Newspaper Page Text
vij 4
N
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NY
Mr. Ln 11 (a A. H’roc
llBKcr.Kurn, Md.
Nigh Unto Death
Sound as n Dollar AfterT a king Five
Bottles of Hood's.
“In the Apt-inf? of JRHfl I ti with
pain* in my breast so =• /»t I could hardly
•tralghfen •*elf up. could not sleep »»t
night d t-hortly after 1 -hh taken with night
IWftH U I bad ippctitc nitd when I did cat
I Bftoame Denthly Sick.
Then largo lumps the slate of n hen’s ftffK U
ed upon both sides of my neck. I op< d
and ( wly followed the doct< iii
but I d tb hair d to
fall off bend. Finally, I b d m h talk
about Hood Snraapurilla I derided to take it
I eont 1 until 1 took five bottle* whi'h cur
ed sound n dolb d f- Ihut time
until now I hav lot had k da d h
Hoods v ;> Cures
not felt tho slight' ♦ offer in of rhe
L. A Wn V •l>**rt St., Iffttfcrr wn . Md.
If oftfT* Pill* nre p find p/Hclcnt, yet euj
in Action, Sold hr n 1 drugglit*
Hex lily’s Varieties.
Tbi r roneh say there an vrrnl
“ages as wc II its kin.hi of bi auty the
beauty of mei vouthfulness, which
they call In beinite dll dinhl also n
beauty if ‘nglin if ‘old age
and of ‘tliiim called hi ben ii I e du
singe. l redenkit Hrerner, tin ,wed-
ish novelist, bud beaut of
“plainm ho wn very plain ol
taco that her exj ion of trustful
ness, ns though appealing to you to
find some other qualities in her than
mere "looks," shone out witha perl i
radiance that ennobled hei fine and
drew friends 1.. her In rimse she linil no
other beauty Hut Miss Bremer took
pleasure in her well-kept hands, o I
which she used to say, "Even lmndi
have their momenta'’ of charm.
The last words of John B. Gough
■re, "Young i keep your r ltd
clean, No bi • motto ■an be iidnpt-
fit by n yoiini man who is ambitious
to make the most of his life and its op¬
portunities.
P rewliel * I lint IG Iiiri*
The lowland * » d mla«ina. the parent of
chill* and fever, bilious, remittent« .th
forms of mab . IIOutfitel
•el) Fitter. a HUP r 1 r. th
Nor Is It le IV n 1 111 (I KKRlMt
rheum wilt* kidney vo PIhIiiIh .HtiHftl hy
h wetting, ( spe,eh.. II mpi Ini
M p 1 tion Am lake'll Ii >1-
il by It. 1 cun I nr I
tdt min r tlmt tlewe wh
teded inn iv Ih o- prophet
liner's H w a m r \\ r cures
|ney nttd Blttd trouble».
free. .
^ T ’ ' ~ V
■
CeninedKrtl Void on iu*nu’ Inlrnded n
yotii breath until mt
A S|trhiM S 01114
fr Id and voting, in early iprln
Till the timely from sontr I si fiei
•ti would l»»*
T«»e till him: I l 1 . 1 M' Is Iv U. (
K II G mH mo;
ll’» jjood lt» iM.kr nnd 1 sure lot ii
H cleans |he blood w m rt
Mn k< < every fun. (1
roHful sleep 11 1 » lit
\nd pm disease, mi I pa
Btatb or Lucas Ohio, City or Touioo. (
Coithtt. i '
Fbahk J. Crumby iiinko.nAth ili.t hn I. th«
tea lor partner of 1 h« firm of K -L L’liKi • A
Co., doing In tho City <»f Tol«df>,
Countv end 8tatoftfore»ttid,nm1 thnt nnld rtnn
will LARS pfiy for tho oftc.h sum and of evory ONE ctnoof MDNPIIED <-M«rrh DO!,* that
c*nnot bocurod by the use '»f II a m.’hL'atahkii
Cure. Frank .f. Ohkney.
worn to Vrforo mo an 1 •uhucrlbod ta my
prwum ihliflth day of Oecembwr, l A. D.
A. \V. O L* A SON,
Notani Vnh’ic.
