Newspaper Page Text
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment.
A Cure {■:. the Ailments of
and Beast
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the
Farmer, the Stock Raiser, and by every one
requiring an effective liniment.
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
This well-known remedy has stood the test of
years, almost generations.
L > medicine chest is complete without a Mottle of
Mustang Liniment,
Occasions arise for its use almost every day.
All druggists and dealers have it.
The Singer Manufacturing Co.
7 he Sewing Machine Makers of the World
After making and Silling over 9,003,000 Macfciue*, have just brought out
THHEEWONDERFUL LIGHT RUNNING NEW OSCILLATOR,
“EWING ULBNT MACHINES VIBRATOR,
AUTOMATIC.
Especially Adopted for Family use.
In Elegant. Convenient and Artistic Cabinet Work, with our new (Patented) Staud
ami all the Lateat Attachments and Modern Improvements.
The Singir po<«< ties every good quility neceesary for a sewing macliiue, and is
unequal*a for perfection of stitch, range of work, ease of operation, speed and dura*
bility. Three quarters of all the machines sold throughout the world normally are
Siugers.
Machines sold on Easy Installments.
Parties laving old Singers can exchange them for improved Machines on good Verms.
.1. R, WILLIS, Agent for Gilmer County. Ellijay, Gr.
Singer Manufacturing Co.,
101 E. 8th St., CHATTANOOGA, Ten*.
CAUTION.—Our latest Machines can be obtained only from our office or from
authorised agents. 6ino.
^ ukeSucces s*:^ fHow (T^auSo^TELL ToJSetTHE ^
r |F to^wcctto^ ^ W Jl LLUa l lin.liUH&.T ta
You want [LAANY^COLORED n.ATES-1
VlGETA&LES^SEND)^ tw»TH T*lOtVf.RS Oft S8R«» » ryzcos^orjH^Gv/Dt:*}
A r~, W L y— THE^.r 9
^-lOcayro* '-TlORALGu ^ick’S^ IDE:' ^ canIbctieducti: FRoA'rtRST ORDERS M JAMES VICKS SorU ’
U Rochester,N.Y.
OVER FORTY 1892 NOVELTIES.
.;trir.W' ’"Ppy. ES5. packet...........................15«. O tinier en Rea " Charmer.’’ packet.....................1 ■“IS:
« r amt Dot; D raw, both u&tsi for......... Potato ** American Wonder.*' i>er H>.............;
» IUw Cbrvwi intbrninro*, each ( set $2.90 Pansies, our superb strain, look almost hu¬
S Choi,’. (,t>rn nlums, each It5c.t set............1.00 man Packet................................. ■ 31k’.
Sweet Corn Golden Nugget.’ packet.........l.'*c. Extra choice, packet........................... .’ijc.
Amy mt not mow a subscriber can have JAMES VICK’S SONS,
’%’lck'M Magazine on* yor free, who or -
•
I
j
j 1
;
Capacity 400 Machines per Day
FOB TERMS, ETC., ADDRESS
DAVIS SEWING MACHINE GO.
BAYtOB, O. CHICAGO, XX.X..
PRIYATELYING-IN-DEPARTMENT"
la she worth saving? If abe wm your daugh
Ueyon d woo!«i certainly uy yen! Da«to*n un.
Ku rd moment, under rolenm prom so of
mvrrisgs, * lady find* her* If in a c >u j ition to
“ ibatb bormif and fiinily, unless aome
During the pei iod of gojtarion
jnt, we offer to this class of uofor
•n is elegant obser^e^, home In which tho
1 privaev and under iho im
i care of skillful pByaloian*. and a staff
Addre *. 0. W. PARKEit,
The Gool Hanurltan Wani n
rry Btreet,
BUSINESS EDUCATION.
IKsSElSl
Of Ker.tnclry University, LEXINGTON, KY.
N. IV. Corner JI*IV nml 1TPKB Htrccta,
oitpiMitc Court House.
WILDUR R. SMITH, President.
