Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, October 18, 1895, Image 3

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Any Convenient Night. "Lucy,” her said au A „e gi .uy to daughter, in a severe tone, “you must not let George remain again as i'” 1 ? as he stayed last night. It must have been nearly midnight when he left.” “But, mamma, we were watching the eclipse.” “Watching the eclipse ! What non¬ sense! The eclipse-occurred ou Tues¬ day night.” “I know-, mamma, but George could not come that night. He had to work.” —Pitts’,,urg Chronicle. --t ■ ' - , —_ A Silent Appeal f»r lirlp. When your kidneys and bladd r are in¬ active they are making a silent app *al •’ fur help. Don't disregard hnt with Hostetter’s 4 Stomach Bi it, They tiers safely impel them inactivity. a e in imme iate danger, and it i-s too - hardines to shut one’s eyes to ttie fact. Be wise in time, too, if yon experience mani¬ festations of dyspep-ia.ma'aria, rheuma i-m, constipation before or nerve trounle. The Bitters a meai adds zest to it. The devil dreads nothing so much as charity and patience. Dr. Ki mer’s Swamp Hoot enras all Pamphlet Kidney and Bladder troubles. and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y. There is a thousand times more goodness aud love in the world ihan m u imagine. When Nature Needs assis ance it may be best to ren’er it promptly, but one should remember to use even the most perfe t remedies only when needed The b- st and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs manufa tured by the Cali¬ fornia Fig Syrup Co. A man’s nature ruus ei’Ler t b herbs’ cr weeds. . • _ It is So Easy m Remove forms With Hinder corns, we wonder so mmy •• dure them. Get it and see how nicely it takes' hem off. How ia it with You?—Do yon .llauticate Your Food Thoroughly? A little attention to tnis mailed is well re¬ warded. Eating, just forth** sake of it, will cut life short by many a year. Eat to live. Look we 1 to oiges ion. Ir your sto nch is weak and unable to properly care tor the foot! eaten, the u*e of Tyner's Dys; epsia Remedy will work wonders. It benefits from the first do e. A po-i ive cure for every form of in !i gestion. JPri> e 50 cents per bottle. For sale fcy all druggists. Deafness Cannot be Cured by lof'al anpl cations, a they cannot reach the diseased coi tion of the ear. There is only one wav to cure Deafne-s, and that is by consti¬ tutional reme lies. Deafness is caused hy an inflamed condiCon of the nlacohs lining of the Eti tachian Tube. When tins tube itets inflam d you have a rumbling sound or im¬ perfect hearing, and when it is entirely c'o eu Deafness is the result, and un e-s the inflam mnti n can he taken out and this tube ‘re¬ stored to it’ normal condition, lo a ring wil he destroyed forever; nine > ftses out 1en ate caused by c tarrh, which is nothing hut an in¬ flamed condit on of the mucous -urfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case o' Deafness (caused by catarrh) I hat can¬ not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, fr -c. ' 0. _ F. J. Chi n y & Co., loledo, , E^Sold by Druggists, 75e. THE WEEKLY JOURNAL. Atlanta, Ga. It contains all tlio news of t lie world with a bright collection of miscellaneous stories, notesof travel, eu-., etc., and will he sent to any nddre-s for fi'ty cents a year. The Juve¬ nile Journal, a I right children’s ; aper. is in¬ cluded with each i opy of the Weekly without extra charge. Send for-pccinten copy. Ad¬ dress The Journal, Atlanta, Ga. At The OHlce you may have a sudden hilio'is attack or headache when it is impossible for Ripans you t > Tab- eave your work. If you have a ta x of ule- in your desk a tabule taken at the first symptom will relieve you. There is Pleasure and Prnflt and sati-faction in a atieg trouhle-ura- and painful ills by using Parker’s GingeV Toni FITS-topped free No by Du, Kline’s dav’s Gp.kat Nerve Restorer. liisafter ti r-t me. Marvelous euros. Treatise and $2.<X)triul bot¬ tle free. Dr. Kline, 031 Arch St„, Phila.. Fa. Mrs. Win - ow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething*, softens the tfums, reduces inflamma¬ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a botti * I believe Pi-o’s Cure for Consumption saved my hoy’s life last summer.