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The Daily Republican from Monongahela, Pennsylvania • Page 3

Location:
Monongahela, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

HOW TO EAT 'POSSUM. OR OUR LITTLE FOLKS. THE MAGUEF. sacred ground. Our Lady of the Berne-dios and the Magueyes was the patroness of whenever there was pestilence in the city or drouth in the land solemn invocations were offered by processions of pricete at her shrine Jfat Tori Tribune.

how he liked it, he said: "It's good enongh; ftll bnt the end of it." A little fellow had torn his trousers in climbing ft tree, and came sobbing to his mother, and said: "See how badlv I have braised my pants Little girl (fearfully) Mamma, when are the Indians coming on? Mother Hush, dear, there are no Indians. Little girl Then who scalped all the men in the front seats? "Mary, is Lucy awake?" "Xo, mamma, s'e an't dot her eyes undon yet," answered Mary. The Skeptic. There was once a bold, bad man. He was the only man in a household of women but the women vere all aunts of an ancient vintage.

One evening the household was gathered about the library fire telling stories. The gas was unlit and the firelight was dim and shadowy. The aunts told in turn of the awful things which they had heard and experienced which partook of a supernatural natura The conversation was very interesting, but the man paid little attention to it he was, most of the time, dozing. At last the oldest and least comely aunt told a story of a horribe suicide. It was about a nian who cast in his own bullet-mold a silver bullet Now, everybody knows that a silver bullet is a suicidal thing to make, and that it always finds its way to the in-sides of him who casts it.

Oh it is a grewsome thing to cast a silver bullet. The youngest aunt was saying words to this effect when the man awoke; he laughed loud and long and poo-poohed the idea And he went and got his bullet-mold from the cupboard, where he kept his gun traps and he took a silver dollar from his pocket, and he melted the dollar in a crucible which he kept ready for various experiments, which his aunts felt were of the devil, and when the silver had assumed a liquid form he poured it into the mold A IMaoaotMf rear! One peculiarity of pearls is that, unlike other precions gems, they are liable to decay. Occasionally a valuable pearl changes color, teems to be attacked with a deadly disease, and crumbles into dust. Snch is. reputed to have been the fate of the most magnificent specimen evei known.

Passing through successive hands, it finally became the prop erty of a Russian merchant, and found a possessor who knew its immense value and prized it accordingly. He kept it carefully in a secluded room of his magnificent mansion, apart from all other of his treasures. It was the wonder and admiration of Ibis favored friends who were permitted to look at it The 'merchant finally became involved in a political conspiracy and fled to Paris, taking bis one great treasure with him. He kept it hidden for a time, but at last consented to show it to some distinguish lovers of precious stones. But when he opened the casket he fell back in dismay and staggered as though stricken with death.

The gem had begun to change color. A fatal disease had attacked it It was Boon a worthless heap of white powder, and the once wealthy merchant was a pauper. The most famous pearl fisheries in the world are near the coats of Ceylon, Japan, Java, and Sumatra, and in the Persian Gulf, although pearls in limited quantities are obtained in the streams of various countries. Before the divers began their work there are blessings and magic spells from priests and sorcerers to drive away the sharks and bring good luck. These incantations are, of course, roundly paid for.

The boats start out late at night, so that operations may begin at daybreak. The divers have small instruments for compressing the nostrils, and beeswax to stop the apertures in their ears. Each one holds a block of stone between his feet to aid hit descent. Leaping from the boat and plunging beneath the waves, the divers reach the bottom, where they run about swiftly, and fill their bags with oysters as quickly as possible. When one is ready to rise he gives a signal, and is drawn back to his boat by a rope.

