Newspaper Page Text
JACKSON
Real Estate id Renting Apicy.
D. J. THAXTON, Manager.
SUCCESSOR TO
H. O. Benton & Cos.
Farm Lands, Business Lots and
Residence Lots For Sale.
FREE OF CHARGE.
We Advertise Property in
the MIDDLE GEORGIA AR
GUS without cost to the
owner.
art th oaly Real Estate Agents in Jackson, and have In our hands quite a
limber if valuable aid dealrable farms in Butts and other counties for sale on the
best of terns.
Also City Property, Residence and
Business Lots.
If you have land te aell, put it into our hands and we will find you a buyer. If
yon hare houses to rent, we will find you a renter.# If you wish to buy a home call
vn its and we will furnish team and driver.
WE ASK ONLY A TRIAL.
faekson, Oa., June 9, 1892.
BLAORANBE FEUiLE COLLEGE
> ifniiMiMWtwMwwwwwywwwwwiwwm ssseess*
Literature, Music, Art. Normal course. Dressmaking, typewriting, stenography.
Music and Art unsurpassed. VOICE CULTURE A SPECIALTY. Bookkeep
ing, harmony, phyaicial culture free. Kcononsical uniform. Send forcata-
Orowth. 1865-86. 1890-91.1 logue. 13*" 47Us session begins Sep. 16, 1891.
Music Pupils 68 162 | RUFUS^v!S MITT q P r es ! ’ LAGRANGE, Gl
A Prize Picture Puzzle.
■XFIiANATJOIf • —The following picture contains four faces, a man and his three daughters.
Af T ope can find the man's face, but it is not so easy to distinguish the faces of the three young ladies.
The picture was published in a few newspapers some time ago, and attracted considerable attention to
pur standard remedies. We now offer anew prize competition in connection with it. As the sole object
i> to introduce our medicines into new homes, those who entered the former competition are requested
ot to compete in thU one. As to the reliability of “The Ford Pill Co.and the estimation in which their
BMdicines are held in Toronto, Canada, vhere they are best known, patrons are referred to the daily
MWipspers, wholesale druggists and leading business houses generally of Toronto.
-~.*J Propr5 * for ; f ,* #Th * Ford P ! H Co -’lr :n Rlve an elegant pair of Shetland PonleS*
and Harness, valued at S6OO, (delivered free in any part of the United States,
i£° can . ma * ca °. ut the t * l . re * daughters' faces. To the second will be given an elegant
u *py * Cold Watch, set in sapphires and diamonds. To the third will be given a pair of
Diamond E,ar-r n*s. To the fourth win be given & handsome China Dinner
c tP,\i othe J li th k- 11 be i-Kodak Camera. To the£*tf, a Swiss Music
seventh, a French Mantel Clock. To the eighth, an elegant Banquet
.amp. To the ninth, a pair of Crown Derby Vases. To the tenth, a complete Lawn
[&n n ‘P Sqt, and many other prizes in order of merit. Every competitor must cut out the above
* Jt uxsla Picture, distinguish the three girls’ faces by marking a cross with a lead pencil on each,
1 1 5 y-A, lw °T n ‘ stamps for one of the following “Prize Ilemedies:”-
Fordi Prize Pills, * “Ford’s Prize Catarrh. Remedy,” or “Ford’s Prize
Lptg. Select any one of the above remedies you desire. Address 4 *Tli© Ford.
Fill to., Cor. Wellington & Bay Sts., Toronto, The person whose envelope is
postmarked first wril be awarded the first prize, and the others in order of merit. As this adver
tisement appears simultaneously throughout the United States, every one has an equal oppor
tunity. To the person sending the last correct answer will be given an elegant Upright Concert
valued at *500.00. To the first person from the last sending a correct answer
will be given a gentleman's fine Gold “Sandoz” Watch, which strikes the hours and quarter
kours on small cathedral gong at pleasure, and valued at *300.00. To the second from the last a
■cat -da* Safety Bicycle, pneumatic tire. To the third from the Aw/, a first-class English Shot
arun. To th* fourth from the last, a suite of Parlor Furniture. To the fifth from the last . a
bad toss* Silver Tea Service, To the sixth from the last, an elegant Piano Lamp, To the
errentk from the last, a handsome pair of Portieres. To the eighth from the last, a genuine
English leather travelling Trunk. To the ninth from the last , two pieces of genuine French
Statuary, and many other prizes is order of merit.
