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’_ V‘ Re L R R "‘fibsggt’-g e ‘;r: By Wi %fiqfi\f“ ¢ss and delightful to use. It relieves in- Bttt iy and permanently cures Catirrh, Hay . Kever,; Coids, Headache, Sore Throat, Ton- Ssihitiland Deufness. If your druggist ha-n't s 5 i ntock, ask him to procure i .for you, .- l An gecasional drubbing does a man good. Pure Blood s essential to health. Now is the time to purify and enrich the blood, and thus give vigor and vitality, by taking Hood's - . Sarsaparilla /The One True Blood Purifier. Alldruggists. $l. Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. Hard Work Mining in Alaska. . Few people realize the amount of. money and labor necessary :to get j Yukon claim in such shape as'to mak 4t bighly profitable. Newcomers gaze 4in open-mouthed wonder when told of many claims that have paid $lOO az day to the man, never thinking for & moment of the dead work that has neec essarily been expended in order to get the claims in condition to wash out the gold, If the bed of the creek Is to hed worked the first thing necessary is to” COLivtrugt o dgm and turn the water into another channel. e -+ Drain ditches have to be dug on ev ery claim, the length of the ditch de pending upon the slope of the land. Ta dig this ditch would dishearten any one but a Yukoner. | The frozen ground cannot be loosen ed with a pick, and but about two inch es per day can be made, that amount being the depth to which the sun’s rays will penetrate in twenty-four hours. In the No. 2 Pelkey claim, for in stance, which bslongs to Mr. Insley and which is one of the richest on the creek, a drain 500 feet long had to be dug, at the upper end of which it was eight feet deep to bedrock, . During its construction the entire length of the ditch was gone over day after day until the required depth was attalned, and at no time was over two inches of gravel, in depth, moved in one day. Those contemplating a Yukon trip _will readily see that even if they should ‘be fortunate enough to locate a clalm their first year, yet the entire work ing season may be taken up in strip ping and draining the claim and get ting ready to wash dirt, and at the close of the season they will not have real ized a dollar as the result of thelr work, though the claim may be ex tremely rich.—Alaskan News, I Judged After Death. !I" It was the Egyptians who judged . their kings after death. If upon ex t amination they were considered to + have acquitted themselves creditably i_hggorable funeral ceremonies were de .':"b;_'.jto their bodies; if otherwise, “*fi:ere thrown on the highways FI O i _ Enigys (dreathlessly)—Phew! I'm all ‘out of wind. Briggs—lt seems to me that the wind s all out of you.—Phila @elplia North American. Not Entircly Lost, If William Waldorf Astor, after dis ~charging his English editor, is to ma rry an American woman there is sti]l hope .for him.—Bt. Louls Post-Dispatch, Time to Drop It . Those newspapers which find fault with the outcome of the Waller case zfll'tfi know when to let a good thing fi%pg&,—washington Post. a g \ INearly every citizen of a town be cley that he “made” it. AN INVITATION. 'wves Us Pleasure to Publish the fol lowing Announcement, 'Ai!l w 'men suffering from any form Jllness peculiar to their sex are re &bed to communicate promptly with ‘Mls. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are re ceived, opened, read and an swered by women only. A woman can ' freely talk cf * her private illness to a woman ; thus has ‘been estab lished the eternal confi dence be tween Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America. This con - fidence has in r duced more than .. 100,000 women to _ write Mrs. Pinkham for advice during the last few months. ~ Thin k‘gwhn’o a volume of experience she has {0 draw from! No physician R Len it 56 mane Hacex ot female ills, and from this vast experi ence surly it is more than possible _she has gained thc very knowledge that will help your case. . She is glad to have you writé or cali %&pfiu her.t. You wil find her a woman g@@flofs y s:§hy, with a great desire to th - oare si If her medi ,hat youggheed, she will SR Ciggu SO, 2 :he’e fl’;fi“i:fi 88t at ten At shie will tell WSty vfim She 0t Ny rlo fexeept your ‘man, rich or she does not Nfl offer o .‘“- m}} : : B 1. o NHLIOTOUD VDADING, THE HAUNTING PAS?. S R e T SCR RN e afraid of death T o of pain, or of any - catastrophe which is likeli to befal them, - These faois are proven s thousand tinks a ! _day. Re %fi?fiflfiéfimm-i@?