HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-06-23, Page 4Wt.1 tt Is to be FOOT!
Tq discover a aprinkle of gray in your beard,.
And a thinness a crop where the upland is
cleared
TO note bow Yo4 talte in year sdiPPexs and
gown,
And hug to the Ore when you get honio from
tewit-
Ah, that's )vhat it is to Pe .fol:tY•
To find that our shadow is portlier grown,
That your voice has S. practical, business -like
tone;
That your vision is trielfy, which once was so
bright,
Axid a hint of a wrinkle is coming to light -
Ali, that's what its to be forty.
A sleigh -ride, a party, a dance or a die;
Why, a course, you'll bo present, you noyor
decline;
Mit, alas there's no invite, your not "young
folks," you see;
You're no longer a pea,ch,but a crab-apple tree,
Ah, thi
at's .1that it s to be forty,
A daughter that grows liken lily, a queen,
And tl.iat blooms like a rose in a garden of green,
A dapper young clerk in an ica-oream saloon,
Both a dude and a duce is to carry off soon;
And a boy that is ten, and the pride of your
eyes,
IS caught sinoldng vile eigis
on the sly -
Ah, that's what it s to be forty.
At twenty a man dreams of power and fame;
At thirty his fire has a soberer flame;
At forty he knows and he feels as he ne'er did
before,
That a nian is a fool till he's forty.
Nyerre young and were old, and we're green
and we're gray,
And the law of our living is change and decay;
Come, see the lone spot in the Valley of Tears,
Where your baby lies low in the cradle of years,
When no longer on earth he is forty.
Farm and Garden.
To those who may not be familiar with
collie dogs it may be stated that they will
not drive sheep or cattle unless first trained
to do so, though the supposition on the
part of some is that such dogs perform the
work by natural instinct. They are more
easily taught to drive stock than any other
breed of dogs, but they will not do so unless
taught.
It is much better to watch for the white
butterfly, the parent of the cabbage worm,
and kill it than to have the annoyance of
the worms. It is not so difficult to keep
the cabbage free of worms by killing the
butterflies as may be supposed, though it
requires constant watchfulness for a while.
Lice will breed on all classes of animals
and fowls at this season unless the quar-
ters be kept clean. Dry dirt is one of the
best preventives of lice, especially if used
on the floors, but the stock should be
examined occasionally. If in good oondi-
tion, however, lice do not attack animals
readily.
Keep up the use of Paris green on the
potato vines. E ,ery year the number of
bugs is being lessened, and with the aid of
Paris green and the parasites that prey on
the beetles the time may come when they
will be exterminated. The rule should be
nSit to allow one to escape.
When grapevines fail to bear, and do not
thrive well under good cultivation,out the old
vine off close to the ground and allow a new
cane to grow. Train it on the trellis, do
not allow too many shoots, and the result
will be a great improvement over the old
cane.
Never feed all the cows by a certain mea-
sure, giving each cow the same amount as
is given another, as cows differ in their
wants and preferences. The cow that is in
fall flow of milk should be given all she may
wish to eat, as she will thereby be better
enabled to give a large quantity of milk.
Young ducks should be marketed when
they weigh about three pounds each, and
may be sold either alive or dressed, the best
prices being obtained for the dressed car-
casses. The best time for selling young
duoks is in June and July; they should be
plump and fat. ,
Do not let the strawberries mat too
thickly in the rows. It is better to have
the space between the rows cultivated, and
manure worked in, so as to benefit the crop
for next season. Out away the runners if
they become too numerous.
Heavy feeding is a good quality in an
animal, and not a fault, as the more food
consumed the greater the product, if the
proper kind of animal be used for the pur-
poses required.
To fatten poultry quickly confine the
birds for ten days and feed them on a mix-
ture of cornmeal and potatoes four times a
day, with all the wheat and corn they can
eat at night.
If the meat in the barrel show any signs
of taint take it out of the barrel, wash in
clean water and put in new brine, first
cleaning the barrel thoroughly.
Do not kill the mole until satisfied
whether it is an enemy or a friend. Some-
times the mole destroys a large number of
cutworms and slugs.
