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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Mar 1892, p. 7

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-- •;. s- . 7 ^ J P l a f n e n o u g h J ^llie ,woyr to a clear complexion, free from blotches, pimples, erup­ tions, yellow spots, and roughness. Purify your blood, and yon have it. With pure, rich blood, an active pvor, good appetite and digestion, the hue of health follows. Doctor OloMffw Modirnl Discovery gives you all of them. It is the blood-purifier. There's no lack of them, but there's none like this. It's guaranteed to accomplish all that's claimed for it. In all dis­ eases arising from torpid liver aad fan pure blood, it benefits or cures, Of the money is refunded. With «n ordinary medicine, it couldn't- be done. I5ut this isn't an ordi- • mcdicine. ^ ; It is the -cheapest blood - purifier ffcld, through druggists, because* yon pay xor the good you get. "Can you ask more ? The "Discovery" acts eatudlv fel^ aU the year round. my. Common Soap Rots Clothes and .Chaps Hands. p . DOES NOT. I- I- I TAKE TLEASiMT THE NEXT MORNINO I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND ftr COMPLEXION IS BETTER? *T doctor am It acts gently on the stomach, liver •Da kidney* gad tea pleasant laxative. This drink It mad* from herbs, and la prepared for use aa easily LAME'S MEDICINE All druggists sell It at SOc. and #1.00 per i»««irw». Boy one fc>day. Lann'a Family Medicine BOTH BMMweli each day. In order to be healthy, IU| ••Why Are You Sick?'* " I know precisely how you feel; it is that ner­ vous, irritable feeling; your back troubles you, and when you try to read a little, your^ head aches. Isn'tthatso? I lmew it. Oh, bother the doctor I Get a bottle of Vetttable Compound, and take it faithfully, as I have done. I've been through this thing myself, but am never troubled now. Do as I tell you, my friend." Prudent women who best understand theii , ailments find in the ' Compound a remedy for iB their distressing ills. It removes at once those pains, aches, and weaknesses, brightens the spirits,' restores di­ gestion, an4,invigorates ---the system. V \ U Druggirti tell It, or «nt , fi? form of Pillt 01 " 91.00. mail, iii form of bxeniM, oni««lntof _ Kver Phl«. Con* •pomltnc« freely answered. Xidrtn In confidence. UT'A K. 1VLNKII AM M LYNN, >!AS§. so. Co., ife' • KAXUBAX. BKK1BY TUB Epileptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Hyiter- , St. Titos Dance, Ifenroiisiieii, ,iHypochondria, Melancholia, IB> ^ ehrlty, Sleeplessness, Du­ llness, Brain and Spi­ nal Weakness* medicine has direct action epon the serve centers, allaying all irritabili­ ties, aad increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It Ss perfectly harmless ,and leaves no unpleasant effects. Valuable Book mm Nervosa Isenses seat free (9 any addresa " poor patients can i medicine bee of RNRR SIMMMMOI ft«e <9 any add** I ni I and poor patients can % obtain I I via la this medicine free of charge. K.OENIC MED. CO., Chicago* ML •old by DrtmUta at «1 per Bottle. SflvtS tarnSlie.SLT5. 6 Bottle* for •». ANAKE8I8givee instant ' >t and ia an DIFiLU-~ CORK for PU1CS. II; at druggists or Bam pi en tree. . _ 'ANAKK8I8," Mlt. NtW TOBK ClTT. WANTED! noKx * MEN TO TRAVEL. WepaySSO to SlOO a month and expeasea, WELLINGTON. HadlfOBTWiZ iBttT MUtH IN THI WORLD. I STOVE ponsH , and Paints which stain the hand*, injure the Iron, and born off. The Rising 8nn Stove Polish is Bril* liant, Odorlwsa, Durable, and the eon* s tuner pays for no tin or giaas package with every purchase. m u mm. SALE OF 3.000 IO& tr'K {Xnascrad Tramp ot tenglnnd'n BratMl Bolrttnra Aer».s \*ut Waicrlm 8«|. The famous Anjlo-Eayptian war of 1881-5 and especially the campaign in the Soudan are being recalled Vividly by the coming production at the Chi­ cago Auditorium of the military ttrama of the "Soudan." * The campaign beiran with the re­ bellion of Arahi Paslw. nn.