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Pon's
AMERICAN GRAPHITE

Pencils

Are unequalled for smooth, tough leads
that hold their points better and last
longer than any other pencil made. Men-
tion the PRIMARY EDUCATION, and send 16
cents for sanir les worth double the money.
JOS. DIXON CRUCIBLE CO.,
Jersey City,
New Jersey.

This book tells the teacher how to proceed from day to day.-What to have pupils do. What questions to ask. What answers to require. The book is for the teacher only, the pupils being provided with models which can be prepared by the

DRAWING

teacher and pupils from directions given in the book. Teachers are also enabled to pass an examination in Drawing by studying this book. The book is substantially bound and contains 180 diagrams and illustrations. Price 35 cents prepaid.

We have just added a chapter on color to this book, with questions at the bottom of each page, for the use of teachers preparing for examinations, Price of the book complete prepaid, 35 cents

Address THE EDUCATOR. 35 Exchange St.,

BUFFALO, N. Y.

This is a new book covering the whole, subject of color as required by the teachers' examinations, and having questions at the bottom of each page.

COLOR.

It also contains suggestions and devices for teaching color. Printed on laid paper, and elegantly bound. Price, prepaid 20 cents Address, THE EDUCATOR, 35 Exchange St,,

BUFFALO, N. Y. The best way is to study carefully the questions and answers used in previous examinations. For 35 cents we send you, prepaid a book containing the questions and

How to Pass An
Examination

answers of the Uniform Examinations in
New York state from Aug. '95 to Aug. 96, the
questions and answers in Drawing also
being given.

We also send with the book a supplement containing the questions and answers from August 1896 to and including March 1897, thus making. practically, two books for the price of one.

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KLONDYKE, THE WORLD,

LIKE DAYS OF OLD,
THE DAYS OF GOLD,
THE DAYS OF '49.

ALASKA.

TRANSPORTATION,
MERCHANDISING,
COLD MININC.

THERE IS UNTOLD WEALTH IN ALASKA. YOU CAN PARTICIPATE
IN THESE GOLDEN RETURNS AND CAN REMAIN AT HOME.

THE ALASKA TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT COMPANY.

Incorporated Capital, 85 000,000. Non-assessable.
HON. T. R. FOSTER, President.

FRED A. OTTE, Treasurer.

Is the largest and most ably conducted Transportation and Merchandising Company for the Alaska gold field trade in the world. Will have our

Own Specially Chartered Steamers Direct for the Gold Fields of the Klondyke and Alaska Generally. While we will send a certain number of men to the gold fields who will devote their exclusive time to discovering and taking up mining claims, and working them with the latest and most improved methods, our principal business and specialty is that of doing a

General Trading, Mercantile, and Transportation Business.

sold and used to advantage in a new mining country.
We will take with us an enormous stock of goods of all classes and descriptions that can be
We will control our own steamers and our boats and barges up the Yukon. We will also
have an overland route from Juneau, St Michael's or Dyea. We will be among the very first in the
field. This company is organized and conducted for mutual profit and mutual protection. The
names of our charter members, stockholders and directors are sufficient guarantee of the integrity
and solidity of this company.
Transportation and Merchandising is the Greatest Kind of a Gold Mine,
for no matter if the prospector is successful or unsuccessful, he must have food, mining outfits
and all other necessities of life. Being the largest traders, having the best supplied stores and
warehouses scattered all over the Klondyke region, we must necessarily do the business of the
country.
FORTUNES ARE MADE QUICKLY.

Fortunes are made in legitimate speculations. An opportunity of this kind has not presented itself since the California days of '49. Will you sit idle and see such chances pass you by, and will you be one of the people to say, "I had the opportunity, but I missed it"? Better be the one person to say, "The opportunity was presented to me and I grasped it." We need an additional million dollars within the next sixty days to develop and carry out our gigantic plans. You can come in on the ground floor-you can be one of the originators-be one among the first. A share of stock, its full face value, will be sold to you at the rate of

$1.00 PER SHARE (Non-Assessable.)

We are offering the public the grandest enterprise and investment of the day. Anyone with a small amount of money has an opportunity to make a fortune in this gold and trading expedition and can stay comfortably at home. Your investment is safe, profitable and, devoid of speculation.

We Will Earn in the Next 12 Months an Immense Income, Thereby
Paying Large Dividends to Our Stockholders.