"Dusty Miller" makes a beautiful orna-
mental plant in the centre of a grass plat,
but once rooted it spreads in all directions.
If a rat get into a chicken -coop it will
kill every chick if it can have time to carry
them off before being discovered.
Don't use any parsnip seed unless it be
of last year's growth, as such seed does not
readily germinate if old. •
Moltke and Bismarck.
A young lady, says Das Deutsche Tagle-
?gait, having asked Moltke and Bismarck
to favor her with a few lines in her album,
the former wrote :
Lies pass away, but truth lives for aye.
To which the Chancellor wrote:
In yonder world full well I know
Truth will at lest the victory gain;
I3ut 'gainst the lies told hero below
A marshall e'en will fight in vain.
--Notes awl Queries.
"Thai Baby in the Ash -Cart -Dumped
Alive into a Scow with the Fifteenth
Wardle Refuge -It was Nearly Dead when
Exhumed with a Pitchfork--NOne of the
Drivers Remember Picking im the Basket
in Which the Waif was Packed -It is a
Pretty 13aby Boy, and Hie Life May Yet
be Saved," -Heading in the New York
1,Yer/d.
Sea air is said to be greatly beneficial to
persons with pulmonary troubles. A we
voyage, however, is considered to be more
adve,ntageorui than a residenCe on the coat.
The Meet preValent surnanies in Scotland
are Smith, the name of oho person in every
Vizty-nine ; MacDonald, ono in seventy,
eight ; Brown, ono in eighty-rihie ; Robert-
sbrii One in ninety-one; Campbell, One in
ninety-two; Thonieon, one in ninety-five;
and Stewart, dee in ninety-eight. One
erson in °Very twelve in Scotland," eays
Mr, Seton, " will answer to one or other of
these seven lillt108."
VICTORIA'S DIOLITHE
Measured in Order to Make 4 Copy of It in
Marble.
Glheoni R•Ae told Ile Of his YleltS to
Windsor when honored with sittings for
his admirable buet of the young Queen,
writes Dr. Macaulay. On grat getting the
commission and the command to attend at
the castle he was in much anxiety and
trepidation concerning his interview with
royalty. The very first half-hour put him
perfectly at ease. He was charmed by the
graolous and affable demeanor both of the
Queen and the Prince, and he was surprised
and delighted by the wide and varied know-
ledge shown by the Queen in conversation,
for she talked frankly on many subjects. At
one of the sittings he said he wished toraea-
sure the mouth, if Her Majesty would allow
him. "Oh, certainly," said the Queen, " if
I can only keep it still and not laugh." The
proposal was apparently unexpected and SO
droll that it was some time before the
Queen could sufficiently compose herself
and only after repeatedly laughing. Another
day he said he wished to pee Her Majesty
in evening dress. She came down the
stairs with the Prince, who accompanied
her, having, like a fond young husband, his
arm round his wife's neck, and said, point-
ing to the shoulder: "Mr. Gibson, you
must give nae thisdirople." The only draw-
back in the artist's pleasant reflections of
those days was the disturbing presence of
a dear, bright, restless child of about 3
years, who kept dodging about with her
doll. This was the Princess Alice. Whether
the Queen noticed the sculptor's thoughts
or merely as a diversion, she said to the
child, "Go and give Mr. Gibson yourlaand."
The little thing toddled up and held up her
hand, which the artist took andkissed, after
which there was stillness for a long time
and the artist's attention was not disturbed.
After the last sitting the Queen said ; e Now,
Mr. Gibson, I shall lie,ve pleasure in show-
ing you what is worth seeing in the castle ;"
and the Queen and Prince took the trouble
to bring to his notice all that they thought
would most interest an artist.
Mr. Gibson seemed pleased to tell all
these details and laughed ha recalling the
Queen's amusement on first being asked
permission to measure her mouth, adding:
I measured also her height to a line and
it was exactly five feet."
Odd Means of Livelihood.
One of the highest salaried skilled work-
men in Chicago is an expert safe -opener
employed by a large safe and lock manufac-
turing company there. He was once a Well-
known burglar, but reformed when released
from the penitentiary a few years ago. He
then secured employment with the firm un-
der heavy bonds, and has been with them
ever since.
