claim." "Charlie," said a sweet voice be­ hind him. Charlie opened his eyes. There was a crowd around him and an am­ bulance was backing up to the curb­ stone. It was a woman's voice that spoke and her arms were around him. A stray lock of her hair brushed his check He looked into her anxious face. Who was she? Gleams of remembrance from his two lives came into his mind. The shaded street ot Green Valley and the girl he loved arose before him. ' They were far away, but she was there by him, her arms around him. Yet she was an angel, his vision, Who asked him strange questions. He put his hand to his head. Theri to his limbs. They were unbroken. •A great joy had arisen within him and he grew stronger. With her help he arose. He looked at the am­ bulance, at the crowd. Then he put his arm half around her to help her through the throng. "Come, dearie," he said. "Let us ge home/] Plnndxted Cuba. Advices from Cuba show that the Island's future grows darker. With banditti on one hand, robberies by Government officials on another and enormous taxes for appropriations, the burdens of the people are becom­ ing greater than they can bear. The banditti have reached a state similar to that of the banditti of Italy years ago. No traveler is safe on the roads or in the country villas. Of late depredations have begun even in the province of Puerto Pripcipe, Soldiers and police are m league with MEDICINE b< JAPAN. , , , ^ ^ ^ ^ the banditti. Robber bands have had spoke of his being hurt, but 1^ j been formed with startling rapidity, did not remember of anything that had befallen him. He realized that something had happened, for he could scarcely think. He tried hard, but everything he wanted to recall was just beyond his mental grasp. So he only looked at the nurse very stupidly and stared around the room. Charlie's case was a peculiar one. The blow he had received on the head had destroyed his memory. Cases of this kind are occasionally known to the physicians. The patient forgets his name and his former history. Most that he has learned must be each having its exclusive territory. The Home Rule party is dead and the Revolutionary party is daily grow­ ing stronger. It is not to be won­ dered at, when men see their homes plundered, their property stolen, their daughters and wives assaulted and their liv.es in danger, that they should come together and make an effort to rid themselves of the scourge which is daily making their lives more mis­ erable. Merchants are loud in protestation because the Government has not en­ tered into negotiations with the learned again. It is extremely un- j United States looking towards a likely that the memory of his former j treaty for the tobacco industry. So life will return to him. Only some powerful shock which brings up before him vividly something that he knew before can restore him to his former self. The medical attendants at the hos­ pital were not long in discovering Charlie's condition. They knew that if he had friends who wanted to find him they would be heard from sooner or later. When his wounds had healed one of the physicians gave him employment as man of all work at his own home. So Charlie began his new life as a servant There were good reasons for Charlie's "friends not hunting him up. He had just established his claim to a small fortune in an eastern State. His rela­ tives who were then in posession were mo.-e than pleased when the months went by and they heard nothing from him. He had no immediate relatives. Mattie was the only one in the world who was dear to him. She was an orphan too, a clerk in a dry goods store in their native town, Green Valley. When his time to return came and he did not reappear she was alarmed. There was some talk among the citizens of investivating his case but nothing was done. Mattie did what she could to find out what had become of him, but inexperience and modesty prevented her from making the search she would have made had she been his wife. However, she did not give up. She had a clew--merely an account in a newspaper of an un­ known man who had met with an ac­ cident and had been taken to a hos­ pital. She