Newspaper Page Text
BRIGHI' BUS.
Telescopes were first made by Jan¬
sen in 1590.
Rochester has a company of deaf
mute soldiers.
Europe now imports every year
660,000 tons of meat.
Ceylon has cinnamon plantations
covering 36,000 acres.
In the rock of Gibraltar there are
70 _ miles of tunnels.
The Union Pacific railroad crosses
nine mountain ranges.
The Chinese live longer than" people
of any other nation.
The anchors of the steamship Cam¬ j j
pania weigh 8 1-2 tons each.
Rembrandt's father is said to have
been a miller and farmer.
A teaspoonful of microbes contains
over 4,000,000 individuals.
In all countries more marriages
take place in June than any other
month.
The queen of Corea has a lady phy¬
sician who gets a salary of $15,000
yearly.
The most prolific of opera composers
was Picciui. Ho wrote over two hun
dred operas.
Unbearable boorishness can be
changed to bearable eccentricity by
the acquisition of wealth.
Marshal Bessieres was a farmer’s
boy, and after enlisting as a private
rose from the ranks.
Southern Pacific locomotives will
soon use for fuel bricks made of coal
dust and asphnltum.
Celluloid is paper chemically treated,
reduced again to pulp and then molded
into its final form.
Some characters are like the black
billiard ball—not black, but called so
because of one black spot.
We are haunted by an ideal life,
and it is because we have within us
the beginning and the possibility of
it .—Phillips Brooks.
A man going shopping with his wife
is usually a most woe-begone looking
object. His face always bears upon it
the marks of despair.
Perhaps you have heard of “Spar
tacus to the Gladiators.” Its author,
the Rev. Elijah Kellogg, still preaches
at Harpswell, Me., although over 80.
A Beverly (Mass.) man was fined and $5
for slapping his wife iu the face
$15 for assaulting the policeman who
urrested him. There seems to bo
something wrong with the Beverly po¬
lice court’s tariff.
The Oldest Specimen of Glass.
The British museum contains the
oldest specimen of pure glass which
bears auty date. This is a little lion’s
head, having on it the name of an
Egyptian king of the eleventh period dynasty.
Thus it is shown that at u at
least 2,000 years before Christ glass
was made with a skill that indicates
the art was not new.— St. Louis lie
public.
If You llntl n Frirnil
Tormented with dyspepsia, you could not Rive
him better advice than to adopt and stick to
s course of Hostetler's Stomach Hitters,
finest and safest of tonics and regulators.
This Is no barren assertion. Experience lias
proved, physicians ami the public certify to it.
No less emphatic is their indorsement of it as
a remedv tor malarial disease, constipation, and
rheumatism, kidney disease, gout neu¬
ralgia.
If you want to know what your friends
really think of you. Ret into a quarrel with
them.
________
Brown's Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia, Mala¬
ria, Blllousit- ss and tleaeral Deoilitv. t,tvo»
etrcnRtb. aids Digestion, tones tlie ai-'ves
creates appetite. The best tonic for ., ursing
Mothers, weuk women and children.
A good sermon will always outlive the
preacher. ______
It is a great tldr.R for a young man to get out
a little and come in contact with other people
and see how they- live. B. F. Johnson & Co.,
Richmond. Vs.,are and giving the man young time men to put a
chance to do this, at themjind same
money in hank r ■ pally. I ry see.
We Care Ruptnre.
No matter of how lonR standing.
for free treatise, testimonials etc., to s. J.
Hollensworth & Co., Owego, Tioga Co., N. x.
Price $1; by mail. $1.15.
__
THE TESTIMONIALS
s\ We publish an- not pur¬
chased, nor written up in
our office, nor from our
r employes. I hey are facta,
r,roving that /toon *
y a™, « urea. "Forovertwen
fiWAwith I, iy years neuralgia, I have rheoma- sudered
MBw hism and dyspepsia- could not
" Many times I Htvid
0^ turn in bed. done 9
Sarsapardia has
Mrs. Burt. me a vast amount of
pood, i am ?! vears old an-l enjoy Rood bcaUh,
which 1 attribute to Kendall, Hood ft >. sarsaparilla.
Mrs. E. M. Hc.it. W, ».
