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FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. —Hare the implements, machinery, harness and tools been repaired and put in order for spring workP —Rice Pudding.—One teacup of ri«e. one teacup of sugar, one quart <rf milk, one teaspoonful of cinnamon; bake •lowly one hour and a half.—Boston Budget. _Wise economy l&oks after outgoes from the farm—not grudgingly, not with regrets, but rather to see that in their exchange there is good return, that which will improve conditions. —Dry cotton-seed will kill hogs, but wet cotton-seed and cooked cotton seed will not This statement from the actual experience of the editor of the Southern Live Stock Journal is made to contradict the claim of an ignorant Northernor to the effect that cotton seed would kill hogs. —Oatmeal Gems.—Soak one cup of oatmeal over night with one cup of water. In the morning sift together dry one cup of flour and two teaspoons of baking powder, add a little salt, mix the oatmeal and flour together, wet with sweet milk to a stiff batter, drop into gem pans and bake immedi ately.—Detroit Free Press. Eglantine Pudding.—Cut this slices of light white bread, and line a pud ding-shape with them, putting in alter nate layers of the bread and orange marmalade or any other preserve, till the mold is nearly full. Pour over all a pint of warn milk, in which four well-beaten eggs have been mixed. Cover the mold with a cloth and boil for an hour and a half.—Boston Bud get. —Breakfast Cakes.—One quart sifted flour, two teaspoons cream tartar, two and one half teacups light brown sugar. Itub through with some of the dry flour one tablespoonful butter. First break in two eggs, beat them lightly with the flour. One teaspoonful soda dissolved in milk sufficient to wet the ingredients to a thick batter. Add the sugar and bake in muffin rings.—Good Cheer. —Cherry trees arc often allowed to grow so high as to make it very incon venient to gather the fruit. If the branches are carefully cut off obliquely and then painted over so as to protect the cut from decay, there can be no ob ection to cutting back the head. It should be done, however,while the tree is dormant, January or February per haps being the best time.—Lidianapo li.t Journal. —A very pretty and quaint wall space can be secured at a trifling expense by using sponge paper or hardware paper in plain color, following the lines with gilt, silver copper or leather head nails. This arrangement is par ticularly good in a dining or breakfast room, or in a small study where drap eries of draping cloth or velours will give a fine finish, and mantel or fancy shelves will be found very pretty with a cover of the felt, the borders pinked out, while just above the border fasten the material carefully with fancy tacks. —American Art. PURPOSE OF PAIN. How it Develops Man's Energy as Well as His Moral Nature. It is not conceivably possible—we of fer it as a suggestion to be considered, and not as a theory to be accepted— that the object with which pain is sent into the world is not the development of man’s moral nature so much as the development of his energy. Man can do one thing which God, from his very perfectness, can not do, and that is, make an effort; and whatever the grand concealed purpose, a'part of it must be that man should strive. We may not see what he can do by striv ing, or how he can add by striving to the store of force in the universe; but if wo were not intended to strive, to develop will, and display energy, and make exertions, the world would sure ly have been made a very different one from what it is. It is always whipping him up, him and the animals, too. There are only two forms of pain which are absolutely universal among sentient creatures, which men feel as strongly as women, and animals more keenly than both, and which human beings, whether refined or degraded, absolutely refuse to endure; and those two are hunger and thirst, the two grand impelling forces of the world. Without these two pains, there would be no world such as we know it. The wild animals would saunter away life doing nothing; the useful beast, re leased alike from hunger and the whip, would be worthless to man; and man himself, though he might reflect as well as saunter, would scarcely be brought to work.