The Pickens sentinel. (Pickens, S.C.) 1871-1903, April 21, 1881, Image 5
The Humor or smaupox.
Generally speaking, there is nothing
excruciatingly funny about smallpox;
but the doctors who are called to pro
scribe for )atients occasionally run onto
something that tickles them. Not many
years ago a doctor here was called to see
a man at one of the hotels, who lived out
in Iowa. The man was sick as a horse,
and the doctor had his suspicions about
what ailed him, but couldn't tell exactly,
so he gave him something to quiet him,
and told the friend who was with him
that lie would call in the morning. The
friend said ho thought as much of the
sick man as he could of a brother, and
he would see him through. The next
morning the doctor called and the sick
man was alone. He oxamined him and
found that hei had smallpox. While he
was dealing out some medicine the
friend caie blundering in. Said he,
" Doe., that medicine ain't worth a con
tineintal. This man is very sick." The
doctor said lie had come to that conclu
sion himself. "1 Why," said the friend,
"I rubbed him all night. I think he
would have died if I had not rubbed his
lead. When a man is my friend lie can
draw oi ic for all that is out, and don't
you forget it." The doctor said he was
glaid to hear it. He Baid there was
nothing more touching to him than lre
friendship between men, and lie was
glad the sick man had a friend that
would stick to him. " You bet your
life," says the friend. And then lie al
most intimated that the doctor did not
understand his business, and said sone
thing had got to be done, if there was
any doctors in Milwaukeo that could
handlo the case. The doctor was getting
a little hot, and when the friend asked,
"Do you know what ails him ? " the
doctor said ho thought he did. Then lie
pulled down the bed-clothes and Ioiited
to a little swelltig near the little too, and
asked the friend if he could see it. "See
it I Of course I can. It's only a little
pimple." The doctor said there was
only one disease that showed that kind
of pimples. " What is that? " asked the
friend, impatiently. " 'naloox! " said
the doctor, in the most aggravating way.
'' Suffering Moses ! let me out of that
door ! " shouted the friend, and the doc
tor said you could have played marbles
on his coat tail. The doctor fixed up the
patient, and when he went out in the
hall the friend was leaning against a
trunk, whito as a sheet and weak as a
cat. " Doo.," says lie, in a quivering
voice, " that manl in thero is nothing to
me. I wouldn't go in that room for a
thousand dollars. Is there no way to
fumigate me? Say, Doc., I want to be
Vaccinated. Put, a pint of virus into me.
Shoot it in with a gun. Damned if I
ever go near a siek mian again." The
doctor sav "auch is life."-1cek's Sun.
Friends and Opponents.
The Declaration of Independence was
adopted against the olposition of some
who had favored the cause of the colonies.
They regarded it as premature and
therefore inexpedient. Among these was
,John Dickinson, the author of the
"Farmer's Letters," which contributed
nuch towardl the American Revolution.
Mr. ,Josiah Quincy tells us, in his re
nunsceiices of Johnm Adams, that lie once
asked the venerable ex-President an ex
planation of Dickinson's course.
"He became discouiraged," replhied Mr.
Adams, "'and for sonic time was one of
the most violent opplosers of the D)eelara
tion of Independence, lie had a wife
and14 mother who were bioth Quakers,
am1i thiey tormnioited him exceedingly,
telling hiun tha he was ruining himself
anid his counltry by the course he was
'"If I had hiad such a mother and such
a wife, I blieve I should have shot my
self. If they luul oppihosed me, it would
have mladle nwii so 'vry unmhaplhpy. I could
not luveo lived had'I not puriisued the
course [ did.
"'One dayv in Congress, Millin, a rela
tive of Dickinson, had a dispute with
"Dlickinson hiad saidl, in the course of
a spechl, that, in driving a teamn of
horses, it was nlecessaruy to rein ina thme
most forward and to encourage the show
andl lagging.
"Mitlini got upi and saidl, 'Not so, Mi~r.
Pre~osidenit. Yoni had better knock the
(11l1 and laIzy horses on the hiead and put
them out of I he team. ft will go on
muich better wit hiout. thiem.'
