Newspaper Page Text
An Urgent Case.
Poor Patient—I sent for yon, doo-
Aor, because 1 know you aro a noted
physician, bnt I feel it my duty to in¬
form you that 1 haven’t over $-*'5 tomy
name.
Dr. Tliggfee—Very well, then, we
must possible. try to cure you up as quickly ns
The Mystery of Dust at Sea.
H to a puullng fact that tho flecks of willing
TtHi-sol* show (1 uAt at night, even If they bo
washed In the morning, and no work la done
during tho day. This is like Indigestion,
which creeps on one unawares. Howevor It
comes, tho only way to cure It ft by tho uao of
Hostetler's .stomach Hitters, a remedy which
never falls toturo dyspepsia In all its forma,
as well as provonth malaria, fovor and ague.
Tho Illinois -wt« Hoard of Health ropom-
mentis that a sanitarium for consumptives bo
erected.
Reality In fllorxl Deep.
rioi.n Mood means a clean skin. No
in!r l ; , r 1 ^^and r, 2:;??^s h
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all tin-
purities banish pimples, from tho olls, body- l.intcli.*, I login blackheads, to-day to
l
and that Sickly bilious complexion by taking
gists, < nsenreN,--beauty satisfaction for ten cents. All drug-
gunr«nte«d, i0o, JiJk:. £>0<j.
Fool* Ni»t All Extinct.
In spite of Hi'* prevalence of newspapers nnd
coroner’s InqucHiKt ttopIc are still turning on
tho gas and trying to blow out electric lights.
44 A Thread Every/ Day
Makes a Skein in a Yea,'.”
One small disease germ earned by ihe
blood through the system •will cotrvcrt a
healthy human body to a condition of in-
•vahdrsm. Do not •wait vntilyou are bed-
ndden. Keep your blood pure and life-giv-
ing all the time. Hood’s Sarsaparilla
accomplishes this as nothing else can.
3icv d& Hll'fWi SaM afmif&
11 " 1 'IF '"1 »i »■■■.
__
Dinner In a Dutch Family.
When the members of a dutch fam
„UyjWne, the daughters join their moili
ers In contributing to the pleasure ol
the occasion. The dinner is simple, but
the viands are excellent and well cook
ed. Soup or bouillon is served first
Fish is the next course, served with n
rich brown sauce. Then follows veal
or some other roast, stuffed with chest
nuts nnd garniflied with rings of beet
root and lemon. The dinner concludes
■with a colil sweet—some kind of pud¬
ding made with eggs anil milk, orna¬
mented with dried cherries and flavor¬
ed with maraschino.
The service of the table Is plain—nc
flowers, but the cloth is of tho finest
damask and the silver nnd crystals ai\
both massive and sparkling. There Is
n great variety of vegetables, nnd these
are placed on little stoves on the table
These stoves contain a remarkably fine
peat, which lias been brought to *i
unifot^^state of visible bent nnd is entirely Every
nD y smoke.
n( ] urn which is brought 1c
kept hot by n simple ap-
The Khis kind, nnd by the same
very litti U< 1 coffco lnay 1,0 always
republican -uv L.. -ii f- tpo liny mill always
( Slill holds oi'ack coffee Is handed
democrats W sweet ’ nn<1 "‘'T 1
Sevres cups nnd sane-
sliti remain at
The troubled* n * this Dutch fam-
decided in the"® ,laughtcrs of tht .
vice.
Tite Board
Million
l wwomen mg
have boon relieved of
female troubles by Mrs.
Plnkham’s advice and
medicine.
The letters of a few aro
printed regularly in this
• paper.
If any one dogbts tho
efficiency confidential and saoredly
character of
Mrs. Plnkham’s methods,
write for a book she has
recently published which
contains letters from the
mayor of Lynn, the post¬
master, and others of her
elty who havo made care¬
ful investigation, and who
verify all of Mrs. Pink-
ham's statements and
claims.
The Pinkham claims are
sweeping. Investigate
them.