Rrrh Cur# i*tAk* n inlornally unit net*
dirrctlv on tlm blood Mid testimonial*, nu mtu’ou** surfftets
tho system Send for frrn,
V'.Chunk v At 00 ., Toledo. O
W 8old by Druggiftts, 7. r K
■tal. .lr.il) of Ink. I) )".*.(i
Hi OgM > :»> nmi'ahle fu t cl
n 51 M Nerve ami Hm i i
llsi e. 10 I A ■ II i; i. .i i f = 1 ~
OlIQHS, Mt»\H.si.NFvs, Souk 1 OAT
ju i<’ k I y relitnoti by "Himi
mtclie*." They surofissHU other 1 •pi
In •emiii i a
l» ntiy
kUHmUN (
IhHO’d OM M > mmi'ieo. It t int's iucid nl
etttitpUoit; it the Bo^l C'ou^hl'urr:- - ,$L
If Hffi i will ii-t>l)r. l-tui »P
*on*i» Eye-water.Drugiiists ‘ell at 2«V j rbott
x
51 ;
•»
’
m
m
A im\. 1
KNOWLEDGE
Brings rxmifnrt aud iropmvrment. ami
tends to * rfiuml enjoyment nlieti
rightly um The many, who live bet-
tei .nan others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, world’s by la-st more products promptly
adapting the to
the need- of physical being, will attest
the value principles to health of embraced tlir pure liquid
laxative in ths
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of is Figs. due its presenting
to
in the form most acceptable and pleas¬
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative; effectually colds, headaches cleansing the and system,
dispelling permanently constipation. levers
a m 1 curing
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable of figs is for substance. sale by al! drug
Syrup in 50c and ?! bottles, but it
gists ufactured by the California Fig is Syrup man
Co. only, also whose the name is printed Syrup on of every Figi.
package, anfl being well informed, name, will
substitute if offered. you not
accept any
WOMAN’S WORLD.
PLEASANT LITER ATI HE KOII
1EMININE READERS.
Tire ovK.nsKiiiT rre.RR,
Thc overskirt, unmistakable and nn-
disguised, is here Thu roAnd,
“apron front” of fifteen years ago is
reappearing. There was an extremely
pretty dress on exhibition Inst week
whoso prettinOKS was spoiled by this
piece of ugliness.
It was of very heavy dark blue serge,
with a perfectly plitiu skirt rin
bodice consisted of i tight-fitting
Eton jacket and it vest of yellow crepe
and chiffon 1 he cults of till jacket
were of yellow satin, under a heavy
dark blue braiding, and the broad
shaped girdle tvus of tho same materi¬
al. sbvm the Cincinnati Commercial Ida-
zett
Hut beneath this simplo and satis
factory waist u sonscless useless
rounded piece of blue sorgo hung half
way down the skirt and over the
waist, It was faced with dark blue
silk. Tho hack of the overskirt cun-
Malm] of n straight, plaited piece of
blue serge about as long as the apron
front.
MAKINO A PLAIN OIKL PRUITT.
She never thought sh had any
points; ho had quit made up her
mind t< the irredei = able ugliness
which, 5 had been t< . was her lot.
Then S|e ike a good, et, wise w
in an Vsk v ir mother to let you
come to spend the day with :.io when
next you are going to a party, and w
will see what can be don ’■ , So tho
poor ugly duckling went, and this is
what hor fairy godmother did for her,
says the. Housewife:
She took her first for a short oxpe-
ditiou, which interested and amused
but did not lire her.- Then ho gave
her a thoroughly comfortable lunch,
and made her lie down in a warm
room for two or throe hours. The
short, refreshing sleep reduced = by the
warmth and quiet endei , aud a cup of
tea enjoyed, the dressing began. Now,
st home, the routine of the day had
never been interrupted because there
was to it party -that night I In
regulnti work and afternoon walk
having been taken, the girl reached
homo tired, just in time to have a
hasty cup of tea and dress. The
operation of dressing was carried on
in a cold room, giving time to get
thoroughly chilled, so that the transi the
tion to a warm drawing room sent
blood with unbecoming force to the
face.
Hut. the wise woman did nothing so
foolish. She made the girl dress
leisurely before a good tire. Hhe
taught hor It X a great, mistake to
stand before a coking glass to do the
hair. It is better to sit and take it
easy, else a tired expression nn cs
into th = Sh nil I no hast v
av ashing s it Ii water to irritate the
skin, Iml refreshed her face gently
with a doth dipped ui rose water”
She kept up a running e brought onmoutary on
tho girl’s points ns she them
out one by one.
"Your hair looks bright as the light
falls on it I admire that .pretty chest
nut brown, with shades of red and gold
in it Chore, now your complexion
looks as clear as possible Mv dear,
how bright and rested your eyes look
Now do me the hand mirror to set
how ■etiy that, curve of your neck is,
with those little curls just waving
about it !”
And the fairy lingers of hope and
happiness touched this girl's eyes with
light and tinged her checks with soft
color, and gave hor gait a firmnessaad
elasticity which prevented all awk¬
wardness, and when she entered the
crowded room she was able to look
people in the face and let them see her
syes, with the new-born light of pleas¬
ure and satisfaction dancing in them,
and tho rest of this girl’s story, is it
not written in tho chronicles of her
happy life, and is not the name of this
dear, judicious woman engraved upon
her heart?