-I -mlc-il when the, 7sTl.o expedition c^isetl its famous journey thirty-two hours too late for the relief of Gordon at Khar­ toum. It was a war remarkable for roman­ tic incidents, wonderful military ex­ ploits and deeds of heroism unsur­ passed in modern English history. Americans remember but little about, it. They have had their own troubles, great and small, and history is made so rapidly in the closing years of this great century that the events of a decade ago, even those occurring within the confines of our own land, seem very remote. But the English do not forget the Soudan fight. The glorious deaths of Iturnabat Earl and Stewart, and the regimen^ of brave fellows--rank and file--ft hose bones lie whitening in the burning sands, are still renrembered. Thou- survivors, marked with scars make by Soudanese spears are living witnesses of those yea^s of suffering and privation. Above all, the hero Gordon connects England with the bleak land of the White Nile. His nam£ stands with Wellington and Nelson on the roll of her illustrious ueau. There is uothiuK iu modern history more sad than the story of England's failure to save him. When 'the call for help came from him in Khartoum the work forb is relief be­ gan. The day after ihe receipt of his message, the Nile expedition was decided upon. Not a moment was lost. The Admiralty wired to every great shipbuilder in the country for bids to construct a certain number of boats. They were to be light in draught and weight, strong and sea­ soned in material, and broad in beam, and'each was to have carrying capaci­ ty for twelve men and fiecessary pro­ visions. Four hundred were called for. 'Ihe replies from the builders were awaited with impatience. At last they came. The specifications were agreed to. Night and day the work went on, and in three weeks-- four days before the time set for de­ livery to the Government--they were ready. The boats were tested, found perfect and shipped in big vessels to Alexandria. From there the journey began. Nearly 5,000 men, the flower of the British army, manned the novel flotilla. Voyageurs and Indian half-breeds from the Canadian North­ west--men who served under Wolse- leyiathe Reil rebellion--joined at Alexandria to assist in the trip t)p the W&riveh There was no delay in starting, and for months, by night and day the dangerous journey went on. Suil^pring was borne without coin plaint. The sun's rays beat down with merciless cruelty sixteen hours out of the twenty-four. Dur­ ing the passage of the Cataracts, pro­ digious work was done. Rocks aud flinty pebbles pierced the boots of the brave boat-haulers. Hot winds beat the sand into their eyes. Unknown chasms had to be passed, every mo­ ment on§ of peril. Each day brought the expedition nearer to the enemy's country. The Mahdi had his follow­ ers in every villa|e and behind every rock--fanatics of desperate courage filled with vindictive hate of the En­ glish invaders. Unmindful of dan­ ger the command kept on. Sometimes at night, when storms made the row­ ing impossible, the Soldiers camped on the shore and sang the songs of home. Two thousand miles from England, but full of tiop« and cour­ age. Every man had Gordon in his mind, and each one hoped to be the first to epter the gates of the fated city. But the tidings of disaster came. One day a halt was called. A copy of the famous message of El Mahdi was read: "On the night of January 26 the army of the Mahdi entered Khartoum and took the forts, city and vessels in the river. The traitor Gordon was killed. Inform your troops of this signal triumph which God has given to the arms of the Prophet (k Ills Prophet." This was the end^ On the fore­ noon of the 28th m, January, 1885, the advance troops nad come within sight of the city. Thirty-two* hours too late! Of all strange incidents in history few have surpassed this one. Gordon diea as he lived, like a hero. With a smile on his lips and a flush on his cheek he cStood unarmed before his foes. They cut him down with brutal ferocity and treated his body with less decency than they would a dog's. The heart of the world thrilled when it heard of the fate of this noble man and true Christian. Eng­ land will never forget the Soudan, while his memory lives. He repre­ sented^ the highest type of her man­ hood. The rugged honesty and gen­ uine worth of his character were no less marked than his military genius. He never disgraced her flag or bfcr traditions. He kept clear of her po­ litical brawls. The hypocrisy and cant of drawing-room civilization were detestable to him. His sword as drawn only to defend the weak and destroy the tyrant. He had the courage of a lion and the heart of a child. A knight of the heoric age re­ born into the present. There was another expedition to re­ lieve Gordon. It crossed the desert from Korti to