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\ ^ """" w s 9 s Yol._g>. < TEMPERANCE. JUST TAKE A DROP. A Arop? One drop of wine or beer? It isn't much to take. If it would only stay a drop, It would no trouble make. One drop! If that indeed were all I'd ever wish to drink, Surely it would no*, could not cause Mv wool iii woe to sink Hut here's the trouble; one small drop Quick to another leads; Then to a third, and on and on The appetite each feeds. The first drop cries, '"'I is not enough," The second, ,4(?iTe rne more," Th* third says; "I must have a glass: Up thirst is sharp and sore." Kuch one tastes better; e :.ch oue makes | Me thirstier than 1 was; And so a drunkard 1 become.? That first wee drop the cause. There's only one thing I can do, lleforc the first to stop. And say, "1'uot a drunkard be, So 1 1*1 not touch a drop." ? Mr*. Helen E. Hroirn, in Unnntr. OLD RYE MAKES A SI'EKCH. 1 was made to be eaten, And not to be drank; To be thrashed in a burn, Not soaked in a tank. 1 come as a blessing, When put through a mill; As a blight and a curse, When run through a still. Make me up into loves, And your children are fed; Hut, if into a drink, 1 will starve then instead. In bread I'm a servant, The eater shall rule; I II il rS II I.* I a m mo of or 1" ' i I I I I l\ . ..... ., An<l the <lrinker a fool. Thou remember tho warning. .My strength I'll employ; II eaten, to strengthen; If ilr.'ink, to destroy. HISTORIC MOTHERS. Upward of u hundred years ago a passer along the streets of Kdinbnrg might have noticed, perched at a ' window, a pule, childish face, light. I ed hv deep-blue eyes, and framed by j sunny, clustering hair. Had the passer entered the house he would i soon have siyn a slender, limping fig- j ure descend from his peixh (where ' ho had climbed to watch his coin- j panions as they started on some boy- i ish expedition), and turn with a I beaming smile to a fair woman whoso resj 01)81 vosmile was us bright as his ' own. The child was Walter Scott, the woman, his mother. A delicate child, lame from infancy, Sir Walter spent the larger portion of his time with his mother, w ho encouraged his fomh ess for romance, trained his imagination, educated his taste, and so converted the accident which threatened such dcnronsiny results into a blessincr, not I " O " only personal and temporal, but | which shall be as enduring as English letters, and as general as the rays of the sun. She gave impetus to the sunny current of humor and humanity which gladdened his life; and she inculcated in the child the energy and perseverance which prompted the old man to take up his pen to write out a debt of half a million. Sir Walter said of her: "She had a mind of natural brilliancy, wellstored with acquired imformation. She had un excellent memory, and could draw, without the least affectation, the most striking pictures of past ages. If 1 have been able to do ^ any thing toward painting the past, it is owing to the studies she gave me, and the influence she exerted over me." Sir Walter records many instances of his mother's tenderness, and gives many evidences of his devot on and gratitude to her. After his death his executors found in his desk, arranged in careful order, a number of little objects so placed that his eye ^ might rest on them as soon as he raised the lid. Prominent among them were the old-fashioned bottles that had garnished his mother's toi let tame, wneii ne, a sickly cmia, slept in ber dressing-room, and the silver taper stand which the young advocate had bqught for her with hjs first fivp gifinea feeWhon the hoart is filled with those vivid plcturos of border and fomlal life; when tho imagination rovels in the splendid portrait-gallery where IiOuis XI., Elizabeth, and Richard Cconr dc Lion stand forth in historic fidelity, and Jeanie Deans, Col. Mahrteriug, and Dominie Sampson invest fiction with the force of reality,filet tho reader remembee her whose guiding hand led-to those fair and fertile provinces, and who, in ^ "the words of Richter, "furnished the JQNWAY clew to his genius." The man who was destined to add j afresh and a higher charm to the j lovely shire where Bruce was born and Burns was buried, Thomas Curlvle, thus writes of his mother: "I am proud of my mother, though she is neither beautiful nor learned. If; I ever forget to love and reverence I her I must cease to be a creature i worth rememherinf. Rh? m?vt?r shrunk from me in my desolation* never tired of my despondencies, or shut np, by a look or tone, the ex- i pression of any real or imaginary; grief. She stands out in my memory as beautiful in all that makes thcex- j cellenccof women/' Mrs. Oliphant has given a charming description of Kcclcfechan, "where the low, gray hills close in around the little hamlet." Hutu far more charming description of the old village?the h'ntepfuhl of "Suitor licsurtus"?has been left by the inimitable artist, who spent there the happy days of his childhood, when, in his own language, "Time was no fast hurrying stream, but a sportful, sunlit ocean." There, in the .humble cottage, the peasant mother, wise as she was patient, molded the character of the vindicator of Cromwell, and the most brilliant hixtorian of the French Revolution. It is said that his fatli er wanted Thomas to "gang and work," Thomas wanted to keep to his "bulks"; the mother sided witli ^ the boy, and her influence prevailed. j There can be no doubt that Carlyle j owed much that was best, in his na ture and his writings to his mother. | She possessed strong common sense, clear judgment, stern adherence to Until, and a rare faculty for classifying and assimilating knowledge. Sho had long been a great reader, but i was unable to write when Thomas was horn, and taught, herself writing for the purpose of corresponding I with her son. The strength and independence of her mind are indicated | by the fact that she suggested to her j son the new theory in regard to the j character of Cromwell, which he! was the first to make public. I)r. Uiltillan records a pleasant visit to Carlyle: "1 had the great pleasure of meeting Carlyle's excellent mother, in company with her illustrious son, and beautiful it was to see his profound and tender reverence and her motherly love, and to her line old Convcnanting accents concerting with his transcendental tones." When the "inevitable hour" came, and Carlyle's mortal remains were consigned to the dust, they rusted, not amid England's great and kindred spirits in Westminster, not in Haddington by the wife he so tenderly loved, but by his request in j the biirrying-ground at Ecclefochan by the side of Ids mother, and in 1 the midst of his kindred. The products of' skill, the treasures of nature, the material wealth of the univese, have a purchasable value, and may be accurately estimated: but the vessel that brought Louis Agassi/, to our shores, bore a treasure inestimable, imperishable, u 11 purchasable. Ilis greatness was not an accident, according to the logic of events, it was a natural conclusion from certain premises. "The reason firm, : the temperate will," of the mother fashioned the character in the old home at Neufchatel. Having lost her first four children during infancy, she watched over Louis with intense anxiety. She ( j discovered that his love of natural objects was not a child's propensity I to make playmates of the animals around him, hut a strong intellectual ; tendency destined to give bent to his i life, slie aided and encouraged him in his childish researches, often proj paring herself by study to give the | information besought. From sympathy with the lower animals, she i developed that sympathy with hnj man beings which so conspicuously distinguished him. From her he inherited the won derful personal magnetism, which I/iwell lias so aptly expressed in a single line, "Wherever he met a stranger, there he left a friend." | The following is an extract fr<yur a letter written by Mine. Agassi/, jto her son; "To do all the good y<im cap to your fellow-being*, to havo a pure conscience, to gain an honorti* hie livelihood, to make those around you happy?this is true happiness: all the rest are but mere accessories." When Agdssiz was separated from his mother lie kept her advised of all his undertakings, and his work was none the less interesting to her when the ocean rolled between them than when he was able to discuss it daily with her. She remained his most intimate friend to the last hour of her life, and he survived her only six yearo* Prof. Sillimnn visited Mmo. Agassi/. in 1851, when she was nearly \ 'f m , ^ I " Be True to Yoi 7B, a,THT. fourscore. As soon as he told her that he was the friend of her son, and that Ids adopted county looked upon him as one of its choicest possessions, she was overcome with emotion. "The next morning she came walking alone some distance in the rain, to bid us farewell. . . >She Drought tor .Mrs. Mlliman a bouquet of pansiest, and bade us toll her son that lie peases were all for him."? Home-Maker XV illiiigucH.H to l>o liittle Things. There are some Christians to whom words of the servant to Naaman might bo well applied. The captain of the host of the King of Syria was very angry because the prophet Klisha had told him to do a thing that seemed so small as to be ridiculous and contemptible. lie felt himself too great a man to do such a simple thing as to wash in the Jordan, but !