—Spectator. Good Food, Good Flavor. Ever and anon some enthusiastic breeder of thoroughbred fowls des cants upon the merits of his favorite breed—their tender, juicy flesh and rich, highly-flavored eggs, not to be compared with the dunghills long ago liscarded—forgetting that the dung hills were truly named, and that from hard scratching for a living in the barnyard, they produce the small, tough bodies and ill-flavored eggs com plained of. while his thoroughbreds have a yard to themselves, are fed on the choicest grain and grasses, have nothing but pure water to drink, and all the delicacies of the season, from the dinner table. What breeder has not noticed the difference in flavor i>f the eggs from his best yards and from the general flock running at large? Instinctively, the best fowls receive the best food and most careful attention, and the result is richer and better flavored eggs. Feeding for flavor must sooner or later become one of the high arts of poultry culture.—N. Y. Mnrkel Journal. \ H FORGOTTEN convict. Story of • Criminal Who Has Not Had m Visitor in Many Years. Says a Kingston (N. Y.) dispatch: An effort is being made to procure a pardon for William Willis, who has been impris oned in the Clinton State Prison for twen ty-one years for murder, and who will, unless the Governor interferes, have to spend the remainder of his days there. Since his entrance to the prison ho had not been visited by a single relative or friend up to a few weeks ago, and never sent or received a message of any kind. The visitor who went to see him was a nephew from Illinois, who is doing all he can to procure his relative’s release. Al though many who could have recalled the circumstances of the crime for which Wil lis was sentenced to be hanged and after ward reprieved and sent to prison are long since dead, many old residents of this vi cinity express themselves as believing that Willis has been sufficiently punished for the murder, which had many extenu ating circumstances. Willis -was a veteran of the late war. He was a young blacksmith in Ellenville before he went to help settle the great question, and was engaged to be married to Jane Conyes, of Napanock, N. Y., near here. During the struggle the young peo ple corresponded with each other, and letters produced at the trial showed that the young woman still made Willis believe that she was true to him aud waiting for his return. He came home to find that she had been two yoars married, had a little child, and had used the money he had sent her to enrich another man’s florae. This blow to the man who had tried to live for the sake of his promised wife was sufficient to arouse the most intense in tlignation and rage in Willis’ heart. While still excited after hearing the news of her perfidy Willis went to the home of the woman, told her who he was aud, snatching a carving-knife from the table, stabbed her to the heart. He then cut her throat and stabbed the body fifty . or sixty times. Wil lis went to the village where the hus band worked, told him of what he had done, and surrendered himself up to the authorities. He was lodged in Kingston jail, and at the next sitting of the grand jury was indicted for murder in the first degree, tried by the court, and sentenced to be hanged. A reprieve, however, was granted pending argument for a new trial, which was granted. The sentence oi the court in the second trial was the same as the first, that he should be hanged. Again he was reprieved, and through the efforts of the late Judge Theo dore Westbrook, his counsel, who brought all the extenuating circumstances in the case before Governor Fenton,' aft r a weary imprisonment of over a year in a gloomy underground dungeon in Ulster County jail, Willis’ sentence was commut ed to imprisonment at hard labor for life. Twice was the gallows erected at Kings ton to hang Willis, and twice was he reprioved oil tho morning set for his exe cution. Half Bird, Half Fish. Count Joachim Pfoll, the German Afri can explorer, gives the following account a mysterious creature seen on the coast A the Ulanga district: “We often saw an animal in the water which we