The moral of my little preachment,
is that if a girl is plain, you won’t
make her any prettier plain. bv dinning into
ln*r oars Hint* alio i« Ami that
Httniol iwimss, if not prettiueas, is
within tho reach of nil women who
rent’, o what their good point# are.
And tlmt it is a miatnko to tire one*a
elf out before a party.
FASHION
Three lur rings of c 1 silver sot
iu au ornamented vu.se hang against
tlic wall and are intended to hold
cards and li tters.
Every garment that extends below
the waiW line lumg), iu godets to the
lower edge, apparently ” increasing the
size of the figure.
A new material for party toilets
closely resembles crepe, except that
it is as glossy as satin and is maun
l'aetured in the most exquisite colors.
Woman is a natural martyr. She
dies a dozen deaths in on- ordinary
life from a masculine point of view.
What with straps aud steels and
springs and wires and belts,' buckles
and bands, tbe \ ^ obabilities an ,d u >
bus been th - st imnediment to
her own pr<
Skirls do not change close greatly in style
or shape, remaining about the
hips and flaring from the knee down.
Many, when made of single width
goods, are of half circle shape, with
the single seam up the back, while
others of narrow w idth silk and other
material have gored breadths aud
godet plaits iu the back.
Moire silk petticoats yellow nre decidedly
elegant. Those in ami pale
colors are shown for evening wear.
Dark ones for the street are stiffened
to help give the dress skirt that flare
which is so desirable. Silk petticoats
will wear much longer if they « rt *
lined with cashmere, a light quality
being selected for tue purpose so not
to add to the weight.
A dress pronounced beautiful was
the result of a happy idea, the com-
bitting of two old dresses, a tan cloth
aud a striped green silk I ■, loth
“kirt opened on a front of tho striped
silk. The coat bodice was made with
narrow cutaway fronts showing a width
tight fitting vest of the silk. The full
puffs of silk for the sleeves were fiu-
isbed with close cloth cuffs So many
different material are combin'd this
seiAou that ft little taste will accom¬
plish wonders.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Debt i* not only an inconvenience,
but b calamity. Johnson.
The greatest difficulties lie where wo
arc not looking for them, (foothe.
What in resignationV niuj Placing Goo
between ns our troubles. — Mine.
Hwetshine.
The wrinkleB of the heart are mort
endurable than those of the brow.—
William Delnzy.
He who does not bring <ij> bin hoii to
some honest calling brings him nj» to
be a thief. -Jewish Proverb.
To rejoice in the linjijiiueeHof others,
is to make it our own ; to produce it,
is to make it more than om own
A. James.
Uy doing good with bis money a man
stamps the imnge of (foil upon it mid
makes it puss for the merchandise of
heaven I’utledgi
They that deserve nothing, should
he thankful for anything. Bless Clod
for what you have, and trust Him for
what you want. —J. Mason.
Tho nerve that never relaxes, tin
eye that never blanches, tho thought
that nevei wonders these aro the
masters of victory. -Burke,
Keep your conduct abreast of your
conscience, and very soon your con-
science will be illumined by the raiii-
* nCB ot 00,1 W. M. Taylor.
The great blessings of mankind are
within us and within our reach; but
we shut our eyes, and, like people in
the dark, we fall foul upon the very
thing we search for, without finding
it Seneca.
Th meek aro not those who art
never nl all angry, for such are inseu-
■ ible, but those who, feeling anger,
control it, and are angry only when
they ought to be. Meekness excludes
revenge, irritability, morbid sensitive-
ness, but not self-defense, or a quiet
Hud steady maintenance of rights.--
fheophylact.
The common fluency of speech ii,
many men, and most women, is owing
to a scarcity of matter, and a scarcity
of words; for whoever is a master of
language, and hatha mind full of ideas,
will be apt, in speaking, to hesitate
upon the choice of both ; whereascom
mon speakers have only one set of
ideas and one set of words to clothe
them in, and these are always ready at
the mouth So people come faster out
of a church when it is almost empty,
than when a crowd is at the door.—
Dean Swift
Silver in a Riiflhilo’s Head.
The buffalo of Ceylon carries hi*
head in a peculiar insnuer the horns
thrown hack and the nose projecting
on a level with his forehead—thus se¬
eming him from a fatal front shot.
This renders him a dangerous enemy,
as he will receive any number of balls
from a small gun in the throat and
chest without showing the least dis-
Hess. This account of a dangerous
encounter with the animal is given by
the author of "Rifle and Hound in
* cylou. 1 had tired without killing the
buffalo and had not a ball left. With
a stealthy step and a short grunt the
Uul1 advanced upon me, seemingly
iuvnn ' " f m .Y helplessness. Suddenly
11 bright thought flashed through my
mind. Without taking my eyes ofl
Ike "limal, 1 put a double charge of
powder down the right-hand barrel,
and, tearing off a piece of my shirt, £
took nil the money from my pouch,
three shillings in sixpenny pieces and
two anna pieces. Quickly milking
them into a roll with the piece of a
rag, 1 rammed them down the barrel.
