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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1898-09-16, Page 6;r Sept embol• 16, 1898 Free Medleol IWvIce You need a doctor. nany times whoa you don't call one. You suffer pain in fifty forms and yet won't call the doctor, be- cause you hope that the pain "will go away after a while." And, too, you knew by experience, that that first visit of the doctor is generally followed by many others, with the inevitable consequence of a big bill "for professional services." You don't know what to do for yourself or what to take. But suppose that you could get free, ab- solutely free, the advice of ane of the most [�MeBI Ph!JsIchrns in the United States? You can. The phy- sician is right Iters. Ho has an office in the building, he has a staff of correspondents to assist him, and anyone and everyone, who needs medical advice is invited to writo to him. If it's baby's health or mother's or the health of any member of the family you may write about it, sure of a careful read- ing of your letter, sure of a conscientious diagnosis of your case, Sure oi a Cure if cure is possible. Every letter will be held as a strictly confidential communication. Remember these facts. We offer you medical advice from one of the most eminent practitioners in the United States, whether our medicines suit your particular case or not. We offer you this advice at the cost of the two cent stamp which it will take to bring your letter to our office. Address the Medical Department. Dr. J. C. Ayer Co.. Lowell, Mass. THE PRIMROSE SELLER. Poor of garb, but fair of face, The little maid stood in the market plane, Singing: "Fresh posies, pale primroses, A penny a bunch. Who'll buy? Sweet spring posies, pale primroses, A penny a bunch. Who'll buy?" The knight rode by on his Arab steed. He drew his rein, and he checked his speed. "A penny a bunch. Who'll buy?" No threw hlsr a crown and kissed his hand. Es was the noblest in the land. "A penny a bunch. Who'll buy?" Se doffed his plume to her lovely face And left her there in the market place, Singing: "Fresh posies, pale primroses, A penny a bunch. Who'll buy? Sweet spring posies, pale primroses, A penny a bunch. Who'll buy?" -rMergperjte Merington in Ladies' Home Jour - eel. THE SMOKING LAMP. Time Honored Institution of the British and American Navies. One of the time honored institutions of the American and British navies is the smoking lamp. Without the smoking Tamp the )nodorn sailorman would be like a fish out of water. He W uld mutiny. A • failure by the galley nook to light the smoking lamp without the less of a sed- ond's time after the word has been given amuses Jack's temper, and whatever lim- 'i ed stook of invectives he is possessed of Is made publio with promptitude and em- ehaata to landsmen the itfentidii of it &iuoking ]amp has no mote significaneo than a moil - tion of the Jaok-of-the-Dust. But both are a necessary part of the equipment of any warship, be she first rate or fourth rate. Upon the smoking lamp the orew, .x including that mysterious adjunct of the paymaster's department, Jaok-of-the-Dust, depend for a light for their pipes. Jaok-of- the-Dust dives down into the depths of the bold and brings up the navy plug, which, living out into bits and crumbled between the hands, is put into a pipe and fired at the smoking lamp. The need for the smoking lamp arises from the necessity of guarding the ehip to ' the utmost from danger of fire. Prawn- -ss- whloh seem ridioulous and unneces- sary to a landsman have been found by sad experience to be absolutely necessary on board a ship of war. The naval regn- lations provide severe punishment for any seaman caught with matches on his per- son. erson. Could it have been proved by the Spanish board of inquiry that the sailors of the Maine had been guilty of carrying matches about with them they would have been justified by naval experts the world over in declaring that the destruction of the Maine was due to the carelessness and lack of discipline on board. Such was not the case, however. No sailor on the Maine carried matches. He lit his pipe at the smoking lamp, and he only smoked during those times that