left Green Valley. Charlie Templeton was slowly, be­ coming accustomed to the new world I bitter is the feeling that the Govern­ ment has to have soldiers stationed at the election booths. \ ' Daily deficits are found in the Treas­ ury and Custom-House. Money paid for revenues disappears as if by magic. The part of the general appropria­ tion which Cuba has to pay is more than $27,000,000--over two-thirds of the general appropriation by the Gov­ ernment. As an example of law violation this will serve. A Cuban killed a man who had wronged his sister. He was sent to prison for life. A soldier, a kinsman of one of the political lead­ ers, killed a man in a drunken brawl and was acquitted. With these op­ pressions and the interpretation of the laws, it will not surprise anybody to hear that another revolution has broken out in Cuba. SJtaltduggwry in t>«llta( IMsmosda The American Druggist says: "The old trick of painting diamonds, so as to make yellow stones resemble the most beautiful blue white, is being extensively carried on by a firm in Kansas. The fraud is a clever one, and not only imposes on the inexpert, but is calculated to deceive even the connoisseur. The trick is very sim­ ple. All that is needed is a yellow diamond--the yellower the better-- and a common indelible blue pencil. After wetting the diamond you pen­ cil the stone all roynd its surface, up­ per and lower sides. Then rub the stone with a piece of cotton or linen in order to equalize the distribution of color, and you will find the yellow stone transformed into one of a per­ fect bluish tint. In this manner it in which he found himself, for it was jis make a ®50 stone appear a new world to him. His position was i worth <200, as even a magnifying Knt.it. tra^ii hp WOA RiiitMi' giass fails to shew that the stone has been colored; although if ,washed in a lowly one but it was all he was suited for. He has but one joy in life. Some time after he came to work for the doctor there came a young lady to board next door. She was a clerk in a down town store and seemed to take a marked interest in the stupid looking fellow whom she frequently saw sprinkling the grass on the doc­ tor's lawn with the hose or cutting witb the mower. She asked bi strange questions. "Think hai now," she would say. "Do you *ot i alcohol, turpentine, or benzine it of course returns to its original yellow tint, daily. Tills People iaroon^ em in then Their e; value o bridal ith outl4! ttle sulky! being played e recently in should or alcohol ith a tooth- open to haseo." saddles a to make Tfco Tlrtnrf or Oyster-Shell Tonic, tobsaco Jnicm, sad Other Keanrdioe. If Dr B. J. R. Matsumoto is to be believed, Japan has more doctors to the square mile than any other coun­ try in the world. Fifty years ago the followers of the ancient school, which Dr. Matsumoto designates as the school of nonsense, flourished on the island. They knew absolutely nothing of the interior of the human frame as now viewed from a medical standpoint. Still they per­ formed wonderful cures. It may be well for the enervated or prostrated to know how simply doctors of the old school used to cure cases such as theirs, or at least gain the reputation of so doing. When these doctors wanted to give a badly run-down patient atonic that would make him feel as vigorous as a base ball pitcher in the first inning, they carefully broke up an old dry oyster shell, steeped the pieces in water for half an hour and gave a tablespoon ful of water three times a day. When as­ sisted by a robust imrnagi nation and a rhubarb pill these potent doses were never known to fail. At least so the Japanese grandmothersdeclare. With the advent of Germans and Hollanders, who taught the young idea how to write prescriptions and saw off legs, there was at once a great diminution in the ranks of the old- school physicians with their oyster- shell tonics. They gave way to a ter­ rible army that went about with lan­ cets bleeding sick people right and left. .. "Bleeding is not so bad when done in moderation," said Dr. Matsumoto, "but to turn a big school of medical graduates loose with their lances was, as