£7* Cheapest* Bout and High cot Honored Collcffo.
K. W. h \r. R. fcmlth. o^oopt of th!« Cnflfox?, rteHvM »h« Gold
W* dBl anl Diploma of II »nor s»i World’* Exposition, f<»r
R*»Ii*m of BooU-IvItidudiuit OrnoriAl B«i*Jnc9«i
FUlupatVon# Nfarlv 1000 Kl:idrnt« In oltondotici* the p%«t Tear,
from hi ttt&to* and Foreign Countries. 10,000 Graduate*
in 11 Tr«r.h*rs •mt*lorcd. Burl new* Course eomUt*
of Honk k'-pfiln?. Arithmetic. Priinisnihlo, Commercial
Law, McrchavlUlm. Btutmn Fmorl<v\ Banking, KYoreantllo Joint Htock, Corrr*pi»«ulenc#, M;.ouf*3turhm,
H»»lf»oa*Cotirafi, ew.
('o»t c»f Full l»ioladl«f Tultl i*. flt.ntioni*rjr
0 Writing ’itl B»srd in and a ulno Telegraphy famllv. shout$00. Nhort-Hnnd. Type
t<*jmher» arid he Ink nnt Rpcrlaltlrai alone with liava the Busin**** special
and room*, can an or
Cour«e. C^lferehanta' &p*6lnld*fNurtmaft( Hpocial Conraaof for I,n<1l**«. Book-Keeping, Lady Principal fl«». ovnftloved. 0~/*B»si*
n«M Arithmetic and Penmanahlp night. when taken alone, $5 per month.
Coll nllegO ago open op*»n 4*? ind Htu<i**i.*f» Ien»a received r<c*-i on easr pay
enta. far (T7* A rran dalle orOffH «nta can attend h« nd made thia this with Collars*. Colleen. Kttlirnad N» Com
ytnles flan. F.ntef a Oradintaa f»*«« to auceenafnl. fly For circiri* vaca- vne
now. Kyi
addre-a WIMILil U. HM1TII, Pr*«% Lexington,
■ m pal Who *ftm Weak, Nervous,
UL Ihbili tated, who in folly an l
■ Wa ■■ ™ i>jn«irance have trifled away
■ their vigor of Body, Mlod
and Manhood, Headache, causing terrible Backache, drains Dread- up n
ihn well* of life,
ul Dreams, Weakness of Memory, Pimples early un
on the fane, and all the efftots leading to
d cay, Consumption or Insanity, send for
BOOK OF Li Ft!, (scaled) free with part'n
ulars of a home cure, NO CURE NO PAY.
BR, PARKER, B40 A. < harry, hanh
vlile, jTean.
DEFORMITIES!
Spine, Cross Eye*, I lyre Lip, Curvaturoof the
Club Feet, Hip Joint Disease, and
all deformities of the Hands, Arms, Legs
and Feet, radically cur- d.
DISFIGUREMENTS.
Etc., Superfluout Hair, Wine Marks, Moles,
puiniesslv und perfectly removed.
StDd for valuable trtatise on the above.
Address, C. W. Parker, M. D.,
lyr 340 N. Cherry St., Nashville, Tenn.
BROKEN DOWN men and Wom¬
CHROMU en autf-ring DISEASE, fr.'m any form of
can secure a val¬
uable wor* on their effletion (sealed)
free, »nd learn bow they can be cured at
84'tN.Cherry home, by writing Street,Nashville,Tenc. DR. PARKER & CO.. Bet¬
ter «rite today, delnya are dangerous.
Please state your trouble and how long
afflicted. lyr.
Some Clever Smuggling.
One of tbe most clever frauds ever per¬
petrated upon the revenue was practiced
by a diamond merchant in New York.
