Newspaper Page Text
The Siamese Twins.
En i and Chang, known a s the Siam¬
ese (jsvUuj, were born of a Chinese
father and a Siamese mother in Slam,
April }5, 1811. They died In North
Carolina January 17. 1874. They
were joined to one another by a short
tubular cartilaginous hand, through
which their livers find hepatic vessels
eommrsntcttted. They were brought
to America for exhibition In 1828, and
after making a competency in various
countries settled In North Carolina.
They married sisters hi 1842. la
IS09 they again exhibited themselves
in Europe. The one survived the
other two hours and a half,—Detroit
Free Press.
Tl><> World'. Supply of Wlti-al.
An Kuglish unpin prophocten a unlv«r*nl
fl*»rth in the wheat »•■<} ply. tie claims that
tii" rain wheat producing be nil is unequal Even to ibo
at that: will put upon It. now
when the f'K"l supply of tho woriq jg nui' | It\
thousniids die because tb.,.',: iU irdered atotfi.
*>•»>» tall to properly UMsiUlste the food they
uk*7 ttOT 8 H to mooli fifttote strettgUien
»n4 and ton© ti p thw few sto i io;> !.■ h uni • Iigee!ivc .ir(toriit,
and and ©nab ic thorn to pe rfoft • their pn per fuuc
Horn. 1 hi« grrnt ■inear and cures dyepepAia, and
torpid liTor, uorTuium«89 (fiver ague.
Th« ordinary cigar Jn Porto ftica can be
b mjrht thrre for a cecfc.
Cood
Digestion should but
Wall* on afipiftlte, or It do so,
this can !>e only when the stomach ts tn a
lioaltliv condltiou. Hood's Sarsaparilla so
tones ad strengthens the stomach that it
digests food easily and naturally and then
all dyspeptic troubles vanish,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is America’s ((realcut Medicine. Price $L
Hood's Pills euro biver Uis. . 25 cento.
How Purlo Ricans Shave.
The natives of ot.tr new territory,
Borto Riet.i, have no need to buy soap,
for the wooded country abounds In
paints whose leaves and bulbs supply
most fully ihe place of that indispen¬
sable article. Among the best of
tluw Is th<» swip trcis so-called, nl
though It is more of a hush than a
tee Its luilb when rairbed on wet
clothes makes -a snow - white. lather,
wide!.! has an odor like, old brown
soap. The I’one It icons, who are all,
from the higlievt to the lowest, great
dandies in their way, make soap out
of etieorinui e.il .’snd bome-made lyo—
««<1 » fine it is, smooth and fra
grant This cocoauut oil soap is used
for shaving. When a man wishes to
have n shave in the morning he starts
out. wiili ills c.M'oami! aboil cup, and
his donkey-tall brush and bottle. It
isjieter any trouble to find an empty
! -%Uh- in i’orio Hied, Cuba. Jamaica,
almost any of the larger West In¬
dian islands, even in remote spots lu
the mountains. At least twenty gen¬
of thirsty people have lived
ail'd thrown away the bottles.
man carries no minor, be Is too
poor to own such a luxury. Not one
house in twenty in Porto liico has
wen the cheapest kind of a looking
glass. But generously rich nature
provides the mirror, as well as the
soap, ’j lie mart goes to some conven¬
ient pool in the mounta in si reran
where the water Is quite st.ilt--t.here
his mirror. He breaks Ms bottle on
stone, and deftly picks out a sharp
piece of suitable size. Then be lathers
Ms face profusely, and begins to
scrape away with his piece of glass,
which in his hands works as Well as
the best steel razor. A cut or even a
slight scratch, is extremely rare as a
result of this al fresco form of shav¬
ing.
PERIODS OF PAIN.
Menstruation, the balance wheel of
woman's life, is also the bane of exist¬
ence to many because i t means a time of
great suffering.
While no woman is entirely free from
periodical pain, it docs not seem to have
been na¬
ture’s plan T
that women '■
otherwise
healthy
should suffer
so Lydia severely.
E. Pink- e?
ham’s Vege¬
table Com¬
pound is
the most
thorough fe¬
male regula¬
tor known to ij
medical sci¬
ence. it relieves the condition that pro¬
duces so much discomfort atul robs men
etruation of its terrors. Here is proof:
Bear Mks. 1'ixkham:—H ow can 1
thank you enough for what you have
done for me ? YV'hen I wrote to you I
was Buffering untold pain at time of
menstruation; was nervous, had head¬
ache all the t ime, no appet ite, that tired
feeling, and did not care for anything,
f have taken three bottles of Lydia E.
