THE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: FRTDAF. 'Ari.IL 13, 1M0. fjords of Praise From Prominent Doctor V "7 1 if 3 Perfect Health The perfect woman Is the woman who has perfect health. Beauty Is more than skin deep. Beauty 13 as deep as pure blood and a perfect digestion. Especially Is female beauty dependent on the perfect health of the delicate female organism. If you wish to have the beauty and attractiveness of perfect health. If you wish your eyes to sparkle, your complexion to resume Its brilliancy, and your whole body to thrill with the glow of renewed vitality, take that famous woman's medicine, MaLKntihara'sVegetableCorapound If you have headaches, backache, organic pains, painful or Irregu lar periods, or any female trouble, begin with Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound at once. It will save you need less suffering. It will restore your womanly beauty. Dba Mrs. Pink-ham: Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound cured me of severe and protracted case of female trouble. After the birth of my child this trouble began, but your Compound restored me to perfect health. My little girl Is now six years old, and I am a perfectly well woman, and as happy as a mother ceuld desire to be. I jive the entire credit to Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound. Mas. S. R. Beck man, Cor. Murphy Ave. and Whitehall St., Atlanta, G. No woman, vere she a Venus d Mllo, could continue beautiful vlth a dragging down female complaint. Mrs. Pinkham Invites all sick vomen to vrite to her for advice. For twenty-five years, Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-Law of Lydia E. Pinkham, has under her direction, and since her decease, been advising sick women free of charge. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Cures Where Others Fail TT CURRENT, LITERATURE. 'The Jungle, " by Upton Sinclair, Is In every respect the most during and most remarkable place or realism that has been produced la this country, und tt will doubt less make a profound Impression on the public mind. Its startling revelation or sordid working and living conditions In Pack'ngtown, Chicago, and Its searching expose of the packing Industry, are the re sult of a long, first-hand investigation, con ducted by Mr. Sinclair. lie spent seven weeks studying the stock yards alone. lie had no seed, practically, to study the lives of the people, because the Intimate study of poverty In the book Is the ex perience of his own life In New York and elsewhere. The writing of the book took over a year and a half. Mr. Sinclair made three visits through the big packing houses. The first was made as an ordinary visitor fc'ho la shown only the places where no laws are violated. The second was with the special correspondent of the London lancet, who had made a life-long studv of the oubject of abattoirs and ht declared that never In his life had he beheld such conditions as In the Chicago stock yards. Writing In the Lancet, he said that the conditions there were "a menace to the health of the civilised world." Mr.' Sin clair's third visit ' through the packing houses waa made with a young lawyer who Uvea. In Packlngtown, who has worked In the yards and who knew the watchman and spatters, so he was able to show him all the things that the la roan never sees. Mr. Sinclair lived and worked and talked with the stock yards people. He has written his story' with a power and atten tion to minute details that In the minds of those who have read the story, almost rank him with Zola. It la sn unforgettable book. "The Jun gle" narrates the adventures of a family of Lithuanian emigrants, which comes to America In search of a fortune and shows the conditions that turn the hero for a time Into a criminal and a tramp. So terrible was the picture painted and so serious the charges made against the conditions In the parking Industry that Doubleday, Page company, the publishers, sent a well known New Tory lawyer to Chicago to Make an Investigation of the facts. He reported that the book was true In every essential details. "The Bride's Primer" Is a series of par-i odl'ea on the ways of brides and their mis adventures. Interlarded with useful (?) hints for their advantage. The text is by Thornton V. Burgess and others, with an essay by Tom Mason. The Illustrations by F. Strothmann are In colors. The book Is bound in a gray cover with a characteristic Illustration and gilt lettering. The Phelps Publishing company Is the publisher and the book Is for sale to the trade by the Orange Judd company. New York City. "Two Young Crusoes," by W. S, Phillips. Is