Our company is composed of some of the most eminent business and professional men, such
as: HON. WM. E. MASON, United States Senator from Illinois; FRANK A. HECHT, of Chas.
Kaestner & Co., Chicago; ALBERT C. BLATZ, Pres. Val Blatz Brewing Co., Milwaukee; B. W.
GRIFFITH, Pres. 1st National Bank, Vicksburg, Miss.; D. G. EDWARDS, Pass. Traffic Mgr. C. H. &
DR. R., Cincinnati; CHAS. H. ROCKWELL, Traffic Mgr. Chicago, Indianapolis and Louisville R. R.
(Monon Route,) Chicago; W. C. RINEARSON, Genl. Pass. Agent Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas
Pacific R. R. (Queen and Crescent Route), Cincinnati; FRED A. OTTE, past 18 years with Shelby
Bank, Shelbyville, Ind.: HON. T. R. FOSTER, Fostoria and Vicksburg, Miss.; RUDOLPH M PAT-
TERSON, of Patterson, Shepard & Co., Chicago; SIDNEY B. JONES, City Pass. Agent Chicago,
Indiana & Louisville R. R., Chicago; WILLIAM A. BECKLEB, Northern Pass. Agent Q & C. Route,
Chicago; JOHN LEAHY. Gen. Southern Agent C., H. & D. R. R., Cincinnati; J. E. DOYLE, Mgr.
American Carriage Co., Kalamazoo, Mich.; HON. CHAS. H. HOGLUND, Chicago; J. M PHILLIPS,
Cashier, 1st National Bank, Vicksburg, Miss.; DR. ROBERT WALLACE HARDON. Columbus
Memorial Bldg., Chicago; J. B. LEGNARD, Capitalist, Chicago; HENRY H. FULLER, formerly of
Snow & Dickinson, Chicago.

Our first expedition will leave in April, arriving in the Gold Valley of Alaska in May. Our next expedition will follow within one or two weeks after the first, and after that our special steamers and special transportation facilities will follow each other at regular intervals. Everything that human ingenuity can devise or think of to crown our labor with success will be carried with us and done by our representatives. We shall almost at once commence the purchase of our supplies and our equipment, consequently you can become part of us and embrace this opportunity and make your own fortune, or at least an enormous profit, on a small investin ent You must act quickly, and the only way to act is to write us at once, stating how many shares of stock you want, enclosing currency, New York exchange, or in a registered letter, the amount of money to cover payment of your stock at the rate of $1.00 per share, and upon receipt of your letter and the money, the stock will be at once returned to you, with full retails, and you will be posted and kept informed from time to time of the progress of this company, and every month after the expedition has landed you will receive such dividends and profits as your stock is entitled to. This stock will be sold to a limited amount at par for a short period; if you are able to participate, do so at once.

Our transportation offer is the best before the public: $300 1st class Seattle to Dawson City, or
$600 i-cluding food for one year. Address and make all money payable to
The Alaska Transportation and Development Company,

Fisher Building, Corner Van Buren and Dearborn Sts.,
CHICAGO, ILL., U. S. A.

Send stamp for Alaska News which gives map and all information of Alaska.

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Buffalo, N. Y.

BOSTON,

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PROVIDENCE,

WORCESTER,

ETC.

Bound

THE SWEDISH SYSTEM OF GYMNASTICS.
By HARTVIG NISSEN, Instructor of Physical Training in the Public Schools of Boston.
in Extra Flexible Cloth. Price, 75 cents.
EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., 50 Bromfield St., BOSTON.

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NEW BOOKS.

PUPILS' OUTLINE STUDIES IN THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. By Francis H. White, A.M. Paper. Square octavo. 123 pages. Price, 30 cents. New York: American Book Co.

This is a book of Outline Studies, Maps and Blanks, intended for use in connection with the study of United States History. It contains an original and systematic combination of devices consisting of outline maps, graphic charts, and blanks for historical tables and summaries, for the reproduction of pictures, for biographical sketches, for studies in civil government, etc. It also contains valuable suggestions to teachers and pupils, and carefully selected lists of historical books and authorities for collateral reading and refer

ence.

Its use will encourage the pupil to observe closely, to select the leading and salient facts of history, to classify his knowledge, to inves tigate for himself, and to carry his investigations up to recognized authorities and even to original sources. It also furnishes opportunity and material for the best exercises and training in English composition.

The book is conveniently arranged for either class or individual instuction and may be used in connection with any text-book on United States History.