I’itikham’s Vegetable Compound,
of Wood Purifier, two boxes of Liver
Fills, and to-day I am a, well person. I
would like to have those who suffer
know that I am one of the many who
have been cured of. female complaints
by your wonderful medicine and advice,
—Mow Jknmf B. Mu.fto, Leon, Wl».
If yon are suffering in this way, write
as Miss Miles did to Mrs. Pinkli am at
Lynn. Mars., for tha advice which she
offers free of charge to all women.
®SSH cy?staf afciiwts’sjftcti 3 ScaS
have Weriilllr imuvitved, until l mu as well as I
ever was in
Newark . Q
CANDY
CATHARTIC
T«ACr s itjtn neamocnsD
'
^^j^SEISBBEa^ 8
Tam LiMPT
* FOB FARM ASD GARDEN. ►
C WW’ ■ irW T $ , r
Sunlight for Stock.
A sun bath will do animals as much
good as human beings, and the win¬
dows on both the horse and cow barns
should be ao arranged that the animals
can have all the sunlight possible.
There is no necessity for placing the
windows where draughts of ,air are
likely to full on the animals, but they
should be placed where the animal
days. will get some of the sunlight this on bright
Not only will benefit the
animal, it will add materially to the
warmth and dryness of the bam and
do much toward killing the odors in¬
separable from animal life. In colder
climates the windows should be ar¬
ranged so that they may be lifted, or
in other ways opened for needed ven¬
tilation, and each with an outer door
of v^ od to close over them on cold
nig/'V Added warmth will be se¬
cured by having a curtain to pull down
from the inside. These guards against
cold should bo arranged so that they
will in no Way interfere with giving
the animals the benefit of the sunlight
during the clay.
Oood for Fattening Fig*.
While corn remains at the low price
it has brought for several years it
would seem as if no better or cheaper
hog food,especially possible for fattening,could
be had, but if it is to accom¬
plish the same result, at even less ex¬
pense just so much is saved. Experi¬
ment with kaffir corn Lave proven that
while its feeding or fattening value is
almost exactly the same ns corn, tho
yield per acre is nearly one-third more,
which constitutes the saving in the
planting of kaffir corn. The soy bean
has also been found not only a good
fattening food for hogs, btu particu¬
larly valuable for general planting be¬
cause of its draught-resisting qual¬
ities. When fed with kaffir corn, both
of them ground aud mixed, the result
was eight per cent, gain in weight
over a mixture of corn and soy bean
It is evident,, therefore, that
kaffir corn, owing to its increased
yield, is preferable to corn, while the
use of the soy beau adds to its fatten¬
ing properties. The soy bean should
have more attention in districts where
droughts are common, It has no
equal as a drought-resistor, and is
readily eaten by all stock when
The Coni of Kcejiliis; a Hen.
The cost, of keeping hens depends
not only on intelligent care in feeding,
on whether the feed is bought or
raised. The ration for laying bens
be such that the nutritive ra¬
tion to tiie egg-producing properties
be about one in four. This
best be produced with cut clover,
middlings, bran and corn meal, for a
morning mash, with grains in variety,
corn, rye, buckwheat, wheat, millet,
A fair amount of green food,
cabbage, 'carrots, potatoes,etc.,should
mixed in ike mash occasionail y, or
feu raw every few days, On such
rations a hen may be kept at a cost of
about seventy-five cents a year, less if
the food is raised.
Buckwheat is one of the best grains
for fowls and adds largely to the egg
production. Kaffir corn and millet
are also good if they can be raised or
specifies bought at a low price. On the rations
two meals a day is sufficient,
the mash in the morning and the
whole grain at night fed among the
litter on the floor. It is sometimes a
good plan to cut the night ration
a little short, feeding the portion re¬
served about the jhiddle of the after¬
noon scattered among the litter on the
floor of the scratching house to keep
the liens busy. This question of
foods and their cost needs to be stud¬
ied closely, especially in sections
where eggs fail as low as ten cents a
dozen during the summer.
A T.tvlnsf From Poultry ami Item,
A living can be made on a small
plot of ground by keeping poultry and
bees, but the person must study to
learn the conditions of success and
then faithfully carry them out in de¬
tail. If is plant mast be large enough
to give him constant employment,and
he should have a taste for the work,
so that instead of its being onerous to
him he will enjoy doing, In this
business, as in any other, what leads
to success is a large capacity for pains¬
taking work.
In my little farm in the village, I
have four large poultry yards, In
these yards are planted 'small fruit
and apple trees, which make a shade
for the hens and furnish mo with
fruit for family use and for market.
