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Health Restored
ALL RUN DOWN
No Strength nor Energy
fa J, Miserable
M '- N thk
EXTREME.
.M a Hands
J>.. <{ J COVE RE D
jljW 1* SORES.
V I ' CURED BY USING
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
“ Several years aeo. mv blood was in O;
toad condition, mj system all run down, O;
and mv general health very much ini- o.
paired.' My hands were covered wilh o:
targe sores, discharging all the time. 1 O:
had no s’rength nor energy and my feel- O:
M i.'S wen- miserable in the extreme. At O;
last. I eommeneed taking Ayer's Sarsa
parilla and soon noticed a change for the o*
I tetter. Mv appetite returned and with o:
it. renewed strength. Encouraged by
these results. 1 kept on taking the Sar
saparilia. till 1 had used six bottles, and
ny health was restored.”—A. A. Towns, •
prop. Harris House, Thompson. N. l>ak. JJj
Ayer's |
Admitted
AT THE WORLD’S FAIR g|
ooooooooooooooooooooooo
iStJaisii—m— innimtnn ■■
. . ■- ——***
What Nerve Berries
* iavt ' one * or others
vscjor
OF 16TH DAY. |T
MEN Easily, Quickly
and Permanently Restored, both day.
A positive cure for all Weaknesses, Nervousness,
Debility, and all their train of evils resulting
from early errors and later excesses; the result
of Mvlauo'**, worry, etc. Develops
and Rives t one and <r‘isKf Si to the f'f'xnshl or-
IfivnM. Klo]>m iinnatund foftMcn or ui/lilly
cuused hy yoofhful n’rorn or ex
cessive use of tobacco, </|>iciiva and liquor,
" hic.i lead to coiQMtim£'2*<*i and IrsaiiHy.
Their use shows immediai< improvement. Accept
no imitation. Insist upon having the genuine
Ovff rv.eej w\ #*■ no ofiier. Conven-
B ient to carry in vest
pocket. Price, SI.OO per box, six boxes, one full
treatment. sft.oo. €*mrs4iaf (opuitnny
If not kept by your druggist we will send them
by mail, upon receipt of price, in plain wrap
per. Pamphlet free. Address mi maii orders to
AMEBICAH KEDIIAL CO.. Clndauatl, O.
fur sale by Nft K. Word.
'Va JjL jtrtl
This Gruyt Cough Curb promptly cam
where all others iu.iL Coughs, Croup, Sore
Throat, Hoarseness, Whooping Cough and
Asthme. For Consumption it Las no rivul;
has cured thousands, and wil] CURB YOU it
taken in time. Sold by Drugglsta oa a guor
-•ntee. For o T.smo Book or Cheat, use
SHILOH’S BELLADONNA PLASTER.2SC.
CH ILOH’S>ICATARRH
O^fe®S^REMEOY.
Have you Catarrh i This remedy ia guaran
teed to cure rou. Price. bC etc. Irlector free.
- - - - • • - - - ▼ -
rakfiw ecU tndiijcsUcit
k/'cocyN^j
jggggpy
PRICE sf> CENTS PER BOTTLE,
saor. Of VALUABLE MFORMATISN TREE.
FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS.
Oosi *" ,nol, oyl also other va lu
-888111 able premiums to good
4*l U lrrf guessors. ltasc 1t.,1! K„.
this is vur opportunity. See
T o-HOME COUNTRY MAUA
/IXK, Price Am-. All newsdealers; or
■V! East JOtli street. New York.
“VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For YOUSU LADIES, Roanoke, Va,
Open* Sept. 12, is:4. One of the lead
ing Schools for Young I,allies in the
Si nth. Magnificent buildings, all mod
ern improvements. Campus ten acres.
Orand mountain scenery in valley of
Va., famed for health. European and
.'American teachers. Full course. In
Art and Music Unexcelled. Pupils
trom seventeen States For catalogues
ad Iress the President,
W. A. HARRIS. I>. !> , Roanoke, V.
‘ T FLY FIEND.”
will positively protect Horses and cat
tle from any annoyance from Flies,
finals and Insects of every kind, im
provi s appearance of tho coat, dispen
sing with fly nets. Recommended bv
thousands. Try it and be convinced.