the smoking lamp was lit. He never dared to go below decks with a lighted pipe. If he had Jimmy Legs would have had him aft.) at thetstink, and the executive officer would have deprived him of shore leave for a month at least. The smoking lamp is constructed upon the same lines as a lantern, but the globe is made of sheet iron instead of glass. In the side there is a small round hole through which Jaok may stick his pipe in order to catch the flame. It is the duty of the ship's cook or one of his assistants to light the lamp when the word is given by the proper officer, who is generally the chief boatswain's mate. He in turn gets lits orders from the officer of the deck.— ' Pittsburg Dispatch. You Need the Best. The Diamond Dyes Color all Classes of Goods., Diamond Dyes, as far as general useful. nese is concerned, are far ahead of all the adulterated package and soap greasy mix - three which are very limited in their pow- ers. 'Tie true they give a semblance of color to thin and flimsy fabrics, but when tried on gond dram Ma erials and heavier goods, such se flannels,woreteds,tweeds and cloths, ,tboy.are pisgply worthlesey T e Diet otl(I Dyes, o g to their great -' pri r of niattation, t it perfect solidity l-lopth'of,uhaileryr-iii r purity and brie• Batey, ere adapted for all elegies of goods ',from. the thinnest g&nee to the heaviest ler bf''vork,possible ,,sigljr•.to- iter -Diamond Dyes, is what has Made there AO popular all over the world. f ti . d 0_y;ouxdyeing worki ' rc if li til td?%$ud Dyes.q iboid all 1initatiort packages and soap preparations. The', ealylond Dyes are first and best for `.4home nue, When Leap Years End. In 1682, in tho arrangement of the Juli- an calendar, ten days were dropped so as to get things running on the then new but the present basis of calculating time. So as to keep things running right it was determined that a year ending a century should not be bisextilu, except every fourth century. Thus there was no leap year in 1700, 1800 or 1900. It is, or at least was, rather rough on the ladies, who have spe- cial advantages in leap year. The ladies gut left again in 1900; but, though there will not bo many of those who see 1900 who will see 2000, the latter year, ending a fourth century, will be a loap year. In this way throe days are retrenohud in four centuries, and the remaining seven days will be made up in a little over 800 years. After that calendar years will be like solar years, and future errors in the calculation of time will occur ne more. The loss of leap year will in thousands of years affect the seasons, but I suppose tho mathematicians of the oeuturios hence will be so flip in handling figures and making calculations that they will have no difficulty in keeping things going cor- reotly.—Washington Star. Under No Obligations. "Shave yourself, sir, don't you?" said a barber who was trimming the hair of a customer, "Yes," replied the customer. "How did you know?" "Well," rejoined the barber, "I know I have never ahavod you, and I do some- times trim your hair. Besides that I think a harbor would do a little better job than you seem to do," "Very likely." "We'd have pretty hard work making a living if every man was like you," pur- sued the barber after clipping and snip- ping a fow moments in silence. "Perhaps." "Y ou're in business. ain't you?" "Yes, "Well, s'pose no barbers ever bought anything of you, how would you like that?" "I don't think it would make much difference," rejoined the customer. "My business is selling pipe organs." And the barber finished the job in s1- lenco.—Youth's Companion. News Notes Barrie's tax rate is 25 mills, c"x,'James Iludley, the tramp who shot G.T. R. Baggegf me n McKeough, of St. Mary's, has been adjudged insane. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Tulle Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, Al Drulreists refund the money 1111 fails to cure,25e Samuel Campbell, P farmer 85 years of age,livingat Ball Point,was drowned Wed- nesday evening while out fishing. Mr Joseph Reeves of Belleville, over 80 years of age and quite feeble, was knocked down by a runaway horse. It is, feared the shock will prove fatal. HOW MUCH DO YOU WEIGH? Thinness is wasting. Wasting is tearing down. Scott's Emulsion builds up. It never makes waste. It will give you rich blood and bring back your weight. Mr Peter Bertram, hardware merchant, Hamilton, has assigned. The liabilities are estimated at $26,000, and the assets half that sum, crofula, hip disease, salt rheum, dy, spepsia and other diseases due t0 impure blood are cured by Hood's baroaparilla, Hon, 4aill44 Chamberlin, Secretary of e:a*e fig true British colonies, has arrived at ew York. Mr Chamberlin will visit British Columbia_ WHAT IS NEEDED By every woman and man if they desire to secure comfort in this world is a corn Sheller. Putnam's Corn Extractor shells corns in two or three days and without dis- comfort or pain. A hundred imitations prove the melte of Putnams' Painless Core Extractor, which is always sure, safe and painless. -.See eignaturreof-N.Polson & Co. on each bottle. Sold by medicine deal- ers. The body of John Doherty of Niagara Falls, Ont., a man about 35 years of age, was found in Jolly Cut, in the Queen Vio• toria Park, on the Canadian side. He has evidently been murdered. MARTYR TO HEART TROUBLE, Mrs Selina E. Core, Amherst, N.S.,says: "At times I suffered intensely from palpit- ation andlfluttering of my heart. I was weak and my nerves shattered, Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills have regulated my heart, toned my nerves and built up my health." At the General Methodist Conferen,e a resolution was passed approving the lnrin• oiple of the proposition to raise a million dollar fund to mark the opening of the 20th oentnry, MEETS YOUR NEEDS. When yon feel tired, languid, nervous, and are troubled with pimples and erup- tions, yon will find Hood's Sarsaparilla ex• actly meets your needs. It purifies and enriches the blood, and imparts;to it the qualities needed to tone the nerves, and nourish the whole system. It cures all blood humors. H000's Plras cure sick headache, nausea, biliousness and all liver ills. Prioe 25o. The High Court I.O.F., Eastern Ontar- io, will meet at Kingston next year. Wm. Bnrk, aged twenty, living near Caledonia, was struck by lightning and killed while standing under a tree. Mrs. Jennie Battersill of Leamington, a patient at the London Asylum, choked herself with a strip of bed clothing. It has been held that ooneumption is he- reditary, and the fact that one person of a family had died with ooneumption was considered a sure sign that others of that family oouid not escape it. This is partly true and partly untrue. A man with weak lunge is likely to transmit that weakness to his children. But there is no reason in the world why the weakness should be al- lowed to develop. Keep the lungs full of rich, red, wholesome blood, and the weak- ness will disappear. Decaying tissues will bo thrown off, and new material will be added until the lunge are well and perfectly strong again. This is the thing that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery does, This is what makes it cure 98 per cent of all cases of consumption where it is taken according to directions. It searches ont disease ga' ms wherever they may be in the body, and foreleg than out of the system. It supplies the blood with rioh, Hte•givtng properties, it makes the appetite good, di. ,gems ., ,e1+t Bed 8 n one -cent s6 i n lrs t•-"8rfd'sDis tensa y'Medical,As+ sedation, Buffalo, N. Y., and receive Dr. Pieroe'a 1008 page "Common Sense Medi- cal Adviser," profusely illustrated. • 1HE CLINTON NEW ERA (ASSESSMENT svSTBM), The Monarch oflrhe Forest Is the Emblem „OP THE.. Monarch of Canadian Fraternal Insurance and Benefit Societies. ..CANADIAN.. Order of Foresters Organized and Incorporated 1879. Head Office, - BRANTFORD, ONT. INVESTED IN DOMINION GOVERNMENT BONDS, ,4100,000,00. SURPLUS FUNDS APRIL 1st, 1898, $618,J63.78, Iavestedin the best monetary Institutions in the Dontiniu.t of Carnd:, MEMBERSHIP OVER 28,000. A Purely Canadian Institution having no weaken- ing alliances or branches in foreign and less healthy commies. Full information, rates, etc„ sent • on arpli..ntion to R. ELLIOTT. •. ILC.?.,, Ingersoll, Ont.; Tilos, WHirs, H.S., Brantford, Ont,; or gaNST GARTUNO, Supt. of