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How is Your Blood?
If it is poor and thin and locking in tho
number and quality of thisw rod eorpujtclwt,
yon aro in danger of *l<'kn«'H* from dlnoaao
gorms and the enervating eff 'Ct of warm
weather. Purify your blood with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Tho Mood ptlriflnr which has proved
it* merit by a record of cures unequalled in
medical hietory. With pure, rich blood you
will be well and strong. Do not neglect this
Important mat lor hut take Hood’s Horsapar
llln now. Be Mure to Ret Hood's.
Hood’s Pills are tantoleae, mild, effec.
tiro. All druffipet*. 35c.
'Woman’s Way.
Minnie—Mr. Kiilio, if I should con¬
sent to be your wife, are you suro you
would never object to my dressmaker’s
bills, never refuse to buy opera tickets
when asked, never—er—in fact, never
object to any expenses which I might
wish to incur?
Mr. Billie—Darling, I swear it!
Minnie—Well, Mr. Billie, if you
can’t hold on to your money any bet¬
ter than that, 1 must say no.— Judye.
Too Impulsive.
“Brilliant and impulsive people,”
declares a lecturer on physiognomy,
“have black eyes; or, if they don’t
have them, they n re apt to get them if
they are too impulsive.”
Tlir ml M«<n Srow WciiU
Hometlmes. The short cut to renewed vliror
is taken by those sensible enough to life Hob
tetter’s Stomach Bitter* systematically. It
re cstalillshos impaired food, digestion, combine* enable* the
system to assimilate and the
qualifies those of ftnovereit(ii of a fine medicinal preventive stimulant remedy. with Ma¬
laria, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatic,
nervous and kidney complaints aro cured
and averted by it.
A Baltimore drawl-t put* this up on
Ids broken « indow: "Tills window was broken
by a lior.-e In a mad rush for one of our soda*.”
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Boor cure*
all Kidney and Bladder trouble*.
Pamphlet Laboratory and Blnchamton. Consultation N. tree. Y.
rlalm An Asheville, rexier* N. (!., paper make* circulation the unique of
to "more for lea.it
any piper In the United Slate'."
Always Cures
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Bad Breath, Debility,
Hour Stomach, Want of Appetite, DiatrrHS
After Eating, and all evil* arising builds from a
weak or disordered stomach. It up
from the llr-t dose, and a bottle or t wo will
cure the worst oners, and Insure a good appe¬
tite, excellent digestion and result In vigor¬
ous health and buoyancy of spirits. There is
no better way to insure good health ami a
long life than to keep the stomach right.
Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy Is guaranteed Dinner to
do this. The Tranquiliting Manufactured Alter
Drink. For sale by Druggists.
l>y C. O. Tyner, At Uinta.
J. call S. Parker, Kmlottia. N. Y , says: “Shall
not on you for the $KK) rmvitr I, for I be¬
lieve Hall’- 1 'at arrli ('ure w ill cure any case of
catarrh. NVns very bad.” Write him for par¬
ticulars. Sold by Druggists, 70c. ,
Experience Lends Mult? Mothers to Sav
“Use Barker's Ginger Tonic" because it is good
for colds, pain and almost every weakness.
**
Cy|UP®G 3 S 1 S
\
A
m Vt't)
3* If
is iVV.IW
us PS
ONU ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; tho it is and pleasant
to taste, acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses ou tho Kidneys, the
effectually, dispels head¬ sys¬
tem colds,
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only remedy of Syrup its kind of Figs is the
ducer, pleasing tho ever and pro¬
to taste ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy excellent and agreeable qualities substances, commend its it
many all made tho
to and have it most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of k'igs is for leading sale in drug¬ 50
Cent bottles reliablo by oil druggist who
gists. Any have hand will
may not it on pro¬
cure it promptly for any ono who
wishes to try it. L)o not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAX FSAXUSCO, Cti.
LOUISVIUi'. AT. A5A yoax. n r
★ HIGHEST AWARD*
WORLD’S FAIR.
^*TFxE BEST *
PREPARED
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
-* JOHN CARLE & ^ONS, New York. *
251cm
Ecit iVftVh t yrnp. TastatUcod. Lac
In tunc. SoM by druggists
! CO SSEESKiiE
@fiwwmzi
“BREAKING” A TEXAS PONY.
LIVELY TUSSLES WITH TRK WICK
ED LITTLE SPANISH HORSE.
Thrown and Blindfolded—When He
Gets Up llio Fun Begins— Some¬
times a Man is Killed.