They were hardly well home before .the
bull sprang forward. I had no time
even to replace the ramrod, aud
threw it in water, bringing my gun on
full cock at the same instant. .1 now
had a charge in my gun which, if re¬
served till he was within h few feet of
tho muzzle, would certainly floor him.
The horns were lowered, their points
were on i ither side of me. and the
muzzle of the gnu barely touched his
forehead when I pulled the trigger and
three shillings’ worth of small change
rattled into his hard head Down hi
went ami rolled over with the slid
denly chocked momentum of his
charge. Away went B—and ! a« fast
a« our heels would carry uk, through
water and over tho phiiu, knowing
wnH 11 dead, hut only
tinned. There was a large fallen
tree about half a mile from us whoso
whitened branches, rising high above
the ground, offered a tempting asy¬
lum. To this we directed our steps,
ami after ii run of 100 yards we turned
1,11 1 looked behind us. The buftalo
bad regained his feet aud was follow-
ing us slowly. Wo now experieneil the
difference of feeling between hunting
«««» ** ‘ 1< ‘« r f, e8
,m » s l’" w ^I'ktmed and lie fell. '\ c
were only too glad to be able to ro-
dime our speed, but we had no sooner
stopped to breathe than he was up
agaiu and after us. At length, how¬
ever we gained the tree aud beheld
him stretched powerless upon the
ground within 200 yards of us.”
The Jewels ol Hie Shah.
The traditional diamond of the East
is the Great Mogul. The original
weight-was 7H7 karats, and it disap¬
peared when in the last the Tartar invasion,
treasures to amount ot
g.TV',000,000 were captured by Nadir
Shah, The Shall of Persia has in his
treasure room jewels valued at $40,-
000,000. His crown contains a mass
of diamonds surmounted by a ruby as
big as a hen’s egg. His royal belt
weighs twenty pounds, and is ft solid
mass of diamonds, rubies, aad emer¬
alds. When the Shah was in Europe
he wore a variety of diamonds and
gems, the smallest of which would
have been a fortune to the lucky pos-
sessor The buttons of his coat were
five in number, and each button was
a dianaand larger than the kohinoor.
’ —St. Louis Republic.
Business Methods Necessary.
Business methods are needed on ths
farm ; not the three-volume ledger sort,
perhaps, but something approaching a
-vstem. The farmer must study the
needs of the market and the probable
changes ere his crop i> harvested. He
must know when he can afford to sell
and when it is proper to hold. He
cannot always tell, for humau judgment
is liable to err. but he will find the
first efforts toward system so satist'ae-
tory that lie will not desire to change
--Kaunas City limes.
patkr“* NATURAL
AGM«
,w reign*.—
roPirsVangemeiucsT KA^it. relative
TO GARDEN,
.- y v—
RAISIN 1 is)LTS FOB SAM!.
There are altogether too many geld-
nigs on many farms Mares are, in
every respect, as good for work, and
will lose hardly a mouth in tho year
producing a colt thut will make some¬
thing above the cost of raising it, if
lairlv well treated i'hc amount of
profit from selling the colt will depend
much upon the judgment and economy
with which In- is raised, anil this does
not mean in starving him, but in feed¬
ing a ration adapted to his growth.
The n nin point, however, in making
a profit out of the colt, is to put him
on the market with a sleek coat on
him. He must be fairly fat, with all
the loose, long hairs cut off, and the
sunburn brown removed by stabling,
blanketing and rubbing A little ex¬
trn rubbing befot selling will put
dollars int your pocket.—American
Agriculturist
QUALITY IN STRAWBERRY PLANTS.
Irt planting a strawberry bed, large
or small, it is well to give careful con¬
sideration to the fact that an amount
of work necessary to its care will be
just as great on poor soil as on rich;
just as great, or even greater, if the
plnnts/et out ffrd Inferior as though
of the best stock. But the yield will
be widely different under these varying
conditions, hence it is the poorest kind
of policy to plant ou poor soil, or to
use inferior plants. There are two
kinds of plants that are extensively
used, which are reallv unfit to be placed
in a strawberry bed. There is no
doubt that t/Tht.iomif' these annually
reduces the>. np considerably.
When an old bed has outlived its
usefulness there are thousands appar¬
ently good i*7T.t« to be plowed under.