a clean, healthy book of outdoor lore and woodcraft, giving an account of the life of two boys, Freckles and Jaybird, through a summer's camping, fishing and hunting experiences on an Island in one of bur western rivers. It recounts their ad ventures in an Interesting and at the same lime instructive manner that appeals to he boy mind as well as to the older boy. Mr. Phillips has written soveral books that appeal to hoy's outdoor Instincts and is an authority on woodcraft and the ways of fish and game. Published by the Star Pub lishing company, Chicago. Many of our readers will, we think, be Interested to learn of the publication of Whist, a monthly magazine devoted to the games of whist and bridge, the Initial ls sje of which has Just reached us. The magazine Is edited by Harry H. Ward, who Is conceded the finest player In the world, and R. F. Foster, whose writings are con sidered at once the most interesting and authoritative on both these games. The seven associate editors are known to all enthusiasts as among the best whist play ers and writers In the country. Under such auspices Whist can not help being a great success. The April Issue, which Is a beautifully printed number of forty pages and cover, contains more than thirty con tributions, all of the most lively Interest. An Important feature is a series of prise SEYMOUR PARK FOR SI10PS Old Home of Dr. Miller Offered to Harriman for Motor Factory Site. SURVEYS MADE AND PLAN CONSIDERED Saearnaa Llaes May Connect Place with Omaha aad Colony of Homes Be Established Oat There. While definite plans have not been made, there is a possibility that Mr. Harriman may locate his new motor car shops on Dr. George I Miller's beautiful old home place, Seymour park, which Is about six miles southwest of tly heart of Omaha. Such a plan Is under consideration and as an adjunct to the plan projections of motor car lines to the park and site of the new shops are being considered. General Manager Mohler of the I'nlon Pacific Is devoting much time these days to consideration of the motor car. subur ban lines and the shops for the construc tion of the cars, destined to revolutionize suburban railway transportation. Mr. Mohler has made the statement that It Is the policy of the I'nlon Pacific, or will be. to utilize these McKeen motor cars. whose success has been established beyond a doubt. In building up suburban Interests, In forming, ss "It were, new feeders for the main lines, opening up new channels of trade and commerce Into Omaha and other cities and centers of commercial activity, and Mr. Mohler has even gone further and confided to a friend recently that It is to be the purpose of the I'nlon Pacific to ap ply this policy with special reference to the new Lone Cut-off which that company Is now building. Mohler Has Serveya Made. Since he made this assertion Mr. Mohler has had the engineers of the Union Pacific run surveys, three in number, from the Lane Cut-off to the south end of Seymour lake. Qne survey disclosed a maximum grade of one and one-half feet to the mile. This discovery la very gratifying to Mr. Mohler. Just what the details of the plans at Seymour lake are is not known, but a gen eral Impression has been given out. Ac cording to this It Is understood to be the purpose to establish the McKeen motor car shops there, buy part. If not all of the 300 acres snd more of magnificent property and provide means for establishing a colony of homes for the employes of the : shops and others. Then, In this connection, to afford quick communication with Omaha, thus making this colony but a suburban part of t metropolis. It is understood to be the plan to run a service of the motor cars back and forth, carrying passengers anil Unlit freight. Because of the local history attached to this beautiful tract and of Its healthful and picturesque location, wlde-stretchlng area. crowned with a forest, which Dr. Miller himself planted and hedged by a bright. clear body of water In itself forty-five acres In extent. It Is readily admitted the Mohler I plan has attractice features. Place of ntatorle Iatereat. This place once was the home of Dr. Miller. But It possesses even another In teresting touch of history. The central portion of the park was originally pre empted and owned by the late General .to; -'- a.v;..V:v:H;: ; : v S ' i r .- ' - , y :;. i " !v'::W-.' $N; :.-, '.k ,. .. " ' ' . : : $ :.Vk': y v. or- '...-......- .- .. : .?-. ..?.