THIRTY YEARS OF CURES
iilPLES
Imd pimples on her face, but
““.iking kired- CASCARETS and troubled they
I had been
■Ao r some time, but after tak-
ot I have had no trouble
i^Hbcannot \V speak H MAN. too high-
1) A I
Philadelphia. Pa
:*5
’ •m
LIFE IN OLD MOROCCO
Mr, Hill Talks Interestingly of
That Distant Domain.
CIVILIZATION IS UTTERLY UNKNOWN
All Work Is Done Ity Agrul Women,
Camels and Donkeys—A CJotl*
Forsaken Country.
Attorney William I’. Hill, of At-
lanta, who lias just returned from a
(lying trip to far-off Morocco, which
country he visited as the special rep-
rosentativo of the Atlanta and West
*>«■ the p« r .
pose of so- uring possession of Thomas
r Hunter, „ (bo defaulting ex auditor ... of ,
the company, and bringing ” ™ him back
to bo tried . , the charge of embezzle¬
on
ment, gives some interesting informa-
turn with reference to the country that
ho visited and the manner in which tlio
people of Morocco live.
He was accompanied on tbo trip by
John W. Rodgers, one of Pinkerton’s
best detectives, and they agree upon
one point, that Morocco is tlio wildest
anil most uncivilized country upon
p| l0 f nco 0 [ jj,,, earfc | 1 _ j„ ,, tlKW(!r p,
volleys of questions tired at him by a
group of friends, Mr. Hill said:
“Morocco looks as well as any oth-
or country on tlio map, but the map is
»» dumb as a soap staMie when it
<,,,,nos to teUin S anything of this dis-
tank land where the people know noth-
ing whatever of liberty or what the
word implies. Morocco is neither an
empire or a republic. Jt is simply u
great big uncivilized country Owned by
the sultan, who though only seven¬
teen years of age, has two wives anil
according c\ to tlio laws and customs of
tlio land 11 have as many more as lie
desires. lie lives at Fez, tin;.capital,
but bo was at Morocco when I was
there, where lie spends a good deal of
bis time.”
Some member of tho group' of lis¬
teners at this point remarked: “Well,
you did not see him?”
“Oh, no,"resumedMr. Hill. “Why,
it would have taken me six weeks to
have gone to where lie was, as there is
no way of traveling in Morocco except
on tho back of a donkey or a camel.
I don’t believe that there is a single
vehicle in the whole of Morocco, not
even n wheelbarrow.”
“How big is the country?” was
asked.
“Well, from what I could learn,
about tlio extent of its territory, I
would say that Morocco is about as
big as four or five of our states, but
when you get to "oing over it, it is
bigger than the I'iiited States, or at
least you will think so if you had to
rely on the speed of a donkey or a
camel to take you over it. And the
country. You should see it to appre¬
ciate what 1 say. There are no roads,
mining in every direction
cut out by donkeys, camels and people
traveling on foot. Outside of the
cities the country is one dense forest
or jungle, nnd no one except a native
could find liis way through it. Tho
laud is marvelously rich and grows ev¬
erything in abundance without work¬
ing tho soil at all. This generosity
upon tho part of the soil has mado the
people indolent and lnzy, nnd none of
them will work unless compelled to do
something for themselves that nature
will not do.
“Tho land is also rich with minerals
of every character, and coal abounds
iu largo quantities. With all this,
however, Morocco gets her coal ami
minerals from the outside world; not
thnt it is bettor than tho home supply,
but because it is considered sacrile¬
gious and even criminal to disturb the
deposits of tbo earth. Tlio heaviest
punishment, which is imprisonment,
is imposed upon any one who will ven¬
ture to disturb the wealth that is bid¬
den iu the soil. The people regard
anything liko this ns a crime of tho
worst character, nnd if hanging was a
punishment in Morocco for crime any
man who would dig coal in that coun¬
try would bo hung without the for¬
malities of a trial.”
“What about the courts?”
“They have none. Hero nnd there
you will find a lawyer, but he amounts
to nothing. Lawyers are not needed
there, ns they can do nothing for a
man iu trouble. The sultan of Moroc¬
co is boss and his will is law. If he
decides that a man is guilty ho is
sent to prison, and the only way that
ho can get out is for his friouds to get
up a good purse nnd buy his pardon
with it. The country is divided up
into sections or states, and each of
these is presided over by a pasha. Ho
is king of bis domain nnd holds his of-
ilco subject to removal by tho sultan.
