Newspaper Page Text
Elimination.
“Say, what would you do if you
had a skeleton in your closet?” “The
best thing to do is to make no bones
of it.”—Indianapolis Journal.
llitllraMl Train# t-c, Itun Slower
KaHreaxl officials rlnlji: that- it la rt-rv
pre»!ve lo run than* llrMuiug expresa traloa,
and nr»> talking *'rv ut radtii-lug the speed. li
I# Ukrwlai- expemitve in ilia boalrii to rush
«WM* ftMiggi#- tt, li t-orajiou* III l-uxinres affairs
a# mm tin nowadays Tlio bralu, the nerves,
the tnnarle*. the whole smein giro* ant. For
Hoetetler’e restoring atrenglh alter tmrinens worries,
Stomach Bitters is the proper
remedy It Is an ideal tonic for the tired, the
run-down and the weak,
Australia,is A gold tnino said under the town „f Unibu ml:
to be the richest la the wo I'M
No lo-Bar for Fifty Cents
Ouarjuuerd tobmvo hat (t rare makes
o're (Strong, Wood jufre. Sft-.ll, All first mimB
x<> ma n an be warranted s-mt-nrl; pfacti
tali 4 is the only safe guarantee.
esek
Sharp Pains
Parting from one point ♦ >ti* r, stiff un-l
.sw'flen joints, Inf! an
faring, eh Animation intense suf
am J„ani<:teristics cl rheumatism.
yr
All three painful symptoms are cured by
Hood's fifUHOpfirilJft which purifies the
blood and neoti < the neid which is till)
cause of rtu.-umaiism. Why coKtinuo to
suffer when you may Se reHovcd by
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
America’s llrcatlKfc M ■ ■ i ». Price
r 1 ;> i • -1 by C, J. flood* I to. I Lowell. Sfoft>s.
-
Hood’s Pills >mre all Liver Ills. 25cent#
The Co oaei ami the President.
IYurfng tbit Jab Spanish-A murlean
war ■iTain .old fttluHt'! who had
served all throjugh the civil wax and
who find lost cm-e of hi < eyiM -at the
bank of Gciiysburg. was very indig
l ecn:i l!W Wits put aside as
physically 1 !>ie, when ? applied
for admlssl s«5“ o mu' of the. V. •\v York
volunteer r neuis.
FM< w wroth he j.'iirneret - 5
W;V t nt on, having c. per J. a
id interview with the President, £
succeeded in getting an audience, * 5
the President, after listening to |
plea, said kindly:
"But. ray good Colonel J you have
only one eye.”
.lust so, sir,” was the pronjpt re
Joinder but cn a* *t you see the great
advantage of tny Having only.due.eye?
When 1 aim my gun I will not have
to close tin* otheri”
He fought at Santiago.
A Singular Accident,
A singular aeeldonl h.ia been report¬
ed from a chemical factory, where a
workman's clothes became saturated
with dust from the grinding of chlor¬
ate of potassium. A spark from 1 lit*
workman’s pipe fell an his clothes,
wlftu the entire suit flashed into
flattie, producing fatal burns.
TUMOR EXPELLED.
Unqualiflod Success of Lyclia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Mrs. Elizabeth Whkrlock. Magno¬
lia, Iowa. in. the .foliowing letter de¬
scribes her recovery from a very criti¬
cal condition:
“ Dear Mbs. 1’tNKU am:-—I have been
taking your Vegetable Compound, and
Min mu i ii i r Till rm am now ready to sound
its praises. It
fr ^ has ders relieving done for me won¬ me in
of a tumor.
J ^ “My health
v has been poor
% for three yea its.
Change of life
L was working.
upon me. 1
«| 5 ? and S much was was. bloated a very har¬
den to myself. Was troubled with
smothering spells, also palpitation of
the heart and that bearing-down feel¬
ing. and could not be on my feet much.
“I was growing worst) alt the time,
until l took your medicine.
“After taking three boxes of Lydia
E. i’ii'ki'.diib Vegetal Compound
Lozenges, the tumor passed -from me.
“My health lias been better ever
since, can now walk quite a distance
and am troubled no more with palpita¬
tion of the heart or bloating. I rec¬
ommend your medicine to all sufferers
from female troubles.”
It is hardly reasonable to suppose
that any one can doubt the efficiency
of Mrs. Pink!)auiN methods nnd medi¬
cine in the face of the tremendous vol¬
ume of testimony
STIPMION
l hav tin 14 das'* nt. a tl :tt<> Wltho nt i\
Of Ultt lluWll,. III-. t. buttig nb Is to
o them eic-pt toy usitij. ',«t water Injections,
Ch sii(ration U'! years filared roe In
trii^ tttrrihlo ciutiiitt that t Bit! 1 tiki ev
cry wiyiiyiy thing! hear ■>:! of. In:! ntVvferUmnrt any rcital; -uel,
anno «M! I ariog C4SCABKTU. I
iiow La v c to U-.ree iKtssaces » day, and if 1
was rich 1 give llOO-Ui for eaeb Is movsinentj It
i# sueh a reitwf AYWUst!. I.-, ii I ,\r.
