Newspaper Page Text
THE LONG FELT WANT.
TRIAM ANn THmrMTIflNN K *|*£
RIKNCKD IN riJBIilwniNH A nkw
PAPER.
Hill Nr* Trite ■■ Haw hr Printed n Onllr
Paper In n Town Where there Wne Ne
Nee at Per It.
A NOTABLE CHARACTER.
The Anterlenn Hnah, with • I'ew el hie
Meet Net able Pecnllarlllen.
1 toyed with A daily once which was
incorporated to fill a long felt want. I
did not know it waa loaded. Vi/e made
it ohr bnaineM to boom everything that
was boomable and to aneer at the lack
of enterprise of oar adversary. Wo got
specials by mail, press reports by slow
freight and showed a style of fearless en
terprises that was the envy and the ad
miration of many largo metropolitan
journals. Wo thought that our adver
sary wouldn’t last more than a month
after election, but Thanksgiving came
and found the Evening Squawker still
on deck. The editor would come and
ttorrow print paper of ns and then use it
to call us the slime-l>edecked and putrid
exponent of a still more baneful political
faction. We would borrow a font of
brevier of him and characterise his pa
per as the wailing foundling, dying in
the poisonous vapors of tho deadly
swamp of political tilth, wherein it had
chosen its bed, edited by the bitter too
of tho laundress and Lindloy Murray, a
man who had evaded justice for forty
years, and, not content with the outrage
of all moral sense, hod declared war on
the spelling ltcok.
Thus we kept up a spirited contest for
a long time. Bometimes wo couldn't get
our paper out of the freight oflloe and
sometimes he couldn't, but we wotthl
loan each other tho last quire wc had
and keep friendly, whilo through the
columns of our rcsi>eotive papers wo
spoke of each other in language which
might have been construed as reproach
ful to some people.
It waa an exeiting time. One day tho
Bquawkor would offend a subscriber and
be would come over to us, and the next
day we would nnwittingly tread on tho
toes of one of our great army of sub
scribers and he would go over to the
enemy.
The editor of the other paper and my
self MW that it was going to be a war of
extermination. We ground our teeth
end our shears and sailed in. At tho
end of the first year he had dischargod
his servant girl and my paper owed me
•800 salary. At the end of the second
year he had blown in his fine brick resi
dence and I had taken my salary ns
Police Justice and thrown it into tho
rapacious maw of my little hungry long
felt want.
One day tho little, muddy, measly,
long-snfforing features of the Evoniug
Squawker failed to appear. We kept
Mking the offloo boy why the Bquaw
her didn’t come. He didn't know.
Finally he went to the publication
offloo. The door was looked. A map
of Dakota was hong over one window
and a printer’s towel over tho other.
The office boy raised the map and stole
in. The uncertain light here and there
broke in straggling rays through the
threadbare places in the towel. On tho
desk lay a letter from the advertisor of
a Colic Eraser in which he offered to
take a column in the Hquawker a year,
following pure reading matter and with
2,000 lines of reading notioes to bo
strung along through editorials from
day to day, in bold-faoed typo, and in
consideration therefor to furnish for
two years to the editor or his order
fifty bottles of the Oolio Eraser at pub
lisher’s price, delivered on board the
cars.
Everything nl>out the offloe showed
that tho work had boon going bravoly
on when the summons oamo. In fact
tho summons lay there on the desk
among other papers, along with a writ
of attachment for $253.85. This shows
what a hold a paper gets on its sub-
scrilters and also what a hold tho sub
scriber gets on tho paper. Tho Sheriff
hail been o subscriber to tho Bqunwkcr
ever since it started, but we didn’t know
his attachment for tho paper wns so
great.
Wo won the day, but at what sacrifice.
The smoke of conflict cleared away and
showed that tho victory was not worthy
of the carnage. We had survived but
we were not proud. The Squawker
had fought us bravely, aud now its still,
cold form lay in Ktate in the basement
of the chief creditor and the usual notice
of attachment was tacked on the door.
