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Women Only Know
How much thev sufler when nervous,
woak and tired.
Nervous prostration is a lingering,
racking, liviug death to those afllioted,
though wholly incomprehensible to
others. Tho cause of this condition
is impure and insufficient Blood.
Make tho blood pure, give it vitality |
and it will properly feed the nerves
and make them strong. Hood’s Sar¬
saparilla cares norvousness beoausc it
acts directly upon the blood, making
it rioh and pare and endowing it with
vitality and Btrength-giving power. No
other medicine has such a rooord of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Makes Pure Blood.
Illcycle Riding Healthful.
Biffers—Do yon think bicycle riding
conducive to health?
Whiffers—Most assuredly. My
health has improved wonderfully.
“But you don’t rido a bicycle?”
“Who said I did?"
“But you said bicycle-riding im¬
proved your health.-”
“Yes, get so much exerciso, you
know.”
“Exorcise? How?”
“Dodging tho bicycles.”
Those Horrid Doctors.
“If you must know, ma’am,” said
tho doctor, “your husband won’t live
twenty-four hours longer.”
“Good gracious!” ejaculated the
broken-hearted woman, “and here
you’ve gone and prescribed medicine
enough for five days.”
<Jy^JP™GS wM
*V
f
m /n
A kV
OiVlS ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
and Syrup of. Figs is taken; it is pleasant
gently refreshing to tho taste, and acts
Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, tho
effectually, dispels head¬ sys¬
tem colds,
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is tho
only remedy of its hind ever pro¬
duce!., pleasing to tho taste and ac¬
ceptable its to and tho stomach, prompt in
action truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any have reliable hand druggist will who
may not it on pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Ilo not accept any
•ubstitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N Y.
♦ McEEREES
<►
.
::WINE OF CARDUI.
o
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< ► .Vf.-T' li'^% v>h!P
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If For Female Diseases.
PARKER’S
'i* HAIR BALSAM
N Clean*** and burnt i fie* the hair.
Promote* » luiuri.M growth.
Nover Fail* to Restore Gray
Hair to ite Youthful Color.
rj Cure* scalp discane* A hair tailing.
Jty, end $1.00 at Prussia*
FREE any entirely one oouuty prom A depirttnent ptly I.ife boy of free to and this Scholarship (1 this t-orain elate. girl is summer to in be Hiisi- App given every to in y
,ne»* l oliege, Macon, Ua.
Ill HULL It I CT Ole NEWS LETTER of value sent
Fit KB to reader* of this pnper.
Charlea A. Baldwin & Co., tOWall SL. N. Y.
7 — I
.1, .sz ,v. ).
si;j
Beat CtlfreS WHtftf I LSE FAILS.
tn Cough Syrup. Sold no* Good. Oas
time. by druggists.
'elJL ■Rj
12757571773.
[ cures. fwred ***?•'* Thousands write that they and snf
^ryonsness
wore cured by this great medicine.
The building-up powers of Hood's Sar
sai>ar jn a wonderful. Even a lew
doses are sufficient to create an appe
tite, and from that time on its heal
ing, purifying, strengthening effects
are plainly felt. The nerves become
stronger, the sleep becomes natural and
refreshing, tho hands and limbs beoome
steady, and soon “life seem to go on
without effort,” and perfect health
is restored. Such is tho work which
Hood's Sarsaparilla is doing for hun¬
dreds of women .
Micro-Organisms In tlie Air.
To the nnassisted eye the prerence
of even any solid particles in the air
is, as a rule, entirely invisible. We
say this is so as a rule, for there are
circumstances when the solid particles
in the air are rendered visible. Every
one is aware of the appearance of a
stream of sunlight, introduced through
a slit or hole in the shutter of a dark¬
ened room. Under such circumstances
tho air through which the sunlight
passes is seen to be full of minute dust
particles, yet “gay motes” which are
thus seen to “people the sunbeam”
constitute, after all, only a very in¬
significant fraction of the total num¬
ber the air contains, for thousands of
them are far too minute to be visible
to the naked eye. Among these latter
are the germs.
It is only indeed with the aid of onr
most powerful microscopes that we are
enabled to discern these latter and
form any estimate of their size. Many
of them are less than tho one twenty
thousandth of an inch. In the words
of Professor Percy F. Frankland, one
of our first experts on this subject,
“400,000,000 of these organisms cotfld
be spread over one square inch in a
single layer. Thus we could have a
population 100 times as gre^t as that
of London settled on an area of a sin¬
gle square inch without any complaint
of overcrowding, and giving to each
individual organism, not three acres,
which certain politicians tell us are
necessary for the individual man, but
one four hundred-millionth of a square
inch, which is quite adequate for a
citizen iu the commonwealth of micro¬
organisms.”— Gentleman'8 Magazine .
