Newspaper Page Text
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A Lenient Pnwnehop.
The Monte di Piote at Rome, which
hat existed ever since 1585, is probabij
tho most lenient pawnbroker’s shop in
the world. Any person who brings a
pledge may borrow from $15 to $25
without paying any interest, but ail that
is lent above that sum is paid for at the
rats of two per cent per nnnutn. At the
end of two years, if the pledge is not re
deemed nor interest on the money paid,
it is sold and tho overplus of the debt is
laid by for the owner, who hns it in bis
power to demand it within lOOyoars.—
Yankee Blade.
A Great Effort.
Wee Miss—“I hato that little girl.”
Mamma—“You should not hate any
body, my dear.”
Wee Miss—“Well, if I mustn’t hate
her I’ll try ‘not to, but I guess it will
make my head ache.”—Street & Smith’s
Good News.
Hortons Dangrr
Threatens every man, woman or child living
inn region of country where fever and ague is
prevalent, since the germs of malarial disease
are inhaled from the air and are swallowed
from the water of such a region. Medicinal
eafegunrd is absolutely ncie'sary to nullify
this danger. As a means of fortifying and
a-dimming the sy.-tem so as to lie able to re
sist the loniar.al poison, Hostetler's Stomach
Bitters is incomparably Hie best and the most
popular.
Nearly 100,000 persons are in our jails and
penitentiaries.
Many persons nre broken down from over
work or household car s. Brown's Iron Bit
ters rebuilds the sy-tem. aids digestion, re
moves excess of bile, and cures mnlariu. A
splendid tonic for women and children.
Thirty-twostatesand territories have given
women some form of suffrage.
Mr. Simeon Staples
Four Physicians Failed
A Running Sore Five Years
Hood'( Sarsaparilla Perfectly Cured
“ Taunton, Mass., Jan. 9, 1893.
“ C. I. Hood & Co., I.nwril, Mass.
“ I was troubled with a running sore on my
ankle, tho doctors pronouncing it salt-rheum.
For 6 years (during which time I employed 4
different physicians), I received very little, if
any, benefit, and it continued to Increase in
size. 1 then commenced taking Hood’s Sarsa-
HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
parlila, and using Hood's Olive Ointment, and
at the end of 2 years I was completely cured,
and have had no trouble with it since.”
Simeon Stapi.es, East Taunton, Mass.
Hoad’s Pills cure liver Ills, sick headache, jaun
dice, Indigestion. Try a box. 25 cento.
ct
‘August
Flower
99
“lam happy to state to you and
to suffering humanity, that my wife
has used your wonderful remedy,
August Flower, for sick headache
and palpitation of the heart, with
satisfactory results. For several years
she has been a great sufferer, has
been under the treatment of eminent
physicians in this city and Boston,
and found little relief. She was in
duced to try August Flower, which
gave immedaite relief. We cannot
say to much for it.” L. C. Frost,
Springfield, Mass. &
RADFI ELD’S
FEMALE
REGULATOR
pr ....
specific for ail derange
ments peculiar to the
feir.hie sex,such asr,hronio
womb and ovarian dis
eases. If taken in time it
regulates and promotes
healthy action of all func
tions of the generative
organs. Young ladies at
the age of puberty, and
„ older ones at the ‘ineno-
ponse, will find in Ita healing, soothing tonic.
The highest recommendations from proml-
physicians and those who have tried it.
vf rite for book ‘‘To Women,” mailed free. Bold
by all druggists. Brauileld Regulator Co.,
proprietors, Atlanta, Ga.
Unlike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are used in the
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
reakfastCocoa
which It absolutely
pure and soluble.
111 has more than three times
| the strength of Cocoa mixed
I with Btarcb, Arrowroot or
’Sugar, and is far more eco
nomical, costing less than one cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and easily
DIGESTED.
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Hats.
DIAMONDS,
WATCHES and
SILVERWARE.
Scud lor our Catalogue.