WO Uni IIS! LhlmH, Mksh,
WM /©=^T,0
is ^ TftAoe mark Rt<Sianrnso^ s ^<
AKrtff
Newtolcteu, WeiiSnJwCripS. ££l§c,Se.
... CURE CONSTIPATION.
K»v!S*j Co»p»«j, Ulma, ImukI, St a (atk. SB
The Potash
Question.
A thorough study of the sub¬
ject has proven that crop fail¬
ures can tk: bv using
fertilizers containing a large
percentage of Potash; no
plant can grow without Potash.
» have a little book on the subject
written by authorities, that
send to every farmer, free
inly write and ask for it.
FOR FARM AND GARDEN. ►
Tree# Tpside Movvo i
The quince roots so roadilv by ben-- j
Iuur over the top and covering it w J h !
earth that it is easily possible to c- i
the natural order '
verse and make .he
tree after two veavs live with vhat i
were it« roots in the air. These mot* '
will thou put forth leaves, and the '
year following will bear blossom* «iid S
possibly fruit. But for several veara !
the tree s, I upside down will -eqniie !
to be propped, «» the original growth
mix largest at tin- ground.
mow I iik H»e Garden,
A great many weeds seed in the
fall .and nature hastens lie. jnrarosses
so that those which if was thought
could not phssfiiiy seed, will nut up a
stal^dn time to perfect a few ,
before w inter. But. if plow ed j
white still green, both the weed and
its seed quickly rots in the soil. Xhi -
fall plowing of the garden also brings
up many insects and pupa which have
found a winter hihvruauug place
under some atoae in the soil. - 'Turn¬
this up just before winter destroy -:
insects’ hiding place; and the
malting snows destroy its
vitality. ’ What insects of all kinds
dread most -is not cold but moisture,
and especially is this true .in winter.
Give Cow*. Gornt Stahl**#,
A cow, like a human being, suffers
bad environment Stables must
dry, clean, well lighted, ventilated
comfortable, el.-e the animals eon
iu them mil sutler hi health.
Most of the bovine tuberculosis is
possible through the ditty, tin
slab! ■’•, and it spreads rap¬
through herds when once intro¬
because of bail physical condi¬
A damp stable ,
wet causes rheuma- ;
in cows, i.a.tk of ventilation and
lowers their vitality, and ;
them resemble children who are
allowed to breathe the pure air
to play in the sun light. When to
and dampness*, to darkness and
air is added the torture of the im~
stanchion, we raa J truly say
rniient auinutls are eonfined in
cow penitentiaries, and the conditions
h -Sr " hole80mo
1 ‘ ‘ lmnn«. I ’ ” ' _#_•
■ ■
. . .
o tin M tt, of'‘aid t~r <t k
Intelligent raisers kinds of
are learning slowly but surely
in most cases a mixed feed is pre
fin able to feeding a single kind of
In sheen sections bran is fed
a considerable extent, and misers
learn to rely upon it to a greater ex
tent than it’s food value warrants. If
oats and peas were fed it would be
that not only sheep, but cows
ess expens*than ^“bran ^“phev
ol one-thiid peas to two-third
.’-w, '
wii... ti,„ „nu in -f in# noTmiVlV • i
that the bevrv is soft but .V ‘
Tnth-eshriov £t X i heine!than it will Vie from The i tt t f
pea - o
about one-fourth p,as aid three
fourths oafs. Ground In this proper
tion they make a grand food for all
Stock. While fed as a soiling crop for
cows they increase both flow and rich
ness of milk. The oat and pea straw
if not. damaged by the weather is a
good hay crop to alternate with tim¬
othy or clover for all stock, including
horses. Both the small Canadian
white pea and the Prussian pea are
good for this purpose, the former the
best for the grain, the latter for straw.
—Atlanta Journal.
tillzin^ r«rm YTuJiteft*
A new industry is being started in
an eastern state, the purpose of which
is to use, flax waste or liax straw m
the manufacture of “absorbent linen,”
high-grade paper, ei This industry
is probably suggested by tho war, «!
iu every su h event “absorbent linen,”
or Lint becomes of the first irapor
tance, because of its unequalted qual¬
ity of rapidly taking up moist are of
any kind fu tire manufacture of
paper, flax fibres have long been the
main reliance for the highest quality
of goods. Bond and faatsy writing
papers must doubtless bo: u.a : o of
linen (rags uve generally used) for
many years. In view of this fact, it
i- passing etrangh that the thousands
of tons of flax straw which every year
are burned on the western prairies has
not long since boon used iu the line of
manufacture indicated above A lm
the fact that whole forests of R|.irnc6
wood bare been cut down hi recent
years to make p iut papers shows that
flax waste is too valuable to destroy
by fire.