Some persons cannot bear to see these
go to waste. Ho they oither use them
for starting new beds, offer them for
sale, or give them to their neighbors
and friends Whoever tries to save
something by the use of such plants is
likely to lose in the end ten times as much
as he seoks to save. Another practice
not uncommon among fruit growers is
to take plants from the edges of the
matted rows of the bed that iR to bear
fruit. As they wish to disturb the
bed as little as possible they take the
plants that have run farthest into the
central spaces between the rows. They
claim that such plants must be all right
since they come from beds of last
year’s setting, and which wero not al¬
lowed to bear fruit.- But they are as
unfit for use as the old plants taken
from the wornout bed, as they grew
from sets at the ends of the runners,
too far from the parent plants. When
a runner has grown for a shortdistance
it forms a set. Whether this takes
root or not, the runner continues for
another short spaifh and then forms
another set, and so on until the third,
fourth or even fifth set is formed, all
more or less dependent on ths parent
plant for their aiuiport and growth.
Those the best nearest chanc theMjjJirent ^ 'hey make plant have
e, more
better rapid growtli^JjHI'iimc plants qf^^Fthose stronger further and
re¬
moved. the while the?!. thffyTat feeble the very effort, ends of
runners, E aro
of low vitality audJc^lile / growth. Be
sides they are fot .1 so late in the
season that they i^ tl ,ot have time to
get in. properly To fill rooteujbefore bed Will such winter plants sets is
a
to make a very poor beginning, and
spoil all hope of anything better than
a light or medium crop.
The proper kind of plants to use in
starting a strawberry bed aro those
grown the previous year expressly for
transplanting. In growing plants for
such purpose, extra pains are taken iu
training and pruuing the runners so
that only the best plants are preserved,
ami so few of these that no two shall
stand closer than five or six inches
apart. The late forming sets anil run-
ners’ure cut off, so that when winter
sets in the bed is composed wholly of
strong, well manured, well rooted
plants. When wanted in the sprfttg,
the cut's' row — not the edges of it:—
is taken up, and n choice grade ot
plants is thus secured. Better pay nn
extra price for such plants than to
lake inferior ones as a gift.—American
Agriculturist.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Whitewash is always good for fruit
trees.
trim trees and vines now, before
(he "sap starts.”
II you have some extra plants left
over give them to your neighbors.
Beets are very easily grown in the
greenhouse Y favorite variety for
forcing is Early Round Dark Red.
G.et the children interested in tho
garden. It will be a benefit to them
and to the garden if you let them helji.
Let there be a regular distance be¬
tween your trees when planting, and
allow for the spreading qualities of the
variety planted.
Cabbage leaves, coarse celery stalks,
bruised lettuce and other waste from
the garden will uot be a waste if
thrown to the chickens.
It is a question for Western farmers
to solve if it is not beet to soil stodk
and not cover the farm with fences.
The fence causes a great outlay of
money.
Potash is valuable for fruits, anti
sandy and limestone soils nearly al¬
ways need it. Clay soils sometimes
•co lit tu u sufficient potash, and often
they do not.
When bees are unusually cross it is
well to put a few dry leaves of home
grown tobacco into the smoker along
with the other material. Persons ac¬
customed to'handling bees can readily
determine when they are in good
humor or otherwise.
Either 100 breeding ducks or 20C
early hatched pullets, properly kept,
and the eggs of the former hatched
and raised for market and the latter
kept for egg6 in fall aud winter, would
soon remove the mortgage from the
farm, says a poultryman.
A practical berry grower says that a
quarter-sere garden well arranged, set
to best varieties and properly cared for,
should yield at least twenty-five bushels
of berries. In no other way can u
farmer produce so much of value, with
so little labor, as iu a garden ot stuali
Inut*.
A Careless Youth.
“Cholly’s in disgwace at tho club
agatn, " said s Willie Wibbles.
"Dcnli i Defth! Yon don’t say so.
He’s always iu twnuble, isn't he? It
was only lawst week that he camo out
without hi« twousalis woiled up.”
"It’s worse this time."
"How?’
"This mobning he forgot to liwush
and comb his chvsanthemum! Wash-
ington Star.
THE SQUIRE’S EXPERIENCE.
IIOYV Sit I I Ui: YVK.IB. or WEST A I It -
(.IMA, ('ll Mtl Kill'll AN ATTACH
OF ••XKKVOl'MNK!**."
Iii* C'nir® Rnfil<*«l I'hvalriaw*—Almost n
riiyrticnl Wreck—f'n immI a - Iahm.
(napti I! '<. t !*<?.)
St. Albans Is one of the busiest l!l tie towns
along the lino oT the Chesapeake A Ohio
Railway In West Virginia. Hs silaation ou
tlm Kanawha aad at the mouth of Coal River
makes it a very desirable shipping point for
timber.