-Mr-. Allle Douglass, LeRoy, Mich , Oci. *0, ‘1)4. If afflicted wi h sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬ son's Eve-water.Drncirists se! at 25“ per hotrte. Fail filedicin© Ia fully as important anil as benolicia! as Spring Medicine, for at this .season there is great danger to health in the varying tem¬ perature, cold storms, malarial germs, prev¬ alence of fevers and other ‘diseases, All these may be avoided if the blood is kept pure, the digestion good, and bodily health vigorous by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills cure all liver ;iLs, bilious¬ ness, headaches. 23c. Increase Your imnme tree book. Comstock, Hughes « Co. 55 Broadway, N. - • The Greatest Hedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS » I Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certifi¬ cates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affeeted it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them ; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped.and always disa- pears in a week after taking it. F. -ad the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause n ish feelings at first of diet ever neces^arv. Eat th best you can get. a.id en ugh of i Dose, one table?] onr ia water a, oei tiiue. Sold by all A N. L*..... .........Forty-mo, u. THU INJUR UK IN BATTMt. EXPERIENCE OP A STJR-SEOH uJEr TNG THE CIVIL WAS. How Some Patients Behaved Under the Knife—Different Degrees of Nerve Displayed by Soldiers. A N old army surgeon says in the Detroit Free Press: “I well remember the first bat¬ c* tle I witnessed and the first operation 1 performed. I do not difli- hes¬ itate to say that I felt a little dent, nor do I hesitate to say that the cold chills ran up and down my back when the minie balls whistled close to where the field hospital wms estab¬ lished. This was at the battle of the first Bull Bun, when the Union forces had over 40fl killed aiul more than 1000 wounded. One soldier in partic¬ ular I remember, for be was my first patient. He was a perfect specimen of manhood, broad chested, muscular and well developed. A shell had struck him ou the right arm just be¬ low the elbow, shattering the bones and necessitating amputation. He was laid on the bare earth—we had no op¬ erating table—and a sponge saturated with ether placed at his nostrils; but he objected very energetically: ‘No, doctor,’ said he, *1 won’t be made in¬ sensible. Cut off the arm, if you must, but I want to see you do it.' He had liis way, and during the operation he never uttered a murmur cr scarcely mqved a muscle. When all was over he coqlly thanked me and said ho would go to the front again, with the left arm, if he recovered, if the Gov¬ ernment needed him. “It was an interesting study for me to observe the difference in soldiers when suffering irom wounds before being treated by the surgeon, aud while on the operating table. Some were cool aud seemingly indifferent to pain, while others would beg to be made insensible, and often those who were slightly hurt made more noise than those that were fatally injured. Two serious cases out of the many I dealt with occur to me. I remember them more readily, perhaps, because they were Michigan men, with the rank of Captain I believe. You re¬ member the battle of Winchester, September 19, 18G4? Yes? Well, ou the morning of the iight the cavalry brigade to which I was attached made an attempt to effect a crossing at Burns’s Ford, some miles below Win¬ chester. The hospital had been es¬ tablished in a little piece of woods on the east side of the Opequau, near the ford. Three times did the brigade try to cross before success crowned their efforts, the sharpshooters on the bluff opposite being very bard to dislodge. In a short time the wounded began to come in, some slightly and others se¬ verely hurt. Among the latter was one of the offioers I have mentioned. A sharpshooter’s bullet had struck him on the point of the elbow, pass¬ ing up aud emerging about three inches from the shoulder, shattering the bone in its passage. It was a bad wound, and a difficult one to deal with, the arm having to be cut off so near the shoulder. However, 1 de termined , , to . do , the best - , I T could, i and ,„i soon the patient was ready for tha knife. I wanted to give him chloro lorm, form but Dut lie he would would have nave none none ol oi it u. lie assured me that his nerves were good, aud that he needed nothing to help .t_. him bear the pain. I was afraid of him, , but . at las., concluded to let him have his way. He was true to his word. During the entire operation h. nm , »«.,*! . groan no, m., 1 . any intimation that he suffered in ths least. This was the best exhibition of nerve nerve J j. bad nau ever ever seen seen in in mv my armv army practice, not excepting the one I have ureviously mentioned. “The other officer alluded to was of a different type, but not a whit less brave than his companion in arms. He was brought in later on with a gunshot wound in his arm, which had shattered the bone and necessitated amputation. When ho arrived at the hospital ho was struggling like a mad¬ man to release himself from the at¬ tendants who had placed him in tlio ambulance. I saw at onco lhat the pain of his wound had made him crazy, and, directing the attendant to lay him on the operating table, I soon had him under the influence of an an¬ esthetic. He was very stubborn and it required a good deal of chloroform to quiet him, but finally he succumbed and I cut off his arm. When he came to his senses he scarcely seemed to realize what had happened. He iook,.i ot. me, .t hi,».i finally it came to him that his arm had been amputated and he could light no more lor many a day With W ith a sudden bound he leaped from the table, aud seizing a carbine that lying s on the ground near by, he start ed on a run in the direction . Of - the .. firing in front. He ran like a deer for a short distance, when the pre vious loss of blood told on him and he euddenlv collapsed an l fell to the earth. "He was picked up by the at tendants, brought back, placed io au ambulance and started on the way to ! the rear, There’s the difference be tweeu two wounded men.” j | To Float a Balloon. j A French inventor has oerisel _ an apparatus for floating a balloon bas ket if it should fall it to tue sea. A I box of membrane which can be infiat ed by simply touching a button is at¬ j tached to the basket and is capable of buoying two persons.—Atlanta Con¬ stitution. Rubber Police Club*. The Police Commissioner?, of New with a newly invented police club. It is said that this c ue w;il knock a nun as quick as the pld wooden one, without clanger ol fracturing his skull. Remedial Foods. __ This list of food remedies compiled by The Housekeeper is well worth con¬ ^deration and preservation for refer enoe: ’Celery is invaluable as n food for those suffering from any form of rhen mutism; for diseases of the uerves aud nervous dyspepsia. Lettuce is useful to those suffering from insomnia. Water cress is a remedy for scurvy. Peanuts for indigestion ; they are es¬ pecially recommended for corpulent diabetes. Peanuts aro made into a wholesome aud nutritious soup, aro browned aud used ns coffee, are o^ten as a relish, simply baked, or are pre¬ pared aud served as salted almonds. Salt to check bleeding at the lungs, and as a nervine and tonic for weak, thin blooded invalids. Combined with hot water is useful for certain forms of dyspepsia, liver complaint, etc. Onions are almost the best nervine known. No medicine is so useful in cases of nervous prostration, and there is nothing else that will so quickly re¬ lieve aud tono up a wornout system. Onions are useful iu all cases of coughs, colds and influenza; iu consumption, insomnia, hydrophobia, scurvey, grav¬ el and kindred liver complaints. Eat¬ en every other day, they soon have n clearing aud whitening effect on the complexion. Spinach is useful to those suffering ing with gravel. Asparagus is used to induce perspi¬ ration. Carrots for sufferers from asthma. Turnips for nervous disorders aud for scurvy. Baw beef proves of great bonefit to persons suffering from consumption. It is chopped fine, seasoned with salt, and heated by placing it in a dish iu hot water. It assimilates rapidly and affords the best nourishment. Eggs contain a large amount of nutriment in a compact, quickly avail¬ able form. Eggs, especially the yolks