Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, January 15, 1898, Page 3

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“THAT TERROR of MOTHERS.” How it was overcome by a Nova Scotian mother Who is well known as an author. Of all the evils that attack children scarcely any other is more dreaded than croup. It So often comes in the night. The danger is so great. sudden. terror of mothers.” Pthat?sne writes in terms of praise a gratitude for the relief which she found both from her own anxietie: for her children’s ailments, in Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. “Memory does not recall the time when herry Pectoral was not used in for throat and lung troubles. mothers—the startling, Dr. Ayer’s our fam That terror of croupy cough—never alarmed me, so lon: as I had a bottle of Ayer’s Cherry Pecto: inthe house to supplement the hot-wat bath. When suffering with whoop’ g cough, in its worst form, and articulation was impossible on account of the choking, gesticulate for experience had taught them that relief was in its con- Dickson (“Stanford | of my children would point and toward the bottle; tents.”— Mrs. Eveleth”), Provinces,” Truro, N. S. w. J. i The climax is so It is no wonder that Mrs. W. J. Dickson (better known under her pen name of “Stanford Eveleth,”) calls it “the Nor is it any wonder author of “Romance of the C. J. Wooldridge, Wortham, Tex., writes: “One of my children had croup. One night I was startled by the child’s hard breathing, and on going to it found it strangling. It had nearly ceased to breathe. Having a part of a bottle of Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral in the house, I gave the child three doses, at short intervals. and anxiously waited results. From the mo- s|ment the Pectoral was given the child's breathing grew easier, and in a short time it was sleeping quietly and breathing nat- urally.. The child is alive and well to-day, and I do not hesitate to say that A er's Cherry Pectoral saved its life.”—C. J. Woo.prinGE, Wortham, Tex. ‘These statements make argument in favor of this remedy unnecessary. It is a family medicine that no home should be without. It is just as efficacious in bron- chitis, asthma, whooping cough, and all other varieties of coughs. as it is in croup. To put. it within everyone’s reach, Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is now put up in half size bottles, at half price—so cents, Send for Ayer's Cufebook (free) and read other cures effected by Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Address the J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. ‘The grain, weight in use, derives its name from be- ing originally the weight of an ordinary grain of wheat well dried. FARMER'S HANDY FEED COOKER. ‘We desire to call our readers’ atten- tion to the Farmer’s Handy Feed Cooker, which is sold at the low price of $12.50 for 50 gallon capacity. : é oe Se ae. re 2 AESINNOYFEED Cog F paar Leung GOO By feeding poultry and stock with cooked food during the winter months, at least one-third of the food is saved; also having stock in a healthy condi- tion, preventing hog cholera among your hogs, and insuring the hens lay- ing freely during the winter months when eggs are always wanted at high prices. This Cooker will pay for itself in one week’s time and is without doubt the best and cheapest on the market—just what its name implies, a Farmer’s Handy Feed Cooker. Upon application to the Empire Manufactur- ing Co., 615 H street, Quincy, IIl., a cat- alogue, giving a full description, may be obtained. They are made in all sizes. tria’s E ror at the Pl The emperor of Austria tak a nusements publicly, much unlike the queen of England. He believes that his subjects like to see him among them, nd when he goes to a theater he takes a prominent position in full view of the how and the conse- quence is that the royal box is the cen- ter of attraction, the actors playing to it “for all they are worth.”—Boston Post Mr. T. C. | Pearse of griceola, | Alberta,Ca- | nada, Pass- | ed through | Chicago re- cently, en route to England He paints in glowing colors the vantages of Westcrn Canada, and that a lerge number of tenant farmers from the old country are mak- ing their homes there, and those who, during the past few years b goue to that district from the United a Kably well. ‘They nd, although when they ar- rived, they are mostly doing well ana h e excellent farm being able to Joan money to the new settlers, As an example of what has been done by colonists this year, he s Hugh Ir- vine, who has been in the country five hed 3,200 bushels of wheat. per bushel for it. ed 3,000 bushels in the fourth year of his settlement, while James Atkinson had a crop of 3,500 bush- els. These m started without any cap- nduced to go through the f the Canadian Govern- development of the Edmonton-Klondike route’ has created a home cash market. Hundreus of square miles of magnificent farming country yet remain for cultivation in the Saskat van Valley. and is sold at low pr: For information as to railway and were ticns iat represen! Benj. dian A 154 East 3rd. St. Paul, or ito W. Ritchie,Graft- cn, N. D. More Trouble Ahead. “No one will ever be sorry that you got your divorce,” declared the Chica- n to his partner. “We are all Indeed, some one will be sorry. Wait till you hear later from the man who is goiug to marry her.” Don’t Tobacco Sp't and Smoke Your Life Awav. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c. or $1. Cure guaran- teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. A stove for burning coal dust has just been invented in Germany. This fuel ves intense heat. vey eer Star Tobacco is the leading brand of the world, because it is the best. It is customary in Finland to kiss a woman on the cheek. To kiss her on the mouth is deemed an insult. Government | Ynnocence- Alice—I heard a very pretty compli- ment for you to-day. George—What was it? Alice—Mr. Thurston, the jeweller, said you were one of the best judges of diamonds in this city. George—May I buy a nice solitaire for the third finger of your left hand? Alice—Oh, George! What made you think of such a thing? Well—if you— want to!—Cleveland Leader. HOSTETTER CO. WINS A CASE. Infringements on Their Bitters Not Toler- ated by United States Court. The United States circuit court for the southern district of New York, Judge Townsend presiding, handed down an opinion December 23, 1897, granting injunction and accounting, in the suit of The Hostetter Company against Isaac Sommers and Louis Jo- seph, for infringement of its trade mark. The jurist states, in bold and clear language, the rights accruing to the Hostetter Company, and the liabil- ity incurred by all who would rob them, by fraud or misrepresentation, of the well-earned reputation and profits of a business built up by the efforts of half a century. The julge says, in part: “The complainant is entitled to pro- tection against the appropriation of its trade mark, by any and all unfair and dishonorable means, and a court of equity has power to grant such protec- tion whenever it is satisfied that an attempt has been made by ingenious subterfuges, to invade the rights of an owner of a trade mark. * * * In the sharp contest hetween the individ- ual manufacturer, who strives to ac- quire and retain the fruits of indus- try and honesty, and the field of keen rivals, seeking to wrest from him the prize of the public good-will, the in- ventive ingenuity of the infringer has conceived a great variety of devices for evading the established rules of fair dealing. * * * Courts of equity finding that their ultimate object and effect were to enable and induce the retail seller of a fraudulent imitation to palm it off on an unsuspecting pub- lic for the genuine article, and thus to contribute to the infringement upon the rights of the original owner, have not hesitated to apply the remedy.” A Composer. Ethel—Who was that man you just | bowed to? Penelope—That great composer. Ethel—A composer, did you say? | Penelope—He manufactures soothing | syrup.—Tit-Bi was Dobson, the | STILL THERE Is MONEY IN IT. | Carl Vollen sold $350 of Salzer’s Cab- | bage: Labor, seed, rent and all did not | cost him $50, profit $300. You can beat | that and make lots of money on Early Radishes, Peas, Lettuce, Mushrooms, | Onions, Sweet Corn, Tomatoes, Pota- j toes, etc. Salzer warrants his seeds the jearliest in the world. Potatoes only $1.50 per barrel. Millions of Raspber- ries, Cherries, Apples and small fruits. Catalogue tells all abouz them. Send this Notice with 14c. Stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, | Wis., and get free their big Plant and | Seed Catalogue and 10 packages vege- table and flower seeds, novelties worth | table and flower novelties worth $1.00. w.n.n. A miller down in Penn: wife through a matrimonial advertisement, haz tried to commit suicide after two weeks o} married life. This is the only kind of adver- tising which doesnt’ pay. lvania, who got a It Keeps the Feet Dry and War And is the only cure for Chilblains, | Frostbites, Damp, weating Feet. Ask for Allev haken inte and Shoe nt FREE. Ad LeRoy. Corns and Bunions. Foot-E: se, a powder to be At all Drug; . *. Sample s Allen S. Obhnstead, The word ‘‘clock” comes from the Ger- man glocke, which means a bell. In early | times the hours were announced by 2 | bell. | Coe’s Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker than anything eise. It is always reliable. Try it. | A parrot only costs 10 cents in parts of South America. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c. © $1. All druggists. Double windows adorn the better class of houses in Russia, to exclude the eqld. When Answering Advertisements Hindly Mention This Fa: NWN 3, 1898 PPPEPEPEPEPEPPEPPEEPEPPE ES 9999990099909 099999 S i JUST AS CERTAIN TO CURE je, Soreness ™ Stiffness i with $T. JACOBS OIL as day comes after night. BEEEEEEEEEEEEEELEL EL EES AAAAAAARAA AAA AAaR AS | ef but is studying the piano. KEPT AT IT WHILE ASLEEP ‘BAD DIGESTION, BAD HEART. ion often causes irregularit; ion. This rity A Mean Trick Which an LKngineer the heart's. " Played on His Fireman, p “We have some pretty long stretches of duty,” said a locomotive engineer to a Philadelphia Record man the other day, “‘and it isn’t an uncommon thing for a man to go for forty-eight hours without sleep. Of course, it isn’t the best policy for a railroad company to allow such a thing to happen, but sometimes it can’t be helped. It would be a pretty serious thing for an en- gineer to go to sleep at his post. You think it would: be hard for a man to sleep under such circumstances, eh? Well, I never heard of the engineer do- ing it, although sometimes they come pretty near to dozing, but my own fireman went sound asleep during »ne of my runs recently. The poor fel- low had been kept on the jump for three days without a wink of sleep and when we started on the run in question he was simply dead tired. He managed to keep awake, however, un- til we reached the outskirts of the city. It was his place then to ring the bell continuously until we got into the train yard. He kept the bell going with regularity and I wondered at his vital- ity. When I ran my engine into the round house he neyer moved out of his seat, but still yanked the bell rope. Then I saw that he was asleep. I called the other fellows and we watched him for two or three hours, sleeping away, and yet pulling duti- fully at the bell. When we finally woke him up his arm was sore and he was mad as a hatter.” THE FASHIONABLE PARLOR. A Distressing Room with Its Delicate Tints and Curious Set Expression. The delicate tints of the average ex- pensively furnished parlor are apt to be colorless unless there’is some relief to them, says the New York Post. One sees so many rooms with soft pearl- gray Wilton carpets,. walls of very much the same shade, hangings of sil- very plush, furniture largely in white and gold, even the soft cushions of the palest hues in costly fabrics. ‘The curious set expression of such a room, as if it were arranged for an exhibition parlor of upholstery, is enhanced, usu- ally, by the lack of any sort of cen- ter. Every room to be successful needs some sort of focus—an open fire- place, a reading table, anything that suggests a drawing together of the room’s occupants. It is this lack of suggestion of life which makes one stroll through one of these perfectly appointed rooms and come with a sigh of relief into the next apartment, which the family really use. Occa- sionally a house is entered whose mis- tress boldly banishes the so-called parlor, letting it be simply an exten- sion of the library. Books line its walls. A long table with chairs drawi around it is piled with fresh maga- zines, the latest books, and a writing service. All these may be as elegant as one’s purse admits, but their very presence confers a charm and effect by their suggestion of use, that is not found in the handsomest stretches of upholstery and woodwork. Gratitude for Past Favors. Fuddy—I don’t understand how it is that Dr. Smarte has so large a prac- tice. He certainly is not much of a physician. Duddy—No, but most of his patients are men, you know. When he _ vas called to see them when they were boys he invariably directed that they be kept home from school. They have never forgotten it. The Klondike Flutter. The Klondike flutter is the newest game in cards. Its object is to find the nugget. It is worked with three cards and is our old friend three-carg monte in disguise. PERSONALITIES. Secretary of State Sherman and Mrs, Sherman will celebrate their gold- en wedding next year. Sir Arthur Sullivan wrote “The Lost Chord” and dedicated. it to a friend whom he expected soon to die. The sale of the song has reached 250,000 copies. While the king of Siam has been junketing around Europe thieves have taken advantage of his absence to break into the royal palace and loot it. Murders, too, have been plentiful. Tennyson was born in 1809, that fa- mous year which, besides Mendelssohn and Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, usher- ed into the world Abraham Lincoln, Charles Darwin and W. E. Gladstone. England