Organization, Brantford, Onc A PHILIPPINE VOLCANO. Daring Exploration of the Crater of Teel by Dr. Hans, the Arctic hero. Professor Charles W. Shields writes of "The Arctic Monument Named For Ten- nyson by Dr. Kano" and incidentally gives a sketch of the latter in The Century. Professor Shields says: It was at Luzon, the largest of the Phil- ippine islands, that his adventurous spirit, though under a scientific impulse, passed the limits of prudence in hli far famed ex- ploration of fho crater of iae1, a volcano on the Pacific coast of the island, in a region inhabited only by savages. Cross- ing over to the capital city of the island during ono of the long delays of Chinese diplomacy, he procured an escort of na- tives from the arcbblehop of Manilla (by moans of letters front American prelates which he had secured before leaving home), and, in rompaiiy with his friend Baron Loe, a relative of Metternich, penetrated the country to the asphaltic lake in which the island volcano is situated. 130111 gen• tlemen at first descended together until they reached a precipice overhanging the naive -me gulf of the crater, wen the baron saw further ;p0111V64 ko be impossi- ble. But the doctor, ip spite df the ro- monstrances of the whole party, insisted upon being lowered over the ledge by means of a rope made of bamboos and hold in the hands of the natives, under the baron's directions, until be reached the hotmj 00 feet below, J -Vein, !tlllrsalr `Diu the cord, he forced wf5 uownward through the outs vapors, vapors, over the hob ashes, to the een boiling lake, dipped his specimen bottle into its waters, returned to the rope, several times stumbling, almost stifled and with one of his boots charred to a coal, but succeeded in again fastening himself and was hauled up by his assist- ants and received into their hands ex- hausted and almost insensible. Remedies brought from the neighboring hermitage wore applied, and he was so far restored that they could proceed on their journey. But rumors spread before them among the • pygmy savages on the island of the _ profane invasion which had been -made - into the mysteries of the Teel, and an angry mob gathered about thorn, which was only dispersed by ope or two pistol shots and the timely arrival of the padres, The,trophies of this expedition wore so>lle, valuable mineral spooimens, a bottl'$*eta sulphur water, a series of graphic views, from recollection, in his sketchbook, and a written description of the volcano by one of the friars, which, after many wander- ings, was put in his hands as he sat at the home dinner table 12 years afterward. Pickle and an Emergoy. The talk turned the other day in an eastern Maine town on good luck Doming out of apparent misfortune, and as an il- lustration a gentleman told how a Waldo county man's house caught fire in a time of great drought when the well was dry and there was no water within half a mile. The woman of the bouse discovered it burning at a lively rate on the dry roof. Help was soiree as water. She began wringing bey hands and saying over and over to herself: "Here's a pretty pickle! Aretty pickle!" pretty pickle!" the word unconsoious- lly repeated itself, and then elle thought of a whole barrel frill of pork pickle in the cellar, caved for bailing over. She darted down the cellarway and soon began delug- ing the roof with the brine. Every one who has tried it knows what a oomplete fire extinguisher salt water is. Theeffoob was magical, and before the supply of plo- kle was exhausted she had the fire out, and the home was saved. She says she never should have thought of it if that word pickle had not kept running it her mind. —Lewiston (Me.) Journal. Lincoln's Pioneer. Abraham Lincoln's western pioneer, al- ways on the lookout for danger and ready to magnify it beyond its true proportions, is only one of a large class of people who use up in one way and another a good deal of vitality which might be profitably applied. Mr. Lincoln's old backwoodsman had very heavy overhanging eyebrows and wore big epeotaolos with brass rims. One day he name rushing into his cabin and seizing bis rifle aimed itdirefully through a crack of the door at a great oak tree that Atood near and fired. "What to it?" whimpered his wife. "A wildcat, Sairy, the orneriest wildcat you -ever see, an 1 missed him l" 13e hastily loaded and fired again and thole again. "NOW, bold'Op, 3osht'ua,' ioil NIP good wife. "Let me look at you. Way, Iawks• a -daisy, it's nothin but a little bug on ons o' your eyebrowe?"