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I i \ j ? Mrs. S. IK Ashley ' a FOR WOMEN IKTEEBLE HEALTH 5 a Hood's Canno t Be Too High- * ly Recommended "C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: b "I have used Hood's Sarsaparilla for years and it has always given the best of satisfaction. lhad little appetite and was troubled "with rheumatism in the left arm and shoulder and back. As soon as I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla my appetite increased, the m Rheumatic Troubles Ceased and I felt better than for years before. I have it. in the family and would not do without V it It cannot be r+r ;mmended too highly for ? iflood iS5^5 Cures J women in feeble health, nor for children when p teething. Any one giving it a fair trial will be c well satisfied." Mrs. S. D. Ashley, North J Richmond. Ohio. Get Hood's. r ???????? o Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and effl- p dentlv, on the ltver and bowels. 25 oents. t. Unlike the Dutch Process Q\ No Alkalies i Other Chemicals a are nsed in the a preparation of E &W\ vv. J5AiLEJK> & UU/9 9 If iWreaMastCocoa ! fil ' 15 * a\ which is absolutely ? Era f MjjvS] pure and soluble. f. Jjr j It has more than three timet fell aRrr ^'e strength of Cocoa mixed I< r with Starch, Arrowroot or si Sugar, and is far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. . It is delicious, nourishing, and KiSlLT 61 DIGESTED. I Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKES & CO., Dorchester, Maw. w- X" DOUGLAS S3 SHOE equals custom work, costing- frora ICniTTTVt \r? $4 to $6, best value for the money 1.1ului3t >4 jn the world. Name and prico stamped on the bottom. Every pair warranted. Take no substi ^JQCfiEjM^^^tute. Seelocalpapers for full #?flTn^WiTiniw^WdcscriPtion our complete r< ^r^lWIWJtRpJi^Si^lines for ladies and gen- ? tlemen or send for 11- 5 lustrated Catalogue structions l^lBB^unsr bow to or. ierbymaiL Postage free. You can get the best bargains of dealers who push our shoes. ' STS U? 16 Northern pacific OBXap IU zi. and FREES!?"11 IIMnC ACRES In Minnesota, I nil Dill North Dakota, Mon- ! IB I V W V tui. Idaho. Washington ana Oregon. PUBLICATIONS. *lth Maps, describing fine farming. frnlt, bop, grating and timber lands Mailed FHEE. P. B. QROAT, wK*" manHan t>ilB n??v>r Nft. 170. ?2 A. M. LEQ8&C0.PWMfc S D. c., ATTORNEYS FOR IN- ?f VENTORS. Procure bo to American and 31 Foreign Patents. Buy and sell Patents in all I1 , I? classes of Inventions. Employ agents every- D* SB w&ere and pay BIO SALARIES. Correspon- w Ck. dence from Inventors and live agent* solicited. Pj P <h| A rn tftO C Can be made working for Jk i / III us. Parties preferred who can V' VUWtBmlli, a horse and travel Alii mm through the country; a team, 1 Hff Is Is If tbougb, Is not necessary. A IV la Kb 1% few vacancies in towns and cities. Men and women of good character will find ?m? an exceptional opportunity for profitable emsloyment. Spare hours may be used to good advan, tage. B. F. JOHNSON dfc CO., 11th and Main Sts., Richmond, Va. 1 January it, ... 12 per cent. " 15, 10 " < February 1, .... 11 " " 15 " S March 1, . . . . 9 " j " 13 f TOTAL, 65 per cent. We hare paid to our customers in 75 days. ( Profits paid twice eaoh month; money can be withdrawn any time; $30 to $1000 can be Invested; | write for Information. FISHER & CO., Bankers and Brokers, IS and -20 Broadway. New York. E CAKED ODDER AND BARSET ' Is positively cured by the use of Scott's Arabian Paste, i Gua&axtsxd. Will not scatter or reduce the flow of milk. Sant b^^naMon J Hoof Paste Co.. Rochester, *N. Y. . BATPHITS~TH0MAS p* SIMPSON, 1 ?rA l^llj O Wash^i^toa, D. C. No atfjrfees J uuui raiwui uutuiuuu. n tkva 1 \jt iuveuwt o uiuuo j i^BHALUSKLIAUUUBII^PHI ICouanptlTM ud people | who have weak lunge or Aitb- WM I ma, ebould sm Pi#0'? Cure for I Conramptioa. It bu enred mm m thoautsds. IthM not Injur- rv ed one. It la not bad to take. H It la the beat cough eyrup. M u Sold ererywhere. Mt. jgff BEECHAA (Veget What The1 0 Biliousness indigestion dyspepsia bad taste in tl sick headache foul breath bilious headache loss of appetit when these conditions are cause l stipation is the most frequent One of the most importa learn is that constipation cau< ness in the world; and it car the book. Write to B. F. Allen Comf York, for the little book on C sequences and correction); sent reach of a druggist, the pills wil " A Good Tale Will Bear Tell Usi SAPC Can You Lose the Grip? Losing one kind of grip is worsa than tak>g another, and when thousands