ST. **. Steven* Bro.,
47 Whitehall HE., Atluulu, (la.
Cure* Consumption, Cough., Croup, Sore
Throat, Sold bv all Druggist, on a Guarantee
FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
The new totato culture.
The main features of the new potato
culture are: Tho seed is so pluuted
that under ordinary conditions it can
not help receiving tho moisture ne
cessary to germination; level culture,
thus exposing the least possible sur
face of the soil to the action of the
wind and sun, saviug u portion of the
moisture that under other conditions
would bo rapidly carried off.—[Ameri
can Farmer.
Dlarubliis llnbit mim, cured.
FEEDING BEES FOB HONEY.
Bees store lionoy, they do not make
it. The poet was correct when lie
wroto that ihoy “gather honey all the
day from every opening flower.”
Consequently lionoy is not changed by
I lie bees, ns it is well known Hint it
partake, of the character of the plant
the bees gather i( from. Thus buck
wheat honey is dark in color and lias
a peculiar flavor, easily recognized by
experts, while clover honey and Hint
from basswood trees are much lighter
in color and have a superior flavor.
If tlie bees are fed on sugar they6tore
it in their combs, and Hie product is
not honey but sugar syrup. To make
honey in Ibis way is u fraud, and Hie
cheapness of it is no excuse for thus
using the bees dishonestly. Sugar
syrup, however, inny he properly
noctl to feed bees from which the
honey has been taken loo closely in
the fall.— [New York Times.
Sl'ARK THE SHELTER.
It is natural that a farmer whoso
work has been largely the clearing of
forest laud to make graiufields and
meadows, and who, laler, has a con
tinual timo of guerilla war with briars
and bushes that follow the heavy
troops of trees anil still dispute for
possession of the soil—it is natural
that he should seek to extirpate tho
whole, root and branch, and take
pride in having entirely clear fields
and fences. But another enemy then
comes in—the parching wind. The
bare areas that he has learned to ad
mire are not pleasing to a lover of
landscape. Some sheltering hedge*
rows, and hero and there a little
grove or clump of handsome trees,
add both benefit and beauty, besides
increasing value. A field without any
sort of rim Is like a picture without a
frame, or a faco without cup or curl.
— [New York Tribune.
sanitary stable.
First of all it needs a healthy cow,
and then let the stable be well made,
though this need not involve great ex
pense. Let the floor upon logs and
“coh-houscs” give way to the floor
made on the earth itself, either conical
or well packed gravel, so that thcro
shull be no cave of the winds uuder it
or dungeon of foul smells, for of tho
many il’s attributed to tho confine
ment of cows in siabtes the most con
spicuous cause of the troubles is the
uuder side of tho stable floor, and
when this is remedied the chief cause
of trouble is removed. Fresh air can
be readily introduced, the only pre
caution bsing to prevent draughts of
air directly upon the cattle.
Tlie chief can e of effluvia is iu not
ceaning the stable frequently and
well and abolition of absorbents in
the gutters, and of use of a few quans
of land plaster each week behind the
cows. Tho welt ordered atabie is
whitewashed and all corners kept free
from filth and decomposing sub
stances.
Light should be made •'glaringly
conspicuous, (he windows frequent
and large and so set that (bore shall
lc all tho sunshine possible in the
stable. A roemy boxstall should be
provided fer the cows about to calve
and well littered with straw. — [Prac
tical Farmer.
TO KEEP COWS FROM KICKING.
It is an old saying Hint habit be
comes a second nature, and this is
pretty woll exemplified in the case of
many kicking cows. The trouble
usually arises from permitting it to
become a halii*, and this can in most
cases ho prevented by gentle usage
from the milker, beginning with the
first culf. Where gentle treatment
does not succeed and the cow is on the
way to become an habitual kicker, or
lifts her foot to knock over the pail
without any provocation, her legs
should be securely lied before begin
ning the milking, so that Hie operation
can go on just as though she was not
trying lo prevent it.
