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THE RIVER OF LOST SOTTLS.
_
tta, a.» H.m. u>. K..
Mexican Stream,
Over three centuries backward and be¬
fore inquisitive Da Soto had lighted Mississippi his
campfires on the banks of the
the Spaniards had achieved two settle¬
ments in this land of the Occident —
Santa Fe und St. Augustine. They had
no knowledge of the country which lay j
between thc-c points or it« inhabitants.
As to what might be the dangers and
deadfalls of a journey from one place to .
another, they were us blandly ignorant
as of the history of the moon, but this
ignorance affected them not, and full of
the uneasy spirit of the hour a military
party in Santa I'e resolved on an overland
expedition to St. Augustine. They knew
tle; distance, for they could figure the
latitude aud longitude, and they could
get the distance by the compass; ,iut
this was the sum of their knowledge.
The expedition, numbering some
dreds of men, left Santo tc late in the
Summer, and crossing the mountains at
Hat mi Pass, the present route of the San
ta t o Railroad, they camped that \Y inter
on the present site of I niiidad. 1 he
grass wits long in the valley, the game
was plenty on the hills, their own stoics
were ample, and, sending back to - ante
he for minstrel and glee maiden, these
gentlemen of the sword got tnas gav a
season as they ever have since. possessed loose
old dons were lads of spirit and
high hearts as well as « taste for travel.
Before them to the eastward, as far as
eve could sweep, spread the desert un
conlincd. What was to be met there
they knew not, but their lack of know!
edge was coincident with an equal lack
0
With the melting . of , thc , snows in the ,
Spring sunshine the women ami c,l ™P
followers returned to M.nte he be
last hand was waved good-bye, the last
mhos was uttered, and the explorers
turned their resolute faces to the work
in hand rhey marched down the val
ley of the little nimbly river which nows,
as you read this, through the town of
1 nnulad. The ones who were to
to Santa Fe watched them for miles, as
sisted by the glint of the sun on steel cap
and harness. At last they were hidden
in willows far down the valley, and this
was the last that was ever known of them.
With the last flap of thc last banner it
was as if they had inarched out of exis
tence, and whether they sunk in rivers,
perished in the drifting snows or were
ilone to diuith by Indians was never told.
No sign or trace ot this expedition or its
people was ever found. There was
thing so eerie and mysterious in the
complete disappearance ol this band,
somethingso dark in the silence of their
fate, that the superstitious Spaniard
made the sign of the holy cross when he
recalled it. With that effort at com
niemorntion which was the spirit of that
time, the little muddy torrent in whose
valley the lost explorers last, were seen
was eaileu LI Bio de Los Animas “The
River of Lost Souls.” [his was the Span
ish name when Sublette, Chouteau, Bent,
( arson, St. Vrain, aud other represent
atives of the French Fur Company of
St. Louis first saw it. K nowing
of thc story and assisted only by their
inferences drawn from the name, these
translated the appellation into the I’m -
gainin'. Y\ lieu the jocund bull-whacker
of the overland trail got to it, in his
Irce-and easy French he called it “the
Piekctwire.” I'.very brand it ever bad
still sticks, and to-day you will find the
little vagrant of a si ream pursuing its
glistening mission to the sea with as
many names as a member of the British
House of Lords.—[Kansas City Star.
Only One Chinaman in the Late
War.
--
K. I). Cnhotit visited Libbv Prison
War Museum a few days ago and inspec
ted the curious relies of the war. Mr.
Caliota is a native bom Chinaman. lie
lias lived in this country nearly forty
years, having left the land of his birth
when only six years old. Long dleuint before
the Chinese Exclusion law was of
lie had proved liis fitness for the duties
of American citizenship by taking up
arms in defence of his adopted country
and marching to the front. Although
but fifteen years old when the war broke
out, he declared that he was over age and
enlisted in the Twenty-third Mussaeliu
setts Volunteers, under command of
Colonel Andrew ElUvood—the only rep¬
resentative of I he Mongolian rave among
the millions of men thus facing each
other in a struggle for life and death.