are in train lg for tne Held sports 01 summer montus. ii i well to bo advised by those who know all bout it. Mr. F. C. Ferguson, 165S Atlantic Avenue, rooklyn, N. Y.. writes to the point March , 1893. He says: "I would like to add my sstimony to your already long list. While laying ball I sprain el my arm at the elbow nd shoulder. It interfered with my playing onsiderably and lost me many good chances rofessionally. I tried everything I could tiink of, but I could get no relief. A doctor dvised that the only thing to be dono was to ive the arm n long rest. A friend, however, ^commended St. Jacobs Oil, which I tried, 'ith the result that I was completely cured nd have since pitched a great deal with no !gns of my former trouble, which, by the ray, retires many a professional player. " ; Gebmany has 81.155,000,000invested intJ>^ anting business. Dr. Kilmer's Swajip-Eoot cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation freei. Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y. Fbench capital invested in trade is estllated at 81,555,000.000. Catarrh Cannot Be Cared 71th local applications, as they cannot reach . lie seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or onstitutional disease, and in order to cure ; you mast take internal remedies. Hall's latarrb Cure is taken internally, and acts di- aI ectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's ' latarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was cc rescribed by one of the best physicians in this ai ountry for years, and is a regular prescription, t is composed of the best tonics known, com- ei ined witti the best blood nurifiera, acting di- di ectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect ,, omblnatlon of the two ingredients is what roduces such wonderful results in curing c&> gj irrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. Chesey & Co., Props., Toledo, O. 13 Sold by druggists, price 75c. m Tbe Skill and Knoniedge iBsential to the production oMhe most perfec nd Bocular laxative remedy known have en- ^ I AC bled the California Fig Syrup Co. to achieve a Teat success in the reputation of its remedy hf yrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the uni- b( ersal laxative. For sale by all druggists. 63 "Bnows'a Bronchial Troches" are widely P( nown as an admirable remedy for Bronchitis, m [oarseness, Coughs and Throat troubles. Sola nly in bores. Shiloh's Cure 3 sold on a guarantee. It cures Incipient Con* amption;itis the BestJDough Cure; 25c., 50c., ?1 m I f afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp- IE Dn's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle. m BADWAY'S t ? PILLS, i Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause Pervt Diirpstion. comDlete absorption and healthful cri sgularity. For the care of all disorders of the tomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous U lseases. . e3 LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA, PERFECT DIGESTION will be accomplished by king Badway's Pills. By their ANn-BlLIOUS operties they stimulate the liver m tne secretion : the bile and Its discharge through the biliary lets. These pills In doses from two to four will ilckly regulate the action of the liver and free tha itlent from these disorders. One or two of Raday's Pills, taken dally by those subject to blllou3 ilns and torpidity of the liver, will keep tlie By a- a m regular and secure healthy digestion. rice, 45c. per Box. Sold by all Dmarrlata. KADWAY <fc CO.. KEW YORK. Signs of Health. You don't have to look twice to detect them?bright sves, bright color, bright smiles, Prr-im ss'ii rffiSro i ;ion. $ oC.QTJS Disease is , ril|l[5lfW Dvercome u jnly when SSTTT | fH h, weak tissue ^ ti s replaced by the healthy si cind. Scott's Emulsion of :od liver oil effects cure by hi Duilding up sound flesh. It Jj s agreeable to taste and ^ 2asy of assimilation. cc Prepared by Scott A Bowse. X. Y. All flrarglata. e3 ,000,000? ' ' JL T>tttrrrt* Ritt.SOID ^ 3MPANT in Minnesota. Send for Mapi tod Circa* rt tb. They will be sent to yoa tt FRE3ES. : Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, w Land Commissioner. St. Psni. Minn. ^ fs pills : CC able) k! y Are For sallow skin P< Wi le mouth pimples jn torpid liver CI tl e depression of spirits ^ H id by constipation ; and con- P? cause of all of them. b< nt things for everybody to p? ses more than half the sick- JJ 1 all be prevented. Go by p< pt >any, 365 Canal street, New w onstipation (its causes con- ^ free. If you are not within Jt