The chief industry of Kilbourn, Wis., is
the exportation of the trailing arbutus.
The flowers are made up into bouquets, the
stems being wrapped in moist cotton and
tinfoil. They are then placed in boxes and
mailed to all parts of tho United States,
including the South and California, arriving
there as fresh and fragrant as when gath-
ered in the woods of Wisconsin.
A citizen of Pasadena, Cal., keptthe wolf
from the door during the winter by fur-
nishing the village druggist with all the
horned toads he could capture. Altogether
he brought in several thousands and re-
ceived good pay for them. What the drug-
gist wanted with them nobody else knows,
but he is supposed to have utilized the oil
extracted from them in the manufacture of
a patent medicine.
A tramp recently arrested in Jackson,
Mich., for disorderly conduct, was found to
have a capacious wallet in his inside pocket
stuffed full of two -cent postage stamps. He
confessed that he had been making a tour
of the State, begging a stamp from every
person he met, on the plea of wishing to
send a letter to his wife. When a stamp
was not forthcoming he usually got two
coppers or a nickle to buy one with, and
was able to live in comfort on his revenue.
A man in Birmingham, Mich., invested
$80, all the money he had in the world, in
a double-barrelled shotgun, on Christmas
day, and entered into a contract with a
local restaurant -keeper to furnish him
with an unlimited supply of fat sparrows
at one cent apiece. The agreement has
been the cause of great satisfaction to each
of the parties to it. The hunter has made
more money per week thin he ever did at
his trade, and the reintation of the
restaurant man's quail ongoast, at 20 cents
a brace, keeps his dining -room crowded.
Their Friendship Severed.
Koseiusko Murphy -I don't see you and
Hostetter McGinnis together as much as
formerly.
Gus de Smith -No; I've given him the
cold shake.
Murphy -What did he de.?
GAB -Nothing, except he asked me why a
thief who gives hie confederates away was
like the capital of Turkey. I said I didn't
know, and then the double -dyed assassin
replied, "Because he is constant to no pal."
-Texas Siftings.
He Earned Hifi Money.
"It's one hundred dollars in your pocket,"
whispered the defendant's lawyer to the
juror, "if you can bring about a verdict of
manslaughter in the second degree."
Such proved to be the verdict, and the
lawyer thanked the juror warmly as he
paid him the money.
"Yes," said the juror, " it was tough
work, but I got there after a while. All
the rest wont in for acquittal." -N. Y. Sun.
•
When kite -flying is to be considered,• the
Chinese of any age are always children.
Old men take as keen delight in sailing
paper dragons and birds as boys of 10. I3ut
this does not detract from the pleasure of
the boys, who unwind „the kite -string and
watch their cherished toy float away with
an interest that flags not with eaoh succes-
Sive eerie' flight.
i
'Episcopal duty n some parts of Aus-
tralia has its humorous side," says the
Ballarat Courier'. "Opo prolate, on lahl
first journey around, wee flungi into the
deep mud by a restive horse. Rising rue-
fully, with hie chaplain'e help, and survey-
ing the place,• the bishop consoled hinaselt
with tho reflection," I have left a deep ha-
preasiOn in that part of the diocese, at tiny
rate."
One of the teachere in the school tet
Ila<niptomVa., recently asked one of the
Indian mmHg what lbs, etobd for. "Elbowq?
I guess," wee theunexpeoted reply.
AGNES III1NTINGTON IN A. sineY,
Slee 040 Tolls Karl Won't 841$ in St. Raul
Ora WWI!. Au1.10eurt
A $t. Paul, Minn, despeteli says : Agnes
Huntington, Marie ptolle. To Karl and
M. Donald, qf the Boston Ideal °Pere
Company, pante here e weeh ago to Assume
the leading roles in the flrst performance
of 1' Ander," eineW.oeete hyig. .Janatta,
a legal compospr of some celebrity. The
opera was to have been produced this
week, and the singers named were to
receive 01,000 for each of eight per-
formances. The interest of the occa-
sion was much' heightened by the fact
that. a Miss Murphy, a pupil of Sig.