—Youth's Companion. Children. Ory for CASTOR IA. Ion Cream In Japan. "I met a charming young Japanese woman the other day, " says a woman con- tributor. "She was eating lee cream, and by way of conversation I asked her if they have ioe cream in ,Japan." "Oh, yes," said she, "but not so much as in America, nor is it as good as Ameri- can ioe oream. There is no other country in the world where they have such deli- cious ioe oreain and tees as in America." "And what do you pall lee cream in Japan?" I asked. "We have adopted the American name," she answered. "\\'e call it ice cream. We have lemonade, too, and we call it"— "Lemon squash; we call it lemon squash," said au English woman who sat near. "No," laughed the dainty lady from Japan, "we call It lemonade, and even if you don't know a word of .Japanese you needn't suffer for lack of your national dainties when you go to Japan, for 'ice cream' and 'lemonade' are words every- body understands. "—Washington Star, • The Amulet Habit. Many sailors on our mon-of-war wear amulets to keep away evil spirits. Some wear them to keep off disease. This super- stition prevails to a limited extent among the ofboers of tho liue. In the old days children were required to wear amulets outdo of asafetida, tied to the neck with a string. They were supposed to keep off all contagious and infectious diseases, and it is possible that they did, because the persis- tent alllaceous odor of the guns is enough to destroy all branches of the bacteria family. No stranger eared to fondle a child scent- ed with asafetida, The Mohammedans used to wear diminutive copies of the Koran as amulets. I have seen negroos in the south wear the horny substance of a horse's hoof to keep off the smallpox.— New York Press. Lightning and Thunder. It is said that lightning may be recog- nized at a distance of 200 miles when clouds among which it plays are at a high altitude, but that thunder can Seldom be heard at a greater distance than ton miles. The sound of thunder is also subject to retraction by layers of different density in the atmosphere, as well as to the effects of "sound shadows," produced by hills and other interposed objects. These are among tho reasons for the existence of the so called "sheet," or "summer," lightning, which seems tp be unattended by thunder. The hardest Japanese wood is the kiya- kl, resembling oak in fiber, which takes a high polish and is used for fine work and frames of ships, but is becoming very scarce, the price having doubled within the last few years. Children Cry for CASTOR IA. se Can't Sleep. It The weary vigils of the night, anxious hours that drag like days. How often they come, and how unwelcome they are. A system robbed by sleeplessness of natural rest cannot be vigorous and strong. The nerves are at fault and must be built up. Dr. Ward's Blood and Nerve Pills are the remedy that cured MISS EMMA TEMPLE. HERE IS WHAT SHE SAYSI At last, after eight months of physical weakness and netvuus prostration, caused by over ext•rtion and want of rest, -during which time I suffer d gn•t,tly on account of the shattered condition of my nerves, and for which I was unable to dud any relief, 1 have found a medicine Dr. \Vaid's Blood and Nerve 1' lis) that in three months made my nerves strung, removed ail nervous troubles, built up 10 y physical system and made me strong and well, They removed despon- dency, and in consequence of taking your valuable Pills I lank forward to the future hopefully. I have to thank your great cure for nervousness and bodily weakness for my present good health and strength. Yours truly, Signed, EMMA TEMPLE, Hastings, Ont, Dr. Ward's Blood and Nerve Pills are sold At .