It. occurs to us, however, that an
eastern factories city is not a proper location
for for wot king up this waste.
The long railroad haul on the bulky
waste in this materia!, from tb.t gram
fields in the west to the place of manu¬
facture, is a waste in production which
modern methods cannot-tolerate. The
factor necessary to success is to bring
at least the preliminary singes ot illati¬
ufacture to the fields where the flax is
grown., But, leaving these details, out
of consideration, it is a amit r upon
which the farmers are to be congrat¬
ulated that one more waste product of
the farm is about to be turned into a
merchantable product of great impor¬
tance and value.—Nebraska Farmer.
Protection of tins in, Vine*.
Though all our native grapes are en¬
tirely hardy when their wood has rip¬
ened, there are few years when vines
which are allowed to boar nil they will
are not so injured by leaf milder, that
a good deal of the later growth of
wood fails to ripen This is rcillv J
w & ti.i. n» u ae.i sm.ii i, .1.
worn! at pruning time. But it j s «
good r'-.t,".- after top lie prunin" ns soon ‘
uosri'de fallen, burning t K'^po .eav,,. j. a
and of the. i.i unir,,
aud also all the. leaves that can
gathered, bo to destrov the sp„
of mildew which the o wdl cttiiy
through the winter. Even if some ot
the pmuiugs arena, green to bnvu.
passing them through a hot flame ”
<1 ox troy ail the fungus they are
in |: pn,8 f<1.an4 *Ii
andlea^ ,, j|*f e
trctfQ „» *
tbe n , V' 4> j*
8
troll ud thrown upon tie ground.
It v probably not be killed if it
atr: .lpon the trellis, but covering
tb ,>?w wood during the winter saves
it /om exposure to sudden changes of
/unperattire, which are always injn
i>o not take oil' this covering
mitil of frost has I'ftssed, for
t3,e vine lying °» the ground and not
cox&ed will put out leaves and shoots
m<>re dwickly than it would if left ex
P 0iei1 » i! winter on the trellis. There
iU '« more failures of grapes of late
years from killing of the shoots by
ff0sta in «1*»‘« than frota » !i -T
other cause. By keeping the vine*
wear the ground with some covering
to keep sunshine from reaching and
warming them, the buds are held back I
until nl! danger of frost has passed,
Then, if taken up and put on the
trellis-, the vapidity with which the
shoots will put forth, will surpristj any
who have not trod this method of,
wintering grape vines. The blossoms
and fruit will be even earlier than they
"»‘l 011 that have been exposed
to air and sun all winter. Ail the
work must be done within a few days,
for after the buds begin to swell it is
hard to handle the vines without
breaking them off, which will cause
flic vine to “bleed” where the break
o c,c n rred. A m si - i eft n € ul ti v a tor.
A . ,, l»a*. *\ ay- to Sell l outtrj.
A writer living at Anrelin, Iowa,
has this to say in the Poultry Tribune:
Of late years a large part of the poul
try raised on farms is sold to buyers :
who arrive at the railroad station with
a poultry shipping-car and send pies
sengere into the country to
farmers of the fact.
It always provokes us to see farm
era rushing into town with their poul
try in their readiness to dispose of it
at tut> paltry price wuich mou
in ^ \vtiling io give ior it, Ivu.y a
chicken is a clucken in the estinia
t-iou'ol’ these Imvere, They limko. no
distinction between age, race or “pre
viott8 , oa diUons of servitude.”
Everything goes at the same price,
that price is bad enough to meet
the ” lowest estate arrive that it is possible for
chicken to at. It takes a ken
of stupendous weight to bring twenty
l5ve cen ( 3 w ]i ell so ld to these buyers,
And yet the farmers seem to
f.j 16 coming of these buyers as a lucky how
stroke of fortune, no matter
pressing the farm work may be they
count it no loss to drop their tasks for
a day and haul their chickens to town
for the purpose of almost giving them
The ttan who , sells .... the best chick
ena y hlcb he cu “ rftl ^, at t ' vent y five
<*>»*», “P 1 ® 1 * 0 when Hpsy aie some
^ontns past a year old cannot be ex
Tyteu to be very enthusiaatio over
the profits of poultry keeping In
fa(;t t “ an habrtuaUy stands
reauy to prove that there is no profit
'vhatever in the business. Me does
^q«aiutancef and Thus 'Testroys^aU
■* f considerable gniu^
mote from the central markets ns
“ ort hwestern Iowa reeontly told me
that he always figures on his liens
acting him iiby cents apiece. This
is not a “fancier,” he is just a
common farmer-one of those
¥ lows > “owever, who has an eye for
bn *f e88 1U ® v «y»hi|ig which he does,
h«owft when to sell and who to
has made it his business
° iin “ t ’ ,ls cn ’ 11 is surplus stock
goes to a Chicago commission house
in the shape of dressed poultry. It
is so nicely dressed and packed that
the commission house is always ghul
to get it and never fails to find a
buyer for it at a price which is event¬
ually satisfactory to the owner.