Tho editor and myself met on the fol
lowing day, and he was the more
cheerful of tho two. He said ho id’
sorry for me.
"I can use what I get hereafter on
my family," said he ; “but you enu’t.
Ton will feel guilty if you buy a barrel
of flour for your own use, knowing iliat
it may'imperil the next issue of the
paper. I have passed all that."
And he was right Tho quicker a
man decides to cease, publishing u daily
paper where it is not neoded, just sim
ply through a high moral sense of duty,
the sooner ho will become light-hearted
and joyous. I paid $2,000 for the priv
The snob family is a large one. It
Affects the city rather than the country.
It shows itself in so many ways and
under so groat a variety of circum
stances, that a full and particular enun
ciation of ita peculiar idioeynorasies
would fill a volumu. One metnlier of
the family assumes what it conceives to
be tho airs and manners of its betters;
another plumes itself upon its money,
looking down with lofty disdain upon
others less favored by fortune. But the
moneyed snob stands not alone. There
is the old family snob likewise, who
claims superiority to the rest of man
kind becauso he has heard that one of
liis ancestors drove • market wagon in
tho early Colonial days. There are lit
erary and artistic snobs, as well ns
snobs engaged in trade and commerce.
A bully is always a snob. So is tho man
who talks loud iu public conveyances or
plaocs with the view of calling atten*
tion to himself. Tho man who, either
in publio or in private, tyrannizes over
hiH wife, is a snob of the first water.
If tho wife tyrannizes over him he lie-
long* to a different variety of tho same
family. It he were a gentleman the
wife would probably not attempt to
wear the breeches. The man who treats
his friend to a twenty-five cent cigar
when he as well ns his friend knows that
ho cannot afford it, but it plonsoB him to
make a big show, performs a snobbish
action. Tho man who dresses lioyond
liis means in order that tho world may
late him at a higher monetary value
than he is worth, is another snob. Bo
is tho man who blows or brags of what
lie possesses, knows, has done, or is go
ing to do. He is a very-well doflned
snob who conntnntly praises liis own be
longings—liis wife, his children, his
house, liis business, his horse—to tho
implied disparagement of the lielong-
ings of the person to whom ho is speak
ing. It is almost superfluous to remark
that your unadulterated snob never
moves in a publio conveyance to make
room for any other person, or rises to
offer a lady a seat. Hu is like Thacke
ray's pet snob, “a gentleman, and be
has paid his way." Nor does it ever
ooeur to your snob not to wonud the
feelings of others by a rude personal re
mark, a loud gaffaw at his owu assinine
vulgarity, or'an innuendo of a cutting
or coarsely expressed character. With
out lengthening a disagreeable subject
to the crack of doom, it may be briefly
said that snobbishness is tho twin-
brother of selfishness, and that it is some
times possible for a snob to beoomo a
gentleman if be tries.—New York Uour.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
The l.lsfct Ilf walla llrm-ll** •• ®*
II Up—Mtareblac «la*haa»a aaS Call.
If there are no children in tho family
and the cares of the house sit lightly
upon ita mistress, she may bo able to
wear a light muslin for a season with
out ils requiring washing. The same
may be said of other summer dresses,
but most women like to know the beet
methods of renovating them. Of course
they will never have the freehneea and
tieauty they had when new, but if care
fully washed may do good service
Borax added to the water in which they
aro washed helps to remove Boil and
stains without removing the color also;
it should be added to the water in the
pro)>ortion of a tablespoonful to the gal
lon of wofer. Powdered borax may be
purohnsed at any drug store; it ahonld
bo dissolved in hot water; when you
fear Mint the color will be washed out it
will sometimes lie a good plan to dissolve
a tablcepi>oiifiil of alum in enough luke
warm water to wet tho dross thoroughly;
rinse it np and down several times, then
rub it gently in warm, not hot ends;
rinse thoroughly in cold water into
which you have put a small handful of
salt; iron if (lossible before it becomes
dry; but if it should become dry more
speedily than you expeot, iron it under
n damp cloth. Care must be taken in
making the stArcli to have it free from
lumt>s, and not scalding hot when the
dress is dipped into it. The drees
slionld be hung where the sun will not
shino on it, and wrong aide out; it
should lie ironed on the wrong side
whotlior it is calico or mnslin.
