Newspaper Page Text
Hood’s Cures
My Health is Solid
As a Duck’s Foot In the Mud
Cured of Gravel and Indigestion
by Hood's Sarsaparilla
‘
■
wm
Hi, >
£ ir •- 1 m
w
Mr, Frederick Earnfred
Chicago, Illinois.
• . want to say that I have been made n
newmanby Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Hood’s
Pi ii.,. I w as in a wretched condition and
laid to one pl ys cian $4.‘ f..r attendance
and present tin s, which gave me no re¬
lief. 1 suffered intensely from gravel,
and think I have endured asm ch mis¬
ery as any man from that complaint. 1
gave up hope of ever getting well and was
only walking about to
Save Funeral Expenses.
Nothing would stay on my stomach. I began
to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and found that
it did me good, so I kept on till I hars
taken fourteen bottles, and n..w my
health is as solid as n duck's foot iu
HOOD’S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
the mud. 1 shall keep Hood's Sarsaparilla
in tho house, as I consider it the cheapest and
boat medicine in the market. My indt
gestion is entirely cur. d, and all symp¬
toms of tire gravel have disippeared."
Fkeueuick Kaiixfiikd, No. 61 South
Carpent/y Street, Chicago, Illinois.
N. B. Be sure to get Hood’s and only HOOD’S.
Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and eftv
f'lontly, on the liver and bowels. 25 cents.
‘August Flower”
“ I aiu ready to testify under oath
that if it had not been for August
Flower I should have died before
this. Eight years ago I was taken
sick, and suffered as no one but
of a dyspeptic can. I employed three
our best doctors and received
no benefit. They told me that I had
heart, kidney, and liver trouble.
Everything I ate distressed me so
that I had to throw it up. August
Flower cured me. There is no med¬
icine equal to it.” Lorenzo F.
Sleeper, Appleton, Maine. ®
|: HO t\t TACKS
YOU ALWAYS NEED 'EM.
SOME INSTANCES.
You pull curtain down quick, off It
comes. You need "Home Taeke."
Gimp gets loose on chain, etc. You
want "Home Tacks."
Spring cleaning—you relay carpets, M
feu must hare "Hones Tacks."
In any home uses for tacks, fi*
.
You wilt always Hnd just the right sii-o y
tacks lor the purpose in a box ot"Home ft
Tacks''— packed in six apartments- ft
: I . I Kid* hflwki- WtNfcms .MltwciMi, a solely most -tw<W>», •— Lo'Mh. by convenient IfWi. Um 91 Vw m. Kovolty TmO, Fall ha form. Dect. >•«. Maax AUtaTftct Cbteafi. TrL.'mxa, Iilftw, Corp'a. Is, I
rijmm*. ‘
HOflE TACKS 3 ?
SOLD EVERYWHERE. X
AN ASTONISHING
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
McELREE’8
OF
h Strengthens the Weak, Quiets the
Nerves, Relieves Cures Monthly
Suffering and
FEMALE DISEASES.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT.
SI.00 PER BOTTLE.
CHATTAkOOG* “F0. CO., CkMtasnfa, Twv
“HOTHER’S
•. FRIEND ft •
“jfissrjJTssssrs r-H-ognized value and in constant
use
Ly tho medical yr fession- It short
rns Lfibor, Lessors Pain, Diminishes
Danger »o life of Mother and C-iild.
vobmSjy testimonial*.
vt *finoe, j«cr oou*c-
5RACFIELD SEGUIATOR CO., Afitaii, 6 l
BolJ t yaU cm^iisU.
<f«sr
I I
^^jQsaetnekss* Mltnu'-'. mni wiifi-ier «a* mosnesr rcrcs. W« »*v *o Co
‘‘^T"sT>eV l “amtvt ntioiciNE
;v.k,- --
BUDGET OF FUN.
HUMOROUS SKETCH PS PROM
VARIOUS SOURCES.
To a Wild Rose—Pleased by the Re¬
flection—Not Afraid ot the
Park— An Idea— V Proof,
Etc. Etc.