Be sure to e*-r HOOD'S
UaaiJV nQOU. S SaT^lil^YTV®® pjf* vUiw*
lt.Td «^‘ill« ran- w-enu. '
"JFRnilRiiLt - ,
b IIU U111M (■ l™ f;--| Arkansas,
savg0 con-|_| S.S.S
“About ten years ago i 1 j
medicine
after medicine, which I took without any telief. |
1 also tried mercurial and pmssh remedies.
cut*an* 3 attack”of*mercurial rheumatism that j
made my life K(II'I|IJ| T jiariiU 1 TtCIA I lal
'.-tie of agony. 1
c^rcarcT^ve up takinc all r^r.edies several and bottles t^an I
isingS.S.S. After
j S.S.S; | poisoning today ou the market. "
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
tree. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, On.
IS -
iri -
.
Stovfpqlish
Da Hot Be Deceived “'--—
Wttn pmim. Eaameli and Patota wtm-h stale the
haul, tajare ta-lr»® aed »*arB red
Tbe Kl*- -.X *«B *««>»» I'-.twS a PriUteM. OdBV
less DunMr, u4 tie e a.timer per* f-e so us
purdsw-.
PA Ml Q P D < ured Hernawsttf
s*t KMH- ruisgt, IfAKKla. ri.i»TFR
. JJto H 1-ifuw. '*
SOME VALUABLE FISHED
RARE SPECIMENS OWNED IN NEW
* OKK CITY.
A Banker's Costly Tank of Curios¬
ities—Queer Marine Freaks That
Are Bred by Amateurs.
R ARE owned a before greater and and in New valuable extent represent York than fishes to-day total ever are to
a
investment of about *>0,000. A story
beantifuWpecimens iieeuliar eharaoteristics^muv in* t^w^and'their
ial interest 1 writTT\ew be of gen
’ York cor
respondent of the 8an JWteco
p. ■ ,
In a self-sustaining aquarium in New
York, containing about nine gallons
of water, are some varieties of gold
fish of an aggregate value of nearly
81000. Clarence MeKim, the banker,
is the possessor of this valuable tank
of fish. He Las collected the specimens
at different times as they wore import
ed to or bred in this country.
About the smallest and yet most
prominent pair of fish in this aquarium
is the telescope goldfish of Japan, of
which variety there are not more than
ten specimens in New lork. They are
of a soft velvety black color, with
bright golden tints on the end of
ic sea es. , )<ny is 1 " ,ir " l "
such an extent that the hsh appears to
be almost round, while the beautiful
double tails droop far below the veu
tral fins ami give the fish the appear
ance of wearing a long train. The eyes
are as large as those found in a five
inch bull-frog and protrude beyond
the head to the same extent. These
fish are unusually intelligent and so
tame that they can be fed from the
hand. Their regular diet consists of a
small piece of fishwood wafer made of
rice, Hour and water, which is fed to
them every morning, and once a week
a small piece of earthworm After re
seivtng the latter delicacy they usually
exhibit their gratification by stretch¬
ing the dorsal fin to the utmost and
swimming round and round after each
ather, playing and curvetting among
the water plants iu the aquarium in au
amusing manner.
A few years ago, when Admiral Ara
men, of the United States Navy, was in
Japan he tried very lmrd to get a pair
of these fish for the purpose of breed¬
ing them and introducing them into
this country. He found, however,
that the Mikado was so jealous of this
rare stock leaving the country that he
prohibited any dealing in this fish.
The Japanese fish culturist who pro¬
duces this variety of fish produces
irtificially their peculiarities of shape
tad color. Originally, they were bred
from the long, slender-bodied, single
tailed gold fish, and it requires untir¬
ing patience on the part of the cultur¬
ist to develop the peculiarities which
give the fish their value. The Japan¬
ese, it is said, take the fish when
young and place them in a cylindrical
tube made of dark colored glass at
each end and with two openings of
elear glass above the oyes of the fish.
These cylinders are laid in the small
artificial ponds constructed for tho
purpose, and the water is allowed to
pass freely through the tube. The
tendency of the tiny fish is to swim
always toward the clear part of the
cylinder, and in time the eyes grow
out into the cavities made for the pur
pose. daughter of the late
The youngest
Colonel Elliot F. Shepard has in her
aquarium three fringe-tail goldfish.
