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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 29 Feb. 1896, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1896-02-29/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
V ght Whim Tiotica. By ROBERT C. BAILEY. WICKER, MONTANA. It will be found in good time that the United States treasury can go a loan. Turkey has been roasted by the press long enough; it is now time it was basted by the powers. With Germany at his back, President Krueger ought to be the most formid- able figure of the time. The census of Germany, just corn- ?tete& shows the population of the em- pire to be 51.758,364, an increase of 2,- 329.894 during the last five years. The king of Corea is constantly sur- rounded by Japanese spies, and fears that he will be assassinated. The dis- patch added that his majesty was night- ly guarded by the American mission - Dr. G. Frank Lyttston, a distinguished nerve specialist, gives the following cure for hiccoughs: \I always cure my- self of hiccoughs by holding the ends of my two index fingers as close as I can without allowing them to touch. In that way I concentrate my mind so cicsely on the fingers I forget the hic- coughs.' Dispatches say that Mayor Strong did not kiss the bride at the Vanderbilt - Belmont wedding. This strengthens the susflkion that the bride isn't the dream the New York society reporters and artists would have us simple west- erners believe. Still, a Chicago mag- istrate would have had the moral courage to do his duty even it it point- ed to a New York face. , rlams are in progress for the 'tattle- ment near Phoenix. Ariz., of a large Mormon colony. Brigham Young, Jr., of Salt Lake City is now negotiating for the purchase of the Buckeye irrigation venal and a large area of land adjacent thereto for this purpose. • The canal heads on the Gila river, twenty-five tidies from Phoenix, Mad 100,000 acres can be .irrigated, extending it across the Hassayampa. Those who know just where the shoe pinches will be interested by the infer- tnation which comes from Union Hill, N. .L. that Charles Heineman of that place has discovered a new and sure \corn mire,\ that may be relied upon to work every time. The corn was on his little toe, and after Mr. H. had suffered as he stated. \the torments of the damned\ he told his wife to cut off the toe. She performed the operation as delicately as she could with a butcher's cleaver, whereupon Mr. Heineman re- joiced greatly for several days. At length bloc;d poisoning set in, and to- day the poor man is dwelling where \mortals weep no more.\ Official calculations made in Russia and transmitted to the State Depart ment of the United States Consul -Gen- eral Karat at St. Petersburg show that the present year's harvest of cereals in the whole world is much smaller than last year's, and compared with 1894 the decrease is in wheat 150,467.000 bushels, and rye 128.971.000 bushels. Other grains turned out better. In Rus- sia the harvest was short 55,371.733 bushels of wheat and 88,345,428 bushels of rye. The financial organ, therefore, commends the policy adopted by Rus- sia dealers of holding back their grains to obtain better prices later on. The I official estimates for next year place thc amount of wheat required to be im- ported at 513,923,715 busbies and rye at 91,133,791 bushels, of wfdch Russia will be expected to supply 121,853,925 bilehels of wheat and 57,527,706 bushels of rye. She will be able to export 131,- 563,460 bushels of wheat anu oa,529,342 bushels of rye. A press report from Washington sears the introduction in the house by Mr. Beach, of Ohio, and the senate by Mr. Allen, of Nebraska. of resolutions fav- oring a congress of the American re- public.; his given an official impetus to preject that has been vigorously re- vived since the disclosures were made in the Venezuelan controversy. Both these resolutions were received with favor and many of the experts on for- eien affairs in both houses believe that Oonte definite action will be taken along Vies\ lilies by the present congress. Mr. Allot., in his resolution, fixed the name o f It,. congress as the Pan-American Union ana suggests that ies object be to prevent encroachtnents by European powers on this hemiliphere. In the plan offered by Mr. Beach In the house It is proposed that the President invite 'the South American republics to send plenipotentiaries to a conference to be held In Washington within a year for eh'e purpose of forming an American Union wilh the same objects in view, the secretary of state to be the repre- *Mit:dive of this governmeee ... mem- ber of the house foreign affairs cent- tnilice mild that he believed the corn - mitt ye would give favorable considera- tion to this reselution. AVhen the financial backers of the Atlanta exponition figured up their loss they discovered that during . the time t he fair Was in progress there had been 818,000 paid adniissione and 435,000 passes. When the \pass\ figures were divulged they went out Red took a drink to quiet their nerves. , • hoer', for the race when a one. eet• tticken violator of the N , v if I, game' laws sends $150 to the . a fine that might have he , „ poi , 104 , 1 I I' 1 r he had been foune out. 