For years he was known to be smuggling
precious stones, but the custom’s detec¬
tives could not catch him. Every time
he returned from Europe he was carefully
searched, and it waa even proved that he
did not swallow his diamonds before go¬
ing ashore, but never was anything found
except a few inferior stones, and these he
did not attempt to conceal. Traps were
set to capture the wily old culprit but
without avail. At last a detective learn¬
ed that, whenever one of the members of
the suspected firm ty rived in New York
upon a certain steamer, another member
or the firm * r an a<_eat took the same
state room upon its return trio. It was
further learned that lie invariably took the
entire state room,* so thithc was alone
upon a voyage. This led to the discov¬
ery of the fraud.
It appears that the importer, when on
his way from Europe, would cut a small
piece out of the flooring under the car¬
pet of his stateroom, aud, after conceal¬
ing the diamonds to be smuggled, would
put back the flooring aud replace the
carpet. When he left the ship he left
the diamonds, ton, in their place of con¬
cealment, and of course the detective
never found any in his possession.
A few days afterwards, when the ves¬
sel was about to sail for Europe, the
other member of its firm or its agent,
having secured the state-room for tho
return trip, would go on board accom¬
panied by his confederate. The latter
would then remove the diamonds, and
go ashore perfectly safe. There were no
custom officers on active duty when
vessels were d pirting.
Facta Worth Knowing.
Q. Is Alabastino expensive?
A. No, tho it is the cheapest article for the pur¬
pose on market.
Q. How is that? Cannot I purchase kalso
mines at a few cents per pound ?
almost A. Yes, kalsomines can bo purchased at
Q. Why any then price.
A. the is Alabastine less expensive?
In first place a package of Alabastine,
costing surfaco a that few cents more, will cover double the
Q. What a package of kalsomino will.
other advantage has Alabastine
that kalsomines do not possess ?
A. Alabastine is entirely different from all
kalsomines. itself It is manufactured from a base in
a cement, and when applied to a wail sets
hard.
A. Q. How do kalsomines differ from this ?
Kalsomines are made from whiting, clays,
chalks or some iitrt powder for a base and are
entirely tho wall. dependent on animal glue to hold them
on
Q. A. What In are the the results?
hardens one cose Alabastine being a cement
with age, and the kalsomines as soon
as the glue, which constitutes its binding
quality, nothing to decays, hold it rubs the and wall. scales off, as it has
on
Q. Does off Alabastine require washing and
scraping beforo rccoating?
A. No, Alabastino w}> n once applied to a
clean surface can be recoated for any length of
time without having to wash or scrape the
walls.
who has
been s washed
and have scraped, all whether it will bo m desirable ____Hi improved to
of this overcome, and walls
instead of -p 4/«d by coating ng them. tnei
Q. A. How From can I get Alabf paint eastme?
your local pa dealer. If he does
not keen it in stock, and tries to sell you some¬
thing Alabastine, else, tell him you are determined to try
and if he will not keep it you will
get it elsewhere.
Did Not Fill the Bill.
Old Lady—“There is one thing I no¬
tice particularly about that young man
who calls to see me. He seems to have
an unborn, instinctive respect for woman.
He treats every woman as though she
^ere approached a.beiner from with a higher sphemto be
only uuuusc deli
naotr cacy aud onn deference.’ noforonna "
Granddaughter (sweet eighteen) —
“Yes, he’s horridly bashful.”—New York
Weekly.
No Heirlooms.
Mrs. Maiflour (after proudly showing
her farailv treasures to new neighbor’s
heirlooms little daughter)—“Have you any such
at homo, my litt’e dear?”
Little Dear (wi h dignity)—“No’m, I
guess our folks was always rich ’nough
to trow away their old things an’ buy
new ones.”
For Impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Mala¬
ria Neuralgia, Indigestion, and Biliousness,
take Brown’s Iron Bit'era—it gives strength,
making strong;. old persons lea feel young—and young
persons -ant to take.
We must tramp on our feelings when prin¬
ciple is at stake.
wane TiUbroolc
Sou of
Mayor McKeesport, Tillbrook Cured ot
of Pa.,
Scrofula in the Neck
By /food’s Sarsaparilla
All parents whose children suffer from
Scrofula, Balt Rheum, or other diseases
caused by impure blood, should read the fol¬
lowing from Mrs.J. VV. Tillbrook, wife of
the Mayor of McKeesport, Penn..
