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Lucknow Sentinel, 1888-02-24, Page 7'•( • 42 , • • I . - . •01;TRItElisIT • TOPX(30: , Lreriet Mame Wiliam, the 11-yeartold oherith who deliberately set fire ' to the New York Hospital for Crippled Children four times in euccession. thelast Week, has a round, plump.face, large blue eyes; and golden hair, and wee the pet of the whole establishment. All of which goes. to phew that you mustn't place, too much .confi- ' deuce 'in outward apPeatances, • Tun late William Oraellehthetlpe, ef• Westmoreland, England, was an old chum at ra_ora Brougham, Coleridge, Southey. • 'Wordsworth, Herschell, Lyeli, Murchison, Sydney • Smith and Mts. Somerville. Wordsworth Was his °eosin. In company with Lord ,Btite he crimped in 1816 from Livorno to Elba andhad an interview with Napoleon: Bonaparte the 'clay before, he made his cleave back to Preece. • ' • • Tau Empress of Attetria,, alarmed at. her inerecisieg embonpoint, has • taken. the • itaviee of her. physidans to go in fit plenty Of exeroise. Any day may be Wit. • nessed at the' Caetle of Godolo a sight, awe. • inepiring or • comical, according to the • opinions 9f the epeotetere, of a stout, -•'elcierly Empress fencing with a demure .• young arebdueess, Marie -Valerie by name. •A dozen years ago the Empress was able to bolt herself with one of her august Inw oollere-a No. 17. ' Ownee te the alarming frequency Of -attacks of robbers upon, mail trains on - sparsely' settled routes in the Far West and the almost constant peril in which the lives of postal employees are placed by these .marauders, the United States Post.Office Department has determined to aril, at )...t the .expense of the Government, every • postal employee on these exposed railroad - routes with weapons of the latest and ,most effective kind. It is a Wonder that this precaution hap not been taken long ere now: Printers' Circular: Some advertieers feel -*that the publisher of a newspaper is , under an obligation for their patronage, and, if offended, threaten to/withdraw it. Notes.. 'paper men should omit no opportunity that offers itself to teach their patrons.that they confer greater obligations thantheyreceive. No man advertises unless he, expeies. to receive More benefit than the worth of the money that he pays. Thepublisheris under more ohtigatioirto his advertiser than 'ii' eldetor4ektoiliis gals* orAlnatte, feeintitinirhenefit. . 4 Tnn approach of St. Valentine's Day .has led in Washington to a disgraceful piece of impudence °tithe part of a firm which publishes.. cheap prints. A design composed of two large hearts, with , a plc- . ture of President Cleveland in one and of. ' Mrs; Cleveland in the other,_ has been leaned with the gushing legend printed • • underneath," Two Bouts with but a single thought, two hearts that beat as One." :Mrs. Cleveland was much, annoyed at this • impertinent production, and certain mis- gWded atteinpted4o"-buyrnp---the- pictures. • The publishers,however, net understanding the tree cepee of the rapid have-clunipecla second and larger lot • on the:Market. •During the disonssion of two papers dealing with artificial lighting, read at the recent meeting of the American Gas Light Association, Dr. Morton, the well. , known physiciet; drew attention to a point apt to be overlooked in these days of electric and incandescent gas lighting, viz., the iraPortance of a thoroughly diffuse - light, if injury to the eye is to be avoided. o said that diffused e,lighting, 'emanating froni,not tee brilliant sources, is better in every way than that which, thotigh,equal in absolute quantity,.proceeds from intensely • bright , points; and he referred to the paralysing effect and ultimate injury to the ,eye precludedby frequent exhibi- tions of powerful naked lights of any kind. All lights of great brillianeY ' should be placed above the Ordinary line of vision, ' and suitably shaded,- ' GENERAL Tenen,iii-Tinver--the Attache to the Chinese Embassy in Paris, has written to M. Franck,. Professor of the , *A.cademy of Sciences, to . thank him for making him at member of the•French Atheist -Thighe. ,He takes advantage Of the occasion to enlighten Europeans on en interesting point of Chineee theology... The , general says it is not true, as the material. tete declare, that the Chineee are atheists,. • On the contrary, they -recognize mid prce e existence of God: • He protesta • again he attempt made to prove that COnf us was a materialist. He says that •Goti and heaven are synonymeus terms -among the Celestials. Moreover, as file- '• thee prod of their belief in the existence 'of a Supreme being, he informs no that .the word • atheist does not . mild in the • .Chinese language, and that the Emperor of China is regarded by ' his subjects as the' representative Of the DiViiiity: • l• ,A-LITTLS 'northeast of India is Kafiristan, whose lovely valleys are densely populated by tribes that are physically' among the handsomest of Asiatics. Their 'nifty is grow out og the rook iteelf, earth -surfaces • being eentedellens by theixAbsenee. It is Uninhabited by ininpan beinge, nor could' any trafie Of animals be discovered, but see birchswarm over ever, part of the island and about. 400 weed Pigeons tier° shot by the explorers while they remained there. No fruits or vegetable matter fit for eon- entliPtion Could, however, be fennel, nor the existence of any supply of /testi water. and • e belief is that the vegetation of thole- - • TE rliY/10171! BRETOW. Origin of the Organizailon, and What, it • Professes-, (Plynlouth Correspondent Canada, Presbyterian.) The Plymouth Brethren OWO their origin to two. men -Anthony Norris Groves, Exeter,- and it Dublin b ri • end is depoadept , for nottrishment on tbe dews end, heavy rains. that • fall. The various specimens, collected of birds; plants and insects, carefully preserved on board under the direction' of Mr: Lister, the well, known naturilist-who went speeially to the island in the Egeria-will be sent home , for , the British museum and Hew gardens. . AT the 'associated Soiree. of the Literary, Scientific and Art Sooietiee of Liverpool, Proieseor Hele-Shiew delivered a lecture on "Perpetual' Motion," Which was copiously illustrated by means of lantern pictures. The lecturer explained to,his audience that the idea Of perpetual motion was Very ancient, and that its successful achieve- ment was as far off as ever, because it is impossible. An old Sanwa niantisoript tells of an attempt at a perpetual motion machine, which was probably connected in some way with the prAyiag wheels of the Budkihists. In Europe, the first definite attempt at perpetual motion was made about the twelfth century; but many crude contrivances have been made. The favor. ite idea seeined to be that of, a wheel so weighted with movable balls as to be whirled around in spite of the laws of gravitation. Professor Hele-Shaw ex- hibited wheel thus, arranged, which flew foetid • at a . most extraordinary speed, apparently by means of a clever arrange. Ment of balls. The Chairman eXarciined the table and tin, machinery, but found no motive power except the weights on the wheel. The solution of the problem of perpetual Metier* seemed to have been solved ;g; but the Professor called out for his "motive power," and a small boy appeared who had. been hidden underneath the ',platform; and had worked the niachine by a strap Passed up through the leg of the table. Such was the motor of one of the most .successful " perpetual' motion" machines ever made. . • • 7 . "1114 tin DI-theY,WhiCh hag -41e =bans Accoannio to Mr. Cox, " there is scarcely hiftamoratovaqoopoeaurahotA ogonnal 1u3nullImieVliffmilnitwIntuurceenliinumo'N •6 - . • ter. Grov'ea, born in 1795, had been dentist first at Plymouth and then at Exeter, where he accumulated 4 large for- tune. About 1825, when he was at the.age, of 80, he entered Trinity College, Dublin, and came 'into montact with Bellett and. John Nelson 'Darby. In '1826 Groves at- tended a Bible reading, and said to Bellett : 4, appears to me froln Scripture that. believers, meeting together as disciples of Child, are free. to break bread together as their Lord admonished them; And, in as far as practice of the apostles can. be a -guide, every. Lord's day should be set .apart for -this remembrance of the `Lord's coinmand." This suggestion was at once carried out by himself and his friends at Dublin. . This . was the origin of the Plymouth Brethren. Groves and Darby had scruples about the doctrine and dism- Pline of ' the Church. Grovel relinquished all intention of taking' orders; Darby did not. At •this time twe ,remarkable men appeared upon the scene -Edward Irving and Francis William Newman. In 1827 a prophecy meeting was established at Albury Park, Surrey, and at Powerscourt Hotise, near