In each yard, as fast as they increase,
I shall set twelve or fifteen hives of
bees. These do not in any way dis¬
turb the hens, and with good manage¬
ment are a source of considerable
profit. ,1 have been able to pay for
my farm and many improvements
upon it, besides saving some money,
because our poultry Lave nearly made
a living for my little family, ‘so v.. ■
could save about all the receipts from
any special money crops grown on the
farm. Our poultry aud bees aud
three acres on which straw berries and
celery are grown for market, I know
are more profitable to me titan
be a good dairy farm of 100 acres.—
W. H. J., Delaware county, N. in
New England Homestead.
Two Faults With
A sheep salesman recently
■«*«. tt. -tork,
ounch of iambs averaging fifty pounds,
-old for $5 per hundredweight.
were ewes and wethers ol good
ity, but they were in very poor
dition. On the same market good fat
lambs brought p *, r
weight. For the thin lambs the
ducer received about $4 per
ing tVt'u .V.L s:l >- f'i per head.
tuiu'kei and fnm < ‘] ! ff b « l "<‘eu
) t
I r «gfS 8 * ttt
or°inhVv h ,Mcer a xts
!idTffer^ r p r? i?" x* 8 * 8 '? pei ' h « a< >
‘bnercuce eig 'r been
II of $1 50 oer head, R150
or
otjouo hundred Iambs. Clearly this
jiittu erred in not fattening his lambs,
even if he had to buy feed to do it.
On the same market was a lot of
lambs that contained a liberal propor¬
tion of bucks. No complaint was
made as to the quality of the stock
aside from this, yet these lambs sold
nt a discount of over 75 cents per hun
deadweight as compared with good
ewes and wethers. The buyer of the
latter considered them cheaper than
the bncky lambs at the difference.
On a hundred lambs averaging seven¬
ty-five pounds this would good mean a dif¬
ference of $66.25, a price for the
labor required to castrate the ram
lambs in Such a bunch and allow for
losses too. Besides, the wether iambs
would have made better and cheaper
gains, and so would the whole flock.
The above are two of the most com¬
mon mistakes of those who raise lambs
for market, and they are illustrated
just as forcibly on every market.—
Stockman and Farmer.
Thorough Prrjmration of Soil.
A few years ago the Rev. W. R,
Brown of Umpire, N, 0., informed
me that upon a certain occasion a
tenant commenced laying off for corn,
being, as I understood it, the first or
leading row through the field. The
row- was crooked and Mr, Brown in¬
formed him that he would straighten
it if he had to run a half-dozen times.
He accordingly ran a n umber of times,
cutting from one side of the furrow
and then from the other until be fin¬
ally got it sufficiently straight to
answer. No person appeared to have
the most remote idea that this extra
plowing would result in any advan¬
tage, other than straightening the
row, 1 >ut Mr. Brown says that tho
com of this rriw was twice as good ae
that of any of the other rows.
The above shows the effect of thor¬
ough preparation. A loose bed from
twelve to sixteen inches deep and of
a proper width should be made before
planting: said the corn. In cultivating,
bed can be gradually widened
until all the ground between the rows
be broken deep. This deep tillage
w ill exert an immense influence in
time of drouth. More than this, the
corn in the drill can be twice as thick
as wilt shadow plowing will admit of, aud
then bear better and bo better
every wav than the shallow plowed.
When the people come to understand
this mutter property they will sbe that
they cannot afford" to cultivate their
land shallow.
It would, however, be better for the
land to bo sub-soiled in the fall or ;
early winter, but when inconvenient
to do this, it may be plowed deep, as
aforesaid, in early spring, provided
that it is done with a narrow plow of
proper construction that will not
throw the subsoil out of the furrow
and expose it to tbe air. It is advis¬
able to expose the sub-soil to the air
if done at the proper time, but not
after the winter passes.
If people would cultivate less aud
fertilize more they would,as a general
thing, succeed far better. They could
then retain command of their crops,
and as a result would not lose all in
time of extreme drouth, as is now fre¬
quently the case. Nine times out of
ten when a farmer fails in his crop it
is his fault rather than that of the
season. The soil must not only be
kept up but the fertility thereof' gen¬
erally increased over what it now is.
Clover and cow peas, in connection
with proper fertilizers, are the great
levers that are destined to revolution¬
ize tho agriculture of this country.
The corn rows are preferably wide,
say, seven to eight feet. The corn
should be planted in the drill suffi¬
ciently close to make from fifty bush¬
els per acre up, according to the rich¬
ness. The cow peas are preferably
drilled midway between the corn
rows.