One of the fish lias u brilliant carmine
color, making the ordinary American
goldfish look jtale in comp arisen with
his glistening sides. Ho presents a
beautiful appearance by gaslight when
passing from side to side in the
aquarium in search of tidbits from his
little mistress, Margherita. Besides
this fish, she has small American
striped dace, noted for their sym
metrical form and swiftness in swim
ming. They will jump fully two feet
out of tho water after a small piece of
scraped beef rolled up to look like an
earthworm and impaled on a broom
straw over the aquarium.
Master Arthur Gotthold, of West
Fifty-eighth street, raised nearly 100
three-spined sticklebacks this spring
from one pair. During a period of
ten <lays in April the larger of these
two fish busied himself in exea Siting
a largo hole in the sand of his
aquarium, carrying it a little at a time
in his mouth all the way across the
aquarium. After getting the hole
deep enough he commenced to pull
little bits of branches off some of the
water-plants and piled them up until
they formed the nest indicated, stop
ping every little while to press his
sides against the branches to cement
them in place with the mucus exuded
from tis scales. Occasionally he would
swim head down and poke his nose in
the opening to maintain the proper
shape in the nest. He then made an
opening on tho side near tho
base, iu such a way that the water
sould pass freely in at one aperture
«ml out at the other. During this
time the little builder changed in
=olor fro™ an uninteresting slab, hue
to a brilliant red all over tne chest and
AJj ^e errrr- til were jaition deposited aboJt bv
took a
an inch above the nest, with his head
toward the opening, and began to fan
vigorously .4 with his jtectoral tins fore
&V£r, h/'.’E.ltd Instea«l .“'v'mifctM."- feeding
est in snvthing else. of
rarenoasly he ate verv little of th*
fresh beef offered him ev- th-' rv morning,
Whenever he did leave n.-t for a
few seconds it wax seemingly for the
purpose of swimming w-ro** the mjusr
mm to tu»nt»-rcifuHy j>*iti-.-b hi* inr.t
teudiug mat« At tl»<: end ol tie- tort
night th*- young ti-h re h»U he*l.
bat be Mill k*}#t *p the- *> rating |*r<e
erne lift! tbt fexrt int.i the tiny • yelk
iftCS attnebed t<* the bodies of tiie fry.
by , which they are nourishing, had
disappeared. Then the young fish
swam out and were able to feed them*
selves from the small infusoria grow¬
ing nnder the leaves of the water plants.
The daughter of Mrs. Soutter owns
a very interesting pair of paradise fish,
which came from India and bear the
^^‘v"he^hVa^r fish ^heVouHs
with dark spots. The gills are
i, or ,{,*cil with * crimson, the eves
J Udv , . ■, crin^m fijuck
tlu vertical are stapes,
with ten or twelve blue
The tail is crescent in shape and is
orimson with a blue border. When
the fish is excited all its colors intensify
in brightness. The tail is covered
with small spots like the eyes on a
peacock’s tail, and the under surface
of the fish changes at times from jet
black to ne arly white.
_
SELECT MFTIYGS.
_
‘ fi0 ’ , )00 telc „ honea
Italy gets $100,000,000 a year i rom
tourists.
Cattle were introduced into Virginia
in 1609; into New England iu 10-14.
The owner of a hairless calf at Brad
j e j- ( ji e ., refused a showman's offer ol
$500 for it.
A j )OV iu Hiawatha, Kan., rides to
., n ,i f rt , m the ^ pasture on the back of
f his
A Chicago merchant 1ms exhihi- . .. .
on
turn in his show window a pair of Uvo
Japanese babies.
In the world's mints from 18.>0 to
1800 there were coined 9194 tons ol
gold and 81,2Jo tons of silver,
Several of the Aztec pyramids ex
C eed 200 feet in height. They ar«
generally composed of a mound of earth
f acei i with stone.
Ambo aithough reckoned as a pro
hict of tUe miuoral Uin ,j (ml , i„, j n
: n bftllilit rwrin fron , au extinct
of coniferous tree,
A cyclone lifted a large sheet of
water from Portage Lake. Michigan,
and earned it high in the air and hift J
a mile inland where it broke. In tho
space of a iniJe the ground was cov
en d with fishes of various sizes.
The great full of “munim” in Mar
dm and Diarbekir, Asiatic Turkey, ha»
been explained. Chemists whotexwn
med the stuff report it to be a specie.
of lichen which is not known to grow
outside of Tuuis, Morocco and Al¬
geria.
released after having the queer label
affixed to his body.