Price of “Fly-liend,” including brush,
on art cans. $1.00; half-gallon, $1.75; one
gallon, $2 50. One gallon will last 3 head
Of horses or cattle an entire season. Be
ware of imitations. Address
I rescrnt Jlfg. to.. 210 V Imliauu iff., Pidla.
pgfejgl
ifpr
* -7;
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
I Cleanses and beautifies Cue hair.
I Promote* a luxuriant |m>wth.
Never Fail* to Beatore Gray-
Heir to Its Youthful Co’or.
Cures aeaip diseases A hair failing.
jpe, and t MX) al Druggists
I C Q NS y MPTIV El
l’e Pnrker’e (linger Tonic. It pure* the worst Cough, j
We •> Drt, L'ty, In digestion, lain, Take in time. Mj eta. j
HtNDERCORWS. The C° TN
y. jti* sui PAa. Ite* u DruttUfto. or iIIdCUL * CO~
MONTANA INDIAN STORY.
A Clas3 Eyo and Its Very Seri
ous Defect.
Why the Old ( row Chief Returned It to
the Cantern Traveler—llls Own Medi
eine- lan C ould Make an Im
provement oil It.
The old pioneers had settled down
for their smoke in the brain room of
the Montana club, says an ex
change, when Hugh McQuaid re
marked:
‘‘l see that some smart, newspa
per man down east has started a ru
mor that the Crow Indians will get
out of their blankets in the spring
and clean up the settlers and the
United States army. I would bet
that a lot of cigar Indians would
light just as quick. Why, a Crow
hasn’t got the courage of a jack
rabbit to fight. The only trait of
a white man—that is, some white
men outside of this room —that a
Crow has got is humor.”
“Of course you mean yourself when
you say outside* this room,” said Dr.
Churchill.
“Well, I mean all mining experts
anyhow; but 1 remember back in 72,
when a party was sent out here by
the interior department to look up
the condition of the Indians, and
they asked me, as a newspaperman,
to join them on a trip to the Crow
agency. We had a fine time; no end
of stuff to drink, and good shooting
before we got to the agency. Then,
for the first day or two, there was
lots of figuring with the agents,
distributing tracts and religious
food to Ihe squaws, etc., and finally
a trip of twenty miles to the tepee
of a chief named Horn-in-the-Foot,
who lived near by the big medicine
man. There was a fellow in our
party from the Smithsonian institu
tion who wore a glass eye that was
a dandy. Said it cost him shven
hundred dollars in Paris, and could
roil around in his head same as the
other one. Well, we got to the old
chief’s camp and found him dressed
like a fashion plate to receive us.
Long head-dress of eagle feathers,
bead-fringwd moccasins, and all of
that, but having only one eye.
Learned later that the medicine man
made him tear out the other in a
war dance. We passed the time of
day, and he said: “How,” and made
the squaws and young bucks get
down in the alkali dust and salute
us. We made a few signs in which
the chief asked for firewater by try
ing to stand on his head, but we
couldn’t let him have any because it
was against the law. Besides, the
supply was short. Finally the
Smithsonian feUovv thought he
would have a little fun, so he takes the
glass eye out of the socket and rolls
it around in his hand. Well, you
ought to see Ihe old chief's faee and
the young bucks and squaws. They
couldn’t have been more surprised
if that ghost that they looked for
last year had dropped down in the
party. The chief, however, recov
ered quicker than the rest and
seemed to catch an idea, for he
reached out for the glass eye and,
after awhile, put it where his miss
ing eye had been. Then the squaws
and bucks gave another yell, and off
the whole crowd started for the
medicine man’s tent, with us a-trail
ing the rear. When we got there
the chief let out a whoop, and out
come the medicine man. lie gave
one look at tin 1 glass eye and then
fell on the ground and began to
tremble and groan. You see, he un
derstood that he had lost his pull.
The chief give him a kick in the
ribs, and when he got up talked a
little Crow and pointed over toward
the Yellowstone river, the same as
to say that he was giving him ten
minutes to get out of the camp.
The interpreter told us afterward
that the chief said that any man
who had to learn to make medicine
from white people was a poor kind
of a medicine man, and was not
needed in those part.s. Anyhow,
the doctor sneaked out of the tepee
with a couple of blankets and a pipe,
and was soon out of sight in the
foothills.