An excellent fertilizer for corn If a
good dose of stable manure, to which
about 200 pounds each of acid phos¬
phate and kiiinit per acre have been
added. Stable manure contains an
excess of nitrogen, and it is necessary
to add these elements in order to cor
feet said feature. About 300 pounds
each of acid phosphate and kainit may
be applied to the peas, in both cases
in the drill and well mixed with the
soil, preferably several weeks before
planting. The peas at most need but
little nitrogen in the soil; they draw
it from the air—far cheaper than buy¬
ing in the market. By reason of this
fact, in connection with certain chem¬
ical the changes that will take place after
corn stalks and pea vines are
turned trader, the farmer will be ex¬
ceedingly well compensated for hia
outlay. The above quantity of fer¬
tilizer may seem large, but it will
prove economy in the end. Follow
with wheat and clover, applying riliO
and one half bushels and fifteen
pounds of seed per acre respectively.
—Bryan Tyson in Farm, Field aud
Fireside,
A Saw (itiartl,
Tn view of the fact that accidents
with circular saws have always been
alarmingly common, it is surprising
that until very recently nothing has
ever been done to-protect persons who
work about these saws Of bite a dc
vice has been employed that seems to
promise immunity from at least a por¬
tion of the danger. It is a cap vesting
oyer the top of the saw, but in no wise
justable interfering with its action. It is ad¬
and leaves ample spare for
the handling of pieces to be cut. An
arrangement of angles deflects the cur¬
rent of air which is created by the
whirl of the saw to the table or the
piece that is cut. This Vdov, « the saw -
dust entirely away from the fro,• t of
the saw and enables the workman to
follow the lines much more closely.
It is a curious fact that the workmen
themselves are the greatest enemies
to guards of any kind that have been
experimented with for this purpose.
But as custom if not law bolds* tho
employer responsible to an extent for
injuries received, it seems right and j
necessary llmf some protecting device
should be adopted. —New York Ledger,
Holmon'.H ( hoico. ( !
that Lieutenant Hobson should have
a dvstik, to Which the hero responded j
that he never drank anything. When
asked to have a ’iigur he also replied
that he never smoked, However, ho
suggested to Colonel Me Michael that,
ddSimes*" bflVe “ • ML “ Ve - - Pha -
GREEN GOODS GOOD AS GOLD.
Genuine Money Sent Out as Bait by the Up
to-Date - « - — Swindlers.
Chief Wilkie of the United States
Secret Service says the country is be
IT „God . opililto!.. -tail, I -P
the circulars to the Secret her vice,
thinking they have discovered
of coumerfelters. Iwenty or Unit)
ot these circulars are sent d.niy to Urn
office of the Secret Service 'by
who have received them. The
has nothing to do with green
people, but generally sends a
answer to each person, warning
of the nature of the scheme
to be worked.
"The green goods men have
Plans this year," said Chief W
’•Formerly they sent out a
inclosing an alleged clipping
of the splendid counterfeit money
ing made. 1 hey claimed that
counterfeit: money was so line as
deceive Government, officials.
scheme was so often exposed in
newspapers as to enlighten the
Now the green goods man makes
following statement in his latest
cular: ’Now. my dear sir, I am
aware of . the , suspicion ... and , . ,,
that you naturally will entertain foi
my proposition, as ><m will on
thought class it as coming from
green goods or sawdust swindler;
if you will lay aside that
apffiy common sense and look at
proposition from a business
point, compare it. with the methods
these petty swindlers and you
credit me with not Iteing fool
to waste my time addressing a man
your intelligence and standing in
community. The methods of the
called green goods swindlers
been exposed from time to time
the daily press. They send out
live circular letters to Ignorant
era with a newspaper clipping in
garil to counterfeit money. &e,
lv pretending that they are the
tl.-s spoken of in the article, and offer
tug to sell that which they have
inducing them to send on their hard
earned money ami sending them a
Hse of sawdust or a brick or
such In t'.Oivr 1 Tho reason ihn»* 1 m- :
cals find ■ , it profitable . to work
game is because they know, and
take it for granted that the people
general know, that there are
of thousands of dollars, counterfeit,
circulation, and as men have no
scruples against increasing the
circulation Hit fact, the majority
people are in favor of doing it by
as Witney tm V late greenback
and tin* present Sliver agitation)
are induced to send on their money
the very liberal terms held out to
tiii-tn five r.-ms buying a dollar,
r '"‘ " p* No
gent man would do it, for their
proposition Is ridiculous.”
t hii-f Wilkie says that the
now sent out by Hie swindlers are
artfully • worded as to deceive
P-l»V. If the swindler begins a
respondtmee with a probable
be sends him « new * bill along
a second circular as a sample of
-irk. The bill is genuine,
Botmdlmes the would-be vict im
this dollar to the Sccre,
without saving where he got it,
„ p is genuine. The
Sr- we officials write him that 'It
Ihe b 1 made, top they manage, to ...
t'I<*,scA. In.ii a circular xvhlch o?>cii«
- - 1,11 males him - , l,ow
ffteen goods man is working on
t Otif.’-itict* Affair.