B REARING a Texas pony is a
regular business on the
plains, says the New York
World. It is ono of the
most exciting episodes in the realm of
adventure, especially if ho has any
{Spanish blood in him
In breaking a pony ho is lariated,
thrown down and cnokod while the
saddle is being put on him. A bridle
and a “hackumore,” or rope halter,
are put on his head. Then ho is gen¬
erally blindfolded with a big cowboy
handkerchief, which consists of some¬
thing less than a square yard of
tough, thick calico, When all is
ready the rope is taken off and the
blindfolded pony scrambles to his
feet, and by the time ho gets there the
rider is in the saddle. How ho gets
there nobody knows, for nobody has
time to see.
When the pony gains his feet the
fun begins. The stories about the
“bucking bronco” are not much ex¬
aggerated, simplybocau.se it would be
impossible to exaggerate them much.
There is scarcely an artifice mention
able that he will not resort.
With his head far down between his
logs, he pitches his hinder quarters
straight up ten or fifteen times in a
minute, and then, to vary matters a
little, he assumes a particular attitude
with the head end up. Suddenly he
half circles around to the right, and
then, quick as a flash, he half circles
back to the loft. In order to keep bis
place the rider has to set at defiance
the law of gravitation and every law
of motion laid down in the philoso¬
Meanwhile the pony is howling and
bellowing much like a bull yearling
when the hot branding-iron is applied.
If ho cannot get the rider off by fair
means he tries foul; that is, he rears
up and falls back with him. More
horsebreakers aro killed in this way
than in any other. The only thing for
one who wishes to live to do is to dart
out from under the pony before he
falls. When the pony rises he must
rise with it.
Sometimes the pony varies things
by lying perfectly quiet, anil then tho
breaker persuades him to rise by slit¬
ting his ears, burying his trowels in
his sides, putting sand in his nose and
gravel in his ears, and indulging in
other similar pleasantries.
Tho Texan believes in general that
man is superior to the horse; in par¬
ticular, that there never can be a
horse so wild and vicious but that
some man can ride him. Cases have
been known where one horse has
killed three or four breakers, but in¬
variably some man came along that
could ride better than the last one,
and eventually somebody succeeded.
For taking all the risks and doing
all the work involved the professional
horso breaker receives $1 for each
year of the horse’s age. If the horse
is a three-year-old ho gets $3 for
breaking him ; if a five-year-old, $5.
For doing nothing elso but break
horses he receives the princely re¬
muneration of $15 per month and
board.
Of course in handling wild horses
the equipments used must correspond
to the requirements of the work done.
When a tenderfoot first sees tho pon¬
derous saddles that are put on such
diminutive ponies ho is inclined to
wonder. But if an ordinary saddle
were used the first jump of the bronco
would break the girth, or if this were
not the case, the first time the animal
fell down the saddle would bo a wreck.
Then, again, it takes a good, strong
saddle to stand the strain of a rope
when an able bodied 900 pound steer
is jerking at the other end of it. The
Texan calls an ordinary saddle a “hu¬
man” saddle. Whether or not he con¬
siders his own saddle an “inhuman”
one is another question. With all its
accompaniments and appendages it
weight from fifty to seventy-five
pounds, but to the inexperienced
hand who attempts to put it on a horse
it seems to weigh about one hundred
aud fifty. A good stock saddle costs
from $40 to $60, whereas a very good
cow pony costs from $20 to $40.
The bridles correspond with the
saddles in point of strength and size.
It i« not an uncommon thing to find a
bridle bit alone that weighs from two
to three pounds. The “shank,” as it
is called, is an iron bar some six or
eight inches long, running out from
each end of the bit, with a ring in the
end, to which the bridle rein is fast
ened, A good bridle of this kind !
costs about $5.
The long, jingling spurs worn by
the stockmen are familiar to most
newspaper readers. Sometimes, in
order to exhibit their proficiency in
riding, the professional horse-break
ers take their feet out of the stirrups
altogether and dig their spurs into
the ponies’ shoulders as they ride,
The blood sometimes runs down the
poor animal’s shoulder and leg clear
to his hoof, but no matter; it is con¬
sidered a test of expertness to be able ;
to ride that way.
The stirrups ordinarilv used are
narrow iron affairs, through which the
loot i* thrust clear to the heel. Often |
ranged that if the rider is thrown the
half circle turns over and releases his
foot. By this means the danger of
being dragged to death, if thrown, m
made less.
WINK WOK IIS.
The man who lives all to himself is a
failure.
A fool is too smart to learn from a
failure.
Stinginess always pinches its owner
the hardest.
Our neighbor* arc those who need
onr help most.
You will find every candidate is a
friend of labor.
Never denounce vice in a way that
will advertise it.
It takes more than a coat of paint to
make a lie white.
Some people marry bad luck, and
others inherit it.
Sin is never able to buy anything
bnt a shoddy coat.
The ox never gets his horns broken
in good company.
The man who loses is never accused
of not playing fair.