It was a tradition in my own family
Mint flour starch is better for starching
gingliams and caliooes than fine starch.
It certainly has the merit of economy,
nnd it is said that calico dresses will
keep stiff and freah looking longer than
if starched with fine starch. It oan do
no harm to try it; to one quart of boil
ing water allow three heaping table-
spoonfuls of flour; mix this with a little
cold water, and stir it until it is per
fectly smooth, then stir it into the quart
of water which should be boiling. Boil
for five minutes, watching and atirring
to keep it from burning; strain it
through a bag mode of crash and kept
for the purpose. This bag should be
made of a piece of crash doubled so
Mint there will bo no seam at the bottom,
and it should be immediately rinsed in
wntor and be oloanod and dried aud put
away for use the next week.
THE SOLDIERS’ HOMES.
Why They nr* Nhnrl ol Kwwiln-AII Veteran*
Weli'omeil—A New llnme In bo llulll
The Soldiers’ Homos crootod by the
United States Govorumout for tho Irene
fit of disabled veterans, aro at Augusta,
Me.) Fortress Mcnroo; Milwaukee,
Wis., aud Dayton, Ohio. Maj. D. C.
Fulton, of Wisconsin, a member of the
Board of Directors of tho Homes, in an
interview on tho subject of lack appro
priations for tho maintenance of the dif
ferent homes, and consequent curtail
ment of ox |)euses, admitted the correct
ness of tho re|>ort iu the main, but de
nied that the shortage was due to
extravagant expenditures in connection
with one or more Easteru institutions.
Improvements had been made only
where they became absolutely necessary,
anil the absorption of the fund appro
priated by Congress for tho Usoal year
ending June 30, wus duo solely to ou in
crease of tho inmates largely in excess
of cxjiectatiouB. Existing hard times
undoubtedly led ninny who bad hitherto
been able to earn a living, to throw
themselves upon tho generosity of a
generous government. Thus the ex
pense connected with the support of the
homes was increased lieyond the esti
mates upou which tho appropriation for
tho fisoal year wore based. To give an
idea of tho inoreose of population re
ferred to, Maj. Fulton stated that while
the Milwaukee homo wns built to ac
commodate 800, it in reality during the
the lost winter months sheltered nnd fed
upward of 1,200. All tho other homes
were similarly situated. The nmuse-
ment halls and all space that could lw
utilized whs devoted to cots. None win
applied with proper documents or or©
dentials were refused admittance. Tho
increase in the expense of maintaining
these additional ward i of tho nation, in
volved an inoreose iu cost of mainten
ance to the extent of fully one-third; nnd
whnt wns true of Milwnukeo wns equally
true of all the other homes. Necessity
compelled curtailment, but happily
everything has turned out all right, ami
the close of the year will be reached
without the imposition of actual hard
ship.
Maj. Fulton is of the opinion that in
creased accommodations for army vet
erans are absolutely necessary, ami be-
FOR CURING CHILLS AND FEVER
AND
Removing the Distressing Effects of Malaria, ■,
AYER’S AGUE CURE
HAS BEEN FOUND SO
NEAKLY INFALLIBLE,
THAT
We Authorize Dealers to Return (he Money,
If the medicine is token according to directions, without benefiting the patient.
PREPARED BY
DR. J. O. AYER A CO., Analytical Chemists, LOWELL, MASS.
Sold by nil Druggists. Price ft, six bottles for $5
ilegeof knowing this, and I present it | liOT “ ^ «ie next five years
6 ° - - an additional home will lie erected
either in northern Missouri or Kansas.