has just discovered that it has no adequate “Life of the Prince of Wales,” and is greatly astonished at the omission. Mr. H. D. Traill has sought to make it good, and has writ- ten a life of his royal highness that will published in the near future, The Empress and Queen Frederick, princess royal of Great Britain and Ireland, has completed her 57th year. The empress, besides being a patroness of charities and an accomplished ar- tist, is known to be a woman of great mental power. Before her marriage she was most carefully instructed in politics and constitutional history by her intellectual father. Miss Mark Twain is what the Paris Figaro calls the daughter of Samuel L. Clemens, who is studying music in Vienna. It says: “The very beautiful voice of this young woman of 18 will some day make her as fascinating ‘on the stage as her father is in letters.” This statement is particularly interest- ing in view of the fact that Miss Clemens is not cultivating her voice may be mistaken for real, o1 hy heart. diseasa, Symptoms are much the same. There is however a vast difference between the two: organic heart disease is often in- curab.e: apparent heart disease is curable if good digestion be restored. A case in point is quoted from the New Era, of Gressabares Ind. Mrs. Ellen Col- som, Newp pint, Ind., a woman forty-three Years old, had suffered for fuur years with distressing stomach troub’e. The gases generated by the indigestion pressed on the heart, and caused an irregularity of its ac- tion. She had much pain in her stomach and heart, and was subject to frequent and severe choking spells which were most severe at night. Doctors were tried in vain; the patient became worse, despond- | ent, and feared impending death. A Case of Heart Failure. She was much frightened but noticed that in intervals in which her stomach did not annoy her, her heart’s action became nor- mal. Reasoning correctly that her diges- tion was alone at fault she procured the proper medicine to treat that trouble and with immediate good results. Her appetite came back, the choking spells became less frequent and finally ceased. Her weight, which had been greatly reduced was re- stored and she now weighs more than for years. Her blood soon became pure and her cheeks rosy. The case is of general interest because the disease is a very common one. That | others may know the means of cure we | give the name of the medicine used—Dr. ‘Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. These pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves Just a Habi ’ muttered Synnic. “Strang “What?” “Why do they say there is no more hope for a man when the doctor gives ”’—Philacelphia North Ameri- Patents Issued. List of patents issued last week to Northwestern inventc Allen, Butte, Mont., station Thomas Appleton, St. Paul, station; William D. D., sales-slip en- t, St. Paul, Minn., V indicator Minn., coaling Bates, Grafton, velope; John Blan! car door lock; Franklin W. Britton, Brainerd, Minn., expansion router bit; nk D. Dibble, Minneapolis, Minn., Anna Hel- rivet cu D. McLellan, Crystal, } Walter Mitchell, St. | ter; Angu: D., milk pa al, Minp., stump puller; Lida H. ! aylor, Minneapolis, Minn., coat hang- Edward P. Ov Nash, N. I chable shovel bl: Stevens, Mivsoula, st Young, Hallock, Minn., ex- | tersible vehicle pole. | Merwin, Lothrop & Johnson, Patent Attorn . 911 and 912, Pioneer t. Paul, Minn. | Adams—Does your up for you when you are out nights? Westwood— she lays for me.— Cleveland Le Reware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury. as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derenge the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never ke used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten-fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Che- ney & Co., Toiedo, O., contains no mer- cury and is taken internally, acting di- rectly upon the blood and mucous faces of the system. In buying Hall's Ca- tarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testi free. Sold By Druggists, price, bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best. ‘The eucalyptus tree attains a height of fifty feet in three years after the seed is | planted. They are grown extensively in | California. Destructive Storms Along the Coast. Reports of maritime disasters along the coast come in thick and fast. People who “go down to the sea in ships” should bear in mind one thing in particular, namely, that it is highly desirable to take along a supply of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters as a remedy for seasickness. Nausea, dyspepsia, biliousness, constipa- tion, malaria, nervousness and kidney | trouble all succumb to its beneficent