After the dark night wo appreciate
better the bright day.
Love may never die, but it gets
awful sick sometimes.
It’s a cross-grained wife that will
scold in a new bonnet.
Frowning down a good cause is the
modern way of stoning Stephen.
No one will ever shine in conversa¬
tion who thinks of saying fine things.
The man who is too nice to help in
clean politics is too nice for the world.
Give the conceited man all the road ;
the more he spreads the less he de¬
ceives.— The South-West.
Ceylon Rest Houses.
The “rest-house” is a Governmental
system of providing road 6ide accom¬
modations, carried in Ceylon to a
higher standard of excellence possibly
than in any other of the Eastern coun¬
tries. English occupation has every¬
where been synonymous with the de¬
velopment of resources, and it has
ever been recognized that the first
step in this direction must be the
oytening of roads and their mainte¬
nance in good condition. It was early
found that the use of the roads by
Europeans and the better class of na¬
tives depend to a large extent upon
the possibility of breaking journey at
convenient stages, esjtecially at night.
In a newly opened up-country it could
not be that suitable places for the en¬
tertainment of travelers would exist
at points where most required, and as
the natives themselves were not to be
depended upon to furnish adequate
entertainment, the Government de¬
cided to erect and furnish rest-houses
as a part of the general system.
The result in Ceylon is that through¬
out the island, where means of com¬
munication by roadways have been
established, there are at convenient
points neat and comfortably furnished
stopping places, managed by natives,
it is true, but under the close super¬
vision of the roadway officials, who
are Europeans. The rest-houses, many
of them, compare favorably with the
best of the private bungalows in the
sections where they are located, and
not infrequently the taste displayed
in the planting and training of flow¬
ers, foliage plants, vines, and ferns,
together with the artistic architecture,
renders them pictures worthy of a
painter’s brush. These houses are in
charge of a native, who is known as
tho bntler, and who for tho care of
the establishment has the privilege of
supplying the edibles, substantial as
well as liquid. All the charges are
fixed by the Government, and those
for rooms, etc., become a part of tho
Government revenue, while those for
meals, etc., are the butler’s. As a rule
the accommodations are limited to
such as are requisite for a half-dozen
people, and the cost of entertainment
is very moderate indeed, especially to
those traveling with English letters
of credit, which insures Geylon money
at the ratio of about two for one. Five
or six rupees per day, or from a dol¬
lar and a quarter to a dollar and a
half, meets all requirements, includ¬
ing the indispensable tips all around.
—Harper’s Weekly.
He Had His Suspicious.
A correspondent says that the late
Ismail Pasha was petulantly suspicious
of everybody with whom he had deal¬
ings. On one occasion, when he had
b eeu advised by Jules Ferry, then the
French Premier, to visit London in
or d er *° enlist the support of tho
the British Government in his scheme
to oust his son, Tewfik, at Cairo, he
showed a new high hat to a friend
*b e remark: ‘ferry sin s I
should not go to London in a fez ; it s
too oriental. He recommended me too
bis hatter, and the pig has charged
me to for this thing. ^ I suspect Ferry
bas a commission on it. Chicago
dimes-Herald.
Neither Melts Nor Burns.
Monazite, a rare mineral which nei*
tker melts nor burns, is found in the
rich metallic heart of the Appalachian
Mountains that lie in North Carolina,
—Chicago Times-Herald.
,o
tsr' *
Si
r f
&aki Mfer
Absolutely Pure
A Pair of Them.
He wes an oldish man, with a good
natured face and a weed on his hat, and
ho sat down in a Baker street car be¬
side another oldish man, with a good
natured face and a weed on his hat.
They looked up at each other and
smiled, and the first comer querried:
“Wife, I take it?”
“Yes, and you?”
“The same.”
“Bad, isn’t it?”
“Very bad.”
“But time--”
“Time is a great healer.”
“And in due time both of us-”
And he winked.
And a woman across the aisle, with a
faint show of mourning on, looked out
of the window and sighed and said :
“Yes, of course, the old repro¬
bates !”—Detroit Free Press.
The Spider’s Web.
The spider is so well supplied with
the silky thread with which it makes its
web that an experimenter once drew
out of the body of a single specimen
3,480 yards of the thread—a length
but little short of two miles. A fabric
woven of spider’s thread is more glossy
than that from the silkworm’s product,
and is of a beautiful golden color.
The Classes and the Masses.
Dickens—There is no such thing as
social equality. Did you ever know a
place where everybody was on a dead
level ?
Wickens—Yes, in the cemetery.—
Few York World.
Change of Life.
When a woman approaches the change of
life she is liable to have a return of all the
menstrual derangements, and other adments
that afflicted her in former years. The direct
action of McElree’a Wine of Cardui on the
organs afflicted, make it the best remedy for
use during this period.