J p< 1 be sent by mail, 25 cents. *>' ing Twice." Use Sapolio! ^ i)LIO i The Latest Novelty THE "iiOSGCTmrPS." The above represent two entirely no1 l1 scarfs which are jnst now the rage in ' e among the latest novelties. The ' 'Lc at, made in black mirror moire, the frc id cuffs of the same, both being edged i ? a j ltireiy novel in design, ana wuuuenui. agonal silk. The white moire vest is sPhaeton" is a nsefnl tailor-made coat, i aartest fashion possible, with a fitting 1 edged all around with military braid, a Fashion In Hair Dressing. There have not been for years so any charming ways of arranging tj minine locks as to-day. With a skil- 1 maid even a homely woman who is a reasonably good complexion can i made to look almost handsome, so :quisitely and picturesquely is it jssible to dress the hair. "With the odern methods every strand of hair made available and made the most !; and it is doubtful if any quantity ; false additions will be worn for any a year to come. Art has really ivaded, in these days, the dress aker's rooms pud the hairdresser s top, and a woman's natural defects id beauties are studied with a view > remedying or developing them. If sr forehead is too high and round, irly locks are allowed to fall over it i id soften the outlines; if the head is to high and round on the crown for inmetry, the hair is dressed low to ve balance and grace to its shape, here is really no profile, there is no ipression which has not its ap t j ' | FOUB -WAYS OP DRESSING THE HAIR. ropriate hair dressing.?New York * ribune. c t Native Gold of Ireland. s "It is not generally known," said t rilliam O'Brien, of Araagh, Ireland, i the lobby of the Lindell, "that f tere is native gold in Ireland in conderable quantity. It is a fact that in any of the counties the precious etal has been mined for a good many andred years, and that it will connue to be produced for a long time > come. Ui course, mere is no sucn ccitement over it as there was in this mntry in the time of the California Lcitement, and there never has been, j at the industry goes forward 6tead- | y. The gold mines of Wicklow proace more gold I believe, than all the ist of the United Kingdom. All over 16 island there are indications that le mining of gold has been carried i in Ireland before the present races ere thought of. The museums have - -T- ? x: 41?* ? Siny lUUlCUrllUUB luui/ ouuu xo icient as well as modern. I saw a ?wspaper notice the other day in P hich it was stated that all of the ^ ranties of Ireland produced silver, ?" it I think that this is a mistake. I " iow of only one or two besides Wicli- 8 w that have a trace of the precious p etaL"?St.'Louis Republic. m v Interesting Iutantile Statistics. ^ It will probably startle a good many ;rsons to find, on the authority of a ell-known statistician, that, could the fants of a year be ranged in a line in j adles, the cradles would extend round : ie globe. The same writer looks at j ie matter in a more picturesque light, j e imagines the babies being carried ist a given point in their mothers' ms, one by one, and the procession ?ing kept up night and day until the stihour in the twelve months had issed by. A sufficiently liberal rate j allowed, but even in the going past the rate of twenty a minute, one i ^ lousand two hundred an hour during j ie entire year, the reviewer at his 1 j >st would only have seen the sixth j irt of the infantile host. In other j ords, the babe that had to be carried j hen the tramp began would be able i wall: when but a mere fraction of ? 3comrades had reached the reviewer's jst. and when the year's supply of | ^ ibe-s was drawing to a close, there j . ould be a rearguard, not of infants, ^ it of romping Gix-year-old boys and I ;rls.?Yankee Blade. j m s Nebraska suA'cred from ft terrible ii md storm recently. The air was so p ill of the flying sand and dust that a ne could not see a block away. Much ! t amnge was done to property. j I in Ladies' Coats. THE "PHAETON." ~el coats, and one of those delight- ' Paris, and which (with the two coats) mgchamps" is an exceedingly smart i rnts turned back with Lyons velvet, < vith fine-cut jet. The sleeves are i ly effective, lined with rich black | applied separately if required. The 1 n black cheviot cloth, cut in the i jack, and very full skirts. The coat * ind worn with a smart Tatt ersall resi A Boy That Weighs 282 Pounds, Wentzville, Mo., has a curiosity in j be shape of a boy twelve years old, J ,GE, 12 YEABS; "WEIGHT, 282 POTODS. ( I rho ie five feet seven inche6 in height, ] .nd weighs 282 pounds. < Tn? io -Ta!?nmr Warl0 j XlltJ UUJf a name 10 uuiiuuj -?