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as he had
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trader wi e
Ihe Knd kieked,, lf ei * r * etical13 arouad ;
store a» J* 0, for
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trader’s that was
\o do this, no easy mat '
__ JjjWperly keep wlthl'WW, v Indian ran f 101 °f, 10 a
^mtanoe seared red otl
that he ~> ; ? “ "
f f fore Xg of perform^ aot itaelf: breathless ^f fe *
J when Ihe he retuvM post ^ v hatl w f to lle J““ th ®
r on a bolt of
counter with ^^recover
pink-striped himself.
The old bu B, K-om who had been
watching tli his seat on a
nallkeg, wit Ri on his wrinkled
mahogany I ;e, Complimented the
advance a I of commerce on his
aehieveme/ myself
*‘I wuz sf“ of a foot racer
when I waf unger an<1 Umberr r than
what I rfvi'i” he said, “but I dunno
that ^ the time that I could
have gardin’fiuw^k than that. I’m re-
as a physical feat,
howeva rin l ot sa Y in ’ that you
showed strikiif siyig-Man-Afraid-of- amount ot jedge-
ment. hen
His-B^helout wife has got'you knotted
up reea rawhide an At he squaws
are jO’ the fire for the grand bru-
b ecu nebbe you will regret your per-
n j S h activity an’ cuss the day that
youumbled the proud spirit of the
no t Injun warrion. Is this shebang
i-^ned •pii was never introduced to me,”
the post trader. “I’ve got a
III f inch of callous on the soles of
jv feet an’ I come into this country
jom the headwaters of Bitter Greek
Long of J. W. Hancher an’ Ed Pher-
aetton an’ the rest of them despera¬
does. I’ve got relatives by marriage
tfaiong the Crows and Ogalallas an’
I’ve drunk more alkali water an’ eat
more dog an’ buffalo berry than any
white man this side of the Big Miz-
zoura. I didn’t bring my outfit in
ere in the spring of ’99. What did
ou expect me to do? Give that greasy,
tin-tagged coyote my stock of cigar¬
ettes to keep him good-tempered?”
“If you had you wouldn’t have for¬
his friendship,” returned the old
bullwhacker. “As it is, I’ve got an
idee his heart is bad an’ he won’t
come an’ see you no more. An Injun
has got his feelin’s the same as a white
man has, an’ I reckon you would git
hostile if any hombre booted you from
blazes to breakfast because you ast
him fer the means of soothin’ your
nerves. You injered that Crow in a
sensitive spot, Ike.”
“I done my best to,” said the post
trader.
“He may belong to the Badface band
an’ have hair in his tepee,” continued
the old bullwhacker, in the same grave
Ions of reproof, “but at the same time
he’s a human, an’ as a human it’s your
play to extend the right hand of fel-
lership to him instid of the sole of your
number nine. Hain’t they got no Sun-
day-school libemes out ou Bitter
Creek? Hain’t you never read about
the settler who found a poor, starvin’
redskin out in the snow plum exhaust-
ed an’ took him inter his shack an’ fed
him up a whole lot an 5 warmed him
an’ then turned him loose with a grub¬
stake an : when the Two Kettle outfit
exhoomed the tomahawk an’ raised
merry Cain scalpin’ an’ bitrnin’
through the paleface settlements an’
the good-heat ted granger was raked in
the Injun that he had saved sashays in
an’ rescoos him from a turr’ble death??’
“I’ve read them stories,” said the
post trader.
“But you don’t believe ’em,” said the
old bullwhacker. “You ain’t sanguine
concernin’ the good that theue is in
your feller man.”
“Well, my the’ry is that there ain’t
no galoot so low down but if you treat
him with kindness an’ keep him close-
herded he will show the good that’s in
him. Did I ever tell you about Old
Man Haines an’ Gus Minnick? Well,
it goes to prove what I wuz a sayin’.
Old Man Haines lived out on Blue
Creek apiece above where it empties
into the Platte, opposite the ifloitth of
Ash Hollow, where Harney cleaned up
the Sioux. He wuz jest about the most
benev’lent old duck tha t ever ripped up
tough sod with a balky team of bulls.