Some iliiys ago a representative ot the
jjfiplisf Bnnnfr was compelled to spend a few
hours hero, between trains. After viewing
the magnificent scenery of tlie Kanawha
Valley he took occasion lo have a chat with
some of the prominent business men of the
place.
The reporter culled on magistrate S. L.
YVebbal his offl 1 hear! him relate tho
following strange but Interesting story in re¬
gard to himself. Tho Squire, by tho way, is
a handsome, intelligent man. about forly
years of age. possessing n largo amount of
that fascinating “Old Virginia" culture, and
withal a prominent and influential man in
politlcnl and business circles along the Kana¬
wha River.
“I was affected for ten or twelve years
with a troublosome case of ‘nervousness,’ as
I call it. (I don't know or care what tho
medical name is.) It was the result of indi¬
gestion and some kind of stomach trouble.
I had also—since our troubles never come
singly—a chronic bowel c and lnint. at the
same time painful and unh I lmd to
give up my work almost ent tire ly aud was
rapidly becoming a physical wrHck'. at the
period when I should have \>w n most drong
aad \ goroua. : I triad every kind of medi-
cine that J could And wit! out avail A
prominent doctor of (’imrje.-ton. now de
ceased, spent a great deal of skill and time
on my ease without accomplishing induced any good
I OS ults. Finally my mother mo to
try just one more treatment. She had used od
a medicine known as Dr. Williams’ Fink
Pills with great benefit, and she persuaded
me to try a box. That was in January 1S93
1 was down at Mr. C. E. Griffith’s stoi re that
day. and ho and I weighed oursolve s on his
scales. I weighed but 140 pounds From
t hat day I began to improve. The first thing
I noticed was my appetite I wanted to cat
all tho lime. Then my n clothes got too
for me. and actual ly when I weighed the
other d til.V on the very samq scale my weight
was 1673di pounds. Now I air* a n evv man.
and just now cam© from a . picnic, wh ere l
hav e b een romping aroui ind md hav mg n big-
time. Dr Williams’ Fin k Fills did the work
for me.”
Squire Webb is such an enthusiast that ho
has his office ornamented with all the Dr.
Williams advertisements that he can And and
spends his extra time, bet wee an eases, in tail-
ing people about his remarl cable cure and
about the pn Ills He is nn inflaan ttal member
of the M© tho list E plscopal Chut
The rope rter n( xt visited Mr. ( E. Grif-
fltb, at his ato re on M lain street IIo said :
“Squire Webb is certainly i new man since
he began taking Di Williams'Pink Tills. He
used to be thin an I nervous, hut now ho is
hen lthy aud robust, and is in every way a
nobli specimen of manhood. I have been
taking some of the pills for the after effects
of the la grippe, and they have been of great
beueflt to me. .last the other day I seat for
soino more, and I am going to keep them ou
hand. AH that Mr. Web l) has told you about
his condition and cure istrue, to my person
nl kdowledgi
Squire Webb sai 1 on parting with the
scribe, that he had mat le a solemn vow with
himself to do all in his power to get people The
to use the medicine that had cured him.
Baptist Banner is glad at any time tp find
such ready testimonials to the efficacy of any
reliable medicine, so listened with a good
deal of satisfaction to the story of Squire
" '
AVf»ld> "
An analysis of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
shows that they contain, In a condensed
form, all the eleuients necessary to givo new
life ,mil richness to the blood and restore
shattered nerves. They are mi unfailing
specific for such diseases as locomotor
atax \ a S's^Jsrsti.srsr partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance,
SCSI atiea
hen H.fSf St
in. p....... either in
plexions and all forms of weakness
male or female. Pink Ptll* are sold by all
dealers, or will be sent poi p d j J
of price (60 cents a box, or six boxes for
JLM-they are never sold m bulk or b> the
100) by addressing Dr. Williams Medicine
Co., Schenectndj, h. Y., or Liock'lUo, On
tnr10 ’
The World of Workers.
The single woman who chooses her
occupation wisely, or who, compelled
for a time to engage in something
that is not congenial, gradually wins
her way to one that suits her taste, lias
one of the best possible prospects of a
happy life. She knows nothing about
killing time. Every hour dies a nat¬
ural death, and she hardly has leisure
to remember that it existed. Her oc¬
cupation becomes her inspiration. She
loves it and delights in growing with
it and making it and herself honored
factors in the life of the city or town
where she dwells. Success commands
respioet. Whether site be a wise phy¬
sician, gifted writer or experienced
dressmaker, she finds herself sought
out aud her friends increasing. The
world of workers, if they bo honest,
whole souled faithful workers, is always
a happy world .—Boston Herald.
The Hungarian crown worn af their
accession by the emperors of Austria
as kings of Hungary is the identical
one made for Stephen and used at his
coronation over 800 years a; The
whole is of pure gold, except the set¬
tings. and weighs 9 marks fi ounces
(almost exactly 14 pounds).