| ,nd he is the eldest son of Mr. and < Irs. N. S. Wade. Sir. and Mrs. Wade ] lave a family of seven children, five : >oys and two girls, but with the ex:eption of Johnny none are above the iverage in height or weight. A peculiar theory is advanced to ac :ount for Johnny Wade's enormous j ize. It is said that from the time he ( ras able to walk it has been his habit ( o follow his father, who is a butcher, j o the slaughter pen and there to ^ lrink quantities of the blood of beeves j ust slaughtered. It is believed that ] his practice is what gave him his phe- ( lomenal growth. His relatives on ( joth sides are small people, or below , he average in size and weight. When Johnny feels like working he ( msies himself helping his father in ( he butcher shop. He is still grow- j j An Extraordinary E?g. ' The purchase of the Great Auk's egg >y Sir Vauncey Crewe, for $1500, has reated much interest. Once on a ime the bird was so plentiful that ] ailors used to be fed on it. The last ' ird shot in the British islands, says an 1 English paper, was in 1834, near Wat- ' rford, and the Great Auk is believed j 1 o have been extinct since 1844. At ? ? | THE GREAT AUK. resent, all we have left of this fine ird are seventy-nine or eighty-one , kins, ten skeletons, and detached f ones of from 121 to 131 birds, and ixty-eight eggs, of which forty-six j re in this country, nine belonging ( u Mr. Chumpley, of Scarborough, , rhose sketch of the egg just 6old is ] ere reproduced. It once belonged j j THE 31 "'00 KGG. ' I o Yarrcll, the grear ornithologist, ] 'ho bought it from a Bologne fisher- : lan for two francs. It was soid. ou .'arrell's death, to Mr. Bond, thenat- : ralist, and passed with his collection, 1 n 1S75, to Baron Louis d'Hamonville. ] A Remarkable Sand Dune. | j There is a remarkable sand dune j ] ear the lighthouse at Cape Henry, at he mouth of Chesapeake Bay. The and 1'rora the beach has been piled up early 200 feet at any easy slope on ho ocean siile, but on the inland side < b descends in an almost sheer preci- 1 ice and particles of sand blown up ] he slope fall ever the edg?i and are ] pread far and vide by th<? wind. It j 3 supposed that the precipice-likc * peculiarity of the mo-ind is due to the ' ction of conflicting v,ind currents hat blow about ths cape.?Chicago Ioraid. Knives and Forks. j As regards table furniture, forks we know were not in general use until the seventeenth century, though as sarly as the thirteenth we find instances of gold and silver ones being kept for special purposes. silver forks and one of gold occur among the list of the valuables of Edward I. John, Duke of Brittany, is mentioned isu6ing one to pick up "soppys,"and Piers Gaveston had three for eating pears with. The custom, however, was considered an effeminate one, and for the general accommodation of quests nothing but trenchers, napkins, ind spoons were supplied; knives?a broad knife and a narrow one?were indeed laid by the pantler on the high table along with the bread and salt, but these were for the use of the attendants only in cutting and removing | pieces oi Dreaa. For cutting up their own meat the quests had recourse to those they themselves wore, and the carver carried his, which were of a particular pattern, in a case. A very handsome set of carver's knives, with handles of ivory and silver, m-.y be seen in the British Museum.?Quarterly Review. Largest Gun Ever Built in America. The first thirteen-inch high-powered rifled gun completed in this country was recently tried at the naval ord- _ nance proving-ground, near Washington. It is the largest modern gun which has been built in this country, md its trial, says Harper Weekly, was a pomplete success. The gun and mount were built at the Washington Navy Yard Ordnance Works in less than a year, and were jet up at the proving-ground to be tested by the actual firing of a service iharge and projectile. Tiie mount weighing about thiijy-one tons, was Easily transported to the provinggTonnd and pnt in place; but the moving of a thirteen-inch gun, weighing 60} tons, was a more delicate matter. The gun was put on two car trucks of four wheels each, connected by a long tie-rod, so that the distance between the trucks was about thirty feet. This length between trucks was 5xed so that in ranning the gun upon BIGGEST GEN EVER BUILT IN AMERICA. ;he barge which,was to take it to the proving-ground, its weight would be avenly brought upon the barge. On irrival