"Thle ciremojistancies of his falmily and
hiis own timunidity made Dickinson' take
the course* lhe dlid. He4 was a muan of im..
mnense property anid founded a college ini
It is a1 sinigulhar fiaet that while somie of
the hlwyers a111nimehants who were
imenmbers of the Con ~ftinenita11(~l ongress
opposed the D)ehu rationi, t he elerical
member~s aill suppiiorted it. Thie louder
of the clergymen was ,Jo hn Witherspoon,
President of P riueeton College.
He was a Scotchuman, and in his youth
had led a co'rps of Highlanders t~o the
Battle of F~alkirk and fought for the
Pretender. Entering with all his soul|
into the cause of the colonies, lie became
a leader in those measures which b roughit
about a finial sep~aration between them
and Great Britain.
When the Declaration was laidl before
Congress a (100p stillns pe'5 ~ rvad(ed the
hall. Every heart was awed. Wither
spoon, of indomnitable will and peerless
courage, spoke first.
'"Mr. President,'' lie began, in clear,
bold tones, ''that noble1 instrument on
yrour table, which insures immortality to
mts author, should be subscribed this
very morning by every penf in the house.
"Although these gray hairs must
descend into the sepulchre, I would in
finitely rather they should dlescend
thither by the hand of the 'eeutioner
than desert at this crisis the sacredh cause
of my country."
"The country is hardly ripe for such a
bold movement," suggested a timid
member.
"In my judgment," shouted Wither
spoon, "we are not only ripe, but rot ten."
The names of five clergymen are found
among the Declaration. They repre
sented the feelings of their brethiren.
EVERBYBODY in the World wants to ap
perto be a gentleman, and yet every
boy in the world forgets that the easiest
way to.accomplish it is to really be a1
gentleman.
PREVENTION excels cure every time. Always
keep Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup convenient; tako
it ini time and you will be free from Coughs,
Colds, etc. Sold everywhiere. Price 25 cents a
bottle.
AN ARIZONA WONDER.
A Renemarkabe Cave Un ne Saut. Sis
Mouneans-The Rottouiees P46.
iTucson Citizen.)
For several years the existence of a
curious cave near Greatervile has been
known to the miners of the vicinity, but
the difilculty of thorough exploration has
deterred many from visiting it, and half
its wonderful extent is yet unknown.
The cave, which is known by the miners
as the Aztec, is located about four miles
south of the Greaterville placers, in a
limestone ridge. Quite recently a party
of i)ikwnas, numbering eight or ten de
termined to discover, if posHible, the ex
tent and resources of the cave, and pro
vidcd themselves with ropes, candles and
other necessities. They explored seven
teen rooms in all, the corridors and ap
proaches to which extefid for nearly a
mile from the entrance.- They exper
ienced great difliculty, as their progress
was frequently interrupted by abrupt
breaks in the plane of the cave, at which
breaks they rapidly used up their avail
able supply of ropes. The cave has two
entrances, which lead into an oval cav
ity, thence a corridor leads into a large
room and thence into a still larger. In
front the latter are two smaller cavities,
and these comprise the extent of former
explorations.. In them have been found
at various times in the past relics of In
dian occupation, including arrows and
skeletons. In one place several Indian
skeletons were found in a depression in
the floor of the cave. evidently fashioned
by human hands. This latter room is de
scribed as 'being of marvelous beauty. It
is irregular in shape, and is full of all the
various forms which the action of lime
has the power to create. In one of these
rooms is a group of almost perfect
statuary. It consists of a large block of
limestone in the shape of a ma , woman
and child, the man being in the center,
and also having the closest resemblance
to humanity. The head is e-pocially like
that of a man, having the features al
most distinct, and surmounted by a hat.
A short distance away from the group,
in the flickering candle-light, the illu
sion is said to be absolutely perfect. At
this point the cave discloses the strange
feature of being two-storied, to reach the
lower rooms of which it is necessary to de
scend by means of ropes. Here the ex
tent of the old explorations ceases, and
the adventurers had to be careful lest
some new and strange feature of the cave
cause them troul)le. In one of a group
of three lower rooms was found a huge
stalagmite, which was insinctively called
Pompey's Pillur. It is three feet in
diameter at the base, and lessens grace
fully in size to the roof of the cave, thirty
feet high. This is probably six hundred
feet below the surface. From the rooms
last mfentioned a corridor leads to a very
large and irregular cavity, and from this
small corridors lead to very beautiful
rooms, which wore given the names of
different memb~ers of the exploring p~arty.