Ho purchases his office from the sultan
with money nnd holds it by making
handsome presents to tho sultan every
year. If he fails or refuses to send
the sultan a present then ho -is fired
out of his office and into a prison,
whore ho is held until his friends como
forward nnd pay him out, nnd if his
friends fail to respond then the depos¬
ed pasha is kept iu prison until he
dies.
“Until a few years ago when a man
was placed in prison ho was starved to
death, unless his friends fed him, ns
tho government did not feed any one
in prison. Recently, however, border¬
ing countries have taken hold of this
matter and demanded that provision
bo made for feeding prisoners, and
now each prisoner gets a loaf of bread
a day and water. This scant ration is
barely enough to keep a man alive.
There are no beds, cots or other com¬
forts in the Moorish prisons. The poor
creature? sleep on the iloor, and as
long as they live or are confined there
mire up in filth and breathe the siek-
taji^^mosplioro ^^^<ted of their duugeons,
ttfek.1. for the most part im-
All the time Mr.
iu Mo-
.ere,
ubout with uh and did tho talking for
UR.”
“Flow big is Tangier*?”
“The population is about 60,000.
Tho town is cramped to death, as it
covers only a small area„ A high wall
surrounds it. Tho ...streets are from
four to live feet wide, and all the
houses are built nliko. At night the
streets are lighted with candles, or
some other light about as useless for
such purposes. Wo lived at the Con¬
tinental hotel and got all we wanted
to cat. This, no doubt, was due to
the efforts of our interpreter. Ho has
lived in Tangiers for twenty years,and
by reason of his long residence there
proved to be a valuable man.”
“What do the women look like?”
“Well, all tbut I saw were old hags,
working about tho town, carrying
loads on their heads or backs. These
old women divido tho honors of being
beasts of burden with the donkeys nnd
camels. They do nearly all of tho
work nnd the men stand around and
boss the job. Unlike the young
women, they wear nothing on their
faces but a mass of wrinkles, caused
by old age and hard work. The young
women, when they go out on tho
streets wear masks on their faces so
tllftt y o11 <!au olll y Kee their e y <,H ’ Tlu, y
only go on tho streets when obliged
to, and at other times are kept in the
1,,mHe a"' 1 not allowed to see any one
or Ue seen by any one.
native of the country can have
j a” mBIi y wives as I 10 enn got. I ho
j pasha of Tangier has twenty-two wives
an, l can get twenty score if ho wants
them. Jf one of his subjects has
w ^ ftt ' H thought to bo a handsome
'laughter, he takes her to the pasha
and offers her to him for a wife. If
t' 1 ” l ,aHlia llk ®"!' er ' ie keeps her, and
'^ oeH ,lo t her bo returns tbo
K irl <■« her father as soon as he be-
comes satisfied that be does not want
her. It is considered a mark of dis-
tinetion in society there for a woman,
although rejected, to have beon an in¬
mate of the pasha’s household. Tho
object of the father in tendering his
daughter to a pasha as a wife is i° r
the purpose of winning favor with him
so as to be rewarded in some way
* a * er on -
“Aro there nny polico or soldiers to
do patrol duty?”
“Only a few of them that I saw.
Here and there you would come across
one. They looked to me more like
brigands than keepers of the peace.
“One of the funniest sights that I
saw there was tho Morocco barber
shop. This outfit consists of a mau
and his razor, the shop being any¬
where in the street that tho barber
happens to meet a customer. In Mo¬
rocco they shave a man’s bond and not
his faeo. The barber stands up while
the customer stoops over nnd holds
his head in position while tlio artist
mows the hair off with a razor that
looks more like a cheese knife than
anything else. Tho barber uses bis
arm for a razor strop, and it is amus¬
ing to seo him suspend operations for
a moment or two to whet tbo edge of
bis razor on his arm.
/< ‘As these people never shave their
facos.I suppose they chop off a section
of their beard when it gets toq long to
suit them.