‘‘ShnlV’ and “H ill ”
According to Southey, the posses¬
sion of “shall” and “will” gives the
English possessed language an advantage which
is not by all European lau
guages But apparently the meaning
of “shall” is not vet fully defined. A
ease came before the Tribunal of Ap
peal, under the London building act,
w hir'h turned on the meaning of the
word The Lion Brewery company,
it appeared, w ere de-drons to
niter premises in I'oubert’s place,
Regent street. Plans were approved
by the county council, but before they
were carried i,ut deviations -were pro*
p.'.-red, and new plans were submitted,
The <• mml declined to sanction the
now scheme. Thu building act pro
vides that if anyone should desire to
deviate from existing plans it should
be lawful for him to apply to iho
comity e nncii, “who shall sanction
such deviation on such terms as they
shad think tit to imp:.so.” Counsel
for the company held that no 116
oMild construe the word “shall” in an
act of Parliament to mean “mav Y 1 .’:
„ Hudson, , uW «•! ...... the tribunal, , asked ,
it
tho council were bound to sanction all
plans presented under then such circum¬
stances, as .there would be no ob¬
ject in the act. On behalf of the
council it wasmaintained ,,,,,, that, accord- ,
ing to Lord Esher, the word “shall”
was not always to be taken as bavmg
iU1 omigauuy ,.. . eeuse. the tribunal
gave the brewery people the benefit
ot tire doubt aiul approved of the new
plan's subject to certain alterations,
—The Architect.
«ot ou , i. rc.
.1 nc 1 ,, nuco . of \\ ales is certainly the
ehaiupiougoutat.ier of trveat Britain.
He has ulhciateu in times in that ca
paeity. He ;uso holds.another unique
record in this respect in having stood
as godfather to the Duke of Marlbor
ouga as well as to the Duke of Marl
boroughs luiaiit heir—that is,
tat.un to both the iftt-uei and the son.
The ceremony m connection with
b ; l P t,>,m of the son took place a 1 the
I '.,i,tenia« 25 veira -ir. narlier oaihe:r, in in the ti
' .Ti R u “.l \ ei | - m a similar capacity
fe ‘ui, ’, 'xeir,tU« o’Let
A'r,^ sponsors
‘ V >S > bv' ,, ,' J,; Y!‘ <)lie SS .'Y <1 ,‘ l ,’ u ^ or * 1
1 -ru’ ’ v.- V % .flu. ulerbm. 1 iheem
—Knight' f'.; wdf , ' tbe '' to
’ °s V ' 1 *’ UPf®**
; U* -^*V: dlmr
HhM child n
on March ” “
M the ince Jmporial./ to. ’rea’« lcVodes ,» tl .
pi Cdf 1
‘f fy J about id VOUU!
t “® ft «*tocfacy, J. fii «^, ; W10U9
o U8f©j ^ ^acli is B 8tom t
w of tli© godchildren
'*““•«* , of the DoBews '* NQ
wise*,
THE BULL-RING AT HAVANA.
No more shall reek in Cuba’s isle
The bull-ring's barbarous court,
For And we shall smash hideous the hideous pile
crush the sport:
And there shall we a diamond lay
And bleachers build withal,
And Cuba's xs.to.ble uiae will, play
The noble game of ball.
The dying ball shall bleed no morn
To slake their odious thirst.
But death their bosoms wiU deplore
When Duffy dies at first:
Act! grief funereal will hietinn
And bow their doleful heads
When old Havana's Baseball Nino
Are burled, by the Beds.
No more shall slaughter’s gory hand
I’ueiuice the crimson flood,
Save whoa the righteous cranks demand
A treacherous umpire's blood:
Nor soul: their wild resentment cry,
Their ilerce displeasure howl,
Save when M.otony .muffs -a fly,
Or Moiiius muffs a foul.
The sanguinary root, no more
The t hiudit's din ttiiall raise,
But Coogao's run that ties the score.
The terraced eranks will praise;
Axnf Murphy's throw, and KwHly’a. bant,
And Dooley'* triple whack,
And McNamara's 'sliding slant
LV ill make the.welkin crack !
No more shall carnage rupture yield,
Nor butchefy enthrall.