Caliota was an unique character, i n
der lire Caliota proved that he was made
of the stern stuff, for his bravery was
commented on during various engage- 'in
merits, building notably at Cold Harbor and
the of General Butler’s signal
station in front of Petersburg. At the
close of thc war Caliota was mustered
out along with the survivors of the regi
nient, then under command of Colonel
Raymond, of Marblehead. Since that
time Mr. Caliota has devoted himself to
business, there being little in common
between him and the ordinary Chinaman
beyond certain race characteristics of
feature. In speech ami dress he is an
ordinary citizen.—-[Chicago Herald.
Vaseline as a Shoe-Cleaner.
It is not generally known that the
easiest way to clean shoes or rubber over
shoes which have become muddy is with
vaseline. A little “stvab’’of flannel on
the end of a stick is good for this pur
pose. Lven if thc vaseline touches the
hands, it forms a coating over them so
•hat the task is not so unpleasant as it
otherwise would he. Such a dressing as
this is sufficient for some line kid shoes,
but others may need a coat of polish, if
line the polish it is not is put liable on to after crack a coat the of leather vase
and it lasts much longer. Rubber over
shoes, especially, look much better and
last much longer if cleaned in this way
than if they are washed with water.—
[New York Journal.
The Oldest Rose Bush.
At piklesheim, in Hanover, there is a
celebrated rose bush, the oldest in the
world. Charlemagne himself planted it
more than a thousand years ago in com¬
memoration of the embassy received from
tlie caliph of Rasehid. Thousand and One Louis Nights,
Huroun al In 81 £ ic
Dcbonnaire, son of Charlemagne, had a
chapel constructed, the altar of which
Zl S? JTdi IZ
bushes is about two and a quarter inches
in diameter and twenty-eight feet in
the height. The branches trained up against
apsis hundred of the chapel cover a surface of
one and eighteen square feet.
The plant annually bears a large number
of flowers.
A Wonderful Discovery.
< >nc- of the most wonderful discoveries
j n sc j cnce that has been made within the
j ast V( . ar or two is the fact that a beam
of produces sound. A beam of
sunUpglit is thrown through a lens on a
g | (iss vegs( q that contains lampblack,
colored silk or worsted, or other sub¬
stancus> A disk having slits or openings
,. ut j n jj. , nadc t0 revolve swiftly in
this beam of light so as to cut it up, thus
making alternate flashes of light and
shadow. On putting the car to the glass
vessel strange sounds are heard so long
as {he flashing beam is falling on the
vcsse ]
Hecently a more wonderful discovery
has bcen ,’ nfuie A beam of sun ij„ht is
mado to pass through a prism, so as to
, )roduce w hat is called the solar spec
trum ov rainbow. The disk is turned,
aud the co | 0 ro 1 light of the rainbow is
lm ide to break through it. Now place
tbc ear tbc vcsse ] containing the silk,
wool or othev ma terial. As the colored
lights “ of thc s , )ectvum faU upon it
g undg v , m bu given by different parts
of the spectrum, and there will be silence
11 Vor^iulmce,
if the vessel contains
,. cd worst ,.,| t and the green light flashes
upon it, loud sounds will be given.
feuble souud , w ill be heard when
the rod and blue parts of the rainbow
fn „ tlu . ^1, and other colors
make h() golIlld at Gr ecu silk gives
loun(1 best in rcd i igllt . Every kind of
material gives more or less sound in
di(fcrent colors , and mtel , s no sound in
0 jj l( . rs
Tbediscovery Is a strange one. and it
is thought more wonderful things will
come from it.—[Golden Days.
Rebuked by a Baby King.
