Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / July 12, 1895, edition 1 / Page 4
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A STRANGE OASE. . . TJI VKCtTMAR JMSlUSE WITH . "WHICH A Y017SO MAN WAS ATTACKED. Yell TiiMch He W Ktln' ercUed n4 Kitten by a. Cat-Hew lie Wm Cured. fJVom the iTovid tarmcr and fntit Grower.) Not loag ago tha e.litor the eurt Oa zclti received a letter which at first was de- from t ha editor ol the-FaHner and FruU rtroaor teintorview W. H. Bryne, o? Holly ; Hill, on the subject of Tink Fills, anil what Up, knew aWt tbem. The editor w&s not tainiliar with, rink Tills, but, knowing from the letter tint there was something interest lug behiu I it all, he determined to investi gate, Mr. Bryne w.is found with bin son putting a tho fluis'aiu'jfto'jcUes to one of the haudsome n3w housss at Btdgewool Avenue and Dayton St roe.1. Catehiaj a moment when the father quit polishing the, ceiling with his rowel and de Moeaded for more material,' the' scribe ap- ' rroachej the subject an I asked him to kindly relate hta : experience with Pink Tills. "Ok I Tint Tills, is it? All right, only tt is my eon here, VK H IJryn?, Jr., that you want to see, ' So theyouug inaD, the lop o whosa head "was scraping the coiling, which his father missed by two inches, came down from the scaffold with a milling face and commenced : '"I will cheerfully tell you my experience with Tink Tills if you wish. : You see, a year ago, I was all drawn up with ao'aing pains all ver me. Folks said it was this, that and the other, but whatever it wai I felt as if I was as eighty-year-old cbronio rheumatic Ttatient, or had a ppifcistent siege of bone break fever. Both legs, both arms, both shoulders and every joint in me would aohe and kept aching until I felt sure I was to be u miserable cripple the rest of my life. . ''Didn't 1 have the blues S Here I whs only 18, racked with joint torturing pain that I old not care, :uid nil the pleasure gone from life. '"If a few drops of rain fell on me, if a . little breezo struck me; if the Weather changed a few degrees. I would feel as if I had been stretched on a rack. In the morn ing I would be stiff and sore all over. At night, when I should' rest from my day's work, those pains would'go at me at ham mer, tongs and pincer fashion, and I wonld feel as if a black tom-cat was clawing and gnawing me. You can Imagine what kind of a time I had ! 'This went on and on until I just got tired of trying to live. But one day I saw in a Cauadh paper, father takes, an account ef a medicine called Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, re lating soma wonderful cures they had made In New York State. I determined to try it. Kilt or cure I should have risked the kill ingfor I had got to the point where I didn't care much whether I lived or died. t "I sent for some of the pills, and the long and snort of it is, the first box did me ao much good I sent for more, and then well you kuow what a raging toothache or a boll is and bow good you felt when it quit tortur ing you. That's the way I felt, and I tell you I have such a vivid feeling of relief and buoyancy that I feel almost like a bird on the wing." Dr. Williams' Tink Pills contain, in a con densed form, all the elements necessary to Kive new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an vn faillng specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, pal pitation of the heart, pale and sallow com plexions, that tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration , all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood, such a Bcrofula. chronic erysipelas, etc. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to fe males, such as suppressions, irregularities, and all forms of weakness. Dr. Williams' Tink Pills are not a patent . medicine in the sense that name imDlies. They were ii rst compounded as a prescrip tion and used as such in general practice by an eminent physician. Ho great was their efficacy that it was deemed wise to place them within the reach of all. They are now manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and Brock ville, Ont,, and are sold in boxes (never in loose lorna by the dozen or hundred, and the public are cautioned against numerous imi tations sold in this shape) at SO cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Will iamb Medicine Company from cither ad dress. Empedoelea -wai called the greatest of nil Greek philosophers, but he couldn't tell where the material went to when he found a hole in the heel oi his stocking. Detroit Free Press. Nero had buljrlnsf eyes and was ver . - . 