Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, October 11, 1895, Image 3

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Street Oar Horse Extinct. It has been estimated that electric railways have displaced in the United States no less than 275,000 hor.-es, and the movement has not yet stopped. It is estimated by a Topeka paper tha! that many horses would require about 125,000 bushels of corn or oats a day. A decrease of 125,000 bushels a day in corn and oats consumption is enough to appreciably affect prices of those grainb. It amounts to 45,000,000 bushels a year. Farthermore, the loss of this commercial demand for these coarse grains in the cities means an enormous Ices of tonnage for the rail¬ roads—about 62,000 carloads. Money Iu the West. Returned Wanderer (gloomily:) “All this talk about money in the west is nonsense. I lost every cent I had.” Stranger : “That’s because yon didn’t manage right. I went west with only a few hundred iu my pocket, and made a fortune in three months.” Returned Wanderer: “My stars! How did you do it?” Stranger: “I bought a drug store for $500. Three months after that the state went prohibition, and I sold out for $100,000.—New York Weekly. A Silence Explained. Carry—Why was it, I wonder, my poor husband never said anything to me about remarrying? Anna Probably you were not the person he wished to warn.—Life. Steam's Up! The Moorings Cast Off. leaves Majestically the ureat ocean grey hound the dock and steams down the river outward bound. But are you, my dear sir, fallible stomachic, Hostetler’s Stomach Bit The B tier" is Staunch commercial travel hy sea travelers, nr land, emigrants, tourists, mariners. It com¬ pletely remedies nausea, biliousness dys pep-da, the kidneys. rheumatic twinges and inactivity of It is the satirical sneer or ridicule that galls and wounds. - Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cures ali Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y. The arrows of sarcasm are barbed with con tempt. _ Does Lots of Good-You Will Find It mo il You Try It. Mrs. T. J. Meador lias kind words to say about Tyner’s Dyspep-ia suffered with Remedy. dyspepsia “For many and years 1 have neivousne—. I have been taking Tyner’s than I have been for vears. It relieves me iu a few minutes or indigestion.’’ If you are suffering with indigestion or dys pep“i«. of any character whatever, it would be to your interest to try a bottle of this remedy. Price 50 cents per bottle. For sale by ali druggists. Stomachic means a medic ? ne that strengthens the stom¬ ach, or to be brief, it means Iiipans Tabules. If you are troubled with a weak stomach and cannot divest t our food u-e Ripans Tabuies. One gives relief. FITS stopped free by Da. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No tits after first dav’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise ami $a.00 trial hot tie free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila.. Pa. --------- tion,allayspain, cures windeoiic. 25c. a bottle Now is the Time to Cure Your Corns with Hindercorns. Ittakes them out perfect ly and gives comfort. Ask your druggist. 15c. We think Piso’s Cure for Consumption h the only Springfield, medicine for ills., Coughs.—J Oct. 1, 1S94. ennie Pinck Aui>, Nerves and Blood Are inseparably connected. The former depend simply, solely, solidly upon the is impure they are fed on refuse and the horrors of nervous prostration result. Feed the nerves on pure blood. Make pure blood and keep it pure by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Fills 3 s wJC. 'pHE people’s turnpike hearts road I find, to Lies through their mouths or I mistake mankind. But the surest way to get there is I say, Feed them is* 9 Buckwheat Every day. *o f World’s Fair! HIGHES: AWARD, t C T\T'DT( Vj V 1? T iX T 5 ; m j jp I* y - 1 5 ** I J- j jVj -j- J | ! 4/rA yAlviL.3 i’v ! UI I K J 5 f Tj*y It Wljf'n tllC Question • J jc 4,5 WFAK * ^ nnd TO ~ rfjbij ! | t ,r> noiimn f r b .j ? ■ • ovbuiJ <J - 3 t V * When CtVrnQ * HlC lO | * ■? J it pnOi) on StOIfiSCili^ " ■>»* j Tr’r’fl jliwp J ' £ ^ ’ ■ certe V<>rfc. g - THE SIX RICHEST MEN. HOW THEY MADE FORTUNES AG¬ GREGATING OVER $1,000,000,000. £i Hung Chang'on Too With $500, 000,000—Kings o Oil, Real Es¬ tate, Nitrate and l ea. W HO are the richest men in the world? It is doubtful whether one person in a hundred could answer this question off-hand. Certainly few would put at the top the name of Li Hung Chang, the great Chancellor of the Chinese Empire, yet that is where he belongs, After careful search and investigation, the Sunday World has arrived at the following list, which may be accepted as authentic: Li Hung Chang........ ., $500,000,000 John I>. Rockefeller...... . 180,000,000 The Duke of Westminster .. 100 . 000,000 Colonel North............ .. 100 , 000,000 Cornelius Vanderbilt.... .. 100 . 000,000 Woh Qua................ .. 100 , 000.000 $1,080,000,000 But two of these multi-millionaires inherited their fortunes. One is the Duke of Westminster and the other is Cornelius Vanderbilt. Li Hung Chang alone is in danger of losing his, but then his head might go, too, and a person without that necessary orna¬ ment wouldn’t eujov even a cracker, As viceroy of the Chinese Empire ho wag f or years in a position to accumu ] a t e W ealth 6 f every sort, With bis five hundred millions he is the owner of great rice fields and innumerable pawn shops, which are most profit¬ able. In the district where he resides he is looked upon as a veritable god. Hundreds of slaves and servants wait upon him, and except when he is *o court to visit his employer, the Emperor, he pusses his time studying. Colonel North is an Englishman. He is not a man of great refinement. When he was fourteen years old he cou iq no t read or write. Like many 0 f his sor t he knocked about the world, serving sometimes as a common sailor aboard ships which carried ma terial f r “ m the old country to the new. He T is a Yorkshire man and ar¬ rived in Chile when he was but twenty three years old. Originally n boiler riveter, he found employment in the . town _ n n c CT nfls , Pf) At At this lUls time e tho ni trate fields „ of Peru , beginning , . to were be talked of as fields for speculation He bad a talent for mechanics, and mastered " everv detail of the business. * Alter , he had , , the „ fortune . , tho ,. seen m stuff, he raised capital, invested it, and founded the fortune which is to day rated at a hundred millions. He secured control of the nitrate beds and arranged for ft water supply m that re- 6 lon • ’ a..:.- oeeing the tue vaRt, vast fortune ioriunc which w n on was to be his, be availed himself of his opportunities, and when the war be¬ tween Chile and Peru broke out found aI1 opening ° for accumulating ° more wealth. He got control of the railway, ., water and gas works and other corpo rations, which he managed most suc¬ cessfully and made paying properties. After the vast flow of wealth which tumbled into his pockets he returned to England, leaving his business in¬ terests in good hands, and then pru ceeded to enjoy himself. Although he is a chief figure at tho race-tracks now, he is too busy a man to simply sit down aud look on. He is luterest ed in many new schemes, most of which have proved more than profit¬ able. His recent defeat for election to Parliament he takes calmly. He scatters money lavishly. The Prince of Wales has become his intimate friend. His racing stables are among tho best in England. His country house in in Marvel. The Duke of Westminster, who has enormous interests in London prop erty, is not only the richest of Great Britain’s peers but also one of the best liked men in England. His pop¬ ularity with all classes has been gained not altogether in politics or iu the tangled webs of diplomacy, but iuthe bunting fields. He would as soon race with his tenants as with a lot of prince¬ lings. Once he was master of the “Glorious Cheshire Hounds,” and once won tho blue ribbon of the day. No other living man is a better judge of houses. He is over seventy years old, but is as young, apparently, as a spring chicken. His father was a Marquis, and he himself was created a Duke in 1874. His income is variously esti¬ mated at from five to seven hundred thousand pounds a year. He owns the land on which many of tlm principal markets in London are situated, Ilia ancestral seats are many aud his hos¬ pitality unbounded. John D. Rockefeller made his vast fortune, which is estimated at over .