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FAITH AND WORKS.
He answer come* to those that prey.
And idly stand
And wait for stones to roll away
At God'i command.
He will aot break the binding oord>
Upon ni laid
If we depend on pleading words,
And do not aid.
When hands are idle, words are Tala
To move the stops;
An aiding angel would diadhin
To work alone.
Cot he who prayeth, and is strong
In faith and deed,
And toileth earnestly, ere long
Ho will succeed.
•-J. C. Rockwell.
The San Jaguelo Mine.
To Josliua Main’s widow it had always
seemed a simple thing for people to sup
port themselves. Did not girls and
women do it oftentimes? Was there ever
any dilliculty about it?
Vet, when she herself was left alone at
the age of twenty, she did not know in
whirl) direction to turn.
Bhe was a soft-eyed,timid little woman,
with absolutely no experience at all in
the ways of the world; and so she went
to her cousin—n brisk, bustling widow,
who kept a wavside hotel on the high
road to Santa Durham.
• “What am I to do?" said she, looking
very small and pale in her deep mourn
ing robes. “What is to become of mo?"
“Why don’t you go to Joshua’s folks?”
Mrs. Chebburn, who was frying crabs
for a party of excursionists who had ar
rived by the noon stage.
“I have uomoucy,” said Alice. “Be
side, I wroto to his father, and he wrote
back that we didn’t ask liis advice about I
gettin- married, and bo certainly ;„ n . H wif(J do „- t um j ergtnD d business; so
shonldn’t interfere in my business now. ! he 1ms
an old man, who represented the “allee
folknee" of Lina’s terrible tale.
With this exception, the travelers had
been more frightened than hurt.
“Is he deed?” said frightened Alice,
with a glance at the yellow pallor of the
face, temporarily pillowed on a folded
shawl.
“No,” said Mrs. Chebbnrn, who had
no contemptible knowledge of simple
surgery, “ho isn’t dead. But there are
some ugly bruises on his head, and I
‘think there's a rib or two broken, dot
tho little corner room ready, Alice, aa
quick as you can. Light a lire and see
that the bedclothes are well aired and
that there is plenty of hot water.”
Whon Mrs. Chebburn came down stairs
again, to sunerintend Linn and Cliee Sun
as they served the supper and to keep
old Aunty Felicia from braining those
brisk Celestials with her pewter spoons
—for there was always an internecine
warfare between the Mongolian aud
African races in the kitchen—the stage-
driver was warming his chilled hands
before the fire.
“lie ain’t dead, eh?” said lie, nodding
at the stairs.
“Oh, bless you, nol” said Mrs. Cheb
burn.
"Well, it seems kind o’wicked to say
so," observed George Qeith, the driver,
“but I wouldn’t "a been sorry to hear ho
was dead!”
"Come, come!”paid Mrs. Chebburn;
“don’t talk like that, Geith!”
“He sat on the box-seat along o’ me,”
said Coorge. “He'd come out" hero to
look arter the San Jaguelo mino. So lie
told me, He’d a powerful gift of tho
gab, and u many questions to ask, for he
hadn’t never been this a-way before. It
seemed he'd a son come out here a spell
ago, aud they bought a claim together.
And the son he got married all of a sud-
dcn-like, and then he up and died.
And so this old sinner, mind you,
Chebburn, ho mistrusts that tho
Such a cross, curt, hateful letter!"
“Just like them!” said Mrs. Clieb-
burn ; liorcely dredging her pan of crabs!
with flour. "Couldn’t you keep miners'
to board?"
“I—I don't think I have courage for
that!” whispered poor Alice. “Beside,
\t would require a large house, furniture,
capital.’’
“Might sew?” suggested Mrs. Cheb
burn, who had a quick, abrupt way of
speaking which was very apt to discon
cert a stronger.
“I am dreadfully slow and awkward
with the needle,” confessed Alice. “You
seo, Cousin Chebburn, I was brought up
in a boarding-school. I cun play on the
piano, aud speak tolerable French,
and—”
“O, my!” burst in Mra. Chebburn.
“And p'raps you could paint on. velvet
and make wax flowers, or any such other
accomplishment which would be so use
ful out in these California mountains.