Many of the sealskins sent to the
London markets are obtained by the
Siwash Indians along the west coast
of Vancouver island and the north¬
west shores of British Columbia.
Mothers’
Friend
Is a scientifically prepared liniment
—every ingredient of recognized value, and in constant
use by the medical profession. These ingredients WILL are
combined in a manner hitherto unknown, and
DO all that is claimed for it, AND MORI it
shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
1 [Mother and Child.
Expre 55 on Receipt of Price, $ 1.50 per Bottle.
ailed FREE, containing voluntary testimonials,
* Ga.
BRADFIEi-D REOULATOR CO.. Atlanta.
Highest of all in Leavening Tower.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
«
vssgssa a Powder
Absolutely pure
Weather Bracelets.
The well known effect in lessening
or in increasing tho temperature of
the body by cooling or wanning the
wrists has been applied by n Philadel-
phiu woman iu an ornamental way. In
winter she wears an inch-wide strip of
asbestos, a noted nonconductor of
•heat, folded in gold embossed velvet
iirnl buckled with a jeweled loop. For
summer use her pulse coolers are
spheroids of rose quartz about an inch
in diameter, linked together with fili-
gree silver, these possessing to a mark-
ed degree the quality of absorbing
colil. The woman claims proof against
suffering from weather variations while
thus braeeleted.
1 f every man in tho country would
strictly prohibit himself from drinking
there would be no need of a prohibi-
tion party
mm Mlly
Mi $
mm
i firm
!;i/f? k mi •‘Jiti hx
'
*
1 V;
mm i i IP
$ J lira
iv, 1 \
It imagination will, perhaps, require a little tbe a
tho on tho part of
recognize head of the fact that tho two tho portraits
the this article are of came in¬
dividual ; and yet they are truthful sketches
made from photographs, taken only a few
months apart, of a very much esteemed citi¬
zen of Illinois—Mr. 0. H. Harris, whose ad¬
dress is No. 1,023 Second Avenue, Bock
Island, IU. The following extract from a let
tor velous written change by in Mr. his Harris personal explains the m»r-
appearance, He
writes : “ Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery saved my life and has made me a
man. My home physician says I am good for
forty years yet. You will remember that I
was just- between life and death, and all of
my friends wero sure it was a ease of death,
until I commenced taking a second bottle of
‘ Golden Medical Disoovery,’ when I became
able to sit up and the cough was very much
bettor, and the bleeding I taken from six my bottles lungs
stopped, Golden and before Medical had Dr... ’•“* of
the ‘ v ery rt
ceased and I was a new man and ready for
business.
1 now fee', that it . is , a duty that , I owe to
my fellow-men to recommend to them the
‘ Golden Medical Discovery ’ which saved my
life when doctors and all other medicines
failed to do me any with good,
I send to you this letter two of mv
photographs; ono taken n few weeks before I
was taken down sick m lied, and the other ner
was taken after I was well.” 11 I liesQ two pho- ho-
tographs are faithfuU y re-pr oduced at the
Mr. Harnssexperienc co in the use of “ Gold-
en Medical Discovery” of is not an except ional
“te Thousands world eminent in people emphatic m all
parts of the testify, just as
srr^vsssisszffss
Medica Eminent , Disc ° e ^ ‘k4y” icians when pre scribe of their “ Golden dear
ones’livesaroimperilledbythatdreaddis- any
Consumption. H Under such circum-
t ^ onIv q th e most reliable reme dy would
be depondc upon . Tbe following letter is to
(he-point. It is from an eminent physician He of
Stamps, Lafayette hereditary Co.. Ark. in wife’: sa ys: fe’s
“ ConKumptlon hate is already died with my the dis
family ; My some wife has sister, Mrs. E. A
ease. a
Cleary, used tnat Dr. Pierce’s was taken Golden with Medical consumpti Discov¬ on
Sin¬
shb ery, und, to tho My surprise wife of has her also many had friends, hem¬
got- well. r‘b
orrhages from the lan gs, anil hor sister m
slsted on her using tho 1 Golden Medical Dis
J'lie Anal Dinner.
:
solemn festival on the day of
and when the corpse was exposed to
view. The relatives and friends were
invited to attend, so that having in-
speeted the body they might vouch
that the death was a natural one, und
thus exculpate the heir and all otl u-rs
entitled to the deceased’s possessions
from accusations of having used vio-
lence.— Westminster Ua~clt<
vr. I„ IIOITGI VS *3 SHOE
equals custom work, costing the from
gemrihe $4 to $6, best value for money
in the world. Name and price
m
v’urtKT muisT--— — ’ how to or-
dor b mail. Postage free. Y'ui can get the best
barsri ns ol" dealers >vho push our bhoei
=> £ 9
^ ATLANTA. o A.