one might say, a national calamity, for it depleted the blood of the peo­ ple to an alarming extent. Then, too, the surgical work was of a very severe order. Limbs were lopped off without hesitation, and the new doc­ tors seemed to take a certain kind ol delight--purely professional, of course --in their sawing and hacking. When a Japanese nativ$ became afflicted with any disease in his limbs he was afraid to summon medical aid, for he might lose a leg or arm if he were only suffering from a plain attack of rheumatism. The ancient system of surgery, which was no surgery at all, was voted by the people to he better than stumping around on Wooden legs or using hooks for hands " Speaking of the ancient manner of treating mangled limbs, the doctor said that it mainly consisted in pour­ ing alcohol or other strong liquids upon the wounds, or else binding moist tobacco into the raw places. The test of the efficacy of these ap­ plications lay in the contortions of the patient. If he did not writhe and jump about, screaming in agony when he felt the raw spirits or penetrating tobacco juice upon his mangled flei --and he generally did--it was a si nal that something more powerful was needed in the way of antiseptics. In fact, the treatment was anything to rouse the sufferer from patient en­ durance to a state of unbearable tor- ture. And yet even this was con­ sidered by many natives as better than the other way of hacking and rawing. But lance and bone-saws have been laid away, and the school which now holds sway resorts to them only when it is deemed absolutely necessary.-- [San Francisco Chronicle. Csrrylsc Concealed Weapons. The mischief of earning concealed weapons h3| no better exemplification than in the disaster that has befallen the actor Curtis, who is under arrest for the murder of a San Frtincisco policeman. Here was -i man who had no oceasion to carry a pistol, was in no dangerous pursuit or business, and under no circumstances was likely to meet with any question that would need firearms for the arbitrament. Yet It has been his habit for years to carry a revolver. Finally, under the influence of an explosive more danger- ous than powder--the enemy that men put in their mouths to steal away their brains--he has shot and killed his man. Did be expect to do less when be put the revolver in his pocket? Curtis was an actor who in his way has Qontributed to the gayety of the people. He had created a character that was always sure of a favorable reception by audiences not too critical and which certainly must have pro­ duced for him a lucrative income. In a moment, -in the .twinkling of an eye, he has destroyed every prospect in life that he had. And so it will always be with those who foolishly think they are well pro­ tected because they are "heeled." In truth, they are then in the most dan­ ger. In a moment of passion, of thoughtlessness, of drunkenness, they •do a deed that no years of life can ever atone. The carrying of concealed weapons is an offense against the law, but na­ turally is one hard to detect. When detected it should be punished as severely as the law admits. But it is to the moral sense of men the appeal should be made. Not one man tn 10,000 profits by carrying weapons, while hundreds in carrying them have only met with disaster^ and grief. Let every man who secretly puts a pistol in his pocket think for a mo­ ment what it means. Why does he do it? Does he think to kill some person? Such is the legitimate end of his act, for the use of a pistol is to kill somebody. If men would only reflect for a lit­ tle space on. the result of carrying weapons there would certainly be less of it done. Oar Lira Stock. A ccnsus bulletin contains the in­ formation that in the census inonth of last year t»iere were on hand on the farms of the United States, 14,- 976,017 horses, 2,246,936 mules, and 49,109 asses. These figures do not in­ clude the animals on ranges nor those kept on holdings of less than three acres, so that the city ownership is not enumerated. The increase of horses in the decade was 44.59 per cent., against 4j.95 per cent, for the ten years endi crease of m and they an In the Sou the perce mules am Lo jrould 90. The in- uch smaller, erously held groupof States, being 32.04 of orses. where gunpowder "Society Dogs.