SPECIAL PRIZES FOR EACH STATE.
. A l *p® c “ l of * Silk Dress Pattern (sixtee* yards, any color), or a first-elazs
■•Win* Machine (any make desired) will be given to the jfirst person in each State in the
U. S. who can make oat the three daughters’ faces. We shall give away 200 valuable prizes,
heeides special prises, (if there should be so many sending correct answers.) No charge is made for boxing
aad perking ef prises. The names of the leading prize winners will be published in connection with our
advertisement fas leading newspapers next month. Extra premiums will be given to only those who are
willing to assist in introducing oar medicines. Nothin* is charged for the prizes in any way. They
are abasia tely given a wav to introduce and advertise “ Ford’s Prize Remedies,” which are stand
art medicines, and will be used in every family for years where they have been once introduced. All
fneet will be awarded strictly in order of merit, and with perfect satisfaction to the public. The remedies
wU be seat by mail, postpaid, and prises free of duty.
A WATCH FOB EVERY CORRECT ANSWKR,
An extra premium of a genuine “Fearless” Watch, (stem winder,) will be awarded to every
rsea who seada a correct answer within 30 days after this advertisement appears, in case they should not
fortunate enough to secure one of the larger prises. That is, if any one can find the three faces and
eadoee them within 30 days from the time this advertisement appears in the newspaper, they are
gwaraamod sifaer one of the leading prises, or an extra premium of a watch on conditions stated,
me answer will be noticed that does not domain jo cents for one of Ford’s Prize Remedies.
MdrntTHE FORD PILL CO, “37,” Cor. Welllntfon & Bay Sti, Toronto, Canada.
HOUSE AND HOME.
rojurie3 Oar Dcmast c Pets Can
Do Without latsntion.
A Doctor’s Advice Regarding Animals
About a House— Other Valuable
Hints and Suggestions of Interest
to Women.
Household pots, from the poodle
to the canary, from the cat to the
guinea-pig, are objects of interest.
They have functions which can
be classed with the piano or any
thing else which is divertive or
pleasurable.
The dog which wags his tail,
the purring cat, the croaking par
rot, the mocking-bird and our
next-door neighbor, the monkey,
help to kill us as they please
us. What they carry into the
house or throw off during a pet
ting, though it be involuntary, is
not of slight account. The little
particles of dust which cling to
feathers and to hair are gathered
by deposits from the ground and
the atmosphere. Having a place
to gain a hold they form a settle
ment, which is not devoid of po
tenevin enforcing the claims of its
members to pursue their vultur
ous tendencies.
Take, for instance, the canary,
there is a period of shedding. Be
fore this is a lossening of the
feathers and a great surface is ex
posed to dust and dirt and—what
not?
The feathers collect material
which neither belongs to nor is
destined for man, woman or child.
As these leave the bird the oil of
the feathers hold fast to the im
purities which have been appro
priated, and in the process of being
cast about in one and another di
rection manages to throw off a
little here and there. The parti
cles of dust which are accumu
lated float around the room, for
which, to a certain extent, the
broom may be held responsible.
Asthma, bronchitis and a host of
inflammatory ailments of the res
piratory apparatus may all be re
ferred to this source.
Dogs and cats are inclined to
wards fleas, carry them into living
rooms and leave them in carpets
and rugs. The flea, while capable
of education and by nature cleanly,
midst surroundings belonging to
civilization, can carry on its long
legs and its peculiar head a great
deal of discomfort. It jumps from
dog or cat to a carpet or rug, and
after a little warning goes to a
human being, carrying with it
parasites which may do much in
the way of disseminating germs
of disease.
Monkeys are by nature, when
removed from one climate to an
other, consumptive. They get en
larged glands, attenuated muscles
and everything which points to-.
wards a not distant solution of
energy and life. Living in close
proximity to human beings, they
transfer to the atmosphere their
germs of disease, and by this
means throw off a great deal of
matter which may produce harm.
If it should come to a matter of
selection in the way of a house pet
get a magnie, a crow or a raccoon.
These are clean, so is the nightin
gale and mocking-bird. Guinea
pig3 make nice pets, like white
rats and the little mice which
cause women to tuck their skirts
about their limbs and take a fairy
story-like position of defense on a
chair.