The pairty followed a steeply-inclined
tunnel, seventy-five or eighty feet long,
which terminated in a large ab~yss sixty
or seventy feet in diameter. After low
ering one of the party down the per
pendlicular sides from the mouth of the
tunnel as far as the remaining rope
would p~ermnit (about seventy feet), and
failing to find bottom, the explorers
namedl it the "Bottomless Pit," and re
turned. _____________
Mus. MIAGOFFIN had been reading in
tev nwpaesof a man wvho died
levga young and attractive widowv
to whom he devised his entire wealth.
"Now, that's what I call true philan
thropy," she remarked, removing her
sp~ectacles and looking at her husband as
if she expected to be contradicted.
" Why so ? he amiably asked. " Be
cause," agid she, "he left his property
in such a way that some other man will
be sure to eniov it."
[Louisville Home and Farm.)
Frank 0. Herring, Esq., of the Cham
pion Safe Works, 251 and 252 Rroad
way, New York, reports the use of St.
Jacobs Oil for a stiffness and soreness of
the shoulder, with most pleasant and
eflicacious e ffectn.
HO'r sand-bags are advocated for bed
warmers in place of hot water. What
we like about this in preference to hot
water is that the~ stopper can't come out
of thd bag and let out the water and
freeze a man's feet to the mattress. But
then if the bag should rip open~ and let
out the sand, it wvould give h imn a vivid
impression that somebody had been eat
ing crackers in the hl
[Freeport (Ill.) Bulletin.)
There is now a substance which is
both professionally and popularly in
dorsed, and concerning which, Mr. J. B.
Ferschweiller, of Butteville, Oregon,
writes: I have often read of the many
cures effected by St. Jacobs Oil, and was
persuaded to try tho remedy mayself. I
was a sufferer from rheumatism and ex
perienced great pains, my leg being so
swollen that I could not move it. I pro
cured St. Jacobs Oil, used it freely and
was cured.
15cENE-The gambling table at Monte
Carlo, Personat--Young English lady
with little sister and a gentleman whose
acquaintance they have made at the
hotel. Young lady-" Oh I I say, I shall
put a five-franc piece on the number of
my age ! "--putting one on the 18. The
number 28 wins. Little sister-" What
fun I Now, if you had really put it on
your right age, sin, you would have won,
wouiin t YOU?"
Profit, $1,200.
To sum it up, six longy years of bed
ridden sickness, costing $200 per year,
total $1,200-all of this expense was
stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters,
aken by my wife. She has done her
>wn housework for a year since, without
bhie loss of a day, and I want everybody
to know it, for their benefit."-N. E.
Farmer.
Tas use of nice stationery marks a per
ion of refinement and taste. It is a
iource of pleasure at once to the writer
mnd the reader. In the same way the
iso of "loud " stationery, big mono-.
grams, fantastic shapes an gaudy letter
1eads marks the vulgar man, and wit
lesses far and wide to his love of osten
ation and " splurge."-Bloston Tran,
:ri pt.
TIte~ 'Frend of DeIlente Ladnie~s
[a Warner's Rafa Kidney anA Liver nure.
Tim crown in England is Valued at
?184,000.
Guy FAwEUs was executed in 1608,
CnOMWLL refused the crown of En
gland in 1656.
DioR were invented and used eAten
sively in gambling 1500 3B. 0. -
ILOUIsIANA and Florida are the warm
est climates in the United States; Min
nesota and Wyoming Territory the cold
est.
Tim French ascribe the invention of
billiards to Henrique Devigne, in the
reign of Charles IX., about 1571. Slate
billiard tables are very modern.
IN the diary of Judge Sewall, under
date of Jan. 24, 1686, it is recorded
that the day was " so cold that the sac
ramental bread is frozen pretty hard,
and rattles sadly into the plates."
"THE ap ple Of discord" is a mytho
logical allusion to the golden apple
thrown into an assembly of the gods by
the Goddess of Discord, on which was
written "To the Fairest," and which
gave rise to a contention between Juno,
Minerva and Venus, to the last of whom
it was awarded by the judgment of Par"i.
IN 1564 Count Landonniere is related
to have discovered a person among the
nativesof Florida who wasbelievedtohave
lived over 250 years, and Maffeus men
tions, in his " Ihistory of the Indies," a
man who had reached the age of 33.5
years without appearing at all decrepit,
having his youth several times renewed.