Meantime, as a matter of economy, he
thinks the existing homes will ho en
larged to meet the increase of demand
that is being made upou them.
to every paid-up subscriber without
money and without price. I don’t know
very mnoh, but if there’s anything I do
know, and know it hard, aud know it
with one hand tied behind me, it is that.
— Detroit Free Press.
David thought he was doing a big
fliiug .when he slew the giant Goliath
w jjh a sling. That’s nothing. The mod-
... erit sling, of American gin, has killed its to make the Fourth of July come
thousands. ' ' ’ - .' v V' u lemons are eleven dollars a box?
^ V' ***, 1
IT CTTHS3 WHEN
ALL OTUEB
cnrxs FAIL, M It
act* SIBEOTLT
And AT OlfOH on
tho KIDNSYB,
Lmm and DOW
ELS, restoring
them to.a JiefUUir
•clton. It u ante,
and speedy cur*
and Ann*
drede hnv*
cured
It when
pbyelotane end
land* h a d
ran them np
dl*.
IT IS BOTH A "SAFE CURE"
and a "8PECIFIC.’ r
-J» to
It CTTRKM nil nbewne* of the Kidney*,
Liver, lllndilt-r nnd llrlmry Orianq
Dropav, Urnu'l, llinbcte*. Rrl*hl*n
HlBtiUN), Nervouslllatraar*. Him**
***, l'emnln Wruknrnae*.
•L v. JS>!<8, ^RHNfteMM llrnd-
achr, Nnnr HtomneX, I»y*wi»»ln,
(lonstlpnilon, I’llrn, Pnln* In the
Itnrk, Loins, or Hide, Kclrnllon or
Nou -Retention of U r I ■ o
It.tl AT 1IRIQUUTS.
O-TAKE NO OTHER.
sand for Illustrated Pamphlet of Solid T*#>
Umoni&U of Abeolute Curos.
HUNT’S REMEDY CO.
( Providence, U. I*
HUNT’S (Kidney and l.trvr) KNUROV
k purely re*etable, mid til* utmost reliencu msy be
placed In it. .
WlltlfS SIMM,
Nashville Tenn.
rin.nl ll* lllili yewrwRh 8.VI yoa»K Indie*.
An actlnnerriMAivn, non sectarian
id parent* Imv., I. atari it* rains, and .till It Inorn
Why couldn’t our forefnthers have “fit
into tho Revolution” along in cool
weather, say just “after haying,” pj well
Air INOKXIOUM FRAUD.
It remained tor a French seaman
named Boauvois to invent nn entirely
now and original device for supporting
himself by fraud. His practice was to
fall through tho aido entrance of a rail
way carriage, pretending that the door
had been carelessly loft unsecured by
the guard. He would fall out, oling
desjioratoly to the door, and eventually
bo dragged back by the other pussen
gers, who would innocently corroborate
his statements. Tho man’s training as
a seaman hod given him sufficient agil
ity to jierform tho feat in a natural man
ner, nnd ho found no difficulty in simu
lating a sprained ankle or arm as the re
sult of tho accident. To avoid a lawsuit
and damaging notoriety, tho company
would promptly compensate him for tho
pretended injury. In this way ho col
lected m one month, on fivo separate oc
casions, sums varying from 40 to 100
francs. At length he attempted the
fraud at Mendon, ou the Versailles lino,
but ho hod lost or failed to procure his
ticket, anti this lod to an inquiry which
resulted iu exposure.
The flight Man.
The other day on an Arkansas rail
road train, on important-looking gentle
man took a scat beeido a quiet mau and
began a conversation.
“I am going to Littlo Rook,” he snid,
"to got a pardon for a convicted thief.
I’m not personally acquainted with the
Governor, but he oan’t afford to refuso
me.”
“Ib the fellow guilty?" asked tho
man.
“Of course he is, but that makes no
difference. His friends have ogreed to
give me $500 if I get him out, and the
thermometer is vory low when I oan’t
put up a good talk. Whore ore you
traveling ?”
• Going to Little Rock.”