Here is au old storv iu a new dress. It
j s told by a Paris writer for the Phila
dolphin Then: Telegraph: cheer
ing come from Spain the most child
accounts of the health of the
sovereign fast, is Alfonso XIII. and He lively, is growing and,
j„ once more strong
f act> gives no end of trouble to his
. mother and his governess by his exuber
ant spirit and head-over-heels baths ways,
j us t now he is enjoying thc and
j sca breezes and of the lovely'seaside his resort of
i Concha, whenever small majesty
- makes his appearance in front of the
| royal bath house he is saluted on all sides
j | with cr jcs of “Long live the king!”
\ comical story is told concerning his
i | behavior in church. He has been often
reproved during divine for laughing and talking loudly
I j service, and lias become
quite exemplary in those respects. A few
j i Sundays ago ho accompanied his mother
j to thc service at the church at Concha,
The priest whose duty it was to preach
j the sermon was a stalwart and energetic
j j ecclesiastic, and he got excited bv his
j owa eloquence, and banged the pulpit
j cushion and shouted out his denunciation
of thc wicked in a very vehement style,
! i \t the first pause there came from thc
j royut i shrilly, pew a little piping voice, don’t remark
j ug ‘ ‘Look here, man, you
know it is verv wrong to talk out loud
I in church
The Nimble Swis3 Cow.
j Its cows and goats nr; the pride of the
j Prattigau, in Switzerland. No people
j Lnropc is so rich in them. Laeh lias
her bell fastened by a broad strap and
great brass buckle, in whose size tlie
I mvner glories as our ancestors in their
| shoe buckles. These bells are carefully
rdtoseu; each lias a different tone, and so
serves to it identify should it the animal, as well as
| to trace stray. The tinkling
°f the I'd Is as the herds come down
from the mountain pastures in thc into
i ! afternoon has a never-failing poetic
j (diarm, iu tlie pathless and no doubt uplands many has been a wanderer led by
their sound, ns I have, to the hospitable
1 sennhutte, and a guide.
Most of us have laughed over the cow
j who “lowed .Mark 1 wain s guide into
j Zermatt, but one learns to think with
i j “nd respect of tlie cow guide. as a mountain-climber Your Swiss
even as a cow
j j does "ill go with like to case follow. whore She her herdsman
not never seems
in i* 10 l east doubt about the next step,
! ^he will find the shortest way to get any
"here where there is a bit of grass or
shade. She rarely slips, never fails, and
1 have watched for several evenings one
who regularly jumps two fences to make
a short cut on the railroad track in spite
of the herdsman's vigorous protests.—
I New York Post,
The Story of an Old Bible,
In the summer of 1804, while the Union
army was lying in front of Petersburg,
Yu., D. O'- Keiuohl, now a patent attor¬
ney in this city, was stationed at City
Point. He found, in a disabled ambu
lance, an old family Bible, in which was
a ily. genealogical tree of Bcinohl the Hatcher fain
For years Mr. has been
trying to locate the owners of the vol
utne and on September 13 last lie wro'e
to a friend in Virginia to assist him in
his search. That lettci and this was morning published in
a Kcinohl Virginia paper Mr.
received a reply from Thomas C.
Hatcher, of Chester Post Office, Chestor
field county, description Virginia. Mr. Hatcher Bible gives in
an accurate of thc
question and says it was lost attempted in May,
18U4. when Gett. Butler to
march from the Bermuda Hundred to
Richmond, It was taken from tho Half
wav House between Richmond and
Petersburg.
This morning thc ol 1 Bible, with tho
history of the Hatcher family for several
generations, was started homeward by
express, after having been in the posses¬
sion of Mr. Rcinohl for twenty-six years.
Mr. Rcinohl has also written a letter to
Mr. Hatcher expressing li is delight at
being able to Scriptures.—[Washington return him lhs long lost
copy of the
Star.
WHAT CUBES I
Difference ef Opinion em u
portent Subject.
Whnt ia the tore. that ouita dlieaae: end
wblcfa lathe most convenient apparatus for
cian applyln* umTuI itf How because far i»the regular physi¬
to ns we believe in him,
and how far are hia pUli and powder* and
toalae only the material representatives of
hia personal influence on our health!