at the proving-ground it was L ?1 nv\A AifvKf.v.fnn .JUIUCU WUIUIC) auu uiv J irane picked it up and safely placed it In its position on its mount. The gun *as fired with full service charge and projectile, and -worked perfectly on its mount without a break. A Mint Mystery. According to a late report of the Director of the Mint. 19,570 silver dollars with the date 1804 were coined iuring that year. To-day less than a 3ozen of them are known to be in existence and each is worth a small fortune. There were 150,000 half dollars coined in the same -year; at present but one is known, wnat ever- oecame of the silver coinage of that year is one of the unsolved Governmental mysteries. Thirty-two years later there were only 1000 of the 1856 dollar pieeee joined. Yet anyone who has S5 to invest can get one of them for a pocket piece. A cool 81000 would not buy xn 1804.?St Louis Republic. Mrs. Cleveland's Dog. MissElizabeth Strong, of New York, is an artistic painter of dogs, depicting on canvas the canine pets of wealthy patrons. In a recent internew with a Recorder representative ihe said: "That picture on the wall is apor;rait which I painted of Mrs. Cleveand's Kay. She loaned him to me for six months, and he was a beautiful nodel, and I made many studies of aim. He was a good-natured old fellow, but not a particularly good nodel. I "tised to have to spend eo aiuch time in getting him quiet, and it last I had to keep a girl all the time to entertain him while I painted. I ATRS. CLEVELAND'S DOG. ised to take him outside on the grass ind coax him to lie down in the shade. Then I would get his attendant to sit in front of him and play with a ball >r some toy, which would attract his Mention without making him move nuch. It is just exactly as if I was I painting a child. That dog had to be ! xmused and petted, quieted or else he would run away." Some Curious Plants. One of the curiosities at the propagating gardens is a plant of the arrowroot family, each leaf of which has a picture of a growing branch on it with leaves, painted by nature to perfection. Young palms are grown from aeed in one of the green houses. In early youth they look remarkably like ordinary grass. Mr. Brown, just for fun, keeps a few sensitive plants. It is wonderful to see them shrink and fold their leaves if oue does but touch the pot containing them. Nobody has ever been able to find out why they do this, unless it be supposed that this kind of vegetable actually possesses some sort of nervous system. ?Washington Star. The ladybird. The ladybird, to which many generations of children have addressed the familiar rhyming admonition, is a most valuable insect destroyer, and has the freedom of well-con ducted greenhouses. It is the special enemy of the little green aphis that destroys tender plants, and the ladybird is always seen upon rose bushes in summer time, because the aphis eppecially attacks the rose. ?Courier-Journr.1. I I cr\ I w Pure f AH other pc a cheaper ma h ferior, and 1< J acidoralkal s i 0 ROYAU BAKING POWDER CO., A Sect ot Fasters. The Jains of India are the champion fasters or long-distance, do-withont- ] food sect of the world. Fasts of from < thirty to forty days are very common j c/irtf q-nrl atipa 1 BlilUIig Hi IP WlUiVUO SJVWVj MMV* v?ww ? each year a "radami" comes forward and undertakes the "grand fast"?a period of seventy-five days, during which time he allows nothing but warm water to pass his lips. When the fast is once begun, the faster will carry it to the prescribed limit or die in the attempt. In curious contrast to this startling feat is the religious eating contests of the South Sea Islanders, -where the competitors actually hoop themselves like barrels with ropes made of grass and bark to keep from bursting through overfeeding.? St. Louis Republic. " flip y The subject of the above portrait is a prominent and much respected citizen, Mr. Robert Manson. of West Rye, N. H. Where Mr. Manson is known " his word is as good as his bond." In a recent letter to Dr. R. V. i Pierce, Chief Consulting Physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buf- < falo.N. T., Mr. Manson says: ] "Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the i best pills I ever took for the liver. All my friends say they do them the most good." I This opinion is shared by every one who ] once tries these tiny, litlle, sugar-coated pills, i Which are to be found in all medicine stores. | The U. S. Inspector of Immigration at Buf- i falo.N. Y., writee of them as follows: < "From early childhood