first be lieved to be a serpent, from its move ments, and from the fact that only now end then it appeared on the surface for a few secondp. Once, when we shot at it, we were su„grised to see it rise out of the irater and ay away. Afterward we suc ceeded in obtaining one of the curious creatures. H was about the size of a largo tame duc^, with black plumage and a metallic lister. On its wings we noticed a few voi^- light yellow feathers. The neck was ®*ry long and thin, and ended in a long, pointed beak, at the edge of which wi^s two rows of sharp teeth. At first aigbfc no head was visible, and the neck vp{i^ared to end only in a beak. The *hc.' a butty of the bird is under water a h/ .e swimming, only the long neck bo 'ng seen. If it was frightened it disap peared altogether under the water, or few rapidly away. Another peculiarity we noticed was that when the bird had left the water it lay down on a bush with outstretched wings to get dry. The flesh of this creature has an unpleasant oily flavor.” --« • - Ufe ami Weight of Americans. Edward Atkinson has been examining the records in ready-made ciothing estab lishments to discover whether the white man in the United States is deteriorating in size and weight. The general result is, that the average height of New England ers is found to be 5 feet 8 1-2 inches and of Southerners 5 feet 10 inches. The average weight of Americans is between 155 and 100 pounds. Mr. Atkinson also discovered that the average height and weight of men in this country have in creased perceptibly since the war. He is convinced that Americans are increasing rather than decreasing in size. The counterfeiter, no matter where ho goes, is seldom well lodged. At least, it is believed that wherever lw is ha bus bad quartern. —.Huston Courier ■ ■ m • ^ -— —First Omaha Man—“Does a dead animal weigh more than a live one?” Second Omaha Man—“I should say so. Last summer Jack and I went fishing and Jack caught a big tish which I weighed at once, before it was dead, and the weight was three pounds.” “Yes.” “Well, Jack took that lish home and the next day we heard him tell a man it weighed ten pounds.”— Omaha World. —Miss Skeen—“Where did you grad uate from, Mr. Gill?” Mr. Gill— “From the school of pharmacy.” Miss Skeen (with surprise)—“Is it possible? What a strange choice for a young man brought up in the city!—but, if 1, remember rightly, your grandfather was a farmer, too.”—Judge. — ^ m - —Smith—“I see coal has gone up forty cents per fifteen hundredweight.” Brown—“Toil mean forty cents a ton. do you not?” Smith—“No. You are speaking in the language of the dc: 1 r; I am stating the fact.”—Binghamton Republican. ■■ ^ ♦ » —Timid young suitor who has won consent of papa—“And now may I ask you, sir, whether—all—whether your daughter has any domest ic accomplish ments?” Papa (sarcastically)—“Yes, sir; she sometimes knits her brows.”— Chicago Tribune. ■—A man in a Western town hanged himself to a bed-post by his suspenders. The coroner’s jury, who had been mothers themselves, decided that “the deceased came to his death by coming home drunk and mistaking himself for bis pants.”—Independent, WOMAN SUCCEED8. On* of the Successful Ones Tails How IS Is Done. No proper estimate of the future economi cal progress of the country can bo made, that does not take into consideration an ele ment which may be termed “the woman in business.” She is knocking at all the doors of com mercial enterprise, and there are very few into which she has not already forced an en trance. The results seem to indicate that, beyond a doubt, she has come to stay. She can not perhaps often reach the levers which move the great driving wheels of business, but she proves a most impor tant factor in the minor but scarcely less important machinery of detail. Phil Armour’s private secretary is a young lady who was first employed as a stenographer and type-writer. She proved so capable and efficient that her sphere of usefulness has been gradually enlarged, until she now has probably a closer acquaint ance with Armour’s extended business than any other person connected with it. It used to be claimed that woman had neither physical nor mental stamina to con duct a large business. Mrs. Frank Leslie