THE use of artificial flowers was intro
duced into England by the wife of Ed
ward III. She discarded the hideous
head-gear then worn at the court, and
in its plare she and her ladies wore gar
lands of flowers. But the fashion of
wearing flowers in the hair did not be
come general in France till 1367.
THE Emperor Diocletian, who died
early in the fourth century, irritated by
a revolt of the Egyptians against the
laws of the Roman empire, ordered that
all their books of chemistry should be com
mitted to the flames, so as to punish them
for their rebellion, by preventing them
from carrying on the lucrative business
arising out of the melting and working
of precious metals.
THn expression "suited to a T " is said
to be derived from the so-called
T-square, an instrument used by archi
tects and mechanical draughtsmeiin in
drawing their plans. As the T-square
is often used to test the accuracy with
which lines and angles have been drawn,
it is altogether probable that the phrase,
"Suited to a T," refers to, and origi
nated in, this fact.
PHAROS was the ancient name of a
small island off the coast of Egypt, not
far from the ancient Alexandria, and con
nected with the mainland by a mole. It
was famous for its lighthouse. The
building was the frustum of a square
pyramid surrounded by a large base, the
precise dimensions of which are not
known. It was commenced by the first
Ptolemy, and was finishe'd about 280
years before Christ. The style and
workmanship are represented to have
been superb), and the material was of a
white stone. It is stated by Josephus
that the light, which was always kept
burning on its top) at night, was visible
forty-one miles. This great lighthouse
was probably destroyed by an earth
quake, but nothing is known of the date
of its destruction. The tower existed
for 1,600 years. For these reasons it
has been classed among the world's won
ders. ______
i9ckel.
Nickel, when the United States Gov
ernment bought a mine in Pennsylva
nia twenty years ago, was a rare metal ;
few mines were known, and those inac.
cessible. The number has been largely
increased since, the most important re
cent source of supply being New Cale
donia, the French colony, where a dis
covery in the preparation of the ore has
greatly cheapened the cost of pure nick
el, and it is probable that the next few
years 'will see a large increase in the use
of the metal.
Urateful Women.
None receive so much benefit, and none
are so profoundly grateful and show such
an interest in recommending Ho p Bitters
as women. It is. the only remned y pecu
liarly adapted to the many ills the sex is
almost universally subject to. Chills
and fever, indigestion or deranged liver,
constant or periodical sick headaches,
weakness in the back-or kidneys, pain in
the shoulders and different parts of the
body, a feeling of lassitude and despond
ency, are all readily removed by these
Bitters.-Courant.
Fon 25c. you can buy a sample bottle
of Portaline, or Tabler's Vegetable Liver
Powder, or if you niecd more you can
b~uy a p~ackage for 50c. Portalifie cures
biliousness, dyspepsia, sour stomach
and all disorders of an inactive liver.
Try it and be convinced. For sale by
all druggists.
A COLUMBUs merchant suspected the
boy .of stealing, and set a small mink
trap in the money-dfrawer to catch him.
In about thirty minutes ho forgot all
about it, ran to the. drawer in great
baste, thrust in his hand, and wailed,
and wailed and wailed to the intense
delight of (he boy. M'oral : Virtue is
its own reward,
INmIGEfr1ONd~p&, UrvO#8 prostratron
and all forms of ea debility rellevod by
taking ME~sxAN's oir EEFJzu TONIC, the
only [preparation of beef o'ntaining its entire
nurtosproperties. It contains blood-mak
ete Iinvalubl all enfebled codton,
whether the result of exhaustion, nervousprs
tration, overwork, or acute disease, prtio larly
if resulting from pulmonary. complit Ca.
well, Rasad A Os, proprietorsNe York
Sea Voyages for l1urjwds
The rapid traveling of I steam
vessels is a disadvantage for ose who
go to sea for the sake of protracted nav
Igation. They reach' their destination
too soon and the changes of climate are
too r. piJ. In the voyage to Atralia,
for instance a few days after the depart
tire from England, warm weather is
reached : then hot weather, when the
tropic has been passed; moist, as well
as hot weather, when the equatorial
calms have been reached. As the ves
sel Arives near the southern limit of its
navigation, in the Paciflo ocean, the
temperaturo again becomes cold-Aus
tralia being reached in about forty-five
days. All these extreme changes within
so short a period are very trying to those
who are really ill, and oiten do them
more harm than the pure sea air can do
them good. Australia. also, is reached
in the middle of their summer; and at
Melbourne and Sydney, where most in
valids go, it is too hot. In Tasmania
and New Zealand the climate is more
like that of our own English summer,
and should, consequently, be yreferred.