Divers cannot remain in the watet over a minute on the average, while two minutes taxes the most expert. A very few who have staid under four or five minutes have won great reputations foi their extraordinary endurance. The occupation is injurious to the health, as it requires a tremendous amount of exertion. Divers are shortlived, subject to various diseases, and have been known to expire suddenly upon reaching the surface of the water. mrve xeaTfl rr an A dispatch from Vienna, to the Atlanta Constitution says: Albert Willis, colored, convicted of burglary, created a sensation in court when sentenced to fifteen years by ejaculating dd "Make it twonty," said his honor.

A 'Dialect Story a Told by Congressman Catenaa, of Louisiana. Only those who have enjoyed an acquaintance outside of business relations with the modest Representative fiom the Second Louisiana District know that Hon. Hamilton Dudley Coleman is one of the best story tellers ever a member of Congress. A year or twe ago, it was at a club, after a promising ineeting of one of the American shipping conventions, that a score or more of gentlemen were enjoying a lively run of such stories as "set the table in a roar." Mr. Coleman was called upon by a companion and told what is given below, being twice encored, so inimitably did he tell it.

It is the story oi an old plantation negro. "If yuh wants to know what's good, des lis'en You look at de 'possum aud smack yor lips, fer he a big, fine feller. Den yuh take 'em an' go rite bac home, an' jes' fo' yuh git to de do' yuh take yo' axe-helve an' put 'em across d( neck an' brake de neck by pullin' of df tail. Den yuh take 'im in de house an de ole 'oman done lef a great big fire place heep full hick'ry ashes; vuh take; de shubble an' opens er big hole in den: pile er ashes an' draps dat 'possum in dar an' when yuh takes 'im outer dai he hair dess pull off dess as easy, an yuh put 'im in -some hot water an-scrapes'im wid er case knife an' he cum; dess as clean. Den yuh takes out dt intrals, hangs Im up an' ash 'm good den yuh salts 'im down and puts 'in; away twel Monday Monday mawnin' cum, de old 'owman takes 'im out an' parbiles 'im good den she gets 'bout peck of taters, an' den slices dem taters an' piles 'em all ober 'im, an' den she bakes him twel de greese run al! fru dem taters.

Den she takes 'im out an' puts 'im in de big dish an' sets 'ire on de dinner table wid de taters piled up all over 'im. Yuh cum ter dinner from der fiel' an' yuh walks in an' seta down to de table, but yuh doan' eat dat 'possum den. Eh eh eh eh "No sah doan' eat dat possum den. Arter dinner yuh takes 'im an'de tateis an' sets 'im up in de cubburd. Bimeby yuh cums home rum de day's wuk fer yuh comes home for yer supper.

Yure mity worn out fer yer ben wukin' in de fiel' ha'd all day. Yer sits down outside de cabin do an' takes yer pipe an' smokes. 'Fore long Ephrem says 'Daddy, daddy," thupper's "But yuh dess sets dar? yer doan' go In at all. Yer wait twel de ole 'oman an' de chillun go off to bed sho nuff. Den yuh knock de ashes out yer pipe an' goes in.

Yuh moves the little squr' lable front de lire an' puts yer char up dar by it. Deu yuh goes to the an' gets de 'possum an de taters. Yuh puts 'im on de table. Yuh tel de old 'oman fur to go out an' lock 3e Den dar yuh is Yuh an' de possum, all by yerselves tergedder. i'uh rows de ole hat on de flo', takes yer seat in dat char an' gibs up yer soul to Gord" Chicago Journal.

Wars and Means. Home-Seeker (inspecting a flat) How in the world are people to live in such little cubby-holes as these? Agent Easy enough, mum. All you need is folding-beds and camp-chairs, and self-doubling up tables, and a few things like that. "Humph! I can hardly turn around in these rooms myself." "I see, mum. It's too bad to be so afflicted, mum.

You should take anti-fa 'New York Weekly. A correspondent wants long eels live. About as long as short eels, we should say. COLUMN OF PARTICULAR INTEREST TO THEM. What Childraa Bava Done, What They Arm Dote-, ami What Tlwf should a to iaM Their Childhood Mariaotte's Prodigy-Below is a picture of Master Carle-ton E.