Metemneh, its line of march forming the base of a triangle, the other sides being made by a great bend in the Nile. This expedition also came too late. Its progress was delayed by numerous terrific fights with the Arabs. The march was a dreadful one. The desert "the great, lonely, waterless sea," terrible in the glar'p ot day, beautiful at night and in the flush of dawn and the hush of evening, was traversed by the brave column for weeks. The sand glistened like molten glass, the air crackled with intense dryness. So parched was the visible world that the surface seemed in its thirst to conjure up fevered visions of pools and lakes of water. The breath of the Simoom burned like a furnace blast. Tall spiral columns of sand whirled over leagues of withered waste, threaten­ ing the troops with destruction. Food lost its nutriment and water leewQM DUtrkL. #nyaBft««isis saved freshed they pressed on. Battles were fought--the men outnumbered four to one. At Abau-Khea a solid phal­ anx of Arabs charged upon a hastily formed square. After three hours hard hand to hand fighting victory was dearly bought It was there that Burnaby fell, pierced by the lance of a Mahdist. Sixty-five graves were dug in the sand, and looking back &t the shadows t.hrown frnni the rooUBds by the sinking closest sun, the boys trudged on. More battles, and yet THE PIRATES- OAPITAL W . I VerrlMe fate That BefUl , Oif' mt tlie IWIeketfeat Cltlaa In the World When the S|>aniards were driven ! from Jamaica they left behind them ! a number of slaves, who sought shel- ; ter ia the mountains and defied the j authorities. These bandits were nearly Exterminated soon after the English occupation, but the remnant •; later grew to be powerful and greatly : troubled the colony. They were known as the Maroons, and the sto- rrt^rc' was sighted., i ries of their desperate struggles for Then the-worst blow of all--the pews of Grorden's death and the words "too late!" The rest fs scon told The return march, the embarkation from the East Coast, the voyage home and the memories of the dead in their desert graves. The Arab is still in the Souden. He still longs for freedom--untamed in spirit, patient under heat, cold, thirst, hunger and hardships. The English--rulers in name only--are still held in intense hatred, and the ruled remain unconquered. Three times tyive English armifes invaded the Soudan, and three times have they been withdrawn without result. Time after time men armed with swords uud spears have assaulted in open desert British infantry massed in squares, and on more than one oc­ casion these naked sons of toe wilder­ ness have donewhat the steel-clad cavalry of France could not effect jit Waterloo. Keteuad by a P|(. "You think that you have seen smart things ftone by dogs," said a farmer. "I'll tell you, there's a pig on my place, about six months old, I reckon, that I feel pretty grateful to these days, and I don't reckon my feelings will change as long as I live. It was just a common pig--no fine breed, but it come of average good stock. I've got a little girl that's been delicate pretty much all her life, and I gave her this pig when it wasn't much bigger'n your fist, think­ ing it might amuse her. She raised the pig and always thought a lot of it, and they've been 'playmates ever since, every day that she was able to play out of doors. "The other day I was out in the field, about 5 o'clock in the evening* when I heard the horn sound at the house. I knew in a minute some­ thing was wrong, just from the way it sounded, and I dropped my work and went running. When I got there my wife looked like she'd drop in her tracks, and she says: " Oh, Nathan, I can't find Nellie anywhere, and the last I remembered seeing her was 1 o'clock. She was playing under the big tree by the gate.' "It /was a whole minute before could gather up mv senses, but when I could think, do you know what -I did? I went and let that pig out. He ran around the yard a minute and then stopped to eat some crumbs of cake Nellie had left under the tree by the gate. I thought I'd go crazy at that, but all at once away he went with his nose to the ground, running so fast that I could not keep up with him, though I am a pretty good run ner. He turned out of the road and plunged into the woods, and I plunged iu after him. Along the ridge he went, gaining ground all the time, and at last heuturned