-!?xXv: tt i so. '.v.' . : v . Mrs. Dr. M. T. Pierce, of Woburn, Mass., whose unbiased opinion is based on the results of years of experience as a medical practitioner, unhesitat ingly commends and prescribes Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey for all cases requiring a pure tonic stimulant and health builder. Dr. Pierce recently celebrated her 86th birthday, in the best of health, sourrounded by a host of friends and relatives. In referring to Duffy's the dear old doctor writes: , - , "I have used Duffy's Pure Malt WTilskey In my practice for many years and. find It most beneficial in sickness, and especially where the system has been run down and weakened by the infirmities of age. At the present time I am giving It to a number ot old people, and It Is the very best Invlgora tor, health giver and tonic-stlmuant I can find for them. Plesse send me six more bottles."-Mrs. Dr. M. T. Pierce, U Mont vale Ave., Woburn. Mass.. November A MBS. DR. M. T. PIERCE Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey Is the most perfect Invlgorator for the aged, and the safeguard of the voung. More than 4.0TO old people state that thetr rusged health and sturdy old age are due to its regulHr and Judicious use. It Is prescribed by leading physicians, rec ommended by ministers of the Jospel and endorsed by temperance workers the country over as the best medicine ana sure preventive of disease. Duffy's cures consumption, pneumonia, grin, bronchitis, coughs, colds, sore throat, malaria, low fevers, nvspepsln. indigestion, constipation and every form of lung, bwoel and ktomach trouble. It aids digestion Inducea sound and wholesome sleep, enriches poor and Impoverished blood, quickens the heart's action, tones up snd Improves ttie circulation and brings the body back to normal health and strength, by going to the source of the disease, killing tha poisonous germs and driving them from the body. It Is the only whiskey recognized as a medicine, and contains no fusel OU. This Is a guarantee. CAI'TIOX When yon ask your drnaraUt or aroeer for Dailr'a Pore Malt Whiskey be ear yoa are ha sjeaa tne. It's the only absolute par medicinal TrhUkey, and la aolit In sealed bottle only silver la balk. LOO a bottle. lok for the trade mark, the "Old t'heraUt," on the label, and make sare the seal over the eark la anbroken. Dnrtor'i advice and medical booklet free. Dairy's Malt Whiskey Co., Boehester, K. Y. SPURT IN ACRE PROPERTY Tract East of Zrn? Park Sold for Forty Thousand Dollars. STRIP NORTH OF PARK UNDER A DEAL Real Ketate Men Flad Room for Great Encouragement to Omaha'a Interests In Sale of This Laai). problems on both whist and bridge, which Jhn M. Thayer. We Trust Doctors If. you are suffering from impure blood, thin blood, debility, nervous ness, exhaustion, you should begin at once with Ayer's Sarsaparilla, the Sarsaparilla you have known all your life. Your doctor knows it, too. Ask him all about it. Then do as he says. We have no secrets We publish the formulas of all our medicines. alaaa y I. C. Ayar Oa.. Imll, Iia. laa Mgsnlaalar af ATM a 1418 TIGOaV Fot tbs kail. ATM' PUXS-Fsr osattipstua. ATUnCJtakBirkCT3iai-aiaaaaa. AXBk't GUCUa-BJn aa4iO. are to be continued as regular features. Whist Is published in Boston. "Below the Dead Line," by Bcott Camp bell, Is a series of twelve detective stories concerning criminals operating In New Tork City. The "dead line" was the boundary line fixed by Inspector Byrnes, who ordered the police force to arrest every crook found south of Pulton street. below which the great diamond houses are located. Despite the watchfulness of the police a number of crooks, headed by an unknown but very clever criminal, suc ceeded In operating In this district for a number of years. It Is concerning their doings and ultimate capture that Mr. Campbell has written. The G. W. Dilling ham company is the publisher. "Seffy A Little Comedy of Country Man ners," by John Luther Long, author of "Madame Butterfly" and "Naughty Men,' is a story, whose characters have been chosen from among the country folk of a Pennsylvania German settlement, told In such a simply style and direct manner that It might be dealing with the court ship, marriage, disappointments and strug gle of real people. The book Is very pret tily decorated and Illustrated with full page picture by C. D. Williams. The Bobbs-Merrlll company Is the publisher. "The ouiiook," oy Lillian Whiting, au thor of "The World Beautiful," deals with the mystery of death- and relations be tween Ufa that now Is and that which Is to come, under such headings as "Delu sions of Death," "Realise the Ideals;" "Friendship, a Divine Relation;" "The Ethereal Realm;" The Supreme Purpose of Jesus;" "An Inward Stillness" and the "Miracle Moment." The bonk is published by Little-Brown ft company. "Psychology