< *Do you live there ?”
“Yes."
“Perhaps you might l>e of some ser
vice tome. What business are you in?”
“I’m tho Governor,” said the qaiot
man.—Arkansaw Vraveller.
h. M. Richards, of Jefferson county,
Wis., went to Dr. Houglimnn, u Mil
waukee oculist, some time ago ami told
him that, twenty-five years ago, while
chopping in tho woods, ho injured ono
of liis eyes. It became inflamed, but,
after a year’s time, healed, leaving the
eye totally blind. He wns not bothered
with it any more till a year or more ago,
when it again became very painful and
felt as though there wns tv strong prt-s-
sure behind it. Tho other eye, in sym-
J pathy with tho injure! member, began
to fail also. Dr. Houghmun removed it
j anil was astonished to find that ossiflea-
1 tion had set in uml tho choroid had
: turned to bone. There are only two
casts of the kind on record, which
makes this instance something remarks,
tie.
Brown's Iron Bitters com
bines Iron with pure vegetable tonics.
It is compounded on thoroughly sci
entific mill medicinal principles, anil
cannot intoxicate.
All other preparations of Iron cause
headache, and proiluco constipation.
Brown’s Iron Bitters is the
ONLY Iron mcdicino that
Ih not Injurious — its use does not
oven slacken the teeth.
It not only cures tho worst cases of
Dyspepsia, blit insures n hearty ap
petite anti good digestion
Risks of x Soldier’s Life.
Brown’s Iron Bitters is the
Best Liver Kogiilator—re
moves bile, clears tho skin,
digests tho food, CUKES
Belching, Heartburn, Heat
in tho Stomach, etc.
It is tho best-known remedy for
fcinalo infirmities.
Tito genuine lias above trade mark
anil erossctl red lines on wrapper.
Take no other. Made only by
Brown Chemical Co.,
Baltimore, Md.
u sands
CrfMMBMI.
A lirmiil n»w linildtn* \*ilh it dinmtt-rnoin tit fury quran
d " r, ':C:/»K. vTE. ti AUO.
i AND WHISKY llAnrrstlURKD
IN THKEi teEEKS
.... Pamphlet*. Proofs -uul Torms,
_ _ _ addnms, ill ci.nft enc«, with Hot.
(Ump. W. O. UKU.AMY, M. D.. Hi UroAd Sural.
Atlanta. (looftfU.
tin‘His, f«»r now oAtaili
OPIUM
Mr.
Taking a bullet at ono under secret grief, have none to pity tjuaht at moohk’n ^■^J r N $£ c ! 5 ls Ji N,VE,t '
, we have 4,200 ounces, or them. .— ’
Bat what, after all, are the risks to
life iu a battle such ns Waterloo? Wo
can form some notion of this by a sort
of analogy, if we are content to accept
the statement of Marshal Saxe, said to
bo a high authority on such matters,
who lays it down as n truth, that for
each man killed in battle the weight of
an averagod-sizod man is expended in
lead. This is said to have been verified
at Bolferino, whero the Austrians firuil
8,400,000 rounds, and killed 2,000 of the
euomy, whioh_ gives 4,200 rounds per
man killed,
ounce weight,
over eighteen stone—about equal to oue
average mau and a half; so tho Marshal
was under the mark. If these figures
are reliable it would seem that in battles,
as with pugnacious dogs, there is noise
out of nil proportion to the amount of
domngo done. —Chambers' Journal.
A Ecinnrkiilile Cordial.
It i* a well known fact Hint gum camphor is
ono of the beat remedii K fur t*iwel troubled,
nml combined iu • cordial with peppermint
mid tint active principle of the huckleberry, it
preai’t Ik in I)r. Higgera’ Huckleberry Cordial
tho GltEAT SOUTHERN REMEDY that re-
■toroH tho little ono suffering from the effects
of teething, and cures Diarrluua, Dysent.ry
and all Imwel trouble*. Eor sale by all drug-
giats at 60 cents a bottle.