Long sufferin’ wmaa’t no name fer
hjm. He had two boy s that was jest
like him. an’ his ol’ wqiman wuz worse
than he tvuz. #
“One fine, cloudy ijn’ Gus Min-
nick an’ Todd aes along an’
rustles ten head of Man Haines’
ponies, an’ was I It south with
op with a crowd
of strani who were drift-
M * Dog into, Kan-
_.jsful purs(H{t of
[any hoss thieves, ^pie
brands in tfielr
Bized ■ch, an’ one of the stranglers recl:-
Hder Blakey. so they tied their feet
^terest their horses an’ headed for the
timber. They give Blakey the
»st swingin’, an’ wnz adjustin’ the
Brass rope to Gus’ neck, when Old
Ran Haines comes up with his big¬
gest jin’ boy, Arch. They had been not
[ clhse on the trail all the time.
“As soon as they explained who
they wuz an’ identified their ponies,
the boss strangler allowed that there
wuzn’t no reason why the ceremonies
shouldn’t perceed, an’ he throwed Hie
other end of the rope over the limb.
“ ‘Why,’ says the old man, ‘you
hain’t goin’ to hang that poor boy, air
you?’
“ ‘I reckon I am,’ says the boss
strangler, cheerful an’ gay.
“ ‘i don’t believe it helps a man to
hang him,’ says Haines, ‘You jest
give him up to me an’ I’ll take him
back to the ranch with me an’ sur¬
round him with moral influences an’
keep him out of bad company, He’s
got good in him an’ I’ll bring it out
of him an’ make a useful citerzen of
him.’
“Well, the long an’ short of it was
that he begged so hard that they let
Mlnnick go, an’ Old Man Haines start*
ed back with him. On the way he
talked to Gus like a father, an’ told
him how wrong it was to rustle cay-
uses when he could get them himself
by workin’ lionust fer them. He made
Gus a present of the ten that he had
stolen as a starter, an’ offered him
good wages to work on the ranch.
“Gus stayed for two months, an’
then he got inter a argymont with tho
biggest boy about breakin’ a colt, an’
shot him up an’ lit out. Old Man
Haines was real provoked about it,
buf he jumped on a horse an’ put out
after Mlnnick an’ overtook fiim at Box
Elder. As soon as Gus seen him he
throwed down on him with a Winches¬
ter, but the old man told him to be¬
have himself an’ quit monkeyin’ with
firearms.
“ ‘I sh’d think you’d seen the evil ol
them sort of actions after killin’ Heu-
ry,’ he said.
“‘Did I kill him?” says Gus.
“ ‘Yes, you did,’ says the old man, as
severe as he knowed how. ‘An’ I sh’d
think you’d be ashamed of yourself. I
don’t wonder you felt as If you didn’t
want to look me in the face after sech
actions. All the same, I don’t want
you stragglin’ off where you’ll get in¬
ter bad comp’ny, so you jest come
right back home with me. We’ve got
to have them colts broke, an’ we’re
short-handed now.’
“Well, Gus knowed how forgivin’ the
old man wuz an’ he went back an’ they
all avoided the subjec’ of Henry,
so’st not to hurt his feeliu’s. He stayed
ou a month longer, an’ then because
the old woman burned his cakes for
him he brained lief with the skillet.
The other boy told him that wuzn’t no
way to do, an’ Gus got mad an’ mas-
saereed him with the butcher knife,
an’ then set fire to the house an’ iit
out.
“When Old Man Haines got back
an’ found out what had happened he
said that it wuz enough to make a man
lose patience, but he wuz sot in liis
ways and he said that he would make
a good citizen of Gus in spite of hill
and high water. So he went out after
him again, an’ coaxed him back, an’
everybody said that Gus was a
changed man from that time forward
—as meek as Moses an’ lionust as the
day.”
“Are they living there together yet ?”
inquired the post trader, with some in¬
terest.
The old bullwhacker -took a largo
chew of tobacco before replying. Then
he said: “I wuz hopin’ you wouldn’t
ast me that question, bccuz it might
seem to milertate against my the’ry.