suddenly,to the left and went racing down the slope ^nd out of sight as though something uncommon were after him. .My heart went right down into my hoots. "At the bottom of the hill lay marsh coveted with a green growth and I almost knew that poor little Nellie had walked into it somewhere and was drowned. I went racing down the hill, but at first I didn't see anything of the pig. Around ft bend in the marsh, and what do you think I saw? On the bank, with his feet firmly braced, was the pig, hold­ ing Nellie up jn the water as best he could by her clothing. At first thought that she was dead; and she did come very near slipping awat from - us, but we finally brought het around." On the Vanc-tM<-KlaD(. Strange junks float-down or sail uj the river, sometimes mere planks nailed together in an uncouth man­ ner, sometimes built in the regulai river-Junk fashion, and well bujlt, too, of varnished wood, with raised deck-houses fligh ^bove the stern, aud sails of matting, and not seldom some bffpainted and bespangled mandarin boat is passed, covered with gold dragons in contortions, and resem­ bling morc'tne advertisement van of some second-rate circus than any­ thing else. Yet they are most pic­ turesque; the grotesque animals, wnose protruding necks form the bow, and whose open jaws are filled with scarlet teeth, are a marvel; but they ^re not alone in their glory, for the whole ship is a mass of tangled rep­ tiles and beautiful but mythical birds and blasts. The cabin, with its gay awning and brilliantly paint­ ed walls stands on the deck like a Paris bonbonniere, while from above fly a multitude of flags, long, narrow pennants bearing the mandarin own­ ers' names and titles, flags with curly dragons--flags, in fact, of every color and every design. Every day we* were passing those boats, and each was a picture. The decks from which the sailors row are very low to the water, and on one oc­ casion the wash of our passing steam­ er caused /such a strain upon th» heavy oars that two of a crew were washed overboard. We saw them picked up again and then proceeded on our way, the gaudy and infuriated mandarin cursing us volubly from the roof of his cabin. All Chinese boats have one delightful peculiarity in common--an eve painted on the bows; for, argues the simple-minded celestial, "^To got eye, no makee see; no makee see, no can go.'.'--Black­ wood's Magazine. Arose at Board*. A Swiss inventor has perfected a method of making artificial boards, and is advocating their use in build­ ing. They are made of a mixture of plaster of paris and reeds, pressed Into shape by hydraulic process. The material has the advantage of incom­ bustibility and lightness, and will re­ sist the warping action of atmospheric changes. * V »>«' ,r 'i;v« freedom, of the privileges wrung from the whites, and of their assistance in suppressing the rising of the blacks in 1865, reads like a romance, says the Boston Herald. Six hundred of these troublesome marauders were trans­ ported to Nova Scotia. Thedescend- ants of the ancient Maroon^ are even to this day a separate people, and still enjoy the privileges granted to their ancestors. Pirates and their blflidthirsty deeds have furnished so often the plot and theme for the melodramatis and the dime-novelist that one hesi­ tates to write about them in sober earnest. But they were no myths in Jamaica, and no account of Jamaica's past, however brief, can omit a refer­ ence io the pail they p'.ayeu in its history, especially as the most dread­ ful calamity that ever visited the isl­ and is connected with them. The Jamaican pirates generally sought to throw ojer their maraud­ ing and pillaging expeditions the sanction of legal authority by obtain­ ing letters of marque, but they ^ere nevertheless pirates pure and simple. One chief after another secured the Spanish main, capturing vessels, usually Spanish, on the high seas, and when the ocean did not offer enough to satisfy his cupidity and love ol adventure attacked cities and towns, laying waste with flre and sword and committing horrible barbarities and cruelties. Nothing was sacred to these human devils, and yet they were tolerated for many years by the Jamaican authorities. The island profited by their expeditions, and the last half of the seventeenth century witnessed a prosperity as great as it was wicked and demoralizing. Port Royal was the capital