Any device (hat restrains the cow
so that Hie milker does not quit or
show signs of beiug inconvenienced
by her attempts at bad behavior, un
less site is naturally incorrigible or has
been made so by scolding and cruel
treatment, will generally result in a
reformation. Even a cow is not likely
to long continue a disagreeable habit
unless its *• fleet* are shown by the
conduct of the milker. If her legs
arc lied a few times until she sees
that she is not annoying him or com
pelling him to stop milking, (he straps
limy then be loosely wrapped around
them and afler awhile be laid aside
altogether. — [Now“ York World.
HOW j’O KILL THE Al’HIS.
The most troublesome }»»<H!t, ytjt
tfie oiio eatioit Iq doBtroy, If the
it li rwllljr kliioil iw imtuoriiftir tlid
entire (op of tho plant in warm
tobacco wntor, easily made by steeping
tobacco stems in boiling wntor until
the water is llie color of rather weak
coffee. Uso it about as warm as one
can benr Ills hand in. By placing the
hands over the top of the pot, with
tho plant betweeu the fingers, and in
verting tho plant and dipping the foli
age in a buckotful of tho liquid and
immediately out again, tho insects are
instantly killed and no injury done to
the plant, even if tho water is too hot
to put the hand iu.
A few minutes after they have been
so submerged the plants should bo
syringed with clear water to wash off
the tobacco stain. This operation
should also bo performed in the even
ing. If Hie plants are exposed to sun
shine soon after they have been
treated the foliage is apt to bo injured
and become brown and spotted. This
treatment leaves no offensive odor
around the plants or in the room, as
fumigating witli tobacco docs.
if these few directions are fol
lowed, remembering that all plants
need all the light and sunshine it is
possible to give them in (lie house,
plants can bo grown quite satisfac
torily. Remember to select Hie plants
that succeed best in tho house, and al
so remember that roses nre nmong tho
most difficult to manage either in
house or greenhouse.— [Chicago News
Record.
GROWTH OF DALLAS.
Whilst there seem to he differences
of opinion as to whether it is wisest to
plant out cailas in tho spring for Hie
making of good summer growth, or
to retain the plants in pots, I find,
writes a correspondent, very many
growers adopt the plan of keeping all
their stoutest ones in pots, only turn
ing them out at the proper season, re
moving side shoots, rubbing down the
balls of soil, and repotting in so
smalt ones as well can bo at the first,
keeping them iu the pots all tho sum*
iner, and pushing them along by
housing early for tho production of
early flowers. In many cases a fur
ther shift into rather larger pots be
comes needful during the Bummer.
Tho market growers regard this as
tho best course where cailas have to be
forced.
That tho weaker or smaller stems or
offshoots when p’antedout into highly
manured ground do relatively make
the strongest growth there can be no
doubt, but as these, even if the stems
and leafage have become ever so stout,
still being newly potted in the autumn
are less fitted lo stand early forcing
than are those which have been kept
in the pots all die season. It is very
important, however, especially that
calias are of a semi-aquatic nature,
(but very ample waterings be giveu,
especially to pot plants, and also that
tho pots stand on a bed of ashes
or cocoa fiber refuse. Liquid manures
are of more service to pot plants where
the roots are densely crowded than to
plants out doors where, because of
ample manure and root room, the
chief want in hot weather is plenty of
moisture. It seems absolutely im
probable, come yellow or any other
color, that the cultivation of the white
variety will ever be materially les
sened. — [Chicago Times.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Onion seed is scarce, and its price
will come high.
Some day feeders will injure beeves
partly with molasses.
Don’t waste hay and fatten the
horses by feeding too much of it.
Tho spinach bod, through cold
weather, is grateful for a covering of
eornstalsk.
Best results are gotten from the soil
when deep-rooted crops nre followed
by shallow roots.
Cover the bit with leather, or in
nny case be sure to lake the frost out
of it before putting it in (ho horso’a
mouth.
Where sings are troublesome use
cut potatoes for bait, and at night look
for them with a lantern and destroy
with salt.