Herrick, of Marinette, the youthful inventor of ft toy ball. Although now eight years old, he was only seven when he first conceived the idea of the toy, knowing nothiDg oi patents. It was entirely his own invention. He has no father living, and no one to aid him in carrying out hie jdeas. The toy appearing to have much merit, friends advised securing a patent.

An application wa3 filed July 28, 1890, and letters patent received Oct. 7, 1890. The toy consists of a small wooden ball about an inch oi more in diameter, tilled witn leaa give it weight. The ball is colored, and has the surface divided by a series of ornamental stripes of different col ors, or circular bands of variegated hues. A string two feet in length if attached to the ball, which is twirled a few times by the one handling it and then allowed to fly in the air.

The "ball revolves in its ascent and descent, and gives a diversified and variegated arrangement of colors that render it very handsome. The ball returns to the point from which it was sent up. The sum of $3,000 has been offered for the patent, but it is considered to have more value than this, and negotiations are now going on for its purchase. Master Herrick has other inventions nni YAvfsistt A T1 Vila invnnfirn genius is hereditary is indicated in the fact that his mother has received letters patent upon a child's toy of her own invention, which will no doubt also prove a valuable one. Master Herrick is a modest, unassuming lad, not at all seemingly conscious of having done more than any lad might do.

As his mother is in moderate circumstances, the pecuniary benefits they will derive from these two inventions will render them comfortable. Good Advice. "Aim to be kind," says Horace Mann, "generous, magnanimous." If there is a boy in school who has a club-foot, don't' let him know you ever saw it. If there is a poor boy with ragged clothes, don't talk about rags in his hearing. If there is a lame boy, assign him some part of the game which does not require running.

If there is a hungry one, give him part of your dinner. If there is a dull one, help him to learn his lesson. If there is a bright one, be not envious of him for if one boy is prond of his talents and another is envious of him, there are two great wrongs, and no more talent than before. If a bigger or stronger boy has injured you and is sorry for it, forgive him, and request the teacher not to punish him. It is much better to have a kind heart than a great fist.

Hoys! Treat mother as politely as if she were a strange lady. Be as kind and helpful to your sisters as to other boys' sisters. Don't grumble or refuse to do some errand which must be done, and which -otherwise takes the time of some one who has more to do. Have your mother and sisters foi your best friends. Find some amusement for the evening that all the family can join in, large and small.

Be a gentleman at home. Cultivate a cheerful temper. If you do anything wrong, take your mother into your confidence. lie about anything you nave i aone. Saying of Little One.

When three-year-old Morris first saw the snow last winter he called out excitedly: "Oh! mamma, the ground is ail white like the sugar frosting on Lola's cake." And Charlie, who is about the same age, said "It is raining sugar." When Charles, who is nine, was getting ready for church the other Sunday I gave him a five-cent piece to put on the plate. "I want two; you have to pay two fares when you go to A little boy and girl had been tioned never to take the nest-egg when gathering the eggs. But one evening the girl reached the nest first, seized an egg, and started for the house. Her brother followed, crying "Mother! Mother! Susy's been and got the egg the old hen measures by A little follow living on the West Side, between three and four years old, was asked what his kitty did in a fight between her and a dog. "Well," he said, "she humped up her back as high as she could, she made her tail as big as she could, and then she blew her nose in his face." Little 6-year-old was obliged to take a dose of medicine that left an unpleasant tftsto in the mouth.

When asked MANIFOLD USES OF A WOXOEIt-r'Vlt MEXICAN PLANT. Front It the Peons Brew Pulque. Weave Ixtle, Make Paper and Build Houses Distilling tbe National Beverage. In the vicinity of Tolcca; one of the characteristic products of the Mexican tableland can be seen in its highest state state of cultivation. This is the maguey or century plant, known to science as the Agave Americana.