•i ro•It.n per box, g boxes for $J no, at druggists, or emailed on receipt of price by The Dr. Ward Co , 7t Victoria St, Toronto. Book of information free. Mte Amos Bonell ofOttawa swallow - e 1 half it 1 utmbler of au bolic acid. No hopes of her recovery are entertained. Mrs. Sant Brook, and Mary Jane and Ethel McTavish of Belmont were pois- oned by drinking buttermilk, but will re. cover. DO.NN CURES A MANITOBA MAN. Mr Alex. Fraser, Miami, Man,, writes:— "I cannot refrain from recommending Doan's Hidecy Pills to any person troubled with kidney disrrder, for a believe if they c'uld cure me they would cure any ease." The thermometer recorded 98 degrees on the Toronto Observatory thermometer Friday, a higher temperature than hag been recorded since 1854. Why it pays. Strength in the hidden parts is the keynote of a good shoe. Without it the shoe can not be comfortable— cannot wear well. Weak spots cause nth uneveness under the foot—pain. When one weak spot wears out, the shoe is done. One • piece of poor material—work- manship—spoils the whole shoe. Uneveness from any cause — weakness, r' threads, tacks or lumps under the foot—is painful, and the wearer unconciously wears out other parts of the shoe more quickly by exerting extra pressure upon them in the effort to relieve the tender places. So a shoe to give greatest wear must be comfortable, — Goodyear welted — strong in the hidden parts. Its economical to wear that kind of a shoe. The "Slater Shoe" is Goodyear Welted. It is made by specialists who work on nothing but one kind of men's shoes. Everybody knows that a workman who does one particular thing all the time does that thing well and quickly. Every operation in the making of -a "Slater Shoe" is performed by men who do nothing but that identical thing. The "Slater Shoe," a speciality, is there- fore better and made with less cost than common shoes made in a factory where all kinds of shoes are made. The saving in cost is put into quality of material and workmanship. The materials used in Slater Shoes—the hidden parts as well as those seen—must be the best obtainable, tecause the makers stamp their name on the soles andguarantee the workmanship and quality and they coul not afford to do so if; the shoes were not faultless. Because of these reasons it iseconomical to wearater Shoes." — Price, 3.00, 4 O and *5.00 stamped on the soles L`AFREE.UE "The Slater Shoe." JACKSON BROS., Sole Agents for Clinton BUSINESS CHANGE We wish to announce to the publio that we have purohaaed the (.irocery busi- ness and stook of James Steep, and have thoroughly overhauled the same, and added to it over $600 worth of the freshest and best goods in the tradee are now prepared to welcome our old customers and as many ntw onee a honor us with a cal]. We are offering some real snaps. See oar 1 Ib. tin - 'ak- ing Powder and Scissors for 25o. Our reduced price on Tema is giving great sat- isfaction. Pickles Mushroom Catsupo. 10o, three for 2er bottle. 5o. Try Gloss ourstarch, 5c line of. Teas at 0oer 1 lb paGoode delivered. Cash paid for Butter & Eggs J. McMURRAY, Conibe's Block PLUSH PARLOR SUITESixPieces, � Only $2 We carry a large stook of Extension Tables, Sideboards, Maii}� Lounges, Bedroom Sets, Mattresses and Springs at prices that defy competition. Window Shades and Poles at rock bottom prioes. Picture Framing a specially. Our Undertaking stock is complete. Prompt attention awaits your call, J. H. CHELLEW. BLYTH LY:SPECIALS Men's Tweed Pants, good value at 13,50, offering now for 19.50 Men's Navy Blue Serge Suits that wonld be cheap at $7, our5• rine is Men's F auey Tweed Suits extra lining and make, well worth110,p$ choice for $7,50 you A large stock of Lamps, new design, special top that will not Dome loose, hand- some colors and patterns, price within the reach of all. Very cheap. They are a real bargain. Colne for one.' Another supply of Wiligiam Salt to hand. Price 11 a barrel, cash. Sugar and Fruit Jars still booming. Best value anywhere to be found here in Tweeds. Your interests always well attended to here. We want your custom. Cash or produce are our terms. LONDESBORO EmrouluM, June 22nd, R. ADAMS HUB GROCERY The most of goods are advancing, but CROCKERY is getting cheaper. We have just received a shipment of DINNER SETS, ranging from $6 and up, as fine goods and as cheap as ever sold in C!inton, considering quality. Also