An allowance of wheat brail and
oats each day to the growing colts will
more than pay iu their growth and
development.
In breeding look carefully to the
predominating characteristics of the
sire and dam, as it does not pay to
breed colls with naturally bad tem
pers.
A Violinist’s Hair.
Why is it that violinists nhvayi
wear their front hair so abominably
long? It is most diverting to the au
dience and keeps one constantly
wondering why the violinist does not
have it cut, or even wear a round
comb if necessary-—anything but to
have it dangling down in his eyes in
that distracting way.
He comes out to bow his thanks for
applause, and there it is; ho pushes it
back and bows again, but lie can’t see
tho audience because this lock qf hair
is exactly oyer his eyes—or one eye,
aj any rate. He rotires lo tho dress-
ing room, ipid boforo he is called out
again the nudlonco fervently pray he
will have arrauget) that wayward lock,
hut no. there it is. jiis yigjjt hand is
constantly bifty j () brushing It back,
but OB wall inlgld lie try fa brush book
1M w.„. [,
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
In Arkansas thcro is a thirteen-year-
Tho hoort of a Greenland wlinlo is
a yard in diiimetor.
old girl who makes tho weighing
machine treinblo at 306 pounds.
Tragedy was first represented on o
wagon by Thespis, at Athens, B. C.
535.
It is said the city of Pittsburg,
Penn., now stands on ground unco
given in exchange for a violin.
Rebecca Allen, of Chester, Yt.,
eighty-four years old, hns just com
pleted a bed quilt containing nearly
4,000 pieces.
It is said to be possiblo to cut a
growing tree and make it into paper
ready for tho printing presses within
twenty-four hours.
An ingenious Boston man hns just
patented an electrical dcvico designed
to automatically play banjo, mando
lins, guitars and harps.
Thcro is no truth whatever in tho
beiiof that any one falling into the
sea necessarily rises and sinks three
timos before drowning.
About 5000 words iu (ho English
language have no rhymo to them.
These include such important words
as honor, virtue, gulf, month, and
echo.
The young ladies of White Pine,
Nov., amuso Ihcmselvos in winter by
coasting down the mountain sides in
rocking-chairs. Their escorts carry
the chairs back to the starting point.
The accepted method of pronounc
ing Hawaii is as if it was spelled Ilali-
wi-e, accenting the second syllable and
pronouncing tho i as in the word pine.
The correct native pronunciation,how
ever, is said to be Hah-vah-o-e.
There are now living williiu a radi
us of ten miles of Ashland, Me., eight
American women who are the moth
ers of 102 children, eighty of whom
are living iu the enjoyment of good
health and sound minds.
Andre Gaertner, founder of tho
Mechanical Museum at Dresden, Ger
many, who was born in 1654, is said
to be the inventor of the elevator. In
1717, having become infirm, lie made
a machine which enabled him to go
up and down tho Ihrco stories of his
house.
There is a point near tho famous
stony cavo in the Catskill Mountains,
Now York, whore ice may be found
on any day in the year. This locality
is locally known as the Notch, and is
walled in on all sides by steep moun
tains, some are which arc moro than
3000 feet high.
The largest heathen temple in tho
world is in Seringapatam, and it com
prises a square, each side being one
mile in length, inside of which are
six other squares. The walls are 25
feet high and 5 feet thick, and the
hall where pilgrims congregate is
supported by a thousand pillars, each
cut from a single block of stoue.
A School for Rogues.
In Faris there still exist schools of
crime such as that conducted by Fagin,
and the dummy figure with bells from
the pockets of which tho young pupils
have to steal purses and handkerchiefs
without ntakiug a noise of ringing are
still iu use.
A young pickpocket who aroused
suspicion because he was spending
money very freely, and who was
found to have only recently stolen a
purse containing $12 from a lady iu
an omnibus, has been interviewed on
tho subject in the prison of La Petite
Roquette.