It is the vegetable well from which pulque is drawn the chief and almost the only native brew. Its leaves furnish the fibre exported as ixtle for the manufacture of rope, brushes and cloth. The same fibre supplies material for paper, and it has many other industrial uses. Indian women take the prickly points of the spiky leaves and make pins and needles of them. Their husbands thatch their huts with the dried leaves and also burn them as fuel when a fire is to be kindled.

It is a wonderful plant, growing in profusion throughout the plateau and generally in soil where nothing else will thrive. At Toluca it is a sheaf of broad green blades from three to ten feet in height. While it grows wild in every patch of neglected ground, it is cultivated on a large scale both for pulque and ixtle, and is one of the most profitable crops. On the line of the Mexican National from the capital all the way to the border fields and patches of magueyes are the most familiar objects of the landscape but it is in these central highlands that the most vigorous plants are seen. It is here, too, that the best pulque is made.

The Indian race, with its inej hausti-ble resources of patience, is admirably fitted to stand watch over this plant and to milk it at the proper times and seasons. There arc certain signs of maturity which do not escape the practised eye. When the stem suddenly shoots up and the bending leaves are straight and bristling the time for blooming is at hand. The stem is then cut off and the heart of the plant is pierced with a sharp spoon, and a cavity several inches deep is made, so as to allow the sap to collect. At sunrise, noon and at sunset the honey-water, as it is called, is drawn off by means of a long gourd, one end of which is in the liquid and the other in the Indian's mouth.

From the gourd the sap is emptied into earthen jars and thence carried into cellars, where it is to be fermented. The milking continues day after day until the juice dries up. Then the leaves are cut off, washed and dressed, and the fibre is sent to market as ixtle and exported in enormous quantities. One Indian can take charge of 300 magueyes a day during the milking season. The dressing of the leaves furnishes employment for thousands of Indian women, since it is largely done by hand, the strength of the fibre being impaired by machinery.

The most vigorous -plants, when they have reached maturity in the eighth year, will yield from three to seven quarts of liquid a day for a period of four or five months. These ire magueyes planted on good ground ind watered during dry seasons. The plants at their best will produce as many as twenty-five pounds of ixtle. If allowed to blossom the maguey -vill exhaust itself and die but if protected against premature suicide it bears a hundredfold. Growing ordinarily in a thin and sterile soil, it seems to have power to draw milk and honey out of the rocks.

For productive energy it is one of the marvels of the vegetable kingdom. As pulque is the national drink, the maguey is accounted by stern moralists to be the blighting curse of the country. This seems to be an ill-considered indictment of beneficient nature, which has clothed the valleys and hillsides of the Mexican tableland with t'ae blue-green verdure of the Agave Americana. In the hot lands where pulque is not made there are worse liquors brewed from the settlings of cane-sugar. These would have been a substitute in the highlands for pulque, if the magucys had bloomed in Mexico as in northern greenhouses once in a generation or a century.

Pulque when unfermented is as harmless as new cider, and much of what is drunk in enormous quantities by the peons is of this kind. Then there is the fermented pulque, which, while rich in alcohol, is not so maddening an intoxicant as the cheap braudy and rum brewed in Mexico as well as in other Spanish-American countries. The Toltec tradition is that the ruin and dispersion of the race were caused by the discovery that a cheering and inebriating drink could bo distilled from the prickly maguey clumps. It was a woman, naturally enough, who made the Brat honeyed brew and tempted man to taste and find out how happy and wise he could be and the King was well pleased with his draught and straightway married the fair brewer; and then all the race drank pulque and went to the bow-wows. This is the tradition, and the moralists have drawn inspiration from it to this day.

They will have it that pulque is the chief cause of the degradation of the working-classes of Mexico. They overlook the manifold uses made of this wonderful plant in the great plateau tenanted by the poorest population on earth that it not only provides their drink indeed, but also their great fibre industry, covering for their houses, fuel with which to cook their scanty meals and even food itself for the roots of it are wholesome and nourishing when cooked. The maguey is the peon's staff of life as well as his strong wine. The legend of the image of Los Remc-dios, the neglected shrine on the road from Mexico to Toluca, is connected with the maguey. One of tho soldiers who followed Cortes in his retreat on the forlorn night carried with him an image of the Virgin and hid it under a maguey plant.