** There is a homely old ballad by An- gustas of Chatillon, wr.tfn In French, which sets forth the sufferings of the poor in wintry weather, and contrasts their condition with that of the petted animals of the -rich. One stanza ruas somewhat like this: "I> there aught that makes one weep Like the greyhound'* mantle warm. When the poor have scarce a shred Prom their hacks to fend the storm!" Not only does the greyhound, which is naturally a thinly clad somewhat "shiv­ ery" animal, now wear a mantle, but so does the pug and even the spanie', which is provided by nature with a warm coat. Probably the spaniel's added fleecy mantle makes him nucomfortable, but he must wear it nevertheless, because fashion requires it Recently there was printed, in a Pa­ risian fashion journal, a perfectly sob -r and genuipe budget of fash'ons pour chiens du monde--that is, "for society dogs." The proper costume for a dog for all sorts of occasions and for the various hoars of the day is carefully proscribed. Here are some of the re­ quirements: "Morning costume--Blanket of white and blue tlannei, pointed with red, or else of red flannel pointed with gold. "Carriage costume--Toilet of blue broadcloth or plush. Velvet collar dec­ orated with numismatic medals. For cold days, a far collar, or a fur edging for the blanket "A leash or leading-string in old silver is absolutely required if Tootoo is to be taken out of the carriage and led about when calling or attending garden- parties. "Promcnado costume--Overcoat of ribbed cheviot j£ant e coining well up around the throat. .... "Reception costume (for five-o*eloc1f teas)--lhdoor cloak of Indian cashmere or velvet, ornamental wifch pearls or a bouquet of roses. Ca»st or coat-of-arms to be embroidered on the back--but never on the fides. To wear the armo­ rial bearings on the dqg's sides is an ob­ solete fashion, and indicates that the doir belongs to the very provincial coun­ try gentry. "Traveling costume -- Blanket of swanskin, checked or white, and very simple. * There is also given by this authority a "wedding costume for dogs," but the costume is not for the wedding of the dog; it is for the wedding of the dog's mistress. It is made of satin or white velvet, richly embroidered and decorated witn silver and pearls. All this* care to keep dogs' garments in fashion is not only a foolish waste of money, bat it is no doubt at the same distressing to the dogs.--Youth's Com­ panion. Halp tout Don't Ossns. , To halp nature in its efforts to thro# oC tha trammels ot disease is, ot eonrse, the legitimate method ot meal cation. This method 1B, unfor­ tunately, too often diverged from and help pe(w retted into coercion. Drastic, excessive purging Is undoubtedly the most frequent form of coer­ cion of this sort. The bowels are forced, liter* ally wrenched into ac Jon. Of oourse, this Is accompanied with much griping pain, and sao- eeeded by exhaustion, which leaves the organs of evaonation in a state incompatible with sub. sequent regularity and activity. The laxt - tat* of that man or woman who uses drastic o ilhar- ties for constipaUon is decidedly worse tuan tha first. Hostetter's Stomach BitUr * in the finest laxative in exlstenoe. Hi new it produoes the neod- ful bat no abnormal action, Is pr abrupt in operation, and str weakening the organs upon it tor malarial, kidney, rheninatlo and dyspep. tic ailments. Knew Not the Use of Fire. Aeoording to Piiny, fire was a long time unknown to somo of the ancient Egyptian tribes, and when a celebrated astronomer made them acquainted with the element and how to produce it they were wild with delight The Persians. Ph vniclans, GretJks, and several other nations acknowledge that their ancestors were once without the comforts* wh ch fire bestows; the Chinese confess the same of their progenitors. Pompanion, Mola, Plutarch, and other ancient writers speak of nations-which, at the time when they wrot \ knew not of the use of fire, or had just recently learned