Just to show what he could do,
Tommy Flagley, of Buoyrtu, Ohio,
crawled into a twelve-inch drain pipe,
and there he stuck. The pipe and
Tommy were then soaked in oil, and in
a little while both were slippery enough
for Tommy to be drawn out.
It is believed that whales often attain
«? ~ it 2 * ”■£=
layers of lamina) forming the horny
substance known as “whalebone.”
These laminiu increase yearly, just os
the “growths” do on a tree.
When Catherine of Russia was on
the throne nn ingenious peasant pre*
sente,1 her with a marvelous watch,
which is at present being exhibited in
*St. Petersburg. In size and shape it
somewhat resembles a chicken’s egg.
When wound up to the proper pitch it
plays religious chants, accompanied
with scenic effect t.
Nectar in flowers is not lionuy.
This nectar is gathered by the tongue
of the bee and enters what is called
tho honey bag, from which it is re
gurgitated by tho bee on its return to
the hive and deposited in the honey
cell. Even then ills thin and watery,
ami does not become really honey
until tho watery parts have evaporated,
In collecting the sweets the been do
not confine themselves wholly to
flowers. They extract them also from
fruits.
- * -----
Superslitious Indians.
No one has ever been known to get
the better of the Navajo Indian in trade,
Navajos are as superstitions as they are
shrewd, and have a mortal fear of a
camera. Nothing will induce them to
pose for their pictures. The Utes are
difficult to photograph. “What are
y oU goiug to do with that?” asked a
handsome Ute on the Ban Juan River
of a Halt Lake Tribune correspondent.
“Wc want some Ute pictures for the
World’s Fair to put with the white
man s and the Navajos.” “That’s well
enough for the whiteman and tbeNav
ajos,” replied the Ute, “but it’s bad
medicine for us. As soon as the Ute
bas bls picture taken he gets sick and
dios. \\ o do not wiiut that tool in otir
country. It is bad medicine.” Noth
j ng will induce a Navajo to touch a
fish, much leas eat it. Swing a fish in
tit* face of a Navajo and the bravest
will run Who will explain?-New .
Orleans Picayune.
„ U '~ ^ ^
.
In Windham County, Connecticut.
liv.-s Hulitt Haze w-dl who‘for twenty
five years ban made his horn*- among
b»itter’pauti'.n t.Sig «ii off,
and his residence in the treetop is the
result of a bet marie in 1868 that Hor
stio Seymour would lie elected Pr<*i
lent HaxeweU’s hou»* rests in the
forks of several large limb* aboat
twenty feet from Uw ground. Tip!
nccestrie itnesiiUil has made friends
with th- b»r«L and squirrel* of tm
i«eigh*ctrh-»<el, and in etimuier they git
in and *»*tt *»f tte tr«* dwtlling si wdL
. —Atlanta CoirfNit'itNk
3mjte3 K PI
.*
Three thousand workers in the Girls
Friendly Society attended the recent
conyentioa in St ‘ 1>au1 ’ 8 ’ Loiuion ;
An English peeress is training a
corps of women gardeners to take th*
place of a present staff of men on her (
large Yorkshire estate.
Way out in the historical land of
Greece the King an,l Queen pay .
woman astronomer named Mum
Grethelm an enormous salary.
One of Mrs. Frederick Vanderbilt’*
new gowns is of pink satin, embroid
ered with lilies of the valley, very be
coming to her blonde beauty.
MrH - Royal Phelps Carroll, a No*
lork beauty, has hunted tigers in tlu
jungles of India and great bear in the
trackless woods of the North.
Mine, do Valsayre, a foreign
pjou of woman’s rights, has started t
crusade for the admission of women
writers to the French Academy.
Mrf) Ogden Mills, of New York, hai
n necklace of seven rows of jx arls heli.
in place by diamond bars; such a neck
lace only suits perfect shoulders.
The bang is gone. The brow Mint
knew thick lovelocks knows them no
Ihore. There was only one bang at
Queen Victoria s drawing room,
Mrs. Richard King owns one of the
largest ranches in the world, Jt lie
about forty-five miles south of Corpus
Christi, Texas, and contains 700,000
acres.