“Another interesting thing that I
saw was a family of apes, living about
live miles out of Tangiers. Our inter¬
preter and myself rode out on horse¬
back to seo them. There was the old
man ape and tbo old woman npo and a
or so young apes. The old man
walking about his abode, which
wus made of logs, with an immense
in one band and a rock in the
other. They were real apes. There
was no mistake about that. As neither
us happened to be proficient in the
ape language, our investigations were
to observations only. I was
that this mammoth specie of tho
tribe was harmless if left
but would fight to a finish if
and this being so, we loft
old man and his family undisturb¬
ed in their county home.
“There is one thing I saw there
that I wanted to bring home with me,
nnd that was the little donkey that
brought our luggage down to tho
wharf. While he was the regulation
size, he was not much larger than a
pointer dog, but ho was all donkey,
don’t you forget it. Hunter bad
a trunk. 1 bad two valises,and Rodgers
bad two also. Now, the owner of
that donkey in somo way placed all of
this luggage on the back of that sp an-
ky little creature and under this im-
m case lond ho walked from the hotel
to the boat. I fell in lovo with tho
little fellow, and would have bought
him and brought him to Atlanta, had
I felt satisfied that the freight on him
would not bankrupt me. I knew I
could stand tbo freight on his body
and legs, but when I sized up his ears
I trembled when I thought of tho
amount of excess baggage that would
have to he paid on them. The ears
were really immense, When I think
of that donkey, I feel as if I left a
friend behind me in that distant coun¬
try to hustle for a bare living during
the remainder of his life. ”—Steve
Postell in Macon Telegraph.
Making Pearls Valuable,
Parisian jewelers are very clever In
the art of “peeling” pearls. They will
take a pearl that is not pretty, remove
its outer coat and reveal a beautiful
gem within. A pearl Is composed of
alternate layers of macre and animal
tissue, and the process of peeling is
very difficult. The tools employed are
knife, various sorts of files,
pearl powder nnd a piece of leather.
The pearly coats are extremely hard
and must be cut off piece by piece, the
operator relying more on the sense of
touch conveyed by the blade of a knife
than on the sense of sight. Pearls
found imbedded in the mother of pearl
of the oyster shell nre made marketa¬
ble by skillful treatment with acids.
Experts know how to make pearls of
any color, black by a bath of nitrate of
silver, and by other chemical means
they can turn them to rose color, lilac
or gray. Pearls of these unusual tints
bring fancy prices.
Sues the Government.
Atlantic Constructing Com
. F. Gaynor president, has filed
^hf^m^United States court
END OP A LONO BLUFF.
Newark Better Qoei to Law ta Recover
Mis Lost Wafer.
Offering to bet that nobody can eat
two bard-boiled eggs upon an empty
stomach lias been a favorite pustime of
Michael Meyer, a Newark horse deal¬
er. He has put forth the proposition
for twenty years as u means of forc¬
ing a man to back down, in any ordi¬
nary dispute, nnd It has been generally
successful. But in October last when
lie propounded It to William Wraage
in Solomon Oury’s place, Oury, who
was tired of hearing It said: “I will
take that bet for $10."
Meyer was delighted nnd arrange¬
ments were made to meet at Oury’s
at 7 o’clock the next morning. Wraage
held the $20 nnd there was another
witness. Meyer arrived at the ap¬
pointed time, felt of the eggs, squeezed
one of them and said that It was not
hard. Oury slipped both eggs Into his
mouth at once, munched them and
swallowed them. Meyer left in dis¬
gust, protesting that the terms of the
bet had not been fulfilled. Wraage
paid the bet to Oury nnd Meyer
brought suit for $. r >0 in the Second Dis¬
trict Court. The ease came up be¬
fore Judge Frederick Guild. The
court was crowded. lOinanuel Lowcn-
sfcln was counsel for Meyer nnd upon
Wrange’s side were ex-County Prose¬
cutor Klvln W. Crane, (lie unsuccess¬
ful candidate for Governor of tho
State. Commissioner Charles Herr of
the Board of Works, and William C.
Nlcoll.