When ou the reconstructed: field
The u'inplre cries, “Play nod’ balll”
But heart- will thrill, radiant eyes
y.-'iii glow like fostftt lamp?,
w lien o or the.hills the pennant flies,'
And Cuba's nine are -champs!
—John l.udtow, in I’uok.
——
HUMOROUS.
------------
She—Are you food of canoeing,
He—Immense. You don’t have io
take off your clothes when yon bathe,
“Georgie, don’t you see that .Taue '
taking yonv candy?” “I don’t tart.
the kind that always ‘ makes her
The Mai<1 , W hat makes you think
hasn’t any children? The Matron
was telling me how to raise
ue>
Why w a horse the most . curious
host- . when \ u tUe , he W0 F has I<i ? not ^ ca » bit 8 « ¥ e f his ts
» m
moul '*
“I can’t understand Claudia?”
“Why not?” “She always is so much
more intimate ivitU desirable people
than they are with her.”
Barites Termer—The true art of
acting is to make an audience forget
you are an actor. Watts—You seem
to do that easily enough,
“The doctor,” said the young moth
Wi “gays baby ought to have one cow’s
mi jk for his daily drink. Now,really,
isn’t that entirely too much?”
“But how can you have the heart
to deprive the poor heathen of their
land?” “They would never learn the
dignity of labor if wo didn’t.”
Madame Theosophia—Tell me, have ivel*
you never seen a Vision’? Sever
corned sutne strange Spirit from the
Unseen World. Airs.Sinclair—Never,
But then 1 entertain so little.
Seat-Where did you get your
—Talk tandem, please, They were
First Criminal—So Bill, the cracks
man, is in the toils at last.
Criminal—Yes, he escaped arrest so
many times that he finally without got fool
hardy and rode his bicycle
bell.
“Now that you have tost your
as surgeon In the regiment, what do
you expect to do?” “Oh, I’m all
right, I’ve opened up a little office
j us t around the corner from ufootb&il
playing * college.”
Once upon a time a man rose polite¬
ly and offered his seat in a street car
to a woman, “Oh, thank you,” cried
the woman at once. This fable teaches
among other tilings that unconvention¬
al ity is infections, so to speak.
“1 guess,” f-uid Rubberneck Bill, in
his most rasping tones, when the
waiter handed him a napkin, “f guess
I got manners enough not to wipe my
hands on your darn tablecloth, with¬
out you bandin' me that thing.”
“J am astonished,” said the scoffer,
“to hear you compare our glorious
country to a small boy getting his face
washed. “Me?’ said the oratorical
patriot. “How? When?” “When
you said. it. was impossible fpr the na¬
tion to stand still.”
Be—There is something I have
wanted to say to .you for a long, long
time. Site *,demurely)-- Well-—don’t
-—don't you think this Is' as good a
time as as. any to say it ? He—That
moje un the left- side of your nose —I
know a surgeon Who can remove such
things- without a bit of danger. They
adjourned sine die that evening,
it f Women,
Yen find in many parts of Spain
blue-eyed -and fair-haired women, these and
wc have in Mexico specimens of
liCieditary Ootlri, daughters of the invading
who have brought down to our
times, in their eyes, the memory of
blue mimnnT MM beneath shorclauds
j icebound life fair hair iu the is long winters too, And and
, common,
; somehow one never gets over tho feel¬
| ing, in listening to the soft Spanish
.
coining from the lips of a blue-eyed
, an q Hght-haired woman, that she has,
j perhaps, learned it as a foreigner in
het early youth. But no; she is as
; much a Spaniard as the women Whose
i eyes'reveal the dc-ceut from the Moor
or the Carthaginian, or as she who
• lias the strong profile of the ltomau
i conqucrer.
I A fair woman is called in Spanish
“mia gueva,” pronounced “oouah
: gwayrah,” or. else “nua rnbia.”. Both
1 terms are common. Among a race
where the dark skin prevails, to be
fair is a mark of baauty.aud one often
j hears people speaking of some lady
• j n terms of praise as “la gtiera.” To
j baby “fair” is to Capture .tho
j heart ‘T*T of the mother. IT™"" A fair complex
: " s°"
f5U, “
m.. Atra»*« Krwinblncf.
t A certain farmc.-, who is by no
means noted for his resemblance to
Apollo, has a son of seven who pos
i 8es,,ea l »ore wit than pedigree. One
: ‘Kv a strange r came to the. farm, aud,
seeing the L 1. asked:
nf, a0 “- v * V ") 'P leve Ve '\ u-f f ? th ? rf .
“ ' the 1 banks.
■* I>1 gpen:
* tl ' e dl *
n 30 su--jutfc?c*. ,
.J**? 7 1 1 oui k t-T * J.V n ‘* CflUS<?