Hints to Housekeepers.
A novel gift for a husband or
brother devoted alike to smoking
and photography is a photographic
cigar and cigarette holder. It is
made to develop a small photograph
by the action of* smoke passing
over specially prepared paper.
With each holder is supplied a
small packet of plain white photo
graphic squares about the size of a
postage stamp. One of these is
placed in the mterior of the holder,
and while being smoked the am
monia vapor arising from the to
bacco causes the photograph to be
come visible.
No apple pie baked with the
sugar in it is so delicious as the
one sweetened afterward by re
moving the crust and adding
sugar, a very little butter, and
nutmeg or cinnamon.
One of the best household remi
dies for bruises, where the skin
has not been broken, is arnica and
sweet oil.
Colored center cloths are no
longer used by people of good
taste. They prefer something that
can be washed. White linen or
wash silk is all that is permitted.
These may be as elaborate or plain
as occasion demands. But in any
case they should be made to con
form to the skape of the table they
are intended to fit, square for
square, oblong for oblong, round
for round and oval for oval.
Greasy pans should be wiped
with soft paper as soon as done
with, then filled with cold water
in which is put' a teaspoonful of
ammonia or a piece of washing
soda the size of a bean. You will
find it easier to wash them when
the time comes, and they will net
be roughened as when scraped
with a knife.
Oyster shells laid on the hot
coals in a stove or range will
loosen clinkers on the fire brick so
that they may be taken off easily,
and a stove that is rubbed off with
newspapers after each meal will
not need polishing so often.
A custard should never reach
the boiling point or it will curdle.
Washday is a good time to at
tend to the “manicuring” we are
all exhorted to do in . these days.
\Ykile tbe hands a ’ soaked.
with a little ivory implement that
comes for the purpose (price, 10
cents), loosen and push back the
skin that grows over the nail at
the root, and with circular scis
sors trim the nails in good shape.
It takes but a minute or two, then
with a touch occasionally through
the week, they keep in creditable
order.
The fumes of a brimstone match
will remove berry stains from tli£
fingers.
If an artery is cut, press it be
tween the wound and the heart; if
a vein is cut, compress beyond the
wound.
No fruit loses flavor from being
carelessly handled more quickly
than apples. Apples which have
been well stored will retain their
flavor throughout the winter, but
those which have been allowed to
lie about with decaying specimens,
or are stored loosely in barrels,
either lose their flavor or acquire
a rank taste from the conditions
around them.
Systematic Domestic Training'.
While we labor over the un
trained majority there are hun
dreds of young girls in orphan
asylums and other institutions
who might be getting a thorough
grounding in the fundamentals of
domestic work, * and make, even
in two years, a change in present
domestic conditions. If it could
be made the fad, even for one year,
for intelligent women to give an
hour a week to this work, we
should be astonished at the result.
To raise the most independent girl
without a practical knowledge of
housework is cruel, but it becomes
'worse than cruel for the depend
ent class. It cannot be that a
large per cent, of the girls yearly
cared for by charity are to be
adopted in comfortable homes or
trained for well paying artistic
professions.
But who is to give this training?
Evidently it cannot be asked of the
faithful workers who are already
overburdened with the problem of
feeding, clothing and sheltering
the orphans. An hour a week is
not much for others to give, the
work would prove fascinating to
many, and there are so many in
telligent women, and so much
time is wasted. More than this,
housework, well done, is a great
preventive of both vice and dis
ease. Nine people out of ten are
sick because they do not exercise
enough—brain as well as body; all
people wlio are vicious aro so be
cause they have not been kept
healthfully and happily busy.
Housework, taught in the proper
way, can be made a fascinating
occupation. The time has come
for some man or woman to origi
nate the fashion of leaving their
millions not at the top, but at the
f bottom, to be used in an education
' that will set the formation of
character above all else.
Choice Recipes.
Grape Catsup.— Boil seven
pounds of grapes, merely picked
from the stems and washed in a
little bowl set in a kettle of boiling
water. When they have cooked
in this way for an hour, strain
through a sieve fine enough to
keep back the skins and seeds.
Add 3 1-2 pounds of a pint
of vinegar, a teaspoonful of cinna
mon and the same amount of
cloves. Cook the mixture till it
is thick.