“T on and Hagby aro dear iriends,
aren’t you Y s
.
“WcU, ho 1ms been dear to me,
5 *» - him anything.’'
sa Head Does vow
Aehe ?
Are your nerves weak?
Can’t you sleep well? Pain
In your back? Lack energy?
Appetite poor? Digestion
bad? Boils or pimples?
These are sure signs of
poisoning. From poisons?
what
From poisons that are al¬
ways found in constipated
bowels.
If the contents of the
boweis are not removed from
the body each day, as nature
intended, these poisonous
substances are sure to be
absorbed into the blood, al¬
ways frequently causing causing suffering and
severe
disease.
There is a common sense
cure.
mm
P1LS M § m
and They natural daily insure an easy
movement of
the bowels.
You will find that the use of
^arsaparia «. Ager’s
with the pills will hasten
recovery. It cleanses the
Mood from all impurities and
is a great tonic to the nerVes.
WrUo the Oisnint'.
0u 7 Bl.©4 fcft.1 l }&pa rtin f nt h©n®
<>! she m«>5t t*mis»wi»t physicians in
the T'nltf.i Tell the doctor
jus* will 3tow you t.fso !tr© best suiteristje. rstcdf^al advtco You
Mlt&Ottt receive
C*>3.t. pit. A.
j. o
w p ; v Si RM M ef$ fey*
g « ; y*
P i Ml® f ; 9 g m M m I
I p 4 Vi
c '
• -c
.
“ La Crcwki’' Hair Itobtorcv is a I’crfrd a ml Hcslorer. Price
BOW A CHINAMAN PISHES,
“• ar*
« er ni«.
“Speaking of the natural Instinct
and extent to which the faculties of
birds may be developed," said an old
bird trainer to the writer recently,
"perhaps one of the most interesting •
examples of this Sa the way the cor
morfuit is trained by Chinaman to
catch flsh. The coromant is a very
intelllgeut bird and is easily donqs
tics ted. They readily lay when cap
tured and their egg* are hatched out
oy enfekpus. \\ hen a Chinese fisher
man has half a doxeu or more of these
freedom lathe water, where they 1
soon develop their natural lacliha- i
tion to dive lu search of fish. But ns
whan ' ,* r fif K ’ y JaVa ca . r f> -h blT n , * tn< pU ’ . ;i . the _ r)n? . ‘‘V t! |
'"
sns f , , ar t
on a raft to some favorab. • fishing
ground and nuts them ovevbonrd. ■
They begin diving In turns for fish..
s s< ' on aii u fisfi Is secured the cor j
xnorant comes to the surface to swal
bv'tile ■ tl rinlr^ronmf 1 g ^ u ^ 1 T d n^b k ni ' Ti 1 liU ihi hlr< S T
Is , then . „ called m to the float, « by the i
fisherman, who robs it of Its prey,'
a„, ,„™ ,™.l W
s.'” n. SLSL’ ^sr,s;
rin « about the neck of the cor
moraut and the whole operation Is
repeated again and again, until the
bird becomes tired of diving, when
another cormorant is put overboard.
Some of these cormorants am so per
fectly trained that they will catch
and deliver fish without being
strained by the ring, and I have seen
one bisd bring to the surface as nmnv
ns twenty fish, all of which
F‘ ° 0M an d 0
pounds.
“The Chinese, who have snccessfnl
lv trained the cormorant and the otter
to Its a for them, have also taken tho
remora tn hand, with the happiest re
stilts.
Most Voyagers in tropical sens arc
aenualnted with this peculiar fish
which Ts known generally by the tn'
vial name ,»f the sucker, Tha
goishlng characteristic of this fish is
iaziness. Unwilling to exert Itself
f von f uH: * «» the. pursuit of food, it
:! S J 3e e \Tf a f arral ;«‘-,T nt ° n th;V
OticK o. c ivS head exactly like the cur
nysrated ml$ of a tennis shoe, and a*
artlffi’ittl in nppcnrnnce :i* if made
* ™ n -
M lien the sucker finds Itself In the
v tolnIty of any large floating body
such as n ship, a shark, or a piece
flotsam, whose neighborhood seems
io promise an abundance of food, it
attaches Itself tirniiv the>*etn
mwu ,p. 0 f ntls curious contrivance.