These long sea journeys, however, seem
more suited to those who belong to the
second category-to the tired and the
weary-than to the really ill. The usual
period for departure is October or No
vomber.--rii8h Medical Journal.
" I DON'T like a cottage-built man, "
said young Sweeps to his rich uncle,
who was telling the story of his early
trials for the hundredth time. " What
do you mean by a cottage-built man ?"
asked his uncle. " A man with only
one story," answered youna Sweeps.
eRBADB MAE
401
THEGREl
RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, S woll
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all othor
Pains and Aches.
No Preparation on earth equals S-r. JAenna, Onr
as a eafe, suare, simple and checap External
Remedy. A trial entails but the comnparativ'ely
trifling outlay of 50 'ents. and every one suffe'rlng
with pain can have cheap and positivo proof of its
Directions In Eleven Languages.
BOLD BY ALL DEUGGISTB AND DEALEES
IN MEDICINE.
A. VOGELER & 00.,
lBaltimor, Md'., U. S. A,.
EITT~ftS
Shooting Chills Down the Back,
Dull pain 'n the limba, nausea, biliousness,
are symD1ptoms of approaching fever a~nd apue.
Use without declay Ilostetter's Stomac Bit
ters, which substitutes for the chilly senisa
tion a genial warmth, regulates the stomach
andl implarts tone lo the liver. Thne bowt Is
the astomachi and the biliary gland being re
storedI to a healthy condition, thne diseasei
conqjueredl at the outset. For sale b~y a
Druggists and Dealers generally.
SEND TO
H. L. B. SHEkETS,
For best Pianos, Organs and Musical In
itrumnents. Latest Sheet Mtusie. Best goods
--lowest prices.
Parties contemplating the purchase of
PIANOS, ORGANS
Cr other Musical Merchandise will consult
hreir own interest by corresponding with
~he house of R. DORMAN & CO4, 1;
?Dhurch street, NASILLU, TENN.
Outt free.2Addr a Taux & Co., Auguata, e
A(jUT ' WORACHOEWEIC.""" w'l
No gai ol or arenie used. Warranted t ure er mone
refunded. Send One Dollar for receipt to
S0. . OBBINS, Druggist, Neola, Iowa.
6a weekddyress nIow.a Tr rno'oandrnf
$350.9 -1Amt'-iru"
FOR return mai a correct plct~. rf your
rOED, c"*mandwfwt ine a
B N s e- s t t e to IE*Eaga41.. It
STRIOWtY PURE
MIis engraving represents Mhe L~vup Ina boadei s".
What The Doctors 8aW
DR. FLSTOnRR, of Lexingtoa, M., say i "I
D. A. 0. JORNSON, of MS. Vernon, I o ea. a
wonderful eure of Consua tioi n61=4.i w
woof ~ 461oe Lung &sm.j 0
DR. J.S. TURNRt Vloun%@011l% Ata~
h~ystlan of twont y eloavlS Aia ej~
aoparastio for Censump M ..werld."
rejr aln Doseases of the Tinra'est LuaI Mumma
Pulmonar sa. It wilme NEA
mooet ezes ont uennee.
AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL,
I CSNTAINS NO OPIUM 1N AT POR.
J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors,
CINCINNATI, 0.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUG8ISTS.
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
H ISE;TO R YOFHAWAR
This Is the eben poet and-only com1pleto and relible his
tory of t Gr i vt v r iI abiotads in nara
tves of peortional :alventuirt, thtiigiri.cide-nts, daringp
exploitq, heroic de,- , wotiroerfil e-capes1, etc. ; and conl
tain life- Aike vort of 100 leadint Oeneralk. Send for
specimen pngs atl extr< a -ims to Agets i. Addlre.s
NATIONAL P-'ULISnIINO'Co., Atlanta, Ga.
AU1ENTM WANTID for the Best and Faste.4t 8.e
ing Pictorial Book and Bibles. 1rices reduced 33 pa3
cant. Nauonal Publiijna Co.. Atlanta. Ga.
CELLULOID
EYE-CLASSES.