M>s , * . 001 ,, “’ lst * B,t8 '
A Cauterising instrument,
A new cautery, termed by its In¬
the “apliysocautery.” has much
recommend it There is a cautery
which the platinum that sears the
flooli is kept hot by a jet of hydrogen
b«t this requires a small bellows
other -appendages to work it. In
nphysoc uitery the platinum sea ret
is maintained at the proper tempera¬
ture by means of anesthetic ether.
The instrument resembles a pencil or
stylographis; pen. with the searing
platinum at the point and the ether
inside the stem. The other is partly
vaporized in a flame to begin with
find afterward by the heat of the
London Globe,
“Xliere are 208 bones in the human
structure,” said the Cortifed Philoso¬
“and the chief desire of man
seem.s to ho to live long enough to get
in all of tnem Indian
npplis Journal,
Pcin'i TotscccSpii and Snake Year Lite *way
To .jnti toi*ue«.‘o caMly and forever, be n n«
nottc. fu’ 1 of itfo. nerve and vlcor. tnSo No Tu
Bac. ihe wontler-worker, that makes weak iron
strong. All drnrglsta. ro.: < r Cl. Curb Ei'ar:
toed Booklet- an l sAtfcffc frhe \d J t’f.-SS
Sterling Itemedy Co.. Chicago or New York
raov'wnfti’it# f t mrn b s with iv-itcha-tlifi worst
are fomid in (he host erases.
There ls*aere rara&ih i i tht- ser'leti of ttie t
const y Umn nil other diseases pi»i, together,
K"! ’’JH 1 th '’i! lstr " w y*- ft r S was suppased t<:>-ho
prmwun^d I™ 1 r ‘;mi*<llcs. it’.? and iSe*r by B ^^?n.mf“pte*hii^ falling
eonsiantly to
crnstittiiiomii ,-nrabie .tiwass, V?ns l %'^n ,r ™tRw-?m V«
«n.i therefore rwjuire#
amnuto-m^li Vrhen"}-'’“'o7Toi" ,n;n’-. m ir< r °'
J 9 'l 1 ® <?“}»' *,*’*«» ciMi»tnuiDna.i \>\% rath.,
i. t i ai’ a •\i<. .n
x^r 1 'w!."",' 1 ”*} ! t*.V ?, 8 ot v ‘ l ". s7Ste,1 ‘
it.Vs.Bs sendfemclivmttwaSr , tea M:
'’i ’V,]"?V !,t “' ° ’ T, ' lf ' d ’ o
Hhii'a Kamiiy PiiiA arc t)u> boat.
h^vA^ot b^ir^Thoitt JWs Cure iot
Campst., Con#amption Harrisburg',.I’a„ fur 20 yours.—L izzie Kkbksi*
May-t. 18»L.
scortng&mkeMie WcTZllU. , spend in
Kdtipftto Yiinv Bowel* With Cascaret*.
c an dr t’auiam... ear>» ‘'Uiis't-.iasi.'i-i f< orevWi
” lit’. C. C.fall.drsiggis'srat .nJd:
ITffle is the moment of frn-t that kills a
whole Rummer’s attiv th of affection-
ever
sec i snow
Sim ii
Siiier?
We never did; but we have
Seen the clothing at this time
of the year so covered with
dandruff’that it looked as if it
bad been out in a regular snow¬
storm.
No need of this snowstorm.
As the summer sun would
melt the falling snow so will
Ayer’s
,iir
vigor
melt these flakes of dandruff in
the scalp, it goes further than
this: it prevents their formation.
w It has still other properties:
M it will restore color to gray hair
2 in just ten times out of every
ten cases.
And it does even more: it
feeds and nourishes the roots
of the hair. Thin hair becomes
thick hair; and short hair be¬
comes long hair.
We have a book on the Hair
and asking. Scalp. It is yours, for the
If you do not obtain all tho benefits
you expected from the use it. of the J’tobatdy Vigor,
write the doctor about
them id tom® which difficulty with In? easUjp your gen¬
eral system utay re
moved DR. J. Addve-s, At&% Lo-weU.. m**
C.
The
Best
Holiday
Gift
rrRzii
on* that will bring • ptcaftint monthtv reminder
olThe giver U a Mibteriptioa to the
AN D IMPHOYEO
.
f* T7 1 Y2LYIK. f T I L l f
-l 7 *-S jC*. S
. _ __________ ___ M
I-* - .«.■ MAfliniV ~ < 4
^ MHldl < t ^ iVlUUlluV
T ........................................ h-ti
Nnw (O eta * a Ypar
Edited by Mrs. FRANK LESLIE.
f Cover m CoIot and Gold
" • Sores oi Ki-k Illustration*.