yvhleh permits it to eat breathe and
perfonn al , necessary functions whim
being • carried about without anv ox
onion on its part. It «an attach and
detach itself InsttnntiinernshL and
holds so firmly that a direct
ward pull cannot dislodge it without
injury :. to the fish
Several 8peeJnM5nR of
tllo fls i, havUljr hwi! caught,
Qjj neso fisherman fits small iron
r j Bj , s to their tails, to which he at
taches long, slender, but very stout
lines. Thus equipped, the fisherman
sets out, and when n basking turtle
is seen two <-r fbroo of the suckers
are put overboard. Should they turn
ar "i stick to the bottom of the fishing
raftf they are carefully detached by
{ K ,d n g p^ «»rr;,;s s he<! r
search again. At last they attach
themselves to the supine- turtle Then
t j M , fisherman hauls its ' the lim s
agalnKt whlch p( , mle suns!on tho
hapless chekm struggle in vain Once
on the raft the useful remoi-a
Js detached and is at once n»Hv '
u^e again." '
fro'd v «„ <.
.
,“ A ? a 4 J' ou *o undertake a
trip of 500 miles %ith such a team as
lour off horse will give out be
{oroyon’re haif way there.”
“Don’t you worry about that boss.
He’ll drop dead about- the time we
to Sketlnak, and the good people t-har
raise a purse and buy me a better
one T his haiu’t the fust time I’ve
mcve *> stranger.”—Chicago Tribune.
.T"— ~~~~
* on 11,ob *«o Spit and Smoke Your Uf» Awa? ,
To qatt tobacco ‘-asily diet forever, ho nine
nottc. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No To
r#,-, the wonder-worker, that mak.-x wcakiren
wed. strong. All aruggtsw, roo or *i. cure Vnara.t'
Booklet ana wimrfo tree. A'ddrm
SterlingJfoijuMiy c<x. rhu-ago or New York,
A London papersponksol Htype-sottingma
chine which can be run- without an operator.
Mrs. WlMfoW’* Boothitw 8rntp fornhijawn
!ffi?' hi fK' soft< : r ' s G I egnm*,r«ittoe«inrturtinrw
Ft. Howard. tVis., A-tonll?-'t!'^ TowSl
sesd. May 4, 1891.
.................—~ ”
Vo-To-IUt for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed ifowo tialtif: cure makes wnak
men'strong, Wood pare. 60c, St. All druggists
A j, !f> rids. Inventor lias designed a stoarn
boat to ran ou the tee in winter;
**®0 Steward. «t«o,
Umt.selene* has >>eett able to euro hi »tl
tm ,miy now
the-medlwl fraternity. Catarrh bftfo« weou
t«S«T Htefo cSi"
na! >■ "«*!?*>8 directly anon the blood and mu- i
the patk-nt -tienctll by bnildlm; cptberucsti- !
!
l*ow«« t*«t they offer Ons Hundred
v Vm .: #l0r ‘ '“ ,,d
- Ghekby a, To]«'3o 4 O.
Htdl’s ,, , Fai'i t ’ C pfq are ^' the best.
Li'neria Is the onlj town of anv size in
Monrovia, with a popufivtioti of 13.1®
Tn Cure C.>usIli>.,H,,'> l'i,i ever.
Taki! tYaftw raw Caftdy CasH-v’tl :. 1ft;,»? -J* •
IK.’. C. C. foil : .toeuro, (irsigglrvtoi’K'fui'at moate
U ,
‘'*i
A Top*) Turvy land.
•
Viewing things from an Oriental
standpoint, we would probably think
our present way of life the for!
turvy way and pity ourselves
ahortalffhtednesa how. and foolishness, as I
the* do
in Japan white is mourning both)
for men ami women, while women l«
diente their age hv their costume to' The
Japanese has do foundation Uia
house, but instead the roof Is hollas
ted. that being considered a bettei
safeguard against the violent stornus. :
Alter tUauer speeches are made be
were ours* Think of the speeches
thrown to the air!
Some of the Japanese symbols arfr
interesting aud deserve recognition.
popular are their works of an in
som, the national flower; ,J« tlm plum
wli ieh sianines ”u, “ ™ W \ icoreuVoIti VV ,
the pine t trench of
nge; a woman under a roof, charmlnu ”**
symbol of content
TlK! cbUqueimss of the Japanese
oulid, which comes before one always
in spring of anything .Tanttnew u! "V !
’
cause,1 hu,oS.T»w5cli2 It k bv th* «l2L S
,, w „ :
1
,o *»“*-»-•*«
______________________________
The Smokeless Variety.
'™gSClcs — ihis war lias shown that
P<> w <'cr .-WU1 be unlike a child.