Oft ns the youth ia bent tho twig’s inclined.
Mullein vs. <’«d Liver Oil.
Dr. Quillian, the leading authority of Great
Britain, on lung diseases, says : While ono of
his patients gained only seven pounds by the
use of cod liver oil, she gained over thirteen hy
tho use of mullein. Thu old field mullein made
into a ten and combined with sweet gum pre
sents in Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum nnd Mullein a pleasant and effective onto
for Croup, Whooping-Cough, Colds and Con
sumption. Sold hy all druggists at U5o aud
11.00 a bottle.
A f’tiri* of l*m % iiiiroiiln c
D. II. Paimnby, of Owngo, N.
Y., rays Hint 11. dou.yhtei wa.i taken silt
tv violent cokl whl :h tormina tod with pnou
mourn, and a!l Hi - b st physician) gave tin
ease up otid rail she lould live but n feu
hours ut most. Kite was iu this comliti
and HENDRICKS. fc&WWSi:«
TrlnlMU Ew«t«*«l In mhiiIIm** nml Irlemls «»f thudlnhnuiahi-il
ctmlliUUM. (hi Tllfi ItKMTI niufli Free u. etiueI «•»».
> a ,str* SimniIeI trriua to those nnWInff from E dl«l»nce. 1 hl»
fr the book yoa want. Writ* unlck tor c r euUM,..rsrti.l
60c. f«»r i>r«*s|M*ouis. M.v lllulnc A l.iifun lunik TI |, B
lead, and ihnac .%f arvcIoiiM Packet ManuaU alwy s suL.
Address W. N. Thowpion, J’ub., 404 Arcli ft., ffkllid •«
AGENTS WANTED iwurvysra
. .. . JThoi. Oulaclls Alloih«rj *4lol. Autt«F
lied. Authentic Impartial Com Id#,Ikt M UAraMl
(*(Ml pa es f i .ML iSrli* hit wdilfirt. 6« r« r AgCBtfc
A .*' « ■ • L. .1 «... a 7*nm *lr U
when a friond recommended Dr. \V r tn. ' SAilfriixsIlitilutiHDM ISt^iwtfcr*, *'«•■
Hull’s Balsam for tho Lungs, nnd advisod hoi 4<*F\'TH WANTED to wit Tfcirtr-Tkrra
to try it. Hho nccepto 1 it as a last resort ! * We'«'?‘iSS
‘ d : r n.^on'rniN«T,L; r A'c^n«^ci.2_
TELEGRAPHY
marked change fur tho liotter, aud hy per
severing iu its use a euro u a. offocted.
Dxbp is tho solitude of thoso who,
Night Hw«sll,
Headache, fever, ehills, malaria, dyspepsia,
cured by “Wells’ Health llenowor." ft
Onk pound of learning requires ton
pounds of common souse to apply it.—
Persian proverb.
The Hope of the Nation.
Children, slow iu development, puny, scrawny
aud delicate, use “Wells' Health ltencwor.”
A comagRous foo ia better thou •
cowardly friend.
l’uhlic speakers and singers uso l’iue’s Curo
for hoarseness and weak lungs.
Tub noble passion, true love, contains
all tho elements of self sacrifice.
Hem! stamp for car N»w Don* ^«
P ATFNTQ I’m "i-- Bi.NOH AM. F’J-
rn I XmIO I O i*nt l.swjKr, W *luu*Hs, p L 0.
■ ■ rara WITHOUT PAIN OH DIWKN-
PPI UM TION KIIO.U MUHINJ-.SB.
HABIT
CURED
Sleep may knit the raveled aleeve of care, but
it absolutely refuse* to darn hole* in socks.
The question whether young women shall
pursue the same line of studies as their broth
ers, aeems to find its chief objection in their
different physical constitution. Arguments on
this subject are finely handled on Doth sides ;
but the perfect adaptation of Mra. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound to the cure of ailments
attending the feminine organism needs no
argument j its works are itB proof.