"C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass.:
"My little boy Willie, now six years old, two year*
ago had a
Bunch Under One Ear
which the doctor raid was Scrofula. Aa it coni In -
ued to grow he finally lanced It and It discharged
for some time. We then began giving him Hood’s
Sarsaparilla and he Improved very rapidly until it
healed up. Last winter it broke out again and was
followed by
Erysipelas
We again gave him Hood’s Sai sapnrira with most
excellent reeulla and he has had no further
trouble. Ills cura la due to the use of Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla. He has never been very robu»t, but now
seems healthy and dully growing stronger.
The doctor seemed quite pleased at bis appearance
and said he feared at one time that we should
lose him. I have also taken
Hood's Sarsanar lla
myself and am satisfied that I have been helped by
It.” Mas. J. W. TiixmtooK, Fifth Are., McKeesport.
Hood’s Pills are purely vegetable, perfectly
harmless, do not gr.pe.
If you havo no appetite, Indlgesti “®U 1 on,
| down” Flatulence, Kick-Headache, run |
or losing flesh, tako
jTuffsTmy 9 They tone up the weak stomach Fills? and Vf?
build up tho flagging energies. 2Ac.
• • • «
KEYSTONE l oa la a ion in 5 minutes.
Haves tirno, work, men,
HUY bsy. .* troii r, durable, light
draft. Send for deacrl tion.
LOADER KEYSTONE M’f’B CO..
Sterlin g , 111,
t iliO.NTII for a Krfirhi Y <*WlU4
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
KEEPING BEEP AND PORK.
It is much harder to keep beef through
the year without spoiling beef than it is usually pork,
probably because the has
more lean meat in proportion to its fat.
It is the lean of meat that taints soonest,
though once begun it quickly spreads
through the whole. Henceft is often re¬
marked that in it barrels is almost thatLjave Jfmpo8sible to
keep pork held beef.
Nine times out of ten th«e beef barrels
are more or less tainted, and as the wood
is porous, it is almost impossible to en¬
tirely purge them of it. 1
TABLE RUNNERS.
“Tablo runners” is the new name for
the embroidered centers introduced down
tbe middle of the table. Linen strips,
with the laburnum flower and pods in
green and white wash silk, are artistic
and pleasing. Zulu cloth forms a good
ground-work for the more elaborate run¬
ners, on which is wrought most beautiful
embroidery in lace stitches and darned
work with jewels introduced in the pat¬
tern. Congress canvas is also used,
wrought in bold aud decided patterns of
corn flowers in blue. Holland is oc¬
casionally used, worked with wash silks
or flax, and Holbein and Russian em¬
broideries are Time3-Demcfcrat. very much employed.—
New Orleaus
STOPPING A LEAK IN A SAUCEPAN.
“I do not know if one way of stopping
a leak in a saucepan is generally known,”
says a young housekeeper, “but it
struck me as original, and it is certainly
very simple and efficacious. I went into
the kitchen the other day and saw that
my cook, who is French, had something
) simmering on the fire. As she was
i pouring it out I saw a white rag at the
I bottom ot the saucepan. “What is that,
I | Pauline,” I said. “Oh, did madame
never see that way of mending a hole?”
' she explained. “But see, it is very
simple,” and she pulled out the little
piece of linen and showed me quite a
large hole in the agate pan. “I put the
corner of a bit of linen through so,” she
went on “and then I pull it until the
fullness is jammed very tigh;; then with
a knife I cut it off on each side, and it
holds perfectly.” “But I should think
it would burn,” I said, lilt never does,”
said Pauline, “but I dout know why—
perhaps because it remains wet—voila!”
—New York Tribune, i.
POLISHING FURNITURE.