of the pirate empire, and the Maroons filled it with Wealth and debauchery. There they maintained in semi-bar­ baric state their great establishments. They lived like men who, with the wealth of princes, did not know when they might die(< and who had no feat of God or man. Imagination can hardly picture the character of the populace of that little city under the sun or the life within its walls. Tc it came the reckless, the desperate,, the men ipost skilled in villainy. With them they brought the spoils ol richly ladeij Spanish galleons bound home with silver and gold, the ran­ soms of cities, and whole provinces and fleets of merchant vessels freighted with rich stuffs from all the markets of the world. All this and more, was poured into Port Roval, and was spent with a lavishness and extravagance tfhat is possible only with treasured bought at so slight a cost as that ol human life. Nothing seemed lacking .to make it the wickedest place on earth; yet tht vengeance of the Lord apparentlj passed it by. But it was only for a sea­ son. One day the earth opened and in two minutes the city, its palaces, and its hovels lay at the bottom ol the sea. Thousands of the inhab­ itants perished with their ill-gutter gains, and the unburied dead, floating in the harbor or heaped upon the lane under a tropical sun, bred a horribk pestilence that carried off thousand: of those who escaped the earthquake. To-day the waters of the bay hidt from sight the ancient city. Wat ever retributive justice more terribh or complete? Romantic and exciting as were th< lives of all these buccaneers, that o Henry Morgan, the greatest of th< freebooters, was the most so. Front a white slave in the Barbadoes, when he had been sold into servitude, h< became first, the most daring and suo cessful of the pirates, and later i knight,and as Lieutenant Governor o: Jamaica, the ruler of that island At the sacking of Panama he obtainec 175 mule-loads of treasure. The Gov ernor who gave .him his cotnmissior was recalled for that act, but Henr." Morgan was knighted, and. as Si; Hefliy^ turned his back *Upon hi.' former companions, and made a mos: popular governor of the colony. of Shap*. The Roilim Tuat fi I'opular. The most popular bodice is only i wide belt, which is fltt6d and come; up well under the arms. It shoulc be of heavier or richer material thai the gown, and its lines, if it has any. should run round. On some after­ noon gowns this bodice extends onlj to the side seams and its eflds ar? covered by jacket fronts. A Parif model has jacket fronts of dull blut cloth over a straight bodice of Ori ental brocade in colors. The jackei is lined with the brocade, and dowr each edge is set a row of crotchetec button-like ornaments of a dul yellow*. •ria m VNU-o* me W*ap Perpetual motion has been th< hobby of unscientific men for cen turies. By a perpetual motion ma chine is meant one which creates it: own power, and will run untifeworr out or breaks down, and at the same time arive power enough to run ma chinery of some kind. A study o" natural science will convince any in telligent person that the creation o: force is an impossibility. There are. doubtless, dozens of men wasting their lives in endeavoring to invent i perpetual motion device. tba j*naltl«a for aUowte* tfala ob- aoalady to gain f«U headway. Al*aya li tt ddtngeKms from ita liability to attack the vitala--inv*.r<»};ly jg it agonising. Hoatetter's BtouaatLlll'tara has in nothing mora clearly aaaertedMta anpramacy to the ordinary rem­ edies for thle tnala^y than in Ha power to expel the/henmatic Tir«s completely from the blood. It la safe, too. while cotchtcum, vera tram, and mineral potoona pieacrittcd er it are not. The efficacy of the Bittera as a cleanaer of the oircn- JaMnn fa al«o conmpimionsly shown where the poison of )i-.iasma infecta tha vital fluid, or| where it it'oontamlnatei with bile. Comtipa- tion, dyapepaia, "lagrippe," kidney and bladder?* trouble, nerroutueaa and debUity are also re-t mored by it. The eonvaleaeZng and the aged ' and infirm derive much benefit from ita use. THESE is no other way of obtaining light and intelligence but by the labor of attention, - Matobrancho. THERE i« more Oktarrli in thin section of thai eouatry than til other diseases pat together, and until the laat few yearn supposed to bef incnrable. For a gieat mmny years doctore pro." nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by oonslautly failing to cur4 with local treatment, pronounced itlncurabto. Science has prolan eatarrh to be *• -onatito* tional disease, and therefore requires constitu­ tional trrei Hall's Catarrh Ctir«, manu> lectured by F. J. Chmmy & Co., Toledo. Ohio, ia the only constitutional cure on the market. 