An Apt Epitaph.
An incorrigible office-seeker died, a
few years ago, and his friends asked a
well-known journalist for an epitaph
for his tombstone.
The journalist selected the follow¬
ing, fchich was not, however, adopted:
Here Lies John Jones
In tho Only IMace for Whiph Ho
Never Applied.
A Sure' Remedy.
Passenger—Captain, can’t you rec¬
ommend any cure for seasickness?
Captain—Certainly, that my good sir,
and one never fails. All you have
to do is to lie down in the shade of a
tree iu full leaf, and away it goes.
Ulllralonpi on the Kond
That 1oh(1s to health are marked in the mem¬
ory of those who, at regulnr stages and per¬
sistently. have been conveyed thither by
Un-tetter's Stomach Bitters, a potent aux¬
iliary of naturo in her efforts to throw off the
yoke of bilious disease. Malarial, kidney, rheumatic
aud trouble, constipation and ner¬
vousness take their departure when tins
benignant dication. medicine is resorted to for their
era
Try to make somebody happy and see what
comes of it.__
Dr. Kilmer’s Swakp-Root enrss
all Kidney and and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet Lalwiratory Binghamton. Consultation N. free. Y.
It is hard for liars to make their stories
hang together.
After Dinner.
After the heartiest dinner adoseof Tyner's
Dyspepsia Remedy will remove all unpleas¬
ant feelings, aid digestion) and build up your
health. As an after dinner drink it's far su¬
perior to all other remedies, as it never disap¬
points, and leaves an appetite lor the next
by meal. For O. sale Tyner, by Druggists. Manufactured
Chas. Atlanta, Ua.
Need Clear llcada.
sleep Working anil people digestion; need clear heads, sickness sound
good for if
comes, what then? It is cheaper to keep wi ll. |
Ion. |
alarmed ami send for the doctor. No need of
t »iat. A box of Hi pan 8 Tabules will set you
right and keep you the right; so you can eat, sleep
and work. Ask druggist for them.
Mather* Appreciate the Good Work
ofParker'sCHngerTonic.with Ities—a the pain-stricken itsrevivingqnal- ;
boon to and nervous,
Mr*. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
•‘Hall’s .1, O. Catarrh Simp-on. Cure Marquess, cured W. Va., says:
me of a very bad
case of catarrh.” Druggists sell It, 75c.
I hare found Pi-o’s Cure for Consumption
an unfailing medicine.—F. R Lotz. 1305 Scott
St., Covington. Ky., Oot. 1.1804.
D TO AVOID THIS XT SB
0 N ETTERiNE
n The o»t.Y painies* and harmless
W T !
Rl A T GrouSd noh.' chaV J: n t t hTp S .’
r ‘
L * * stamps or cash to J. T. Shuptrme,
b ° 1 ’ “ r ° Qr
RECRUITS FOR THE NAVY,
DRILLING NEW MEN AT THE
BROOKLYN NAVY YARD.
How the Work of Enlistment Is Done
—Drilling the New Recruits—
Their Dally Routine.
A BOUT any on in importance the the only Brooklyn ship now work going Navy of
Yard is on the battleship
Maine, which was designed and con¬
structed there. Her turrets and side
armor are all in place, and her gnns
lie on the dock leady to be mounted
whenever the Chief of Ordnance shall
give the order.
The Maine will carry ft crew of 300
men, and these men will probably be
the first draft from the 1000 new men
authorized by the last Naval Appro¬
priation bill.
On board of the guard or receiving
ship Vermont the work of enlisting is
in full swing. Every day a file of men
march from the York street gate of
the Navy Yard to the Vermont, and
are examined aud enlisted or rejected
according to their qualifications.
When a man goes aboard the re¬
ceiving ship to ship as a seaman, he is
first taken to the ship’s writer, who
makes a note of his name, address,
and previous sea service, whether in
the navy or merchant marine, and
then he turns the applicant over to
the boatswain. With a piece of rope
and ten minutes time the boatswain
will find out just how muen the appli¬
cant knows. He gives him the rope
and tells him to make an “eye splice”
in one end'of it, a “bucket knot” in
the other, and to tie a “single and
double Matthew Walker knot” in the
middle of it. He is then passed along
to the doctor, who hammers his chest,
feels his muscles and tests his hearing.
Afterward his eyes are examined and
he is told to pick out different colors
from a basketful of yarn of different
hues. This is to find out whether the
applicant is color blind.