Varnish is not a desirable finish for
auy kiad of furniture on account of the
ease with which it is scratched. . A polish
equal to the be3t varnish is made iu this
way. If necessary to fill the gram of
the wood use boiled linseed oil warm
and add to it enough corn starch to
make a thin paste. This is well rubbed
into the wood with a flannel rubber,
giving time for each coat to be absorbed.
Then melt in a suitable vessel, a tin cup
or can will do, two ounces of white or
clean yellow wax. Add to it while
liquid four ounces of pure spirits of tur¬
pentine, and stir until cool. This is ap¬
plied to the wood and is thoroughly well
rubbed with a soft flaunel rubber until a
brilliant surface is male. When the
polish becomes dull, repeat, ‘durable anl in tim?
; a very fine surface .Bad varnish nrd-i .
tuiuVill not os Scratched * Easily is 1
cured. - Antique oak thus treated _ takes \
a very high polish, and gradually beeomes
darker. The dark dolor of very old oak
is made by applying (Sulphuric acid to
the wood, by which the surface is oxi¬
dized aud acquires £?ne appearance of
wood that is two or centuries old.
The darkened surfaceT’Then smoothed
with fine s md paper azsd polished in the
for way old above furniture mentioned.^ is only The revival present of fad
a one
that was popular about fifty yetrs a to.
Most of it is made as Aere described.—
New York Times. |
'
RECIPES. f
Pallets for Tea—Three 'eggs, one
cup ef sugar, two-thirds of a cup of but¬
ter, one pint of P’ < t, three pints
of flour, three teasjn mi ffltuls of baking
powder. Bake in n-rings and serve
warm. r4
Crust for Tarts- one teacupful
of pinch lard into of salt. three Beat teAgA^fuls tn ;Shite of of flour and
a one egg
slightly, to it, and add mix five it into teasi^oafuls ' flour. of Do water uot
mix flaky more than necess; jr, and it will be
a cru3t.
of Orange butter to Pie—Add teacuj.fui ^ C e tablespoonful
one of sugar and
stir to a smooth cream; Grate the peel
of one orange, extract the juice of two.
Beat and rind, four eggs the creamed thoroughly, add the juice
j butter and sugat
and one pint of cream whipped to a stiff
froth. Bake with on4 crust iu a slow
oven.
Plain Outlets—Beat; four eggs very
light. * Have ready a K,to j aa 0 f hot butter,
pour tho beaten eggs it, and fry it
till is of a fine brown )a the under side,
then lap one half ovtr x the other, and
serve it hot. Just buforc you lap it,
sprinkle a little salt and pepper over the
top. Chopped parsley t)Mj qr o lion may be
mixed mixed with —^'"fore it is
fried. -()ae of , hue *
„ bried . , ~ ^ ® m ’ CU P
Corn a D9 a ‘}easpoon salt, two
white meal, one-half f piut boili milk
tablespoons sugar, eighth on<y ^ east cake> ^ ^
two ’
eggs one 8alt and ,
stiffen- Mixthe me iu milk;wheD
Add gradually the b igoIve(J jn ft , ifctle
cool add the yeast, di ateQt and flojr
water, the eggs well ' hatter, o
make a stiff dropi tab! B over
a oon into
night. Drop from f
deep, hot fat.
Apple Cherry—Pei 1 » n(J with a scoop
remove tho cores of * 9 many apples as
needed for your com' an .J r - ^ >u t them in
a baking dish with • Uttlo lemon peel
and a syrup poured - r them of sugar
and water. Cover ' 1 a baking sheet
or plate and cook owly so a* not to
break them. Place ‘ ,' a d*® 1 * filling thi
centre of each with ?°i le d rice and place
a candied cherry or prwerved one on the
top. Put boiled r;j« al >° ut tb ? m aa<3
pour over all the^V^P ' D which tho
apples cooked.