THE CHILDREN'S FOURTH READER By Ellen M. Cyr. Square, 12mo. Cloth. 372 pages. Fully illustrated. Boston: Ginn & Co.

The "Children's Fourth Reader" has been prepared on the same lines as the Second and Third Readers of this series. The plan adopted in the previous Readers of making boys and girls acquainted with a few of our great authors is continued in this book.

Sketches of Hawthorne, Dickens, Scott, Ten nyson, and Irving are introduced, amply illus. trated with portraits and pictures of the homes of these autors. Choice selections have also been made from well-known writ. ers, like Bayard Taylor, Mrs. Spofford, George MacDonald, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Thackeray, Eugene Field, Thomas Nelson Page, Helen Hunt Jackson, R. L. Stevenson, Charles Dudley Warner, Mrs. Ewing and other authors whose writings are especially interesting and instructive to pupils of Fourth Reader grade.

The book is illustrated with vignette portraits of many of the authors, in addition to a large number of original illustrations based upon the text and designed especially for this reader.

NEW FACTS ABOUT SOUTH
DAKOTA.

To enable the farmers in the Eastern States to pass the long winter evenings in an enter. taining and instructive manner, the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company has recently published for free distribution, a new pamphlet, finely illustrated with pictures which will delight the eyes of Eastern farmers, and containing letters from their brethren in South Dakota descriptive of their experience while tilling the soil and raising cattle, sheep and hogs in the "Sunshine State"

This pamphlet is well worth reading through from cover to cover. It will be sent free if you will send your address to either H. F. Hunter, Immigration Agent, 291 Dearborn Street, Chicago, or to Geo. H. Heafford, General Passenger Agent, Old Colony Building, Chicago, Ill.

- For map drawing let us send you something in the way of crayons and pencils that will please you. No charge. Address, Educa tional Department, Joseph Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City, N. J.

Enclosed please find check for $10.00 for which send me via Adams Express, School Library A with the changes I have marked. My pupils sold one hundred shares in two days.

TRYING ORDEALS FOR WOMEN.

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Mrs. Pinkham Tells How Women May Avoid Painful Examinations.

To a modest, sensitive, highstrung young woman, especially an unmarried woman, there is no more trying or painful ordeal than the "examinations," which are now so common in hospitals and private practice.

An examination by speculum, or otherwise, is sometimes a positive necessity in certain stages of many diseases peculiar to women, so at least it is declared by the profession. This would not be the case if patients heeded their symptoms in time.

If a young girl's blood is watery, her skin pale and waxy looking, her lips colorless, bowels torpid, digestion poor, her ears and temples throb and she is subject to headache, begin at once to build up her system with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Do not allow her to undergo a physical examination. Here is a letter from a young lady who requests that her name should not be used, but gives her initials and street number so that any inquiry addressed to her will be received. She says:

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"Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-It affords me great pleasure to be able to say a few words in regard to the merits of your Vegetable Compound. I was tempted to try it after seeing the effects of it upon my mother, and now I feel like a new person. I am a stenographer and was troubled with falling of the womb and female weakness in general. I continued to work until I was so weak I could no longer walk, and the last day I was forced to stop and rest.

"I was then so ill that I was compelled to stay in bed and so nervous that I could not hold anything in my hands. The least noise or surprise would cause my heart to beat so loudly, and I would become so weak that I could hardly stand. I suffered for almost a year. It is different now. I can go about my work with pleasure, while before, work was a drudge.

"Trusting that my words of praise may help some other afflicted person, and be of benefit to womankind in general, I remain, Yours in gratitude, L. H., 444 S. East St., Indianapolis, Ind."

WAVERLEY BICYCLES RUN EASIEST.

No owner of a Waverley Bicycle ever regretted his purchase. No rider of a Waverley ever felt that he possessed less than the best that could be produced.

INDIANA BICYCLE CO., Indianapolis, Ind.

SECURED PRIMARY SCHOOL LIBRARY

We may send for another Library or a part HAVE YOU of one, as the children have had more money promised if they want it.

Respectfully,

Mrs. D. F. ANDREWS.

If not, write us for particulars.

EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., 50 Bromfield Street, Boston.

"THAT TERROR of MOTHERS."

How it was overcome by a
Nova Scotian mother

Who is well known as an author.