Bowdoin Pudding. One
quart of milk, one-third of a box
of gelatine soaked in the milk one
hour. One cup of sugar, yolks of
three egg3 beaten together; add to
the cold milk, cook like soft
soft custard. Beat the whites of
the eggs, and stir into the pudding
just as you take it from the stove.
Hard Gingerbread. Twg
cups of molasses, two-thirds of a
cup of butter or lard, half a cup
of warm water, two teaspoonfuls
of soda, one of ginger, flour to roll
as soft as you can; wet the top
with milk and sift sugar over it
before baking.
Apple Charlotte. Line a
buttered loaf-tin with thin slices
of homemade bread; dip the edges
of the bread in white of egg and
fill the space with a smooth apple
sauce seasoned with lemon rind
and nutmeg, or cinnamon; cover
the top with strips of bread; put a
small quantity of butter on top,
and bake one hour.
Oyster Salad. —Clean one pint
of white celery, and cut into fine
pieces. Season with salt. Parboil
one pint of oysters, drain, and
when cold mix them with a French
dressing. Put a layer of shredded
lettuce in a salad-bowl, sprinkle
with a French dressing, add the
oysters and celery, cover with a
Mayonmnfb dressing, and garnish
with pickled barberries.
A Grudge Against the Poets.
“What, asked Christopher Col
umbus of his good friend Martin
Alonzo Pinzon, “what shall we
name the new world when we find
it?”
‘ ‘Let’s call it America,” returned
the ingenious sailor, “because that
name doesn’t rhyme with any
thing, and it will make the poets
of all the centuries as mad as hat
ters.”
- * ‘That’s a good idea,” said
the great discoverer, “and it
goes.”—Chicago News-Record.
As Bad as the Church Fair Stew.
Mistress —Bridget, where are
the oyster crackers that I or
dered"?
Bridget—Faith, mum, an’ I
broke ivery one of tliim, and divil
an oyster could I find in one, and
I sent them straight back. —Chi
cago Inter-Ocean.
AN ENGAGEMENT.
She does not wear my little ring:
Upon her hand,
I wonder why?
Is it b> an *2 it tells somethin*,
Tye simple band,
And she is shy?
Yet one could see a ribbon peep
Abo ye the lace—
(lf one should try)
About her throat: but let it keep
Its hiding place
From every ere.
The secret is too new, too dear,
No one must know.
No one must spy;
It is so sweet to be so near.
She wants it so,
And TANARUS, and T.
—Exchange.
Hurried Eating- Impairs Health-
A habit easy to acquire, and
most difficult to overcome, is that
of fast eating. The best of food
taken without thorough mastica
tion is less digestible than that of
an inferior quality well chewed.
The mouth is a mill arranged to
supply digestive fluid in propor
tion to the amount of grinding
done. When food is taken re
peatedly without being sufficiently
ground, the glands secreting this
fluid lose their activity from want
of use, and dyspepsia ensues.
Children should be trained to eat
slowly, no matter how hungry or
what important business is press
ing. Much safer a little food well
ground than a hearty meal swal
lowed in haste. Cold food is even
more difficult to digest than hot,
if taken too rapidly. The normal
temperature of the stomach is
about 98 degrees; food has to be
raised to this temperature before
digestion can take place.
A large quantity of cold food
thrown into the stomach by rapid
eating is sure to prove more or less
injurious; the same food well mas
ticated would in the process have
considerable heat imparted to it;
hence, would be comparatively
harmless. It is easy to see why
icewater taken with the meals, or
in quantities alone, so often proves
hurtful. When a person is very
tired, chilled or overheated, the
stomach, like the rest of the body,
is not in good running order, even
for well-masticated food. At such
times a cup of hoi broth, milk or
water, with a dish of cream and
sugar to flavor the latter, would
not tax the digestion, and would
temporarily relieve the cravings of
hunger, and so give time for na
ture’s balance to be restored.
These few suggestions are not for
the invalid only, but for the well,
with the hope that they may aid
the former to regain and the latter
to retain that prime blessing,
health. —Tribune.
How Do Women Kill Time?
