Newspaper Page Text
The Inequality of Fortune.
’’It’s r’al’y discouragin’,” said Farm¬
er Corntossel, as he laid down his pa¬
per.
“What is?” inquired his wife.
“Ter see so many first-class patriots
thet don’t git ter be nothin’ higher’n
fourth-class postmasters.”—Washing¬
ton Star.
Ice tongs are among the season’s
fads, and fill a long-felt want in han¬
dling ice. They show a spoon at one
end and a claw at the other.
Trips Undertaken for Health's Sake
Will be rendered more beneficial, and the
fatigues of travel counteracted, if the voyager
will take along with him Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters, ami use t iat pro eetive and enabling
tonic, larly. nerve invigorant and appetizer regu¬
hy Impurities in air and water is neutral
lz “d it, and it i- a matchless tranquil zer
and regulator of the stomach, liver and bowels.
It counteracts malaria rheumatism, and a
tendency to kidney and bladder ailments.
helping Sympathy never goes very far unless it gives
a hand.
* Dr. Kj mor’s Swamp-Root
euros
aii Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet Laboratory and Consultation fr*e.
Binghamton. N. Y.
It tnkes an expert to find the expertness of
some experts.
The More One Uses Pirker’s (linger Tonic
the more its virtues are revealed in dispelling
colds, indigestion, pain and every weakness.
fcj P &
4* m. 2
Mm |L 7,1
S..
Tainted Blood
Poisoned my whole system, local troubles
being the origin of my suffering. My limbs
and arms swelled and sores broke out. My
nervous system was shattered and I became
helpless. Medical treatment availed nothing.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
gave me vitality at once. I gained rapidly
and the sores disappeared. I gained strength
and was flna' y restore 1 to health.” Mas.
IfiiBHinoE E. Smith, P. O. address, West
Granville, Mass. Get Hood’s.
I tn Cu are tasteless mild, effec¬
tive. All druggists. 25c.
“A Penny
Saved is a
Penny Earned.”
But a penny saved in
buying a poor article of
food is a dollar lost to
the doctor.
BUY
r 9
SELF-RAISING
Buckwheat.
Saves
Health,
Dollars
And Time.
13
»
NEW DOMESTIC
COFFEE BERRY.
V m
v
C4tt ST#
-? Vr
n v
r /
S'- IS
I I • v-MM ly -Nag?
BETTER THAN A SOLD &SIHE,
Raise y ur o>yu coffee at ess tha / 1 cetii a pound.
Let hi h tariff stor« coffee g . The poor man’s . r lend
and ich man’s delight. Matures .North or South In
four n onths. Plant a iy time up to the 20th • f June.
30,000 farmers supplied and every one praise.* ir.
H«s produced over coffee. sixty Produce# bushels per acre. Some
prefer it to store two crops a year
In the South. Large packet postpaid cents, or
enough to plant 200 hills. 50 c^nts or stamps. Will
make 300 puts of most delicious coffee, go enough
for a king. Is uperseding store coffee as fast as lfs
merits become kn wn. l-arge catal ,gue of fifty new
var e ies *>t seeds and teatlmoni ls from patrons ail
over the Uuioo sent free with each order by
C. E. COLE 8Et DMIAV,
* Buckner, Wo.
ZW~ Special ttholesale prices to farmers and mer¬
chants, who dear from $6 to %S> per month selling
this wonderT- l! r.ccri dni-iAo t ■* -Heter.
« »*XV*W* » mV* Vfcjh, * **» F0
World’s Fair! HIGHEST AWARD. ?
I X IMPDRIALi
| I GrRANUM
Prescribed by Physicians Hospitals!
i [Relied on in
Depended on by Nursesj
Endorsed byTHE-PRESSs
(The BEST prepared FOOD j
e So Id by DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE I 1
Z John Carle & Sons. New York. ;
A CLAW-FINGERED PEOPLE.
strange deformity in west¬
ern NEW YORK.
Residents of Zoar Who for Four Gen¬
erations Have Devoloped Claw
Like Fingers and Toes.
T HE most picturesque stream
in Western New York is the
Cattaraugus, writes a corres¬
pondent of the New lork Sun.