Of all the evils that attack children scarcely any other is more dreaded than croup. It so often comes in the night. The danger is so great. The climax is so sudden. It is no wonder that Mrs. W. J. Dickson (better known under her pen name of "Stanford Eveleth,") calls it "the terror of mothers." Nor is it any wonder that she writes in terms of praise and gratitude for the relief which she has found both from her own anxieties, and for her children's ailments, in Dr. J. C. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.

"Memory does not recall the time when Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral was not used in our family, for throat and lung troubles. That terror of mothers-the startling, croupy cough-never alarmed me, so long as I had a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house to supplement the hot-water bath. When suffering with whooping cough, in its worst form, and articulation was impossible on account of the choking, my children would point and gesticulate toward the bottle; for experience had taught them that relief was in its contents."- Mrs. W. J. DICKSON ("Stanford Eveleth"), author of "Romance of the Provinces," Truro, N. S.

ART

C. J. Wooldridge, Wortham, Tex., writes: "One of my children had croup. One night I was startled by the child's hard breathing, and on going to it found it strangling. It had nearly ceased to breathe. Having a part of a bottle of Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house, I gave the child three doses, at short intervals, and anxiously waited results. From the moment the Pectoral was given the child's breathing grew easier, and in a short time it was sleeping quietly and breathing naturally. The child is alive and well to-day, and I do not hesitate to say that Ayer's Cherry Pectoral saved its life."-C. J. WOOLDRIDGE, Wortham, Tex.

These statements make argument in favor of this remedy unnecessary. It is a family medicine that no home should be without. It is just as efficacious in bronchitis, asthma, whooping cough, and all other varieties of coughs, as it is in croup. To put it within everyone's reach, Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is now put up in half size bottles, at half price-50 cents. Send for Ayer's Curebook (free) and read of other cures effected by Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Address the J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.

CRAYONS

FOR SCHOOL AND HOME DECORATION.

We have a limited stock of finely Lithographed Art Crayons of the following subjects, size about 18 x 24 inches. Usual price in Art stores, 1.00.

NOTES.

The Department of Superintendence, N. E. A., will meet at Chattanooga, Feb. 22, 23, and 24.

-State Supt. Charles R. Skinner of New York has just issued "Tabulated Statement of Facts Relating to the Organization of the School System of the Cities of the State."

-Osprey, an illustrated monthly magazine of ornithology, hitherto published at Galesburg, Ill., by Walter Adams Johnson, in association with Dr. Elliott Coues, is about to be transferred to New York City, where it will be issued in enlarged and otherwise modified form by the Dout leday & McClure Company.

The Century Company has gathered together from the pages of The Century Magazine a collection of portraits of celebrated people which are put up in a portfolio and entitled "The Century Gallery of One Hundred Portraits."

- William Lloyd Garrison, 53 Federal Street, Boston, as treasurer of a committee formed to further the work, solicits subscriptions for “A History of Woman," by George Willis Cooke, intended to be "a scientific study of her social, moral, and intellectual development."

The American Philosophical Society an. nounces that an award of the Henry M. Phil. lips prize will be made two years hence; essays for the same to be submitted before May 1, 1899. The subject is, "The development of the law, as illustrated by the decisions relating to the police power of the State." The essay shall not contain more than 100,000 words, excluding notes. Such notes, if any should be kept separate as an appendix. The prize will be $2,000 in gold, to be paid as soon as may be after the award. The essays must be addressed to Mr. Frederick Fraley, President of the American Philosophical Society 104 South Fifth Street, Philadelphia.

Education is in a fair way of flourishing i,

See our offer below. Order as soon as possible as this stock cannot be New York City. Over $300,000 has been approduplicated.

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Sir Edwin Landseer

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Charles Sumner.

W. E. Gladstone.

James G. Blaine.

General U. S. Grant.

Edwin Douglass.

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priated for increasing the salaries of public school teachers, and $10,000 for the vacation schools, next summer; and the increased appropriations for libraries are also a move in the right direction. The Harlem Library has been awarded $2,400 for the coming year by the Board of Estimate and Apportionment, the New York Free Library, $82,000 and the Aguilar Library, $41,000. The Board agreed to give other libraries the full amount allowed by the Richard Ansdell. law, as follows: the Pro-Cathedral Free Circu. F. Leigton. lating Library, $8,800, the University SettleLeon Olivie.ment Library, $4,000, the Washington Heights Free Library, $3,900, Maimonides Free Library, $9,500, St. Agnes Library, $5,000, Young Women's Christian Association, $5,300.

Heywood Hardy.