The guileless man who asked
this foolish question got his answer
from a woman, who, with her hus
band, two children, and two ser
vants, lived in a house with nine
rooms. Having kept a statistical
account for one year, she gave the
results as follows: Number of
lunches put up, 1,157; meals or
dered, 963; desserts made, 172;
lamps filled, 328; rooms dusted,
2,250; times dressed children, 786;
visits received, 879; visits paid,
167; books read, 88; papers read,
552; stories read aloud, 234; games
played, 229; church services at
tended, 125; articles mended, 1,236;
articles of clothing made, 120;
fancy articles made, 56; letters
written, 429; hours in music, 201-2;
hours in Sunday school work, 208;
hours in gardening, 49; sick days,
44; amusements attended, 10.
Besides the above I nursed two
children through measles, twice
cleaned every nook and corner of
my house, put up seventy-five
jars of pickles and preserves, made
seven trips to the dentist’s, dyed
Easter eggs, polished silver, and
spent seven days in helping to
nurse a sick friend who was ill,
besides the thousand and one du
ties too small to be mentioned, yet
taking time to perform.—Wash
ington Star.
Oddities In Print.
An advertisement in a Bcsten
oewspaper appeared as follows:
“Wanted, a young man in the dry
goods trade; to be partly outdoors
and partly behind the counter.”
The following extract from a
medical advertisement is perhaps
correct: “Consumptives, cough
while you can, for after you have
taken one bottle of my mixture
you can’t.” \
A butcher’s sign out West reads
as follows: “John Jacobs kills
pigs like his father.”
A tailor had a bill in his window
to the following effect: “Wanted
—several thin coat makers.” This
is a fine chance for spare tailors.
One advertisement was headed:
“Two sisters want washing.” So
do a good many brothers. Another
advertisement was: “Wanted —-a
boy to sandpaper.”
An evening paper states that
ex-President Hayes went to Sena
tor Sherman’s residence on his ar
rival in Washington, “where a
substantial breakfast and several
of his intimate friends had been
prepared for him.”
To the correspondent who in
quires if there has been any sud
den drop in dry goods this week,
a commercial writer says: “We
have noticed but one. She said,
when we picked her up, that peo
ple who ate grapes ought not to
throw their skins on the sidewalk.”
A farmer wrote as follows to a
distinguished scientific agricultur
ist, to whom he felt under obliga
tions for introducing a variety of
swine: “Respected Sir: I went
yesterday to the cattle show. I
found several pigs of your species.
There was a great variety or hogs,
and 1 was astonished at not seeing
you there.” /
A Bad Cold
If not speedily relieved, may lead to serious
Issues. Where there is difficulty of breath
ing, expectoration, or soreness of tne throat
and bronchial tubes, with a constantly irri
tating cough, the very best remedy is Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral. It removes tTtfe phlegm,
soothes irritation, stops coughing, and in
duces repose. As an emergency medicine,
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral should be in every
household.
“There is nothing better for coughs than
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I use no other
preparation.”—Annie S. Butler, IG9 Pondst.,
Providence, It. I.
“I suffered severely irorn bronchitis;
but was
CURED BY
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It saved my life.”
—Geo. B. Hunter, Goose River, N. S.
“About a year ago I took the worst cold
that ever a man had, followed by a terrible
cough. The best medical aid was of no
avail. At last I began to spit blood, when
it was supposed to be all over with me.
Every remedy failed, till a neighbor recom
mended Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I took
half a teaspoonful of this medicine, three
times a day, regularly, and very soon
began to improve. My cough left me, my
sleep was undisturbed, my appetite re
turned, my emaciated limbs gained flesh and
strength and, to-day, thanks to the Pectoral,
lam a well man.” —H. A. Bean, 28 Winter
st., Lawrence, Mass.
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
'PREPARED BY-
Or. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, fie
memi
Mm
/
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J If foyi
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nnnnnnnnn
rvyisT KJ.EOANTI.Y bound Album of
Ar| World’s Fair Views, published by
/ the C. H. & D., which in connec
tion with the Monon, fo-ms the
popular WORLD'S FAIR ROUTE from
Cincinnati to Chicago, will be sent
to any addressbv E.O.McCormick,
G. P. & T. Agent, C. H. &D. R.R.
Cincinnati, 0., on receipt of ten.
cents in stamps.
TH E SCHOOL OF TMs. SOUTH .