*is servant wisely said: <4My father, if the prophet had bid thee do some great thing wouldst thou not have' done it?" Certainly he would, and the servant could appropriately say to him: "How much rather wash and be clean"?that is, if you would do the great thing in obedience to the command of the prophet, you certainly should be even more willing to do the little thing he has commanded. This kind of treatment swept away the harrier of pride behind which the Syrian captain had placed himself, and we are told he did "according to the saying of the man of God," and was healed. Just so soon as Naaman was brought to a true spirit of obedience he was as willing to do the small thing as the great There are yet some people in the world who need to be brought to the same state of mind. Any man whom the Lord will use in great things must be willing to do any t hi Jig. There are a very few great things to be done in the Mas tar's service, and a great many peo pie would like to do them, whila there are innumerable so called small things to be done, and comparatively few who aro ready to undertake them. Some one has said: "Once in a while, when a great fortress is to be taken, God will bring out a great field piece and rake all with j the fiery hail of destruction. Hut common muskets do most of the hard fighting. It took only one |.Joshua and the thousands of com A -1 - - I * . 1 uiuii troops unuer nun 10 drive down the walls of cities, and, under wrathful strokes, to make nations lly like sparks from the anvil. Itonly took one Luther for Germany, one Zwingli for Switzerland, and John Knox for ! Scotland, one Calvin for France, and one John Wesley for England. The most work is in the rank and tile of life. No man can be idle. Put down love of place and pride, Look around, not above, for work. Hemember the nobility of service is not in what men call prominent or great deeds, but in deeds, However humble and unknown, which the King has commanded. There is a blessing in the service, and a reward awaiting that kind of word for Christ, which , is done so naturally as to be forgot ten until he shall remind us by say ing, "Inasmuch as yet did it unto I one of the least of these, vet did it unto me." Kx-Pcrsldeut Cleveland Invited to Chicago. Chicago, Oct. 20.?The Press Club of Chicago has extended an invitation to ex-President Cleveland to speak at the Auditorium under the auspices of the club. If he. accepts the invitation he will coine about the middle of November. lie declined an invitation to Chicago tendered by the Iroquois Club. The Press Club had Denew as as its truest in June: _ a 0 it now wishes to have Mr. Cleveland come to speak in the Auditorium on any subject that he may select. , \ writer in a ilostorr .paper rocoip* i mends wouuyi"to |tudy. their coup1 [tenancies by aid of their antirrofsJ Oood enough} Bflt then Vf they do hot1 cure theirvcolds wItir Dr. Hull's Cough Syrrtp they run the ' risk of breaking their deflectors and destroying valuable property. You can be cheerful and happy only when you are well. If you feel out of sorts," take Dr. .1. II. Mcj Lean's Sarsaparilla. There's not a joy the earth can give, like the sudden surcease of violent and terrible pain. It is like the rest at the gates of Paradise, but how can it be found? It is the simplest matter in the world. Buy a bottle of Salvation Oil and rub it in. w I l"ord, )oi'r Work end IV ESDA V, ] TIIIC FIKST rONFKDKltATK SKALS. Tliey weft' Made in IMillodulpliia n Month Bcidro the Full of Sumter. (Fjom the Philadelphia Press.) Here is a feet whicn the Muse Clio has entered as an item in the! great journal of universal history; March 12. 18(51, John Forsyth and Martin J. Crawford requested Sec re- < tary Seward to appoint as early aj day as possible, on which day they might present to the President of the j United States the credentials which they bore as commissioners duly ae-' credited by tho Government of the Confederate States of America, to which request Secretary Seward, with President Lincoln's approval, three days later replied that he saw in recent events and the condition political affairs in the South not a rightful and accomplished re vol u tion and an independent nation, with an established government, but rather a perversion of temporary and partisan excitement, And here is fact, unpublished hitherto, which a Philadelphia die[sinker, P. H. Jacobus, -10 South 3d street, entered in his journal; March 8, 18(51, tilled an order for two seals inscribed "Confederate States of America, department of State," and "Confederate States of America, department of war." The order was sent by Joel White, hookseller, Montgomery, Ala, to the Lip pincott Company, and Thomas W. Hartley, of that, company, transferal to me. These seals were used in all offi cial documents of the Confederacy until the seat of government was removed to Kichmond. Now let us add two other, facts ! with their respective dates: i At ! 