—Wbat in the world do yon
nu ’ a:i?
Waggles--It should be heard, not
seen.-—Judge.
»«•«„*, i. l.ioo« i»e,p
..
i>eanty without It. Casoaret*, Candy Oatbar
' '«in y'oor )lml and keep i* elea’i. bv
' i,i * , ' rni « aoibe irt/> liver and driving ail im
inritie^ from tbe IJeglri fco-.fiAy tfi
t^msh pimp)e .. bo r,». blotches. bhc khcvK
• »n/t that sickly Wlfoiw (.•wni'Rsiowb'y tnklns
i Cnsenret*. -beauty for ten .corns. AVI droe
i iriM*. *ntUf action cmirantixal. 10c. 35o, 30c.
VVher-.-t rnsrrbM wornw- :ocs a war un a
l ' on ' (,s homo ovrltcr (ball she In
X'^
lo Sl ‘ 1 -' u ’ * 1,11 -wch hsm at Hny.hiuK
To ( ore a ( old in One Hay.
Take Laxative Brcrrio Quinine Tablets: AU
f*tn» g »«o reimm miaiey if n Mb, <»«««>. «&-,
i <* cot eenendb- known that »U per
we*- to Nvhfin ii&ht «oi<l t*ndfr»«l may
! tU ' Uie * Hny ou! h/hetow' the car-*
—...................- - -
: Norvo , •r.'rw.w-i&'Tti.v.ss: ttostoivr
*2 irtal bottle ami treat!** freo.
ifo- »• «• m Arcs St., t’k»a„ i> a .
work ’Frisco shipwrights ..............•’.............. set p tor nine hours’
’ ’
r,in.af v tour Bowel* with ttaaowrot#.
<-a-n<ly Cathartic, foil,Mrugiftst*refnn4 cure <j.jn«tp«i,tioa forever
| l0c ’ iV '‘ ifC -G.o money
’ B our neigiffior* objected to hs aniniwh as we
A ff ~.
2K
ii
■
W
IN'
™ E acauNCE « shot of
th < ? originality and
slm I“*«ity of the combination, but also
to tixc care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
knovv » G> the Califounta Fio-S vaur
t 50 - only, and we wish to impress upon
a11 th * i«*portance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
tke < auvohnia Fit. Strop Co
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
unttot ions manufactured by other par
i-* 08 - 1 he high standing of the CaU*
founta Fig fSvKite Co. with the medi
P«>ras«on, and the sattsfaelton
”the genuine byrupof togs has
S' " ^, mi ¥V ,ncenfT/fr!:! lf uuihes. " f' lar; makes
in' other' l-ix'-it ivel* !f
far advance ' of all ^
as R ?icts on thc kidn(y . s< (lt
bowels without irritating or wcaken
inir “ th* ' in ' f and it does 1 not ‘j 1 erioe p r p e nor
nausoatc - In order , to get Us beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN t’HANCISCn. Cut
fAnrisvintt:. iij. FEW YOUK.H, E.
« H 43 *"" O
n-tei«once , >
In the Privacy of the Home.
** TT7HEBE u la no need of women subject
/mil s * i •sfLE. f%?v \ X, I jug of themselves minations to the mortification for
f W i ,)i \ treatment exa of the by various-diseases doctors tho
\ to
which they arc* subject. Those troubles
/’'y "rNTT—-' S 5«), I'i'A M home. can be treated When just as effectively at the
!|j'{i : j, 'i'Sl you are affected with de
hi ‘ rangements of the menstrual functions
mm lilvSiSMi ^ *211=' \rndt ibe completely any other female cured and disorders, you fully can
> IJ tho organs
' r : restored to activity and strength If for a
-
’ 1 , ’ I few months you will uee regular!v
V GERSTLE'S
\ v FEMALE PANACEA.
T’ , * o *( C-S-> JE^,
DOCTORS FAIL. BUT GERSTLE’S FEMALE PANACEA CURES
thought My wife best was to call taken sick another anti I phym-iaa at once railed for consultation. otir family ph; Alter ,i ue. their ■ he
tn ns:ng
medicines bottle for two months I found sin was andcomment very little fetter. ?n 1 then purchased,
a of Ceratle's Female Panacea better H m-ating her. b‘< tor*: ita<!
site had finished taking the second bottle she was in health than she
enjoyed neighbors in yeans good previous. results I then recpmmvnded H. J. TfUlAii.KU.L, the Panacea TUrailkuh to three Miss. of iu>’
wiui
IJemove ail oostiveness teftli. mild doses of 51. Joseph’s Liver
Regulator. If your ease i« complicstt d, write us and. wo will instruct
you fully how to use these great remedies.- Hold by nil druggists.