Through most of its course it is tjie
boundary line between the oounties of
Erie and Cattaraugus, and it is not a
large stream except when melting
snows or autumn rains have swelled it
into a torrent. Rich farms, wooded
elopes, deep gorges whose lofty walls
form the high banks, as the natives
call them, and a tangled wilderness
where nature still runs riot, as she has
from the first; these mark the course
of the Cattaraugus. The Indian name
is itself musically expressive, and re¬
calls the days when only red men oc¬
cupied its banks. There are still In¬
dians along 'it, and the reservation
named for it contains most of the few
remaining members of the Seneca
tribe, once the possessor of all the re¬
gion from Lake Erie to and beyond
the Genosse.
The reservation begins near the vil¬
lage of Gowanda, and just above there,
shut in by high hills, is the wildest
and most inaccessible spot in the whole
region, the valley of Zoar. Here
among the hills, where strange faces
are rarely seen, is concealed a remark¬
able example of nature’s occasional
vagaries and the strange persistence
of abnormalities through heredity.
Among the few residents of Zoar there
are several families of claw-fingered
persons. They are not wild, but nearly
all of them have a curious deformity of
the fingers and toes which gives them
their name. They have lived here many
years, and although their neighbors
are still inclined to look upon them
somewhat askance, they are no longer
regarded as especially wonderful, and
one might travel through the valley a
dozen times without once hearing a
word about its strange inhabitants.
In driving through the valley re¬
cently the writer came across an old
farmer loading hemlock bark by the
roadside, and inquired for the claw¬
fingered residents.
“That Robbins tribe?” was the re¬
ply. “Yes, I’ve knowed some of ’em
for nigh on forty years, ’cause I was
raised right here. Yes, their hands
is like e.laws. Some of ’em. It’s a
mighty cur’us thing, but ’taint
nuthin much to look at. Why, folks
comes all the way from Buffalo [be¬
tween thirty and forty miles] to look
at ’em, an’ you’d think by the way
they go on about it that they was
goin’ to a circus.”
As well as can be learned, the pe¬
culiar digital formation of the claw¬
fingered folks has existed in Zoar
through four generations. Jn the
early part of the century a man
named Robbins settled in Zoar. He
was remarkable because his lingers
and toes were so bent that they re¬
sembled claws somewhat more than
they did human digits. In other re¬
spects there was nothing particularly
striking about his appearance. His
strange, claw-like hands and toes be¬
came objects of considerable curios¬
ity, but it does not appear that Rob¬
bins ever explained the origin of his
deformity. Or course, after it reap¬
peared in his descendants it became
the general opinion that Robbins
himself inherited it. Others believe
that he was the founder of the claw¬
fingered family, and that he settled
in this remote spot because of his
disfigurement.
Several children were born to Mr.
and Mrs. Robbins, and all of them had
the usual number of fingers and toes
of the usual size and appearance. In
the succeeding generation, however,
the claw fingers reappeared, and since
then they have been found on some
members of every family that claims
descent from the man who introduced
them into Zoar. A peculiar thing
about this strange family heritage is
that it is impossible to tell where or
in what form it will appear. Some¬
times it is inherited from the father,
sometimes from the mother; some¬
times it appears in all the children of
a family, at others only in one or two
out of a large number ; sometimes a
father and mother who have well
formed handsand feet will bring np a
family of children all of whom are badly,
and perhaps variously,deformed. Again
parents whose hands are so deformed
as to be unsightly will have children
all with hands perfectly straight. Oc¬
casionally the deformity will appear
in a person’s hands and not in his feet,
or vice versa, Sometimes it is in his
right hand or foot and not in his left;
and so on till all the possible combi¬
nations are exhausted, The term
claw-fingered certainly would not fit
more than half of those with deformed
extremities. Of course none of them
has what could properly be called
claws.
The hands of these people of Zoar
are usually broad and short in the
palm, with stumpy fingers. The fin¬
gers curve in, and the joints in most
of them are either altogether lacking
or are greatly out of place. That is,
the finger may have only one joint or
it may have two close together. It is
of course difficult to manage such
fingers, and one might suppose that
two of these Zoar people in shaking
hands would be likely to get hopeless¬
ly tangled np, though such a thing
has not been known to occur. Hands
are sometimes found among them in
which the fingers are all joined to
gether in one broad stump. Oscasion
ally a child is born having an addi
tional toe or finger.