$180,000,000, out of oil as easily as the farmer’s wife gets pin money from her chickens. His golden eggs were laid by obliging refiners, who had to do as he said or go to smash. He started a refinery in Cleveland, Ohio, and organized a company which is now the Standard Oil Company, From this beginning ho has achieved immense power and wealth. He iu a strict Baptist, and has given two mil lions to the Chicago University. With his family he lives quietly in this city, a most unassuming man. In spite of Rockefeller's enormous wealth, his charities are large, and his wife and two charming daughters as well give away many thousands each year to persons who they think deserving of more than alms. Cornelius Vanderbilt is probably the thriftiest of the sons of William H., and has actually more money than he knows what to do with. His magnificent house facing Central Park ea gerly sought by almost every vis itor to this city. His daughter Ger trade is, after Miss Rockefeller, the greatest heiress in the country. The Vanderbilt money was inherited, aud the system bearing the name is snp posed to be worth near three hundred millions, of widen this lavored ton owns a third. While he is somewhat of a society inau, Cornelius Vender* hilt does not care for that kind of life, except for the pleasure it gives his family. Me finds most pleasure in the quiet of his library, lie wants to be left s4rerelv alone. He enjoys par ticulariy a month’s walk in the Swiss Tyrol or a vacation in the wilderness of the Norwegian forests. Woh Qua, the great Canton tea merchant, has a fortune estimated at hundred millions. For years the trade in tea has been centered in him. From the smallest settlement in Maine to the largest capital in Hurope, tea is everywhere a daily beverage. Whether it comes by caravan across Siberia or by boat arouud the Horn and Capo ol Good Hope, it is as much a necessity as bread. Years ago Woh Qua, who had worked himself up in the linn with which he was connected, looked ahea 1 titty years and saw the vast pos¬ sibilities of the business. Ho lives in a magniticent villa on the edge of Canton an entertains persons of all Nationalities. A good share of his money, like part ol the fortune of Iii Hung Chang, is invested abroad. His vessels are numbered by the thousand, and as a matter of fact he commands more ships than the Admiral of any principality. of other great in¬ There are, course, dividual fortunes, such as those of Baron Hirsch, the Astors and the llothsehiids. The two latter, however, are jointly owned by half a dozen members of the family, and while the^ sum itself is great, it would not make each member as rich as either of the six men mentioned above if it were to be apportioned among them.— N eW York World. WISE WORDS. What man has done, woman thinks she can do. Melody is the soul of music, while harmouy is its mind. A pretty woman iH tho prettiest thing on earth—to the eye. The more a bachelor thinks of matri¬ mony the less of it he does. A pair of soft brown eyes in a man's heart makes him blind all over. Faith iu men aud things is one of mankind’s slipperiest possessions. A wife may easily love herself enough to make her husband unhappy. Love is tho great inexplicable, and marriage sometimes makes it more so. Strong action can issue only from strong faith. Only out of certainty comes power. Sorrow herself will reveal one day that she was only the beneficiont shadow of joy. When a man is no longer able to do harm, he becomes possessed of an am¬ bition to do good. You will not learn anything if you nie not curious, and people will not like you if von are. . The honeymoon has waned when the bride stops telling things, and be gms to ask questions. It is harder work holding back when one starts going down the hiU than it is to get up when one starts going up. Women are safer in /. perilous situa turns . . and , than men, and i emergencies might be still more so il they trusted themselves more confidingly to tha chivalry of manhood. It is good to know that he who makes nobler life possible by any coil scions work of his, for other people (herein lives nobly himself, not merely in their lives, but in his own. It is not our fortune iu life, our sor¬ row, or our joy; it is tho explanation which wo give of it ourselves, the depth to which wo can see down into it that make.