Wilt rose the bleak cliff up-bearing
Wild rows of lir.-, dark and gaunt.
Wild rows the boat nan despairing
Wild roes that wilderness haunt.
—Puck.
rSREGRETTED.
Old Salt (sadly)—“Whaling ain’t what
it used to be.”
Little Johnnie—“Well, great thun¬
der! You ain't sorry, are you?”—Truth.
SOT AFRAID OF THE DARK.
Kitty—“Oh, light the gas and turn
that light down, it's going out.”
Tom—“I don’t object to that; do
you!” do—to the smell!”—
Kitty—“Yes, I
L ; f«
PLElSfiD BY TflE REFLECTION.
Miss Peart—“Did you ever look at
yourself ia the glass when you were
angry?” I'm
Rival Belie—“No, never angry
when I look ia the glass.”—Philadelphia
Telegraph.
rUF.l’ARED FOR TOVO It STEAKS.
“What made you talk to Phillips as
you did? He is just grinding his teeth.”
“That’s what I wanted him to do.
You see, I’ve invited him to take dinner
with me at my boarding-hou3e.”—Chi¬
cago Inter-Ocean.
AN IDEA.
“The eyes, as the poet said, ave the
wiudows of the soul,” said the moral
lzer
“Then I suppose spectacles are the
stone windows of the soul, chi” put in
the demoralizer.—Puck.
a woman's star.
“I heard Miss Harkins say last night
that she was fascinated with me,” said
Smikeworthy, who is uot handsome.
“Yes, she is. She toid ine so herself.
She is an enthusiast on the Darwinian
theory.”—Harper’s Bazar.
DEFINED.
Johnny—“What docs the paper mean,
l>a, by saying that Mr Tomlinson bore
the lost of his property by fire very phiio
sophically?” Pa—“Uroph! It he
Johnny’s News Record, means
was insured.”—Chicaga
A WITTY RETORT.
“Can some one of you,” said the
teacher of the class in geography, “tell
me the location of what is sometimes
spoken of as the banana belt.”
“I know!" exclaimed the smallest boy
in the class, hugging his stomach de¬
lightedly. —Chicago Tribune.
hard pressed.
Von Blumer—“l don’t think I ever
was so hard up in my Ufa as I am now.”
Van SViukle—“Why, it was only the
other day that I beard you were having
house built.”
Von Blumer—'“So I am; b ut I’ve got j
raise tho interest on the mortgage. ”— j
perjury proven.
Justice—“Four husband says you are
regular “struck virago and that this morning
him. Is this true?”
Wife (contemptuously)—"Shurc, Oi had shtruck him yer
it’s a lie. If
inarnin’ he wouldn’t hove boen able
t’ he here this afternoon t’ mek th’ com
plaint.”—Judge.
A PROOF.
Hicks—“I felt a tug at my hook, the
terrible struggle! ., r „,rn-in>»’ Pnpt,- I uck.
A SHREWD TRICK.
Baron (bringing an heirloom to 16
jeweler’s)—“Could you not substitute
imitations for the diamonds so that I
could take the jewel back and you still
have the valuable portion of the jewel?”
Jeweler—“Certainly, my dear baron;
but you see your father has got ahead of
you,”—Fiiegendc Biaetter.
A DUDE PREDICAMENT.
Choily—“Did you hear about Woggie?
He was widing ia the Park, and his
horse threw him, an l Weggic came
wight down on his hea-l.”
wac.ous ‘
Cb °l ? : J “Jr !?■ i Ae «,” worit b” oN
Jjs b.t
13,.,r.
A MAS’* NERVES.
this time of night?
Mr. Binks— “Why?” rattle
“Juit hear the windows! They
like everything.”
wasn t blowing. —New 1 ors iieexy.
-
, a fkcllem.
Ulfmore Daddy—“I with our baby A- could
plainly; B: »was •
m<>rlth younger, a 11 oce can unl ^ r ” an
__
Mrs. Daddy (offended)—“I'm sure I
don't know. (To t .e baby) Comesey
tooly icoramv i:se sweety. Does 'oo
wicked popper scold ’oo dear it’Jc popsy
woney dodkinsF’— Puck.