If the would-be sailor has passed all
these examinations, the paymaster’s
yeoman and the “Jack of the Dust”
rig him out in Uncle Sam’s uniform,
give him a bivg of clothes and a ham¬
mock, and he stands forth a United
States sailor.
The life of a recruit, until he is
transferred to a seagoing ship, is not
at all hard. He has three hours of
drill every day except Saturday and
Sunday, and he does not have to scrub
decks as does tho man on a sea-going
ship. Almost the hardest work on a
guardo is getting up in the morning
--5.30 o’clock is the rising hour—and
washing clothes. This duty must be
performed every morning if the re¬
cruit does not want to figure cn the
report books.
The call sounds to quarters at 9.30
o’clock every morning, and the re¬
cruits must fall in with their respec¬
tive divisions and be inspected by the
division officer. After quarters the
divisions march out on the Cob Dock
to drill.
The recruits are drilled in the use
of rifles, bayonet, broadsword and
great guus. They also have instruc¬
tion in a mild sort of gymnastics. In
the afternoon all hands are allowed to
go out on the dock, and they play
baseball and football, pitch quoits and
amuse themselves generally. There is
a library, well stocked with books of
all kinds as well as papers and maga¬
zines. In this library building, which
is known as Sailors’ Hall, divine ser¬
vice is held on Sundays and also on
Wednesday nights, Church is held
on board of the Vermont by the regu¬
lar navy chaplain on 3unday mornings.
Both churches are generally well at¬
tended, though the attendance is not
compulsory, as it is on the receiving
ships.
O a the first Saturday of each month
the recruit on board of the Vermont
learns what general muster is like.
Every one on board ship on this day
puts on his best clothes and falls in
line at the first blast of the bugle, and
.after an inspection, more rigid than
nsual, tho divisions march aft to the
quarterdeck. Captain Silas Casey
stands there in full uniform, surround¬
ed by all of his officers. When all
hands are “up and aft” the Master-at
Arms so reports to the Captain, and
then the First Lieutenant steps two
paces to the front with the naval blue
hook iu hand and gives the order:
“Attention—to the rules aud regula
tions _ of the United . States Navy.
At this order every hat comes off
and the First Lieutenant proceeds to
r ® aa i alnnd A1 ° u ihw tde mimiH ™ rlOU ® t.hin<r* forbid- lor Dia
“
den aud allowed by the naval regula¬
tions. Then he tells the recruits what
the pnnishmeut of , each , offence _ is, and ,
after the long catalogue has been gone
through he salutes the Captain and
announces that the articles have been
read. After this the band, which is
formed around the midship’s gun,
plays “The Star Spangled Banner.”
The order to pipe down is given, and
a screech from the boa’n’s pipe indi¬
cates that general muster is at* an
end.
The band plays popular airs for an
hour, and the crew have a chance to
dance on the slippery decks of the big
frigate. At one o’clock the liberty
P«ty is called away for two days
&Bhore < a ? d no Jis done on the re*
CeiVing SUip nntll the following JlOn
day.—New York Sun.
Highest of all in leavening strength.—Latest D.S. Got. Food Report.
1 W* J
Powdlf
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Economy requires that in every receipt calling
for baking powder the Royal shall be used, >—H
will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter,
of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome.
'i
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
The Central Park Monkeys.
“There are twelve varieties of mon¬
keys in Central park, New York city—
thirty-two monkeys altogether,” Baid
Keeper Cook.
“My favorite is a Nubian baboon.
He always tries to help me sweep his
cage in the mornings, and fights to get
the broom away from me. I give him
a rap over the head and then he pre¬
tends that he’s angry. But it’s only a
bluff. He wouldn’t hurt anybody.
He knows I keep apples in my pocket
and he knows which pocket they are
in, too, and gets them when he can.
There is a Java monkey who used to
ring doorbells and had to be sent here
because his owner’s neighbors com¬
plained of him so much. Nobody
could stop him. He lived somewhere
down town, and no matter how they
tied him up he would break away and
ring bells. He can’t ring any bells
now, but he is never quiet.
“Monkeys don’t live long in captiv¬
ity. They all die of lung trouble
sooner or later. We have one that
has been here years, but that is an ex¬
traordinarily long time. We have only
had one monkey born here that lived.
That was about four years ago, and he
lived two years.”
A Dog and Parrot Story.
William Winpenny, of Queen lane,
was, until a few days ago, the owner
of a pet parrot, which he had purch¬
ased in New Orleans several years ago.