of eggs, are useful in jaundice. Beaten up raw with sugar are used to clear and strengthen the voice, With stigar and lemou juice tlio beaten white of egg is used to relievo hoarseness. Honey is wholesome, strengthening, cleansing, healing and nourishing. Eresh ripe fruits are excellent for purifying the blood and toning up the system. As specific remedies, orangos are highly recommended for rheuma¬ tism. A NEW LEASE OF LIFE. IN GOOD HEALTH AT SKVENT1T THKKK YEARS (IV AGE. nilsR Cornwall’* Wonderful* Recovery of Health—lSecame Well in Two Months After an IUiiezn of Six Years. From the Register, New Haven, Conn. In this rapid ago of ours when so many men and women are old at fifty, one who has lived three-quarters of a oentury, aud then, after debility and suffering, regains health and vigor, must he regarded with a feeling akin to wonder. A New England lad ..... y h “» been / 0UQd who has had this eexperence. shire ^ the farmer family on of the Clarence MerRlflu WllUama road, Cheshire, a Ohe ot ljvBH Miss 0oruelia Cornwall, a lady seventy-three years of ago. For several years Miss Cornwall's health has been de¬ ollning very rapidly, caused by a (tenoral <le blllty _ Her friends feared that the respected ] ft dy had not lorn* to liv«i hut a kind Proyl denee directed the aged lady, and in a news advertisement Mias Cornwall read about Dr. Williams Pink Pills—a few boxes 0 f w hioh she procured at onoe, and with the result that ts best told in her own words, “About six years ago,'’ Miss Cornwall be forent parts of my body. My condition gradually grow worse until- my limbs were could apparently longer unable to hear stairs my without weight, theas- and I no go up gjatanoe of some one. “f consulted physicians who prescribed medicines for my blood. Those I continued to take for several months, but without any efteot. The sense of feeling in my lower limbs seemed to be leaving me, and I began to fear that it was hopeless to look for a ou re. I was still suffering terribly from the pains through my body, when I chanced to read the story of a cure that had been effected with the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pa e People. I discovered that the town druggist here had none on sale, so I sent immediately to the headquarters in Bohenec tady, N. Y., and secured two of the boxes of the pills. “Last December I commenced using the pills regularly, and a month after I had been taking them, I felt greatly benefited by their use. The feeling in my limbs came back again, and in two months I was able to go about the house as 1 had been accustomed to a year before. Now, as you cau see. I am enjoying good health. The pallor in my face was removed by the pills. A number of my friends in the neighborhood were com¬ plaining of symptoms somewhat Birnilnrto my own, and I recommended that they take Dr. Williams’ Fink Fills. They did so, and take the pills, though there is not so much necessity for them at present. As Williams a purifier of the rdood, ’ 1 consider the Dr. pjnk pills a wonderfal m e licine.” Fink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will he sent post paid on receipt of price, (50 cents a ^°, x .'? h ' x tl0xhli for aft F ,r sold in hulk, l or by the 100) byaddressing Dr. Wjlllwns > Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. The Gramophone. Thegramophone, a talking machine, much simpler and cheaper than the phonograph, invented by Dr. Berliner, the famous electrician, will soon be put upon the market. Its record of human speech and of music, it is said, are indestructible, and can be cheaply multijjlied to an indefinite extent by simple mechanical means. What it has to say or sing can be heard all over an ordinary-sized house. So devoid of complexity is its construction that the complete apparatus will cost only $18, and a smaller edition intended for the use of children will be sold for go. The Private Secretary. “Henry!” “Yes, your excellency !” “A great deal of curiosity ia mani fested anout my wishes in regard to a “Henry, I wonder why people do no * as ’ < whether or not you would lik* a second term? Pittsburg telegraph. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Powder Bakins iss_ _ :53 ABSOLUTELY PURE A Good Law. The New York law in regard to the maintenance of secrecy by telephone employes as to messages passing over the wires went into effect September 1st. It Inquires the stuff of telephone companies to be as secretive regarding the nature of their business as are the operatives who handle telegraphic messages. A person who either wrongfully obtains or attempts to ob¬ tain any knowledge of a telegraphic or telephonic message by connivance with a clerk, operator, messenger or other employo-nf a telegraph or telephone company, or, being such operator or other employe wfA wilfully divulges to anyone the person for whomitwus intended the contents or the nature of a telegraphic or telephonic message iu trnsted to him for transmission or de livery, or of which contents he may in any way have become possessed, is punishcjl months’ imprisonment, by a fine of $ 1,000 both. or The six or same penalty attaches to neglect or refusal to transmit or deliver messages, except wdimtliey are intended for ille¬ gal purposes. Long distance telephone lines uTf being so rapidly extended aud the substitution of the telephonic for the telegraphic message that mch an excellent protection as the New York law provides should bo univer¬ sally provided. The telephone com¬ panies would do wisely in promoting the adoption of such law in every state where their lines extend. Not Acquainted. “I suppose whenyoumarry thednko you will go at, onco to his homo in Eng¬ land with him?” “Dei:? me, no! I wouldn’t trust, mysel^rway over there with a man I know do little about.”—The Wnter- Timely Warning. r-'ja. The great success of the ohocolate preparations of *10 the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established riOi in 1780) has led to the placing on the market many misleading and unscrupulous imitations |||^C)f their name, labels, oldest and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the and largest manu- 1 SR Mm facturers of pure and continent. high-grade No chemicals Cocoas and I Chocolates on this are IB1 [11 used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, tha genuine Walter Baker 8t Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. The Catalogue Is sent by mail on receipt of 10 cents in .stamps or money. Seasonable Bargains sounds like overcoats or household goods, but this time ’tis Guns, Pistols, Revolvers, Bicycles, &c. Johnny gets his gun about this time of year, and to know just wbat to get and WHERE TO GET IT, is why the Lovell Arms Co. put out their New Mammoth Catalogue. It will tell you lots of things you knew before—lots that you didn’t know. It’s a sure money saver for a bargain hunter. It says nothing about a few Second-hand Bicycles, but they are bargains too and should be applied for at once. JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., BOSTON, MASS. Sole U. S. Agent lor “STAR” AUTOMATIC I’APliR FASTliNKR and WILLIAMS TYPK WKITLIf. Agents wanted in every city and town for the Lovell Diamond and Kxcel line of bicycles. I Tlie One Crop System <pf farming gradually exhausts the land, unless a Fertilizer containing a Idth percentage of Potash is used, better crops, a better soil, and a Ijirger bank account can only then be expected. Write for our “Farmers' Guide,” a 142 -page illustrated book. It i * brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and vill make and save you money. Address, GERMAN KALI WORKS, Na„.n Sir«t, New York, germ=life 7|io doctors tell us, now-a-days, that disease germs are clotj jeverywhere; in the air, in the water, in our food, ies, money ; that they get into our bodies, live them .thrive and grow, if they fin'l anyth ing to thrive on. Consumption is the destruction of lung-tissue by gerihs where the lung is too weak to conquer them. The j remedy is strength—vital force. Scott’s Emulsion, with hypophosphites, means the adjustment It fighting of the lung strength with 1 to overcome in germ-life. favor. '" * germ the odds our The ie tiny little drops of fat-food make their way into : the system and re-fresh and re-invigorate it. Whether you SUCCCed with it or not depends on how fpoi live. aatart 1 lie shortest thc germs Way had, to and health how IS carefully the patient you One. can The gain is