BIS REASON.
“I understand Piolessor, that you are
opposed to admitting woais-i to a caiiege
course." .,
••Tiitt ia my posit.oa ejtactij.
»HtTe vott taf obj«ct:o&« to giving
rour rea-ou>” embraced ,
“\one in tae least rthey »r*
“Wnat msrVied :* that?'
••I a lad with a c .. . ste
education. —T.d-B:’.#.
ftoH lift. BID TW<
Tim****** 4 AS J mkrg 1 ..
§!#« fl •Qfj fiiibit c>aS*iw"e ft# to** of-
He had finished his meal at the hotel,
and os he shoved back his chair he
shoved out the munificent sum of twenty,
five cents to the waiter.
“There, my roar," he said, “take
that. I don’t do things by halves.”
“ITo-o, sir,” whispered the waiter,
“you do them by quarters. Thank you,
sir.”—Detroit Free Press.
Him AS AS IDENTIFICATION.
Lady (at largo dty-goods store to floor¬
walker)—“I wish to exchange something
I bought yesterday.”
Floor-walker—“Yes, madarnc. Do
you remember whether you were attended
to by tho gentleman with the dark
moustache, or the gentiemau with the
light beard?”
Lady—“Ob, neither! It was the
nobleman with the bald head.”—Life.
SOME DIFFERENCE.
Dealer—“A furnace liko this one,
suitable for warming thoroughly a ten
loom house such as you describe, and
guaranteed to give satisfaction, will cost
you $200, and n good, honest job can’t
be done for less.”
Customer—“I don't want it for my
own dwelling. I—aw—want it for a
bouse occupied by a tenant.”
Dealer—“Yes. sir. Here is a most
excellent one I can sell you for $97.50.”
—Chicago Tribune.
A JOKE WITH A MORAL.
“That new brooch of yours, Mrs.
Viuker,” said her candid friend, Mrs.
Speakout, “if you don't mind my saying
so, is the uglicst thing I ever saw.”
“I know it,” replied “I the brave little
woman, cheerfully. wear it because
my husbaud gave it to me for a birthday
‘
And Mr. Minker. listening iu the
room adjoining, remembered that he had
given away to chronic loafer, and office
bores, with contemptuous remarks, the
box of cigars his wife had preseuted him
on Chris Unas Day, and he went out to
*ha coal shed and kicked himself. hi¬
C8 S° Tribune,
MRS. UOCKSALT WANTS TO KNOW.
“Rocky,” said Mrs. Rocks tit,
up from her newspaper, “how do
pronounce H-a-w-i-i?”
“Let ’er go as she lays,” rcpliel
Rocksalt.
“Do you mean it as it is
wa-i!”
"Yes, or Ua-wa ki-yi if it suits
better—ami you keep it to yourself.”
“No, but Rocky, I want to know;
should it not be Ha-wa-ay?”
j “Ha-wha-wh—why this painful sub¬
ject?” gasped Mr. Rocksalt; “why this
insane rearing for the unattainable?”
“Mr. Rocksalt,” said tho lady, with
dignity, “I have been reading of
overflow—I mean overthrow—of
Lilioukalani of Hawaii—”
“Madam,” said Mr. Rocksalt, raising
his hand to impress silence, “do you
consider what may happen if you con¬
tinue to use your tongue iu that reckless
manner? You will beemtu able to
a Columbian post age stamp with one fell
swoop and thus acjieve an immodest in¬
dividuality, or lock-jaw will set iu ant*
an unearthly silence will cuue. Jill
you let Qjoen Lil, of Ila-lia, alone
you’ll lie a winner. This ain’t no cabi
net meeting.” And Mr. Rocksalt
tir. d behind • uaptr and wres“*d '
. " wtu iuh question.
—Oil City Bliiztrd.
Ingenfons Alaskan Toy.