Th$ truth is that the old man seut Gus
to towu one day, an’ Gus come back
with a jug of whisky for himself* but
he forgot the old man’s smokin’ ter-
backer. The old man said that it
showed selfishness an’ ingratitude on
Gus’ part an’ he allowed that he must
be poor material, anyway, an’ he had
done the best that he could with him,
but that settled it. They wuz standin’
by the woodpile at the time, an’ the old
man had the ax. I come along jest in
time to assist at the funeral.
“Still, I never took the old man’s
view, reckon that Gus jest forgot.”—
Chicago Record.
The Story of Electric Lighting.
In the story of electric lighting
America stands first. The first man
in the world to light his house with
electricity was Moses G. Farmer, of
Salem, Mass., who accomplished this
feat in 1859. The first incandescent
light was also the work of an Ameri¬
can, named Starr. Likewise the great¬
est searchlight in the world is now at
Pasadena, Cal., this being of
candle power, and capable of being
seen at a distance of 150 miles. The
greatest work of Edison was in the
development and invention of the in¬
candescent lamp and in making it of
practical utility.
As an illustration of the popularity
which electric lighting has now
achieved, there are now in use in the
United States 500,000 arc lights and
25,000,000 incandesQent lights.
A Devise to Prevent Shipwreci.
A device to prevent shipwrecks has
been tested at Southend-on-Sea, Eng¬
land, by a special committee, with sat¬
isfactory results. It consists of a me¬
tallic conductor fixed on an elevation
on shore or on a lightship or reef or
lighthouse, from which etherie waves
are transmitted over a zone having a
radius of seven miles. All vessels
fitted with a receiver entering this
zone are warned promptly of their
proximity to danger, and the distance
and point of the compass where it
lurks is registered. It is really an au¬
tomatic The device systemjpf hasfneen wireless tested telegraphy.
aa/d in fair and
foul, foggy clear weather, with
uniformly satisfactory ail results.
Talks About
'ojnankina^
Women Flower Farmer*.
Flower farming is becoming a prof¬
itable occupation for women in Eng¬
land and is recommended to Ameri¬
cans. A few women here have adopted
the business, but there Is room for
many more, say the florists. Lilies of
the valley, hyacinths, azaleas, carna¬
tions, jonquills, daffodils, all are easi¬
ly raised, and in great demand. Such
flowers might be cultivated to advan¬
tage in any small plot of ground not
too far from a city.
She Cares For Cut Glass.
A New England woman who always
took great pleasure in well-polished
glassware when misfortune came to
her found that some of her neighbors
would be only* too willing to have her
come to their dining rooms after an en¬
tertainment and put their cut glass¬
ware away in proper condition. To
the woman who loves her cut glass
next to her jewels, this arrangement
is of special merit, for, having once
seen the little woman at work, there
is no longer a dread of breakage each
time a valuable piece^is taken out for
use.
Tittle Economic*.
Teach the children not to waste tri¬
fles, which they often throw away
without thought, and which, if saved,
might be of use to others if not to
themselves. Wrapping paper, pieces
of twine, odds and ends of various
kinds, may do service a second time if
put away until the need for them
arises. The habit of economy is one
that ought to be cultivated, for careful
saving makes lavish giving possible.
Hoarding is not a viee of childhood,
nor should it be encouraged, but the
wise husbanding of resources for fu¬
ture expenditure is a valuable lessou
that cannot be learned too early.
A Hotel For Women.
The women of Troy, N. Y., are mak¬
ing a united effort to secure the build¬
ing of a large, well-arranged hotel
building, especially arranged for the
convenience of women. An architect
under their direction has prepared
plans for such a building, which will
be fire-proof and contain all the mod¬
ern Improvements. It -is estimated
that $40,000 will be required, and suf¬
ficient support has been pledged to
enable them to promise a good return
from the capital invested. The women
are now placing the matter before the
public through the daily papers, with
the hope that it will meet the eyes of
some*eapitalist.
Mourning Handkerchiefs.
The most beautiful of the new
mourning handkerchiefs show the
owner’s initials merely etched in tiny
black letters on a flimsy white ground.
Very coquettish widows’ handker¬
chiefs are white with a hemstitched
black border, on which small white
clover leaves appear, or more attrac¬
tive still are the white handkerchiefs,
with the initials in the corner
wreathed in violets. The tiny white
spot in a vast square of densely black
linen is no longer recommended to a
woman as the proper type of muchoir,
no matter how fresh and deep her woe.