“Well, we had a good time laugh
ing while the Indians were dancing,
not knowing, of course, where the
eye came from. The chief put the
horse on us, though, when we got
read}' to leave by handing back the
eye to the Smithsonian fellow and
saying in Crow to come back next
year and the new medicine man
would have an eye made that he could
see with.”
Professionals.
Two beggars discovered standing
at a door —“To which of you two,”
said the servant, “am I to give this
half-franc?”
First Beggar (with exquisite po
liteness) —To him, mademoiselle; I'm
leaving the neighborhood and have
brought him with me to-day to intro
duce him to the customers. —Le Petit
Cambresien.
The Amer can Hog.
Who dares sneer at the American
hog? During 1892-93 our exports of
bacon were 392,000,000 pounds, of
ham 82 000,000 pounds, of salt pork
63.000,000 pounds, and of iard 300,-
000,000 pounds. —Rochester Herald.
NOT DISCONCERTED.
The Exasperating Nonchalance of
Some Wedding Couples.
One Groom Winds Kit* Watch In the Midst
of (he Solemn Ceremony The
Preacher’s Dignity Did Not
Meet the Occasion.
“It is remarkable,” said a prom
inent city clergyman to a New York
Tribune reporter, “with what non
chalance some bridegrooms go
through the ceremony. I don’t un
dorstaud it, for when I was married
my knees wobbled so that I was pro
voked because I had not strapped
them together before the terrifying
ordeal began. But the, coolness and
complacency with which some of the
men who come to the parsonage to
be married go through the thing are
a revelation to me and make me be
lieve that I had no ‘nerve’ at all.
“Of course,” he continued, “the
people who came to the parsonage
to be married are generally of the
plain sort. They dress plainly, and
frequently have delightfully fresh
and original manners and ways of
doing things. But you must
acknowledge that even to a clergy
man who has read the service over
hundreds of trembling couples, it is
rather startling to have the bride
groom at the most solemn part take
out his Waterbury watch and begin
to wind it up in the most method
ical way imaginable. Hut that is
just what happened here last week.
I was reading the formal charge to
the man and woman, and reading it
in a way that I considered most im
pressive and awe-inspiring. The
bridegroom, who was a big lumber
ing fellow, followed me for a time
with considerable interest. Then
he suddenly took out his watch and
began to wind it. I let him go on
for a few seconds and then I real
ized that it was one of those watches
that might wind through all the rest
of the ceremony. So I stopped short
and looked severely at the man. He
smiled at me in a friendly sort of
way, but he didn’t comprehend at
al! what was the matter —and all
this time the steady click click of
the winder was to be heard.
“It was very mortifying to me
that my dignity was not overwhelm
ing enough to make that man stop
short, but he didn't, and I had to
speak to him.”
The clergyman sighed as he
thought of his trials. “Then a pair
from the country came here last
night—a couple of bumpkins, green,
clumsy and good-natured. When 1
said: ‘The man and woman may join
hands,’ meaning, of course, they
were to join right hands, they sim
ply clasped hands as they stood side
by side and swung them back and
forth like a couple of little school
girls.
“ Right hands!’ I said in a low
voice, but with considerable empha
sis. ‘Oh, yes, of course,’ said the
youth with a blush, and he seized
the bride’s hand and shook it most
cordially.
“As I said before, I consider my
self one of the most dignified clergy
men in the city, but I am slowly
breaking dow r n under the strain of
keeping my face duly solemn at such
moments as those.”
THE THEATER HAT.
Remarkable Experience of a Boston
Newspaper Man.
Women wearing high hats at the
aters are the subject, and legiti
mately so, of much adverse criti
cism. Funny stories without num
ber are written on this subject bv
witty paragraphors, but the high
hat survives and surmounts the high
heads of high-minded women all the
same.
Perhaps women do not read the
labored efforts of funny writers on
this topic; or perhaps they wouldn’t
be influenced to wear low hats or to
take off the double-deckers in places
of amusement if they did read all
that is written on the subject. Be
that as it may, the writer had an
experience in Union hall while the
Harvard theatricals were in prog
ress which softened some of the as
perities of life and convinced him
that at least one young woman had
carefully read the papers and that at
least one young woman was sweet
tempered and kind enough to de
serve a good husband.