16 is taken internally In domfrom ten drops to » tea spoonful. It acta dlraotly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the syatera. They offe* one hundred dollars tor any case St fails to cure. Send for circulars aiiit testimonials. Ada dress, F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O, JSrSold by Druggists. 78a. PTHE first happiness of & man is not to sin at all; the second is to be sensible ttAd sorry for his sin.--St. Chrysoatom. CRAOINA CO.. Philadelphia.Pa., wilt send. postpaid, for 2 Dobbin^' Electric r:oap wrap­ pers and ten cents, any volume of "Surprise Series," (best authors), 95 cent novels, about 200 pagea Send 1 co.ut stamp for IF our ey es were better the stars could give us more light. PBPDEKTT.V BREAK UP YOTTR COLD by the timely use of Dr. IX J ay no's Expectorant, an old remedy for Sore Lungs and Throats, and a certain curative for Colds. . THE deepest gulf known is that whloh sin has made between man and God. BKBCHAM'S PILLS take the place of an en­ tire medicine cheat, and should be kept for use in evpry family. 2ft cents a bo*. IF work is growth, the world is foil of people who are very small. Tea Thousand Men Wanted. Men who desire work can get It In the Red Hirer Valley of Minnesota and North Dakota In the early spring. During the past season, owing to the large crops and scarcity of help. Orfr.-r.- wsic unauie to thresh their wheat aad do the regular fall plowing. * Threshing machines hare been running In \ arious p»rtj of the valley all winter, and hundreds of ucre-i or grain still remain unthre^hod. To plow Hnd aeod the fields In the af>r!ng of 1SD2 will require the labor of at least 19.000 men in addition to present lielp. The sons of farmers In the over-crowded East should consider this opportunity to get work and pay their expenses while in­ vestigating the chances in one of the finest agricultural sections of America. Many of the well-to-do farmers of the Valley began life there as laborers or renters. The land is plowed, seeded and harvested by machinery, and the large a*ea awaiting cultivation requires an army of men. Tho eoil is easily worked, aad farmers wish to put in large crops. Write to John llirkholit. Grand Porks, N. D.; Jacob Lowell, Fargo. N. D.; H. W. Donaldson. Nortlicote, Minn.; or F. L Whitney, fit Paul, Miua.. for particulars. BAD taste in the mouth or an unpleasant breath, when resulting from Catarrh, are overcome, and the nasal passages whicbi have been closed for years, are made (ref by the use of Ely's Cream Balm. I suffered from caturrh for twelve years, experiencing the nauseating dropping In the throat pecu­ liar to that disease, and nose bleed almost dally. I tried varlou* remedies without benefit until last April, when 1 saw Ely's Cream Balm advertised. I procured a bottle, and since the iirst day's use have had no wore bleeding. The soreness is entirely gone.-- D. G. Davidson, with the Boston Budget, formerly with Boston Journal. Apply Balm into each nostril. It is Quickly Absorbed. GIVES RELIEF AT ONCB. Price 60 cents at Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS 50 Wnrren Bt. New York. The Only One Ever Printed--Can You find the Word? There Is a 3-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 "Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word? and they will return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS, or SAMPLES FREE. MB. Joint a FfearaAw, AHUm* SHno!* writes on Jan. 16th. 1891: uMy Wife has been a great sufferer from headaches for over 20 years, and your Bradycrotine is the oftly medicine that has ever,relieved her. I can get you all the recommend] ttons you want from here. We take sreat pleasure in recommending it on all occa­ sions." Of all Druggists. Fifty cents. If you hnve poor health, write to On Crowley, Terre Haute, Indiana. Syrup Justice of the Peace, Ceotge' fdnson, of Lowville, Murray Miua., makes a deposition concern^ ling a severe cold. Xistea to it. % ; ;the Spring of through ex­ posure I* contracted a very seme cold that settled on ray lmigs. This was accompanied by excessive night sweats^ \One xbottto of Boschee** German Syrap broke up the cold, might sweats, and all and left me in a good, healthy condition. I cqa give German Sytup my mostearnest commendation." -.0^ DO YOU arch SAVE YOURSELVES, COUGHS I HALE'S Homer er EOREHOCND AXD TAB prevent bronchitis and consumption. Pun's TOOTHACHE Ditors core In one Mlnnte. For Coughs and Throat troubles use "BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES."-- "They stop an attack of my asthma cough very promptly."--C. FcUch, SOamiviUe, Ohio. Officer A. H. Braley of the Flail River Police Is highly gratified wit'j Hood's Sarsaparilla. Re vaa badly run down, had no appetite, what he did eat caused distress, and he felt tired alt the A TT J). « M« *• WWVI/4^4, UA "WUO lilt* W fecoed a marvelous change. Ihe distress in the stomach is entirely gone, he feels like a new man, and can eat anything with old-time relish. JPor all of which he thanks and cordially recom­ mends Hood's Sar­ saparilla. It is • !?ry iiiipoF (Jitu* that during the months of SScr-olt April May the blood should be thoroughly purified and the system be given strength to withstand the debilitating effect of U»e changing Mason. For this purpose Hood's Sarsaparilla jKssesseg peculiar merit, «nd it is the Best Spring Medicine. The following, jnst re­ ceived, demonstrates ita wonderful blcod - purify­ ing powers: "C. I. Hood 4 Co., Lowell, Mass.: "Gentlemen: 1 have had salt ihenns tor I number of years, and for the past ye »r one of my I«g«. from the knee down, has been broken ont j vstzt I touk uiuou uieuiciue lor a long time with no good results, and was at one time o b l i g e d t o w a l k w i t h cmtchea. I finally oon- cluded to try Hood's Sarsa­ parilla, and before I had taken one bot tle th«in"?»??sn?at .5 ssrhed I oantinued until 1 had taken three bottles, and am now better than I have been in rears. The Inflammation has all left my leg and it ia entirely healed. 1 have had such benefit from Hood's Sarsapariila that I concluded to write this voluntary statement," V. J. TEMPLE, lttdgeway, MU-LI. ft Cures CoW«, Coo*ha. Sore Throat, Creaj. liduenn, Whaoplnic Cuiwh, Bronchitis ana AKtlmuu A certain enre for Consumption ia fir** April May , „ . onsumptton ia fir** s'j'K'fi. aud a sur- relief in advanced stages. Use rtns.f. You will see the excetle tefleet alter teklnsr the Urxt dose. So il' una in mi pallida. Large DOlteis ft) ceute aad $1.00, "V HOOIVK 1*11X8 easily, promptly and eX ciently on the liver and bowels, liont dinner jilL S ÛRIFO$ ONE BHJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys­ tem effectually, dispels colds, head­ aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. 6vrup cf Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro­ duced, pleasing to the taste and ac­ ceptable to the dtomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared onlv from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs Is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug­ gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro­ cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA F/0 SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, KV. NEW YORK, H.t. Tim Hopkins. Timothy Hopkins has been left $200,000 by Uoses Hopkins, the broth­ er of Mark, so that he can now carry on his fight for the possession of the millions left by Mrs. Hopkins-Searle at his leisure. Th&> only thing now that he needs isPlong life. To the end that he may attain this he ouirht to take RKID'S GERMAN COUGH: AND KIX>- NEV CUKK. This is the best thing in the world for weak lungs and maladies attendant upon a life in England. This great remedy con no poison, but it is the best thi the world for all lung and throat troubles. No one has e.ver tried it yet who has not been benefited by it. When it is considered that almost all ease in this climate comes from » cold, it will be seen that REID'S 6N» MAN COUGH AND KIDNEY CURE min­ isters to more than half of all the ailments that attack the system. Every family ought to keep this rem- sedy constantly on hand. Get it of any dealer. The small bottles coat 25 cents, the large ones 50 cents. : SYLVAN REMEDY CO., Peoria, DU ; • '*3 •> , LITTLE LIVER r PILLS DO ROT GBIP1 HOB 8ICKXS. Bars ears for SICK HEAD* ACHK, Impaired dtgwtioa,i patlon, torpid glaoda. Thtr mM vital ornc>, rcmovs niaut, tftt. " ' "eten