has made a success of as complicated a business enterprise as al most any in the country. The strong point in this case is that when she took the helm, the Frank Leslie Publishing Company had but a short time previously failed. Madam Demorest conducts a very exten sive business, which includes the publish ing of a magazine. Mrs. Annie Jenness Miller conducts a famous dress reform movement, and is also the editress of a very successful magazine called “Dress.” Her daily mail is said to be larger than that of any other woman in the United States. Mrs. Miller says: “Warner’s safe cure is the only medicine I ever take or recom mend. The safe cure has the effect to give new energy and vitality to all my powers.” These women have demonstrated that the sex can succeed in business if they take proper caro of their health. That is the main point, even with the sterner sex, and it is the subject to which, above all others, the women of to-day should give their attention. And here, as everywhere, comes in play the old maxim: “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” A Desperate Fifflit. An aged farmer of East Sullivan, Me., annoyed by the depredations of a b a , set a spring gun for him. When ha visited the gun he found the bear there, bad y wounded. The old man tried to kill it with an axe, but the bear knocked him down, and was in a fair way to kill him when a neighbor arrived with a gun a* J killed the bear. A General Tie-Up of all the means of public conveyance in a large city even for a few hours, during a strike of the employes, means a general paralvzing of trade 'and industry for the time being, and is attended with an enor mous aggregate loss to the community. How much luore serious to the individual is the general tic-up of his system, known as constipation, and duo to the strike of the most imiiortant organs for more prudent treat ment and better care. If too long neglect ed, a torpid or sluggish liver will produce serious forms of kidney and liver diseases, malarial trouble and chronic dyspepsia. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets are a preventive and cure of these disorders. They aro prompt, sure and effective, pleasant to take, and positively harmless. An Anti-Fat Kestaurant .Corpulent persons who dosire to avail themselves of the opportunity can now patronize a London restaurant in which nothing but dishes prepared on the auti Cat plan are served. The Coming Comet. It is fancied by a grateful patron that the next cornet will appear in the form of a huge bottle, ha ting “Golden Medical Discovery” inscribed upon it in bold characters. W ketker this conceit and Ugh compliment will be verified, remains to bo ern.. but Dr. Pierce Will continue to send forth that wonderful vegetable compound, and potent eradieator of disease. It lias no equal in medicinal and health-giving properties, for impartingvigor and tone to the liver and kidneys, in purifying the blood, and through it cleans ing and renewing the whole system. For scrofulous humors, and consumption, or lung scrofula, in its early stages, it is a positive specific. Druggists. Can a drunken man hanging on & lamp post for a short period he said to have come to a lull stop?—Ftelad L hia News. There is a great deal of blow about the signal service officers.—Boston Fust. Woman's Work. There is no end to the tasks which daily confront the good housewife. To be a suc cessful housekeeper, the first requisite is good health. How can a woman contend against the trials and worries of housekeep ing if she be suffering Irom those distress ing irregularities, ailments and weaknesses peculiar to her sex 1 Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a specific for those dis orders. The only remedy, sold by drug gists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers. Satisfaction guaranteed in every case, or monev refunded. See printed guarantee on bottle wrapper. The girl with the highest hat is reckoned at the lowest figure.