It was in the rear of the hall. The
play had just opened. The writer
was craning his neck to catch a
view of the players. He was not iii
tempered. He did not, for the mo
ment, think even of railing at high
hats. He was resigned to his fate.
Suddenly a sweet-faced young
lady, sitting just in front of him,
without even a suggestion from any
one, turned around and, in manner
so gracious, so full of the spirit of
loving kindness, said:
“Does my hat annoy you, sir? If
it does I will remove it.”
“Your sweetness and thoughtful
ness entitle you to wear any hat
you may prefer,” was the writer’s
response.
The young face was quickly turned
back to the stage, but in a few
minutes the hat was removed from
the wealth of golden hair which en
veloped the bead of a lady. —Boston
Journal.
Georgia Factories,
A Michigan farmer who simply
knew that such a place as the south
i existed had a curiosity to visit it
J about three years ago. He went to
| Chattanooga and several other
cities and while in them heard that
| they could raise peaches at Fort
i Valley,(la. He went to Fort Val
ley simply to see what it was like,
and tlie result of his inspection was
the purchase of a $6,000 farm. He
wrote his brother-in-law in Michi
gan that he believed a fruit crate
factory could make money there.
The brother-in-law came down and
agreed with him. lie started the
Georgia Fruit Package Company
withslo,ooo capital. They found a
demand from not only Georgia, but
Florida and other states, for peach
and orange baskets, berry crates,
butter trays, grocery baskets, etc.
The place has been in operation
two years and business has increas
ed so that the company is forced
already to double its capacity.
About January 1 a 100 horse-power
engine and boiler, a 72 inch log
shaver, veneering and other ma
chinery will be added, a total cost of
$6,000. The company gets all its
wood within five miles of its plant.
It pays its fifty hands one-half of
what its pay-roll would reach in
the north, owing to thecheapness
of living, and it 1 as excellent facil
ities for shipping goods to all points.
Home of the same reasons which
placed the capital in the Georgia
Fruit Package Cos., induced the
Fort Valley Manufacturing Cos. to
begin operations with $25,000 capi
tal. It will make plow wood work,
singletrees, etc., from hard wood in
the vicinity of the town. The plant
was started May 1 with a number
of orders and any humber of inqui
ries which may lead to orders. J.
A. Spain and S. F. Dashen, two
Georgia men, have joined with P. J.
Herrman, an Indiana man, in this
com pa ny.
Flies that Spoil the Ointment.
Sulkiness.
Stinginess.
Procrastination.
Half-hearted ness.
Lack of perseverance.
A fault-finding habit.
Pre-eminence seeking.
Lack of consideration.
Neglect of little duties.
Doing things by halves.
One sided views ot things.
Jealousy of other’s success.
Shirking one’s responsibility.
Lack of sympathy for other’s
trials.
Lack of attention to personal
habits.
Failure to improve one’s spare
moments.
Failure to keep one’s promises to
the full.
Making self the chief topic of
conversation.
Failure to meet the engagement
at the exact time.
Failure to carry the Christ-like
spirit into every act of the life.
Physicians’ Responsibility.
It is not only in Japan that in
competent doctors are punished for
professional failure resulting in the
loss of life of their patients, hut in
Russia also, where physicians are
held similarly responsible. A well
known medical practitioner at St.
Petersburg has just been sentenced
to seven days’ imprisonment, to a
fine of 1,000 rubles, and to the pay
ment of an annuity of 300 rubles to
\a lady who was injured by his un
skillful treatment.
THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME.
jpjrapgi m
jgj J-Jjj
Tom (with emotion)- —Jim, I wuz born
in this house. My grandfather killed
my grandmother in it. and my twin
brother left it to end his days in Sing
Sing, and I return from my term on
the island to find the old place occu
pied by a heathen laundryman. (Gurg
ling) Do you wonder at my show of
feelin”? (After a pause) Let's go in
an rob him! —Life.
•tfucnsttO maqt oauS aqs ‘najpnqo pnq ops traqyv
•uuojsvq oj Simp aqs ‘ssir auivoaq aqs uaq_v\.
•vucqsoo jo; pauo aqs ‘pnqo v sv.u wp n.iq y,
Xuojstjj jaq BarS oja ‘ipjs svaa Aqua uaqji.