- our lives significant or insignificant to us. To do what we ought to do is an al¬ together higher, diviner, more potent, more creative thing than to write the grandest poerfi, paint the most beauti¬ ful picture, carve the mightiest statue or dream out the most enchanting commotion of melody and harmony. Hunting the 3Ino.se, Thanks to the fact that the moose ia rather solitary in his habits, quick¬ witted, and keen of eye, ear and nos¬ tril in detecting danger, he is not destined to he exterminated so easily as the more stupid bison, caribou aud elk. Rarely, indeed, does the hunter find more than a family of moose together, even in the dead of winter, when they “yard up” iu a given locality for days or weeks at a time. By reason of his great size, his savory flesh, his much-prized head, and the difficulty of killing firm, this animal has always been very attractive to sportsmen arid naturalists, and pot¬ hunters also. Asa result, our leadiug scientific museums now possess more and finer mounted specimens of this species than of any other large game animal of America except the bison. The museums of Washington, New York and the University of Kansas possess magnificent groups that are lasting monuments to the greatness of Aices Americanus, and a credit co our country besides.—St. Nicholas, The Avalanche. The guide gave the wor 1 to leave the channel of ice and take to the rocks on the side, for a snowball or two had rolled down from above, and he was afraid more might follow. Scarcely had we got out of our trough and up on the crags, when down came an avalanche with a vengeanc -, an l we were within twenty feet of a tre* mendous discharge of thousands of ton- of snow and ice, which swept down the track that we ha 1 just ascended, We were perfectly sa f e, but somehow the half liiss, half roar remained in my e»rs for some time; and for many nights afterward, when indigestible suppera produce 1 evil dreams, the ava lanehe was snre to figure in them.— Blackwood’s Magazine. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report ABSOLUTELY PURE FOR SUPERSTITIOUS WOMEN. Thc-se may be interesting to super¬ stitious women: Monday’s child is fair of face. Tuesday’s child is full of grace. Wednesday’s child is born for woe. Thursday’s child has far to go. Friday’s child is loving and giving. living. Saturday’s child must woik for a But the child that is born on the Sabbath day, Is bonny and happy and wealthy iu .1 gay. Of the mouth in which one is born it is said: If a girl is born in January, slie will be a prudent housewife, given to melancholy^ If in February, but of good humane temper. aud affec¬ a tionate wife and a tender mother. If in March, generous nnd impul¬ sive, but apt to be headstrong. If in April, inconsistent, not very intelligent, but likely to be good-look¬ ing. If in May, handsome, amiable and likely to be happy. If in June, impetuous, will marry early and be frivolous. If in July, passably handsome, but with a sulky temper. If in August, amiable and practical, and likely to marry rich. If in September, discreet, affable and much liked. If in November, liberal, kind and of a mild disposition. If in December, well-proportioned, fond of novelty and extravagant. llloodstunps. Almost every jewel 1ms a supersti¬ tion of some sort attached to it, and the bloodstone is not wanting in this particular. The story is told of it that at tho time of tho eruciiixiou some drops of blood fell on a piece of dark green jasper that lay at the foot of the cross. The crimson crept through the structure of the stone, and this was the parent of this beautiful jewel. Tho dark red spots and veinos were supposed to represent tho blood of Christ,and many wonderful properties were attributed to the stone. It was thought to preserve tho wearer from dangers, to bring good fortune and to heal many diseases.—Now York Ledger. a Happy Woman, At last I am* well and happy woman a^ain; mauks toMcKlree’s Wine of Oardul. 1 have trom womb trouble Ol the most horrible kind. Twelve years x went to the San Antonio Hospital, where they performed an operation, hut it left me in a worse state than ever. 1 went to Dr. Kliufs ley and Dr. D. V. Young, but they nave me li “ le wl ,ef After spending $iK.oo I was not - able to . 