@@n% « far “mfi%fl lent than cowdrdice and dreagd.. - But théw is hardly a man ¢r woman in the - world who does not look back with mors cx’ less 'of apprehepsion apd trembling upon vpast life as registered in tha individual consciousness. The world may not understand—the world may even account them saints from infancy ; but they know how God looks upon them, and how they lcok upon themselves. How rare— how almost inhumanly rare— isthe man who has no haunting past! To every soul, pondering the problem of the future life— whether that soul be avowedly Christian or not—the chance of salvation seems to rest upon the righting, in some way, of a condemning past. So long as that hangs. about a man's neck like a millsene, there is no possible tendeney forgllen, in time or eternity, but down, dasorever down. Somehow that incu b it be thrown off; somehow the past SHONNERS washed out or made right before Ry fean be saved. This is the instinective ;énthe race, no matter what may (e darm of its religious, or irreligious, Bf. " Superstition must even have its sac “Btes made and its message sung for the gBl that has already passed to its account, P'all hands men are crying out, and striv "f_‘ 88, and being cried and striven for, 88 get rid of their own accusing past. ¥lt is to this vast, t2oubled, yearning multi fude that Jesus Christ comes, with His won- “derful, precious message of hope. What does He say to the sin-burdened,sin-haunted “soul? The message is strangely brief and -simple, yet how marvelously sweet and suffi ~cient : *‘Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are hea-y-laden, and I will give you rest.” -The invitation is personal and direct. We are simply to come and cast the burden of our guilt upon Him, and He will per sonally assume it, and forever re move it fromi | us. The solutieon of the whole casuistical problem is so simple, when this light or perfeet love falls upon it! By reason of His divine nature Christ has perfect moral right and power to assume your sin-burden and mine—just as much - right as your ereditor has to assume or re mit your debt to him. We have sinned against Christ, and He, and He alone, can unsin us. Where in all the history of human thought, is there so sure and logical an an swer to the universal problem, *How shall a man escape his condemning past 7’ None was ever offered that brought the peace and assurance of Christ's personal invitation and promise. Oh, all ye who are laboring under the dread and discouragement of past sin, unforgiven, come and taste the gsweet, immediate peace of the Divine forgiveness! There is no other escape from this haunting serse of condem nation for soul-recorded evil. There is no other spiritnal peace save the peace of God in Christ. In vain many menlabor to atone for past ill deeds and thoughts by present virtue. In vain may they strive to reason God, and a future, and a judgment, out of the universe. A thought, a consciousness, a premonition,will unceasingly torment them ; and they will know that itis not well with them unless they are forgiven. Nosoul ever got rid of its haunting past until it yielded it andio the loving, burden-bearing Son of od. CONTEMPLATION. A lady sat at her window on a balmy spring morning. The sun was out without a cloud, the blooming flowers were sending forth their fragrance to perfume and bless the earth, and the virds cang their songs of gladress as they went forth to their daily toil. Soon the lady saw that a little worker had chosen a rosebush for its home and was very busy bringing in sticks and hair and feathers and other material to make its house ' ““Ahlvon pretty Ilittle creature.” said the lady, ‘‘you are building too low. Soon the destroyer will come and break Rp your sweet home.” And so it was. The days passed by; the nest was finished, and then there were eggs in the nest, and then four big mouths were open whvnoyes thw luw elilrp of (e mothvwr an rouncedthatthatshe had something for them to eat. One day the lady sat by the window sewing. Suddenly she heard the cry of the birds, in the deepest distress, and she locked out to see what was the matter. There was a great snake that had crawled up and was devouring the helpless little ones, while just above them the poor heart broken mother fluttered about in the wildest distraction. DBut it was too late; her chil dren were gone, and her home was left deso late, a sad reminder of her folly in building so near the ground. So I think it is with people who have no higher ambition than earthly pleasures, wealth or honors. They build too low. Their heart’s home is in casy reach of death and the devil ; and de pend upon it, the destroyer will come, soon or late.