This precious young rascal described
how his father had carefully taught
him to pick ladies’ pockets, “I only
pick ladies’ pockels,”.lio said. “That
is easier than picking men’s. With
gentlemen it is much moro difficult to
do the trick without their feeling your
hand on them.” IIis “papa” and lie,
lie said, uso.l to travel together iu tho
omnibuses from the Palais Royal to
the Bastile.
That was not so good a “pilch,” ho
explained as the omnibuses from the
Madeleine lo the Bastile, but these
latter were already worked by “old
Mother G.,” who, it seems, claimed,
and successfully assorted, exclusive
privileges with regard to the portnblo
property of passengers on that route.
Tho interviewer, aftor leaving the lad,
found himself minus a handkerchief
aud a halfpenny, which he had pur
posely left in his (nil pocket as an ex
periment to see whether ho could be
relieved of them without his
knowledge.—[New York Journal.
A Snake in a Bog of Potatoes.
A man purchased a bag of potatoes
at the Capo Town, (South Africa)
market, and when tho potatoes were
turned out at his home he discovered
that a puff adder was included in Hie
bargain. That viper must have been
callous, indeed, to have expended no
vornotn during its transit, and it is to
be hoped that- Hie potatoes were well
examined after beiug iu such com
pany. The polonists are wondorfu.ly
expert in dealing with such quarry.
yfhy He Never ('ailed Again.
Waller Ego—Yoq mustn’t believe
everytlijug von hoar about me.
Gl$i|y» (ione—Of ponrso not. I
pevor bear anything about yojj, o*copt
(Tbfttyogtt!} tpe.-f^uok,
An English State Secret.
I hope that the revelation I am about
to mnko may be considered as strictly
confidential. It must not be told across
the Atlantic. It 1b one of those secrets
which one learns with shame and repeats
in a whisper. It refers, in fact, to the
venerable house of lords. It has to do
with a thing which greatly adds to what
tho peerage calls the enjoyment of a
title. It is a secret of the vestisrium, or
robing loom. It is nothing less than
the long and carefully concealed truth
about tbe coronet. You know that it is
a crimson velvet cap,very soft and pretty
and comfortable, round which is tbe
gold coronet set with pearls. Now, a
coronet is just a broad circular band, as
everybody knows.
The iron crown of Lombardy is such a
band of gold set with great rubies
roughly cut, and without any palliative
of velvet. With the bare crown stuck
firmly on his head there he was—a king,
just as with his wig adjusted on his head
there is the other man—a lord chief jus
tice. Very well, then. The peer’s cor
onet is not of gold at all. I am assured,
by one who knows, that it is of copper
gilt, and that the pearls in it are not
pearls,but silver Ihings as big as pigeons’
eggs. One more illusion is gone. We
shall learn next that tbe velvet is cotton
velvet or sateen or soft merino, or even
red flannel. Only copper guilt! Is it
possible!—Walter Besant in London
Queen.
Bound to Skate.
Little Boy—“Pape, I wish you’d get
me some skates."
Papa—“Skates? There’s no ice.”
“I want to have’em ready when the
ice comes.”
“Some winters there is do ice at all.”
“Well, roller skates’ll do.”—Street &
Smith’s Good News.
Random Shots.
Many people are buay in the world
gathering together a handful of thorns
to sit upon.
The brave man is an inspiration to the
weak, and compels them, as it were, to
follow him.
Never wait for a thing to turn up. Go
and turn it up yourself. It takes less
time, end is surer to be done.
Forbearance and aelf-coutroi smooth
the road of, life and open many ways
wbioh would otherwise remain closed.
It is well to be sanguine and full of
anticipation; we are the better off
for our hopes, even if they are never
realized.
What is experience! A poor little
hut constructed from the ruins of the
palace; of gold and marble called our
illusions.
A Cat Exterminator.
An ingenious Brooklynito has come
out with an invention which bids fair to
relegate the bootjack to the attic with
tbe distaff and spinning wheel. He has
run a wire along his back fence. To this
is attached a strong electric bnttery. A
button at the inventor’s bedside sends
forked lightning through the wire, and
the current is turned on when tho eats
begin their midnight parleying. One
wild feline screech aud all is over.—Chi
cogo Inter-Ocean.