Those who beat us in tho swimming days of
boyhood are our mother*.
Hay-Fbvbb. — One and one-half bottles of
Ely’* Cream Balm entiroly cured mo of Hay-
Fever of ten vears’ standing. Have had no
traeo of it for two y
Smltbboro, N. Y. Pi
ear*.—Albkht A. Fbbky,
rice 60 cents.
CUBE GUAUANTEED,
All rorumuiiicAtiwnfi Ntriotly o<m*
I’oi iMunpliluU *ud
cortitioftto* adriru&ti
m- A. BRADFORD, N.D.
DrugiciHt *n<l Pharmacist,
P. O. Box 183. C'oluiilbUffls ill
Tlinina* I*.
PfilCfitS tnaton, D. <1., PATENT LAW
YER. Wrtta for Inventor*’ Guide.
Hnnnokr Collon I’rera
Tin. Uu*t «nn Olioaiirat Prrat
mado. Coatn Ms than «h«*l-
i«r over other pronaea. Hun
dreds in actual use at boto
ntaam and hone power gina.
Malan faster than any gin oan
pick. 'I he new improve*
menta in cin bouaea de
scribed in t ne words of tnoif
inventors free to all. Ad-
dm*a HoaNOKR lH<>N AMD
Wood Woheb, Chatta
nooga, Tenn., or RoaNOM
Cotton Pulss Co., Rien
Square, N. C.
The man who bosses tho turnstile does not
always set the fashions.
“Ranch on P*..ln” Plaster.
Porous and strengthening, improved, the
cent for backache, pains in chest or side, rheu
matism, neuralgia. 26c. Druggists or mail.
A good many “amusements” are bores ; but
fishing is reel fun.
Hay-Fevek. I was severely afflicted with
Hav-Fever for 25 years. I tried Ely s Cream
Palm, and the effect was marvellous. It^s t.
cerfeot cure. -Wm. T. Cahb. Presbyterian Pas-
tor, Elilabeth, N. J. Price 60 ccntH.
The parflon at the wedding is the right man
in the rite place.
“Roiiffti on Pain.”
Cures colic, cramps, diarriiooa: for
aches, pains, sprains, headache, neuralgia,
rheumatism. For man or beast. 25 ana DO.
A “droll dog” is n wag with a funny talc.
Questions nnd Amwwa.
What is the bust Hair Pressor? WhAt is the
best Dandruff Eradicator? Which is the best
Hair Restorer? Which is tho best of all prep
arations for the li&ir 1 CARBOLUfK.
XC A rOSXTXVS CURB
For Femnle Fomplalnfsond
iWenknessrs so common to
oar best female po:>ulation*
It will cure entirely tho wor*t form of Female Com
plaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulcera
tion, Falling and DlsnlacrmcntN, and tho consequent
Hpinal Weakness, and is parllcularly adxptod to tho
Clangs of Life.
It will dissolve an*! expel tumors from the uterus In an
early stage of development. Ths tendency to cancerous
humors there U checked very speedily by its uso.
It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving
or stimulants, and relieves weakness or tho stomach,
A cures bloating, Headaches, Nervous 1’roBtration.
General Debility, bleeplcssnees. Depression and Indigee-
tion. That feeling of bearing down, causing i>uin, weight
and backache, is always permanently cured by Its use.
It will at all times and under all circumstances act la
harmony with tho laws that govern the Femule system.
For the oure of Kidney Complaints of either «ex, this
Compound is unsurpassed, Fries 11.00. Six botllus for $5.00.
No family should bs without LYDIA E. P1HKIIAM'3
LIVER PIUjS. They cure constipation, biliousness aud
torpidity of tho liver. 25 cents a box At all druggists.