It The Inhabitants of the Mar on Islands, which were discovered in 1551, h&d no idea of lire and its uses. Their astonishment knew no bounds when they saw It applied to wood, most of them taking it to be some kind of ani­ mal which the sailors had brought with them, and which must be fed on wood. A Colored Dnqncr. One of the Washington theaters en- Joys the distinction of having a profes­ sional claquer on its roll of employes. He is a negro of athletic boi!d, with an extremely dark sk'n and enormous mouth, and a fine set of shining Ivories. But hi* most notable characteristic Is his laugh It is by turns soft, resonant, harsh, strident and mellow. He is In his place in the top gallery throughout a summer season of light opera, and he never misses a far e-comedy or a minstrel shqw. He always knows when and how to laugh. He sits wKh his chin on the rail and enjoys himself in a highly Infectious fashion, the audience frequently laughing more heartily at him than at the performan e. A clever tou~h of comedy will provoke an ap­ preciative chuckle, a good joke elicits a hearty guffaw, while a fine sample of "stuffed-club" humor fairly convulses him. After each performance he stops at the box-office and collects his salary of 25 cents a night.--Now York World. They Bottle Up TKeir Tears la Persia. In Persia they bottle up their tears as of old. This is done In the following manner: As the mo irners are sitting round and weeping, the master of cere­ monies presents each one with a piece of cotton-wool, with which ho wipes his tears. The cotton is afterwards squeez­ ed into a bottle, and the tears are pre­ served as a powerful and efficacious rem­ edy for reviving a dying man after every other means have failed. It is elso em­ ployed as a charm against evi! influences. This custom is probably alluded to in Psalm lvi. verse 8: "Put thon my tears into a bottle. * The practice was once universal, as is evidenced by the tear- bottles, which are to be fo ind in almost every ancient tomb, for the ancients bur­ ied them with their dead as % proof of their affection. , ^ ----jmii ; CHIMMMW. A11 claims not consistent with the high aharacter of Syrup of Figs are purposely avoided by the Cal. Fig Syrap Company. It aets gently on the kidneys, liver and bbw- els, cleansing the system effectually, but it is aot a eure-all and makes no preten­ sions that every bottle will not substan­ tiate. ^ IN Bulgaria only 7̂ per ceut of this population can read and write. A'o Opium in Piso's Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fall. 25c. ONE in five of the population of Great Britain is in the Sunday schools. tuv j. mwium uw oaua- ion, Is progressive, not . strengthens instead ot pon which It acts. Use The Record 0C crass seeompltsbed by Hood'* Sa«»ip*rlUft has MW bean surpassed In lbs history ot ssedlelae. •nd Ike ooostant strsscs o! letter* If em people who wtrc almost In dsspair bnt were cured 17 Hood's SarsaparilMi is vety gratifying. Bsoause et the»e we nrgs all who nflkr Horn Scrotal*. Belt ahevm. or say other SISSSSB caused by impart bliod or lo# state at the srstem, to trr Hood's KarsaoerlU*. HOOD'S PILI.S-Iavt«orat»ttellw. rsf- nlats a* hovels. KSective. bat senile. MMM. SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION The success of this urest coag] without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos­ itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can Suc­ cessfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH'S CURE, Price lo cts., 50 cts. and ft.00. If your Langs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts, The Oaljr One Kver Printed--Can You Find tha Word? There la a 8-inch display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescentf on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you BOOK, BKACTITUL UTHOOBAPBS, or SAMPLES 1-BEK. Watch Making: In Switzerland. Great anxiety is felt in Switzerland concerning the dtcadence of the watch­ making industry, which, next to the textile industry, is the mainstay of the inhabitants of the country. 