X 
ADVERTISEMENTS. 
IF IT BE POSSIBLE, AS MUCH AS IN YOU LIES, STUDY TO LIVE AT PEACE WITH ALL MEN. 
WAR! 
" O World ! 
O men ! what are ye, and our best designs, 
That we must work by crime to punish crime. 
And slay, as if death had but this one gate?''— 13 1 m.»- 
THE COST OE 1 WAR — " Give me the money that has been Bpent in war. and 
I will purchase every foot of land upon the globe; I will clothe evcy man, 
woman, and child in an attire of which kings and queer.s would be proud ; I will 
build a schoolhousc on every hi I Iside and in every valley over the whole earth ; I will 
build an academy in every town, and endow it; a college in every State, and will fill 
it with able professors ; 1 " ill crown eve' y hill with a place of worsh p consec: atert to 
the promulgation of the gospel of peace; I will support in every pulpit an abie 
teacher of righteousness, so that on every Sabbath morning the chime on one hill 
should answer the chime on another round the earth's wide circumference, and the 
voice of prayer and the song of praise should ascend, like a universal "holocaust, t" 
heaven." — Richard. 
" WHAT IS MORE TERRIBLE THAN WAR? 
Outraged Nature. She is never tired of killing, till 9he has taught man (lie terrible- 
lesson he is so slow to learn— that nature is only conquered by obeying her. . . . 
Kature is fierce when 9he is offended, as she is bounteous and kind w hen she is obeyed. 
Ah, would to God that some man had the pictorial eloquence to put before the mothers of England the mass of pre- 
ventable suffering which exists in England year after year ! " — Kingsley. 
How much longer must the causes of this startling array of preventable deaths continue unchecked? 
FOR THE° MEANS OF PREVENTION, AND FOR PRESERVING 
HEALTH BY NATURAL MEANS, USE 
ENO'S "FRUIT SALT," 
prepared from Sound Ripe Fruit. You cannot overstate its great value in keeping the BLOOD PURE ; as a means 
of keeping the system clear, and thus taking away the groundwork of Malarious Diseases, BLOOD POISONS, and 
all Liver complaints, or as a HEALTH-GIVING, COOLING, and INVIGORATING BEVERAGE, or as a gentle 
Laxative or Tonic in the various forms of Indigestion. 
AT HOME, MY HOUSEHOLD GOD ; ABROAD, MY VADE ME CUM. 
A GENERAL OFFICER, writing from Ascot on January 2, 1886, says : " Blessings on your 'FRUIT SALT !' 
I trust it is not profane to say so, but in common parlance 1 swear by it. Here stands the cherished bottle 
— my little idol — at home my household god, abroad my vade mecum. Think not this the rhapsody of a hypo- 
chondriac; no, it is the outpouring of a grateful heart. The fact is, I am, in common, I daresay, with numerous 
old fellows of my age (67;, now and then troubled with a tiresome liver. No sooner, however, do I use your 
cheery remedy than exit Pain — 'Richard is himself again.' So highly do I value your composition that, when 
taking it. I grudge even the sediment that will always remain at the bottom of the glass. I give, therefore, 
the following advice to those persons who have learned to appreciate its inestimable benefits : 
" When ENO'S SALT betimes you take, j ' But drain the dregs, and lick the cup 
No waste of this elixir make, i Of this the perfect pick-me-up." 
WRITING aga ; n on January 24, lSSS, he adds : " Dear Sir,— A year or two ago I addressed you in 
grateful leeognition of the never-failing virtues of your world-famed remedy. The same old man now 
salutes you with the following : 
" When Time, who steals our years away, ! Eno's ' FRUIT SALT ' will prove our slay, 
Shall steal our pleasures too, And still our health renew." 
TpEVERS, BLOOD POISONS, &C— " Egypt— Cairo.-Since my arrival in Egypt in August last, I have 
- 1 - on three occasions been attacked by fever, from which, on the first occasion, I lay in hospital six weeks. The 
last attacks have been, however, completely repulsed in a short time by the use of your valuable . FRUIT SALT,' | 
to which 1 owe my present health at the very least, if not my life itself. Heartfelt gratitude for my restoration I 
and pres-rval ion impels me to add my testimony to the already overwhelming store of the same, and in so doing I 
feel that I am but obeying the dictates of duty. Believe me to be, Sir, gratefully yours, A Corporal, 19th 
Hussars.— May 26, 1883.— Mr. J. C. Eno." 
Caution. -Examine each Bottle, and see that the Capsule is marked ENO'S "FRUIT SALT." 
Without it you have been imposed on by a worthless imitation. 
SOLD BY A LL CHEMISTS. Directions in Sixteen Languages HO W TO PEE VENT DISEASE. 
Prepared only at ENO'S "FRUIT SALT " Works, London, England. 