The regular doctors cure; the horuceopath
io doctors cure; the Hahuemannites cure:
and so do the faith cures and the mind
cures, and the so-called Christian scientists,
and the four-dollar-and-a-half advertising
itinerants, and the patent medicine men. They
all hit, and they all miss, and the great dif¬
ference—one great difference—in the result
is that when the regular doctors lose a pa¬
tient no one grumbles, and when the irregu¬
lar doctors lose one the community stands
on end and howls.— Rochester Union and
Advertiser. *
Nature cures, but nature can be aided, hin¬
dered or defeated in the curative process.
And the Commercial's contention is that it
is the part of rational beings to seek and
trust the advice of men of good character
who have studied the human system and
learned, as far as modern science" lights the
way, how far they can aid nature and hoiv
they can best avoid obstructing her.— Buf¬
falo It Commercial.
is not our purpose to consider the evils
that result from employing the unscrupul¬
ous, the ignorant, charlatans and quacks to
rescribe for the maladies that afflict the
physician uman family. We simply declare that the
who knows something is better than
the little physician indeed who knows nothing, or very
about the structure and the con¬
ditions of the human system. O; course “he
does not know it all.”— Rochester Morninn
Herald.
I have used Warner's Safe Cure and but
for its timely use would have been, I verily
believe, in my grave from what the doctors
termed Bright’s Disease.—D. F. Shriner, sen¬
ior lsditor Scioto Gazette, ChiUicothe, Ohio,
in a letter dated June 30, 1890.
A Correct Idea.
General Booth’s idea of improving the
condition of London’s poor by attending
first to their bodies is a correct one. You
cannot expect to find a healthy soul, so
to say, in a starved, dirty, and broken
down body. There is an interdepend¬
ence of condition between the soul aud
body, which spiritual and physical doc¬
tors must recogniz e.—Baltimore American.
Another Kind of Bar.
“Yes, Jimmie must belong to a gym¬
nasium, husband now," remarked inquired old Mrs. Jones the
to her who what
boy did in the evening, “I heard him
tell find a him friend the other night that hanging he could
down at the corner on
to a bar most any evening in the week.”
— Texas Siftings.
Insurance Against Disease.
In certain instances there have been ar
the r&ngemcntB head nmde family between that a physician fixed nn<l
of a a amount
should he paid for each day the various mem¬
bers of the family continued in good health.
But should sickness enter the household, discontinued, the
physician's usual stipend was
bueh an agreement is founded ou common
sense, for we don't want to he mude well, wo
want to he kept well. There is a great deal of
unnecessary sickness resulting from a want of
careful attention to bodily requirements.
Keen the blood pure, keep the functional
habits of the body regular, counteract the ef¬
fects tle of the exposure Bull’s by always Sarsaparilla having in a bot¬ the
of I)r. John
household and using it in anticipation of an
attack of illness or when the verv first trouble symp¬
toms are manifest. Disease will not
excellent you if you preventive will heed this disease good advice, and decay, It is an
of as
well as a safe cure.—-Marina Banner.
A medical like philosopher inverted fever. says that It begins matrimony with
appears an
warmth and ends with a chill.
Malabia cured and eradicated from iho
system by Brown’s Iron Bitters, which en¬
riches the blood, tones charm the nerves, aids general diges¬
tion. Acts like u on persons in
ill health, giving new energy and strength.
American dentists pack away every year in
defective teeth about 1,S(X) pounds of gold,
worth about $450,000.
When medicine is given a child, parents like
to feel it is a safe and proper one. Such a
remedy is Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers.
The milk and pulp of the cocanut is said to
annihilate tapeworms.
FITS Stopped fr«n by Dn. Kurus’s Great
N itnvK Bestobkr. No (Hb utter flrat day’s as®.
Marvelous cures. Treatise aud $-1 trial bottl.
free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., I’hila., Pa.
Woman, her diseases and their treatment.
72 pages, illustrated; price Me. Sent upon re¬
ceipt of 10c., cost of mailine.otc. Address Prof.