A Novel st0 ™
One of the most Went novelties is a
house stove introducf 1 - 1 V* England. Tbe
grate is swung on tf unlon ® aafl can
reversed. After f esb 0041 b%s be * Q
added at the top, «ver*al w made,
and tbe coal ,f r s thus brought to
green |manner, to answer
the bottom jn an :ioa, namely, the
the purpose in
gases from the co.it laming upward by
means of this
red portion of tht jonsumed
bottom, arc air before
France and Spain.
The diplomatic negotiations between
Germany and Spain have lately seemed
to look toward the consummation of
reciprocity treaties which should shut
France out from any commercial rela¬
tions with tho Castilian monarchy. It is
supposed been that such a result would have
very pleasant to ihc Queen Regent
Christina and the Spanish premier, Senor
Castillo. But it could not be worked
safely. France is (he best customer that
Spain has, and though in time Germany
might ion, have stood in somewhat the same
rela it was dangerous to exchange a
certainty Spanish for a mere therefore po; ibility. instructed The
his premier has Spain
minister in Paris to say that
desired to bring about an under-tauding
with France either through a definite
commercial treaty or by a temporary
agreement. Of course. France will
promptly and cordially accept these over¬
ture*, and Germany, for the present at
least, will have to abandon the effort to
connect Spain commercially with the
central poweis.
Managing a Boy Baby.
Tired Woman (in a railway car)—
“Please, sir, will you please hold my
baby awhile? He’s crying so I can do
nothing with him.”
Male Passenger—‘Tm; what is he cry¬
ing for?” sir.”
“Nothing at all, it do for
“Well—er—what good will
me to take him?”
“Then he’ll have something to cry
about.”
“Oh, he will?”
“Yes, sir. He’ll be crying for me
then, and the longer you hold him the
louder he’ll yell.”
“I presume so.”
“Yes, sir. Then, when he is real sure
it is only me he’ll he is crying for, I’ll Smith’s take
him and stop.”—Btreet &
Good News.
Asbestos Cloth.
both Asbestos with rolled cloth packing is made
and without India rubber core.
Afcbestos block packing consists of an
India rubber back upon which there are
built up edgewise a number of layers of
asbestos cloth. Sufficient elasticity is
thus imparted by the rubber back, while the
great durability and protection to
rubber is insured by the use of asbestos.
—India Rubber World.
Deafness Can't be Cured
diseased By local applications, portion as they cannot reach tho
of the ear. There is only one
tional way to remedies. cure deafness, Deafness and that is by constitu¬
is caused by an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in¬
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper¬
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed,
deafness mation is the bo result, and unless the inflam¬
can taken out and this tube re
itored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are
1 *' ~ 1! ~’ 2 b u t, an j n
.
ill gi 'aces.
of deaf: —--------Dollars for any
case _________ (caused Hall’s by catarrh) that we
cannot -— ----- cure —j by taking .aking Catarrh Cure.
Bend for circulars, ulars, free free.
F. J. Chknky & Co., Toledo. O.
Sold by Druggists, Tec.
___
Tbe Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YO0 FIND THE WORD?
Theire is a 3 inch display adveri isement In
this paper, this week, which has no two word*
auk e except one word. The same is true of
u*n. ijoo < ior it, send tnem the nsme of the
word an d th ey wilt return yon b >ok, beauti¬
ful lithooRapbs or samples freT. *
Coughs, Hoarseness, Kore Throat, etc.,
■Troches. quickly relieved by Brown’s Bronchial
in removing They surpass all other preparations
hoarseness, and as a cough rim
edyare pre-eminently the best.
If you suffer from sick, nervous, neuralgic,
spinal, billious, will or dyspeptic headaches, Brady
crotine cure you promptly. Fifty cents;
drug stores.
One dose of Beecham’s Pills relieves sick
headache in 2J minutes. For saie by all drug¬
gists. 25 cents a box.
aH»*aa**M**w*#M*w«WMW«***S P‘MOTHERS’1
I FRIEND” f
%
To Young |
Mothers •
. Makes Child Birth Easy.!