“The natives of Alaska may not suffer
from a surfeit of civilization,” said
Janies II. Warded, of Fort Wrangell,
Alaska, “but there are some things in
which they excel; mtabiy in the way of
children’s toys. Every baby in Fort
Wrangell has a plaything that would child bo
the euvy aud admiration of any in
America. It is an odd and curious cou
trivance, rather a mixture of a jumping
jack and rattle. It ii made of a piece of
ivory or walrus tooth. It is about six
^ches long and about on^inclUD^lam^
hollow walrus tooth When the child
, mUg tUc striDg the ro j, crown and ball
jump nearly out of the tooth. The
length of the string prevenU its leaving
the piece entirely. Then, when the
string is loosened, they clatter down
with a rattling sound aud strike the bo'
tom with a chug that tills the heart of
the budding Esquimau with glee. It i»
a very funny design for a rattler, and
there is nothing like it in America.
is simple but popular, and the man who
first struck the idea is getting rich, al
tbought his scheme is not patented.”—
St. Louis Giobe-Democrat.
T||i . Jfanitott.s Prairies,
**If the horse could sUnd it," said 8.
y. Howbothan, a well-known resident of
Winnipeg, Manitoba,“a man could leave
wmoip.it ...i is. I„»l vm ™i -s t.
o.„. m>.»
would be obstructed by the mountains.
This gives an idea of the great territory
^ T? SaV iZ
duces the finest spring wheat grown any
where, and this enormous plaia will in a
jew year , be the great granary of the
world. Eastern people have a misty
to a decade hence, though our
crop two years sgo was 33,003,000
bushels. We have hut little snow and
: in the many JL years I resided in Manitoba
, -ever . a top ^' of f th.hr, ghd prairie
g™ 1 * covered. Cll “ r ‘- T ,^
from acroat the water, yet the number
from the Western Sttte» is yearly in
creasing. Wc have no wild West Iron
tier *cen«. There are no settlers killed
over disputed claims, as u*s been an
every-day story in the VVeit for year*.
Our homestead laws require a three
years’ residence of wx months
Laud may Ue yrwmpted, too. — >V(iff
iogtoo Star.
A Lo don idea.
iu certain London .esUuraats MSS
customer is showed to make ate (or awi
tea. 1 he waitress lights the gas sad ouarwr.
wh:cb is affixed to each table *•**
thereoa a «i*er kettle. Toes aha .*«•
‘veto to the teamaker a silver caddy -U
v.ued into rompwuaenu and offering a
rao.ee of Samhoag, Ceylon o»
tea. Aiit one «hoi» compelled to
ibe lukewarm s’uf! tailed us at
rnt< snli appreciate the new *dea.
in Health.
Every oi should know something
about the jsc, as it is a very import¬ body
ant index tche condition of the
in varloundiases, ana is a valuab’e aid
to the detaining of a patient’s condi¬
tion in neaf ail diseases, says “Medi¬
cal Brief.” } order to know the condi¬
tion of the Use in disease it is necessa¬
ry for us tixamine it in health. The
pulse is ab;i. 120 to 140 at birth. It
gradually Ainishes until it reaches
about nine! at the ago of seven or
eight years, jfn adult and life iu it is old sixty
five to se’ ty-five, sixty. Ft males have ago
not much et
a somewhat l ire frequent pulse than
males, the V'rrcnce being from five
to six beat a minute. A differ¬
ence of five ten beats is made by
changing fro lying position to sitting
and from s.... * to standing. By vio¬
lent running, e pulse may be increased
to 140 ‘ The pulse is felt by
or m<
placing the s t tw > fingers upon the ar¬
tery at the oeide of the arm, with the
second flngf lard the heart. The
force of th- art is determined by
pressing wit e second finger and
noticing how » force is required to
compress *’ k , so that the pu'sc
cannot h first finger. The
pulse i '-a temple, the neck
and vs lions.
Th. : t and Table.