1. X -1 aear-Biguieu. Mr. Louts A. Wroe Uagerstown, Md. Nigh Unto Death Sound as a Dollar AfterTaking Five Bottles of Hood's. "In the spring of 1889 1 was taken with severe t pains in my breast so that I could hardly . s'.rpiciiten myself up. X could not sleep at night and shortly after I was taken with sight Sweats. I had no appetite and when I did eat I Became Deathly Sick. Then large lumps the size of a hen's egg form ed upon both sides of my neck. Z opened tbem and closely followed the doctor's directions, but I grew worse and the hair commenced to fall off my headl Finally, I beard so much talk about Hood's SareaparUIi I decided to take it. I continued until I took five bottles which cur d me as sound as a dollar, and from tllM time uiil now I have not bad a sick day aoS have IIood's5,? Cures not telt the slightest effects of rheumatism." h. A. Whok, 37. Prospect St., Ifagerstown, Md. I PiJ la htb prompt and efficient, yet easy )..!! ''. M by t'.l drutTKisM. S5 cento. i I t.r-t All ti J. f ii frjrui). 'iiutna UooU. Usse U.XCLE SAM'S TT DOLLS. PLASTER CASTS OF EMINENT MEN IN THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. How Life Masks Are Made Sculptor Mills and Ills Homemade Indiana The Eskimo Dolls. H7 rHE head of Joseph Francis, , weira ana gnostiY loo&ea J . ii i I down from a shelf in an out ' m -f ii - p it vr (, oi-me-way corner oi tne na tional Museum, It wan a mask in plaster, taken from the aged inventor ef lifeboats a few weeks lef ore he died. Close by fc-as a similar counterfeit pre sentment of the living General Oreely, of Arctic fame. It is a sort of like ness rather painfully Btriking, inas much as it resembles in all essential respects a death mask. As in the case with a death mask, the eyes are closed and expression is lacking. However it is a perfect reproduction of the features, save for a slight distortion caused by the plaster, which pulls down the eyelids and the muscles of the cheeks. The mask is in fact a cast of the entire head, except that what might be called the "bottom" of it is left off to permit it to be taken off. whole. The usual method of taking a life mask is to insert straws in the nostrils while the plaster is spread in a soft state over the head. But Theadore A. Mills, the sculptor who made these likenesses, prefers to leave off the lower part of the nose, thus enabling the person to breathe more more com fortably. The whole operation re quires only about fifteen minutes. It is easy to add the bottom of the tioso afterward. Such masks ought to be made of all great men while they are living. Thus their features might be accurately preserved for all time. But in the last illness the face is apt to be much altered, in contour of feature a3 well as expression. The sculptor uses the mask only as a model, with a photo graph to help. He opens the eyes, relieves the ''drawn" effect caused by the plaster, and the result is like life itself. Sculptor Mills, who does work for the National Museum, sometimes makes lay figures for that institution by baking casts of different parts of the body of a living man or woman the arms, lego, hands, feet, etc. and putting them together, thus repro ducing the entire individual. This he did with some of the manikins for the World's Fair in Chicago, which were to represent savages in the ethnologi cal exhibit. The joints whero the parts met were filled in with putty and painted over with the color of the individual's complexion. The only portion of tho body which cannot be copied by casting is tho abdomen, the movements of which in breathing would break the hardening plaster. It is a disadvantage to be a near relative of a sculptor, because he usually in sists on utilizing the anatomy of his family for the purposes of his art. Most of the big dolls shown at the museum to illustrate the races of man kind are clothed so that only the head and hjinds need have the appearance of flesh. In making one of them the first operation is to produce what is called a sketch in clay that is to say, a nude figure in miniature, roughly done, in the attitude desired for tha manikin, which is to be of full human size. Using this as a guide pieces of well-seasoned inch plank are sawn out for the trunk and legs. The. legs are made all in one piece, or jointed, ac cording as the figure is to stand, sit, kneel or lie down. To the body sec tion a cross piece is fastened for the shoulders and another for the hips. The four limbs are attached by bolts or hinges, and the shape of the trunk is formed by ribs of thick galvanized wire. Thus is produced the skeleton. Now burlap is stretched over the ribs, and on the outside of this layers of