and Higher Life," by Prof. William A. McKeever of Manhattan, Is nooic wnicn might be characterized as a study of human nature based on psycho logic methods snd Insight. In every chap ter there Is made a strong appeal to the reader's nature. It will prove especially valuable to all who are Interested In self- siuay ana seir-oeveiopment, as well as all those who have the responsibility of rearing and educating children. Published by Crane ft company of Toptka, Kans. "The Athlete's Garland" is a collection of versa of sport and pastime compiled by Wallace Rice. The book is small stsed but contains about 100 selections and Is appro priately and neatly bound. Published by A. C. McClurg and company. "Meyer's Das Amulett." edited by C. C Glascock. Ph. D., Instructor in German, When It was made known to Omaha that Mr. Harriman, under a management dis tinct from the Unionl,.rciflc, would have built shops for th.e .construction 01 the McKeen motor cars. Omaha's enterprise Im pelled It to urge Mr. Harriman to build the shops In this city. Other cities went after them. Mr. Mohler, looking after Mr. Har- rlman's Interests here, aked the commer clal Interests of Omaha to appoint a com mittee to take up the matter and a com mittee of prominent men was appointed. Thus far no report of a completed mission has been made. Whether or not Seymour park will eventually be chosen as the site Is not known, but ,lt Is positively known that the property, or enough for Mr. Har rlman's use, has been offered for sale to him. A written proposition has been made and consideration of It Is pending. Fifty acres was decided on by Mr. Harriman and Mr. Mohler as necessary for the shops alone, without adjacent grounds. OMAHAN THINKS TWAIN RIGHT James C. Lindsay, In Describing: Kaplea and VeaaTlna' Light, Volcea Hamorlat'a View. James C. Lindsay, member of the Board of Education, visited Naples In 1883. In talking Thursday about the present erup tion of Vesuvius and of the city at Its base, he gave his impressions of the city as he found it. He said: "There is some reason in the trite saying of Mark Twain, 'gee Naples and die,' for with respect to scenes of beauty and grandeur, one has little or nothing to live for after seeing Naples in all its phases of lights and shades. "I had the pleasure of sailing into the harbor late at night, the darkness being lit up to a certain extent by Vesuvius away to the right, and the lights ot the city around In semi-circular form, produced a very pleasing effect. However, the night is nothing to the beauty of the sunrise on Naples; all the tints of the rainbow are seen with flashes of gold on tops of domes of cathedrals and other buildings, all all shimmering with their whiteness in the early dawn. Then the bumbo&ts come out to sell fruits to the ship's people and musicians sing and play for the amuse ment of the passengers, tha money thrown over to them being caught In an upturned umbrella, wide bien. "Pompeii ts some twenty miles from Naples. The effect upon one's reflective qualities going through it is such as Is not produced by anything else except, may be a graveyard. All sorts of curious sights are to be seen In Pompeii and Herculaneum and to preserve the places Intact as dug up most movables of value are taken to the Sheffield Scientific school, Tale university. National museum In Naples, where rooms an interesting novelette, Is here pre. sented for the first time with an Introduc tion, notes and vocabulary for American students. It contains a charming story, having as Its historical background the absorbing events Immediately before the massacre of St. Bartholomew. Because of Its beauty of style, its Interesting na ture, and its freedom from trivialities and sentimentality. Pas Amulett is well adapted for class-room work. The notes and vocabulary are ample. Published by the American Book company. "Ideals for Girls," by Mrs. Frank Learned. Is a series of talks on character, life and culture, which formerly appeared In serial form In the Delineator over the pen name of Priscilla Wakefield. They possess the charm of sn excellent literary style, combined with the Impress of a nobis and gracious personality. The subjects are well chosen and hold a wide range of interest, which with the qualities of helpfulness, high Integrity and sweet womanliness that they Inculcate must make the book of value in the development and strengthening of character. Published by the Frederick A. Stokes company- Above books at lowest retail prices, Matthews. 