'I hi\ `u 'V' the game. Duplicate*. When the ignorant * piling Buckeye farmer struck a gas well on his place sold out for enough money to make ben quite an eligible matrimonially, and it wasn't long before he had mar- ried a very nice girl. She was look- ing over the wedding prese::•e e..!• him, and was struck by an uuueuril state of affairs. \Why she exclaimed, ••1 declare there are no duplicates in tho whole lot.\ Ile studied the collection intently for a minute or two with a puzzled look. \Duplicates?\ he said. \Dupli- cates? What's them? Some of theist new fangled things they always give folks at their weddin's?\ MGR PRICE FOR POTATOES. The John A. Saizer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., pay high prices for new things. They recently paid $300 for a yellow rind watermelon, $1,000 for 30 hu. new oats, $300 for 100 lbs. of pota- toes, etc., etc.! Well, prices for pota- toes will be high next fall. Plant a plenty, Mr. Wideawake! You'll make money. Salzer's Earliest are fit to eat In 28 days after planting. His Cham- pion of the World is the greatest yielder on earth and we challenge you to pro- duce its equal. If you will send II cents in cramps to the John A. Selzer' Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will get, free, ten packages grains and grasses, including Teosinte, Spurry, Giant Incarnate Clover, etc., and our mammoth cata- logue. Catalogue Sc. for mailing. w.n. Fed on Electricity. Inventor Edison, at a recent sci- entific saance, had a laroo globe of goldiish whose anatomy was distinctly outlined and every action of each organ was plainly seen. This the \wizzard\ accomplished by making the fish swallow minute incandescent lamps, and by invisible wire conducted the electric current. The fish, ap- parently, were nht incommoded by their diet of electricity. There is meta' Catareh in tbts section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro- nounced jt a 'coal dieease, and pre- scribed local remedien. and by constant- ly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires consti- tutional treatment. Hail's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only conetitu- Hon& cure on toe market. It is taken internally, in doses from ten drops to a t teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucons surfaces or the sys- tem. They offer One Hundred Dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address , F. J. CHEN reY er CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by druggists: 75e. Hall's Family Pills. 25e. In Arctic Seas. The Danish government has under - talon. d-ing the year 1895 and 1/396. • • • xploration in the Green- land w, it waters. The expedi- tion will o eepanied by a botanist. Forecasters. No Some people are so influenced by the elec- tric currents of the atmosphere that, they can fortell the coming of a thunderstorm 'with perfect accuracy, and others there arc with nerves so sensitive that they are sure of having neuralgia from a low and fretful state of the nervous system. Now why I can't the latter be warned in. time and know that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. To use St. Jacobs Oil promptly will ward of an attack, or if at- tacked, will prone.- H cure. Such people can do for themset% what others do from weather pi. p' el the signals and save the • •, er A man who does not I , n,w that all these \healers\ are frauds. .11 be nuide to be • hove there is money in a patent right. The Modern Way Commends itself to the well-informed, • to do pleasantly and effectuali t y what was formerly done in the crudest man- ner and disagreeable as well, To cleanse the system and break up colds, head- aches, and fevers without unpleasant after effects, use the delightful liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs. Manu- factured by California Fig Syrup Cans - patty. Formerly nearly all the young men be- came lawyers or doctors. Now about half of them are beeominglife insurance agents. Colorado Gold Mines. If you are interested in gold mining ] or