These were effective, perhaps, hut
never practical, and the approved sim¬
ple mourning handkerchief has but
the narrowest hemstitched edge of
black.
The Art of Hressing Well.
Fashion is becoming impotent; among
a certain set, and without doubt the
new century will herald the reign of
individuality. Those w r ho buy their
clothes as they buy their groceries, at
the recommendation of the shopman,
will always be at the jjeck and call of
w-hat is termed “fashion,” but the good
dresser is coming to exercise more and
more the dictates of her own feelings
and tastes in the matter of dress, and
the result, let us hope, will be the
ideal philosophy of clothes. It is not
an indifferent matter whether w’e like
and choose this or that; it is the out-
I ward and visible expression of our be-
ing. What we like determines what
we are, and shows w’hat we are. and to
instil tastes into a person is inevitably
to form character.—London Queen.
Notwithstanding Her Nose.
“When I was a little girl,” said Julia
Marlowe, “my greatest regret and
anxiety was my retrousse nosh. I was
in the habit of stating to my family
that I should some day become a great
tragedienne. This amused them not a
little, for neither they nor I knew any¬
thing about the stage or of actresses.
The idea wras plainly my own, but the
family laughed at me, and assured me
that such a thing as a tragedienne
with a pug nose had never been heard
of. I was impressed with the state¬
ment, and it occurred to me that the
nose might he remedied. So I sought
our family physician, and confided my
troubles to him and begged him to op¬
erate on the offending member. He
was vastly anlbsed, but reassured me
on the subject of noses. For years I
was troubled with the idea, but I have
lived to discover that even a nose is
not a barrier to success.”—Success.
Spending a Small Income.
“A girl whom I know,” Harriet an¬
swered, “says She has found that the
best plan in spending a small income
—she married a man who has an in¬
come of only $2400 a year, and she
lives in New York in a lovely little
apartment, and goes into society and
entertains and is blissfully happy—is
to divide it into twelfths. She says
that the correct proportion of expen¬
diture for a young couple in New York
who are more or less society people
and who have_about that income is
three-twelfths for rent—$600; oae-
twelf th for service—$200; four-twelfths
for food and fuel—$800; one-twelftit
for the personal expenses each of hus¬
band and wife—$200 each; one-twelfth
to save or for life insurance—$200. and
one-twelfth for doctors and dentists
and emergencies—$200.”—Anna Went¬
worth, in the Woman’s Home Com¬
panion.
The Bride’s Oulfit.
The first duty of tne present-day
bride-to-be, whtffi the question of her
trousseau is to be considered, is to take
into careful account the requirements
of her husband’s position; the necessi¬
ties which his place in thtuworld will
entail upon her in the wi* of enter¬
taining on the one L.nd. or of practis¬
ing economy on the other. These obli¬
gations will vary in almost every case,
as she marries a doctor, a clergyman, a
professor, a missionary, or a man
whose position in the world entails
many social obligations. When she
has taken these obligations into con¬
sideration she must balance them by
another list, that containing the means
which her father can provide her for
meeting them. She ought to begin,
then, with a pencil and paper, writing
down what she ought to have, and
then what she can have, cutting off
here and adding there.—Harper’s
Bazar.
So Vfonm /m> F
THOR
The face on the silver dollar is that
of Miss Anna W. Williams, a Plrtla-
delphia school teacher.
Mme. Modjeska is no longer under a
decree of banishment and may return
to her Poland if she will.
Paris, Berlin and Amsterdam all
have hospitals which are under the
entire control of women.
Three times Sarah Bernhardt has
been on the verge of bankruptcy, but
friends have come to her rescue.
Mrs. Cushman Iv. Davis, widow of
the late Senator, is in Washington,
compiling for publication her hus¬
band’s speeches, letters and lectures.
One of the largest omnibus com¬
panies in London is managed by a
woman, who selects, engages, dis¬
misses and pays all drivers and con¬
ductors.
It is generally supposed that the first
congress of women was held in Chi¬
cago in 189(1. On the contrary the
first congress of women met in Paris
during the Exposition of 1889.