Gommlssioner Herr endeavored to
eliminate the gambling law feature by
saying that this case did not coine un¬
der the act because eating eggs was
not a game of chance, but n trial of
skill; an act of showing skill, or pro¬
ficiency and capacity. Edward Stern
and Mr. Wraage testified that Oury ate
the eggs fairly, and the latter said that
he had taken the bet because it became
monotonous after twenty years of con¬
stant repetition. lie said that he ate
two eggs at once, not one before the
other, and that lie had not eaten any¬
thing since dinner oil the previous eve-
ning. The Jury announced a verdict of
$10 for Meyer. That was all he want-
ed, but it does not convince any of
the people on the other side that Oury
did not eat the eggs.—New York Sun.
Bouncers In New York Hotels.
Many people have not understood
why all the great hotels In New York
city employ special detectives who are
constantly In the main corridor. Some
have had an idea that these detectives
are employed as “bouncers." No such
thing. According to one of the most
Intelligent of these detectives the other
night, the work of a detective in a ho-
tel is arduous, “You have no idea.”
he said, “how many spies and sneaks
and ‘rubbernecks’ Infest the corridors
of the New York hotels. These spies
are employed to watch public men and
if possible to listen to their utterances
when talking to their friends in the
corridors. These spies and sneaks are
also employed to report on all sor ts of
matters. It Is a remarkable fact that
Fo many men acquainted with public
affairs are so guileless as not to bo
aware Of the presence Of these rubbei-
necks.’ Tho detectives iu the hotels
quickly , , , spot . ,, these fellows, „ ,, . but so long
ns they conduct themselves decently
there Is no ground for ejecting them.
Nevertheless. It Is my opinion that
well-known men who desire to discuss
the secret things of politics and of
finance nnd of religion, nnd who also
desire to have business matters kept
private, should be very careful to as¬
certain who is sitting beside them in
the corridors of onr hotels, or they
should discuss their matters else¬
where.”—New' York Sun.
B. B. B. CUBES BLOOD POISON.
Bottle Free to Sufferers.
Blood Poison, producing Falling Hair.
Itching Skin, Swollen Glands, Eating Sores,
Ulcers, Eruptions, Pimples, Sore Throat
nnd Mouth, Bono Pains, cured to stay cured
by B. B. B. (Botanio Blood Balm), made
especially for all terrible Blood Troubles.
Sold at drug stores $1 per large bottle. Trial
bottle sent free to sufferers. Write for it to
Blood Balm Co., 6 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga.
Advanced One Number.
“Does your wife let you sit in the
easy chair she gave you Christmas?”
“No; she sits in that; but now I get
to sit iu the she gave me last year. ”
ono
—Chicago Record.
Tdiicnto Your lloweln With Cascitrcts.
Candy Cathartic, cur© constipation forever,
Kc. £6c. H C. C. C. fall, druggists refund money.
Marshall Centenary.
February 4th, next, will be celebrated by
lawyers and Judges in various parts of tho
country as the centenary of John Marshall’s
appointment to the chief Justiceship of tho
United Mates.
Head This. The Peerless Tobacco Works
Co., of Bedford City, Va., wants traveling sales-
men ln each state. Write them for particulars.
Experience not absolutely necessary.
"Whales* Teeth as Money.
Whales' teeth form the coinage of the Fiji
Islands. They are painted white and red, the
rod teeth being worth about twenty times as
much as the white.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup lor children
teething, softens the gums, reduces luflammn-
Uon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
The United States supreme court decides
that tapioca flour is admissible free of duty.
How Are Yoor Kidney* f
Dr. Hobbs’ Sparagns Pills cure all kidney ill*. Sam*
pie free. Add. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N. Y.
Dreyfus’ counsel, M. Laborl, will lecture for
thirteen weeks in the United States next au¬
tumn.
lleware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury,
ns mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell ami completely derange tho whole system
when entering it through the mucous surfaces.
Such articles should never be used except on
prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do Is ten fold to the good you
can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh
Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and Is taken
internally, acting directly upon the blood nnd
mucous surfaces of tho system. In buying
Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine.
It is taken Internally, and is made In Toledo,
Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free,
fc^- yold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
I have found Piso’s Cure for Consumption
i»n unfailing medicine. —F. R. Lotz, 1305 Scott
St., Covington, Ky., Oct. 1, 1894.