Bray, Wicklow, Ireland. Thette meetings continued on to 1833. At the last meeting at Powerscourt, Mr. George Muller, of Bristol, WAS present. He was leader of what was called the Separatist movement in Erigland. He had been a Baptist, but left that body in keen% of a visibly United Christian eanniunioni free from the bondage of tests - and 80- scriptions, which seemed to him the cause of all the mischief. He went to Powers - court and established a meeting for the breaking of bread, 'open to all who loved Christ. Lady powerscourt enabraced these vien's and seceded' from the Church. Darby practically abandoned his ' clerical position in 1833, and directed hie efforts. henceforward to the building up of the new society. At Bristol a • large congregation gathered to_the ministry of Mr.. Muller, and sprelentcthoth an& athree ccepgre - 1214tillismee?llieekrintLveleite-•;•".5ThaIlcale '-10-halirde4.1frath a� leenriasht". litilifirthe `Where IheY'inel- • white are Cireciesians sold by their parents." Theprice of the . female staves varied with their pretensions to good. looks, the comely 01108 being to some extent educated and taught to sing, dance and make theinselvee agreeable. We learn that a " girtunder 10 will bring $100, a maiden 'between 12 and $371.21 for a Guess. •• The readers of our paper will be inter- ested in knowing that the proprietors of " Warner's Log Cabin Remedies' 'will pay _ . $3,71.21. in cash for the best answer_ to the gees ion . What is the hole foe that is 16, if she be attracttve and can play upon iin the outside of thee chimney of the old - the zither, from $3 500 to $5 000 If'ho • young' woman be a blonde, with black eyes and otherwise of 'rare beauty, she may bring from $4,000 to $6,000. An amateur will pay doublethatfor a choice specimen, well educated in French and other graces." Rif Mr. Cox adds that " this tariff b • as ioned log cabin, es represented in the trade -mark of 'Warner's 'Log Cabin Re- medies?'" A pamphlet with a picture 'of, such a log cabin 'can_be_,proctired-at-any- drug,stere. The answers must be eent by Mail to Et. IT. Warner & Co., 'proprietors of means applior tc),, the thslnvei e,- oelebrated--(4.-warnerie--Skixf-ctai-, , Rochester. N. Y., before April 10th; 1888: r13eattit twonemeaturiver from each contestant Will be considered. It must be signed with the , giving. post,office address, and must state that the party has purchased and wed at least one of the following remedies: Warner's Log Cabin Sarsaparilla, Warner's Log Cabin Hipps ancIBuchu Remedy, War- ner's,Log Cabin Ceegli and Ccirisniaption Remedy, Warner's Log Cabin Extract, Warner's Log Cabin, Liver Pills, Warner's Log Cabin Rose Cream ,(for catarrh, ' etc.), Warner's Log Cabin &alpine for the scalp and hair); Warner's Log Cabin Plasters. The answers' will he referred to' inipar- tial,committe,e for decision; which will be announced April 10th, 18e8. Letters of inquiry Will not be answered. ••• bitins Who *ever See men. The Via Merulina Convent, in ROme, will remain in the peeteession of the nuns until thedeath of the last of 'them,' when the property will go to thecity. The sixteen remaining flung, who are callecithe Sepolte Vie(); are still in the monagery;where, they once received a .visit from the ',Princess of Wales. Theed-nuns,riome of them ladies of noble families, observe a very strict rule. Once entering the convent they nevi& leave it alive. They -never Bee men, not even the priest who. says mass in the chapel. The altar is screened off, and they can just sea the elevatitm of the hest; Through a sinall aperture they receive holy. coraniuniOn. Iron; gratings and a linen veil guard, the small openings through which they 'make confession. They never, undress or repose, but spend half the night in prayer, and keep, except. in cases of extreme illness, a' perpetual absence from heat. They „rnake almost everything they Use, peen to 'ehoes and medicines. If a parent of. one of these nuns, dieEe the announcement is not made to the nun herself, but in general Urine it aid that one of them has lost by death athee or a mother, RS the Cat30 may be. - don Court. 