12 South Fifteenth lret. are set apart for their reoaption and ex hibltion. "Were It not for the fact the climate in and around Naples is so salubrious, there would be fewer people living about the mountain foot. My experience was tha every fifth man I met in Naples was churchman of some order or other, and begging or selling trinkets of little or no value seemed to be the staple trade of the city, and visitors are regard-d as game for plucking. For Instance, I gave a woman a gold sovereign for some British silver that she wanted to get Into smaller bulk and I bought some oranges snd paid for them: then she held out her hand fo something extra because I had obliged her. "The streets are narrow, for the purpose of keeping them cool. Limes and othe fruits grow In flower boxes on window sills ar.d there is a general evidence of nature being beautiful. "On going through the king's palace the things which struck me as most noticeable were the large pictures in tapestry .work ranged along the wails, each being some twenty feet long by perhaps ten feet deep, mostly portraying biblical aubjticts. "Everybody is happy, light-hearted and gay. Wine la cheap and they use It." 1 DIAMONDS-fcOoiui. Mitt eaii Harney. of sunny California were dissipated In his young mind when Patrolman La hey took him by the arm. Willie did penance all day Thursday In his night robe. Forty acres iust east of Krug park, be longing to Mrs. Flora Brown of Phlladel phia, are reported sold, though the name of the buyer Is not mentioned. The price named Is 140,000. The property ts but a short distance from the park, only the twenry-flve-acre tract of the Omaha Water company lying between. It has been in the Brown family since IS5 or 18d7, when the voting preacher, William E. Brown came to Nebraska and was persuaded to j buy eighty acres by his future father-in-law, who saw a future for Omaha. A tract of twenty-five acres was sold to the Omaha Water company in 18K7 or 18S8 for $40,000. Fifteen acres have been disposed of to other persons and Mrs. Brown now has but five acres in her possession. A deal is also said to be "on" for the forty acres of W. W. Morsman on the north of Krug park. In another direction from the city a man has had a tentative offer for acreage property of twice what he paid a year ago. All these things are Interesting to the real estate fraternity at large, as they In dicate a growing demand for acreage prop erty and show that acreage property close In is getting scarce. Real Eatate sales. The following sales have been reported by Robinson Ac Wolf: Southwest corner Twentieth and Paul to A. B. Alplrn. 14.100. The owner will build. House and lot at Twenty-fourth and Leavenworth, M. Rosenblatt to Dr. Philip Shor. 12,100. Pouthwest corner Fourteenth and Cali fornia to A. B. Alplrn, $2,500: transfer of same to snother person, $3,000. Store building and fiats. Twenty-sixth and Burdette, A. Cahn to M. Blank, $3,050. House and lot northwest corner Twenty- first and California, American Fire Insur ance company to Mrs. Weinberg, $5,2i0. Brick building and lot southwest corner Thirteenth and Dorcas, H. Welnstein to man whose name is not disclosed. George Wallace reports activity In west ern lands. He hss sold to George Gllmore of Omaha a section of land In Cheyenne county one and one-half miles from Sid ney at $5 an acre. George Hill has sold his house and lot at the southeast corner of Twenty-eighth and Chicago streets to Patrick McAndrews for fc'.SuO. George C. Johnson of Newman Grove, who will be manager of the Nye-Schnelder- Fowler elevator, has bought from the Byron Reed company a new dwelling b-ing built by that firm on Harney between Thirty- third and Thirty-fifth streets. The consid eration was $ti,400. P.OOSEVELT SAVES A LIFE President's Magnanimous Action Wins Llfe-I-ona; Gratltnde of Welsh and Wife. Harry Welsh, the prisoner at the county Jail who waa permitted, through the mag nanimity of the president of the United States, to go to St. Joseph In response to the pitiful pleadings of his wife, then thought to be In a dying condition, re turned to Omaha Thursday and Is back in his cell. County and federal officials In Omaha, though anxious to let Welsh go to his wife's bedside, saw no way of cir cumventing a peevish law, so the matter was taken up at Washington and after the attorney general presented It to President Roosevelt the chief executive declared the man should go and the president of the United States would stand responsible for violating the law. Welsh went. He returned a different man. Ills wire, so lar as medical science can tell, will live, and all the gratitude that two human hearts can oontaln Is welled up for the magnanimity of tha great, tender-hearted man at Washington who allowed no fetters of a grim, technical statute to stand between htm and tha pos sibility of saving a human life. 