There, Alice, don't cry 1 I don’t want to
hurt your toolings, child, but people’s
ideas about educating girls are so queer.
Get me a platter—two big platters—for
theso crabs. You can stay here for a
while. It’s possible you may be able to
help me with the housework. But I’ve
no use for your French and your piano-
playing."
For all Mrs. Chebburn’s short, blunt
speech, there was a kindly sparkle in her
honest, gray eyes, and Alice Main ac
cepted her invitation in the spirit in
which it was given.
It was a strange existence for the girl
who had been brought up in the artificial
surroundings of Ban Francisco life, this
wild home on the plateaus, with monster
redwood trees keeping watch on the
heights above, passion-vines swinging
in purple fringes over the edges of tho
din's, aud tigs ripening against the sunny
rocks.
With the coming and going of the
daily stage, travelers came and went,
also, of all varieties, and Mrs. Chebburn,
assisted only by a pair of pallid China
men, aud a fat old colored woman in the
kitchen, ruled, an absolute queen, over
the pluee.
“It’s hard work, to-be-sure,” she would
say; “but lam my own mistress here,
and I render an account to no one. If a
miner talks too loud, I can turn him out
of the house. If 1 traveler finds fault
with the fricassesd chicken, I can bid
him go further and suit himself better.
Joshua's widow is welcome to a home
here, though I misdoubt me she’ll turn
out a poor, shiftless timid thing.”
But Mrs. Chebburn was favorably dis
appointed. Joshua’s widow proved to
be possessed of better qualities than she
had thought.
She was quick and dainty with the
desserts, tasteful in the arrangement of
the rooms, and affectionately anxious to
■pare her cousin all that she could of
work or worry.
“I may make something of the girl
yet," said Mrs. Chebburn. “Poor dear!
she’s very young to be left a widow.
What a selfish scamp that old father-in-
law of hers must be! Joshua was as
tinea fellow as ever lived! Guess be
wasn’t like the rest of his folks though.”
It was one December evening, when
the heavy winter rain was pattering on
the roof of the house and beating down
the shuddering boughs of the redwood-
trees, and the stage was several hours be
hind time.
“Supper’ll be clean spoiled,” said Mrs.
Chebburn, with a discontented glance
toward the kitchen, “and then they'll all
be grui-.bling. Men are so inconsiderate!”
Just then, however, Linn, the tallest
and yellowest of the Chinamen, came
shuffling in. with the news that the rain
had washed away part of the steep and
narrow road that wound through the
gorge, that the stage was overturned and
“allee folksee killed!”
“Linn, you are a fool!” said Mrs. Cheb
burn .
“Missee look for slieself,” persisted
Linn. “Alice dead! Horace leg broke!”
And presently two or three men came
up the hill, bearing the senseless body of
and Mrt. Chebburn was one of tho few
women who can keep their own counsel.
“He’i good to the child now," said
she. “They’re as happy together as if
they were own father and daughter. Why
should I interfere?”
And so the San Jaguelo mino made lit
tle Alice rich in her Eastern home, and
old Sewell Main treasured her as if she
were a rare tropical flower. While every
year there came some loving token of re
membrance across the Sierras to Mrs.
Chebburn, who still presided over the
Redwood House, and kept the peace,
with ever-incressing difficulty, between
Aunty Felicia and the two sons of the
sun.
“The child doesn’t forget me," said
Sirs. Chebburn, with a smile and a tear.
—Helen Forrest Orates.
Not • fad >(1 or sray hair to be seen, after us*
Inn Hall s Hair R-newer.
M A powerful rimed)' for lun?troubles. Safe
for youngqr old. A vor’a Cherry Pectoral*
A lazy policeman, like a piece of cloth. Is
generally know by his nap,
■ ,TBc seiche#! Man la tke Wane
oouM be poor without health. The dying mil-
"qnauy consumptive would exchange all he is
n orthfnr anew lease of life. He Could hare
naditfor a wing bad he used Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery” before the dis
ease had reached its last stages. This wonder*
1111 prepare ion la a positive cure lor consump
tion if taken in time. For all diseases of the
throat and lungs It Is unequaled. All druggists.
In eome of our restaurants the customer is
one who does the most wsit'ir,'.