One of the best expert accountants
of Philadelphia is a woman, who au¬
dits regularly the accounts of many
large corporations, of several railroads
and of at least one leading bank of
that city. .
Three of London's most important
clubs have handed over the domestic
details of their dub houses to the
management of women, and it is said
that since the change occurred general
expenditures have decreased, and that
coffee rooms have not only paid, but
are showing balances.
Helen Keller, the deaf and blind but
no longer dumb student, who is now in
her freshman year at Radcliffe College,
has been promoted in the English com¬
position class on account of her extra¬
ordinary. progress. In her class there
were forty students, and above the
work of all these that of the deaf,
dumb, and blind girl has stood pre¬
eminent.
A young woman with a taste for
collecting is making a scrap book of
“mysteries.” She includes instances
of the unreasoning horror of certain
animals that some persons feel, re¬
markable cases of intelligence in ani¬
mals, strange dreams followed by ful¬
filment, presentiments that proved to
be true, ghostly experiences and other
inexplicable occurrences.
r V/ ^ LEANINGS
/
V —» • FROM TtJe. 'T~
h Stfops
White brocade, satin embellished, for
trimming and fronts of waists.
Lots of Persian silks are used in the
make-up of neckwear with gold braid.
Point d’esprit with taffeta applique
is offered. Also nets with applique oi
taffeta.
Many en^hroidered polka dots appear
in the neckwear shown; also hem¬
stitched effects.
The new collars (stock collars) are
all soft, and the high effect in back has
almost entirely disappeared.
Pleated satin belts in black are
shown in rich profusion, ornamented
and finished in numerous ways.
All the cottars shown are straight on
top. Some have a point in front be¬
low the neck band, but this is almost
the only departure from the perfectly
straight collar.
Some very delicate French hand-
hemstitched handkerchiefs are shown
in colors, with the one-corner effect
embroidered by hand in white. These
have a half-inch hem.
A popular pattern is a taffeta silk
with a white ground, embellished with
print warp floral effects and with tiny
black silk figures and rings running
up and down, forming a, very pretty
and effective silk stripe.
Satin foulards bid fair to be popular
for the spring season. The patterns
shown are mostly medium and neat ef¬
fects, large patterns being tabooed.
The shades selling most freely are
rose, biege, tan and reseda. Blacks are
not so popular.
A very pretty aovelty is a handker¬
chief made of silk and linen, with a
heavy cord running through. There
are about four or five colors in this
handkerchief, woven right in, forming
a very pretty plaid pattern. The col¬
ors are all warranted not to fade, and
are selling in large quantities for both
Goods Economist.
____
Parities the Biood-Cftiti .\nihine
to Try.
B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Raim) ia the finest
and best Spring Blood Purifier made. B. B.
B. gives life, vigor and strength to the blood.
B. B. B. cures the worst Eczghul, Itching
Humors, Boils, Pimples, bv giving r, healthy
blood supply to the skin. B. B. B. cures Ul¬
cers, Eating Sores, Scrofula. Cancer, heals
every sore and makes the blood pure and rich.
B. B, B. cures old Rheumatism, Ache 3 and
Pains in Bones, Joints. Try Botanic Blood
Balm this spring. Druggists, $1. Trial treat¬
ment free by writing Blood Balm Co., 12 Mit¬
chell St., Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble, and
free medical ad vice given.
The fellow with his first camera believes
in taking things just as they come .
Dr. Luke P. Itlaclibiirn
Writes concerning Crab Orchard Water: “In
tardy motion and chronic consfipation of the
bowels it excels all other medicines known to
the profession.”
that A doesn’t man's house make him may be nobleman. his clstle, but
a
H. H. Green’s Sons, of Atlanta. Ga. s are
the only successful Dropsv Specialists in the
world. See their liberal offer in advertisement
in another column of this paper.
People —; with --------- hot -—
give rather cool tempers may sometimes
treatment.
J B
*ara
A Noted Boston Woman Describes
its Symptoms and Terrors.—Two
Severe Cases Cured by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
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ADLLE WILLIAMSON.