wish to keep posted regarding the wonderful strides being made in Colo- rado, it will pay you to send fifty cents for a year's subscription to The Gold Miner, an illustrated monthly paper published at Denver. None of the \smart set\ could get out in the world and earn a living as school teach- ers. It the Daily Is Cutting Teeth. Holmes and WO that old' and well tried remedr, yak Wissoow's Soartaxo Strut - , for Children •rtaatiars. There nre so ninny patenl maileinee now that unless a man 'breaks g, h e d oc t ors hinPelt. Mothere appreriate the „I iv ork of Pseker's 0Ingerl'inde. with '/ /1/1/IlItfi'S boon to the pain -stricken. Sleepless sod nervous. Theological fireworks do not make as many Christians as plain statements of facts. When you corns to realise that an Tom corns Sr. gone. and on mitre pats, how grateful you feel. All the work of 'Baden/ohm lite. The girl should hesitate long and earnest- ly before changing religion to marry. 1 Tit le nrittl'IN a BROW les BRONCHIAL TitoCnEM are sold only in boxes. They are wonderfully effective for Coughs and Throat Troubles. When a mother tells . you funny stories about her baby, to' ' ,silent, or she will hate you. Coe'• I nog at On /tans mu Se oldest unit la so. It Wit I.,',,, sCold er then anything eh\ It tsilable. rt It - --- Those Who envy the it ,.# r i c h families do not know the sliad, , .. • ,•,,, -i/Irltsstopitect free!, Crest Pers./ Restorer. Pm rattan t. •,:At YAW , . Tpo,g11.0.\ $2, ro , g hand to ler. kfinejral A rub bt.,1•1Aike.,1 a. The (lays of rapidly accumulating for tunes on speculation are gliding by. Pisres Cure for Consumption is the be , t of all cough cures George W. Lotz Fabucher, La.. August 26, lelee. Some debutante', appear to know every thing at their dna apeearapce. FAITHFUL HEARTS. HEY were in Lady Brereton's boudoir in Green street, bosom friends and alone. A 6 o'clock tea equipage stood between them and a too brilliant June elm was excluded by blinds of a be- coming tint and an etagere of ferns. Mrs. Crosbie helped herself to a sweetmeat leisurely and with a due re- gard for her irreparable glove. \Of course, you know,\ she remarked, \that Capt. Valence is home from In- dia?\ \Somebody told me yesterday that he had just arrived. But why the 'of course?' \ replied Lady Brereton. \I don't know—if you don't. Only\— Mrs. Croshie looked through the cream jug at futurity—\it's just the year since poor Lord Beereton died.\ \And what of that?\ Mrs. Crosbie's eyes deserted the tea tray and fixed themselves severely on her friend. \Blanche she said, \you are in one of your moods, and you don't practice on me! Are we alone, or is somebody hiding behind the cur- tains?\ ‘\You ridiculous woman!\ \Then why this superlative inno- cence? Why this affectation of coy 17? For heaven's sake, be a rational being and treat me like one. As if everybody doesn't know that Arthur Valence wor- ried himself nearly sick over you at the time elf your marriage. And you try to persuade me, of all people, that you think it means nothing when he returns to England, after an absence of five years, just as the first twelve months of your mourning expire!\ \His movements don't interest me in the least, and I don't suppose mine any longer interest him. You seem to ig- nore the lapse of time since we met, and faithful hearts, my dear, went out of fashion with the crinoline. Besides, he wasn't a man—he was only a nice \Anyhow it doesn't matter now. He has probably forgotten all about me long ago.\ She spoke with a complacent disbe- lief in her own words which made her hearer laugh. \If you thought for a moment that he had forgotten you you would be ir- ritable beyond endurance.\ \I hope you are not laboring under the absurd delusion that I care in the least.\ \Alt' I your enemy that I should ac- cuse you of having a heart?\ laughed Mr, Crosble. \I merely meant that your amour propre would be ruffled, my dear. I know you so well.\ \You were never more mistaken fia your life,\ asserted Lady Brereton, t Minty. \I am utterly indifferent.\ Therein she was insincere. It wastettz that she had snubbed him unmercifully In years gone by, and the only feeling his boyish passion had inspired in her had been sisterly liking, afterwards mingled with pity,amusement and grat- ified vanity. But, nevertheless, she looked to the renewal of the floral chains which bound him to her carriage wheels with a truly feminine pleasure. - 7 - \FORGOTTEN YOU! IS IT LIKELY?