and | speedy action. It is estimated that American travelers annually spend $100,000,000 in Europe. Beauty’ IsBlood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No | beauty without it, Cascarets, Candy Ca- thartic cleans your blood and keeps it | clean by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body. Be- gin to-day to banish pimples, \ boils, | blotches, blackheads, and that sickly | bilious complexion by taking Cascarets— beauty for 10 cents. All druggists, satis- faction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50c. The new coal plant that the Baltimore & Ohio railroad is erecting at Sandusky, | Ohio, will consist of an elevated track to | be used either with side dump or drop | bottom cars, the coal dropping into bins from which it will flow into buckets of four tons’ capacity, each placed upon movable platforms. Derricks of a capaci- ty of ten tons each will lift the buckets to | the vessel. There will be sixteen of these patent drop bottom buckets and they will be handled by two of the latest steam re- | volving derricks, and these machines will | give the plant a capacity of about 300 tons of coal per hour at a minimum cost for the work and with a slight breakage. The plant will be in operation by April 1. Paris has 105 branch postoffices, to all of which the mails are shot from the gen- eral postoffice, through pneumatic tubes. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup For children teething,softens the gums.reduces inflam. jon.allays pain, cures eclic. 25 cents a bottle The queen of Italy is a graceful and skillful bicyclist, and every day has a spin on her silver mounted wheel. ASTHMA can be quickly cured by Dr. Taft's Asthmalene. All sufferers from this distressing complaint should write to Dr. Taft Bros.. 4 Elm 8t., hester, N.Y., for a sample bottle, sent absolutely free on receipt of nameand address. They arereliable. Piso’s Cure for Consumption has been a Godsend to me.—Wm. B. McClellan, Sept. 17, 1895. Chester, Fla., Smoke Sledge Cigarettes, 20 for 5 cts, | on his writing a | stamp. Authors and Writers Union,Chicago,Il. (OPIU FREE FARM OF 160 ACRES. Would You Like to Be Absolute Owner of Your Own Farm? WOULD you like a farm that pro- : duces upon an average of 30 bushels of wheat per acre? WOULD you like a farm that grows from 60 to 90 bushels of oats per acre? WOULD you like a farm that grows from 40 to 60 bushels of barley per acre? WOULD you like a farm that grows more bushels of potatoes per acre than any farm in Michigan? WOULD you like a farm that pro- duces all kinds of roots and vegetables in abundance? \ t WOULD you like a farm that pro- duces the heaviest and fattest beef cat- tle that goes to the English market? WOULD you like a farm that pro- duces butter and cheese equal to the finest Danish? WOULD you like to own a farm in a country where cattle are never stabled winter or summer? WOULD you like to live in a country where taxes are very low, the principal taxation being for schools, and the government pays 75 per cent of that? WOULD you like to live in a country where every person is happy and con- tented, excepting the doctors and un- dertakers? WOULD you like to be where each of your sons can get 160 acres free, when they reach 18 years of age? If so, consult the advertisement of the Canadian, government free lands, appearing elsewhere. Frewty Good Proof. Graham—Speaking of Mortimer, his wife is considered quite a good judge of music, ain’t she? Morgan—I believe so. At any rate, Mortimer never plays at home.—Bos- | ton Transcript. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS, We are asserting in the courts our right to the exclusive use of the word “CASTORIA,” and “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” as our Trade Mark. I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachu- setts, was the originator of “PITCHER’S CAS- ‘TORIA,” the same that has borne and does now bear the fac-simile signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original “PITCHER’S CASTORIA” which has ; been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. have always bought,” and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the Wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. March 8, 1897. SAMUEL PITCHER, M. b. Emperor William’s Paper Weight Dr. Buchner, the African traveler, broke from the highest point on Mt. Kilimandjaro, one of the mightiest mountains in Africa, a piece of rock, which he presented to the German emperor. The emperor now uses a mountain summit as a paper weight Boston Post.. Rend the Advertisements. You will enjoy this publication much Letter if you will get into the habit of reading the advertisements; they will aiford a most interesting study and will put you in the way of getting some excellent bargains. Our adver- tisers are reliable; they send what they advertise. An Honest Opinion. Writicus—Well, what do you think of the last book I shall ever write? Criticas—My dear fellow. you should not have made that book your last. Writicus (fattered)—You really mean it? Criticns—I do, indeed. Such an hon- or you should have accorded to the one before it—New York World. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure druggists refund mone In muddy weather the Japanese walk on stilts four inches high. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 25¢ An air-inflated life preserver, to be at- ached to the head, has been invented. For maps, pamphlets, railway rates, ate , and full information concerning this country. enjoying exceptionally pleasant climate and continuous good crops, apply to BEN DAVIES, Can. Gov’t Agent, 154 East Third St., St. Paul, Minn. AUTHORS wor Se best prices: Inclose Hy FAP Was carned in 5 years by ono agent with our free outfit. $22,00 | Youcan, P.O, 1871, New York, DROP SY rie elctoncne ore eases. send for b»ok of testimonials and 10 days? treatment Free. Dr.lt, I. GREEN'S SONS, SUanta,Ga, Vegetable Stan Nad AIR RENEWER It has made miles and miles of hair grow on millions gene ofall fot a sin: ‘ie A ir. FOR 14 CENTS ‘Wewish togain 150,000 new cus- hence offer Worth $1.00, for 14 cents. Above 10 pkgs. worth $1.00, wo will mail you free, together with our grent Plant, and atalogue Epon receipt of this notice and He; fe. We invite your tradeand @° NEURALGIA Sick and Nervous Head-- aches POSITIVELY Cured in 30 Minutes, by Anli-NeWrOlgique. At all druggists or sent post- paid upon receipt of $1. FRENCH CHEMICAL CO. 356 Dearborn St., Chicago, 11, Look carefully | at the wrapper and see that it is “the kind you | WORTH OF PREMIUMS TOBE GIVEN AWAY DR. SETH ARNOLD'S COUGH KILLER. U.S. Capitol Souvenir Spoons, Scarf Pins, Sleeve Buttons and Watch Chains. Save the Maltese Cross on Outside Box. You will find a Premium certificate around each bot- tle. Send the certificate and crosses to the Dr. Seth Arnold Medical Corporation, Woonsocket, R. I. 1d Ce try SI ae country Stores. 25¢c., 50c, and $1.00 ACENTS WANTED ‘TO HANDLE. FIRE CLAY COOKING WARE. ‘Miniature sample sent on receipt of five 2c. Address stamps. ¥.M. BURTON, Roseville, Ohio. Self-adding. pat. combination beam. S$ No loose weights. U. 8. standard. Best and cheapest. Send for pricen. WEEKS SCALE WORKS, BUFFALO, N. Y- ${00 To Any Man. WILL PAY $100 FOR ANY CASE Of Weakness in Men They Treat and Fail to Cure. An Omaha Company places for the first time before the public a MacicaL Treat- MENT for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of Life Force in old and young men. No worn-out French remedy; contains no Phosphorous or other harmfal drugs. Itis a WoNDERFUL TREATMENT—magical in its effects—positive in its cure. Ali readers, who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life, causing that mental and hysical suffering peculiar to Lost Man- ood, should write to the STATE MEDICAL COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will send you absolutely FREE, a valuable paper on these diseases, and positive proofs of their truly Magica, TREATMENT. Thous- ands of men, who have lost all hope of a cure, are being restored by them to a per- fect condition. This Magica, TREATMENT may be taken | at home under their directions, or they will pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who: refer to go there for treatment, if they | fail to cure. They are perfectly reliable; | have no Free Prescriptions, Free Cure, | Free Sample, or C. O. D. fake. They have | $250,000 ‘capital, and guarantee to cure | ayhy case they treat or refund every dollar; ,or tl eir charges may be deposited in a bank to be paid to them when a cure is effected. Write them today. <r Polson Primary, Seo. A SPECIALT Y coasyo:rer tiary BLOOD POISON permanent! cured in 15to35 days. You can betreatcd: jhome forsame price under same guaran- ity. If you prefer to come here we willcon- tract to pay railroad fareand hotelbills.and peng led fail to cure. Ifyou have taken mer eury, iodide pot: ‘and still have aches and ins, estes ‘atches in mouth, Sore Thr mp) ‘any part out, it Co; r Colored Spots, Ulce: ‘of the yody, air or Eyebrows falling is this Secondary BLOOD POISON tee to: ‘most obsti- MORPHINE and WHISKY HABITS. HOME CURE. Book FREE. Dit, 4. C. HOFFMAN, Isabella Bidg., CHICAGO, ILL, in the South. Cheap. Easy Terms. F A | Free Cat. W.H.Crawford & Co., ‘Southern Colonisers, Nashville, Tenn. When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. CURE CONSTIPATION

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