often slow. 90 cent* and 51.00 SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemist*. New York Economy. It is a duty to be economical. At the great feeding of the 5,000 from bread, miraeuldusly furnished, the Christ commanded that all the frag¬ ments be saved.' .JJe was more careful than many a servant who will throw away slices of good bread-and many a slatternly housekeeper who will- let bread mould, rather than take caro of it, although, the household provider may be breaking his back and heart iu trying to keep the wolf from tlio door; but the Lord of all who could produce bread by the ton with a prayer, saved all the pieces. Economy is a duty, a very important duty; it should bo taught to all and be practiced by all. —Womankind. Your Poor Tired Husband. He has worked hard all week. Let him sleep late Sunday mornin(, then treat him to a breakfast of Cakes. r A^ta^POSIT'O^ G^IREr^TOR)-^ 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. $TILS0N i COLLINS JEWELRY CO ■ J 55 Whitehall St., Atlanta. Ga. Everything In the Jewelry and Silver Line ut Factory Prices. PHILLIPS & CREW CO. 37 Peachtree Street. STANDARD Pianos and Organs, SHEET MUSIC, MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. FISEMAN 13 and 17 Whitehall BROS., 7 W Street, ATLANTA, GA. ----ONE PRICE — CLOT IIIER.S, Tuilors, Hatters and Furnishers. FINE MILLINERY. 78 Whitehall St. Atlanta. Ga. D TO AVOID TIIIH TTJBUE3 0 TETTERIhlE i Tlio only painlftM find barinle*i C T ctJKK for tho worst, typo of Eczema, R I Tottor, Ringworm, the face, ugly crusted rough paloh- scalp. H oh on M n __ Ground itoh, ohai’es, chaps, pim J Ip ' pioH. III short Poison ALL from itchkh. i?y or Send pohon Me. oak. in |#l|Htaii,p<i ||vnntiah, or cash Ga., to for J. one T. ho*, Shuptrine. if your driiKKiaL uon’t koop it. You will llnd if at ( 'has. t). Tymch'm, Atlanta. AHOftfl EXTRACT ATIC BLACKBERRY e ANI) i- RHUBARB mm Dysentery, —FOR— Flux, < liolrru dlorbuM, riiolom, IMnrrliuea —and— summer I'omplaiun Try It Price 25c., BOc., $1.00. For Sale by Drtig'/istsor write to J. Stovall Smith, MANUKA! TURING PHARMACIST. 102 Whitehall St., Corner Mitchell, At LAN TA. GEORGIA. SULLIVAN & CRICHTON’S AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND. The bf»Ht anil cheapest Business College In America. Time short. Instruction thorough. 4 Penmen. Big demand for graduates. Catalogue free HIT,I,IVAN U minlNM, KU« r Hide., Aflanla, «a. For Style, Wear and Comfort, "\F i»lt Sloe Co. IjlMiM 14 WhitohalX St. SAW MILLS CORN ANI» FEKI) MILLS. Wutor Wheels and Hay Presses. BEST IN THU MARKET Drl.nnnli IIIH Ally. < <>., :l!K>. Ailnntn. 41 a. ACME CHURN, $4.00 Best Butter, Shortest Time, Least Labor. King Hardware Co. g ATLANTA. GA. 7/ r Iff" Host Stores und Ranges. Diwent prices. Best Winter APPLE For the South. UipenH November; kevps till May. All varieth-M Fruit and Nut Trews, Gr.tj e Vim* , Ji*i rv Plan'M, Homch. Ornamfn lal Pl'Giti*, A". Semi ior new catalogue free. W. D. BEATIE, Atlanta. Georgia. osbouktb^s S^mmedd Scliool of ."'iliortlinncl ai <;i st\. No text books u»od. Actual bu«ta»M from 'lay of untiring. I?Udin«->H p.npor.d. coiieg^ curr-noy aa 1 pint d<* a-nd. Ivtn l hundsome.y illustrated cat» ogue. Board cheap. K. R. fare paid to A-igasta. ? ASTHMA POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC Gives ruhftt in FIYI minutes. Send I for a f'WEJEtrial package. Bold by 8 Lnurjrii'tR, One Box sent powtpata i n receipt of $ 1 . 00 , 8lx bo 00 . Address TUOH. iOl'HAX, PHILA., PA. %£p ? ZJunil Q k DAY sURE.ujio^ how ".a h you to m*k« work day; absolutely sure: wa fur¬ nish the and teach you fro* you work iu lha locality where you fire; U8 y ,, ' ar *'-‘ ,r *‘** ’id w« will exploits r Mm tha bi:Kln4.«e fully; remoui rr w* kuslT> w ^ oateeacirar or ai: >. %s itirerery ay's D. T. HOfiLAV, H w rk; Bb«olDtti|j IT, DLTKGIT. M*rr ; write JIHKIGAll. ot orco. 4r<aKPr , l(ox PARKER’S v? HAIR BALSAM ? a Clean-?* and beautifies the hair. Promote* a luxuriant growth. .Mm ? Never Falls to Youthful Heatore Color. Gray Hair to its taking. CUre* eva p duM-a*** & hair auc, b ■nd $l.ooat _ ZESMSSi RF'FOR a 1C ■ U Ubt rA!Lo- Use O’ Best ( ouiih bjrup. lostea Good. V-) ta time. bold_ by drucsfiifa. ; 8 i 'SUMPTION * it S