Meyer Von Bremen. R. Collinson. J. Hoffner. John Lucas. Meyer Von Bremen. Van Den Bes. Rubens. Raphael.

"Lawnfield," The Home of Garfield. (Lithographed in three tints from special drawings.) Washington Monument. (Printed in tints showing view of monument and surroundings.)

Send us your renewal, with $.25 extra, (total $1.25) and we will send you postage paid, neatly packed in strawboard roll, your choice of any of the above $1.00 Art Crayons.

EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY,

50 Bromfield St., Boston,

63 Fifth Ave., New York.

PRIMARY MANUAL TRAINING. By Caroline S. Cutler. Boston: Educational Publishing Co.

This is a suggestive and helpful little work for the teacher's use in intelligently guiding small fingers through the mysteries of me king. Beginning with a study of the type solids as a means of gaining the first form facts, the usual work under modeling, sewing, tablet exercises, paper-cutting, paper-folding and sticklaying are given, each emphasizing some salient point as well as adding variety. The work is evidently the result of practical school room experience, presented by one who thor. oughly appreciates the self-activities of the Ichild and his love of creating.-Art Education.

OUR 5 CENT CLASSICS. Such editions as your "5c. Classics" certainly places opportunities within the reach of poor children that thny might not otherwise secure. And frem a mechanical standpoint, they are equally worthy of commendation.

MARA DE BENARDI, Independence, Mo. You would be gratified to see how the "5c. Classics" delight my little pupils. They deserve to be, and are the most popular children's books of which I have any knowledge. LAURA M. PrOTT, Felmar Public School, Belmar, N J.

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PURIFIES

as well as

Beautifies

the Skin.

Removes Tan, Pimples, Freckles, Moth Patches, Rash and Skin diseases, and every blemish on beauty, and defies detection. On its virtues it has stood the test of forty-eight years; no other has and is so harmless, we taste it to be sure it is properly made. Accept no counterfeit of similar name. The distinguished Dr. L. A. Sayer, said to a lady of the haut-ton (a patient): "As you ladies will use them, I recommend. 'Gouraud's Cream' as the least harmful of all the skin preparations." For sale by all Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers throughoutthe U. S., Canada and Europe.

FERD. T. HOPKINS, Prop'r, 37 Great Jones St., N. Y.

AGENTS $100W

MONTH AND EXPENSES. WE FURNISH EVERYTHING. You work at home or travel, showing, appointing agents, and taking orders. Patented "Quaker" Bath Cabinet. 97,000 sold. Demand unlimited. Home necessity. Turkish, Hot Air, Vapor, Sulphur or Medicated Baths at Home, 8 cts. Purifies system, produces Cleanliness, Health, Strength. Prevents disease, obesity. Cures Colds, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, LaGrippe, Malaria, Eczema, Catarrh, Female 11ls, Blood, Skin, Nerve, Kidney troubles. Beautifies Complexion. Guaranteed best made. Price, $5. Wt., 5 lbs. Write today.Book Free. K. WORLD MFG. CO.,Cincinnati,0.

SEAT

Primary

Language Cards

SIXTY unique cards with index, prepared by one of Boston's most successful teachers. Useful for Spelling, Punctuation and Language Work. In a neat box. Price, 25 cents.

See Sample Card. (Reduced size.)

Educational Publishing Co.,

50 Bromfield St., Boston.

63 Fifth Av., N.Y. 211 Wabash Av., Chicago. 300 Post St., San Francisco.

WANTED-AGENTS represent us in the

following states, Oregon, Washington and Idaho,

stamps selling our Thirty Volume Library and Supplementary

Reading and soliciting subscriptions for POPULAR
EDUCATOR and PRIMARY EDUCATION.

EDUCATIONAL PUB. CO.,

300 Post St., San Francisco.

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The Problem of Life.

Every sensible doctor knows that the great problem of life and health is a problem of repair. If he could only find some means to repair the rapid waste of tissues in the human structure faster than it goes on, there is no disease which he could not conquer. He is like the alchemists of olden times continually seeking the one magical solvent which should turn all things into gold.

The wasting lingering diseases which come from deep-seated constitutional weakness completely reverse all the natural conditions of the organism. The waste increases to a frightful degree while every normal process of repair is entirely suspended. The drugs which are efficacious in some acute or merely local troubles are of no avail. The average practitioner has nothing in his medicine case which can cope with the disease.