Brown’s Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia, Mala
ria, Biliousness nnd General Debiht'. Gives
strength, aids Digestion, tones the nirves—
creates appetite. The best tonic for x<<urging
Mothers, weak women and children.
Tho statement is made that Victor Hugo
loft 400,000 unpublished manuscripts, long and
short.
Beecliam’s Pills nre better than mineral wa
ters. Beecham’s—no others. 25centsabox.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-water.Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
The Argument Used
B Y the makers of the second-class baking
powders to induce the dealer to push
) them off on Royal consumers is that
they cost less than Royal and afford
the dealer much more profit.
But you, madam, are charged the same price
for them as for the absolutely pure Royal, which
is perfectly combined from the most highly refined
and expensive materials. The lower cost of the
others is caused by the cheap, impure materials
used in them, and the haphazard way in which
they are thrown together.
Do you wish to pay the price of the Royal
for an inferior baking powder, made from im
pure goods, of 27 per cent, less strength? If
you buy the other powders, insist upon having
a corresponding reduction in price.
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
to health of
tho value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Fig3.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, tho refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
ana permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of tho medical
profession, becauso it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance,
vSyrup of Figs is for sale by all drug
gists in 50c and$l bottles, but it is man
ufactured by tho California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
hOOR for
Two Beautiful Ladies
COMPANION PICTURES
You will find one on a box of
home; tacks, i
with several apartments,
and all different sized
TACKS, adapted to all the
various Home uses
the other on a box of
home; nails,
containing several differ
ent sized NAILS, just what
are needed for every day
use
Made solely by the Atlas Tack Corp’n, Boston
W*rehouoeo.—Booton, New York, Philadelphia,
Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, Lynn.
Fectoric*.—Taunton, Man. Falrhaven, Mww.
r acuincii—a auutvii| maie, x Hir&iavcn, mass,
Whitman, Ma... Duxbury, Mas., Plymouth, Mi...
Every home neede them.
Every dealer sells them.
DR. KINO’S ROYAL CERMETUER D
? IS A POSITIVE CUBE FOB
K LaGrlppe, Catarrh, Ithriirnntl.m, K
I Neuralgia, Dynpepeia, llowel, Kid- I
N nnd Bladder Diseases, Blood N
O Poison and General Debility. u
Pleasant as Lemonade.
r Harmless Always. Ft
O Price, $1.00 Per Bottle. o
Y Unexcelled for BURNS, BRUISES Y
L and STINGS. £
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
| KING'S ROYAL GERIETUER CO. I
ATLANTA, GA.
Take Dr. King’s Germotuer Pills for
Co '
the Liver and Constipation—60 pills in
| box, price, 26 cents. ^
R DR. KING’S ROYAL CERMETUER
^GsUft
Polish
Do Not Be Deceived
with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which stain the
hands, injure the Iron and burn red.
Tho Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor
less, Durable, and tha consumer pays for no tin
or gloss package with every purchase
HALL’S
City of Toledo,
Lucas Co., [S. S.
State of Ohio.
Beet Cough Syrup
H The Beet Cough Syrup. L
jTaates Good. Use in time.!
il Sold by Druggist*.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner
of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and
every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of
a ready' HALL’S CATARRH CURE.
We of
fer you
made medicine for Coughs,
Bronchitis and other dis
eases of the Throat and
Lungs. Like other so-
called Patent Medicines, it
is well advertised, and
having merit it has attain
ed a wide sale under the
name of Piso’s Cure for
Consumption.
It is now a "Nostrum," though at first It was
compounded after a prescription by a regular
physician, with no idea that it would ever go
on the market as a proprietary medicine. Bnt
after compounding that prescription over a
thousand times in one year,we named it "Piso’s
Cnre for Consumption,” and began advertising
it in a small way. A medicine known all
over the world is the result.