Subsequently an Indian chief found this image after repeatedly seeing an apparition of tho Virgin, and a temple with a magnificent hrina was built oi the Strange Sarffical Operations. "Operative surgery," 'said Superintendent Ludwig of the City Hospital, "is keeping pace with other departments of investigation and successful experiments on human beings. If the discoveries of Harvey and Jenner be accepted, the healing art has made greater advances during the last couple of decades than it had previously done since the days of Galen and Hippocrates. One of the latest cases of strange surgical operations was the transferring of the brains of a living dog and cat. This operation was said to have been performed by Dr.

W. F. Thompson, Professor of Physiology of the Medical University College in this cityand it was said to have been completely satisfactory; but whether it will become common for men to have their brains patched and strengthened is something beyond almost human credence. But who would believe, say even as late as a score of years ago, that we could perform the feats of surgery we are doing to-day? Here is a boy's defective leg repaired by grafting into it the bone of a dog. The brain of a cat is transferred to repair the injured brain of a dog.

Then we have trephining, to remove abcesses of the brain, relieve fractures of the skull, and laparotomy, to sew up wounds in the intestines. Patches of healthy skin are grafted from one person to another to replace that which has been destroyed. Blood is pumped from the veins of a strong person into those of the feeble, and if you lo3e a nose or a lip the surgeon can build you up a new one. But who would believe that a person could live without his kidneys, and who would believe that the operation of removing those vital organs can be successfully carried out and the patient completely healed. Such is the though, and we can bring forward three healthy specimens to prove the truth of our assertions.

We receive daily reports from those persons who have gone out cured, and their condition is better than it ever was before." Si. Louis Star-Sayings. How Rice Paper is Mads. The so-called rice paper is not made of rice, as its name implies, but from the snow-white pith of a small tree belonging to the genus Aralia, a genus represented in the United States by the common sarsaparilla and the spikenard. The tree grows in Formosa, and, so far as is known, nowhere else.

The stems are transported to China, and there the rice paper is made, which is used by native arti3ts for water color drawings, or dyed of various colors and made into artificial flowers. I was invited to visit a worker in pith and accepted the invitation. On arriving at the house, I was ushered into a badly lighted room, where a man was sitting at a table with his tools in front of him. These consisted of a smooth stone about a foot square, and a large knife or hatchet with a short wooden handle. Placing a piece of cylindrical pith on the stone and his left hand on the top he rolled the pith backward and forward for a moment until he got it into the required position.

Then, seizing the knife with his right hand, he held the edge of the blade, after a feint or two, close to the pith, which he kept rolling to the left with his left hand until nothing remained to unroll; for the pith had, by the application of the knife, been pared into a square white sheet of uniform thicknesa. All that remained to be done was to square the edges. A steady hand and a clear eye are required for the work, and hence it is that the rice paper is manufactured only at night, when the city is asleep, and the makers are not liable to be disturbed. New York Telegram. The Man Freedom Shrieked Over.

Thaddeus Kosciuszko, a Captain in the Polish Army, owing to an unfoi tunate love affair, came to America in his thirty-first ear, and, October 18, 1776, received a commission as an officer of engineers. He rose to be an Adjutant of General Washington, aud later was made a Brigadier-General. At the end of the war he received the thanks of Congress and the badge of the Order of the Cincinnati. Returning to Poland he was prominent in efforts to free Poland from Russia-Prussian domination, but in 1797 returned to America and was given by Congress a pension and a grant of land, for, like other soldiers of fortune he loved the good American dollar. He died in Switzerland in October, 1816, by a fall from his horse.