1 leave my bed, and most of the time 8U(terea jM to C quaU thou.anddeaths. On , ll0 tenth of la(jt October my friend Mrs. Ste veug> ft( i vis ,,,i me to try McKlree’s Wine of Cardui. The first bottle did me good, ami I *rot more, aud to-day I am a new woman ; am able to do all iny cooking and home-work, am running a boarding-house and doing all the work myself. I still use the Wine, and always keep it In the house—it-suved my life. Mits. M. J. Meyekh. Appleby, Texas. How’s ThU! Wi* offer One Hundred Dollars Howard for any case of Catarrh that, cannot be cured by Hall’s t ’atm”h (hire. K. ,1. Cheney <V Co., Toledo, b\J. O. We, flic under-iftnccl, havtt kfmwri believe him <!lr j - uey for the la/d, 15 years, and per¬ fect! v honorable iii all bu-dnes* tianf-H' t ions and financially able to carry out any obliga¬ tion made by their firm. WekxA Tiiuax, Wholesale Druggets, Toledo, <)hjo. Wald iso, Kiss as & M ahvin, Wholesale dl’s Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. internal]v, Il ( atarrh Cure is taken tirur directiv upon the blood end iimcou ‘•ur'aces of t he sy- »eni. Test imon als sent f ree. Price, 75c. per bottle. , y old by all Druggists. Jh«rv 'Mother MioiiJiI Mwnyn Have a bottle of Parker’s (iingerTonic. Nothing so g* o i for pain, weakness- ,coldsand tdeeple -hih-ss Out of sorts \J —and no wonder. Think of the con -K dition of those poor women who have to wash clothes and clean house in the old-fashioned way. They're $ m x tired, vexed, discouraged, out \ i of sorts, with aching backs as / ^ 'N \ their and They aching wits. must hearts. Why be out don’t of J they use Pearline? That m / is what every woman who at==7-j41n ^ values her health and strength ' is coming to. And they’re coming to it now, faster than ever. Every day, Pearline s fame grows and its patrons increase in number. Hundreds of millions of packages have been used by bright women who want to make washing easy. 481 il Fertilizers for Fall Crops should contain a high percentage of Potash to insure the largest yield and a permanent enrichment of the soil. Write for our ••Farmers’ Guide,” a 142 -page illustrated book. It is brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and will make and save you money. Address, GERMAN KALI WORKS, jj Nmmo Strwt, New York. The Lust Cuban Rebellion. In 1868 Mio Cubans made an effort to secure tlieir iml'ependeuce, and their struggle lasted about ten years. They were not defeated, but were induced to yield by promises of reform, which the Spanish government has never carried out, and this fact is the leading cause or the present formidable revolution. In the last rebellion Cespedes started with ft force of 147 men, and,in two days he -van at the head of an army of •1,000. In a month he had 12,000 men and had captured several important towns. * In the first three years Spain sont 100,000 soldiers to the island and eighty-two armed vessels, and yet tlio insurgents were able to hold their own. At the end of three years the Spaniards had lost 68,000 men against 13,000 on the Cuban side in battle, but it should be stated that 43, >100 Cubans were ar¬ rested, many of whom died in prison. The Spaniards murdered thousands without regard to ago or sox. Mexico and the Mouth American re¬ publics recognized the Cubans as bel¬ ligerents, and in this country a Cuban league was organized with tho gover¬ nors of all the states except one as vice presidents. Among the atrocities committed by the Spaniards was the murder of twelve students who were charged with desecrating the grave of a Spanish writer. Tho Spaniards also captured tho Virgiuius, which sailed under United States colors to aid the insurgents, and fifty-three of the crew and passengers wore shot at Santiago, including (lio commander, Captain Fry. Others would have been shot but for the threat of the captain of a Brit¬ ish gunboat to bombard the city. The present rebellion appears to be even more promising than the one in 1868, and it, is doubtful whether Spain can sond a force strong enough to suppress it. vaT, i it iv ,. eS ■ HB ro i , orm enjoys Both the method and results •when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to tho taste, and acts gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on tho Kidneys, the head¬ sys¬ tem effectually, dispels colds, aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. only remedy Syrup its Find of Figs is tho of ever pro¬ duce!., pleasing