The farmers. In their swamps, we’re sure.
Could hud the roots unit plants that cure;
If by thoir knowledge they only know
For JUst the disease each one grew.
Take courage now and "Swamp-Root" try—
(for kidney, liver and bladder complaints),
As on this remedy you can rely.
s cotun on to pocket the whole con
cern, profits and ail—for the San Jaguelo
mine, don't yo know, is trebled und
quadrupled in valuo since they first be
gan to work it.
“ ‘Ain’t you goin’ shares with the
woman';’ says I.
“ ‘Ain’t the papers all in my name?’
says lie, with a leer. ‘I’ve al'uys heerd,’
says he, ‘that you Western people was
sharp on business.’
“ ‘Not that kind o’ business,’ says I.
‘I sw’ar,’ says I, ‘el I hain’t the biggest
mind I ever had in my life to pitch you
off the box into the bed of tho creek be
low 1’
“And, sure as you liVo,it wasn’t fifteen
minute* afore the lurch came, and over
we all went together! Most like a jedg-
ment, now ain't it? And I declare I’m
'most sorry he wasn’t killed outright 1"
Mrs. Chebburn was busy spreading a
luscious cream meringue over the top of
a pineapple pudding—for tho desserts
Brrved ny the lady of the Redwood
house have acquired quite a local celeb
rity—but she looked quickly up.
“Didn’t say what his name was, did
ye?" said she.
“No,” said Geith; “because I don't
know myself. Grasp, I should reckon—
or Gripe, or Grind, or some such thing."
And ho chuckled at the clumsy joke os
he made haste to obey the summons to
supper.
It was late in the night before the
stage was righted and a relay of horses
supplied, so that the tide of travel could
once more flow onward; and the clock
struck twelve when Mrs.. Chebburn
went up stuirs with the candle in her
hand.
“Who’s thnt talkin'?” she asked, as she
stopped on the threshold of the im
promptu hospital wal’d.
“It’s the sick man," said Alice. “The
doctor said he would be more or less de
lirious for a day or two. Do you know,
cousin Chebburn, he keeps talking all the
time about ‘Joshua!’ And look at the
color of his eyes, and tho way his hair
grows down on his forehead!”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Chebburn. glancing
keenly from the restless head that rolled
to and fro on the pillow to the pale,
startled face above it.
“I know who it is,” cried Aliee,
wringing her hands—“it’s Joshua’s
father 1”
“Hush!’’said Mrs. Chebborn. “Ikind
o’suspicioned it was. Now, don’t cry!
A sick room ain’t no place to get excited
in. Keep cool—keep calm, and jest let
Providence workout its own salvation.”
Near-y two weeks elapsed before old
Sewell Main recovered—two weeks _ of
pain and suffering; two weeks during
which he looked grim death full in the
face.
“Who are you?” he sharply asked,
when first he became conscious that a gen
tle hand was ministering to him day by
day.
“I am Joshua’s widow,” Alice gently
answered.
H closed his weary eyes, and asked no
more. But he thought of many things.
‘ ‘I should have died if it hadn’t been for
you, shouldn't I?” was his next abrupt
question. “But how does it happen?
Joshua’s -widow here, taking care of me!"
“Hush!” soothed Alice. “Don’t try
to talk now. Don’t even try to think!”
But he put out his skeleton hand to
find hers.
“Forgive me!” said He, in a choked
voice. ““Only say that you forgive me!”
“For whntj” she asked, in amazement.
“For all that was in my heart!” said
he. “For all that I might have done, if
God had not stayed my sinful hand!
Alice—they called you Alice, didn’t
they?”
“Yes.”
“You have been like an angel to me.
Henceforward, nothing shall ever part
us. Will you go back to the East with
me. Alice?”
And Alice went, only too happy that
Joshua's father had learned to love her.
She never knew aught of the darker
side of his character. Stage-driver
Geith never came that way nowadays,
A Soldier of Fortnno.
Glancing through a Philadelphia news
paper a few days ago my attention was
arrested by a brief paragraph, dated at
an interior town in that State, which
read as follows;
“Isaac Tnylor, a former citizen of this
place, committed suicide last night by
hanging. Mr. Taylor had been employed
until recently ns a clerk in the treasury
department at Washington, D. C."