'I shall, for the test of my days, anil so will my wife, feel that President Roose velt saved her life," was Welsh's exclama tion upon his return. "Prison life is not a hsppy lot, but I go back In my celt with a light heart and a mind ridden of a bur den that was almost killing me." COAL CARRIED IN . MAIL SACK Baggage Fviii Colored Cltlsesi Leads to Hie Arrest and Detention. C. T. Lanier, colored, living at H7 North Twelfth street, was arrested Wednesday night while carrying coal In a government mall sack. The prisoner will be held at the city jail until Saturday, when th postofflce Inspectors will arrive here tfl make an Investigation of the case. Lanlet 1s charged with petit larceny for the present. He will not say where he found the mall sack. The man has been ar retted on numerous occasions for petit larceny. REMARKABLE EXPERIMENTS AND STUDIES ON THE STOMACH. How To Eat Properly. BT DR. ALEItTWE. NO GOLDEN GATE FOR WILLIE California Mast Walt Till Master Dickson Completes Peaaace In Ills Perjamas. Despite his youthfulness Willie Itickson, 7 years of age, appears to have well-defined Ideas about California and cleaning old brick. The boy, who is the son of A. Dickson of .112 Jones street, was found Wednesday evening crouched behind a pile of baggage In a baggage car of the overland train Just before it was due to leave Omaha. A rail road attache turned the boy over to Patrol man Lahey, who sent the little runaway to the police station for investigation. The little fellow was so hungry he readily de voured a meal provided for him at the jail; then he told his life story, hich seemed to mean as much to him as the more weighty affairs which come to men of years and experience. Wlliie said tne darkest hour of his life was the one when his father asked him to clean mortar from a pile of old brick. The boy's ambitions in life, evidently, ere in other directions, so after cleaning brick for ten minutes he picked up his cud anJ went down to the Union station, where he made his way to a recess behind a pile of baggage in a California-bound car. Master Dickson remembered his grandmother lived near the Golden (ite and he also re membered the pit's and cookies she baked for him last summer. He tnonght Omaha could struggle along without hint for am hile. He became murti rielevled m h. ji found tithiud the pil of Lagi;e. Yimu Not long a(?o Horace Fletcher pub lished a hook called "The A. B, 7,, of Our Own Nutrition," in which he advocated, "Do right the feeding of your body; Nature will do all the rest (or you aright." After a dozen year of uninter rupted experiments upon himself and upon dors, cats and otuur animals, Mr. Horace Fletcher concludes that the aver age human being eats tbrno times as much as Is good for him ; that by eating only onn-thfrd as much and masticating It even more thoroughly than by Glad stone's famous thirty-two bites of each mouthful, a person U assured of unfailing health, strength, contentment and lon gevity. In a word, he will have annihil ated the chief cause of all disease indi gestion. Mr. Fletcher conducted experi ments at Yale and Cambridge Universi ties, and made tests under the auspices of the United States Army. As a result of his experiment he advocates that people should Ignore false appetite and wait for a return of normal appetite, which Is Indicated by a desire for some particular simple food, accompanied by a watering of tho mouth all of which is good advice, but a great many Ameri cans, both men and women, are thin, pale and puny, with poor circulation, because they have already ill-treated their stom achs by hasty eating or too much eating, by consuming alcoholic beverages, or by too close cotitinement to home, office or factory, and in consequence the stomach must be treated in a natural way before they can ntctlfy their earlier mistakes. The muscles in many such people, in every weary, thin and thin-blooded per son, do their work with great difficulty. As a result fatigue comos early, is ex treme and lasu long. The demand for nutritive aid is ahead of the supply. To Insure perfect health every tissue, bone, nerve, tendon or muscle should take from the blood certain materials and return to It certain others. It is neces sary to prepare the stomach for the work of taking up from the food what Is necessary to make good, rich, red blood. We must go to Nature for the remedy, which shall be simple but effective. There were certain roots known to the Indians of this country before the advent of the whites whi -h later