Mrs. D. Pennington, West Plains, Mo., says:
“I had been suffering from change of life and
it took the form of dropsy. The doctors told
my husband it was useless to prescribe for me
any more. About that time we got Dr. McEl
ree’s book on the treatment of female diseases
and decide d (o try the Wine of Cardui Treat¬
ment. After using nine bottles, I am well.”
Why She Smiles Sweetly.
the Sparkling blush eyes, quick beating heart, and
rosy of pleasure on the cheeks,
makes the strong man happy when he meets
his lady love. That’s the kind of a man
whose very touch thrills because it is full of
energy, vigorous uerve power and vitality.
Tobacco makes strong men impotent, weak
and skinny. No-To-Bac sold by Druggists
everywhere. titled Guaranteed to cure Book,
‘‘Don’t Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your
Life Away,” free. Ad. Sterling llomedy Co.,
New York or Chicoco.
For Well People.
Most medicines are for the sick. Some can
be u«ed with pood effects by person® appi
rently Tubules well. Occasional resort to Ripans
prevents attacks that result lrorn I !
di--orders of the stomach and liver. I
To nroservo i< hottpi* 0LUeI nnd ana ohpanpr cueapei tVmn Uian to to |
rpmir repair.
,
Piso’s Our a P a wonderful Cough medic ne.
—Mrs. W. Pickert. Van Siclen and Blake
Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 26, ’94.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Those Distressing Corns!
Bad a® they are, Hindercorns will remove
them, and then you c in walk as you like.
w These stc
-J? using
m a This one si
have to gue<
K s it gave him toe
what e very bo t
when there’. 1
& and there’
removed fr
But this <
because* si
found something better than soap—
Something easier, quicker, simple
economical. No rubbing to spe;
wear—easy work and money saved,
it’s washing clothes, cleaning hou
kind of washing and cleaning.
N0i?jlfPeai.
Climatic Co-Operation.
“Well,” said the man who fixes up
the weather bulletin, “there’s on*
thinar to be said to my credit anyhow.’*
“What is that?” inquired the assist*
ant.
“My reports haven’t been dry read¬
ing for a long time .”—Washington
Star.
_
Advance sheets of “living-picture"
posters must be Bent to and approved
by the Boston Aldermen before they
are allowed to go on the bill-boards.
Foul breath is a
1) discourager fection. of af
It is al
\\ ways an indication
)Il of poor health —
4' L bad digestion. To
iK bad digestion is
traceable almost all
f $ human ills. It is
► wl 'll*the of starting point
fs’ ious many very ser¬
W maladies.
Upon action of the the healthy
i diges
t v e organs, the
blood depends for its richness and purity.
If digestion stops, poisonous matter ac¬
cumulates and is forced into the blood
—there is no place else for it to go.
The bad breath is a danger signal.
Look out for it! If you have it, or
any other bottle symptom of of indigestion, Fierce’s
take a or two Dr.
Golden Medical Discovery. It will
straighten out the trouble, make your
blood pure and healthy and full of nu¬
triment for the tissues.
GOOD POSITIONS
SECURED BY STUDENTS
Business Fins Supplied witl Help
Richmond’s Commercial College.
Established 1884.
Send for Catalogue. SAVANNAH. G A,
THE OGLETHORPE
Brunswick, Ca.
This is the finest Hotel in its appointments
south of Baltimore. The table is supplied
with all the delicacies the market can afford.
The Cuisine is excellent, and service prompt
and attentive. Open all th° vear. Rates rea¬
sonable. J. H. STILWELL, Manager.
D TO AVOID THIS USES
0 " TETTERSNE
S I The ONLY painless and harmless
C-3 *T" I CURE for the worst. Type of Kcscftma*
ce ■ Totter, Ringwnnn, the uffly crusted rough patch*
A Ground es on itch, face, chafes, scalp.
H f pies. Poison from chaps, poison pim
In ivy or oat.
n short ALL ITCHES. Send 50c. itt.
staiups or cash to J, T. Sliuptrine,
Savannah, Ga., for one oox, it yoor
druggist don’t keep it.
HOTEL TYBEE
TYBEE ISLAND, GA.
This Hotel is noted for its excellent service and
sp undid ca sine, ih« table boing »upp ied with »1V tl»
^eiioicies the market affords- An abundantsupply oi
cribs, for snntnp, etc. JjQon s nne orctiestra en—
\y for season. Special Specially inducements low rates this s-ason.
r it e terms. to partin' at
tenormore. JtOllAN it t O WAN.
Up iff m “““PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
m Cleanses and beautifies the hair,
r l Promote! a luxuriant growth.
v>i j Never Fa-da to Restore Oray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
S»sr
A. N