BPCST.IIPS ARHXCA RAIYI.
The best B.siTe in the world ferOufe
Rrn.ses, Soi*q doers, Salt Bkanin. Fa
ver Sores, 'l etter, Chapped Heeds, Chil-
IsiT-.s. Corns, and all f-kin Eruption*,
mat positively curee Files, or no pay re
i ;l rod. It is ■rua. an eed to give perfect
t stV.ction, or money refunded. Pries
calf per box. For sale by Young .4
G •
for Infants and Children.
Mothers, Do Y OU lC ftO W that Paregoric,
Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine ?
Do Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons ?
Do Yon Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics
without labeling them poisons ?
D > You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
Do Yon Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of
its ingredients is published with every bottle ?
Do Yon Know that Cactoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher.
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined ?
Do Yon Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to uso the word
“ Castoria ” and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense ?
Do Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Do You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35
cents, or one cent a dose ?
Do You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest t
Well > these things are worth knowing. They are facts.
The fac-simile // K ~~ H nn every
signature of WTa PP er -
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
W. L- DOUGLAS
TTxm 8 SHOE J&m
<4 S5, S4 and $3.50 Dress Shoe.
'. yS: I $3.50 Police Shoe, 3 Soles.
82.50, $2 for Workingmen.
.4 $2 and $1.75 for Boys.
Jr LADIES AND MISSES
}^e' NfW S3, $2.50 $2, $1.75
* K§. CAUTION.—If any dealer
' '--Sr—-.—__ offers you VV. L. Douglas
l> Tbic ic Tlin Tx \ shoes at a reduced price,
IMj I Hfc lIPST c. or says he has them witli-
I " Q. Hk out (ho name stamped
wjk on the bottom, put him
Or lAr down as a fraud.
\-'f r i
W. L. DOUGLAS Shoes are stylish, easy fitting, and give better*
satisfaction at the prices advertised than any other make. Try one pair and be con
vinced. The stamping of W. L. Douglas’ name and price on the bottom, which
guarantees their value, saves thousands of dollars annually to those who wear them.
Dealers who push the sale of W. L. Douglas Shoes gain customers, which helps to
increase the sales on their full line of goods. Thev can afford to sell at a less profit,
and we believe you can save money by buvingr all your footwear of the dealer adver
tised below. Catalogue free upon application. W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mass.
I*. IX. GAHWOOD.
BB—BMB—■ BTIIBIBHIH II ~B CIIBII I IMBII—I llltß—i II SI 111118111 IBi 81l ■ITTmrMrr'—WFMM—BB—P
Free! Free! Free! Free!
TITD
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ORDER BLA^K.
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If sent direct. T will give each subscriber the choice of any one of the followingstandard andpop-
Ular boose which will he senf free ami postpaid. These books are handsomely printed on fine
paper from large. clear type, and bound in best of clotb, with various designs stamped in gold and
silver, and are each in a box. ’ "
Sesame and Lilies Beskin
Pleasures of Life Lubbock
Bacon’s Essays.
Thoughts Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
Discourses... Epictetus
Emerson’s Essays First Series, | Boxed
“ 1 Second “ ( toirether.
Cranforu Mrs. Haskell
Vicar of Wakefield Goldsmith
chesterfield Letters,
Idle Thocohts of an Idle Fellow Jerome
Tales from Shakspeare !'m^Lamb
I also otler, i;. combination with Kiibso irrioTts to the rOcri. AP. MONTHLY, the works of the
leanfncr standard a a thorp. iu cloth, at remarkably low combined Drices :
Clrcnlor* giving full information nent on application. *
Mrs. FRANK LESLIE 1(0 Fifth Ave. KewYcrk. *
\ ATrR.W.^L A W I N THK Set ' T, ' AL 1 1 IRT’M MOND
ADDBKSStK DRFMMONP
Representative Men Emerson
Rae and his Friends, Marjorie Elim- (
ing, etc 1 drown
Essays of Elia Lamb
Sartor Rksartfs Carlyle
Heroes and Hero Worship Carlyle
Ethics of the J'i st lii skin
4 Window in Thrfms J. M. Barp.ie
Uncle Tom’s Cabin (not t-axed' Stowe
Or. Frank Leslie’s Illtstrated Goodies.