Though he faithfully observed his Russian parole, he could never be reconciled to Russia's dismemberment of his country, and rejected the courtesies and favors which the Russians would gladly have conferred in exchange for his influence in pacifying conquered Poland. When on his release from prison in St. Petersburg and about to depart from Russia, the Emperor Paul, observing he had no sword, a thing all gentlemen then carried, took off his own and offered it. "Ah," exclaimed Kosciuszko, "I need no sword I 1 have no country to defend!" Greeting the New Moon in Fiji. In Colo, the mountainous interior of Viti Levu, the largest island of the Fiji group, tho natives have a very curious method of greeting the new moon.

On seeing the thin crescent rising above the hills they salute it with a prolonged "Ahl" at the same time quickly rapping on their open mouths with their left hands, thus producing a rapid vibratory sound. An old chief, wben asked regarding the meaning and origin of this curious custom said: "Wo always look and hunt for thn moon in the sky, and when it comes we do as you see to show our pleasure at finding it again. We don't know the meaning of what we do; our fathers always did so." St. Louis Republic. and cast a large silver bullet and he 1 said There! in the most audacious way, and, putting it into his pocket, he walked from the room, yawning as he went.

It was terrible. The aunts threw up their hands and in one voice said "Presumptuous!" "Preposterous!" "Foolhardy!" and "Sacrilegious!" (for there were" four of them, which I omitted to mention before) and their I exclamations blended into a long composite word, which sounded Jsimply awful; and the man called back and asked if they were swearing and these good women shuddered and exclaimed again, and one said "Ah!" and one said "Oh!" and one said "Ow!" and these sounds united in a composite groan. Now, this skeptical man carried the bullet which he had made for a pocket-piece sod he remained well and hearty, but his aunts said it was sure to come; and when they said "it" they meant his violent end. And the young man quite forgot about his silver bullet, for his mind was taken up with the world's fair but, at last, one day he was returning from town with an aunt whom he had been taking about, when his attention was attracted to a huge bulletin which announced that there would be no world's fair after all, because Baby McKee had said that he did not want one. The man was overcome with rago and disappointment, for he had made bets upon whether the fair would come off or not, and he had not hedged sufficiently to cover the bets on that side.

He was quite beside himself and he felt for his revolver that he might make an end of himself, but I then he remembered that he had left his revolver with an uncle of his the day before so he took out his silver bullet and swallowed it then and there. His aunt was too frightened to scream, so she sat silent and waited for him to die; nor did he so much as have a fit of indigestion. Indeed, he is ali and well to this day. But the belief of the aunts in the old saying is not shaken, and they declare that the from which the bullet was cast must have been a counterfeit Chi-oaao Times- Our Standing Army. "I see you speak in this afternoon's Telegraph of the hardships our sol-liers had to stand on the plains," said H.

T. Carrington, of Chicago, at the I'ark Avenue Hotel, "and while I admit that your informant is right in nearly all that he says, yet service in the arniv is a delight to what it was before the war. There is not a post throughout the country that I know of that is not accessible by railroad, and which does not have a daily mail. The quarters to which the private soldier is now assigned are simply palatial -compared with the old-time affairs. Take Fort Hiley, for example.

The men's barracks are splendidly arranged and handsomely furnished. Each company quarters is furnished with a library, billiard room, gymnasium and marble tub bath-rooms, while the squad rooms or dormitories are nicely fitted with iron bedsteads and the walls are hung with pictures of army life. The mess hall at Fort Riley seats 1,200 men it each meal, and the chef de cuisine is a salaried civilian at $150 a month. "Life in a post is in itself very monotonous, and a man is apt to fall into bad habits during his time off just from the fact of having nothing to do. Then again in every regiment, or in fact every company, there is sure to be some scoundrel who tries his best to make his associates as vile as himself, and who does more harm than the officers can do good.