K. 11. Kline, M-D., SOI Arch bt., P-Ua., Pa.
LeeWa’s Chinese Headache Cure. Harm
Timber, Mineral, Farm Lands and Ranches
in Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkansas,
bougn t and sold. Tyler & Go., Kansas City. Mo.
Oklahoma Guide Book, ami Man* sent an)* where
on receipt of 5Ut*U.Ty lor «& Co., Kansas City, Mo.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Kye-water.Druggi6tH sell at25c per bottle.
Beechham’s Pills cure Sfck-Headache
Catarrh in the Head
Originates In scrofu ous taint In the blood. Hence
the roper method by which to cure catarrh iff to
purify the blood. It« many disagreeable symptoms
and the danger of developing into bronchitis or that
terribly fatal disease, oocsamptlon, are entirely re¬
in <ved by Hood'ff Sarsaparilla, which cures catarrh
by purifying the blood; It a so tones up thc ffystem.
“For % years I have been troubled with catarrh In
thc head. Indigestion and general debility. I never
had faith In such medicines, but ooncluded to try a
bottle of Hood’s Sarsapsillla. It did me o much
good that I continued Its use tl 1 I have taken five
lKittles. My he 1th bos greatly bnj roved, and 1 feel
like a different vrvman. —airs J. B. Adams, 8 KlcL
mond St., Newark, N. J.
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Fold by all druggists. £1; six for S3. I’re;—rod oul,
by C. L HOOD ft CO., Lowell, Hms.
IOO Doses One Dollar
EL J
o 5 n
i
igpf Sr i i
i
Housekeepers 1 Helps.
Baked QcrNCEs.—Bake ripe quincn cold,
until done and very soft When
strip oil the skins, place in a deep dish
and sprinkle with sugar and serve with
cream.
Pumpkin PASTisv.-Boil a pumpkin and
mash it up. Season with pepper aud
salt to taste and add a teaspoonful rf
cream. Make a pudding paste to put
around it. Bake thoroughly.
Cup Cake. —Two cups of sugar, one
cup of butter, four eggs, one cup of milk,
four cups of flour, two teaspoonfuls of lemon bak¬
ing powder and one teaspoon flat loaf.
extract. Bake in n large
Stewed Phenes. —Wash, drain cover
with cold water, let soak several hours
or over night. Stew in this water, add
sugar to taste, with just enough with water to
cover. Fine; served very cold, any
forms of bread given, are highly nutri
tonsand gently laxative.
Potato Soup. —Three pints of rich
milk, one pint of mashed potato, two
tablespoonfuls of butter, pepper and salt
to taste. Boil the milk, acid the potato
and boil again, stirring frequently that
the potato may become thoroughly dis¬
solved, nnd season just before serving.
Serve very hot.
Spice Cake.—O ne cup of brown su
gar, half cup of blitter, two eggs, two
tablespoons of molasses, half cup of milk,
one teaspoon of cinnamon, one each of
cloves and allspice, half a nutmeg, one
cu|i of chopped-raisins, two teaspoons of
baking powder and enough flour to make
quite stiff.
Cnisr Cookies. —One-half pound su¬
gar, one-lialf pound flour, one-quarter
pound of butter, a third of a nutmeg,
three eggs. Cream the butter, add the
sugar ami yolks of the eggs, beat until
light; stir in the stiff-beaten whites, the
nutmeg aud flour; flour thc board, roll,
cut and bake in a quick oven.
Onion Soup. —Three pints of milk in
which boiled six good-sized delicious onions have been
makes a soup, seasoned
to taste with butter, salt and pepper,
thickened, if desired, with a tablespoon¬
ful of corn starch made smooth in cold
milk. Onions are much nicer boiled in
milk than in water.
Queen Fritters— Take one glass of
water and two ounces of butter and put
on the stove in a saucepan. When this
comes to thc boil, add half a pound of
flour and stir till stiff. Take off the fire
and add six inw eggs separately, beating
each one ns ndded till a soft dough re¬
sults, then fry in lard in pieces the size
of a walnut.