“I am so nervous! no one ever suffered as I do! There
isn’t a well inch in my body. I honestly believe my lungs
are diseased, my chest pains me ha4e so, but I have no cough. I
am so weak at my stomach, and indigestion terribly, and
palpitation backache of the heartam losing flesh; and this headache
and nearly kills me, and yesterday I had hysterics.
“ There is a? weight in the lower part of my bowels, bearing
down all the time, with pains in my groins and thighs — I
can’t sleep, walk, or sit, and blue — oh goodness ! I am simply
the most miserable of women.”
This is a most vivid description of a woman suffering with
nervous prostration, caused by inflammation or some other
diseased condition of the womb. •*
No woman should allow herself to reach such a perfection
of misery when there is no need of it. Read about Miss
Williamson’s case and how she was cured.
Two Bad Cases of
“Dear Mrs. Pinkham ; — I
was suffering such tortures
from nervous prostration that
life was a burden. I could
not sleep at all, and was too
weak to walk across the floor.
My heart was affected so that
often I could not lie down at
all without almost suffocating.
I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound and it
worked like magic. I feel that
your medicine has been of in¬
estimable benefit to me,”
Miss Adele Williamson,
196 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.
Ol REWARD.—We have deposited with the National City Bank of Lynn, $5000,
which will be paidrto any person who can find that the above testimonial letter*
are sion- not genuine, or were published before obtaining PINKHAM the writer’s MEDICINE special per-
mis LYDIA E. CO.
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Dumps anil
Penbertliy Injectors.
% B-S 1-?-? --- --
/ j MRHft
Manufacturers and Dealers In
SAW MILLS,
Corn Mills, Peed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
I. ocks, Knight’s Patent Dors, Birdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Repairs, Governors, Grate
liars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
“The Bonce that made WestPointfamou**” TABASCO.
MclLHENNY’S
ems.
’J.lT'.V.U’tUilTItompson’j Eye WatM
PISO’S CURE FOR
Best Cough 8yrup. ’rastw Good.' Use
in time. Sold by druggists.
SIT ■UMIS)
23.2w
FOOLING THE OTHBR PAS¬
SENGERS.
“Clara, dear, we’ve been careful s®
far. and I don’t think they suspect we
are just married. You must scold me
a little now as we get off the train."
(Sharply and in a high-pitched voice)
‘George, darling, when we get to the
hotel you must certainly take off that
absurd lavender necktie!”-
For Sale.
A tew hundred bushels of Russell's Improved,
prolific, BIG BOLL COTTON SEED' Disclaimed
for this Cotion that it is the most Prolific varie-
ty on earth; that it is never troubled with boll
worm, rust or the Insect known as the sharp-
shooters Stands extremes of wet ami dry
weather Less thaa half the labor required
for picking.
MARKS & GAYLE, Montgomekv, Ala,
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, tion, soften the gums, reduces inflamma¬
allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle
of Glasgow which varied Ills live from public baths, the cost
$82,000 to $105,000.
- ----
I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consump-
tion has unequal for coughs and colds.— John
F. Boxer, Trinity Springs, Feb.
“I had nervous prostration
terribly, caused by female
weakness. I suffered every¬
thing ; was unable to eat,
sleep, or work. Aft(*r a while
I was induced to try Lydia
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, and I really began to
improve bottfe. on taking the first
t I continued to take
the medicine, and am now
better in every way, and feel
like a different person. I am
simply a well woman.”
Mrs. Della Kexseb,
Paf
FRAGRANT
Sozodont
Tooth in Patent Box, PoiRty- handy
a new
to use. *. . 25 '
SOZODONT LIQUID - 25c
Large LIQUID* POWDER,75c
At all the Stores, or Bv Mail. AdoriO,
HALL A HUGKEL. NEW YORK
Cough Dr.BuIt’s£teW. Syrup Tot
Refuse substitutes. Get Dr. Bull’s Coutfh Svu&*
AGENTS WANES
for ho
Brohard Sash Lock and
Brohard Door Hoidor
Active workers everywhere can earn big turner, pis
ism
nn I J A DC V quick ne w feiief piscov and I By
P $LO
cases. Look of teatimoriisls and days,
tree. Dr. H. H. GEE^N' EBON
(]$£ CERTAIN £9