110 epets for whom are in •Soutar and in the Villages ' of the Bos- phorus. The black guile slave will bring $90, the black- maiden $75, and eunuch perhaps $400." ' We are assured by the author that "the alai° his not a hard lot. The child Of the slave has a part of the inheritance of the father. More than .half of the marriages in Turkey are With skives." Each so-called wife of the Sultan, for instance, is a alave, his rank being too exalted to permit of his entering into any marriageproper. "The fact :le, thus Mr: COX Rama up his 'observations . on the sub- ject, ",slavery in Turkey is but a name. The Olives have nothing to • complain of. The white slaves rush to slavery as an alternative to something else and worse; only the black slaves • who are brought from Africa have lin the cOurie Of transit) Undergone the horrors of the traditional slave trade: Once received, however, the house shave, though perhaps looked down upon as one of under -condition le never, theless, from infancy to old egeAreated as One of the family. After a feintile_slave,,has Worked faithfully fpr awhile, say seven years,- she is nearly always freed by the mistress or master of the household:. • He Dazed the landlord. • "1 desire to retire," said a Boston guest to the proprietor of a hotel in Arkansas. "You whipb ?". asked the dazed, Marl. rdesire to retire." ' "1 desire to retire." " Well---I-I-don't b'leeve vte've got it in the house, miater." •• • •• • "Got what.?" said the anniied guest. "1 didn't ciell:for 'anything." 44 Well, say it agin arit•see if I kin ketch on."_ " It is strange you cannot 'understand plain English.. I simply said 1 desire to iefl retire, that is I wish to go to my room." 1.1„ 44, Oh -eve -oh I That's hit ? You wanter .1•4971 , almost a tended book to us; fo only one arn n, eh ? Why n t yen Bayed ? We • „ -don't 'know nethin'4botit 4.116eirin' to retire' here in Arkansas. . We just put off to bed." •And when he 'Mime downstairs he said to his wife, 4.LIf that's the way they talk in ? Boston it ain't no wonder there's s� many fools theme. ••4Desire to retire!' :Well, I'll crossing their threshold. ,Ab lit four year White man, Mr. McNair, 127 acceded • ago, staining his skin with walnut juke . And in the guise of an •71-ndian doctor, h pushed some ways inte'the territory, unti • tive that hoeght it prudent to retreat No ien the fleapits 'natives became so inquisi 'mAi'avellee has =ever • reached Lhasa, thetkpital of Thibet and the Rome of the ,Bilddhiets,, Or penetrated far into Southern Thibet, . though many notable ttempte have been made.. Reeently.,Pre- jevaliky has tried twiee in vain 't retie& Lhasa, and last year Mr. Mc:peaky, After elaborate preparations. eini- after . he hen spent 811 year in getting the permission Of the Chinese and Thibettin autherities to Visit Lhasa, was finally turned haek before helirid-crossed the frontier, Letritne havo. beenreeeived from Her , MI1101403 ship tgeria,Commander Pelham Aldrich, containing partieulers of a visit she has recently madeto Christmaii Island, . which she was.ordered to explore fOr glen - tiff° purposes. The Hgerib, chains to be the first vessel that ever explored this blend: Christnies Wand is situated in the, Indian Ocean,,in latitnde 11 degrees smith; longi- tudel.05 clegfeen 80 Minutes oast; it is 1..400 feet' above the sea; is 12 nailed long and 8 broad. It was found that the whole place - WAS 001Aposed of coral and rook. Notwith-. standing thie, hoWeverot is poVered alMost Completely with trees and shrubs, the trees, • Vail& are of largo •dimensione,seeming to A Dad Dream. "What can be more depressing than a terrible dream ?" . 44 -I -will tell you vvhat is Moredepreesing ; it is to .have a pleasant, delightful 'dream' • and wake up to find that it is nothing but a dream." Have you ever been there ?". "Just the other night. I'll never for- get the anguish t felt when I woke." '• That ray room rent was paid a iiionth ' 44 *,.. The young on of '4. K. Bellew'living • near Spring Place, Ga., loosened s large log that was lying on the. mountain side and started to run ahead of it to see if he could beat it in a race. downhill. The log gained velocity at every . turn, and soon overtook the 130y, crushing -him to deeth. , A large shipment of earriagee has been made by a Guele firm for the Centennial Internatiottal Exhibition at Melbourne next July Kington Beard of rteelth has &added to ask the Legislature for 'Power to license dairymen living otitsido the city. • • • Leave ioPe behind., • All ye who enter hero , • So ,ran the dire warning which •Dante read on the nortale of the Inferno: So rens the cruel verdict of your friends if you are overtaken by the first symptoms of that terrible disease, consumption: ", Leave hope behind! Your days are numbered I" And the struggleagainst death is given up in despair. But while there is 'life there is hope! Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has cured hundreds of oases, worse than:years and it will' 'cure you if taken in time: But delay is dangerous. No power can restore a wasted lung; the " Golden Medical Discovery," however, can and will arrest the disease. • . . The Congleient I Mary, this house is ae cold as a. barn: Why don't you, keifil the' fire going and make the place more OoMfortable ?"' "You are' very sensitive to a little crilde.' Where have you'beeli for the past hour ?" .44.1 was up on the' roof so I could hale) a better vie* of thedog.fight Over In Grigsby's . • , 44.Whatever is.. Write,",egid thoweary editor of . Country newspaper, whose patent outside hed failed to .oppeitt on time.• • • . • • , Abel Finkle, a Well.knoWri fernier of Sichiey, who had a .stroke of paralyeie on the tdp,of a straw -stack "Tuesday WO* died yesterday.: •4 • .._ yard.-gebraska State Journal:, • HOPE FOR- CONSPRIPTIViS t 14, NSW 'Theory' of the Dread likeesse • Whlch- • Seems Very; Sensible. . In fifty Far cent; ef the cases; coneninp- her bO 1'- 08 he 17 nd he is ed he or .. - a d, t. Y. le n. t, 8 -• tier* is On y the. symptom of some ot disease . The disease, in such cases,.pannot eared until the Cause, Whate'Ver it jet removed. • More thanclialf the victims of consum ten have albumen in their water. " Whitt does this indicate?" • • _ Albumen estinet appear in what eseap from the body,. if the, organs whiph take t water from the blood are hettlthy. - We drink water in large gearitities eve day. This water goes through the bod and washes away the Waste matter a decay of the system,' and takes it to t kidneys. If these organs' are healthy, th waste in solution in the Water remov by them. It net, the natural action reversed, and, instead a. removing t waste that poisonone stuff remains n t blood, but the real life-giving element the albamen escapes... • • ' , Fancy the effeet This uric acid waste isa rank poison; an attacks the weakest organ first. Th Brampton Hospital of Leaden; Englan shows in ail reports, that over 52 per oen of the victim's of consumption are reall victims of kidney disease, the lung troub being shown by the presence of albumen i the blood to be but theinclicationof kidhe derangement. The real cause of .puhrion ary troublee,being so authoritatively show to be faulty, even though unsuspected attic) of the kidneys, explains why, in order t master the dreaded consumption, one mus rid the blend of the uric' acid irritan *Ili% in-fie:nes and burns up the lung sub stance. For thie purpose there is nothin equal to that great specific, Warner's saf cure. This remedy hes won the favor o medical men all Over the world, purely o its merits. We hev,e no doubt that if-th kidneys are kept , in natural action, con sumpticin a.nd a great many other diseases caused by nrio acid, will not enty he cured but will be prevented. • ' J. W. Westlake, of Mt -Vernon, Ohio, hail a, sister residing in Michigan who wa thought surely to be going with 'oonsuinti Lion. She took ten bottles of Warner's safe cure, which he sent her, and he Bays, "That was the Ittetlheardolhertoesuinp- Aien•TherteeldstPteitelreasesVr;demel„, "011otlieveekdatY• ae,e ••6, wIlim-----Takawasf4,:-'7alitexY4ael, and it soon featers and • is destroyed. Send acid -poisoned blood through the 'lungs every second and they soon give This, then, is the condition Of things that always precedes consumption: First, weakenea,kidneys; second,, retained uric tusid poisoning the blood; the development of disease in the lungs by the irritant acids .passing through them. Then there is a little cough in the niorning; soon., thick yellow matter is spit up, followed by loss of flesh and strength with_dreadful-night and when -the Patient goes to school pliyeleian for help he is. put on 'c od liver oil; which his stomach weakened also by uric acid in _the bleed, cannot digest. Because thereIs no pain present in the kid- neys; the patient does not think they are affected, but the, kidney acid is doing its work every minute, every hour; day and night, andby and bythe disease of the lungs has advanced until pus is developed, then come hemorrhages, and \at last the glassy stare of eyes, whioli-oenoteithat the end is near. ."N. • • A post-mortem examination of such eases allows that the terrible uric acid has completely destroyed the substance of the lung. It is impossible to cure lung diseases, the blood is poisoned with uric acid. * Natural Reaction. Higgins -Awful headache, and I feel sa dull. I can't see what makes my spirits so law• • Wiggins --Natural reaction, thyboy ; you raised them too highwith a corkscrew last hight.