Taylor was one of tho characters of
Washington. Thirty years of his life
(he was sixty at the time of his death)
were spent in travel and adventure. He
hHd visited every habitable country on
the globe. He spoke half a dozen lan
guages fluently, and was one of the most
delightful conversationalists I have ever
known. He made the overland trip to
California in his early youth. In San
Francisco ho joined a party of Americans |
bound for the Sandwich Islands. While
en route Taylor discovered that the ob
ject of the expedition was the overthrow
of the existing monarchy in those lands
and the formation of a new government.
There was a rebellious spirit afloat in the
kingdom, and the adventurous foreigners
calculated to take advantage of it for
their own ends.
Taylor said nothing, but upon tbciT ar
rival in Honolulu he sought an audience
with the king and unfolded to him the
details of the plot. Tho conspirators
were banished from the island. Taylor
remained and was 'speedily installed
as the king’s favorite. To crown all,
the king's sister, a beautiful Hawaiian
princess, foil in love with the dashing
American, and, at the king's suggestion,
offered him her hand and fortune. Tnylor
received the most positive assurance that
his marriage to the princess would make
him heir to the crown. He declined the
honor, however, with thanks. In talk
ing with his Washington friends Taylor
used to say that, although he never re
gretted the refusal, he felt positive, that
had he espoused the dusky princess, the
king’s pledge would have been faithfully
kfipt.
Years afterward Taylor returned to the
United States, and served as a soldier in
a Pennsylvania regiment. In the course
of time he drifted to Washington, where
lie secured e minor clerkship in the
treasury depsrtment. About six months
ego he was dismissed from government
service on account of his irregular habits.
Broken in health and in fortune, he at
last returned to the obscure Pennsylvania
village which he quitted a light-hearted,
adventurous boy forty years ago. Within
a fortnight after hit arrival he ended hie
life in tho manner above described.—
Chicago Hews.
FORCOUCHS, CROUP AND
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105?
heImEDY
OF SWEET GUM AND MULLEIN.
The Rwoet Gum front it true of tho aan.n nanny
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ALWAYS curabl* by USD
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MEDICAL VICTORY !
CurpR nH'jhtsVDIsoiisp, Catarrh
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SYMPTOMS and CONDITIONS
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Scalding Stiqqiniro nioocl-tlnacil
Diabetic Albumen Ilrlrk-dust
Dropsical Dribbling Milky-pink
Heniluchn Frequent Costiveness
Roncacho Nervous Kedish-durk
Uric-acid Settlings Cntnrrhaclie
Backache Nerveaehe Phosphates
Bud-taste Foul-Ureuth Gull-color
IT IS A SPECIFIC.
Mf ».r/r dost go.* to ths spoil
Relieves and Cures(nlrmni Slime-fever
Cunltor,Dyspepsia, Anirmln, Malaria, Fever
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ness, Spermatorrhoea and Gout.
It Rllminates lllood Impurities, Scrofula,
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■t In a most Wonderful Appetiser,
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VT Tell your neighbors all about it.
Prick 25c, $1.00—0 bottles $5,00.
HTProp nred at Dr. Kilmer's Dispensary,
Binghamton, N. V., U. 8. A.
Invalid*' Guide to Health (Sent Free.)
WIL8ON8
CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER
iilien draught arrester in
the vvEirhl. No more gin Itoiinr*
burned from engine npiirk*. Hold
on (fiiurtiniee. Write lor Ciren-
lur. T. T. W J.MISOK A C O., No*,
xi A 2ft WnynH t., .>1 llledgevllle, C«n.
nr IBB III TIE
ZD POULTRY YARD.
80th Edition. 108 P«R.., espl»lns
thebusincM. Symptom* and rem-
•die* for All diseases. Writtou by
• farmer for farmers. 25 cts. in
■lamp*, or one ct. n y*ur for my
• i perienc*. A 50 page 111. Cir. free.
A. 1>I. LANG, Cove Dale, Ky.
Fanny Cans* of a Panic.