—New Haven News. Every person is interested in their own affairs, arid if this meets the eye of any one who is suffering from the effeits of a torpid liver, we will admit that ho is interested in getting well. Get a bottle of Prickly Ash Bitters, use it as directed, and you will al ways bo glad you read this item. If you would secure a fresh share of life seek the fresh air. — Texas Siftings. Sudden Changes of Weather cause Throat Diseases. There is no more effectual rem edy for Coughs, Colds, etc., than Brown's Bronchial Troches. So.d only in boxes. Price fio cts. If you don’t feel able to harness clams perhaps you might saddle rocka — 'Texas Siftings. If you want to be cured of a cough, use Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. A word to the y y’s is often given ia Welsh.—Texas Siftings. If afflicted with Sore Eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye Waier. Druggists sell it. 25c. Money just now is like many men who have it—close.—Texas Siftings. FOR ALL DISORDERS OF THIS " and Iswifs STRICTLY VEGETABLE. Cure Constipation. Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Piles, Sick Headache. Liver Complaints. Loss of Ap petite, Biliousness, Nervousness, Jaundice, 6tc. For Sale Ly all Druggists. Price, 25 Cents. ; PACIFIC MASUFACTliflifta CO.. ST. LOUIS. MS HXS PHOTO The venerable bene factor of mankind, intent upon his good works, is known as we see him here. His familiar face and form have become a trade mark, and the good he has done is illustrated in the follow ing marvelous instance: Jan. 17, 1883, George C. Osgood & Co., druggists, Lowell, Mass., wrote: “Mr. Lewis Dennis, No. 138 Moody st., desires to recommend St. Jacobs Oil to any afflicted with rheumatism, and desires especially to say that Orrin Robinson, of Grantville, Mass., a boy of 12 years, came to his house in the summer of 1881 walking upon crutches, his left leg having been bent at the knee for over two months and could not be bent back. He could not walk upon it. Mr. Dennis had some St. Jacobs Oil in the house and gave it to him to rub on his knee. In six days he had no use for his crutches and went home well without them, and he has been well since St. Jacobs Oil cured him.” in July, 1887, inquiry was made of the Messrs. Osgood to ascertain the condition of the little cripple, which brought the follow ing response: ‘‘Lowell, Mass., July 9, 1887.— The poor cripple on crutches, Orrin Robin son, cured by at. Jacobs Oil in 1881, has re mained cured. The young man has been and is now at work every day at manual labor. Dr. George C. Osgood, M. D.” No other remedy can make the same showing. The best and sorest Remedy for Core of all diseases caosed by any derangement of the LiTer, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels. Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation, Bllions Complaints and Xalariaof all kinds yield readily to the beneficent influence of It is pleasant to the taste, tones op the system, restores and preserves health. It Is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to prove beneficial, both to old and young. s a Blood Purifier It is superior to all others. Sold everywhere at 81.CO a bottle. in the States of Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana for 8. 5, or 10 yearn. INSTALLMENT PLAN, by which a portion of the principal is repaid each year. A planter thus gradually pays otf his indebt edness without exhausting each year the whole pro ceeds of his crop. N o Comitiinnionn Charged. No lien on live stock or crop. No shipments of Cotton. Don’t wait unt il you need the money. Apply at once, and the loan will be ready when von need it. FRANCIS SMITH. CALDWELL A CO., Rooms 9 and 10 Cot ton Exchange Building. Memphin, Tenn. Formerly Francis Smith & Co., Vicksburg, Mississippi. n evil1 A y MUSTANG mtLAluAR LINIMENT I BA C V B A A y MUSTANG III t A 1 h k PS LINIMENT Ely’s Cream Balm Gives relief ut once for COLD in HEAD. -| CTKE8 | CATARRH. Not a Liquid or Snuff. Apply Balm into each nostril. ELY PROS., 235 Greenwich St. ,U.Y KO-KG TULfJ, Tho Best Medicine In the World, and a DELICIOUS SHEWING GUN. (Registered Label and Trade Mark.) -CUILES Indigestion, Constipation, Dyspe, sia, Foul Breath. WILL LAST FI E YEARS If not In hands of your dealer, send 50 cents for a box (which contains twelve 6-cunt packages) or 5 cents for •ample package, or 4 cents in stamps for a fine souve nir, to fcOJL COLEMAN, Memphis, Tenu. AGENTS WANTED FOB EARTH. SEA & SKY, Or Marvels of the Universe. 