The b 4?d placed for children the
injurious. A across
front of the > prevent the little
one from fal 1 the little one linns
things forward on agatt th. m <*> in get front. a * j J* ! lie lc ch.
the is thus shoulders pressed >ward rounded aasinst the bar, 1 "
c
Z had In
plac.d'unSn.ea.'h cramped, and the
child to support 'forced are into bad and
is act a floor
unhealthy p tu A rug on the
is the bc.t placdor aasnaU child to play,
and it should bjaUowed As it to roil bigger, about
much ns it lik,ed grows
low chair and $ dc suited for its a xe
bo provided; if't falls off the ilia r
harm is done,'lit to fasten a child
evil.
Bread.
Attention is i Jed to the new method
of making bn* tof superior lightness,
fineness and yoiesotneness without
veast, a receipt fir which is given else¬
where in this <7per. Even the best
bread makers w bo interested in this.
To every readi ho will try this, and
write the resur \' the Royal Baking
Powder Co., lOt M « r ' street, New York,
that company w send in return, free, a
copy of the nidi practical and useful
cook book, comining one thousand re¬
ceipts for all kitds of cooking, yet pub¬
lished. Meotio this paper.
Misuse if Dlslt Towels.
Tlio habit *om> housekeepers have of
using dishcloths md towels tot lifting
hot spiders, dish'*, etc., cannot be too
quickly overcou 1 ’; they not only shorten
tl>ii useful days ’f dish towels, hut l Uii
.ou risk of trnnit>fiug some of the stove
black to their able chins, Holders
should bo provi Jid for lifting hot dishes
and kept in a hAoiy place. If house¬
keepers wou*" -tom tbemaelvta to
the use of h' »* wofild soon find
them inudT __ mmanage
bl- rt“»
Dialer ,• a horse 1
can rtrommei: .u, kind——’’
Old Lady- I don't wuat that
sort of a hur.t. Ha holds his head
high.” “Eh?’
Dealer—
Old Lidy—“I like a horie that liolds
bis nose close to the ground New so he York can
see where ha’s gnin’"—
Weekly. _____
The Virtue ef Pro mp I Unde
I. In nothing mor orcibijr shown limit in llir
es< apo from dt»e i*‘ of those who hand it -
warning*. Fore. t !» wl ely tietr Pmutlced khlney* l>>
IN'foils who, iitis i ting that henhliful
want activity, Im, irt to there a Hitlers. nu It>
pulse with Hoet<: ter'e Brlglit'adlw-a Btotnaeii eiiml oth*
so doing they avo 1 r
ilestruetlre renal eonstipstfun. oaifi* -. ( tltll-onit IruuMr. fe\er, 1
indigostton, liver In hnd tiy i »-h- tlii‘|
inaiiani should hr i-ipped the
Hitters.
It liecomcs a wise man to try negotiation
before arms. . .....
Lillies needing a tonb, or «l;l dren » ho
want hullding up. sh old take Brown’s lr.ni
Bitters. It i» plea-ont to take, cure- Malar a.
Indigesiton.HIUou to-sand Liver t omplaint h.
uutkes tho BIo.nI rich and pure
They who forgUt mmt Shall lie most for
gtrou. __________
CODOSI Attn Hoe Heisrss. The Irritation
which Indncee entirhing relleveil Noldanlj by uwj boxes of
“Brown'e Bronchial Tiochu.' in
!
s •
m l
K *
.1 fi A
OXE " VJOYS
od result* when
«n; iliaplmsaut
and refreah:n- a taste, and act-*
pen'uj yet pr n the Kidney*,
Liver and I causes the sys
tem effectua » colds, head
only remedy of . £&sit£ kind
it* ever and pro- .
duced, pleasing U. the taste ac
eeptsble to the #'onacb, prompt in
it* action and tri 4 r heneficial in ita
healthy and agr< saWe aubetance*. ita
to all and hflVc made It the most
popular b remedy of Fizi kLoWB. it for sale in 60c
end yrup £ bottlesall leading drng-
1
nth Any rcluhls druggist who
may not , have ft on hand will pro
cure it promptly fur any one Who
wishes to try it Ifio not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA HB SYRUP CO.
INN Ft A M 'SCO. CH.
tOUISHUi, t* atm r oat, a.t.