Pays Over Half tho Taxes.
New Orleans represents more than the total
valuation of Louisiana, and consequently pays
more than half the taxes.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascareta Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
If C. C. C. fail to cure, drugglstsrefund money.
The “Kids” Repeat It.
ither—History ■I^don’t repeats lteell. They make
la our school. us
>
I Had
a Bad
"I had a bad cough for six
weeks and could not find any
relief whatever. I read what a
wonderful remedy Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral was for coughs and I
bought a bottle. Before I had
taken a quarter of it my cough
had entirely left me.”—L. Hawn,
Newington, Ont., May 3,1899.
Quickly
Cures Colds
Neglected colds slways lead
to something serious. They
run into chronic bronchitis which
pulls down your general health
and deprives you of sleep: or
they end in genuine consump-
tion with all its uncertain results,
Don’t wait, but take Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral just as soon as
you begin to cough. A few
doses will cure you then. But
it cures old colds, too, only it
takes little . We
a more time.
refer to such diseases as bron-
cbitis, asthma, whooping-cough,
consumption, and hard winter
If you’ve just taken cold a. 25 cent bot¬
tle is all you’ll need. For harder cases a
50 cent bottle is better. For chronic
troubles, and to economical. keen on band, the $1.00
bottle is most
Her Definition.
A little Memphis girl, who Is con¬
stantly surprising her ciders with her
sage remarks, was invited out to
luncheon one day, and while she was
at table she was helped to a croquette.
“What is this you gave me,” she
Queried with the frank Inquisitiveness
childhood.
She was told that it was a croquette.
“Well, what is it made of?” she In¬
sisted.
“Of chicken,” her amused hostess re-
plied.
“Oil, I suppose that is the reason It
is called a crow-quette,” she naively
remarked.—Memphis Scimitar.
I’utnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain
tho hands or spot the kettle. Bold by all
dragglsts,
slate Pencil Industry,
Pencils from slate dust molded by hydraulic
pres^uro are n.,w mode In large quanta ea.
'they are mueh more popular than tho solid
cut pencils. Ono fie-tory last year made 25,-
000.000 molded pencils,
ten’t Tcfcstcco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.
'■Lo quit tobacco easily nnd forever, be mag¬
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Fac, tho wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Now York.
French manufacturers demanded the rejec¬
tion of the reciprocity treaty with the United
States.
Vitality low, debilitated orexbaustod cured
by l)r. Kline’s InviRorattnc Tonic. Frek $1
trial bottle for 2 weeks’ treatment. Dr. KUne,
Ld.,031 .Arch St., Pbtlndelpba. Founded 1871.
IT. II. Greek’s Sons, ol Atlanta, Ga.. are the
only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world.
See their liberal offer in advertisement In an¬
column o£ this paper.
An Old Grant.
Mrs. Edgar A. Sto; er, wife of a Columbus
(O.) bauker, lias found among old papers a
signed by ono of Washington’s generals
eighty thousand acres of land located in
A DR.BUHE KiiSYRUP
_ ___
Cures a Cough or Cold at once,
m Is Conquers the best Croup for Bronchitis, without fail. Grippe, co c
Ui Hoarseness, Whooping-Cough, and
<£ for the cure of Cc nsumption. * 73
</> Mothers praise it. Doctors prescribe it. m
Small doses; quick, sure results.
'
i VsnssiaSsL ROUBLE y
-
P O flavor T A S and H gives firmness color, to
all fruits. No good fruit
can be raised without
Potash.
Fertilizers containing at least
8 to 10% of Potash will give
best results on all fruits. Write
for our pamphlets, which ought
to be in every farmer’s library.
They are sent free.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 & 3.50 SHOES 2,"i?"
gsWorth \ with $4 other to $6 makes. compared
y f| \lndorsed by over | .
|J f The 1 genuine , 000,000 have wearers, W. L. 1 t %
gj a-i Douglas' name and price
jjjjl stamped substitute on bottom. claimed Take a ^
4=2 no to be A
as good. Your dealer
should keep them — if
not, we will send a pair
on receipt of price and 25c.
n extra for carriage. State kind of leather,
use size^and width, plain # or cap toe. Cat. free.
r«T W. L DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass,
cows Mins
/Barters ink
Has the largest sale of any ink
in the world.