Crab Apple Jelly. — Wash Sibe¬
rian crabapp es, quarter, but do not core,
put in a kettle, and cover with cold
water; cook until soft. Strain twice
through a jelly bag. Put the juice on
and boil twenty-five minutes. Add a
pound of sugar to every pint of juice,
with the juice of one lemon. Boil until
it jellies.
Hickory-nut Layer Cake. —One cup
of sugar, half a cup of butter, half a cup
of milk, two cups of flour, two
eggs, and two of teaspoons chopped of baking powder
a cup raisins stirred in
last. Bake in layers and ice with boiled
icing which has had a cup of chopped
raisins stirred in. This is an excellent
recipe for company.
Apple Tapioca Pudding. —Soak a cup
of pearl tapi^c i in a pint of water two
hours, stir in three-fourths of a cup of
white sugar, add one-half teaspoonful of
salt und a cup of thin cream or new milk.
Peel, quarter aud core eight large apples
eaithen (Greenings preferred), and put in an
pudding dish, grate a little
nutmeg ou top, nnd bake an hour and a
quarter in a slow oven. Serve with
whipped cream.
Chocolate Fh-ling forCake.— Grate
such a quantity of chocolate i.s you may
desire (I use about half of a square), into
a small tin pan, and set it on the back of
the stove to melt. Then beat the whites
of one or two eggs with sugar as you do
for unboiled frosting, and stir ic into the
pan with the chocolate. Flavor with
vanilla, aud sprend between the layers
nnd on top of the cake when tlie cake
has cooked.
Lemon Sauce.--M ix a tablespoonful
of corn starch with three tablespoonfuls
of cold water, stir into a teacupful of
boiling water, boil till clear and bake;
add giated yellow rind the juice of one
lemon, with a cupful of granulated sugar.
Simmer two minutes. Bent one egg,
add two tablespoonfuls into cold waiter, pour
the boiling mixture this, stirring
rapidly, return simmer. to fire; remove soon as it
begins to
Cream Chocolates.— One quart of
granulated sugar, half a pint of boiling
water, half a pound of baker’s chocolate.
Pour the water on the sugar, mix well,
and leave it to boil ten minutes without
stirring. and Place briskly the saucepan in it the cold
water, stir until becomes
stiff enough to handle. Mold it iu little
balls and put aside to cool. Break the
chocolate in small pieces and put it in a
bowl in the top of a boiling tea kettle.
When melted, remove the bowl and drop
in the balls one at a time; take them out
with a fork and place on a buttered
paper.
DROPSY
TREATED FREE.
Positively Cared with Vegetable Remedies
Have cured thousands of capea. Cure From patients pro
nonneed hopeless by best physicians days first dose
symptoms disappear; in ten at least two-thirds
all symptoms removed, bend tor tree book testimo¬
nials of miraculous cores. Ten days’ treatment
free by mail. If yon order trial, send 10c. in stamps
to pay postage. On. H. H. Gbken A tsONfi, At lanti, (».t.
Comes Every Week — Finely Illustrated — Read in 460,000 Families.
Five Double Holiday Numbers.
Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s, Easter, Fourth-of-July.
FREE TO 1891.
To any New Subaciibcr wbo WILL OUT OUT and send ns this adver¬
tisement, with name and Post-Office address and $1.75* wo will send
Tho Youth’s Companion FREE to January 1,1891, nnd for a full year
from that date. This offer includes the FIVE DOUBLE HOLIDAY
NUMBERS, and all the ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY SUPPLEMENTS.