ROOT, BARK « BLOSSOM
r-“—rrr.fsrr !w lammMf tsfl fax ams-vsjr. « ar.d at
» 4 A* evwt-Mifc. vm** t«UW. rtrTvs'r-Vi*^ %Nmm*'*mN 0 m. i at.
—
II?*-* mUSX Sir.’ -
I f.or.sa.n AScosaoM, afifiitfififififififififififi* hews, •*. o.
nm w ms msRWsa w
Significance of Intermarriages.
The American nation exhibits in its
character the results of this
directed law, without the oper¬
of which all other means toward
development of a common impulse
patriotism would bo hindered and
writes John Lambert Psyno ii
article on “The Secret of llappt
Marriages” in the March Ladies’ H'>me
An appeal to statis¬
facts is here opportune. By rtf
to the census returns of 1881
those for 1891 being unfinished—it
will be seen that there were then living
in the United States 503,434 mothers, persons
having native fathers and foreign
and 1,837,064 who had native mothers
and toieign fttbers. These figures, while
clearly establishing the fact I had just
indicated, also show the nature of the ii -
terraartiages which had taken place thing up
to that time. It was n significant foreign
that the affinities formed between
men and native women were considerably
more numerous than those between na
tive men and foreign women.
Advantages of Good Roads.
A country without roads will remain
undeveloped, ita bidden treasures stored
away. Where poor roads prevail lie every¬ the
thing ebe is vi ry apt to poor,
nor-e, farmer ami merchant. If two
hors'* haul the load of four, one wagon
haul the load of two, one set of harness
haul the load of two, one driver eerve
for two and six miles instead of three
oe made per hour, the aggregate income sav- of
ing would double tho net
the average fanner. This desideratum
cun only be accomp ished by the mentis
of good public ionds. The «ffcct of
goal public roads upon the land value is
to inercaso the value of such lands. Ex¬
perience il l* shown that the v due of
ground is iu direct ratio to the good
condition of the atreota or nails wli'nli
traverse them. A road system is
means of facilitating intercourse,
tircunmunication is the buckbone
business. Good public roads are the
prinniry neee sitiea of civilized life
national —Americau haninr.
A Rig Room.
Mr. Gotham—“How’s business in your
We-tern Frirtid--“Boi>rotng, sir, just
tmoinii'g Why, sir, in I logout City,
where 1 live, they are opening whole up new is
at reels so fas! that the town
down with dipthiria.”
M*ny person* nn» broken down from over¬
work or botiMbobl ears. Brown’s I lj*n Hit¬
ter* rebuilds t lo* *>* tetn, ablH dilution, re
liimuM cnees'-of bile, find run** nmlafiH. A
splendid tonb* for women mid children.
The I tost Inst rue! Ion Is to prwtle® wbat yon
tench.
If ftfflie'ed will* snrome Or. IsaacTboiiin*
fM»ttV Kve-waler.Orflifictatsfell at «?<V |>er I wit 1 10 .
t We of¬
CURE FOR
k Th* »hnt C'outfit Hyrup. fer yon
aTusto« litMui Luo In time. Jr!
BHuia by Urngir Wn,
a ready
made liiedlelne for Coughs,
Hi’oiiehiHs and other dis¬
eases of the Throat and
Lumps, like oilier so
i aiYeuWeh ..uYenics. it
is well advertised, ami
having merit ii lias attain¬
ed a wide sale wilder (lie
name of I’iso’s Cure for
Consumption.
It Is now a “Nostrum," I hough at first It was
compounded after a prescription by a reguhir
physician, with no Idea that it would ever go
mi the market as a proprietary medicine. But
sfter compounding that prescription over *
thousand times In one year,we named it ‘‘PIno's
C ure for Consumption,"and te gsn advertising
t ill A MitftU wfiy. A iiicdi< Inn known nil
over the world is the remit.
Why In !t not juM ns g<nnl ah (hough r-ontlnf
wit* to a dollar for a ni»t i*.n and aa
^um to Ii»vb it |»?it up at a drug afore?
WEBSTER’S
INTKUNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
s,
wzz.- T raj.i*«»dad. ij
A < rand Educator !