Why is It not just as good as though costing
fifty cents to a dollar for a prescription and an
equal sum to have it put up at a drug store?
AN ASTONISH I NO
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
MOBLREB’SH
CARDUI
It Strengthen* the Weak, Quiet* th#
Nerves, Relieves Monthly
Suffering end Cures
FEMALE DI8EA8E8.
ASK YOUR DRUQQI8T ABOUT IT.
ft ,00 «K BOTTUE.
CHATTAN0MA MED, C<£ (
Sworn to before me, and subscribed in my presence,
this 6th day of December, A. D. 1889.
A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public.
?NOTARIAL SEAL T'
: LUCAS CO., o. :
» •
HALL’S
CATARRH CURE
INTERNALLY,
, and acts directly
upon the Blood and
mucous surfaces.
CATARRH
TSBTXMONIAXjS :
E. B. WALTHALL 4 CO., Druggists, Horse
’ave, ICy., say; “Hall’s Catarrh Cure cures
svery one that takes it.”
CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS, Detroit, Mich.,
lays: "The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is
wonderful.” Write him about it.
REV. H. P. CARSON, Scotland, Dale., saysf
“ Two bottles of Hall's Catarrh Cure complete
ly cured my little girl.”
J. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Va., says;
"Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very had
case of catarrh."
Jail's Catarrh Cure Is Sold by all Dealers in Patent Medicines
PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE.
CURE
THE ONLY GENUINE HALL'S CATARRH CURE IS
MANUFACTURED BY
F. J. CHENEY & C0„
Testimonials sent free»- -unlication.
TOLEDO, O.
* BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
BICYCLES.
Aulieai> grad* Bicycles. .Sundries of
all kinds. Send stamp for catalogues
And prices. Imineiine llurirniiiN
In gt»con<UllRii<t Bicycle-*,
Pneumatic and Uitaliloii Tired. Theon'yex-
cluaively bicycle house in the South. Installment term*
♦o responsible parties. Send references. Ad Iress,
to responsible parties, henti references. Ad iresti,
BltMfCLK IfKPAIiTIU’T, LOW It Y HAIM).
WAHK CO.. E. I*. CliulInin, Malinger., No.
■ For Indigestion. Biliousness.
" Headache. Constipation, Bad
I Complexion, Offensive Breath,
I nnd all disorders of the Stomach,
i Liver and Bowels,
igeation follows their use. Sold
by druggists or sent by moil. Box
^ vials),76c. P--*
EOCt
r free samplea-tiddreHa .
Hi PAN 8 CHEMICAL CO., New York,
Elso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the
Beet, busiest to tee, uud Cheapest.
C/VIV\R R H
Mold by druggists or «ent by mail,
60c. K. T. Hnzelline, Warren, Pa.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
V WITH
THOMSON’S I
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tool, required. Only a haramor needed to drive
nnd clinch them eanlly and quickly, leaving the clinch
nhiohitely nmooth. Requiring no ho e to be made In
iho leather nor burr lor the Iliveti. They are atroag,
lou.b and durable. Millions now In u.e. Ail
'cnetns, uniform nr nn.orted, put up In boxen.
A.k year dealer for them, or .end 40c. lo
.tamp, for a box of 100, annorted ntzes. Man'fd by
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFQ. CO.,
WAMHAH. MANS.
If »y one doaht* «hol
we can euro thomj.tob-
.tlnato cuo In SO toM
daye, let him write for
particular, and lnve.t|.
gate our rehab llty. Oar
Hu.mcUl hooking le
Stop,ooo. When mercury,
iodide potaaelun, aanaparilla or Hot Springs fall, we
S iirantee a cure—end our Ua-lo Cyphllcnol. tbe only
ibg that will onra permenontly. Poiitive proof oen|
... fcananr Co„ Chlo.go, Ul.
BLOOD POISON ]
A SPECIALTY.
■Oiled, tree. Cook
opiuMrgim'
y Jill <»ur«<n
mi
ix
I