•”r*: l l*-„ ca 5 r ?2‘ t r
k' j »t lac!" k.'‘ i , ,^te»qu?n
SsaftsaCTJSfS^a^
ff® L BJfti S 89 L |* Ftesti.al.Aii mre, A Vard nf
1 Bvk» Cb i ‘t';'-'"'" CiivEN \f,,feib Nnv
« \« ' rxHt
Eii’-.-/.“it C 'fr&E i ‘'C'iU'? 'i J
ptat* oiven «iti;'a mcnth*
! “ ■ • •-ipifl.n tor « rent-.
V .«« hi-' ossoasw. nfMMNK.' t'.S. N«y.
• -v //„„>./.
FRANK LESLIE WBUSHINO HOCSE,
BxivU. us Filth Avenue, N.y.
w
____ ____
urMTlAM MEitTlO^ TUf^ TH! 0 FAPtKibc.-,. onD r ' i > ^ vririugtofiijvw
ami: W-SO
hart al, TNr e o? g
'
’
. .ou„
Hflt,® s»i J S«V. »s tt « 9HV> * 4*
-T
\T s;
r^\/t
fern. t
-=* ,i. a 0 i
si ■ses*
-V- P r 1
Wm :: §k;’~ %r\
H
^ P
|#1«| L
/ \ -i i
V \ rn
N ■ :>
,«r ***■«. As Liii^rT
,c.:> ■
■
If you have a carpet that looks dingy and
you wish to restore it to its original freshness,
make a -stiff lather of Ivory Soap and warm
water and scrub it, width by width, with the
lather. Wipe with a clean damp sponge. Do
not apply more water than necessary.
The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soar is made, and its purity,
fit it for many special uses far which other soaps ate unsafe and
unsatisfactory
_ T!*Vtt*sifr k Oast We Co., Ctocinn&ii
Block Type on Visiting Cards.
The latest .style in engraved visiting
cards still remain:; in the block type.
This is the very sweliest form, lmt so
which is perfectly good form Tito
latest card is almost square in shape,
and, although thin, notsc>exceedingly
thin as was the fad a year ago.—
New York Herald.
tn-ttut.v I# Blood Deep.
Clean blood menr»s a clean skin No
benuty without it. Cascaretn. Candy Cathar
tie clean yo«r blood and keep it clean, by
siirritg ) the \ »7.y liver atul driving all im
uritit- r«n the body. Begin, to-dav to
A ■nnifh pimples, hoila. blotches, blackhcail#
and tha t, sickly bilious complexion by ink his
C ascarets,- liennty for ten ceuts. All drug'
eists, Satisfaction smarm;teed. 10 . Sac, 50•.
Ftcrn-.. At.the. electrified beginning "Of si recc ent thnmlp.p
eked drops were obs*«*rved that
ora emitted sparks. faintly oh reiuditag th 0 ground and
To tine a Cold In One l>ay.
Take laxative Brcjho. Qnihina Tablets, All
I)n:ci:i.“t» retimd money if it fails to cure. S5c.
The cries of «:t bJrtls.erpe.elaHy seami’le.
nrp very valnablp a# fog-signal#. The birds
olnater on tho. <1 .ft- ...... roast, nnd tboir
ci ii'# warn boatmen that they are near the
! '—----------------
VI rs. Winslow’# Soothing Syr for children
le'ethjng.RiJftens lion,allays thegnrro;. red; •; inilamm v
pain,eyres .wind co! 35::. a bottle.
Fits permAflently ..................................;■------ ettrad. No Ills
or
PC 8S.fl iter first day’s use of Dr. Kiltie’s Brea*
Nt rvo Kestonr. *i trlallailtlo and treatise free.
Du. K. U. KIMS, Ltd.. 031 Arch St , l’htl»., Pa
Sp. snti.menf is to feel when we- ought, to fee!;
• • ti men tali f.yis to fee’ when vre ought to
To Cure Constipation forever.
Take Oaacaseta Candy Cathartic.. 10.. cor 35-'..
: SC. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund Bisteay.
Equality equal is the impracticable'} out th at any t. Ut] wo Uerb. men
are is opinion of y one o
A HEALTHY BRIDE IS A HAPPY ONE.
E VERY woman is under obligations
to herself and the man she mar¬
ries to be in the most heal t hy con¬
dition possible. She should bo free of
igmm. ail female d iseases ami menstral irreg¬
ularities, beeauiSfVthe condition of the
wife makes or mars the home. Don’t
delay because von dread to coliaulfc a
ay> s doctor, for a consultation is unnec¬
afer essary. Got a few bottles of
,y. OERSTLE’S PANACEA
\ Trukf O-. IP. 3r?.)*«k.
y .a and treat yourself In the privacy of
5 our home. L will euro y ou. If there
Is any costiveness or indigestion, re¬
move it v, ith a few mild doses of St.
jKEP, & Joseph’s ii Liver is Regulator. Aiitl Write Hill us,
your cQiBO com w &
‘instruct you, free of charge, how to
use these famous remedies.