H KBasinessGolle£e^ KYANT & STRATTON u ^ ,,,e te?a (Bookkeeping
a n hi-
Lf 2d class Catalog p tree
Cost no more than school.
Mention this Paper ^
it* THE BEST FIVE-cent
SMOKING
Tobacco on Earth Is
NOT intheTRUST
6 TOBACCO, . TOP
Si" % IS THE BRAND.
'A PC V, Union Made!
I nr
manufacture
BROWN BBON. CO., WINSTON, N. O.
FALLING * -
a r n— p* *
■-
9 r
A k. 4 —la a_a»
1
Site- 1
)h
\1WN; mm
li (a
NJ
m
to ?
K t
9
Save Your Hair with
Shampoos of
icur* #
»M
0 . i
£ I it.
f m ?s W
7*'
%
And light dressings of CUT1CURA, purest of
emollient skin cures. This treatment at once
stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and
dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces,
stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots
with energy and nourishment, and makes the
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy
scalp when all else fails.
Millions of Women
Use Cuticura Soap exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying
the skin, for cleansing the scalp of scales, and dandruff, nnd tlie ’
crusts, stop-
ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and healing, red, rough, .and
sore hands, in the form of baths for annoying irritations nnd dialings, or
too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weak¬
nesses, nnd for many antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves
to women, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet,
bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have onca
used it to use any other, especially for preserving and purifying the skin,
scalp, and hair of infants and children. Cuticura Soap combines delicato
emollient properties derived from Cuticura, the great skin cure, with the
purest of cleansing ingredients, nnd the most refreshing of flower odors. No
other medicated soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for pre¬
serving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No
other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared
with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it com¬
bines, in One Soap at One Price, viz., Twenty-five Cents, the best
skin nnd complexion soap, the best toilet and best baby soap in the world.
All that has beon said of Coticura Soap may be said with even greater emphasis
of Cuticura Ointment, tho most delicate, and yot most effective of emollients, and
greatest of skin cures. Its uso in connection with Cuticura Soap (as per directions
around each package), iri the “One Night Cure for Sop.e Hands,” in tho
“ Instant Belief Treatment for Disfiguring Itchings and Irritations,"
and in many uses too numerous to mention, is sufficient to prove its superiority
over all other preparations for the skin.
ftMPfch External and Internal Treatment for every Humor,
I Lfl wa consisting of Cuticura Soap (2’)C.), to cleanse the skin of crusts nnd
scales nnd soften tho thickened cuticle, Cuticura Ointment (60c.)
The Set, SI .26
A Single Set is often sufficient to cure tho most torturing, disfiguring, and humiliating skin,
scalp, and blood humors, with loss of h»ir, when all else fails. Potter Drug and Chsm.
Oorp., Sole Props., Boston. " All about tho Skin, Scalp, and Ilair,’* free-
Don Stop Tobacco Suddenly
It injures nervous system to do *o. BACI)*
CTJliO Is the only cure that REALLY CURE3
and notifies you when to stop. Sold with a
guarantee that three boxes will cure any case.
PgViU»UUnlJ PIBRII is vegetable and harmless. It
cured thousands, it will
cure you. At all druggists or by mail prepaid,
SI a box; 3 boxes $2.50 Booklet free. Write
EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., LaCroise. WIs.
24 Wuhiiigton Street, Con.taurine. .Mich.
nDhPOY Imt ■% \Jf lb# ■ quick NEW relief DISCOVERY; and cures worst civ.,
cases • Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatmt
Free. Dr. H. H. GPEBN’S SONS. Box B ' . Oa
Agents Wanted S 3R*gf
term?, C, fi. Anderaon A Co.. 37? El:
IIN U If FFnil llCUH RHEUMAr,SM 7 -
itive relief, never fail*--* —■—
Address Rector Street Book
If afflicted with I Thompsf
sore eyes, use
fa FOR 14
' 1 Wmj mmWi ll Jf 1 * “ " Day Ripe Radish-*** '
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