, B LJ HAY-FFVKR.
i ri I have bean a great suf-
|farer from Hay- Fever for
i r8,u * u( ll “>
/•yOtAM cur., by Ely’s
f 1‘ ,r »mBalm,odthou«ht
1‘ r" «■» u r e ; nor,, I
|\fter one application I
was wonderfully helped.
l\ro weeks sgo I enm-
•Uf need using it and now
1 i'imjI entirely cured. It
is ihe greateet discovery
known. — Duhamel
ark. Farmer, I*ee,
C*renin Hnlm is »
•emedy founded on a
jorrect diagnosis of this
lisease and can be de
pended upon, fit) cts.
at druggists; 60 cts. by
mail. Sample bottle by mail 10 cts.
FLY HltO*'.- Mruguists. Oivi'go, N. Y.
ANTED 1L.«1 ial>1*» hook shlenuien f*»r ••n« h conn y.
Salary $40 per month. Unquestionable references re
quired. Addren* E. Y. Loomis A Co., Atlanta, (ia.
Pensions
for Circulars. COL. I*.
11AM, Atfy. Washington, P. O.
CHLORAL AND
OPIUM HABITS
EA81LY CURED. BOOK FKKB.
DR. J. 0. HOFFMAN, JEFFERSON. Wiseontin.
\ n I 1 New»riri5fW jerter] PuMUodS
■ ^ flMi snduatei. National patronage. Wrlw
Medical Depart;nent*--University of Louisian;..
New Orleans.
Ab t is un»v<*rwally admitted that Practical Modicino
and Surgery cannot be taught eh.ewhtire than at the
bed-side of the sick nnd wounded, this institution justly
claims unrivalled advantages in the introduction of its
classes intoth« w.-rds of the great Charity Hospital,
whose ElGH r HUNDUFD beds and an annual admission
of Eight Thousand patients supply unlimited clinical
material. * irculurs sent upon application.
A i;ENTS WANTED forth* bast m l fastest sell-
in* Pictorial Books and lliblos. Price, reduced .)3
percent. Naxiokal Pdbubhi.'u Co., Atlanta, La.
PAYS fn» » Uf* Scholarship ia tha
Coleuinn Unaineoa C.Uese.
Newark, New Jersey. Piwitlon, fo*
graduate,. National patronraj. Write
Tor Circular, to H. CO I .KM AN SCO.
SOLID SILVER STfM MBIjM
FULL JEWELLED QSMTS SIZE
WATCH FOR $12.69,
laapratloa b,for, pure basin*.
J. r. 8TKVBNS * CO , Jawalar*.
Atlanta. Go*
ABENTS WANTED .^IV^Vr^bSSh
Oil7 E. F. DIETER If nn. Cleveland. OM«.
.f n sarant*. large pretty chromo reward, merit, eredll
diploma, birthday friendship, gift and school al
cards. 16 o. Price list free. Fine Art Oo., Warren, Pie
m mm mm e.rai* f Thome. F. Sin peon, Waab-
PATENTS ! tnaton. D.O. Nop ye.ked
for patent unlU obUined. Write for lurentora’ Guid*.
GOOD NEWS
TO LADIES!
tireateat induccmenta ever oL
/rred. Now’s your time to get up
orders for our celebrated Tens
and C’off ces.and secure a beauti
ful Gold Hand or Moes Hose Chins
ToaSev, or Handsome Decorated
Gold Band Mose Rote Dinner Sot, »r Cold Band Moaa
Decors ted Toilet Set. Pol■loll partlcnlare addrera
THE flHEAT AMERICAN TEA CO.,
P, O. Box £1 and 3HVeaey St., New York.
Paynes’ Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill.
We offer an H » P. monnted Emflne with Mill.
60 n. solid Saw. 60 ft. b-ltioe. oant-hooka, rla complete
for npe-stlon, on cm. S ,!»■- 0 "
1-s. S nl f*r oiroulnr (B). R. YS . PAYNE Ac
SONS, Mannfscti r'rs of ill itylee Automatic En.
nine*, from Sto8 oil. »»’■>««'» ‘O'!
hbaltn* Elmira N v t!” 11
A. N. U.
Box I t>0C.
..Thirty.One >84