The bird was a veritable household
pet, being allowed liberties that no
other parrot ever enjoyed. Its con¬
stant chatter amused the members of
the family, especially at meal time,
when Polly was regularly placed at
the table, receiving the choicest tid¬
bits for her meals. A few days ago
Polly died and was reverently buried
in the yard with a little headstone to
mark the grave. The next day’s din¬
ner was a mournful ofie for the family,
Polly being sadly missed. The old
house-dog, Pomp, looked on with a
wistful eye, surmising that something
was wrong. The instinct of the brute
solved the problem, anti, without more
ado, he went into the garden, dug up
the parrot and, carrying it into the
dining-room, deposited it in its accus¬
tomed place .—Philadelphia Record.
Not Sudden Enough.
Young Tutter—Miss Clara, suppose
that tomorrow evening I should call
again, and,having nerved myself to it,
I should, without a word, throw my
arms around your neck and deliberate¬
ly kiss you—what would you do?
Miss Pinkerly—Oh, Mr. Tutter,
don’t ask me to look so far ahead.—
Brooklyn Life.
When You Come to KeitUze
that your corns are gone, and no pain, how
grateful you feel. The work of Hindercoms. I5c
Light the Room Dimly.
A glare of gas jets and of glaring
conspicuous lamps is in the worst pos¬
sible taste and betrays a parvenu on
the spot. A room should be lightedi
from the sides with softly shaded gas
jets, one only in a moderate sized
room, or by quiet, half hiilden lamps.
Candlelight is the prettiest of all and
the most becoming. Wax candles are
too expensive to be used largely to
light the parlors, but for a dining
room nothing is more conducive to a
confidential, reminiscent hum of con¬
versation. Don’t light the gas at all
and place the candles in clusters o,f
four, daintily shaded, at each corner
of the table. Do not overdo the dim
lighting and have the halls too dark
to admit of a stranger walking through
them with safety .—New York News.
WE
GIVE
AWAY 1
Absolutely free of cost, for a
LlfllTED TlflE ONLY,
The People’s Common Sense Medical Ad¬
viser, By R.V. Pierce, M. D., Chief Consulting
113 Institute, Physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical
and Buffalo, a book of over 1,000 large
pages 300 colored and other illustra¬
No. tions, in strong paper covers to any one
packing sending 21 cents in one-cent stamps for
and postage only. Over 680,000
COUPON copies of this complete Family Doctor Boole
already price of sold in cloth binding at regular
this Coupon) $1.50. Address: (with stamps and
World’s Dispensary Med¬
Buffalo, ical Association, N. No. 663 Main Street,
Y.
★ HIGHEST AWARD*
WORLD’S FAIR.
★ The BEST ★
PREPARED
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
★ JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York, if
Pro/'. 2?. W. SMITH, Principal of the
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE of KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
MEDAL LEXINGTON, KY., AWARDED DIPLOMA THE
AND
By the World’s Columbian Exponitlon, for System
of Book-keeping and Course Business $90, Education, etc. Cost
to complete a Business about including tuition, books
and board. Address. Phonography, W. B. Type SMITH, Writing Lexington, and Telegraphy taught*
By.
A. N. U...... .......-Twenty-one, ’95.
Hammar I | COST LEMTHAN cheap pa,NT op Paints jSi" Guaranteed S yea™.
The effects of the acids remaining in the pure White Lead as now made, causing it to
chalk and wash off, are neutra ized in Hammar Paints, therefore they weak better
and look glossy much longer; besides, Hammar Paint costs much less. Mo labor iostin
mixing, no expensive Colors needed to get desired shades.no Turpentine or Drvers, only
pure Raw Linseed Oil.
Q+tMSmxSrSs StLquisMqP^
It bristles with
good points.
And the minute they spy dirt they
rise up and go for it. No matter
N PearlinE what it’s on—linen, laces, silk,
woolens, flannel, marble, china,
WASHING glass, wood, metal, or your own
Compound person, Pearline will get the dirt
-5 TH£ GREAT INVENTION . off with the least trouble and labor.
foASjonnsTo nt LxuNtr 5 ^- It saves that ruinous wear and
With out lujumr To Thc
TkXTv HC.Coi o a OoH aho*. tear that comes from rubbing.
NEW YORK. But there’s another point to think
* about, important still:
more
Pearline is absolutely harm
ess to any washable substance or fabric.
Beware FALSE—Pearime Peddlers “ this is as and good some as is ” unscrupulous never or “ the peddled: same grocers as if your Pearline.” will grocer tell sends IT’S voc.
you aa imitation, be houcst —ttnd it oatk. 447 JAMES PYLlf. New York.