\ 'therefore, with the possibility be- fore her mind of a visit from her old admirer, she bestowed sundry adorning touches to her toilet, countermanded the victoria, and settled herself in the drawing room, in a graceful attitude. prepared to be very much astonished to see him, Indeed. The afternoon waned, however, and he failed to put in an appearance. Neither did he come the following day nor the one lifter, nor the next. Evi- dently he was in no hurry to call on her, and Lady Brereton's usually sweet tem- per developed inequalities in cimse- quence. When within a week of his return he greeted her at length on the neutral ground of the Burlington club, she found him a good deal changed—older, improved, nothing of the boy she re- membered about him, except his feat- ures, which were good. • \Then you haven't quite forgotten me.\ she said. \Forgotten yqu! Is it likely? MY dear Lady Brereton, don't you remem- ber my youthful adoration? You made me as Nretrthed as a love-sick boy can be. I was so very much in earnest; one takes oneself I40 seriously at 21. I have often laughed over the thought of it since.\ ale laughed now. So did she, very naturally, too. But she was not pleased; for in his frank allusion to the past she discerned that her empire was lost, and no woman likes to make that diesevery. even if she has not valued it at the time of possession. \And in your stay in tendert to be long?\ she asked. , \Oh I am not going hack to Delia. at all,\ he said., \The regiment 'iii he home next month. I mean to eettki down. 'the governor wants it; litinety about the title, you know, since my brother died. It's rather /1 bore By the way, Lady Brereton, I WAS hitt u I Mg to call and ask your all alecit W'ornen are so clever at this l-oi of et thing.\ \I shall be delighted.\ she Reid sweet - ly. \I'll look net for you and you must come and see me and report what dIFI- roverles Nem are making on vitt' own eceohnt But the conversation was a little one-sided after that Capt. Valence chatted easily little nothings of the hour, amusing vermation of a well- bred roan of world with a witty tongpe and irewd perception, lint she did not y much heed to what he said. She thinking of the tinie.theY met. She vas Blanche Forrester thea, and he led her his angel, the light of his IlL and she had laughed, and bidden n not to be a sly boy. The whole e ode had been very absurd, of course, ut somehow his mockery of is did no lease her. \Thu day is my day,\ she said to Wi n he put her in her carriage, by an by. \But if you like to take your mice, you know \ aps she thought about him more en way home than she had ever thought about him before at one time. \I was young once,\ said Capt. Va- lence to the horse chestnut trees, \I was distressingly young—a malady we all suffer from. But I feel better now, thank God!\ he added, piously. And he lighte'd a cigar and went to watch the polo with a smile of self-satisfac- tion. They met a good deal in the course of the next few weeks. He reminded her of her promise, and she mentioned two or three desirable damsels to him: but her assistance ended there, and he .never saw an attractive girl in her house. Also he found occasion to al- lude °ace more to his salad days. \Nothing polishes a cub,\ he said. \like an affair with a woman of the world. My dear Lady Brereton, ac- cept the assurance of my gratitude.\ She would have been better pleased if he had intimated that she had ruined his life, better pleased even if he had openly avoided her. \One would think I was his grandmother,\ she said to her own wrathful reflection in the toilet glass. For a week she saw nothing of him, then one evening their eyes met across I the opera house, and a faint resent- I ment—the sequel to the unexplained tears—was in her smilelese brow. It was perceptible, too, in the manner of her greeting, when, during the last en- tr'acte, he deserted his stall for her , box, and, on Mrs. Crosbie's invitation, dropped into the vacant chair between them. \I have news for you,\ he mur- mured in her ear when the stage claimed Mrs. Crosbie's attention. \She is found.\ \Indeed and am I to congratulate you?\ \Perhaps it would be a trifle prema- ture. You see, I haven't proposed yet. I'll tell you all about it to -morrow if you are sufficiently interested.\ \Tell me now,\ she said. She spoke quite naturally and she was smiling. But he did not look at her face; his eyes had been on her hand as it closed with spasmodic force upon the handle of her fan. \You will break that toy if you treat it like that,\ he said. quietly. She dropped it as if it had stung her and drew back in the shadow of the draperies with her white teeth pressing her lower lip. \Go on,\ she said. \Is itateleaffair of the heart, or of her forehead?