45 Address, The YOUTH’S COMPANION, Boston, Mass.
The Magnet and Hypnotism.
subject, A curious in fact is of that lethargy, if the hypnotized the
:: st ite grasps
north pole of .» maguet, he is filled with
intense joy, and sees beautiful flames
issuing however, lrom is the end of the magnet; the south if,
he connected with
pole he is profoundly miserable, and usu¬
ally flings the magnet away in horror. If
the north pole is placed in his right hand
and the south pole in his left he becomes
entirely dating passive, the two currents pre¬
The entire inrt fferenee to anything.
is over-cxeitability such in of the nervous sys¬
tem the hypnotized person that
you can bring about all the symptoms of
poisoning tity by strychnine if a small quan¬
placed of the poison in a scaled glass tube is
on the skin in front of the neck.
A tube containing brandy will produce
all the signs of drunkeness, and a tube of
cpium of will tinder bring about all the symptoms
a man the influence of that po¬
tent drug .—London Court Journal.
Wife —Horrors! Husband, I’ve just
heard there is a case of smallpox in the
flat above us.
Husband—Yes, I know about it. That’s
ail right. It’s the young man who plays
the flute.
wivh Owing to exposure I have been indisposed
AYule Thenmatism about six months.
Mv skill failed to afford me relief and I was
induced to try Bull's Sarsaparilla, and must
confess that it entirely cured me. It is decide
iy superior to all other preparations of Sarsa¬
parilla.— B. B . Alien, M. D Brandon, Ky.
All sanitary rubbings of the body or limbs
should invariably be, in direction, toward the
heart.
Brown's Iron Bitters cure* Dyspepsia, Ma¬
laria, Biliousness and General Debility. Gives
Strength, aides Digestion, tones the nerves—
creates Mothers, appetite. weak The best tonic for Nursing
women and children.
An English official report concerning diot in
prisons, says that a cent’s worth of split peas
is equal in nourishment to 9 cents worth of
heel.
Do Yon Ever Speculate T
Any person sending ns their name and ad¬
dress will receive information Ijewia that will lead
to a fortune. BenJ. A Oo M Security
Building, Kansas City, ilo.
0
<5b
f
m
ON» ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing ofFigs is taken; itis pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gently Liver yet promptly on the Kidneys,
and Bowels, cleanses the sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only Svrup of Figs is the
duccd, remedy pleasing of its kind ever pro
to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its to the stomach, prompt in
action and truly beneficial m its
effects, prepared only from the most
its healthy and agreeable substances,
many excellent qualities com¬
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy k nown.
d Svrup $1 bottles of Figs is for sale in 60o
an gists. Any reliable by all leading drug¬
may not have it hand druggist will who
on pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not acoept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
Lmtv'uHir™"™ 0 HEW ' 0 “L- YORK, n r.
Vr-i ; ::
W COLD HEAD
: RELIEVES INSTANTLY.
x : :.
& KLY BROTHERS, 6« Warren 8t, New York. Price 60 cts
«y " ,uhT„ vz"t "lYe""™:
I'l BV STORE, 73 Whitehall Street.
Largest StocLc and Loieest Prices in the City.
fsySoclety Emblems a Specialty._ iaJ
Send me $l.fiO nnd get a Solid Gold Pin of
any Order you belong to.
PENSIONS Ket’ss.r PENSION Bill
*h£ta<&. 9
x piHO’S Cheapest. ItEMKHY Relief FOR Is immediate. GATAltIUi.-Bestr A is Easiest certain. tlTusc!
cure For
Cold in the Head it has no equal.
A A
It Is an Ointment, ot which a small particle is applied to the
nostrils. Price, 60 Address, c. Sold by druggists E. or sent by mall.
T. Hazrltink, Pa.
■ gam ■Ul n BI ■ I ■ ■■ Hcured and Whiskey at home Hahlta witb
■ 811 B HUE H HI fln oat titulars pain. Hook FREE. of p&r
M <H9 H.M. WOOLLEY,M.D. sent
—■
Atlanta. Gr. office 104>£ Whitehall St
PATENTS ■ B-u ■ mam wm W i" R p ho^ atent# g » ent frM<
Patrick O’Farrell,
TELEGRAPHY I LEADING SCHOOL AND SOUTH. SHORTHAND Cntnloidic !
free. COUCH A Ll'OENBEEL, Meiiora, Ga.