The claw-fingered residents of
have the reputation of being some
what queer, but this is very likely due
to the fact that their deformity has
served to shut them oS from their
Xifcighbors. They seein to be fairly
Intelligent, and thoir neighbors say
that they are industrious and honest.
They are seldom seen outside the val¬
ley, and live their own lives apart
from others. In their valley home
they are free for the most part from
prying eyes, and they may hope for a
continuation of this immunity, tor it
is likely to be a long time before any
part of Zoar is cut up into city lots.
A fow years ago suoh a thing seemed
not improbable, for oil and gas were
discovered in the valley in puyiug
quantities. The Standard Oil Com¬
pany quickly secured leases of nearly
all the land in the neighborhood; but
except for the two wells first put down
no attempt has been made to develop
the territory. Now the excitement
has passed, and the eyrie of this
strange people will probably remain
undisturbed for many a long year to
come.
SELECT SI FIT.AGS.
Gas was first employed as fuel in
1868.
Buchanan, Mich., has not a vacant
house.
There are 14,000,000 clocks in this
country.
Straw hats are believed to have been
first invented in Manilla.
The eggs of a crooodile are scarcely
larger than those of a goose.
Frank Clifford, of New York, owns
a collection of buttons numbering over
nine thousand specimens.
A Hungarian couple, whose com¬
bined ages are 233, celebrated the
centenary of their marriage tho other
day.
A South Carolina widow became her
own mother-in-law recently. That is
to say, she is now the wife of her hus¬
band’s father.
Alonzo Wickers, of Searsport, Mo.,
nicked himself with a scythe recently
and sewed up the gash himself. It
was five inches long.
Observations recently made on a
criminal beheaded in Franco proves
that the heart beats continued for six
minutes after the ax fell.
The gum on the back of tl^e postage
stamps of the United States is made
from alcohol one part, ascetic acid one
part, dextrine two parts and water five
parts.
A girl baby born the other day in
Kokomo, Ind., is the fourteenth
daughter of a fourteenth daughter of
a fourteenth daughter, a record which
is thought to be unprecedented.
George Spencer started to walk
across the Lewiston [Me.) railroad
bridge, when along came a train.
Spencer couldn’t get away, but he
jumped np on the cowcatcher and
•scaped uninjured.
A shepherd at Chambery, Savoy,
employs a horse instead . of a dog to
keep tho herd together. The horse
understands the orders given him and
carries them out as intelligently as
the best trained dog.
The following blood-curdling an
nouncement is said to be posted on a
board in the neighborhood of Grindle
Glacier wald, Switzerland executed in : twenty “Parties en the^
os.
Very recomtnendable. ”
There are now on the rolls of the
legal profession in London about 15,-
300 solicitors (or attorneys-at-law, as
they were called nrior to 1873), as
compared with some 10,009 or 11,000
some twenty years ago.
The largest sailing ship afloat has
just been completed at Bremen. She
is called the Potosi, is a five-master,
394 feet long, fifty feet broad, with a
draught of twenty-five feet andu carry¬
ing capacity of 6150 tons.
Aii Unfinished Bracelet.
Old Commodore Tyrell was sitting
with some friends the other doy when
tho heat impelled him to ro 1 up hin
shirt sleeves. As he did bo the eyo of
a reporter who was sitting by him fell
upon an India ink decoration upon
his wrist.
“Let me see that, Commodore," [h «
said.
The old sea dog extended his rigk«
arm across the table for inspection
The decoration was a shield and au
eagle and one side was something than
looked like an unfinished wreath.
unn “Why dian i*i ft t tho it artist . , finish . , iti ...it
the Commodore was asked.
“Ah, that’s a story of tho awfnlness
of war, my boy,” said he, as he grew
thoughtful . and j stopped j i j.i_ the joking • i •
that he bad been indulging in “It
was when I was a stripling of a boy in
the navy that that was done. Like
all ,, , boys, t I tu thought , . t I was not . a full- , ,i
fledged tar until I had myself tattooed,
and one of my mates started to make
a bracelet around my wrist. That was
the day V before the battle of Mobile
^ Bay. He did T, as much , as you see there
and was going ” to finish it next (lay. J
„ Next . day , we went . into . action and first ,
shot that came across our deck struck
my mate right , . amidships, • 1 , • and 1 the .L.
poor fellow never knew what finished
him.