came to the knowledge of the settlers and which are now growing rapidly in professioual favor for the cure of obstinate stomach and liver troubles. These are found to be safe and yet certain in their cleansing and invigorating effivt upon the seoinach and blood. These are: Golden Seal root. Queen's root. Stuie root. Blood root. Mandrake root. Then there is Black Cherrybark. Tho mi-diciual principles residing In these native roots when extracted with glycerine as a solvent makes the nrt, reliable and efficient stomach tonic and liver Invigorator. Where there Is bankrupt vitality such as exhaustion, bad initritiou and thin blood the body acquires vigor and the nerves, blood and all the tissues feel tha favorable elloct. Although some physicians were aware of the hivh meJidnal value of the above mentioned plants, yet few have used pure gl ferritin in cuin-iinaliou. or as a solvent, and usually the doctors prescriptions called for the Ingredient in varying amounts, tcif aicJluti. Narlv forty years ago. Pr. Pierce found that chemically pure glycerine, of proper strength, was tet for extracting the medicinal properties from these root and that it gave added value to a tonie compound In resutring tone and vigor to tal effect which alcohol would give. Kn Dr. Pierce put up what he called Dr. Pierce i Uolden Medical Discovery. on of the principal Ingredients, Golden Seal root, suggesting tne name, l his prepara tion is of pleasant taste, agrees perfectly with rebellious and sensitive stomachs, and has sold more largely In tha past third of a century than any other medi cine put up for like purpose. Tha test oi tne merit ot a compound is its lasting Qualities. Medicines that depend upon the alcohol contained In them for their popularity have never remained long la favor. Dr. Roberts Bartholow, Professor la Jefferson Medical College of Philadel phia, a recognized authority on MaUrU Metlica and Therapeutics, ssts of Hy drastis (Golden beat root): "Very use ful as a stomachic tonic (stomach tonic and In atonic dyspepsia. Cures gastrin catarrh (catarrh of stomach) and head aches accompanying same. Const lpa tion, dependent upon different deficient secretions, with hard and dry stools, may be overcome by the remedy. Chronle catarrh of the Intestines, even if It has proceeded to ulceration, Is remark ably benefited hy Hydrastis. It may be given as a remedy for Intermittent, chronic and malarial poisoning, and enlarged spleen of malarial origin. It diminishes mucous In catarrh of tha bladder." From "Organic Medicines," by Grover Coe, M. D., of New York, we extract th following: "Hydrastis (Golden fceal root) exercises an especial Influence over mu cous surfaces. Upon the liver It act with equal certainty and efficacy. As a cholagogue (liver Invigorator), It has few equals. In affections of the spleen, and abdominal viscera generally, it la an efficient and reliable remedy. Also In scrofula, glandular diseases generally, cutaneous eruptions. Indigestion, de bility, dtarrhoa and dysentery, constipa tion, piles and all morbid and critical discharges." The "Golden Medical Discovery" not only produces all the good effects to be obtained from the use of Golden Heal root. In all stomach, liver and bowel troubles, as In dyspepsia, biliousness, con stipation, ulceration of stomach and bowels and kindred ailment, but the Golden Seal root used In Its com pound !Lg Is greatly enhanced in its curative action by the other ingredients mentioned above. Each of Its Ingredients has tha endorsement of those medical writers and teachers most eminent In thetr pro fession. A little book of extracts treating of oil the several Ingredients entering Into Dr. Pierre's medicines, being extracts from standard medical works, of the different schools of practice, will I mailed frit to any one ask log bv pos'al card or letter), for the saLie, addrewed to Doctor K. V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y., and giving the writer's full poet-office address, pUiiidy written. In cases of chronic ailments, attended by marked, or persistant, constipation. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellet should' he taken conjointly with the use of tha Golden Medical Discovery." to regnlat the bowels. 1 hey art in Larmoor with the " Discovery." and will be found to be a most valuable laxative, or, in fuller doses a cleansing cathartic. podoohyllln. the clple of Mandrake root, enters largely active mediefnat prln- lnu tbe composition of tha little sugar- coated "Pellets." In fact I ooe of their chief Ingredients. They regal t&a Vhe entire si.teiu wil&uul tLe detrluiqa-1 Hyf. tutu cb and bow