—H. M. Wharton. THE PERIL OF A BOOK RELIGION A book religion such as ours—that is, a religion based on written records—has, it is well to remember, perils as well as benefits. One of the benefits is that a people with this kind of a system cannot be altogether illit erate or uccultured. They are compelied t> lcad and hence to think. It is necessary that they know much concerring books in general before they can properly understand one book. And from this latter truth arises the peril. Many, who have very little ac guaintanee with books, whoily {ll to com prehend how very easy a thing it is to misunderstand the thonght and mis interpret the words of writers many centuries away and many thousands of miles distant from their own time and place. They do not realize how poor a medium for con veying thought words alone must ever be. Hence they suppose the words must have meant to the writer just what they seem to the reader; ard they suppose they have the authority of prophet or apostle or of Jesus Himself, for what is wholly, or at any rate pattially, the produet of their imagination. It is a very grave peril to be constantly keyt in mind. The Bible is a wonce ful help if nroverly used—read with diserimiration and diseration. J PRECIUUS RESULTS. Is it at all unreasonable to suppose that the contemplation of God will yield us greater, more precious results than thecon sideration of anything or of everything in this world that He has made? You are wrapt in the study of mineralogy of botany or conchology : and have no time to spare for Ithe eultivation of your aecquaintance withifxold. « ¥ < yXon, my rricn(gj have a great dread of being found imperfectly ac quainted with a certain literature and think nothing of devoting whole nights to the ac quisition of it : but your conscience is vis ited by no painful sencze of your defective knowledge of him from whom is every good gift. Indifference and igrorance are here indissolubly linked as are also knowledge and thirst for knowledge. *““Then we shall know if we follow on to know the Lo:d.”’— George Bowen. ALONE WITH GOD. Wo must make time to be alone srith God. The clcset and the shut door are indispen sable. We must cscape the din of the world to become accustomed to the accents of the still, small voice. Like David we must sit before the Lord. "Happy aite they who have an observatory in their heart house to which they can often retire heneath the great heart of eternity, turn.wug their tele scopes to the mighty constellation that burn beyond life’s fever, and rcaching rcgions ‘where the breath of humay applauss ox cen ware cannot foliow.—F. B. Meyer, v s ¥ ' DANQUET WITHOUT WINE, It wasa men’s banquet, too, ti.e anniver sary of the Bookkeepers’ Benelic al Associa tion of Philade’phia. Wuter wus the only mf )everaae, save the coffee that followed the {ast year by Mr. Reed, an Englishman. fn the sittings of the Oplum Commis sion in India, he recorded accurately, and afterward read over, the evidence >f ¢wo Brahmans, of whose language he 'mexg »gthing, and whom he had never seen’ ke. He took down the sounds is thy, ‘€ame from their lips, represent ng each sound by its phonetie charac ter, Eux«fim‘s Libraries. ~ Austria possesses more libraries and books than any other country in Eu rope. It has 577 libraries and 6,475,- 748 books, besides manuscripts, Next comes France, with 500 libraries, 4,- 538,100 books and 135,800 manuscripts; Italy, with 495 libraries, 4,339,281 books and 350,570 manuscripts; Ger many, with 398 libraries, 2,640,250 books and 359,000 manuscripts; Eng land, with 200 libraries, 2;871,494 books and 26,000 manuscripts; Bavaria, with 169 libraries, 1,368,500 books and 23,000 manuscripts; Russia, with 145 libraries, 952,000 books and 26,800 manuscripts. The largest national library is in France. It has 2,080,000 books. The British museum has over 1,000,000 books; the Munich museum, 800,000 books; the Berlin museum, 700,000 books; Dresden, 500,000 books; Vienna, 420,000 books. The Oxford University has 300,000 books; the Heidelberg Uni versity, 300,000 books. The vatican li brary contains 30,000 books, and is the richest in manuscripts, reaching 25, 000 in number. i Never Satisfied. “Yes, my eldest daughter married for money.” “She is happy, of course.” “Far from it. While she has every thing one could wish for, she is fai from being happy. She loved another.” “Your second daughter also married did she not?”’ “Yeg, she married a man for his good looks.” “I suppose she is happy?” “Indeed, she is not. While her hus band is a good provider, he can't af ford to give her what her elder siste: receives, and, consequently, she is un happy.” “And your youngest daughter, the on¢ I always thought so much of, is she married?” “Yes, she married a man for love.” “Ah, sensiple little girl!” “But her husband is very poor!” “Still, with all her poverty, she loves he man of her choice, and is, of course lappy ?”’ “No, indeed. She is the unhappiest of the three.”—San Francisco Wave The good pill has a good coat. The pill coat serves two purposes; it protects the pill, en abling it to retain all its remedial value, and it disguises the taste for the palate. {Some pill coats are too heavv: thev will not dissclve in the stomach, and the pills they eover pass through the system as harmless as a bread pellet. Other coats are too light, and permit the speedy deterioration of the pill. After 30 years exposure, Ayer's Sugar Coated Pills have been found as effective as if just fresh from the labor atory, Its a good pill with a good coat. Ask your druggist for S : % . " 0 8 %‘3 Ayer’s Cathartic Pills.! More pill particulars in Ayer’'s Curebook, 100 pages. ON’T ‘(O U OFTEN ‘€omo neross e ! expressions . 8 and references in the mnews ey papers and books which you don’t fully umderstand, and which you would ’ like to look up if you had some compact book which would give the in formation in a few lines?—not be obliged to handle a twenty-pouni rncyclopedla costing $23 or §3O. c in stamps sent to B3OK PUB LISHINGC HOUSE, 134 Leon- 5 0 ® ard Street, N. Y. City, will furnish you, postpaid, with just such a book, containing 520 pages, well lilustrated, with complete handy Index. Do you know who Creesus was, and where he lived? Who built the Pyramids, and when? That sound travels 1125 feet per second? Vhat is the longest river in the world? That Marco Polo invented the compass in 1260, ind wko Marco Polo was? What the Gordian Knot was? The book containg thouzands c of explanations of just such matters aj you wonder c 5 O B about. Buy it at the very low price of 5 O g ! half a dollar and IMPROVE YOQOURSELF. There is lots of pleasure, satisfaction and health corked up in a bottle of HIRES Rootbeer. Make it at home. Made only by The Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphige A 23¢. packaze makes 5 gallons. Sold everywhere. 6f My Profits Doubled from the day I took your advice and bought your ‘ADVANCE’' MACHINE!" “I wizh I had taken it gooner'!"” One of the successful Well Driliers who uses our machinery and tools for Drilling Wells in Oh'!o made this remark a few days ago. }%e did over Ss6ooo worth of Drilling in 10 months last year. I.OOMIS & NYMAN, - - TITFIN, OHIO. lu“ltfl%rggme th.bit Ctg_e‘d in %t‘! - ays. No pay till care 0? BDR.J.STEPHENS. Lobanon Or npl“,m~ and WHISKY babits cured. Book sent REE. Dr., B. M. WOOLLEY, ATLANTA. G 4 BNU 24 “va. PISO’S CURE . FOR by GURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. By Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use - e} in time. Sold by druggists. S CONSUMPTION o Money in Chickens. MONEY IN CHICKENS -IF YOU ENOW HOW ' To keep them, but it is wrong to let the poor things Suffer and Die of the va rious Ma’'adies which afflict them wi-n in a majority of cases a Cure coud have. been efiected- !fid the owner ! posse. sed a ti}e }mf}f_ TTR S R RTR jected to alt the jurors who had been summoned save one. As no others were at hand, It was agreed that the action should be tried by the one re maining juryman. After the evidence was heard the judge told the lone juror to retire to make up a verdict He retired, and, after staying out over an hour, came back and reported sol emnly that the jury had failed to agree upon a verdict. “Why does she wear that di i W sfiguring “Disfiguring? My dear boy, you should see her without it.”