''fM Al>re»'.t of the T‘m*s ]
fi l-it.rir, ir. tiself i ;
li.i»!iiaWe to fl*v
**2sM-L>* Ib bS’fKil'I.aii'lloflW! i.r<.f#*«**i«»ual “ J
i t# a< ln r.
V£> as*.' , u:.iu, cdu« Ator.
* ,
Ank your Booknetlrr to show it to you. J
» KHIAM « .Srriy.Mru>.M**M« tfij ,1 mnrn 8 A a \
> ,
i f »l for tit*- t**» f'.nUinlng
| rycji.) not *» ■; ffpdnt* of fliMofl wl;u«»n«i.
Unlike tlie Dutch Process
No Alkalies
— OH
e V Othpr (lipiiiiuals
t *L »rt? in thn
JiflikUtPill of
W. BAKER k CO.’S
•BreakfastGocoa
] ll l) ukirh 4t mk—tmtmtg
* I jtnrm ttnH Bntaahte.
J h )> th* Uh*nm'fr*thanthr*eiim*0 ttnmtfik of Co*
i o*
! U»iTh »ilx*r, Arrowroot or
an* is far mum eeo
lien.K-at. cw'iny /us »*.«« one rent n cup
!« t« 4 <*Im-»ou*, B*em«liing, au-t r**!LV
bl'.crrei'.-
lk.14 If letucet* n.Tjnksr.
W BAK£R 4 CO. Dei Hu.
BICYCLES.
\C7* v-/ ^
IS
|*l»»*Mt.Sll* »*d fl •»•!»#'•** f * ■* ** 9 *•
«..*»*« s* s mm * ' -* hrs* * fl.« A «*,
~ Ati rw*-n.
- Bit ?« , MeajYt * f 4 ■'Has' ■ w
%.¥ Mi I* BKTJI’ F. I.MW K \
flU I « I F- * Hsssflrr.. *
'
UIIST UAUC ««*»»» *T»SI
n»»*K • * w
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The Hair.
The hair, like all things of vegetable
growth, is Improved by clipping alt the
ends once a month. It is not at ccr
uin, however, that cutting the hair im¬
proves its growth after a person his
reached the oduit age. On the contrary,
it sometimes pr .duces ha'.dness. It is a
great mistake to use any alkali, even
soil p, in washing the head, as this tends
o make the hair dry. When the hair
is naturally dry, a little vas line may be
used to advantage around the roots, but
only to render the hair soft, not enough
to make it greasy.
His Usual Fate.
Getthere—"Did you ever attend any
of Mis* Build’* ‘at-nomesf’”
De Bore (sadly)-‘ N o, but I’ve at¬
tended a good many of her not-at
homes.”
Roving Itaggs—After all, it pays to be
perlite, pardner. Jagg*—Not always. The other
Jocose and
day I was actin’ deaf and dumn,
when b man gave me a dollar I says,
“thank ye, air,” and he had me ar¬
The New Bread.
"P OYAL unfermented bread, made without
1 v yeast, avoiding the decomposition produced
in the flour by yeast or other baking powder;
peptic, palatable and most healthful ; may be
eaten warm and fresh without discomfort, which
is not true of bread made in any other way.
Can be made only with Royal Baking Powder.
for Making One Loaf.
/'"vNE quart flour, t tcaspoonful
salt, hall ateaspoonf.il sugar.
• heaping tcaspoonful* Royal Baking
Powder, half medium-sized cold
boiled potato, and water. Sift to
wether thoroughly flour, salt, sugar,
and baking powder ; rub in Hie
potato- add sufficient water to mix
smoothly and rapidly into a stiff
batter, about as soft as lor pound
cake; about a pint of water ton
quart of flour will be required—
“A SUCCESS.”