Mrs. C. F. Wells, of Fowler A
Wells, New York City, is the oldest
woman publisher in the world, having
been connected with the house for
over sixty years.
Miss Anne Bayard, daughter of tin
new American Ambassador to the
Court of St. James, is said to haw
1 been the most graceful and spirited
ridl , r in Washington,
Tho , iro r rt cd fr((1I1 Pogo
* province Vl.tnk.ng of Posen, of tw«
« flexion, to improve Un i,
^Jcnd. swallowed a poison,,,u
It speedily killed thorn
Mm m Ra „| oU has built up a,
EocklliII(J> it( , iU1
£ shipping 11HUlllly reacted to men
office, from which
( |he f uruill hes seamen in any desired
number.
1
A training home for women in Eng
tend teaches laundry work, the man
1 sgemunt of dairies, saddling and
harnessing horses, and the euro ol
I poultry; besides everything necessary
LyUbuseht t j-ing.
Woman’s work in India has mad*
great progress. There are now 711
?omen—foreign and Eurasian—mis
T-tSTJES
,«.MiieMargarctte A. Moody, a t( ach« 1
» P uhl,c lu South
Mass, has resigned after an uninter
fu P te<1 8er v ' c0 °f ' ,ft >” tw ”. y ' arH ' J h<
grateful , Alumni . Association gave huf
a basket containing fifty-two roses.
The development of tho loco Indus
*1 “ Ireland has been a great boot.
^ the unpovemhri poople in
broidery alone 12,000 girls are em
P»»yed, ami 1 .(MJfi.ffilO dozen hamlker
thiefs were sent lust year to tho Amen
:an mfirkot '
Mrs. Itachacl Foster Avery, who tv at
tho Secretary of tins recent Woiimn’H
f'On at , (Jneago, . that ,, . . senl
gross says s i<
“ ut 8000 personal letters in prepara
tlon meetings. , he entp oyetl
lometimes as many as we ve « snog
raphers and often worked seventeen
hours a day.
The Princess Margaret, of Con
naught, who is only eleven years old,
took her mother’s place at the recent
opening of a bazaar at Koutbsea, Eng
tend. Her father accompanied her,
»nd tho two were addressed as “Your
Royal Highnesses,” much to the de
light of the little Princess, who was
presented with a handsome casket,
Miss Mary Elms Busselle, of Now
ark, N. J., is tho Sergeant at-Arum of
the Board of Lady Managers of the
World’s Fair. She was born in New
York, and is a descendant of the French
on both sides of the house, Hh>! «tv
first elected to hold her office for the
Executive Committee only, but »ii
afterward appointed to act for the
entire Board.
Among the numerous presents show* i
ere j „ n t h <; Princess May is a magnif
icent bed cover of g. raiiiuin red satm
embroidered w ith lilies and ttmtgy
'worked in solid gold and silver. The
design is a reproduction of a <juilt Im:
lomrinx to James I., and was einbroid
ered by the associates of the Royal
School of Art Needlework, to whom
the princess has endeared herself.
^ ^ the , Ut „ f r c 8II rrections in i
jj, 6 rea Jm of fashions. Every week 1
records the revtval of some obi fancy
““
** 'told* teiAhe f»#pe’is ^
f»eli to
. , . , ft
«»»” • i-i-»t" i"— »' I
English women are, as usual, taking I
the lead in athletic games and sports.
At a rec» nt arr-h- ry rontest at c.li.d
tenha/n, one fair markawomon mwi<
seventy hits out of a possible seventy*
five. This wa* si a distance td stiff
yard*. In angling, too, f-ag idi wo 1
men sr. very auoe—fal. Q.e clly nn tu
Itnm of them nr«-now trout fishing IS
the Highlands, snd I m otter lay |w«
•f tteun captured our 1W fish.
A Musical Canine Critic.