Representing the eholcest selected Tortoise.
*heU and Ambor. The lighteat handsomeas
and strongest known. Sold by Optioians and
.ewelers. Made by SPEN CE OPTICA-1
M'F'G CO., 18 Maiden Lane, New York.
If you are
Interested
In the Inquiry-Which is the
best Liniment for Man and
Beast?-this is the answer, at
tested by two genieraitions: the
MEXICAN MUSTANGd LINI
MENT. I'heo reason is simi
pie. It penetrates every sore,
wound, or lameness, to the
very bone, and drives out all
Inflammatory and morbid mat
ter. It " goes to thne root " of
the trouble, and never falls to
cure ini double quick time.
RAWV FUR S 1 nc (awon
eok Jb iniit cas CR n1 i r, 4. rv I a~coon,
hfair Dy eta the 8FEEi
and BES*T ; it ac4S intanta
eolyprod ucIngth os. i.
Brown ;doee NOT HT A I N Lh e
apNinred ie ady ole
4entlemrn.. Hl r t n Syo
staa o pplied b li Ini
1) r~e. Dpot 91 wiI.
C. N. Chl1TTENTON, A 't.
P I SDO C UR E o Cs'u*."con"*.a :.
A ~Pimn Breical ydvhcle,
Ii e ) a 4 lE I a I tiu-e
t'end( -cent 4,9rap for 't1 pago cata
Payne's Automatic Engines
-RelIable, Durable and Economicali, ?willfurnish a
Anq power withi M, less luel tgt H swater thnan any, other
.1ngine built, not iltted with an Automatic Cut-off.
en d for Illusitrated Catalogxo "Jf," for Information &
Ptjifees B. W. PA YNE & oys, Bo 860, Corning N.Y,
T RU TH !4!"," ,he
h Aish o SAnve ey.A aRi Yek ar penth Al E XPnS.
advee, it ace.ima WAE rompety d. LA
& Co.300 Gergo 'I t Caincinat.d
KID EWSPrSIe. Ul0 CRIAGE C.';"&T1C0.
Cincinn00 atog i. Catialogu FRE.
ETROLEUM,
Used and approved by the leading
CIANS of EUROPE and A MERICA
The most Valuable
FamiRemedy
known.
3OEE, C0
SIN DISIAS8s
CATARRH, EWOREHoL
- Coughs, Colds, Bore Throat,Croup a
.'Try therm. 25 and 50 wtat si. 01
BRAND MEDA L AT TE P'HILADELIsMi
PiLM.nAL AT TUE VeAmm U
PONDS>+
Hm GRZAT VIG3TAIM 3
PAIN DESTROKER AND SPECIFIO
FOR INFLAiMATION AND
HEIOREHAGES.
Rheumatism, Neuralgiae
No other preparation has cured so many cases of these
distressing complaints as the EXtde. Our RWias
ter is invaluable In these diseases, Lumbago, Pains
in Back or Side, &c. Our Olsanaent (604ents) for
use when removal of clothing is inconvenient, is a
great help in relieving inflammatory cases.
HemorrhaBleediui from the
H emorrhages. L""'I Yaomab'
Nose, or from any cause, Is speedil 'inmtrolled ana
soed. Our Niasal Syrim= (I cnts) and Ess
bleedi ($1.00) are great si arr eng Internal
Diphtheria E Sore Throat
DiUse the Extract promptly. It is a sure cure. De
lay is dangerous.
Catarrh. The Estract Is the onlyecwi
Oe oca ,Curo," scially prepared to mee
seuious Caaes, contains all I a ourat is properties of
the Extrawt: onr WasalsyA-loge, Invaluable for
use in catarrhal affections, is simple and unepensive.
Sores., Ulcers, Wounds
Sprains and Bruises.1
In:, cooling and cleansing. Use our OluatsMIea in
connecti on with the Extraet; it will aid in healiag,
softening and in keeping out the air.
Burns and Scalds. a'o*" as
it is unrivaled, and should be kept in every family
ready for use in case of accidents. A dressing of our
Olstnsent will aid in healing and prevent scars.
Inflamed or Sore Eyes.
It can be used without the slightest fer of harm,
quickly allaying all infiammtioa and soreness with.
out pain.
Earache, Toothache &
Faceache. uedna riteai
tions, its etrect is simply wonderful.