20 A. M., April 12, 1801, the roar of a mortar from Sullivan's , Island, quickly followed by the rushj ng shriek of a shell, gavo notice to the world that the era of compromise diplomacy and misapprehension was ended; and on Sunday afternoon, April 14, with colors Hying and drums beating, bringing a'ray his company and private property, and saluting his Hag with lifty guns j Major Hobt Anderson marched out i of Fort Sumter* Looking back a few montlls to learn how i'hiladelphians felt before the crisis actually arrived, we find that on December ft), 1800, Mayor Alexander Henry issued nproclianm tion, by the advice of the councils of the city, summoning the whole people thereof to assemble on the 13th in Independence square. Tho"result was the most imposing of all meetings which were held to discuss measures for placating the deeply offend I'd South. In his address Mayor Henry said: "The misplace teach ings of the pulpit, the unwise rhapsodies of the lecture room, the exciting appeals of the press, on the subject of slavery must be frowned | down by a just and law abiding people Thus only, may you hope to avoid 'sectional discord, agitation, and animostity.'' The Hon. .Joseph lb In" jgersolI followed, saying: "It is a | farce to suppose that this country will be divided." Charles K. Lex said: "Let us discountenance any denunciation of slavery, or of those who maintain that institution." Theodore Cuyler said: "Let us receive our brother of the South, if he ! will come among us for a littlo time attended by his servant, and permit thus to come. We arc bound by a sacred compact not to interfere or meddle with the institution of slav ory as it exists in many of our sister States." The spirit of this great meeting was embodied in ressolutions of the niQst conciliatory, friendly and apologetic feone> " '4h these foiir concise statements of fact?in tflo few words which iiuvetyeen devoted to tlie Confederate cointjiissioncrs. the Confederate seals, the fall of Sumter, and the mass meeting injlndepondcncc square ?lies the substance of a whole chapter of history. There is no more interesting chapter in the history of civil war than that which deals with the sentiment which prevailed in the Northern States immediately before the outbreak of hostilities. Ask Mr. Jacobus if he thought at the time thut there was anything strange in receiving an order for seals to lie used by the 'Confeder* m r (W/i// //." n( >v ii:m bj I ate States of America," and he will reply simply: "Oh, no. I had other orders from Southern linns and filled this among the rest." Ask a representative of the J. K. I.ippiueott Company, whose memo-i ry goer, tmek to tnat day, if this commission excited surprise, and he, will answer: "if we should get aM order for seals 'Independent County of Chester," or the 'Confederate States of Delaware and Maryland., we should till it, payment be- j ing guaranteed. That's the way we felt about the order from our cor-, respondeney in Montgomery." >1 owk ('liuractrrs. Mock characters, like false lights,; are worse than darkness. There is any number of skin deep saints in the world at all times; and sheep's i clothing and long robes are always I ' I in great demand in the market. In-, deed, we all use cosmetics of the i moral kind to remove freckles or wrinkles. To meet the respectable, | smooth shaved, decorous, venerable j ornaments of society we sometimes see, you would not suspect that any slanders could find birth against men so soft-spoken, so frank, and so confidential. Hut they do. Itavcn j black and dead eyes, and drawn- j down corners of the mouth, and an unexceptional tie, don't always! stand for godliness. Curullus mm t'ltn'f, momtrchum?"The cowl docs not make the friar." That highly respectable hoard of directors, so hale, loud-spoken, well fed, seem, j every man of them, fit for prizes at an exhibit ion of commercial moralities; still they are in trouble about loans or contract-, or prospect uses. That manufacturer sing loud in his pew on Sundays, hut makes thirty | live inches to the yard on Mondays; and that prosperous shopkeeper has strangely dark windows; and does that, one believe his own putt's? The millennium has not come yet, and can hardly be hoped for, by appearances, at any very short date. Somehow, the bottles do not show the ! same strawberries all the way down, in all cases; and jockeys sometimes forget to tell a horse's faults; and there have been books written on I adulterations and tricks in trade; and men's words or writings are not always the unclouded expression of their thoughts. And yet to meet i men, how nearly perfect they seem in their suavity, innocence, and seuiimcnis. i Here are a good many Siberian crabs, and apples of Sodom, land huge pears that look like honey I and oat like wood. W'e have our I panics, and thousand liquidations, and a hundred millions of railway stock unproductive, and bankruptcy court revelations. The crop of knaves and half knaves is by no means extinct. There is a dark side to a good many things besides the moon; and has not the