I have suffered from a sluggish liver, with all the disorders i accompanying such a condition. Doctors' t prescriptions and patent medicines I have used in abundance ; they only afforded temporary relief. I was recommended to try Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. I did so, taking two at night and one after dinner every day for two weeks. I have reduced the dose to one ' Pellet' every day for two months. I have in six months increased in solid flesh twenty-two pounds. I am in better health than I have been since childhood. Drowsiness and unpleasant feelings after meals have completely disappeared." I Assist nature a little now and then with a ; ? gentle laxative, or, if need be, with a more 1' searching and cleansing cathartic, thereby removing offending matter from the stom- t ach and bowels, and toning up and invigo- d rating the liver and quickening its tardy tl action, and you thereby remove the cause b of a multitude of distressing diseases, such b as headaches, indigestion, biliousness, skin diseases, boils, carbuncles, piles, fevers and ti maladies too numerous to mention. a If people would pay more attention to a properly regulating tne action of their bowels, they would have less frequent occasion " to call for their doctors' services to subdue d attacks of dangerous diseases. b I :in for Farmer?. Minors, II. T. H down to the heel. EXTRA WEARI YOUR Boot wearers testify this is Rubber DEALER FOR THEM and d< ' ' j W ! king\ 3 >wders are J de and in* i eave either J i in the food ! i Porcelain Teeth* Artificial teeth are made of porcelain. Porcelain is, a& everyone knoura^ 5f many degrees of hardness, and tha greater or less hardness of a particular iind of porcelain depends mainly " - * * i?i. : J apon me aegree 01 ut?b requucu w> fuse the ingredients of which it is composed. The porcelain need foe irtificial teeth consista chiefly of ? ?ery fine kaolin, such as that need bj the Chinese ceramic artists, with felspar for the enamel. The teeth, with platinum pins inserted in them, ire exposed to a degree of heat so tiigh as to melt any metal less fusibla , than platinum, and this baking brings them to a state of hardness sufficient to resist the wear and tear incident to the woijk they have to perform.? Courier-Journal. -v md That, of all knows agents to tocompBA this purpose, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets an unequaled, is proven by the fact that one* used, they are always in favor. Their secondary effect is to keep the bowels open ami regular, not to further constipate, as is 8m| case with other pills. Hence, their greet popularity with sufferers from habitual coo** ;tipation, piles, and indigestion. The " Pleasant Pellets " are far more effee* tive in arousing the liver to action than "bh? pills," calomel, or other mercurial pfepantiaons, and have the further merit of bdng purely vegetable and perfectly harmless tat my condition at the system; no particular :are is required while using them. I Composed of the choicest, concentrated vegetable extracts, their cost is much more ;han is that of other pill? lound in the market, yet from forty to forty-four "Pellets* ire put up in each sealed glass vial, as sott hrough druggists, and can oe had at the prioa >f the more ordinary and cheaper made piUa. Dr. Pierce prides himself on having bem irst to introduce a Little Liver Pill to lb* American people. Many have imitated then, >ut none have approached his " Pleasant Pel* ets " in excellence. For all laxative and cathartic purponi he " Pleasant Pellets" are infinitely sup? ior to all " mineral waters," sedlitz po?? lers, " salts," castor oil, fruit pyrups (p?ailod), laxative " teas," and the many otbav jurgative compounds sold in various forme. Put up in glass vials, sealed, therefor? Jways rresh and reliable. One little " Plolst " is laxative, two gently cathartic. As a "dinner pill," to promote digestion ake one each day after dinner. To relieve istress from overrating, nothing equab hem. They are tiny, sugar-coated, antfilious granules, scarcely larger than mo* ird seeds. Every child wants them. Then, after they are taken, instead of <E?? iirbing and shocking the system, they act is mild, and natural way. There it no fiction afterward. Their help lasts. Accept no substitute recommended to b? just as good." They may be better for thm ealer, because of paying him a better profit ut he is not the one who needs help. r r-. ^ iiu< \(t Ql'ALITY. Thousands of the BEST tliey ever had. ASIC be persuaded into an inferior article