excelsior are put on by sewing and wrapping with twine. Over all is sewn an outer skin of burlap. The legs are stuffed and wrapped in the same way, the feet included. It remains to put on the head and hands. The former is usually modeled by the sculptor from a photograph of an individual of the race to be represented. The latter are plaster casts of real hands. If the arms are to be bare they are made of plaster or papier mache; otherwise they are made of wood, padded as above described. The head, neck, hands and any other exposed parts are painted suitably to the complexion required. Then the head is sent to a wig maker on F street, who constructs for it the proper kind of ehevalure. Such a manikin will stand travel and handling well, the plaster portions be ing packed separately. Once made, to dress it is easy enough. With a pho tograph of a man or woman of any nation or tribe and a complete cos tume there is no difficulty in turning out a doll in accurate likeness of the original. The taking of the casts of the sort referred to , requires no little skill. Suppose, for example, that a hand is to be reproduced. The first thincr r necessary is to carefully oil the skin all over in order to lay down the hairs on the surface. It this were not done the hairs would catch in the plaster and the removal of the latter would be painful. Next the plaster is spread over the hand. When partly dry it is eut so that it may be removed. As soon as it has become hard it is taken off. Of course there must he a good many pieces, and these are iLpt to be broken more or less in the process. But the pieces have . t a be glued together, each one bcin? oiled on the inside, the result being) a perfect mold of the hand. Into this mold a mix ture of plaster and waiter is: poured, At the end of a few ininutes it' has hardened, and the ioiu is gentiy broken. The ooatin of oil has pre vented the plaster pared ia from flicking tu it and wi the mold is destroyed in the opera tion. A foot or any other part of the body is done in the same way. In making such casts tarious com positions are need in preference to plas ter of paris. Some of recent invention have the 'I eel" ,- of flesh. They have been utilized recently by the National Museum in manufacturing counterfeit snakes, which are as flexible as real live ones, thus adding to the realism of the effect. The same thing is done with fishes, but neai'lj- all of the models of finny creatures on exhibition are cast in the, money pulp from the Treasury, which is macerated paper cash. Freshly caught fishes are em ployed for producing the molds, and the casts are painted in - the highest style of art. . '1 his method is much more satisfactory than stuffing fish skins. For mounting - small mammals the skin is sometimes first rejnoved and a cast of the flayed body is mad In plaster. Over this the skin Is ttien put, the proportions of the animal being thus exactly retained.- New York Advertiser. An Interesting Table. The lottery of marriage and the chancer of mankind therein have been investigated with great thoroughness by a Parisian physician, according' to M. Paul Bourget, the'French novelist After studying the effects of varipua occupations upon a man's chances of success in matrimony, the doctor has come to the following conclusions:: Masistrntes, lawyers, no- " tarive, etc 5 chances in 100 Physicians 10 chances la 100 ( College teacn- - rodagosues rs 10 chances In 100 Collwre Dro- t fessors , 5 chances in 100 i Under captain90 chances in 100 (Above captain 5 chances in 100 80 chances in 100 B0 chances in 100 10 chances in 100 Officers Painters . . . . , Seuiptors.... Musicians .. Architects... Actors Busin's 3Ien 50 chances in 100 j Tragedians. ..20 chances in 100 Tenors 60 chances in 100 I Co medians. ..99 chances in 100 I Clerks 80 chances in 100 F;oor-walk'a..20 chances In 100 Proprietors. ..5 chances in 100 Journalists... 50 chances In 100 Dramatists ...10 chances in 101 Novelists. . ..15 chances in 100 Poets 30 chances in 100 ; 2 chances in 100 '1 chances in 100 Litor'y men Brokers Bankers . . . . KNOWLEDGE Bring comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's be products to the lieeos of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and feveri and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to million! and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the nsrae, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, yon will not accept any substitute if offered. AUENTS WANTED to ell alhimlnnni novclttps: 3 RHinples. pen-holder, collar button and thimble with catalogue nd special terms mailed for He. Brook lyn Novelty