sun its spots, not to speak of eclipsvs that happen ! pretty widely throughout, the uniI verse? lie you, young man, a c:mtrast to all this. Character that is only a mask is beneath you, and mere conventional goodness is a lie of the devil. Dcrtermine, from the lirst, to be transparent and truthful to Cod and your fellows, let Mephistopholes say what he likes. It is bet1 ter, after all, to have the universe on 1 your side than againgst you. Curses, like chickens, come home to roost, j and so do falsities, if not outwardly, 1 yet in your soul. I pray you don't offer a prophets chamber in your conscience to satan. Life is sacred; keep it so. We arc born for a purpose, and can serve itonlyas we servo ; God. Humanity is a whole, not a mere ! limit (if rr<.IIAI*.if iititu OH/1 l?c?a .. .!.. I 1 ...vy./ x/. .K MIIKMI.'I IIIIM I I CIO CI UI-JMI* ny in which every one has a set part. The little lnomcnt of our being is great enough to live well hi and leave true work behind it. Play the man, and not the trickster. Kvelyn saw men at Leghorn staking their liberty for life in mad gambling, and, having lost, presently led off into slavery. lie who has to do with a lie stakes his soul, and loses in any case. Character, pure'and noble, chimes in with the eternal harmonies; but fasehood is a hideous clungor, now and forever. What any life, however humble, can do is a secret with Uod. It may widen its influence through ages, or it may leave a trace seen only by him. Hut if valiantly, earnestly, nobly lived, ait O,, 18QO. by tin- 1 lit of Mod's truth *aud laws, it is holy forever. The City of Mod slowly rises through the ugos, ' and every true life is a living stone in some of its palaces. You were made for (Jod, young man, from eternity, and no lie is of him, be it iii trade or profession, in act or in ^ ... y word. Insincerities are marks on ^ the devil's tally, and so are all hypo- ^ crisics and shams. Let your character tie real, the shining warp and ^ woof of each day working out the ^ part (lod has set you in the great j) loom of Time. fj (Hijei'tn of I'Mucot ion. k In view of the general discussion 11 of the subject of education, it will y 1)? well to hear in mind the objects v of education ss given by Thomas Jcf- !l ferson in 181 St. H Objects of primary education: 1. To give every citizen the infor- 1 ination be needs for the transaction a of his own buisiness. ' 2. To enable liini to calculate for ^ himself and to express and preserve a Ins ideas, bis contracts and accounts 1 in writing. * 3 To improve, by reading, bis ^ morals and faculties. 1 4. To understand hi,s duties to bis 11 neighbors am. country, and to dis ' charge w i111 competence the func- ( lions confided to him by either. 5. To know bis rights; to exercise 1 with order and justice those here- ' tains; to (boose with the fiduciary of ? those he delegates; and to notes their * conduct with dilligcncc, with can dor and judgment. 5. And, in gencrul, to observe 1 with intelligence and faithfulness all the social relations under which ' he shn11 he placed. 11 Objects of higher education: 1. To form the statesmen, legislators and judges, on whom public ' prosperity and individual happiness are so much to depend. 2. To expound the principles and structure of the Government, S the laws which regulate the inter- ' course of nations, those formed ! municip for our own government, ' and a sound spirit of legislation, ' which banishing unnecessary res-1 train! on individual action, shall j1 leave us free to do whatever does not I' violate the ofpial rights of another.!1 To harmonize and promote the 1 ite rests of agriculture, manifaatories, j and commerce, and by well informed views of political economy to give free scope to the public industry ' To develop the reasoning faculties of our youth; enlarge their minds, cultivate their morals and instil into them the precepts of virtue and order. 5. To enlighten them with math ematical and phywicsl science, which advance the arts and administer to the health, the sustenance and comfort of human life. 0. And generally, to form them to habits of reflection and correct ac- i tion, rendering themselves examples 1 of virtue to others, and of happiness within themselves. (Joi.inda (Texas) writes: "Please i tell me how to pickle beef tongue.?" answer: Mix, in four gallons of water, a pound and a half of brown sugar, and twoonncesof saltpeter or sale-ratus; if the tongue is to be kept a month, add six pounds of salt: if it is to be kept three months, I add nine pounds. Hoilall together, gently till done, skim, and then let; the mixture cool. Put the tongue in which it is to remain, pour in enough i I . 1 . ? 