a erste of Stoneware, direct from England. You oan get any part of a set or a, whole one, just as you wish, and at ridiculous prices. star 1R:4:310 S'WALJ.I WT, - Clinton FURNITURE BROADFOOT, BOX & C The„pteady increase in our trade is good proof of the fact that our goods are r1 and our prices lower than those of other dealers in the trade. We manufacture furniture on a large scale and nen afford to sell cheap, 11 y y from us, we save for you the profit, which, in other cases, has to be added n for the retail dealer. This week we have passed into stock some of our new designs. Space will not permit• us to quote prices, but come and see for yourself what°snaps we have to offer, Remember; we are determined that our prices shall be the lowest in the trade. UNDERTAKING. In this department our stock is complete, and we have nndoubtedlyl,the best funeral outfit in the county. Our prides are as low as the lowest. BROADFOOT,BOX & CO. J. A'. Chidley Managers P S—Night and Sunday calls attended to by oalling at J. W. Chidley's, (Funeral Director) residence. THE BEST PHOTOGRAPHS ARE TAKEN BY HORACE FOSTER A Prominent Physician. A prominent New York physician in disouasingg the merits of Ripens Tabules with a brother M. D. said : " Several years ago I asserted that it one wished to beoome a philan. thopist, and do a beneficent deed— one that would help the whole hu- man rano—nothing mould be better than to procure the Roosevelt Hoa- pital prescription, which is the bars, of the Ripon *Tabule,, and cause it to be put up in the form of a ketchup and diatributed among the poor. dales Increasing. The largest retail drug store is America is that of Hegeman & Co. on Broadway in New York City. A reporter who went there tot 1)i kysloian emce, and that means a how Ripens Tab- tsavingof $2 a call. An Elderly Lady. An elderly lady living at Fordham Heights, s part of New York City, and who was. knolva to be a warm advocate of Ripani Tabules for any ease of livor trouble or indigestion, said to sreporter who vieited her for the purpose of learning i� particu- lars arta u- lars of her' orae s employed a physician and did so on the last occasion I had for one, but at that time obtained no beneficial results. I had never had any faith in patent tnod1Ofnee, but having seen Ripens Tabul recommended very highly in theNew York Herald con.. eluded to' gi a them a trial, and round the were just what my case demand I hive'never employed ules were selling bought a flea -cent carton and asked: "Do you have much call for these?" He was referred to agentleman who proved to be the head of the depart- ment. He said : " The sale of Ripens Tabules lei constant and is increasing, due especially to the influential character of the testimonials in the daily press, and growing out of these, through the rerommendatlon of friend to friend: Satigfhyotiori with thein is verbeguny general, ra ice at "toy are ermanent customer for them is m : This, 1 believe, is through the 'ONECIVES RELIEF merit, which proves the bona de character. i f , e advge`rtising. I think In the general A dollar's worth of R i p an s Tabulee lasts me a month, and I would not be without them now if it were my last deililtl."tif At the tt.ma of this inter- ewere were present tbvo daugh- ters who specially ollfetted to themlr *nether giving s testimonial which shduldparade her name in thenewspapers,' but to do this the elder lady argued : "There majrN,ther'WW1; jtlet like and I sure I take great pl: in tia4llf mg endinthe Tahu] ofle afflioted as w Jf ii<lii3 be papers t .1013 SOMQ other pp' eerson similarly affected tots!he•gmeatly ignfiited as I have been, I see no ojecttiion." The daugh- ters, knowing how earnestly she felt bout fitbenefit !dh = - I d' 4ll lived. decided n7io tt'ad Anew style peahen containing. {1t(i titti`rits packed ina pew carton (without gime) hin t: for talent some drug etoree—rd* SIVs to ow- Plead sort M intended for the poor wed th• cooppomloal. One dozen of the arecent cartons (120 1 had b mai by sending fo •� eight *mato the lgraxe CaastoiL COMPANY, No. 10 vr�Ii Nryt :p Fr a eptil i t e.� news �irai e �.8 oran at some iquor stoes.res and barber ahopa A' t. One giros roller.