A wonderful story of a French musi¬
cal critic is related by persons who
profess to have been acquainted with
him and to have seen him in attend¬
ance on musical performances. He
was a dog, and his name in public was
Parade. Whether he had a different
„. mo at homo was n „,r known \t
the beginning of the French revolution
he went every day to the military
parade in front of the Tnileries palace,
JR. marched with the musicians, halt
ed with them, listened knowingly to
their performances and after the pa
radc disappeared to return promptly
at parade ,me the next day
t.radually the musicians became at
tachcl to this devoted listener, i hey
““XL 1 ‘^Stations dwL^TnvitedVim to dhi’m^
."l^ant gnest! di^ov' and wm a
It was red
that after dinner lie always nttended
U l0 theatre, where he seated himself
r almv iu a corner of the orchestra and
listened critically to the music,
If a new piece was ittevod ho notic¬
ed it instantly and paid the strictest
attention. If the piece had line,
melodious passages, he showed his
joy to the best of his doggish ability,
but if the piece was ordinary and un
interesting he yawned, stared about
the theatre and unmistakably express
ed his disapproval.— Youth's Com¬
panion.
Spanish Courtesy,
In Spain a pursuit who seats himself
at a table where there are others seat
ed salutes them on sitting down and
rising. Even when seating himself iu
a park or garden, near to others, he
lifts his hat and repeats the courtesy
when he leaves,
Don’t Blame the Cook
If a baking powder is not uniform in strength,
so that the same quantity will always do the same
work, no one can know how to use it, and uni¬
formly good, light food cannot be produced with* it.
All baking powders except Royal, because
improperly compounded and made frqm inferior
materials, lose their strength quickly when the can
is opened for use. At subsequent bakings there
will be noticed a falling off in strength. The food
is heavy, and the flour, eggs hnd butter wasted.
It is always the case that the consumer suffers
in pocket, if not in health, by accepting any sub¬
stitute for the Royal Raking Powder. The Royal
is the embodiment of all the excellence that it is
possible to attain in an absolutely pure powder.
It is always strictly reliable. Ft is not only more
economical because of its greater strength, but
will retain its full leavening power, which no
other powder will, until used, and make more
wholesome food.
“German
Syrup”
Mr. Albert Hartley of Hudson,
N. C., was taken with Pneumonia.
His brother had just died from it.
When he found bis doctor could not
rally him he took one bottle of Ger¬
well. man Syrup and came out sound and
Mr. S. B. Gardiner, Clerk
Texas, with Druggist J. K. Barr, Aurora,
prevented a bad attack of
pneumonia by taking German Syrup
in time. He was iu the business
and knew the danger. He used the
great remedy—Boschee's ^German
Syrup—for lung diseases.
Unlike the Dutch Process
.1. No Alkalies
-V — oi~
Ollier Chemicals
are used In the
preparation of
W. BAKER k CO.’S
reakfaslCocoa
in 'i t chirk 49 ubwotutcly
i pure and soluble.
It bM» more tknn three 11 mss
. H Ihegtrrnt/th vt Ctxroa mixed
with gtarcb. Arrowroot or
e i ff*. — Sugar, aod la far mote eco¬
nomical, evtiing le*t than one cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and K-tsiLT
PI'.tSTKK. _
held kjlitsmt eterywkara.
W. BAKER & CO , Dorchetter, Maaa.
—
MEND TOUR OWN HARNESS
V THOMSON’S SLOTTED WITH p
vLINwH Al liupu sCI PIVPTQ Vt I Oa
-ft t" 1 **-.
g^£>M3m ’■bSir ..
r
uwtMu«a
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFC. CO.,
was tut* Maas,
Xngleside •:* HLetreat.
For l,J,e< of Women ■> waufle ireatiaetsi end
km«m! «isrwn-ftM u* iwm* *»
^
60ITRt _ CUREO nr-e KuHiXn tm r « ir-star
Even Machines Most Rest.
To the town council of Southport,
England, belongs the honor of having
reduced Sabbatarianism to an absurdi¬
ty. Not content with decreeing that
all shop-keepers shall rest from their
labors on Sunday, this delightful body
has decided that the same rule shall
apply to automatic machines. Six
days these overworked automatons may
labor, but on the seventh day they
must disregard the pennies introduced
into their interior on pain of fine or
i m prison meat.— Exchange.
TH- True l.nxatlve Principle
Ol the plants used in manuf «ct oring the pleas
ant remedy, Syrup of Figs, has a permanently
beneficial effect on the human system, while
the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral soln
tions, usually sold as medicines, are |>erm&
nently Injurious. Being well informed, you
a ill use the true remedy only. Manufactured
by the California Fig Syrup Uo.