Janette, was to sing the leading part,
Lorette, on one of the nights. lilies
Murphy, besides being a very olever
contralto, is also a great favorite in pociety
here. Miss Huntington had been en-
gaged to sing the part of I.lorette, and when
she heard that an amateur was to replace
her for one night she sought Sig. Janette.
She informed him that the people of St.
Paul expected to hear her sing, not Miss
Murphy, and she (Miss Huntington) did
not propose to disappoint them. It was in
vain that the hapless Signor remonstrated.
Miss Huntington declared that he deserved
a thrashing and that his opera ought to be
burned, and with this declaration of opinion
flounced back to her hotel. Then Tom
Karl took a hand in bedeviling Sig. jane,tta,
and informed Mai that if Miss Murphy was
allowed to sing in the opera he should dee
cline to appear. A boycott of Miss Hunt.
ington and Tom Karl is now proposed.
aNIMMI
The Autumn Assizes.
GALT, J.
Toronto Civil Asssizes-Monday, Sept 12.
TorontoCriminalAssizes-Monday,Oct.3.
St. Catharines -Monday, Oct. 24.
Orangeville -Monday, Oot. 31.
Milton -Monday, Nov. 7.
Brampton -Monday, Nov. 14.
ARMOUR, 3.
Hamilton -Monday, Sept. 12.
Stratford -Tuesday, Sept. 20.
Guelph -Monday, Sept. 26.
Berlin -Monday, Oct. 3.
Brantford -Thursday, Oct. 6.
Simcoe-Tuesday, Oct. 11.
Cayuga -Thursday, Oot. 13.
Welland -Monday, Oct. 17.
mursnox, 0. 'J.
Barrie -Monday, Sept. 12.
Owen Sound -Monday, Sept 26.
Ottawa -Monday, Oct. 3.
Pembroke-Mendey, Oct. 17. "
L'Olignal-Monday, Oct. 24.
Perth -Thursday, Oct. 27.
Lindsay -Monday, Nov. 7.
Peterboro'-Monday, Nov. 14.
BOSE, J.
London -Monday, Sept. 12.
St. Thomas -Monday, Sept. 26.
Chatham -Monday, Oct. 3.
Sandwich -Monday, Oct. 10.
Sarnia -Monday, Oct. 17.
Goderich-Monday, Oct. 24.
Walkerton -Monday, Oct. 31.
Woodstock -Monday, Nov. 7.
o'corezer., 3.
Whitby-Moiaday, Sept. 12.
Napanee-Monday, Sept. 19.
Picton-Thursday, Sept. 22.
Belleville -Monday, Sept. 26.
Kingston -Monday, Oct. 3.
Brockville -Monday, Oct. 17.
Cornwall -Monday, Oct. 24.
Cobourg-Monday, Oct. 31.
Are They Leaning on a Broken Reed '
A Brussels cable says: The discussion
of the Bill for the defence of Belgian neu-
trality by the fortification of Meuse Valley
was continued in the House of Representa-
tives yesterday. Minister of State Nothomb
showed the necessity for fortifications by
asserting that England can no longer assist
Belgium, her military forces being
numerically too weak. Minister Nothomb
quoted the opinion of Sir Charles Dilke
and other English authorities. Mr. Woeste,
one of the most powerful friends and coun-
sellors of the present Belgian Government,
maintained that unauthorized reports of
England's future attitude should not be
listened to, as the English have always
officially promised to protect Belgian
neutrality by force of arms in case of need.
Several other members rejected the idea of
England abandoning Belgium. One went
to the length of saying -incorrectly, no
doubt -that the reason why Lord Randolph
Churchill was compelled to resign was that
the English Cabinet would not abandon the
idea of protecting Belgium from attack.
The discussion of the Bill will probably
last until the end • of the present week at
least.
.A. Child's Letter to Raiser wilhelin.