KM? r. Ca ens nervosa •1MM. Mafical afltet hejrsmd bladder. complexion PURELY VaeSTAtai. eysai bill orders. ur&i DAILY ACTIOS. hy prnvimm £ns The dote it nIrriy adjnfted to tuiteaw, a* ene sill icrlMtMBOth. Each vial contain* 4,carticeia efert. like laad ptncil. Baainesa matn'a | sieve pock convenience. Taken caaier Una enger. Be ( where. All genuine gooda bear "CreeaicL" Ssodt-evnt ttamp. You get SSpaga book withaaaatlt y». HUHTEt moieiw CO.. St. Loate, It* ST. JACOBS OIL THE GREAT REMEDTTOR PAIN, CUKES RHEUMATISM, SCIATICA, BURNS. WOUNDS. SWELLINGS, FROST-BITES, NEURALGIA. Fool ins the JPheaaanta. One of the most ingenious method? practiced by preachers for the purpose of netting pheasants i#that in whict a game cock is fitted with artiflcia spurs, and then carried to the pro serves. Then the game bird crows one or two more of the cock pheas ants ^immediately respond and ad' vance to light. In this way some times five or six pheasants are taken, while the game cock remains unhurt STACKIXG the cards so that youi adversary shall have four kings against four aces which you deal t* yourself is looked upon in pokei Kennedy's Medicaj Discovery Takes hold in this order: Bowels^ Liver, Kidneys* Inside Skis, Outside Skin* Driving everything before it that ought to be out. You know whether you need it or not.' Bold by every drugcist.aadnianu(actnred by DONALD KENNEDY, ROXByRY , MASS. Remedy Free. IRSTIIT lEUff. ilnsl cure in LU asffn. Never rettirtiK . no parte; no naive: no suepo-itorv. A victim tried in vain every irmedv; has discovered anisunlo care, which be will nisi I free to lug tellow xnlerers. A<~ dresa J. H. REEVES, Bex 3X90. N.T.City.X.' C.N.U. •Ko. 11 t>i "tXTHEN WRITING TO ADVEItTISEHS, Ti please any jrou aaw the advertisement in thfa paper. GARFIELD TEA woibsd eatinz; cures Siek Head* Over­ comes r ssl| eating:; cures Siek Headache; i stores the Complexion; cores Constipation] J. H. HANKTNSON, CARTHAGS, MO., writes:! Was troubled with Constipation and Sick Headache a year ago, and two boxes GARFIKLD TKA completely cured me. A lady in Youngs town, O.. reports a core of Diabetes by using Garfield Tea, after the doc« tors had given her up to die. With Quinine, it (Ctarfieid Tea) !* a specific for La Grippa . ;J WE ARE THE PEOPLE! At Least That's What lira Ait reli Us. Who would not get a "big headT with aurh a line ot Safeties as M have to offerV Our Sprinter has tke Lubun|hi>< vial. : v iuch.haU-roanl cushics tire, holfow rims, and bt-ins constructed in this manner the rebults are & light durable tire with great resiliency. Our pnettmatie fire is absolutely correct, aad ire guarantee both for one year. We have the largest assortment of Bicycle Sundries aud NoveltiM iu America, and the prices aga.: rig li t. Llbe ral disco lints are ai w " to the trade. • * Liibufg MacufacturiiiijCa, SSI. 8*3 * 38a N. Eighth 8t* " Philadelphia, Fa CHEAPER THAN BARB WIRE. HUBUKE^ STRONG^ VISIBUfc EZSZ5 3ZSZ5 XZSZA wy TO HARTMAN WIRE PANEL FENCE. U>e. U Friivs, _ set , .ur of Khaj awn. Write for ik'ttcriptivs Double the Strength of any other fence: will not stretch, sac or A Perfect Farm Fence, yet Handsome enough to Ornament al'a-.v.. gad Testimonials, also Catalogue of Uarfman Steel Picket Lawn Fence. Tree and Flower Guards. 91 V» ire Mats. 4c. Address your nearest agent. HAKTM.4N .MFG. CO., tSeaver rWUa. T. D. CANSE, General Western Sates Agent, 508 State St., CHICAGO* ItUBLOW-SATLoa Win* Co., St. Louis, Mo., Agents for Southern Missouri and Southern HHnafr, Kf Always mention this asper. OPIUM MORPHINE Hnblt Cured in 10 IA&vr |iriiu«5 VURCU iu JLW to SO rtnya. No nay till cured. OR. J. STEPHENS, Lebanon,Ohio. F f! ner - Dor all ROUlHHt i disabled. J2 fee for Increase, as years ex-^ „ perience. Write forl^ws. A.W. McCOKMICK * Bona, WASHixeroK, D. C. A CIMCIMNATI, O. A MAN with a cork, lex ought to , , .. . ^ . . ... . . m ̂ -- - _ _ _ If TO« have Malaria, Files, Mek Head. H| Bene, Costive BoweU, Dumb Ague or • W if vo«ur food does not assimilate, •flirt'sTiny Pills: BwUl enre these troubles. Dose small. ̂ W Price, *60. Ottee, SB Vark Place, >9. ® ® t 1' * * .5 „<**...? Sll > - , FAT FOLKS REDUCES P l S O ' S C U R E r CwuaapthrM aad paopis Iwho ban weak tangsor ink-Ms.skonldusa iHio'iOn*f»r CoosaaapOoB. it has --»ad ISTSRJRUSFARTIFFL: it Is the beat eo«ga ayey. v , i-P ^ ;

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