In somo stories of John B. Gough, -tie
temperance locturer, printed by the
Philadelphia Times,occurs the following;
One of the most terrible scenes I ever
witnessed throughout my forty years’
career as a public speaker, and yet one
with a very ludicrous side to it, occurred
in Dr. Herron’s church, tho first Presby
terian, Pittsburg, in 1851. I was speak
ing to a densely crowded house, when
all of a sudden there was a terriblo crash
in the gallery. A frightful panic ensued.
Tho people thought tho gallery was fall
ing, and made a stampede to escape from
the building. Some threw themselves
from tho gallery to tho floor below.
Others jumped from the windows. In
the midst of the confusion the stove was
upset. Fortunately the fire in it was
very low, and no conflagration followed,
but the occurrence terrified the already
frantic people. Above the din I could
hear the stentorian tones of three or four
powerful men in the front of the gallery,
who seemed to be trying to quell the
panic by shouting at the top of their
voice, while they gesticulated wildly with
their hands and arms. “The fiddle! it
was the fiddle, the fiddle,” but what on
earth tbe fiddle could have to
do with it was more than I could make
out. At length some good brother near
ths pulpit struck up “From Greenland’s
Icy Mountains,” Others joined in the
familiar hymn and order and quiet were
at length restored. Tho meeting did not
last long, though, after that. When the
audience had dispersed the floor was
strewn with false hair, hairpins, hats,
bonnets, overshoes, gloves, skirts, canes,
capes and wraps of all kinds, overcoats
and every conceivable article of wearing
apparel. A large cart load of these things
were taken to the mayor’s office the next
morning to await tho claims of their
owners. After the trouble was all over
I learned that the crash which created
the panic was caused by some man’s [
stepping upon the big bass fiddle, which
was at that time used in the choir and
which, when not in requisition, was al
lowed to repose on the gallery floor. This
was what the men in the gallery whom I
heard snouting about the fiddle were try
ing to explain to the fright-crazed peoplo
below.
A horseshoe has been invented that
comes on and off like a man’s shoe. A
rim at the bottom and a buckle at tho i
back hold it in nlace. A pad protects ,
the bottom of the hoof. i
CONTAGIOUS!
I am a native of England, and while I wa* In that
country I contracted a terrible blood polMott, and for
two year* wax under treatment a* an out door pa
tient at Nottingham Hospital, England, but waa not
cured. I suffered the most agonizing pulns In ray
bones, and wa* covered with (wire* all over my body
and limb*. Finally I completely lost all hope lM
"■■■“ ^ fc- *
that country, _
treated at Roosevelt In thla city, on veil aa by A
prominent physician In New Y'ork having uo con
nection with tho hospital*.
I saw the advertisement of Swift’s Specific, and I
determined to give It a trial. I took six bottles und
I can Hay with groat joy that they have cured ms
entirely. 1 am aa sound and well as I ever waa lq
my life. L. Fukd. H*u*koho.
Now York City. Juno 12th, 1S8S.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free;
Thk swift Spkomu Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Oa
N. Y., 157 W. 23d St.
CATARRH IN THtHEAU 1$
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once for a troatlae and a Fr#o Bottle of n»y lnfallible
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in Sunny
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Free Farms
The moHt Wonderful Ayrioulturti
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Lour Time. Park Irrigated by Immense canal*. Cheap
railroad rates. Every attention »hown settlers. For
maps, pamphlets, etc., a hires* COLORADO LAND A
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Yon nr* allowed aft— trial of thirty davit of tbe uas
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R* RlSfS ts Cut Off Horses' Manes
s diMsse of the .muoonv
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sage* and msintsias it*
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Yhom this point it sends forth
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through the digestive organs,
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pr tducing < ther troublesome
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Cream Balm
[ Is a remedy baaed) upon a
correct diagnosis of this dis
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ELY BROTHERS, Druggist*. Oweoo. N. Y.
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perfections, Including Facial Develop
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N.Y. Est’b’d lKO. “ *
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i and po£T£fii^f MILLS I
LA. DcLoach AM, Atlanta, Oa.1
Price* wonderfully low. Send foa ’
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Halter to any part
reoetptoffll. Hold .
Hardware and Harness Dealer*
Special discount to the Trade.