SUCCESS UNPARALLELLED
Open day Kud night the entire tear )
Three Di-tinct Department -
Commerial, Stenograph, Tehm apl -
envering 8,500 fe< t of space, all und
tlireclioi. of distinguished specialist
Textbook? discarded! Scholarship
and hoard cheaper than other instiui
tions. Graduates assisted to position
through our er.aplo) ment agency—noi
one idle. Send for handsome <a
losfue to
W YATT& MARTIN
Macon, Ga
PPP
m•m • ■ ©
CURES ALL SKIN
AND
BLDDD DISEASES,
thyJcianTsndor** F. P. P. a>
nd prMcrlb* it with great eatUfactloa for the cares of al
fount an< steges cf Primary, Secomiarv ami Trrtlsn
E *P TD
jkE^jLWmk
LVIiMSSC ROF J lA,
Syphilis, Syphilitic Rheumatism, bcrofaloua ulcere and
Sores, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatlsrc, Malaria, old
Chronic Ulcere that have resisted all treatment, Catarrh,
F| nri r cures |
T.r. HISMI
t4nia, CtaonlcTSoai? hloi*"'*
cnrial Poitoa, Te.ter, Scald Head, etc., etc.
P- P. P. fa a powerful tonic, end an excellent appetlaer.
R P.P.
CiiRES*RH EU MAT iSM
Duua'.iJt; up uie sysism xapiuiy.
Ladles whose systems are poisoMei and whose blood Is m
an Impure condition, dee to menstrual !rregul?.rltlee. are
PI HQ f CURES
T.r. MALARIA
the wonderful tonic and blood. *
eleantlng propert'aa of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Root
and Pot-isefma.
Err
CuR£^DYSP|PSiA-
LIPPHAN BEOS., Frcprletors,
Druggists, Lippman’a Block, BAVAMAH, 94,
for tb c nTTT~7
Weakness, Mular.a, Indigtrstioa Ifli
Eilteu=.-;sss. take
ftttOWs ? IRON BITTERS.
It cure, quickly. For sale by all dealer? in
aediftuitt. Get the genuine.
1 >
f&W*&** M i-< . L
ES mt-* S*/ Lu* Lu . | f jr
A LteTte L- P ***
§/ ; A X
lim a rs? iss: i\
IN EFFECT OCT. 30, 1252. jf 1
EAST BOUND. i
Leave Chattanooga .... I- .. B
Arrive Bristol (Central Time) . . L p ■
Leave Bristol (Eastern Time) . .
Arrive Shenandoah Junction . . ''T'/B
Leave Shenandoah Junction . . J' r
Arrive Washington .... 9: J -V. ®
CONNECTIONS. 1
Leave Washington .... 10 J
Arrive New York .... S;C9 • I
Leave Memphis .... L' B
Arrive Chattanooga .... 'l9
Leave Nashville ■
Arrive Chattanooga ■
Leave New Orleans ....
Leave Birmingham
Arrive Chattanooga . . . w|_^B
Leave Atlanta .....
Arrive Cleveland 1.25
Leave Mobile 8:0^,
Leave Selma ... 34. J
Arrive Cleveland 1.2 r
TRAIN CONSISTS OF Ml
Two coaches and Baggage Car. ttfl
Pullman Sleepers. Pullman v
Dining Car. Pullman Sleepersoi ft | !jt|l
New Orleans to New York,)!) * I ill
Memphis to Washington and\\\||s-r|nit if
Nashville to Washington. Din- (//If r\ I
ing Car Chattanooga to Wash-ljJ * S
ington. Through Vestibule ■ J
Coach Atlanta to Bristol. ,i
Dining Car Service I’nsurpar.T J
NO EXTRA FARES! K
B. W. WRF.NN, General Pass, Agt. Kno.xvrll
Chamberlain’s Eye A
Ointment.
A certain cure for Chronic Sor#< fflß
Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald ITealyjM
Chronic Sores, Fever Sores,
Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore
and Piles. It is cooling and
Hundreds of cases have been cu®
it after all other treatment had f. *.■
25 cents per box. n
\ 1
Send TEN cents to 28 Union
for our prize game, “Blind Luck,’wD
win a New Home Sewing achlr>e,> |slßP
The New Home Sewing Machinejraf
ORANCE, MASS. I A
UNION SQUARE, NX JX
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