7 I of the pick Id to cover it, anil set it1 I uway in a cool place. Once in two I months, the brine should be drained off, boiled and skimmed, and be far' ther seasoned by half a pound of salt and two ounces of brown sugar. This | pickle excellent for preserving beef, pork and dried beef, as well as beef i tongues* mimim -v 4 > , Col.'J. Henry Nellnran; Oolleotor of Internal lb-venue, Baltimore Md. ; believes in it for rheumatism, ilc writes: I have tried Salvation Oil, anil believe it to be a good remedy for rheumatism, The seal hunters of Victoria, British Columbia, have decided to tlx the price for next season at *3 a skin. When you are constipated have headache, or loss of appetite, take Dr. J. II. Mc I .can's Liver and Kidney Billets; they are pleasant to take and will cure you. I - - ? Cambridge university has conferred an honorary degree upon Explorer j Stanley. - . ? ^ V?> I No. 17. OKFSF FOR PROFIT. low and N\ here Money Can be Made with (iccsc. A* compared with other clauses of louliry hut few geese ore raised, and ot, with suitable facilities, breeding 'Pl'Hli i< dun til v nrnfiliil.ln TUni? I v,x/?,/.j I'twiiiuuivi * iiuig I ways ii fair demand for well fatencd young birds during the lute utumn, and again at the holiday ciison, as well as the call for fine pecimons of leading varieties for reeding and exhibition purposes* 'he market for what is popularly nown as "live geese feathers'' is icver glutted, and therefore the ield of feathers adds a second and . ery considerable source of pi ofit. It mist be borne in mind, however ays the agricultural editor of The sew York World, that geese are rolltable only when there are suitble facilities. It is imperative that hose include extended grass runs, or geese are great graziers, and free ccess to water, this latter being iccessary to a plentiful growth of eathcrs of pure quality, as well as he thrift of the flock. An ideal dace for geese raising is a hilly piece >f grass land through which flows a nook. It is useless, from a commerial point of view, to breed geese in estricied quarter or in close proximty to small fruits and vegetables. II the first tliev will niiilrn l?uf mmi per growth and they will destroy the econd. Autumn is a favorable time for nuking a selection of birds for breedng, just before the Hocks arc called 'or fattening. The two principal jreeds of geese, when Iho birds are lesired for prolit, are the gray or ~ Toulouse and the white or Kmbden. These insure hardiness, early maturity, heavy weights and prolificacy. The Kmbdens require a pond, but the Toulouse, other things being favorable, will do fairly well with what water can be furnished in troughs. Too standard weights, as set. by the American standard of perfection, for an adult Toulouse gander and goose are respectively twenty-five pounds and twenty-th^e pounds, and for young ones, tw^tw pounds and eighteen pounds. The standard weights for Kmbdens are placed at the same figures, though the common opinion is that the Toulouse gain the heavier weights. Other and less well known varieties lire the African, light gray plumage; Chinese, brown, also white plumage; Uunadu, gray, and Kgytian, colored plumage. When geese are s?*t early two broods may be obtained from each female, thus securing large Hocks for each season's sales. The latter hatched birds make excellent flesh by Christmas time. AJgoose makes but a poor show upon the table unless it is very fat. For fattening geese ought to be penned up, half a dozen together in a dark coop or shed, and fed on barley meal and fattening grains. When raised for market old geese may be plucked three times and young ones once before killing time. Geese lay regularly, and rear their young well season after season but the ganders are not profitable kept more than three or four years. A c've heard of a woman who said shed walk five miles to get a bottle of Pr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription C,; if she coulden't get it without. That woman had tried it. And its a medicine which makes itself felt in toning up the system and correcting il IVglilUl IUV3 113 OIATII <13 lis 113V IS lie* gun. Go to your drug store, pay a dollar, get a bottle and try it?try a second, a third if necessary. Before the third one's been taken you'll know that there's a Hpmedv to help you. Then you'll Keep on"'"aVul a cure '11 come,-r But if yo^ shottMn't feel thohefj*, should ;bo disappointed in t)ip results-^'oUt'U ^guftran* tec printed v" the bottle-wrapper that'll get 'yortr money back for v> N ,v ; ; u > ? How many women are there Wk'tl | , rathor have the money than head ft!? % jjfa And 4* Favorite Prescription" produ- j J jjm ces health. Wonder is that there's Jg woman willing to suffer when theio's^ VjJM ' a guaranteed remedy iti the nearest* Dr. Pierce's Pellets regulate <hos Stomach, Liver and Dowels. Mild mid (ITtcti^t# ^ If you suffer from any affection tj. caused by impure blood, such as scrofula, salt rheum; sores, boila, pimples, tetter ringworm, take Dr. J. H. McLean's Sursaparillu.