A 13 -year-old lad of Stahm, in Prussia,
August Wolk by name, wrote the following
letter to the Emperor William on hisbirth-
day :
"Dear King, -On thy great birthday thy
subject offers must obedient congratula-
tions, with the prayer to the good God that
thou rnayest long be our good King. And
now I beg you to be so kind as to send my
poor father -who has boon an invalid since
the war with Austria, having been shot in
the foot -something from the war fund. I
have two brothers and two sisters, and
often we have no bread to eat. I, like my
brother, mean to be a soldier, and then will
fight tho enemy. My dear mother has
long been siok. And now I greet you, dear
Enaperor, and send you my nanae.--AnorosT
Worm, 13 years old."
The War Ministry has taken the case in
hand, and inquiries are being made into the
circumstances of the little petitioner's
parents.
Cause for Thankfulness.
4( Jim," said a lusty tramp to a compan.
ion this is beautiful weather, ain't it
" lietcherlife." "We've got or lot o' things
to bo thankful for, ain't we?" "You bet
we have, and 'specially thot wood-pilee is
out o' season."-Waslzington Critic.
PEOBIL ,YOUrna/ "The chief trouble
with journalism in 4.merica seems to be
that the men who 'know best how to run a
newspepor are engaged in other lines of
lytisiness-clerkieg. in stores, driving 'ex -
preset wagons, or 111 the embryo state Of
some d tile other profeesions."
Ripe peachde and vvaternielons are being
shipped from Georgia to northern markete.
•
A PAIIPLINA PrOMI4
The Water Became Bitter Mid the Fish
Wanted to Live 01.1,14114
A Charleston, deepatoh says: In
the pouthwestern corner of Georgetown
CellgtY, in the Santee Swamp. is Dawhe
Lake, widely celebrated for its great quan-
tity of excellent fish of all kinds. About
two weeks ago a terrific, hailstorm, of Bove -
rat home' duration, passed over the place,
beating the limbs and leaves of trees into
the lake in great quantities and damaging
the crops in the vicinity very much. A few
days after the storm the fish in the lake
began to appear upon the surface of the
water by thousands, the number increasing
daily, until now the whole surface •of the
water is covered with them. The water of
the lake has always been of a whitish color,
but now it is as black as ink and quite
bitter. It is said the fish on first rising
approached the Shore, struggling as if to
get on land. Alligators, cooters and snakes
yvero seen leaving the lake in great num-
bers. De.who Lake is about one and a half
miles long, from ten to thirty feet deep
and from one to two hundred yards wide.
The stenoh arising from so large a mass of
dead fish is terrible. The buzzards are
having a high carnival. Upon the approach
of any one they rise to fly, making a noise
similar to the roar of the lateAugustearth-
quake. Adjacent lakes are not affected.
"Don't Marry Rim!"
"He is such a fickle, inconstant fellow,
you will never be happy with him," said
Esther's friends When they learned of her
engagement to a young man who bore the
reputation of being a sad flirt. Esther,
however, know that her lover had good
qualities and she was willing to take the
risk. In nine cases out of ten it would
have proved a mistake; but Esther was an
uncommon girl and to every one's surprise
Fred made a model husband. How was
it ? Well, Esther had a cheerful, sunny
temper and a great deal of tact. Then she
enjoyed perfect health and was always so
sweet, neat and wholesome that Fred found
his own home moet pleasant and his own
wife more agreeable than any other being.
As the years passed and he saw other
women of Esther's age grow .sioldy, faded
and querulous, he realized more and more
that he had" a jewel of a wife." Good health
was half the secret of Esther's success. She
retained her vitality and good looks because
she warded off feminine weaknesses and
ailments by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite
Prescription.
A*,
A Puzzle.,
If from six you take nine, and from nine you
take ten,
(Ye wits`now the puzzle explain);
And if fifty from forty be taken, there then
Will just half a dozen remain.
Solution. -From SIX take IX and S
From IX take X and II willremain
From XL take L and X
•
The Old Silver Spoon.
How fresh in my mind are the days of my sick-
ness,
When I tossed nie in pain, all fevered and sore
The burning, the nausea, the sinking and weak-
ness,
And oven the old spoon that my medicine bore.
The old silver sppon, the family spoon,
The sick -chamber spoon that my
medicine bore.
How loth were my fever -parched lips to receive it.