Co., 1 055 Jladlson St., Brooklj n, N. Y. XV. I DOrOZ.AS 3 SHOS equals custom work, coating from $4 to $6, best Tmlue for the money in the world. Name ndpricr aWHX stamped on the bottom. Kverf pair warranted, j ane no lawn lute, bee local papers lor run aescnpiion oi pur wmprar lines lor jaaics uia Ki. . . i r it rvuou ucmen or sena Kr Ji Hstrattd Catalefu giving; in structions latlst smiT how to or,. lerbvmail. Pontape free. You can pet the best -iarsnins of dealers who push our shock. u 15 January '2 14 per Cent. " 13 10 " February 1 11 " " 15 Ii " Starch 1 9 " 15, . . . . JH " TOT A Ii, 15 per cenr. We have paid to our customers in 75 dajra, fronts paid twice eaou moutn; money eau be withdrawn anytime; $2i to $1UJ0 can ba invested; write for Information. PigllEK. dcCO., Bankers and Brokers, 1H and Oroadnrar, New Vrk. Men A'eatly Classified. One of the ladies who addressed the committee of the Legislature on tba subject of women's suffrage made the following classification of the human kind: ; I divide mankind into four classes: First Those who do not know and do not know that they do not know ; these are fools leave them. Second Those who do not knot and know they do not know ; these are children teach them. Third Ihose who know and do not know they know ; these are asleep arouse them. Fourth Those who know and know they know; these are wise men fol low them. This is certainly a very wise classifi cation and everyone can satisfy him self an Lo which division h ought ta fall iato. Cleveland World. SELECT sirmus. Franoa has the largest national debt..-' ., ' ' In China the rolling of tea leaves is done by hand. 1 For the will and not the gift makes the giver. Lessing. Some wish they did ; but no man disbelieves. Young. . The best honey in Persia is collected from orange groves at Kanyeroon. The United States uses nearly one half of the quinine produced in the world. On the plains of Mature there is an oak under which legend says Abraham rested. f v The mines tributary to Butte City, Montana, have an output of $23,00O, 000 a year. In 1516 Francis I. gave his Queen the equivalent of $16,000 of our money to buy her a hat. Crucifixion is the method of sacriJ fice adopted iu the Benin country on the west coast of Africa. In the days of Roma's greatness many of the Senators had incomes as large as $800, 000 a year. Theophiius Bland, of Pitt County, North Carolina, has seven sons, each of whom weighs over 200 pounds. The Suez Canal is eighty-eight miles long and reduces the distance from England to India nearly 4000 miles for ships. Alaska's barbarian clans have dif ferent names at different periods of life. The final name is taken from an ancestor on the mother's side. The library of the late Comto de Liguerolle, only 4000 volumes, is ex pected to bring the highest price per volume of any collection of books ever sold in Paris. A cotton vest made from a piece of cloth woven 114 years ago is owiedby John B. Perry, of Dawson, Ga. Tho cotton was woven by Mr. Perry's great-grandfather. The publio library of Easthampton, Mass., has been presented with a wed ding dress over 100 years old. The garment is of "changeable silk" and weighs less than eight ounces. Yynacio Garcia, of Buena Vista, Cal., is 113 years of age, as is shown by incontestible records. He is erect and strong, and has the full use of his faculties. He settled in Los Angeles in 1825. The cheetah, or hunting leopard, 3 feet high, is in India considered invaluable in the chase. Hooded as hawks were of old, it is taken out to deer hunts. "When a deer or other animal is iu sight, the hood is re moved, and attention is directed to the victim. The cheetah dodges through the jungle, springs upon his quarry, and throttles him to death. Dog3 Fiercer Than Wolves. A pack of three wolves and two dogs are running together east of that city. Those who have observed the animals say that the dogs are the leaders of the pack, and that they are much more ferocious than the wolves. Tho dogs approach the ranches in a fear less manner, and bring the wolves up where they can do most damage. Laramie (Wyoming) Boomerang. State or Ohio, Crrr of Toido, Lccas County. f Frank J. Cheney makes oath that ho is thi senior partner or the lirmoC F. J. Chkney A Oo., doing fousineBH In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of C itafrh that. cannot be cured by tho use of H all's Catahhh Cure. ihank J.tjntNiY. t-wornto before me and subscribed in my presence, thu 6th day rf IJenerabisr. A. D. lS8b. )- , A. V. Gleason, seal Nntar-1 Piilt'ic. Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken internally and act directly on the blood and mucous nur f aces ot the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Chenky & Co., Toledo. O. ty Sold by Druggists, 7.rc Natubal eras has been found In largo quan tities near Fairfield, Iowa. Shlloh's Cnre Is sold on a ruaran tee. 1 1 cures Incipient Con sumption; it is toe Beat Cough Cure; ac., 50c., $1 It Is proposed to establish a linn of whale baok steamers to run between Baltimore, Md., and Tamplco, Mexico. Coughs, HnARSKXKss. Sore Throat, etc.. quickly relieved by "Bnncn's Itrtmchial 'lYitclte." They surpaoo all other preparations in removing hoarseneus. and as a cowih remedj; are pre-eminently ifte best. A crisis has arisen In France, unprece dented since the existence of the present Constitution. "I save.l $1" is swiset music t-3 tho husband. "1 ordered those pills, plasters ana soap. UBital nrice, obtained tnem bv mail for 1 from B. A. Hall, Charleston, fc C." Free catalogue. Cold weather has reduced the pressure in the natural gas fields around Celina, Ohio, and suffering is the result. ' A physician of South Haven, Mich., will make a voyage around tho world in a schooner 125 feet long, with a beam of about twenty-five feet. Mothers9 Friend txmm Is a Scientifically nrenarrl every ingredient of recognized value, and in constant use by the medical profession. These ingredients are combined in a manner hitherto unknown, and WILL DO all that is claimed for it, AND. MORE. Jt shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to Life of Mother and Child. 5fB y Express ea Receipt of Price, Si.so per Bottle. m Book to "Mothers' mailed FREE, Ssld ly All DruMtas. BRADFIELD Highest of all in Leavening Power. l 1 What ia Electricity I Probably no better answer can be given to the above query than the one that follows: It is stated that on one occasion when Professor Galileo .Fer raris, tho Italian scientist, whose name is known to all-electricians was asked by a young lady what electricity was, he ventured to answer it. Opening her autograph book ho wrote: "Max well has demonstrated that luminous vibrations can be nothing else than periodic vibrations of elcctro-magnetio forces. Hertz, in proving by experi ments that electro-magnetic oscilla tions are propagated like light, has given an experimental basis to the theory of Maxwell. This gave birth to tho idea that the lunviniferous ether and the seat of electric and magnetic forces aro one and tho " same thing. This being established, I can now, my dear young lady, reply to the question that you put to me : What is electric ity? It is not only the formidable Agent which now and then shatters and tears the atmosphere, terrifjing you with the crash of its thunder, but it is also the life-giving agent which sends from heaven to earth, with the light and the heat, the magic of colors and tho breath of life. It is that which makes your heart beai to the palpita tion of tho catside world, it is that which has the power to transmit to your soul the enchantment of a look and the grace of a smile. " Soientifio American. It will, porbaps, require a little stretch of tho imagination on the part of the reader to recognizo. the fact that the two portraits at tho head of this article are of the same in dividual ; and yet they ore truthful sketches mado from photographs, taken only a few months apart, of a very much esteemed citi zen of Illinois Mr. C. H. Karris, whose ad dives is No. 1,623 Second Avenue, Rock Island, HL Tho following extract from a let tor written by Mr. Harris explains the mar velous chance in hi3 personal appearance. Ho writes : 44 Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery saved my lifo and has made me a man. My homo physician says I am good for forty years yet. You will remember that I was just between lifo and death, and all of ray friends were suro it was a case of death, until I commenced taking a second bottle of Golden Medical Disoovery,' when I became able to sit up and the cough was very much better, and the bleeding from my lungs stopped, and before I had taken six bottles of the 4 Golden Medical Discovery' my cough ceased and I was a new man and ready for business. I now feel that it is a duty that I owe to my f oUow-men to recommend to them the 4 Golden Medical Discovery ' which saved my life when doctors and all other medicines f ailod to do me any good. I send to you with this letter two of my photographs; one taken a few weeks before I was taken down sick in bed, and the other was taken after I was well." These two pho tographs are faithfully re-produced at the head of this article. . '' Mr. Harris's experience in the use of ' Gold en Medical Discovery" is not an