L. GERSTLE; 4 CO., Props., CHATTANOOGA. TENN.
"~ T
Would w W« Spend *
.* * nilIlo “ uOUttrs
’VCarly rfc¥T*»' advertising- '** *
r tL/aiaiOgfie© i
if tfaey vyeF© ‘ Sl'CLtl *
WOftsI . naving f
t Un Our '' general ‘rockery. Catalogue stove.. contain; Clocks, je-whig
m^o£' etef,
< ^ tnaffeSr i^ r ^ orator3 ' mUm
an ‘ J f’*rn»h ifroo)« »m> . i.,wv
H «ro T<“» can buy at the s»m- prices
that, .. dealers ray, A million and a half
owns have written for our Free (>-?»-
logues.
Bo you want them? Address this way:
inliii<s Hinpe % c?«„
Dept, M «0t 6AIT1H0FE oftusiimmt, MD. WO
| ^ - bKi £sUC'd>525t'UL. Cl IfTPCCFI II
P farmer who raises fruits,
Vegetables, - . , berries or
ram , knows experience
'
fa, p orancc »•. iiav:n s 3
percentage, of
f:
ifeS A
his fertilizers. If the fer¬
is too low in Potash the
is sure to be small, and
of inferior quality.
Our books tell about the proper fertilizers
for ftU crop’s, and we .will gladly send them
free to any former.
OEHrtAN KAU WORKS.
t»3 Nassau St., New York.
fi. XX
A,
The
Best
sjm Holiday J
% Q ft ' j
.i
that wiii bring n pleasant monthly reminder
of NEW the giver AND I* a subscription to the
IMPROVED
H ^ T 8 < a' f
1 4t*tpb- 1 iJVt)UC « O
iwl r Monthly
Now 10 cts.; $1 a Tear.
Edited by Mrs. FRANK LESLIE.
EACH MONTH: { in Colors And Gold,
of kich lHuPtraiionS*
CONTRIBUTORS: W t). Ckna Bar- I
ton, Hrr-C Hare-, Waller Camp, Flank H Sleek ton*
Margaret E, Saiiffssicr, JilHa C. R Dorr, jtiacjtntt
Miller, Edgar Fawcett, Egcvton Castle, Louise
Chandler Mduifon, and other famous ami jjopu’ar
v.-rit-era
I :ra ' { y fu ) An " 1 a [ d of
rnfcfc siibscripliMi i
with a B
fu”, f jT.*.V »'w5t: *«! 'i r'l*
<ji\en 1
trial subscription for = 3 cents,
COMPLEre »ory«t ft« smiNfi CFThf -.mebbiamc ”
Hie toims.nu. »f tl.a /.-w.-. in the January
Kumlwr - tu, ‘ v «»«*•*>•-»*-!.
.W-..-4V -V* mu™ LfmiM.
FRANK LESLIE PUBLISHING HOl’SB,
r '“ u ’ T H ’ MM-ifth Avenue, N.V.
,, , ,, “' iP '
'
Dfffl-Ufffi ah Smas MttCHINES and sizes, tor /'I
I *N « R LOOMIS erics, years Gos. 'WHAT Mineral am etc. experience. -Irrigation, drltfiocweRs ft,.a, ries, Water & YOU Prospecting. Latest NYMAN. lee tHv WANT, Works, Flanls, and tmd WRITE Tiffin. -Coal for llcst Oil ViWe to Facto¬ Uh:w- Ohio- .and use, ana US 90
gsr* fponiAgiE mn&imnf
can be mMmhi «;-> nc«->;;> for }wpnbir mata*
a» /in<% 0<io<l ^eiiriuj* wa^rsi ,nb*<cTi.r*tiitr.B of b- s*ii^ it busi- }« j r
manent. fo in* t tuul
ii ms ouaWficoTfoiK*. Sond br letter of .'inform**
tion. BTODDAK1), :if>» l^arl St. r Net*,- York Ci y
DROPSY!’ff, 'or book of t Kxtrmmiwte m3l i o rF, H> K ';v tjftv**’
cam**. mate's
i vb&i iri“Vt ibr *•' c*. Dr - H - E, som. AtJa at A, Ga,
ty ANTED- <’*•« at bsA l-rivlib sh.iK HMWS a
>• wiii n.if Hs-iif nt. Sere! Decs, in Rtpaso< Clisnifcftl
c, N..,*V ,rk hit n H cay lgv un 5 tm c itfout >i uis.
" V** Thsmason’s Eye Water
,
MENfiblTHis PAPiiSr'rSf;