The officers take personal interest in the men. and do all they can to raise the standard of the private. Not only do they try teaching, but, better still, actual experience, which, alter all, far excels the other." Ne York Tele- ara in. A ICIng TUh. Forest and Stream says F.

S. Stevens of Augusta, is credited with having caught a speckled laker which is beliered to be the king fish of all its species ever captured at Moosehead. The fish was taken near Deer Island, and measured thirty-five inches in length, ten inches from back to belly, and weighed 211 pounds. Opals tharold for $200 "have been found in Oregon. When So Many PeopDe Are taking and praising Hood's Sarsaparilla as their Spring Medicine, having become convinced that it is by far the best, the question arises Whv Don't You Take It yourself.

Possessing just those blood-purifying, building-up, appetite-giving qualities which are so important in A Spring Medicine It is certainly worthy a trial. A single bottle taken according to directions will convince you of the merit in, and make you a warm friend of, this popular medicine. One of the latest novelties in astronomical phenomena, as brought to light by studying the spectra of certain stars, is the showing that two of these, heretofore classed as single, are in fact double, and belong to that class known as binary stars, or pairs which revolve about a common center. The binaries thus discovered are the stars known as Zeta, Ursa Majoris and Beta Anrigse, the former being that star which, in popular phrase, would be described as the middle star in the handle of the "Dipper." Be sure to gat lUIUJEFFECTUAC GUINEA A BOX JTY roisl not kfepthem) WILIj MAIL I PRICK, A BOX. (Mention this PapwU PROF.

LOISETTE'S NEW B03K9. on two mront Memory sytm. Real, stout April lsu Full 1'aula ot Uonbmt forwarJsi only lo those who send stamped directed euvelupo. Also Prospectus PUSl' Khrt oi um Aever r'grgetum. Addruu Prol.

iAiiSf.rTK, Mfu New Yor. GTAflMCDIllO CUHE wARAfTKKu 0 I nillmLnllllls imdW Eeks Mchaol, ss Ucdford A llrsokl) -4 1 (Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, ft; alitor $3. Prepared only Bold by all druggists, lx for $1 Prepared oat by C. HOOD St, Apothecaries, Lowell. Maw I by 1.

HOOO Apothecaries, Lowell, Mae IOO Doses One Dollar I IOO Doses One Dollar I II I a I I -V. PAINLESS. sr WORTH A For BILIOUS NERVOUS DISORDERS Such as Wind and Pain in the Stomach, Fullness and Swelling after Meals, Dizziness, and Drowsiness, Cold Chills, Flushings of Heat, Loss of Appetite, Shortness of Costliness, Scurvy, Blotches on the Skin, Disturbed Sleep, Frightful Dreams, and alt Nervous and Trembling Sensations Ac. THE FIRST DOSE WILL CIVE RELIEF IN TWENTY MINUTES. BEECH AM 8 PIUS TAKEN AS DIRECTED RESTORE FEMALES TO COMPUTE HEALTH For Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver, thj ACT LIKE MAOlO, Strengthening tho muscular System, restoring long-lout Com plexlon, bringing buck the keen edge of appetite, nmt arousing with tho ROSEBUD OP HEALTH the whole Dhuslcal entrau of the human frnmn.

(Iim nr th ht i.nnnaa mVStr HVE URGEST 8ALE J'rTIJHrrd only by TIKI. BKKCHAM, St. Helens, f.nnrnelilrr, Fn.lnnd. Mid PU ItruaointK nrHrrnllu. ill est fn Bonir4f "it Wtfa 'ufi '1' BfcKCHAM'S PlLLHpn RKcEII'T of FRAZERAjjkl BEST IN TUB WORLD UllliHOli IV Oct Genuine.

Hold Ererywner PMIlllJ MCLO Orewly rant Mtratohfth Adopted by ituatnte si Harvard. Amherst, and othsl College, also, it professional and tartness men snry. WW, ji ivf nil iw Tvmr WW. qua see. TO I QM1LY, TU Wasalafta.

Mrtet, kost.

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