exceptional one. Thousands of eminent people in all parts of the world testify, in just as emphatic language, to its marvelous curative powers over all chronio bronchial, throat and lung diseases, chronic nasal catarrh, asthma, and kindred diseases. Eminent physicians prescribe ' Golden Medical Discovery ! when any of their dear ones' lives are imperilled by that dread dis ease, Consumption. Under, such circum stances only the moat reliable remedy would be depended upon. ' The following letter is to the point. It is from an eminent physician of Stamps, Lafayette Co., Ark. He sayi : 44 Consumption is hereditary in my wife's family : some have already died with the dis ease. My wife has a sister, Mrs. E. A. Cleary, that was taken with consumption. Bhe used Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery, and, to the surprise of her many friends, she got well. My wife has also had hem orrhages from the lungs, and her sister in sisted on her using the ' Goldra Medical Dis linimnt containing voluntary testimonials REGULATOR CO.. Atinnf. i, Ga.. J - - Latest U. S. Govft Report fKN , f? TVeiguinjr a Hair. . The delicacy of the scales used in the United States Mint is illustrated by the following. The renner oi me .. Assay Office Says r To number the hairs of your-heail is not a very difficult task. Avery ' close approximation can be made by : weighing the entire amount of hair , . on a man's head, and then weighing a single hair. The weight of the whole mass divided by that of one hair of average length will of course give the j desired number. If you "will pluck ' out a hair from your beard I can show you." . A long and straggling one wa ac cordingly' djtached, the refiner put ting it on a scale, which was inclosed in a glass case, and graduated with ex ! treme accuracy. I With little weights of aluminum ha . piled up one arm until an equipoise i was reached. The hair weighed three , milligrammes. . "If you reduce this to figures, " he ' said, "it would require eight thou sand hairs to weigh an ounce, and sup pose you have six ouncer, you hav forty-eight thousand." The first mention that can be traced of coffee in England was made iflthe year 1660. A duty of four pence per gallon was levied on the maker. , In 1635 the site of tho city of Boston, Mass., was sold for $150. covery.' I consented to her using it, and it cured her. She has bad no symptoms of con sumption for tho past six years. Teopla having this disease can take no better rem edy." Yours very truly, From the Buckeye State comes the. follow ing ; 44 1 was pronounced to-have consump tion' by two of our best doctors. I Spent nearly $300, and was no hotter. I concluded to try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. I bought and used" eight bottles and I con now say with truth that I feel just as well to-day as I did at twenty-five, and can do jurt as good a day's work on the farm, although I hod not done any work for several years. Truly, your friend, ... Mr. Dulaney 's address is Campbell, Ohio. 44 1 bad catarrh in the head for years and trouble with my left lung at the same time. You put so much faith in your remedies that ' I concluded to try ono bottle or two, and I derived much benefit therefrom. I used up three bottles of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, five bottles of your 44 Golden Medical Discov ery," and in four months I was myself again. I could not sleep on my left Bide, and now I can sleep and eat heartily. So long as I have ' your medicines on hand I have no need of a doctor ; I do not think my. house in order without them. . Yours truly, . . . , Marlow, Baldwin Co., Ala. If it would be any more convincing, w could easily fill the columns of this paper with letters testifying to the cure of the severest diseases of the throat, bronchia and lUngc, by the use of 44 Golden Medical Discoverv." To build up solid flesh and strength after the grip, pneumonia, ("lung fever"), exhausing fevers, and other prostrating diseases, it has no equal. It does not make fat like cod liver oil and its nasty compounds, out tolid, u holo tome flesh. , . A complete treatise on Throat, Bronchial, and Lung Diseases ; also including Asthma, and Chronio Nasal Catarrh, and pointing out successful means of home treatment for these maladies, will be mailed to any address by the World's Dispensary Medical Association of Buffalo, N. Y., on receipt of six cents in stomps, to pay postage.. McELREES WINE OF CARDUli A ST in is found an d. OtTiously; 7 tiact lik"- ; i v.
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 12, 1895, edition 1
4
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