to the taste and ac¬ ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from tho most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it tho most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug¬ who gists. Any reliable druggist may not have it on band will pro¬ cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL . LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N Y. r Atlanta ^poSlTfO?T C'7)IRE^TORy6> A List of Reliable Atlanta Bus iness Houses where visitors to the Great Show will be properly treated and can pur¬ chase goods at lowest prices. STILSON & COLLINS JEWELRY CO •9 55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Ga. ICverythtug in the Jewelry an<t Silver Line at Factory Prices. PHILLIPS & CREW CO. 37 Peachtree Street. STANDARD Pianos and Organs, SHEET MUSIC, MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. FiSEMAN In 15 and 17 Whitehall BROS. Street. 5 ATLANTA, GA. --ONE PRICE CLOTHIERS, Tailors, Hatters and Furnishers. BOWMAN BROS., FINE MILLINERY, •78 Whitehall Street. OUR KALI, I.MI'OKTATTONS ARK NOW IN. LEADERS OF FASHION, LATEST STYLES, LOWEST PRICES. D TO AVOID THIS TJSE 0 N TETTER8HE O 11 1 The only painless ami ]mrml»n I. ▼ I CUitit for the worst- tyi»H of Ke/.eina, w GC Tetter, Ringworm, face, ugly rough ed patch* UOttll). *T m on on the crust Ground itch, chafes, chaps, pim¬ C ples. Poison from ivy or Bend poi-on oak. l In short all nellies. 50c, in H tnn,ps nr cash to J. T. Hlmptrine, _Siivumifth, (in,, lor one box, ii your _ druggist don’t keep it. You will find II at i Ham. 1). Tynkk’h, Atlanta. AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY m CT\ AND *Ym U RHUBARB mu A. Dysentery, — FOK— Flux, : nC Cholera Alorhmu v; Cholera, Diiirrhuea —and — Sum hi or ( iimpininh Try It. Price 25c., SOc. f $1.00. For Sale by DriigtsiHI m or wrll« to J. Stovall Smith t .MANUKA* ”1 IKING I’ll A KM A l '1ST. 102 Whitehall St., Horner Mitchell, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. SULLIVAN Sc CRICHTON'S I AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND. The in-fit, and cheaimut BuginenaCollege in America. 'I’ime nliort. Inulruotion thorough. 1 Penmen. Big demand fur gruduufes. Oatulogue free HI' 1,1.1 V A V \ ( Hl< IlfOA, KUer llltlg., AtlnnM. tin. IF YOU Buy YOUR SHOES FROM Blooflwortl Sloe Co. They will give you pleasure livery minute you wear them. 14 WliltoliAXI ati oot. SAW NULLS CORN AM) KKEI) MILLS. Water Wheels and Mav Presses. kbst in ' 1111 . marki-:t M.-Lfinrli llil! Min. to., Itfiii, AlLtntn. fin, ID Best Winter APPLE For the South. IHihoih Sovernht r", keerx Dll May. All vHiiutiuH Fruit iitul Nut Trees, Drape Vines 4 . IT- rrv PlanlH, Koho«, (>rnniuen tal rl untH. Send ior new catalogue free. W. D. BEAT IE, Atlanta, Georgia. 1895 Edition. Just Issued. A Credit-Book and Complete Director? OK Til Y. Book, Stationery and Printing Trade in the United Stnt.es and Panada. With Capital and f’mlit !iatiiij<‘. street nddrutv- iji a!< i it*es. Subseript ion, $V> per vi*ar. For p >rticuiars, addreHM VV. D. r. WFV.MOl TH, Manner. 156 Fifth Avenue, New Y«>rk City. GOOD POSITIONS SKCURKI) ItV STUDKM’S Business Firms Supplied wi Help Richmond’s Commercial College, ({NlabliKtird I S H l. Send for Fatalogue savannah, a a. MONEY !N PECANS. MONIED MEN wow AMBITIOUS CLERKS Ih your oppurtuni y i’• to invest iit tils 4U LnryuNt Fi-irtiii ifrclixril HM* VV orfib i>t «lmr l just coining .Hint* ii. into lieu bearini;. in fuil ben ••’fill an ml absolute «•t»l«l * t or Iree prospactu* J«.A.>'Viii€l»-n,Brownwc« giving reference# •i full partied ars -I 5 Q ^ DAY SiJRE*r!H \Jf‘ini wo win aIiow you how to nt#h in .k” tii»- a wort: day . and .Qwduu-ly touch you *ur*-; free wo lur- >ou work in the locality wher*- you live; fiend I8y« ur ml drees and we will explain th»- buHinetM fully; rementoer w< guar arit»-‘-a clear prodc ot ior>-vtry -ay’s iiOiAL HAAtrACTlftlMi w- rk: amohltely sur* LB, write Detroit, at oner. QUR’aM, Box Mich. PARKER’C 2 * HAIR BALSAM CIeai:«rj ani beautifies the hair. Promote# a Ii ixuriant growth, m Never Fall s to Bestore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures era tp 1 t »•••> Sl hair tailing. 50c. a ind * 1 HU at DruggUi N. U..... .. .Forty-one, ‘9.5 KmA Best Cough Syrup. Tastes GouSL Uifi in tiuiQ. Sold by drocrlcta. :>;CO NS U MPT fGHsl