\ \She is the only woman I should ever wish to marry,\ he answered. \I want her more than I have wanted anything in my life. I hardly know how to de- scribe her to you. Don't laugh if I rave; I am in love, and when a fellow's like that, you know. • • • Lady Brereton, you will certainly ruin your fan! But I am not going to tell you that she is perfect. She has variety, she has charm—admirable qualities to attract a man. Ah, she is adorable, ee. —Lady Brereton!\ She was leaning back against tie partition, her eyes closed, her face col- orless, \Nothing—don't notice me!\ shr murmured. \The heat • • • I am better already.\ He bent forward to screen her from the other woman's view. His hail I covered hers, and it was shaking, like his voice. \You are going to faint! I am a brute, but I want you so badly and I knew it was the only way to make you care. If I had shown--\ \The comedy is finished.\ The words were spoken on the stage,and the curtain fell. He put her cloak round her as they rose. OUT OF THE ORDINARY. The most costly horse barn in the world is re Syracuse, N. Y. It belongs to Ii I' ol,o1 and cost $700,000. The me tents believed that purga- tory's main entrance WAS though a cavern on the island of Lonough Derg, Irel t toothed combs of ivory and bra have been found in Egyptian ton} which date back more than 1,000 yen, It, C. J. L. Allen, a telegraph operator at Loretto, in Marion County, Ky., has invented a railroad clock that is a mar- vel of ingenuity. It registers each train as it passes and the time at which it passes, and an accompanying device gives warning to incoming trains if an- other train has pegged the station with- in fifteen minutes. The room of a certain self-possessed girl was entered recently by a burglar. Without en instant's delay the young woman caught up the only weapon at hand. She elevated it in so orthodox a manner that the intruder, noting only ' the ominous flashing of steel. took to hie heels as effectually as if he had iwen aimed at with ft rifle. Instead of the tarn ily pair of seieeers. The story ornes from A rlsona of Chiricahns nm. ' , tor who, while work ing a tunnel tn that district, hal put in a blast, light , d 111.• Ins° and started nut , tn find th , . tc,,dth .d• the tunnel block tided %, till a bk. k hc:Ir and f hren rubs It said the pros pi tor was ill terrible dilemma, whether to he blow, np or eaten lip, and hocamo an chilled with fright that the air in the tunnel frog , \ nip in big chunks and the fire it, I the fuse went out. 714 Delaware. Members of the Delaware legislature are elected in each county on a general ticket, but there is an effort by means of a party arrangement unknown to the law to provide a sort of district representation. Each party assigns representative or a senator to each hundred, as the township is called in Delaware, but as there are more hundreds than the combined number of representatives and menders, senile hundreds must almays go unrep- resented. fatrtottsni. Lisbeth —I hear you have broken. With Ambrose. \Vha.t was the mat- ter? Jeannette—We fell oat about lit- erature. Ambrose is such a horrid Anelornaniae. He persists that Shakespeare is funnier than Bill Nye. —St. Louis Post -Dispatch. lier Advice. She Why don't you go West and , seei L a S f aTtfo .lt - Ine lS Someone might try to blow my brain,. out. Sh D e—on't toll folks you have any. _ _ l,ru ' Sprain, Soreness, Stiffness, When ST. JACOBS OIL -Alta floats of peo;de go to *irk In the wrong way to care a Would care la the right way, right cit. s GNtiv $ 1.2t a it Te'OU PLANT THE RIGHT SEEDS ;Vfy New Seed Book tells all about the best varieties of less and Everything o fin- terest in the Seed Line; how to grow them for profit, etc. FREE if you send a postal to -day, mention this pope:. KW. BUCKI3EE Rockford Seed Farms ROCKFORD, ILLS. P. O. Ber. DTI --ewssa. TUE A ER 11()\:01C i'0, doss nai: the war/O's vrtodrn..1. hominy's, e, ause It has reduced the tot ot ertrul power toI 41 o 1.:„/ U wa t IL h.ts mato blanch 411 I .tippl iro41N and teLollITS at your I: 10, c.to 3. 1 does tarnish better article for It -so Remo/I/an :IV, It makes Pumping and onnired, Steel, aft,', oc on WopletIholtni:1, ilienz and Fixed sittet 'rowers. ,tcei jbaz!, I ee0 etaterii and I et d (trindr • In,,1 N1111410:5 It .1111.11W Of ,it 114 mat It Pill f111111,11 January Int at 1 /3 toe 11,1a1 *rice. It also mai, Taol, and Ptolow of all kinds 9Pod for catalog, 6. Factory 12111, koatreil and Fillmore Streets, Cilium). SMOKE YOUR MEAT WITH otSERS 1.14111D EXTRACT OF SMOKE el s e:u r ine. E.KEAUSERe BRIMILIONA. Money Say aol by d t 1 .7. U rico list ,,t 1)ry toads, I Inuring. / troeerlee 4 1- .,re F11111,111 l'111.11t tire, r'loith ikft, Jewelcv, Ladles , =:;..t r .. HAYDEN BROS., Omaha, N0b. SWEET POTATOES' rot shoreti. N.. toppricn... ro- oulrect Directions f,,r 11,rwItin6t free ALM res., T. .J. SKINS Ell, l'olooritoos, Bison. Opium r tt\g ) ,;In i : DR. J.STt.P . HE Nu, Lebanon Ohio ;Thompson's Eye Water. PISO'S CURE FOR , : ei . , Cs' All LS All flout Cough yrup. Taiatitt Good, rfee ire I,.