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., Gentlemen;—
I have suffered from catarrh for about fi9r$cars
and have tried .several remedies without relief
unii£J,A*>mmeni **d to use HaU’s_Cftt*AiTh 4 UTC iflfit
February I must say that it is a A SUCCESS,
the dropping in my throat disappeared entirely
after the first 1>ottle. It increased my appetite, so
that I now weigh eight pounds more than mycus
tomary weight. 1 have recommended it toothers
and all who used it have been greatly relieved and
speak highly of it. One of them was in my store
yesterday and expressed his wish to peddle it this
winter. Will you please let me know the lowest
terms you could furnish it for. as 1 would like to
keep it in stmk. Hoping t«» hear from you
soon, 1 remain, Yours ru»|>ectful1y.
K. C. HAUSWEDELL.
Igtke City, Minn.
BOLD U¥ DRUGGISTS, 75c.
GENTLEMEN.
V SV M A sewed shoe that will not comfortable, rip; Calf,
A mg V seamless, smooth inside, more other shoe evet
m H* 3 stylish and durable than style. ar.y Equals custom
A sol-1 at the price. costing Every |4 to f5*
made shod Irom
V Em The following are of the same high stsndsri a*
c. \wt
I n vW( *,.co Ij.so and S5.00 Fine C-lf. If 1 -- K -rnerW ‘ -*
; - ..... a: t Surfing I • r»
* - ’
A IA k<-75 IT ta ! °r IS et-l Mls»c«. A the DOTY best yeti vain® owe ‘ ycor—a ot V™*
tbou-e. L^.cr. -n.rx* In JOOM
toe . coax By t urchasliig
HistsraEBESH^ '»jg
V o:'.
LJ 4 ojy
‘ V.'0Pp;>
Wltl.lv. e»ne.lve «l...KS wS3mS*M fSnSnfiM&aS
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
If I] THOMSON'S SIXITTKI)
CLINCH RIVETS.
’ f»4 »h* m *«».!*}nyrk s. t>S *• r
an c
* k* •»» <SA »t#,y *•» Tr' «*■» ~. *r « I * T- - Ml •!•••*.
nefltfto •n't <SSfl »«•*** **
•
7mZ£*m Ash /mm r dr.r
- 0 t & .*—***- ’ ***
JUDSON L THOMSON MFO- CO
WttIHOI. **»»■
rmsm Ha < rt ’Mf
CATARRH
4 « SANB t w
|t 1 Wmrtrnm ft*.
fond of Fishing.
Mr. Good son—“i^o you worked for
Mr. Cleveland one mmroer? He i| very
fond of fishing, I beli«v*v’
Patrick—“Fond of fi lling’, is it! Wall
Oi’ll tell ye. D'ye ino'no th’ time He
wax furst noinynuteu?" it.” .*
“I remember thin,
“Wo!!, tor, Oi waz on th’ foe*]
an, roe hate was near Ids l ouse.
Oi heard ih’news, Oi ru-hed ui
an’ says Oi, ’Hooray: We’ve n n
ye fur President’, says O:. *W nil j.3
acciptf’says Oi. ’Oi *uir, says he, “i
there’s good fishing iu lit' Potomac.'’
New York weekly.
He Coaid Walk.
Mother—“I wisn you would go on an
errand for me.”
Small Son—“My leg aches awful."
“Toobad. I wantid you to go to old
Mr*, htickney’s candy slur.-, and -”
•Oh, that isn’t far. I can walk there
easy.” well. Go there and right along
“Very Go
side of it yon will tee a grocery store.
in and get me « liar of soap."—Sr. et &
Smith’s Good News
more or less according to the cr and
and quality of the fiour used Do
not make a stiff dough. like yeast
bread. Pour the batter iuto a
greased pan, 4)4x8 inches, and 4
inches deep, filling about had Iu.;
The loaf will rise to fill the pan
when baked. Bake in very hot
oven 45 minutes, placing paper
over first 15 minutes baking, to pro
vent crusting too soon on top. Lake
at once. Don't mix with milk.
ggffl SHILOHS
'roucri CUhr CURE.
liar Mr - eus
■•uS
BLOOD POISCS «'■»«>» Mr t SS to M
’ns I m Stirs
A SPECIALTY. f ita «r*r
mmmtto m
gs tfV •* : ’me*asms
•ks « <• i . :i ms» •
OPIUM
t,*vHS ’ll