-Texas Siftings. • • •Dreain-of Fair women. Tennyson in his exquisite poem dreams Of a long processionof lovely women of ages past. This•isall very well, but the laureate would have deme the world a greeter serviceif he had only told the Women of the preeent hoc/ they could improve their health and enhance their (therms. This he ' might • easily heve, ,done by recom- mending the use .of Dr. Pieree'ci Favorite' Prescription. Health is the best friend of beauty, oha the innumerable Me to which women are peculiarly subject, its *met enemies, Long experience has proven that the healthof womankind and the "Favorite Presaription " walk hand in hand, and are inseparable. It is -.the only •medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers; that it Will give satisfaction in every case; or menu refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle -wrapper, and faith- fully carried out for many years. The Crushed. Parent. "What' de you. pelf your new baby, Jones ?". " Well, to tell' the ' truth; • the puree hasn't let me have a thand in the game since it was horn, so I heven't calk it at all."-.--Oznalid. .SepOlican. •' • Offen:dye, breath vanishes with the. use of De. Sage'eCatarrli Remedy.' •• Two Ei>iis, the Least Chosen. Agitation may have its advantages, but its injurious effects are not a patch on the evil that railroad. monopolyhas done, and dOing, for us.-,Winnipe9,3un. ' Safe,, Sure and Painless.- , What a world of Meaning this statement embodies. Jest *hat you are looking for, is it not ? Putnain's Pairiless Corn Extract. tor--41tegreat sure -pop eorn eItractor-- e,cte in thio way: It makeenO sore spots; safe, acts speedily and with certainty; SUN) And Mildly, without the parts; painlessly., ,Do not be imposed upon by • imitations or f3UbStitIltoff. • Captain 4- Bil1dry,4 Of the steam whaler , • Orea, has just rettirned to filen 'Francisco from a voyage in ,which he killed thirty- five whales, the largest catch 011 reeord: Twenty-eight of these -all the ship eeuld carrye-were stowed and yielded 2/809 bar- rels Of Oil and 48,000 minds of bone. The catoh was tied $ 6,800. • 1.41,4) IX N a P1144 a' • SPIPTO'103,441Stni rr intenseitelting.cad stinging; most at 'night; Worse by acrateh fogy If' allelied to oentintie,ttlMee'S tenni, • which:often bleed and ulcerate, becoming. yen', sere, livalltnee Onixontlee 'dope the' ftohnig WI Needing. heahl 111P0Mtiell; fink 42 many cases removal' the tumors. - it Is 2t1 eat° s evoffilr. osi own sA scuring oN 1r 0 pl. _V " tors, Philadelphia. , 131valruz's Ortinnuir , can he obtanedof druggiste.Sent by mail for 60 0811tS. A. Child Thrown to Wolves,. The eevete cold of this winter has brought out large packs of wolves, all over • Hungary. An .dimigarian county 'wart judge?returning: home frOM Grosswardein in a sleigh, last VridaY, wile beset by, a . ravenous. pack, which terrified his horses atitt-eanded him to be thrown out of the sleigh: - The coaohnian, without'- hooding his master, drove madly on, and the maps-. trate Was cornpletely devoured. Nothing , but a few bones and pieces of cloth were found On the•road When Search was subse- quently made for him. Another horrible • cite° is reported, nainely, that of a Peasant who, punned by wolves, flung his bey, aged • 13, out of the sleigh to these animals, and thereby saved himself. On reaching his village this wretched man surrenderedhim- self to the police. • 1. ;. th.„,jaate! e•ew kTene:111WIrt'7..ot=•••eft-egeo3ten,"(5 1,;:ki1itteathi atilefunkartpt etRiavotodcrathinerattrithodnvagail notel and Surgical Institut,e, Buffalo, N. has afforded. a Vast experience in nicely adapt - fug and thoroughly testing.' remedies for tlie • our° of woman's peculiar. malad,ies: • • Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescription ii the ,outgrowth, or result; of 'this great MAT- vainable experience. • ,Thousands of •tcstimo- ..