How nauseous the stuff that it bore to my
tongue,
And the pain at my inwards, oh, naught could
relieve it,
Though tears of disgust from my eyeballs it
wrung.
The old silver 'Teem, =the •medicine
spoon, 4,
How awful the stuff that it lefton my
tongue. 'I
Such is the effectof nauseous, griping
medicines which 'Make the sick -room a
memory of horror. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant
Purgative Pellets, on the contrary, are
small, sugar -Coated, easy to take, purely
vegetable and perfectly 'effective. 25 cents
a vial.
The sassafras tree is qiiite a pest in most
of the Southern States as it sends up
sprouts from is roots Which soon take pos-
ession of a field that has been cleared.
The Victor's Crown
Should adorn the brow of the inventor of
the great corn cure, Putnam's Painless
Corn Extractor. It works quickly, never
makes a sore spot, and is just the thing
you want. See that you get Putnam's
Painless Corn Extractor, the sure, safe and
painless cure for corns.
The Mayor of Philadelphia celebrated
Queen Victoria's birthday by closing a low
dive that had been given her name.
The most reliable cure known for rheu-
matic affections is an internal remedy
called McCollom's Rheumatic Repellant,
prepared only by W. A. McCollom,
druggist, Tilsonburg, and sold by wholesale
and retail druggists generally.
Polyphonic.,
Jack (backward in his grammar) -"Papa,
what part of speeCh is woman ?"
Papa (fresh'from a verbal engagement
with inamiita, in which, dfecourse, he his
•
been betilly worsted)-" She Ian, t any part
of beech at all, Jack; she is the whole
of it 1"
Don't hawk, hawk and blow, blow,
dis-
gusting eparybody, but use Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy.
•
•Last week a man named D. McKay ap-
peared <before the Mayor of Kincardine
ohargeel,With entering the school grounds
and plucking the flowers the children had
plantect. The Mayor held that the defend-
ant was as criminal as though he had com-
mitted larceny in a private garden. From
the poiht of view of teachers and pupils" His
Worship stated the case very mildly.
• Thrio of the best known clergymen of the
Protestant denomination in Newark are
open and zealous in their advocacy of the
doctrines of Henry George, and probably
others of the Catholic and Protestant clergy
here are favorable to Henry George's idea
of land ownership.-Neiverk (N. J.) Press-
Regitter.
iFI4NC4120 THE WRONG MAN;
"useutablI3 MI.O.nder. PS' " SerVed-IMPS"
lett " Mrob?
A Jasper (Ind.) despatch sari ; All the
reports heretefore Pebliehed lof the Petry
county lynching have been grossly exag-
gerated and untrue. The ‘i child " reported
to have been gutraged is e, big, strapping
•woman of 23 years of age, weighing 150
pounds eir more. The man, Clay Davis,
charged with the crime is a small man.
The woman wile not seriously injured.
John Davis, who was hanged, was innocent
of any participation in the reported out.
rage. The men who did the hanging were
ten in number, masked, and had their
coats turned inside out.
Wapwallopen is the picturesque name of
a Pennsylvania village. •
AIL
YOU?
DO yOn f eel dull, languid, low-spirited, life-
less, and indescribably miserable, both physi-
cally and mentally; experience a sense of
fullness or bloating after eating, or of " gone-
ness,' or emptiness of stomach in the morn-
ing, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in
mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent
headaches, blurred eyesight," floating specks"
before the eyes,nervous prostration or ex-
haustion, irritability of temper, hot flushes,
alternating with &illy sensations, sharp,
biting, transient pains here and there, cold
feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or
disturbed. and unrefreshing sleep, constant,
indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend-
ing calamity?