Ymi can’t tell touch ahmtt a mnn’s religion
by the noise lie makes at camp meeting
work Many persons household arc broken Brown’s down from over¬
nr car s. Iron Bit
lers rebuilds the system, aids digestion, re¬
splendid moves excess tonic of bile, and cures children. malaria. A
for women and
When you talk to a muunbout his sins don't
stand over him with a club.
Ucware of Ointments for Catarrh That
foutntn Merrurv,
as mercury wl II surely destroy the sense of
emell and mmpletoly derange tbo whole system
when entering it through the mucous surfaces.
Hnth articles should never ini used except on
prescriptions they I rom <lo reputable physicians, as tb«
damage will is ten fold to the good you
can 'aremanufactured possibly derive from by F. them. J. Hall's Catarrh
Toledo, 1 O., contains Clieney and la & taken Co.,
internally, acting directly no mercury, the blood end
of upon In
mucous surfaces tlie system. buying
Hall's Catarrh < 'tire bo sure tnget the genuine.
It Is (akeu Internal ly, and is made iu Toledo,
Ohio, by E. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
IVSold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle.
Itat*rham*H I MIN <*tin,Indication anil conci¬
liation. Bfocham’s no other-. 25conta a Imx.
l trom Do -- ntiest sleep, You which of Sleep tbou the <letfl--»; rru.ae Peacefully flies, of thou all (lost |K-ae» tlilnus, 1 of sleep, the mlml thou
ears who
SOOTHE
THE HEARTS
OF MEN
Wearlrd with toll* of tbo da/, and reflltMt Uiernl
I for labor.**
[THE T HIGHLY TEMPERED STEEl WIREi
7S egg re sfes v
1 iMmmmm
? I 9 . 1 .
1 |
Spring
Heel
S«* ur*t* ** tartttntc *l*r p mad IM watt torfwttml
**
l*i not tm flH’i*i»e*l by ' ln-sp comm on wlr«
inilfatl jfiaiK, f»r “they wrwootwbwt they wppwwr. ‘
t.M bltilt«4i fit No. «i Wmtcb su*mU hww VurA;
So. 2 HMimlttan i'lmcc, limtaa.
For MRlt* by aUi r*U*bl«
bfBUlDfiPd ?#*#• Ifri|a Igrtnia. Tag Hfcuterv-l Irwlmark on a
N»d for Honey Savin* Printer, free.
A«l«« Tar It teraeraCtea. Beaten.
JWisKHOcinta- iioetnn, S.w York, Philadelphia,
•j < hUe*o, lialtitoore. San Krancteeo, hr no.
CKuTouia—Taunloo, wiuuuaai. Meae.; Uuxburr. Hue.. Kalrharea. Maae.. Pi/monUi. Maaa:
Mam
BVor AN l»'H*r*r IDEAL. low. FAMILY Ul 11 !>■••#••. *M ID 7cTn6| I
Ili wtlB-b., ( u»«UMU»n, Hwd —^
a f tioapl** * Ion, Offrudn (trFutb, I
•wiuiwli disorder* of LL$» bUtiumJx.
Uitrwo'i IWwete. :
|dl*«illoa I p art l>y ilniinrlrt.- (r-nti. RIPANS fullowa v. 1 (ir TARULES tiaeir aii'.lj. LymaU. u«e. Fertert tout Box :
>*t
I (trial,,TV. Ivku- eAO!-** • set,,W- :
Wul free eainplee Yerk.
Kli'ANn t II1HK AL New
Sr, r m m « • e. a, m w^ -rew.re-<
CANCER
Cl .Title «ll HOLT THE KMtL
Or une of {utinfu!. b irnlng. poioonoua plan- Dr.
lets. Can* era exclusively trravtod.
I*. B. Oreen'n Hanatoriuro. Fort Payne, Ala.
u
ATC b.Qxl AA -J*
a / __________ » -
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PlSOvSCURE iOR
■ ■ (Mnerilot aad people
B •Uoaa-e «•«. aagaor A*ve
■ «, **••*«*'' *>»« Piae • fare for
B c . __ tm u
■ tk-eewewte. It **• net Itiia
e i on- It I* aot fc» 1 M> taae
■ B liittk* aae»ee«*a ,fr» t>.
* (4 ererrwkerr •»-.
£ONMjMf' i C*.
A. Si, t .0.. i ti'tjr us, m.