• rinds, received from patients and from •physi?. clans who:terve' tested it in -the more at gi- vated and •obetinate -caSeS •.Nrilich had )buffled • their skill, 'prove It to be the mon 'wonderful • . remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of • „. . suffering women.. It is not recommended WM • "cure -ail,". but as a• most perfect Specific for •' woman's peculiar ailnienis. • • powerfUl, InVigorattlinetOinle6 *.• it impartS strength, to the whola_ system.and to the womb_ anct 118 appiidagea partieular. For ;overworked; • worn-out," ".run-down," debilitated . teaohers,,_:millffiern-1-7, dressmakers, seamiftreesee,.'shop-girls," house- • keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble,"mintell generally, Dr. Pierce'Favorite. Prescription. •. is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled • 'as an appetizing cordial and .reetorative tondo. As a soothing', and', strengthening. nervinei "'Favorite. Preseription" is une- qualed and is invaluable•in_aftying_anctsub- • duing nervous . excitabtlity, irritability, hilustiOn. prostration, hysteria.' spasms and 'other distressing, nervous symptoms. com- monly attendant upon • fiznetional and organ10• disease-of-.the-womb:--It-TindueeeTWfresldflg - sleep and relieves mentat anxiety and de- ' spondency. ' • , - • , , . , Dr. Pierce's Favorite PreserintiOli is a•• legitimate. •nzedielitet carefully • compounded by an experienced' and skillful ' • physician, and adapted to 'woman's. delicate'. orgenteation. It . is . "purelyvegetable in Its composition and perfectly harmless. in fts effecte in any .condition of the' oyster!). Por morning; sleknein, or nausea, from Whatever',. .; cause arising', weak stol,naoh; indigestion, drie • Nepeiit and kindred. symptoms, its use, in small oses.,will prove verY beneficial. • 64 raITOr ite PreseriptiOn 91 Is a poi. tive, cure for the most complicated and oh, etinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive-tio*ing, painful menstruation, unnatural supPressicins.• '•., prolapstis, or falling. .of the womb, weak back., • "female weakness," anteversion, retrovernon. bearing -down *ligation% chronic. congestion, inflammatiounnd ulei3ration of the womb, In.. 'flatnmation, pain 'and tenderness in ovaries,. accompanied with "internal, heat."' As .a regulator • and promoter or ftino., • tional action, atthat critical _p?riod of •chartge from girlhood to womanhood, 'Favorite'Pro- • seription ".is a 'perfectly sa.fe remedial agent, and can produce only good results. It 'is equally -efficaelons, and . valuable hi its effects • when taken for those' disordets'und ,derailto; Monts incident to that .later and most critical - period. known an "The 'Change of 'Life." "Favorite Prescriptions', when taken • ' in connection with the use of Pierce' Golden •Medical Discovery, and small larative doses of Dr..Pierce's Purg.ative,'Pelle.ta (LiWe Liver cures Liver. Kidney and 'Bladder diseasea. Their. coinbined •nlinalao remov,es • blood tante, and abolishes •cancerous and scrofulous humors froni-the system.• "Favorite Prescription 10 is the only ' medicinefor women, sold by druggists. stud.* • • it positive guarantee', from the mann. ,• ofaascetturers.,or nu.otnhaoytiwtftwilLIegirevitilasadtisedfa. igun eatawvery TWS tee bits been printed on the bottle -vs pp and faithfully carried out for maw y Large bottles GOO dOses) *1•09 For 9 or silk • h. °t? l:rgeleomr. ulls5trtteO.d. T reatis•exin' teems— Wonten (160 pages, paper -covered), send ten &Mei fn stamps. . Address, World'sDisponsari Medical .Associatiok 663 Main St., noiriAlLos DONL, ..8 ,.. 1 When I flay *tire 1,40.pot inean niefely to ft op them fora time and then have them return again. I.mean a Fadkal , cure, I have made the disease of PITS, EPIXIIPSY or5aLla1140 4 SIOXNE4S a ilfe-lonfe sti../y. 1 warl'antthyrtp4. to care the worst cum Bocatieo others Iowa rases o no resuion tor nig now receiving Cure. fiend atenoefor treatise and a Pree Bottle of my Infalilble remedy. Glas 'iexpress and Post °Moe.. It costa you nothing fog • 'and I will cure2en. Address Ilia Brandi:Ise .37 YoutSt, -Tore a • THE cot!, Kys..REST FrZIE111171, NSUMPTI(INs I Woo a positive remedy for the shorfidliniase f by its „dee ' thotuands of eatetiorthe worst kind eh +sr long standing .have boon tudeed, ,tre strang,. ‘v faith in its ogicoogo thot 1 wol aend TWO' 110111,E9 " togetbOr: with a VALI/AIME TRRATTSIC eh this 4fpo...,- oryr Otifferier, dive esprrer Ind P. 0, addreas. '8,ritin OfticaoSI-r-To 'St; Tottite- IL 4. iii•Ot Mil, • • 4. 6