MY WIFE HAS SUFFERED FROM WOMB TROUBLES
For more than cl even years, ami has tried everythin* she rp ufd get & well as
several dbriors; tint imthimi did her any which Shod. ttvejmjrijedtate Last spmig Immwtetteen relief and benebted girtn*
tier Gerst'e’s Female Panacea periods. \V, h. ILftbLlL St. Stephens. Ala.
her greatly at her monthly
L. UERSTLE & CO., Proprietors, Chattanooga, Terni
OYER-WROUGHT NERVES OF WOMEN.
Extracts From .Letters Received by Mrs, Pinkham
"I am so nervous and wretched.” “I feel as if I should fly.’’ How familiar
these expressions are. Little things annoy you and make you irritable. You
can' •t sleep, you are unable to lift ordinary burdens, and
M are s« bjeefc to dizziness. helps make
2 That bearing-down sensation to you
» feel miserable.
Yon ha re backache and pains low down
, in the side, pain in top of head, later on
j x —w-^ / N M» at Base of t he brain,
s Jm \ Such a condition points unerringly to
y — Jgm \ \ serious uterine trouble, Pinkham
jict a. , If you had written to Mrs.
........ ■, \ \ when you first experienced impaired
vitality, rou would have been
\ spared these hours of
^ r—-L ' I / *5’- \ ^ \__awful ' suffering. will be
/ s Happiness gone
«sw ( - / ontof.your life forever, my
><“*' fi i s ter unless yon act promptly. Procure
Lvdia E. I’inkham’s Vegetable Compound
a t once, and begin its use, then write to
Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., if there is
A * - rnvtliing about vour case you do not
understand. totellhcr the
MifMScif -eSMtm You need not, be afraid
v «»“■»• “*“»»“•*»
n»«i Jfi ahsoliitely confidential. . .
W Pinkham's vast experience with such
Jf ^ i troubles enables her to and tell you she will just
what is best for vou,
f charge you nothing for her advice,
mSSP W Mils. Jexxib Bikklt, Youngdale,
JY , writes:
«T>r,'».p gratftSfor Mw Ptvkijam-—W ill vou kindly allow me the pleasure of expressing
my the wonderful relief I have experienced by taking your Vegc
table Compound, i suffered for a long time with nervous prostration, back.
ache, headache. loss ot appetite, a heavy bcaring-dowu feeling, also burning
pains iu the groins. I could not sleep, was tired all the tune, had no ambition.
Life was a burden tome. The paina I suffered at times of menstruation
something do dreadful* I thought thero H*as no c\xte for it* I saw your auvetuse*
meat ia paper, Ja and my husband advised me to try your medicine. I took
bott: s6 , now i «m wdi **4 v oW mnudu, wv«d myhV
4 trnmmmm H1Y«UccatentM ftmm’imiMm Merisi
Maisby I Company,
3t> 8. Broad SI., Atlam.-i. G i
En 8 ines and Boilers
Water Heatew, Hieant I'nuipa and
I’euberUiy injectors.
/v'fe.. iS
Meuufa 'Hirers .-.ml Dealers Jn
SAW MILLS,
Corn Mills, FCpiI Milts.Cotton Gin Mttchin
< v t‘j »ntl Grain >«»j»arators.
SOLID and IN^KHTED Saws^ Saw Teetli and
I.u.’kH, Knight’* l>o^s, B.irdsaU Saw
Mil! ami Knsiup lt^pairK, Governors, Grate
Burs awl a tuh lino of Mill Suj»pUrs. Y r
aad dual tty of goods guarantoud. Catalogue
fttid Whiskev Babil#
cured at home with¬
out rain, Book of fiftf
tlcumrs sent 1KEB.
Aiiania, ...........................mM,WOijJ,LKT. Office 104 N. Pryor M.D. St.
G<».
AJBflfhlCV HI 0 S»L • Securi'v
Jfr. re.pitriHl! Either
sex. Send 4 i-eats in slaiups for outline.
The Prip.te.fW Supply 'bo.. Herald Ss,. N. V. 'Oily
— —---------
y\? YV ANTED'- «j Case of bad health that t RT ! -A N s
w o -t heneOt. Semi *:«#. to Rip -■ .1
Co., NewYoirk, f-u 10 samples and IMW
--------------------- ------------
w -------- -----““ ’ Ttsittew, par
IJOWaIG' ass or Lftdieft
" - s -e. BHOJS Buffalo NX
Oiiiits CouKb WHLKE ALL Tas«a» USf fAtlS. Ose
I in time, Syrup. Solti Onurffistsb; OOuU.
by
; :