If you have all, or any considerable number
of these symptoms, you aro suffering* from
that most common of American maladies -
Bilious Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated
with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more
complicated your disease has become, the
greater the number and diversity of symp-
toms. No matter what stage it has reached,
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
will subdue it, if taken according to direc-
tions for a reasonable length of time. If not
cured, complications multiply and Consump-
tion of the Lungs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease,
Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other grave
maladies are quite liable to set in and, sooner
or later. induce a fatal termination.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dia.
cowry acts powerfully upon the Liver, and
through that great blood -purifying organ,
cleanses the system of all blood -taints and im-
purities, from whatever cause arising. It is
equally efficacious in acting upon the Kid-
neys„and other excretory organscleansing,
strengthening, and healing their diseases. As
an appetizing, restorative tonic, it promotes
digestion and nutrition, thereby buildingup
both flesh and strength. In malarial districts,
this wonderful medicine has gained great
celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills and
Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis.
cover),
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a comtnon Blotch, or Eruption, to the
worst Scrofula. Salt -rheum, "Fever -sores,"
Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, all diseases
caused by bad blood aro conquered by this
powerful, purifying, and invigorating medi-
cine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly,heal under
its benign influence. Especially has it mani-
fested its potency in curing Totter, Eczema,
Erysipelas, l3olls, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrof-
ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joipt Disease,
"White Swellings," Goitre, or Thick Neck,
and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in
stamps for a large Treatise, ,with colored
'plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount
for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections.
r•
"FOR THE BLOOD IS4THE LIFE."
Thoroughly cleanse it by using III% Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery, and good
digestion,. n fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital
strength and bodily healtlOvill be established.
CONSUMPTION
which is'Scrofulabrilie Lungs, Is arrested
and cured by this, remedy, if taken in tho
earlier stages ()Mho disease. From its mar-
velous power over this terribly fatal disease,
when first offering this now world -famed rem-
edy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought Seriously
of calling it his "CONSUMPTION Cyan," but
abandoned that name as too restrictive for
medicifie which, from Ks wonderful cona-
binationvf tonic, or strengthening, alterative,
or bloodteleansing, anti -bilious, pectoral, and
nutritive; properties, is unequaled, not only
as a remedy for Consumption, but for till
Chronic:Diseases of tho
Liver*;.Blood, and Lungs.
For Wedir Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short-
ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bron-
chitis, Asthina, Severe Coughs, and kindred
affections, ts an efficient remedy.
for 5sI.
.0e0n.d tbS*•
31.by Druggists, at $1.00, or Six Bottles
n cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's
book on Consumption. Address,
World's Diiiensary Modtcal Association,
863 Main St.. 10FFALO,
DC/ N L.„8:8 87.
.imairna.Aaan'Fis
sitoT GUN SIGHT
n.ti excellent thlog. Price DOM
S'end for arceder and New Cata-
logue of Rifle Sights. Address
WM. LYMAN• Middlefield, Conn.
CONSUMPTION.
I have A positive remedy for the above dI,n,e; by lte nee
thousands ammo of the wont kind awl Miens standinw
asive been cared. Indeed, so etrong le my faith In 11.
eMceey, that I will aend TWO BOTTLES FRES, together
with • VALUABLE TREATISE on Oils disease to any
sufferer. Give express and P. o. address.
DR. T. A. SLOCUM,
Branch Office, 37 Tonga St., Tomato
PS
BAKING
P ER
THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND
!CURE FITS!
Men I say eure I do not mean merely to ,to them Mr es
limoand then haVe thent rettirri agaln. .rniefin A Wield
mare, 11,600 made the disease of PITS, It PILSPSY orFALL
IND 1310155588 • Iffe.long Minty. 1 warrant 101 10511017
to cure the worst mem Because Others ligVe failed 5, 00
'lumen for not no* 'receiving a mire. Send at once for
treatise And a Terms Bottle of MY Infalliblr remedy. ,Olvo
Express And got onus.: 11 00011 you nothing ,for a Dia
and 1 will cure' You. Addrems DE. IL G. BOOT,
i3rancli Office, 37 Yugo St.; Tolituto.
BEST IN THE ,
WORLD!
ittlE,AXLIAXIM" Magazine Rifle. '1.4-44%,
For 110g0 et Small Mune, 411 Sizes. strOugeit 'illodtrng rifle nub. Perfeete
accuracy guaranteed, end Ow wily Abselutely mate Mile on tho market
HALLAIID exterolv, srmirred Alkin TARO ET nines, Nroeld rehowned. Sod or
11104e55e4 Catalogue, MARLIN FIRE .altMS Co., Neu. Maven, Conn.
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