Shortens Labor, «
Lessens Pain, |
§ Endorsed by the Leading Physicians, g
O Jtoolc to “Mothers > • mailed FMBJB. g
5 BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. o
2 ATLANTA, GA. C
• cor SOLD n bv BY ALL at. 1. npunoisTA DRUGGISTS. <T
#• ♦ M t a aa aaeaa awaaaaaaa—«w«t
“German
William Syrup” McKeekan,
Blooiningdale, Mich. Druggist at
“Ihave liad
the Asthma badly ever since I came
beta fa'the drS^usinessfiV fifteen
years, and hay(- tried nearly every¬
thing on tJjfe market, nothing has
given me-’t'he slightest relief until a
le w njdiiths ago, when I used Bo
®5^ee’s glad German acknowledge Syrup. I am now
to the great good
it has done me. I am greatly reliev¬
ed during the day and at uiglit go to
sleep without the least trouble.” @>
MedicalDiscovery Kennedy’s
Takes hold in this order:
Liver, Bowels,
Inside Kidneys, Skin,
Outside Skin,
Driving everything before it that ought to ? e out.
You know whether
you need it or not
Sold by every druggist, and manufacture bj
DONALD KENNEDY,
ROXBURY, MASS.
An Untruthful Boy’s Work.
Pretty Teacher (severely)—“Did your
mother write this excuse?”
Bad Boy—“Yes’m.”
Pretty Teacher—“Humph 1 It looks
very much like one of your scrawls.”
Bad Boy—“Mamma wrote it; but,
please ma’m, she had sister Jennie in one
arm, crying with a bumped head, and
brother Willie in the other, with a cut
finger, and a lot of sewing on her lap.
and she was rocking tho cradle with her
knees, and she had to write with her
toes. ”
Pretty Teacher (in the evening) — “I
am very s^rry, Mr. Poorchapp, but I
have changed my mind. I shall never
marry.”—Street & Smith’s Good News.
Not So Anxious.
Smart Boy—“Please, ma’am, it was
two minutes after nine when you got
here. W’en we’re late yon always keeps
us after school.”
stay Teaoher—“Very and keep well. You can all
me after school, if you
wi»li.”
[Smart boy subsides.]
Short Enough.
shorten Stranger—“I see it is proposed to
New York into “York.”
Gotham Host—“Oh, no need . N’Yo’k
is short enough as it is. ”
For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomach
disorders, use Brown’s iron Bitters. The Best
Tonic, strengthens it rebuild-* the the system, cleans tbe Biood
and muscle*. A splendid ton¬
ic for weak and debilitated persons.
only Prosperity balance is no weigh just scale; adversity is tho
to friends.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Ktune’s Great
Nervf. Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and Phiia., $2 trill
tottle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Pa
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isa,ac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water.Druggists sell at, 25c per bottle.
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
and Syrup refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is and pleasant
to taste, acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, the
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬ sys¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
only constipation. remedy of 8yrup its kind of Figs is the
ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its action to and the truly stomach, beneficial prompt la its in
effects, healthy prepared only from the most
and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 60o
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬ who
gists. Any reliable hand druggist will
may not have it on pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept anj
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIB SYRI/S CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK.
Risih ~ I x~- —- r \- .
yr<
A Sample Book Cake of Dermatology Soap and 12S
page and Beauty; on Illustrated;
^ Skin, Bcalp, Nervous
on
and Blood'diseases sent
sealed for | Oc.j also
Disfigurements, Birth Marks, Moles, like
Warts, Powder India Starks, Ink Sears, and Pit
tings, Redness of Nose, Su¬
perfluous Hair, Pimples.
Dermatologist, John II. Woodbury, ‘i.i W.
1
4’Jd St., New YorkClty.
Consultation free,at office
or by letter.
WELL DRILLING
Machinery for Wells of any Mounted depth, from 20 to Drilling 8,000 feet, ami
for Water, Oil or Gas. Our Steam
Portable Horse Power .Machinesset to work inSOminutes.