—Detroit I'rea Press. Thrives on good food and sunshine, with plenty of exercise in the open air. Her form glows with health and her face b'ooms with its beauty. If her system needs the cleansing actionof a laxative remedy, she uses the gen tle and pleasant Syrup of Figs. Made by the (falifornia Fig Syrup Company. Pretty women who are stupid are rose without fragrance. Heart Disease Relieved in 36 Minutes. Dr. Agnew’s Cure for the rieart gives perfect relief in alt cases of Organic or Sympathetc Heart Disease in 30 minutes, and speedily ef fects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Pal pitation, Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Ileart. . One dose convinces. If your druggist hasn't it in stock, ask him to procure it for you. It will save your life. The man is not poor who has the use of things necessary. Buy $l.OO worth Dobbins Floating-Borax Scap of vour grocer, send wrappers to Dobbins Soap Mf'z Co., Philadelphia, Pa. They will send you {ree of charge, postage paid, a Worcester Focket Dic tionary, 208 pages, bound in clothk, profusely il lustrated. Offer good until August Ist oaly. A fighting chance often means a chance to be whipped. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25z. a bott!e. Our richest relatives are often the most distant ones. Hall's Catarch Ourg ix a liquid and is takan internally, anc acts directly oa the blood and ipucoas surfaces of the system. Write for .os timonials, free. Manufactured by F.J. CurNEY & CO.. Toledo, O. The increase of knowledge increases the need of it. i FITS stopped free by Dr. KLINE'S GREAT NERVE RESTORER. Nofitsafter first day’s use. Marvelaus cures. Treatise :nd $2.09 trial bot tle free. Dr. KLINE, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. People usually pick out their own tempta tions. Piso’s Cure for Consumtptlon has no equai as a Cough medicine.~¥. M. ApBoOTT, 383 Sfeneca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 1894. No woman waunts the latest wrinkles in her face. if affilcted with sore eyes nuss Dr. Issac Thomp son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25¢ per Loltle It is easy to pick out work for the fool killer. Pill Clothes. Sent free. J.C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass GHEAPEST AND BEST GERMAN DIGTIONARY /E\ OF 624 PAGES i FOR ONLY OKE BoLLAR. /] AFIRST-CLASS DICTIINART Y Aa Itgives Tngli b Werds with the Sarman Equivy lcnts and Pronuaciution ard German Words with Epglish Definitions. Sent postpaid on receipt of §1 READ WHAT THIS MAN SAYS: BATEM. Mass, M . Book Pub. ITouse, 134 T.eonard St.: Y 5, 1 _ The German Dictlonary {sreceived and I am muen pleased with it. I did not txpect to find such cleag printin so cheap & book. DPicase send a(o Yto —, ard inclosed find 81 for same. MM. fflsnu. Address BOOK PUB. CO., 134 ZLconard Street, New York (ity, Not to Feautify, The Modern Beauty & man who devoted 25 of his life to CONDUCTING A POULTRY YARD AS A BUSINESS, not as a pas time. Ae the Hvingeof him eelf and family depended on it, he gave the subiask such atiention as need of bread will U smbodied in this which we send postpa -unprosperous career as an outlaw, would be a good text for a sermon on morality, but it would be useless to preach it, because the class of degener ates to which “Bill” belonged does not read sermons. He was a type of the barbarism that exists in all civilization, and appears most conspicuous at its edges. Education and enlightenment are the best remedies for it and they are at work slowly but effectively. The “Cherokee Bill” style of villain is dyirg out. It will soon cease to extite the admiration of the untrained boys and the emulatinn of villainous men. HELPING HAND SOCIETY Three Grades of Membership. Persons of Good Moral Character Can Become Members. ° FirgteGrade by paying $3.00 and in cas £ lyess receivé $3.00 a week and az xea $30.00. e Second Grade, §8 admission and In sick ness $2 per week &nd s2oin death, Third GradegsB & week in sickness, $1 te become?if. meutber &nd $lO at death. $ } er 12 ngi_can join. First Grade 1H881.50, anafié Secona for 7§ cents, and reGei¥B-half benefits. Honthly Q¥ fr Grown Persors, Faron o 0 + g R T d S . - - g 5 o« ¥OR CHILDREX.- First Grafilas - - = Second fi -y - . %%CG.?