YEBhHra
" SONGS
51 Also, lOO Hongs of the Uny. including “ Wall
LfltUl Clouds Roll By,” " Spring Time und Robins •
have Come," “Climbing up de llolUen Stairs, 1 *
“IVek-u-lioo!" “When Robins Nest Again,"
**-ril Await My Love,” etc. Both books, and csta*
Ibcues of music, novelties, etc., free, on receipt of lflot.
N. V. TBIFMTt80S Washington St., Boston, Mass*.
v> A fVEWTOwaat«d for PlNKERTON*5
• I I® Best Detective Book.
*fcOeProfcuioDfll ThievesDetectives.
rmoKU-.KL Y ILLUSTRATED, .n,l EAST TO SELL F.r 1,11
Aaacrlptlva circulars, apaclal territory and oatra lirmi to axanla,
ASdraaa, Q. W. CARLITOM A CO. .PublUhnn. Now. Vork7
U I KAMI’S Celebrated Dough Knkadi.su Ma
chine. Only family machine capable ot making
• - • ‘ ‘ ” iplei
dough for broad. Simple*t, cleanest uml healthiest
method. Price ^10. Agents wantedLiberal commis
sion pa d. * **
Add's III?hand A Co., ft* Lib*
OPIUM
aa**~««.. ««.*.. ...... s* useless*
Iy cured at home. Correspondence
solicited and /res trial ot cure eeot
£ onestInvestigators. Trig Humana
iRMRDY Company. Lafayette. Ind.
CDCC * isiwsMKs LOVE
FHPP by the Union Pub. Co.. V Ks
M MM BMMB Newark. N. J. Send stamps for poHt’g.
Blair;*Pijla
Srsnt English Gbut and
-■ Rhsumatic Remedy.
OH | rutod, HO eta*
to Soldiers A Helm. Send stamp
for C Irculars. COL. L. BING
HAM, Att’y, Washington, u. C.
Pensions
lKTengravl:
ClWn NAMK QUICK far Proft Moody’n New
U Book on Ur*M Making. New DoIdirb.
KJCuuiug. etc. Agents sell 10 a day. Prof.HOOD Y,(
FINE Blooded Cattle, Sheep, Hogs
---- , m Poultry, Dogs for sale. Catalogued with,
150 engravings free. N. P. Boyer A Co.. Coatesvllle.Pa.
PluntrateA.
and Mnotls,
'ineiaaati.Oe.
HELP
..itploy .
lum ami do collect-
I full pnrticularp, five. Address
SUPPLY CO.. Albany. X. V-
THURSTON’S STOOTBPOWDER
Kreplug Teeth Perfect nntl Ghmis Healthy#
WELL BORSNC AND ROCK
• t$. Toolif for nil kinds of Well
j id. NYMAN. TIFFIN. OHIO,
and WHISKY HABITS cured
at home wit bout pain. Book ot
particulars sent Free.
B. M. WOOLLKY, M. D., Atlauia, Ga
PENNYROYAL PILLS
“CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH.”
The OrlKlnnl and Only Oenalne.
S.f* .cl It.li.hl-, B.w.a-or worth!.-.. Imitation*.
jtlUp.O'.bio u> LADIES. A.It your l>rtt BE l.t for
M Chichester’s English” and take no other, or iuclone 4o.
(ntampa) to aa for particular* In Uttar hr return mnlL
NAME PAPER. Chichester Chemical C«k*
MSI B Madinou oqnnre* PhllaJn.,Pa.
■old by DnigplaU every where. Ank for “Chlche*
tor’s English" Pennyroyal Ptllo. Take no other.
i*. PISO'.S QU-RE FOR
t
Best Cough Syru
&
~ C .Q N-S.U'M ; RT.tDN
Nnno genulna unle«!
ataaipeJ with tho sbuvt
SLICKER
Don’t waste your money on njmm or rubber coat. Tho FISII P.P.AND SLIP KEF
is absolutely vnpr and wind moor, and will kci*p you drv in the hardest storm
Ask lor ths “FISH BRAND” slicker anilTake nootlier. If your storekeeper doei
Is Tiie Best
Waterproof Goat
Ever Me.
g\wp”. send for d^*printive ratalognu t