Pils Blind, Bleed"- * or gtels,. itt.
Pi O. the greatest known remdy* rapidly our
ing when other medicines have fale . #a's Exe
ta-Met Melicated Papee for close se, is a pre.
ventive against Ohaang and Files. Our Oitmaeant
is of great service where the removal of clothing is in.
convenient.
For Broken Breggtj and
Sore Nip les. ian ,'a -
Clous.1hat mothers who have once used it will never
be without it. Our Ointaent is the best emollient
that can be applied.
Female Complaints.*.l;;
be called in for the majority of female diseases if the
Extract be used. Full directions accompany eacl
bottle.
Pond' Extr ctRe been imitated.
Pon d's Extract T"': nuin'e-a';
words "i'ontl'as Extract" blown n the glass, and
our picture trale-mark on surrounding buff wrapper.
N'ne other i geiuine. Always insist on having
Pond's Exta-aet,. Take no other preparation.
14i1 eieer sold in bulk or by aeasure.
Price of Pond's Extract, Toilet Arti
cles and Specialties:
PON D'n5 EX'IACT............ , $1.00 and 1.75
Toilet (t s.100 OkarI Cur. 75
Dent if-Ice......... 50 P llaaler. .....
Li pMalie............ 25 I enlassler...........100
Totllet Nstap t3t.ks) 50 Nasal NyrlunFl..... a.
Olnsneusi1..........350 Medicated Paper
Prepared only by POND'S EXTRACT CO,
NEWV YORK anei LONDON.
yor sale by all Druggista and Fancy Goods Desiers.
Orders for $2 worth, carriage free, on receipt of 8225.
Onr I, for su~ worth. carriage free, on receipt of 58. if ad.
44 Wi*si Fourteentia Miireet. New Yorkt.
MILL & FACTORY SUPPLIES
OF ALL KINDS. BELTING, HOSE
and PACKING, OLS, PUMPS ALL
KINDS, IRON PIPE, FIT TINGS,
BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES,.
ENGINE GOVERNORS, &o. Send for
Price-list. W. H. D1LLINGHAM & CO.
143 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY.
AOENTS WVANTED FOR OUR
CENT EN NIA L Cak gand PAN.
J~ounekeepers canniot afford to de
without it. Price 7 ets. also ouu
Domestic CLOTHES Sprinkler,
anew, novel, useful, rapiselling.
-.artileo. PriceS30cla. A rare o.
p~ortuniity is her. offere'd gensa
to mtakec money.Hend for ourillua
'rated Circiua and our un usual ly
theral termse. D~oMsT-r ScarLU
(Co., l19i W. !th bt., Cinconiathi, 0
v(a ear to Agents, and exptnses. 96 Ontfit
tel t ree. Addressi F. SwAuN - Co., Augusta, Me,
7A YEAR sed aspen ses to
IAgents. Outit Free. Address P.
O.VICKERY, Augusta, Maine.
ENUNy MnNLearn Telegraphy!iEr e o80
amec.s. A ddress V ALE~NTINE BXOS.,'Janesville Vis.
ofi igwis.4,weak. a f e.
ened by the strain of trtiigoen
stiulants an d use toebeunren
Hop Bitters. watueopB
dIcion oar d nsa to;ifyuaemr
r loorhoraltlor lan u abesotsck
ness, rely on op Btes
wheneer you fel nal rmsm
ned hoin ,totn-g, es a n h
in gor tim atug, hnv bee o ntodrs
wltliutintxlcotn, ob aimel nore and
takwastepus Hop B.e
Bitteers.
Thousandodidyan
pnuallyir okndsome
disease, atimeagh
of the thaveadben presented
lieerornebyeea tiey u e om
HBittersu~tl~.
Ifv you dyesis- odbdr.
laitu, tryNlVEacanea~If
Hopp Bitters
saved hun--e, .Y
dreds. . &TD.os.oO.
isanabolt
an'ressa
bl c re o
sui~l~.~fland crcula. senioncrquest
Addrssds.i~ A orntd, Oane
PHBI
ND $ArtclNGro UES
cir A to e Vnees a '
$to 2m *r d yat ham.. sa soras ro
YRHYSI- o~
are sThe Ten g
- AtAnsrtilefomfare
A X or~g~ 35 Pomad VA 20
VWTf , ~CLATes e &CesNe