I?o<*hkc»‘pinc. fliisinos* I'rncl c short-
hand. iVc. Send lor entaloaue
>IA(TiK\N.I I RTISiir WAliKKU. H’narr*.
Mary Magdalene’s (,'rnre.
Fifteen thousand pilgrims annually
visit St. Baunie, in Provence, not fur
from Marseilles, where Mary Miigda-
lone is said to have spent the last thirty
years of her life.
The legend, according to tho Nouvello
Revue, runs that Mary Magdalene camo
from Juiheft in ft small boat-with Laza-
rus, Martha, tliotwu Marys aud Salome,
bringing with themlhebody of St. Anne,
the head ol Eit. James the Less und a
few wee hones of the innocents mussa-
crod by King Herod. But from early
ages this story lias boon disputed, and
the Abbe Duchesne, one of the most
erudite writers ou the early Christian
saints aud martyrs, considers that the
relics of Mary Magdalene were proba-
bly sent from Constantinople about the
, seventh century. A Greek breviary,
j however, died Ephesus speaks of the saint Yuri; Recorder. ns having
at .—w
covery. 7 i consen ted to her ns ing it, an d it
cured sumption her. for She o tho has ha had no sir sir symptol itoras of People con- (
past past years years.
edy.” having this Y disease d can truly, take no better rem-
ours very 7
ing From “ the I Buckeye pronounced Stats comes to have tho follow¬
: was consump¬
tion hy $.>00, two and of our best, doctors. I spent
to nearly Dr. Pierce's was Golden no better. Medical T Discovery. concluded
I bought try used bottles I
and eight and can
now say with truth that I feel find just as
i" .f.i\ as 1 did at tu eiity.five. can d-'
a (lav’s .-a tb-fnrm.
v. ■
iv.”l ):■:l- h le-lir'it therefrom. I
fie
five bottles of your “ Golden Medical
ery,” and in four months I was myself again.
I could not sloop ou my left side, and no— T
can sleep and eat heartily. So long as I h ave
your medicines on hand I have no need tor if .1 a
doctor ; I do not think my ho use in order
without them. Yours truly,
c
Marlow, Baldwin Co., Ala.
If it would bo any more convincing, wa
could easily fill the columns of this paper with
letters testifying to tho euro of the se rer eat
diseases of the throat, bronchia and lungs, lun
hy the use of “Golden omi Medical Discovery.’’
To build pneumonia, up solid flesh (“lung fever”), strength exhausing after the
grip, fevers, and other prostrating diseases, it has
no equal. It does compounds, not make/of but likecod solid, whole¬ liver
oil and its nasty
some flesh.
A complete treatise on Throat, Bronchial,
and Lung Diseases Nasal Catarrh, ; also including ar.d pointing Asthma,
and Chronic out
successful means of homo treatment for the less
ahulies, will bo mailed to any address by the _
'orld's Dispensary Y., Medical Association of
uflalo, N. on receipt of six cents in
McELREES’
of
— —
re *1
iV'i 'V\>S
jA M itk /l(\\
For Female Diseases.
HALMS AnU-Hhoamatic AnU'iiatarvhal GhewincGum
A *• Cm• du t PruvHiits Liticutnatism, la list stioa, .• A
r>y?pcp8iu, Heartburn. Catarrh aal Ant-ama. V
w I kctul in 'i.ilaria and Fever?, cleanse? ' the
¥ A Teetu and Promote? tno Appetite. £3#
the Breath, Cares the Tobacco Te Hahl F ndo
•• bv the Medical F !0r
0 ceu< packae^. St7--«ob^ .Stamps or Postal^S'Ote. f A
Ja nil ary VF' r ^ nu
February .
March ii:. •..... 5 "
TOT A Fj, Olt __________ per eerr.
We have paid te our cuctomer* in in 75 7.5 day*. dav*
Profits pai-i twice each mouth, money can "b
riffir: $80 to $10JO can be invested;
FISHER &fO.. F5«niter* nnd Brokers,
l*' und -O Broadway. New Vnrk
A Guaranteed Cure
The Opium Habit.
We guarantee to cun e Ike e opium for disease board, in
any form in fifteen day rno pay
treatment or attention ' ^n. Sanitarium al Salt
11. Hits. Ga- Corresponde Nklms’ Guarantee nee con-
f tL- M CVHKOO r lAx.k BoxA ustell, Ga.
'Ié’svcrfiz'
A. 5i. U Fifteen, ’94.
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE f/ULS-
Best . Cough C Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in time. Sold by c:ruj 5 #ri 8 t ?
!SA£ AU 2E
u2§ (ifs. ,