'Ihe profits are dwindling down, as the United states and England are every year becoming more powerful rivals in this fie'd. The demand, too, for ^wiss watches is falling off fonslderab'y in certain countries, notably in this co in try and France. Oxer IK THE PRIME OF Lin.--It has been atated that the moat extreme age to which a chicken can live is about nine years, but any one who has ever boarJed knows better. This may be a joke on boarding houses In general, but the fact still remains that Dr. White's Pulmonarla Is the best cough reme­ dy in the universe. It cures coughs, colds, asthma, bronchitis, whooping cough, and consumption. THK celebrated Lick Observatory re­ veals 100,000,000 stars, and some of them are so small that it would require 30,000 of them to he visible to the naked eya BI Ofini ta>mel«« pleee white UoHIa* DLUUIIl P'vr. with wo. »ex. occupation. lficr» scope magnify 80,000 times. I xond free narttenlsri ronr disease. DR. T. N. CBOWLEX Terr* Haute. Ind. n m FAT FOLKS REDUCED /\V / T\ Mrt. Alio* M»pl>. Ore«on. Me., wTitM I \ uf I J "MT weight WW no pound*, now it im 114 a red notion of lib lb*." For circular* sddrM*. with fa- Dr.O.W.F.SNYDEB. UeVielwr'sThaeUw.OMeiiae.IU. IP YOU Malaria or Pile*, Sick Headache, Costive Bowels, Dumb Ante, Soar Stomach mad " sfi If your food doe* sot assimilate a nave no appetite, IMlehl and and you nave no appetite, Tuft's Pills WlU core thee* trouble*. Frio*, M oeata. DADWAY'S n PILLS, Its Great liver ami Stomach Rsnedg, For the cure of all disorders of tbc Stomach. Liver. Bowels. K'dtj«\vs, Bladder, Nervous Dtneaaa#, Loss ot " ~ _ & ness. B wolu. Hies ant! all derangements ot the nteraal Appetite. H-'itisaclie, Con* ipatlon. Oo^tivenesa, In- "igrHtlon. Biliousness, Fevrr, Jufla umation of tb* Vlfcoer*. Purely re**-table, eoutainiug no mercury, mineral*, or deleteilous draii. PERFECT DI6ESTI0N wa.v » Puis every morning. 1 dinner pUl. By so doll Will be accomplished . by tskl* 1 oae ot Bsd- about len o'clock, as a J. A SIMPSON, "Ball's Catarrh Care _ oatarrh." Druggists seU it. 75e. Marquess, W. Va., sayi: red me of a. wry bisd ease THERE are two bearing apple trees in Indiana Couaty, Pennsylvania, that were planted in 1792. One of them is ten feet in circumference. SICK HEADACHE, Dyspepsia, Foul Stomach, B llousness, will be avoided, and tbe food that te eaten ontribuie its nourlt-hiEK properties for the support ot the aa'ural Wn«'« of the body. Observe the following symptoms resnlttoc from Disease of the DicasUve Oraan» : OonsUp»tton. Inward Mlep, Fullness of tbe B ood la the Head, Acidity of the Stomsc>>. Nausea Heartburn, Diasust ot Food. Fu lnes- or Wetsht in the Stomsch. fcotir the Heart, In a lying b*:o Acidity of the Sromsc>>. Nausea Heartburn, Diacusl the Stomst rlB| - _ . _ - ns 1 pouters. Dlmneee of Vl«lon, Dots or Shrbt Fever and Da 1 Psla hi tb* Head, Dsticieocy _ . Blaht in the Stomach Eructations. Muklig or F.ut erlnff of the " okinc or Suflbcatlns Sensations «ben In 1 , Dimne** of Vl»lon, Dots or Web* be:ore tbe Psi» in ihe Side. &bes ot Perspiration, yellowness of tee t-kln an<1 Fit cases. 8end to Dr. Kline. 931 Arch Bt.. Pnila., P*. mbs, and Sudden i'I Sres, F.nsbes ot Heat Bnrulnitln 'heFe»h. A few do**s o( RADWAY% PIIXS will free th* system < f an th» above-naurd dlsord r* Price 35 ®ts. per box. I t-enrt a letter stamp to . No. 33 Warren street. Hew wot th iboHs<.&<ts will be sent to you. " Be sun »nd a»k and >ee that the name "KADWAY" Is on what yon buy. Bold bysll drug • f >-t* 1 DR. lunwAi a w York. 4V Iulorni A COL. luiormatlon TO THK PUBLIC : Be~surT• n~dV»k loi BADWAVS. m bottles of HMM^aaipap HELPLESS. < . , Chicago, IIL I was confined to bed; could not walk from lame back; suffered 3 months; doctors did not help; t . JACOBS Oil. cured me. No return in 5 years. FRANCIS MAURER. • "ALL M6HT1 ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT." < Best Cough Medicine. Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and taste. Children take it without objection. Reoommended by Physicians. agreeable to the By drum lata Flower I bad been troubled five month* with Dyspepsia. Tbe doctors told me it was chronic. I had a fullness after eating and a heavy load in thft pit of my stomach. I suffered fre­ quently from a Water Brash of clear matter. Sometimes a deathly Sick­ ness at tbe Stomach would overtake me. Then again I would have th* terrible pains of Wind Colic. At such times I would try to belch and could not. I was working then for Thomas McHenry, Druggist, Cor. Irwin and Western Ave., Allegheny City, Pa., in whose employ I had been for seven years. Finally I used August Flower, and after using just one bottle for two weeks, was en­ tirely relieved of oil the trouble. I can now eat things I dared not touch before. I would like to refer you t» Mr. McHenry.Jor whom I worked, who knows all about my condition* and from whom I bought the medi­ cine. I live with my wife and family at 39 James St., Allegheny City,Pa. Signed, JOHN D. COX. H G. G. GREEN Sole Maaufactarer, Woodbury, New Jersey, D.ll, Jj • - ' " . v- -V j&: LITTLE LIVER PILLS N HOT U1R HOB SICOK. Bar* eat* fer SICK 1UEAD* ACHJC, bapaind ««*»«*•, seartW >»£££.*!£&'Zsns ̂ sin***. Hacleal eflfect ealEtfr amandMsddar. Canst . bilious asmai He» orders. lfw*wisa i» and DAILT Aonoat. JBMratitr complexion blood. rxm*i.Y vumsu. Th* dose I* nlrrlT «d]a*t*4t*ratteai£ aeeaeftill * much. Eseh vl^leentain* 4, eantMias " tad pei Taken eaater tkan *o«er. 8a All gniaine goedi bnt'tMenb" smrbttM -- , Art. Ilk* lead pencil. BOSIBSH manl avmltne*. Tskca eettoi "" peekrt ee»*cr where. Band g-eeni stamp. T*n (*t tt pace bosk w*ki ML HARTSR MEDICINE CO., St. Laals. •* BOLD MBDAL, PARIS, 1A7S - W* BAKER k C&ttt Breakfast Cteot from which the ezeesaof S0 has been removed, /« sAwhiM|r psre.sdl it im wfsHi. No Chemical'9 are used In Its preparation, ft has more than thrte times A* ttrength of Coco* mixed wttb Starch, Arrowroot or HsgM, and is therefore far mora e*a- I aomical, costing less ttss ana I cent a cup. Iti* delicious, aa<ap> I tshlng, strengthenlag, asaiVT MaBSTBD, and admirably adapted tor femttda aa wall as for persons in health. Sold b; firoeers ersrywher*. W.BAKER & CO.. Dorchester, Hair. * - tWi 4*$ • •t!f ifi 'if * ; 1 ."lift *8 ^iSi F|M Book IIMI Writing Papers, Cover I Ui8R ind If mill Papers, letter Him Note Heads, Bill Heads, Stite- •eits and Riled Piper* VfKCv ** ' By the CASE or CAR LOAfrw For Samples sad Price* addrsas CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNI0& a7.ae.ai & 93 f$. JeOtewa 8U CIU«SM> O RATEF UL--COMPORTINQ. EPPSS COCOA BREAKFAST. "Br a thorough knowledU* of tbe nataral Jaw which goTem tbe operatl as of digestion sad aaWs tl ID, and by a eanral appUe atton of the aa* >ws» ties of wet.-e.-'leetod Coooa, Mr. Kpns has psawfie* ourbreslrfsst tables witk a dslleetsly taiwsatlsa srace whloh naajr save as maajr beary dootonT bOlfc It is oy toe iodloloas oae ot saob arttoie* at that aooatatutioa may b* gr dually oallt aa aata strong eoouah to resist e*eey teodeooy tgdMMa Huadredsof sabUe maladies are ttoattac aroaad *» ready to astaok wbaraesr tfcsc* Is a weak pouat. We may eeoape saaay a fatal shaft by knplaa os» selves wall forttAad with pore blood a -d a property nourished frama.*--*£*»• asreiee <Jaast*s.'r Made simply with boUlaa water or mir<r, Sal# only la Half-pound tio*. y Oroo-r«, iabellcl tbBS: JAMBS KPPtf 4c CO., Bomwopathlo CheasMb LOXDOS. tmusc. 8ta Hunt? Taamaaa, mmt noted physidaaafSa^ laud, says ibafe MR tfcaa half of all ill errors la disc Send for Free Saxqpla at Garfield Tea to 319 Va* 45th Street, Xew Tork CHfb- ELD TEA _ J sfbad *atUf|carM lick ;;esdaski| sasisse*riarl't ;~t h EWIS' 98 ^ LYE I1 I Powdered and PorfunsadL K % F*TXWT*D > Tb* strongest aad aarsst lM mad*. WOT mak* UM» kss* famed Bard Soap in 90 inlintsa without boiling. 33eart for cleansing wasta-ptpaa. M .,.„ lag sinks, oloaeta, waaiiiac bat» tlee, valuta, treaa. ate. mm1 SALT rrt Qm. Acta.. Phil*,. Pa. and Aaiomatt* Cagiaeea urn SIM Wanaated *qa*l « saperter • TREATED FKKK PaeitheiT Cured srtth Vegetable thousand eases. Care path fw oacedhopelesa cores. *<?»days treatment fnmislied fteear • < WAITED! SV.& STOXE Si WELL1K MEM TO TRA VKUU W» IliOUUl sua r««WMk (iXUN, Manlimut. Wlb PILESSs^^ C.K. U. 2K WRITING TU JU>' SAD SUM* AAWTBE

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