It is in such cases as this that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery reveals its extraordinary power of restoring nature to her proper balance. It has the remarkable property of reaching and arousing the innermost springs of vitality in the human organism, enabling it to take up again and carry on to completion its own natural work of repair in spite of disease.

"I have thought for a long time," writes Mrs. Rosa Petty, of Lockville, Chatham Co., N. C., "that I would not do you justice if I did not write and tell you how I was cured of that dreadful disease called consumption, by using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. I had measles and pneumonia both at the same time and came near dying, and as soon as I was able to go out I was taken with grip and then followed consumption. My physician did all he could for my relief but I received none. I tried everything that I could hear of that was good for a cough but grew worse, and would have died soon had I not commenced using the 'Golden Medical Discovery.' I felt improved before the first bottle was finished. I took six bottles, and after that I felt better and stronger than in ten years before. That was six years ago, and to-day I do not feel any symptoms of a return of the disease. I remain cured, and I think I am the cause of a friend being cured by using the same medicine. He was afflicted like I was, and after everything else failed to cure him he took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and was cured."

This wonderful "Discovery" begins its marvelous repairing process at the very foundations of life in the nutritive system; it gives the digestive functions power to extract nourishment from food and transform it into rich tissue-building blood. It charges the entire circulating system with the vital red corpuscles which repair inflamed throat and bronchial passages; heal and renew worn out lung fabric; create healthy substantial flesh, muscular force and nerve power.

County, Tenn., writes: "I am over 58 years of
age. One year ago I was prostrated, and from
that date until the 15th of the following Janu.
ary I was treated by two as good physicians as
there are in the country. They pronounced
my disease thickening of the walls of the
stomach, a sloughing off of the mucous lining
of the stomach, enlargement of the liver,
neuralgia of the stomach, and ulceration of
the bowels. I had frequent attacks of bilious-
ness and was badly constipated. Thus matters
stood until January, 1895. The doctors were
doing me no good. Prepared chalk, Dover's
powders, calomel, would not reach my case.
My wife now got me a bottle of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery and a vial of his
'Pleasant Pellets.'

tivity and is ready for contagion of any de. scription. The "Golden Medical Discovery" is the best of all known liver invigorators. It will put the laziest of livers on a lope in no time. It makes your liver lively and your blood pure. It is the best of spring medicine. "I had been troubled for several years with spells of liver complaint," writes H. N. Dransfield, Esq., of Centennial, Monroe County, W. Va., "and about two years ago my health gave way. I tried Sarsaparilla. I was getting worse all the time. I had a weakness in my left side and limbs, palpitation of the heart at times, cramping pains in the stomach after eating, nerves weak, and no energy for any. thing. I took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and began to mend from the start.

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"The medicine taken, my wife said I was better, or at least was holding my own. She went back and got another supply; I took the medicine and then could see for myself that I was gaining. I have used in all twelve bottles of 'Golden Medical Discovery' and also, some of 'Pellets.' My biliousness has left me, constipation is gone and I am as regular in my bowels as I ever was. I was almost a skeleton. I lived for months on boiled milk, but now I It energizes and rejuvenates the entire sys. can eat a little of anything I want, sleep well, tem; drives cut impurities; restores strength, go anywhere I want to, visit my children and capacity and mental buoyancy; rounds out friends, and look after my business. In fact, sunken forms and gives fresh color to pale Richard is (nearly) himself again.' In May, cheeks. No other remedial agent known to after I was able to sit up a little, I weighed 116 medical science is so marvelously efficacious pounds, in August, 122, in October, 132." in bringing back complete, robust, permanent When a man's liver is out of order he is ripe health to the weak and suffering. for almost any disease that happens along. Mr. A. W. McMillan, of Shiloh Church, Sevier His entire constitution is in a state of recep

I soon felt like a new person. I am now enjoying splendid health and have a splendid appetite, good digestion, and also a peaceful, quiet mind."

As Chief Consulting Physician to that renowned model sanitarium, the Invalid's Hotel and Surgical Institute of Buffalo, N. Y., for the pas: thirty years, Dr. Pierce has had an unpar alleled experience with severe chronic diseases. His remarkable book, "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser," should be possessed in every home. It is a magnificent thousand-page volume, illustrated with more than three hundred engravings and colored plates. It will be sent absolutely free, paper. bound, for 21 one-cent stamps to pay the cost of mailing only; or substantially cloth-bound for 31 stamps. Address the World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St, Buffalo, N.Y.

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