^{E Companion YOUTHS
IK.
(jmiSIKAJ*
Let every enfeebled woman
it! There’s a medicine
cure her, and the proof's
Here’s the proof — if it
do you good within
time, report the
to its makers and get
money back without
word—but you won’t do it!
The remedy is Dr. Pierce’s
proved Prescription—and itself it
the right
in nearly every case
female weakness.
It is not a miracle. It won’t
everything—but it has
done more to build-up tired,
and broken - down
women than any other medi¬
cine known.
Where’s the woman who’s
not ready for it? All that
we’ve to do is to get the
news to her. The medicine
will do the rest.
W anted—W omen, First
to know it. Second to use
it. Third to be cured by it.
The one comes of the other.
The seat of sick headache
is not in the brain. Regulate
the stomach and you cure it.
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets are the
little regulators.
fi’i™i.5d r si:?iS.OTr.S
m 5.0°; !§; R ■■ L ;yoo
I/OR ^OlES
n FI fe
CnO iM
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. FOR
ITSmI addrma on postal for valuable Information.
W. L UObULAS. Ur.cktsa. llus,
•.or.,
Lai ss
Rr
i L id -A I BtfOll&tlOg i $
Consumption Price, fl.00 per and bottle. its Cure, Dr. mailed Schenck’e free. Rook Address on
Dr. J - H. Schenck & Bon. Philadelphia.
KING COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton °n JONES
5-Ton Cotton Scale.
NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST. ,
For nddresa
JOKES OF BINGHAMTOJT,
IRON FENCE
sixty styles ro*
CEMETERY & LAWN
CATALOGUE FREE t
J. W. RICE,ATLANTA. GA.
CHEWALLA Sure seldom and Gout. oure or for Ordinary ever Rheum require mtham c mmM
more thaa one bottle. Price $’2.00 per bottler
Witt. W11 ANN* Box 835* New Orleans* La
»1'U D), iiooK-keepiug, Business Forms,
thoroughly Penmanship, taught Arithmetic, by Short-hand, ate*
rant's MAIL. Circulars xra«fc
College* 457 Warn SC. Buffalo. N. V.
VASELINE
FOR A ONE-DOLLAIl BILIj sent tu by mat)
we will deliver, free ol all charges, to any person In
the fully Unit packed: <1 States, all of the following articles, care¬
One two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - loots.
One two- ounoe bottle of Vaseline Pomade, - 15 “
One Jar of Vaseline Cold Cream, ----- 15 “
One Dike of VoseliueCantphorloe, - - - - 10**
One Cake of Vaseline l»oap, unscented, - - 10 *•
One Cake of Vaseline Soap, exquisitely scented J6 H
One two-ounce botLe of White Vaseline, - - 25“
named. Or for pottog- On stamps any tingle article at \e price
no account be persuaded to aocept from
your unless druggist labelled any with Vaseline or preparation because therefrom vrtU
our name, you ecr
tainly Che.ebrough receive an imitation which has little or no vahsm
Mfg. Co.. i»4 State 8t., M, Y.
NEW LAW CLAIMS.
Ap tS ly MiloB. Steye&s&Co.
Attorneys, 1419 F St., Washington, D. O.
Braach O aloes, ClerelaaJ. PetrslLChlcar#.
■ I prescribe and tally en.
limn* dorse Big G as the only
IHr Hi Care, in wj specific ol for the certain car*
TO 6 bixs. this disease.
U ra Mly by the We bare sold Big Gtor
a ClnclnnaU.WW faction.
IA Ohio. 1 D - KDTC ®^iiL
fad* k* 91.00. Sold by Urugelet*.
A* N. U. ::........ voTtm, *'18*:
For Coughs^ Colds
There la no Medicine like
DR. SCHENCK’S
PULMONIC r SYRUP.
It in pleasant to the taste mad
doe* not contain a particle of
opium or anythin* Injurious. It
is th« Best Cough Medici no in the
World. For Sale all