164 pages; 329 illustrations. Only $2.75. English and German. Th® fastest selling book out. Som® agents have already sold nearly 1,000 copies. DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE. Highest commission® allowed. Write for illustrated cir culars and terms. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., St. Louis. I Wholly unlike artificial systems. Any book learned in one reading. Recommended by Make Twain, Richard PROCTOR, the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astor, Judah P. Benja min, Dr. Minor, Ac. Class of lf)0 Columbia Law stud ents^ two classes Of 200 each at Yale; 441> at University cf Penn.Phila.. 400 at Wei lesley College, and three large classes at Chautauqua University, Ac. Prospectus Pos t free from PROF. LOX&ETTE. 237 Fiith Ave., N.Y. JONES 1 II >! 'PAYSthe FREIGHT i> 7 on Ytacou 8calt*»« Iren Levers, Steel Hewing*, Brae# Tare Bsaxu and B»am Bex for $80. f Ererj sis- scale. Tor free price list T»-» jnentJon this paper and address ff JOSES 0? 81N0KAMT8K, * BlN^KAxUXO.N. W. if. (NOT) TOUR ORDERS TO " xYYev^.'t C<j. For China^Glaw and^stswar, Meakin & Maddox English White Gr» ' LAMrS AND I.AMP GOODS A SPECIALPr ^ WEAK, NERVOUS PEQpi p Rhenmatlsm, v.urJj5f »** neyandall Chronic RtJ* are positively -i *Hf>me h f un. r, L>, br. magretio hklt t?*1 Onion hav. e hern cured. ILKTRIflTT4}® felt. Paten Us\ted n.i I ■ i | i-T, ••> wear same bolt. ELECTRIC 81 Wensori ts r at v belts. Avoid worthless Imitation, El sn »,."!! w*l» FORRUFUKE. 700 cured In TVS. Son Ists mf T,il'*« DR. W.J. HORNE, laicnt,„,|89 w ITTLE RUCK wtefam jrLEERAP:j_^^ - Furnishes at moderate enst the be«t lr«n, „ Book-Keeping, Telegraphy. Shorter . „ '-1!l Writing. For full inforniatlon rail au'1 ^ or:;,|'lr'-s_ *<■ a. mt.,nV, n?;:^ CHICKASAW iron Works Engines ami Boii#M V?,' * MEMPHIS. - ’-4‘ FLOYD’S CANDIES! D. C. MOONEY, WM. FLOYD. SENO jf, $2 or $3 inel«,1 M^iurth'V ““'"'V1 B‘*n-busS. fi' KlMLl niK -'NO * HE. d. WTKY a box 2^9 main st.. MEMPHie" W ! f OLD U. S. AND CONFEDEKA’l K * I ,vns i*K? age Stamps used between N3 ami k v;‘. are valuable, and will bring high pn.,7 original envelope c>r Uttrr. Send for l!!-.i»trkti. ■*-? cuiars and price list, describing what - THOMAS SE.MMKS. Box 9. Alexandria Vs. $’00 to $300 fan wonting for hr. Agent* preferred who can {-* their own horses and give their whole timoi iX business. Spare moments may be profit*1 jmJ, ployed also. A few vacancies in towns a < ;' •«. B. f-. JOHNSON * CO.. 1013 Main St.. l.;,-hiu„od, v£ AND WHISKEY HABITS Cl UEI> AT HOME WITH. OCT PAIN. »„.* „f Ocular* HEAT FREE _ „ B. M. Winn.I KY. M. 11. ATLANTA, CIA. Office 33. Whiu-liuilHL fAA PER 1>ROFIT »»<! b\MPI.rs FMlFH IUU rr’NrrP,° men t - i»r. “ ^ OXlJN i Genuine Electric I!eli., Urn.lie. etc. Ijtrty agents wanted for Elccn i i, . sales. Write lorterms. Dr.Scott. >'<! Hr. a.lwaV.N y. SRI nU S«“t Pensions, if if W aw Siietlw disabled; Officer*’ | itv, i .i^, ty collected; Deserters relieved: ‘£'£ x..,\:4 practice: success or no fee. j.aws sent fete A. IT. Mct ORMK k Ji HON, Cloclunatl. 0.. .v ftaihincinn, lu, ^ A MONTH. AomtsTTiinted. 90 best sell b ln£ articles In the world. 1 -ample Fret. •pfcWWAddreJS JA YBBUNSUN,DaroiL,i£&k> F5 ft RS STUDY. Book-keeping,Penmanship, Arith metic, Shorthand, etc., thor-ughly UoftC by mail. Circulars free. DRY AST’S COLLEGE, Buffalo, S t. TO $8 A PAY. Samples worth $1.H FREE. Lines not under th< t, Wrin ItUEH STEU SAFETY REIN HOLDER CO., Ilol^Sieh ugMsmEmmzm A. N. K., F. 1168 WHEN WRITING TO AMERTISEI^ PLEMI mtntc that you saw the Advcrtiftcmcnt Jo :A<# paper. ’,§ DQLI For a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure. . *^77 _-7-7 ^ 50 CEMT.S. s MU [ Copyright, IS87.; CATARRH IN THE HEAD. SYMPTOITSS OF THE mSEASE.-Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak; there is ringing in the oars, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive mat- i ter, together witli scabs from ulcers; the voice is changed and » has a “ nasal twang ”; the breath is offensive; smell arid taste impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depres sion, a hacking cough and generui debility. Only a few of the above-named symptoms are likely to be present in anv one case. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. If you would remove an evil, striltc at its root. As the predisposing or real cause of catarrh is, in the majority of cases, some weakness, impurity, or otherwise faulty condition of the system, in attempting- to cure the disease our chief aim must be directed to the removal of that cause. The more we see of thi3 odious disease, and we treat successfully thousands of eases an nually at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, the more do we r< alize the importance of combining with the use of a local, soothing and healing application, a thorough and persistent inter nal use of blood-cleansing and tonic medicines. [. In curing catarrh and all the various diseases with uK!EF which it is so frequently complicated, as throat, bronchial, and lung diseases, weak stomach, ca Qri iiupr tarrhal deafness, weak or inflamed eyes, impure ilCUAnjL. blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wonder .. fill powers and virtues of Dr. I’ieree's Golden Med ical Discovery cannot bo too strongly extolled. It lias a spceilic effect upon the lining mucous membranes of the nasal and ointx air-passages, promoting the natural secretion of their ioHica-sana glands, therebv softening the disensed and thickened merauraiift and restoring "it to its natural, thin, delicate, moist, healthy con dition. As a blood-puritier, it is unsurpassed. As those iiw«s»i which complicate catarrh are diseases of the lining mucous t ‘ “• brancs, or of the blood, it will readily be seen why this mefocxt Is so well calculated to cure them. 1 A« a local anplieation for healing the diseased coi'l' i \ nflAI S tion in the head, i)r. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is beyjwl | ^ubftU R ;|;i comparison the best preparation ever inventro. i i nr jit B It is mild and pleasant to use, producing no sinarl * f ttuLH 1 „ B or pain, arid containing no strong, irritating, or cans XauinBcwaaafS tie drug, or other poison. This Remedy is a power ful antiseptic, and spcedilv destroys all bad smell which acci’in panics so many eases of catarrh, thus affording great comlort to those who suffer from this disease. |«r- Tho GoMen Medical Discovery is the natural Pr RMiKFKT “ helpmate ” of Dr. Sage’s Catsn-h Remedy, t k LtinaiiLn( not only cleanses, purities, regulates, and buil'M piinro up the system to a healthy standard, and enn i* UUnCO. quers throat, bronchial, and lung complicate ns when any such exist, but, from its spermt, effects upon the lining membrane of tho nasal passages, it ams materially in restoring the diseased, thickened, f>r ulcerated mem brane to a healthy condition, and thus eradicates the disease. When a cure is effected in this manner if is permanent. half-dozen bottles $2.50. A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable hints n« to clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will be mailed, post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-cent postage stamp. Address, World’s Dispensary Tiedical Association, No. G63 Main Street, Buffalo, N’. T. - - - --—l I Sold by Druggists. 23 Cents ^ Vial. BEING PI'HELY vegetable, Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in class vials, hermetically S'n]«*d. Always fresh and relia ble. As a gent]** laxative, alterative, or active purgative, they give the most perfect satisfaction. PURELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY HARMLESS! Aa a LIVER PILL, they are Enequaled! SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask for Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, which ar>' little Sugar-coated Pills, -r-— or Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET A DOSE. i i SICK HEADACHE, HiHons Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion. Bilious Attacks, and all derange ments of the stomach and bowels, are promptly re lieved and permanently cured by the use of I»r. Fierce’s Pellets. In explanation of their remedial nnwpr omr ca trppaf a vnriAtv of diseases, it may truthfully be said that their action upon the system is um^trsa , gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence. Manufactured by WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCLATiJ^, buffalo. ist. sir.