“' Meets Ot d ~econfiil‘uesday of the month at Sharg®Bapsist Church, Carey and Presst- | man St&ETE i | WENRY TINSLEY, President. P, McGUINN, Attorney - at - Law, 19 }. Sqrqtogq St. Practice in ail the Courts. D. D. DICKSON, Attorney - at - Law, 213 N. Calvert Street Residence, 636 W. Lanvale St. MALACHI GIBSON, Attorney - at - Law, 19 E. SARATOCA STREET. Practice in all the Courts. H. & M. SCHWAB, : Wholesale Grories, 106 S. Howard St. BALTIMORE MD DENTISTRY. DR. J. M. JOHNSON, Invites the attention of his many friends and patrons to the fact that he is sfill in serting those Beautiful Sets of TEETH at very reasonable rates and a good fit guargateed. Also old plates mended at shortest notice. Teeth cleaned, nerves treated and filling put in gold, si’lver and cement to suit thie color of teeth. Also extracting done with the greatest care at 434 Orchard St. Assets $250,000. CERTIFICATES J3SUED, nearly $500,000 THE BALTIMORE Mumal Aid Society 8. E. cor. Park Ave and Saratoga St. Most popular and successful Mutua] Alg Soclety in America. Offers the most attrao tive formsof Industriallnsurance. Endow wment Policies, payablein cash in 10 years, [mmediqte Benefits. Guaranteed cash surrender values. Weekly Premiums from 5 cents upward. F.SB. STROBRIDGE, President. \ W. 0. MaeGirL, Secretary. oansl! KOU SHORT? IF S 0 CALL Az THE OLD INDIAN HERB MEDICINE MAN! L.ove! The A, B. 0. of Esdras is 8 Secret Beneficial Organization and desires to ex tend its benefits to every colored man, woman and child in the United States. Its plans are simple and easily understood. Its financial backing is the strcngest of any other organiza#on of its kind. Its fees are less than those charged by other orders of the same character and type. Its benefits are greater than any other secrct beneficial organ‘zation on earth, Itsopportunities are gr:ater, and its facili ties more attracting than any other order known. It is the best order of its kind in existence, as its inducements and attractions wre superior in quality to all others, and therefore worthy of recognition. Itis conducted upon business principles, and offers special inducements for a few months, The excessively low rates to join are special features open only for a limit'ck ¥me, and all should take time by the forelock, and join at once. Cost of joining Jecret Department $1.50, Beneficial Department (open to all classes in all cities) 30 cents. "eople from distant points can become members by remitting to the Central Office 60 cents. Dues 5) cents per month to both £¢ ret and beneficial tlasses, 25 cents widow daes, 24 cents per year annual dues, Members when sick receive from three to five dollars per week according to age and time in the order; if all dues are paid according to the rules governing sick members. Books of the rules and regula tions can be had at any of the cffices or meéting. Every member shou!d have the Book of Rules as their gnide, . , OFFICES: (Central: 590-ST. 'MA Hastern Branch; 14t Loans! VY BUTTER PRINT.- A CALICO PRINT.- A “TRAMP PRINT) © The “Bufter Print” is used tomake and A “Calico Print” is used to make ladies wearing apparl. (e A “Tramp Print” is used to tramp ' g around over the United States giving “advice” to Country Printers. , L “The Afro-American Print” is altogether a different kind of “Print.” Those business like, attractive Posters or Hand-bils, or Pamphlets, or Circulars,or Books whick you see attracting so much attention, say dcwn in the lower left hand corner, o “THE AFRO-AMERICAN, PRINT.” CONFIDENTIAL. WE DO PRINTING. No matter what you want in ~ our line, call and see us. WE lIAVE SOME NEW IDEAS, let us put them into ycur Job Printing IT ISJUST A WAY WE BAVE of doing things that makes our Job Printing so very satisfactory. OUR PRICES are just right, you get full value every time. The Afro-American, ROMPT,—— TEASING . PROGRESSIVE RINTERS. 616 N. Eutaw St., BALTIMORE, MD. ESDRAS. BENEFITS. received and receipted for at the CENTRAL OFFICE or at either of the branch offices. e Cures all Diseases (Or Nd Charge) with Herbs, Roots, Barks, Gums, Balsams, Leaves, Seeds, Berries, Flowers & Pla **l know nothing about physi cians’ or druz-store medicines, I am no physician, nor do I pretend to be, JAMES P. RERR, 1. . . s . Tig Old Indian Herb Medicine Max, Better kown as THE OLD INDIAN HERB DOCTOR all over the Amerlca]? Continent and urope. Residence: 616 N. Eutaw St., BALTIMORE, MD, TAKE NOTICE.—S¢me maucToua scroundi-el has bem%rzsontmx an selling frauduleh mitations of my PREPARATIONS. All guch will be pros= ecuted to the full extent of the law. "~ Truth? 1216 N. Fremont Avenue, Hope!