Guaranteed to drill faster and with less Wells power than any
other. Specially adapted to dril'tng in earth or
rock 20 to 1,090 feet with Fanners and others are making till,
to business 040 per dny our machinery We and tools. the oldest Splendid ami
for Winter or Summer. arc
largest Manufacturers In the business Send 4 tents in
Stamps fur illustrated Catalogue H. Am>m.kss,
Fierce Well Excavator Co., IV'cw York.
KING COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton on JQ J] g
$60 JONES 5-Ton "•» BINGHAMTON. For •''e*oe»T OF tanas Cotton BINGHAMTOff, address BUT N. Scale. BEST. Y.
SWEET GUM.& MULLEIN
. CURES*
ONSUM "
AND ALL LUNG TROUBLES
Hold by nil dealers. Accept no substitute.
THECOSTISTHESAME.
The Hartman Stee! Picket Fence
Cost a no more wore than an ordtuar,
apart apart in in a a short shot time. Tbe Har
them and is
I
Ought to be smaller
— the great, griping, old-fashioned
pill. There’s too much unpleasant¬
ness for the money. Ought to be
better, too. They’re big enough,
and make trouble enough, to do
more That’s good. what Dr. Pierce**
just good.
Pleasant Pellets do, — more
Instead of weakening the system,
they renovate it; instead of up¬
setting, they cleanse and regulate
it—mildly, gently, Little and Liver naturally. Pills
They’rfe the original effective,
—the smallest but most
purely vegetable, perfectly harmless,
and easiest to take. laxative Only one
little Pellet for a gentle —
three for a cathartic. Sick Head¬
ache, Bilious Headache, Constipa¬
tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks,
and all derangements of the Liver,
Stomach and Bowels are promptly cured.
relieved and permanently
They’re tbe cheapest guaranteed pills you give can
buy, satisfaction, for they’re to is
or your money re¬
turned. You pay only for the good
3 ’ou get. It’s a plan peculiar to Dr.
blood. Beautify Pukei-v complexion Vegetable. by purifying
The dose is nicely adjusted to suit ease, as one pill can
never bet oo much. Each vial contains 42, carried in vest
pocket., like lead Taken pencil. easier Business man’s greal
convenience. where. All than sugar. Sold every¬
genuine goods bear “Crescent”
Send 2-cent stamp. You get 32 page book with sample.
DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St. Louis. Mo.
GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878.
W EAKER & CO.’S
Breakfast Cocoa
from which the excess of oil
has been removed,
Is absolutely pure and
It Is soluble.
No Chemicals
are used in its prepara’ion. It
has more than three times the
strength of jg ory, y lxeA with
Starch, Arr.. ’ Sugar,
k
and is therefore far more eeo
j nomical, costing less than one
centacup. It is delicious, nour*
' ishing, strengthening, easily
digested, and admirably adapted for invalids
as well as for persons in health.
Sold by Grocers e verywhere.
W. BAKER & CO , Dorchester, Mas*.
EVERY School, Library, FAMILY, and Office
S-H-O-U-L-D
Have a Ditftionary.
Care should ho taken to
GET THE BEST.
THE INTERNATIONAL,
New from Cover to Cover, of the ’* Unabridged,”
Successor
ts the one to boy.
10 years spent revising,
loo editors employed.
$300,000 expended.
Sold by
AU Booksellers.
G.<fcC.5tKRRIAM*Co.\ Bend to
Publishers, \ DICTIONARY
8prlngfleld,Mass.,U.S. A.
for free specimen pages.
rsons given after? tof
T All ILF J
bottle 13ft. Ad
_______________________________ Wanted| EIGHTY _____Spruce cent t
S Agents per pro
• ••OO •••*••••<
P.ISO’S CURE FOR
Consumptives and people
who have weak lungs or Asth¬
ma. sbontd use Pieo’s Cure for
Consumption. It has eared
thousands, ft has not Injur¬
ed one. It is not bad to take.
It is the best cough syrup.
Sold everrwhere. SSe.
CONSUMPTION.
A. N. U... .. ......Thirteen ’92.