(....10 hi .1/.14:gists_ c \) CONSUMPTLON s\ - L. N. U. No. 6.1896. or - Kincity Mention This Paper When You Write to an Advertiser. / I J ‘ : - atE 3 ,, ea L.. ‘,... *' 41r es e e n... ./ • erit Is what gtres Iloed's lkirsaparina Its great pap- ularity, increasuigsalesand wonderful cures. The combination, proportion and proms.\ to preparing Bond's Barsaparilla are unknown to other medicines, and make it peculiar is itself. It acts directly and positively upon the blood, and as the blood reaches every nook and corner of It,. human system, aft the nerves, muscles, bones and tissues come un- der the beneficeut influence of ood's Sarsaparilla One True Purifier. All druggists. ('urn' liver Ills; easy to 1100d 7 S Pills take,easytootierate.25e. E , A I r E Ar a t ) IN THE 1 ORLO' 1 DO YOU KNOW ... That the finest vegetables in the world are crown from Salzer's seeds? Wh)? Be- cause they are Northermgrown, bred to cerliness, and sprout quickly, grow rapidly and produce enormously! 35 Packages Earliest Vegetable Seeds, $1. POTATOES IN 28 DAYS! just think of that! You can have them by plant- ing Sidrer's seed. Try it this year I LOOK AT THESE YIELDS IN IOWA. Silver Mine Oats, 19 - Mi. per acre. Silver King Barley, . . . . . 95 bu. per acre. Prolific Spring live, 60 bu. per acre. Marvel Spring Wheat, . . 40 hu. per acre. Giant Sburry, • • • • • . 8 tons per acre. Giant Incarnat Clover, ., . 41005 hay per acre. Potatoes., . , . . . 500 to 1,100 bu, per acre. Now,above yields Iowa farm,:s have had. A full Ilst of farmers from your and adjoining states, doing equally well, is published in our catalogue. tC X-0C:is lir ID FL 16/11#3M1 7Z). Enormous stocks of clover, timothy and grass seeds, grown especially for seed. Al, it's fine! II ighest quality , . lowest prices! IF YOU WILL CUT IHIS OUT AND SEND IT With P2e. in stamps.you will get our be catalogue and a samp/e of Pumpkin Yellow Waterrnek,n sensation. Catalogue alone, Sc., tells how to get 1 that potato. JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO., LA CROSSE, was. WN • e.,........a.......a.soe.-----ea.........e.e.----e...seeseeew. the Greatest iledical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has li! ereLl in one ,,t our common pasture \oat; a remedy that cures every kind et humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). tie has now in his possession over two hundred , ertiticates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first ts•ttle, and a perfect cure is war- ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causest shooting pains, like needles passine threugh them; the scum,' with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being sir emed, and always disappears in a week aft.r tikine it. Read the label. It the .tansish . It .111 Heals it will cave sate -one ti tecieles at first. la • clone,- t a diet ever necessary. Eat the boa vett ,:an get, and enough of it. Dose, one —Mail in water at bed- time. S. •1.1 et, I ann , r'r.ts PARKER' NAIR BALSAM c• to O. toopt•Pes the hale. I n )111 , 11,11 21' r 1.111n to Iteatora °ray o Os Youthful Coior. ( • r ri *rased, hu, traLing, n , a; leaf 1121 Ito . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . : . s a , : % ' i •,. .▪ ............ Dr. parkburst and young men In twelve farmli.kr ''till-\ Dr. Parkhurst, the preat New Veik preacher and reformer, will address hinr:elf bf voting' men A feature that will f ontinire through the year of in Cbe Ladies' home 3ournal ONE DOLLAR FOR AN ENTIRE. YEAR OYI:ll 140 (iIRLS WlI.L EIDILIGATIiit FRIT. At thi- .t “Ilegcs and imuervatories the laee Edit, at— , 11 Ilan ef jt)1 . 1 , `.. NI Every girl SAM,' 11.1t1( - 1\ t111W for any kind of ts to, rtion she w.lilt • .1 15enny need /the expend. Let her , dipplv wTilt' to Che Carrels 'Publishing Company, Philadelphia L erirsowoort. IOW , Iry roe t 5, 411 ) 03 0 COM. Purt \n u ,. 400.esPeitEtv:: a '0. e, • -.• FA I a:. pat a ho lad I Ic flu sce to rio hat flit sire wo, ''d tied as! \Ke tic), tcrt has Kee rat in for A We Le Sco ter D. sou er fan ▪ He tra, Wa so fen: Mre des Ga hat pat. inti ma arc bit! Mr- whi tra of of I • eig bri her pin ao t win I,',' or t des , of t her that • jou eve ale the the Brn trite mcn me ef vie In r. a VP 1/11 Am , fron don Ill-( : e