“I never would let anybody else
finish it, but maybe when I go to
Davy Jones’s locker I’ll meet Dick and
get him to finish that bracelet. ”-Oin
cinnati Tribune.
A Bloody Deed Recalled.
The Cabaret Debene, a tavern in the
Rue Haxo, near the walls of Paris,
will shortly disappear. The tavern
had acquired notoriety throng h the
fact that in 1871 the Comm mists
murdered fifty hostages—gend armes
and priests—in its garden. Th s rag
ged population of Belleville, inf ariat
ed by the bombardment of the ci ty by
Government artillery, insisted o n re
the fifty hostages were
brought irom the prison La Boq oette
to this garden, and then, without word
of command or order, shot oi* cut
down, and horribly mutilated ufter
wards.—New York World.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Bakins Powder
ABMIUVECV PURE
ODDS AND ENDS.
Spots of white as , large as a . in ,,
dollar appear on some of the new vei s.
The novel Florentine jewelry, now of
so popular, shows the daintiest sort
coloring and workmanship,
The newest things in ash trays shows
a daintily painted half-burned eigar
and a red-tipped match on a China
surface.
The silver filagre photograph frames,
so much the ruge recently,have been su¬
perseded by the richest one of gold in
heavy open work patterns.
Square Japanese fans made of silk
or paper with pearl or bamboo sticks
are new, odd and very pretty. They
are surprisingly nice to carry, funning
much more air than the ordinary
kind.
The British crown is rnado up of
diamonds, rubies, pearls, sapphires
and emeralds, set in silver and gold
bands. It weighs 39 ounces and 5
pennyweights, troy. In it there are
3,452 diamonds, 273 pearls, 9 rubies,
17 sapphires and 11 emeralds.
The little queen of the Netherlands
entered upon her lfith year a few days
ago, and in honor of the oocasiou, but
to the regret of her subjects, intro¬
duced a momentous change—she be¬
gun to wear her hair in tho fashion of
young women.
One Australian species of the female
quail is almost twico the size of the
male of the sums species, and among
larger birds the male of the common
cassowary, on acoouut of its smaller
size and duller plumage, might be re¬
garded by a casuul observer as tho
female.
Significance of Christian Names.
Some significance should be attached
to one’s name, and a badly-named
child is very apt to Vie influenced as
much by its signification as by the
stars under which it is born, sayH tho
seer. And so are here a .few of our
favorite names and their origin and
meaning: Anna, from the Hebrew,
meaning a prophetess; Annette, from
the French, sweet, but sorrow Ini;
Caroline, Latin, noble-spirited; Doro¬
thy, Celtic, fruitful; Edith and Edna,
Saxon, happiness; Frances, German,
free; Grace, Latin, favor; Helen,
Greek, a very beautiful woman; Ida,
Greek, a lofty mountain; Josephine,
French, a savor of life; Lucy, Latin,
shining; Louisa, French, defender of
her people; Leonora, Polish, victori
our; Margaret, German, a pearl; Mud
eline, French, favored; Marie and
Maria (from French and Spanish), and
Mary, from Hebrew, a salt tear or a
drop of water.
How’s This!
Wf offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh l hat cannot be cured by
Hull’s Catarrh Cure. Co.,Props.,Toledo,!). . , _
F. J. CnKNicY tic
We, the undersigned, have known I'..I. Che¬
ney for the last 15 years, and believe bin i per
feetlv honorable In all business transact obliga- <>ns
and financially aide, to carry out any
Wbkt & Tkuax! Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Waoim.ng, Kinnan & Makvin, Wholesale
Hall’s' Catarrh* Ciiro the is blood taken mid internally, mucous
act ink directly upon Price, 75- per bottle.
Mil- aces of the. sy 'em. Testimonials free.
Hold by all Druggists.
llo* KuImIiik Extraordinary.
Two acres mulberries fatten 85 Then
hoRR were turn**<1 In th orchard in Mav and
kept there till September eatinir nothing b it,
mulberries and were perfectly fat when taken
out. They were fed a little corn to harden
the meat and tln n killed. Two acreR of
mulberry trees 6 ok ft. Ji /h cost $30.00—what
are 85 fat. hogs worth? For best kjidsof mul¬
berries write for new catalogue which is sent
free. Address W. 1). Beatie, Atlanta. Ga.
To Our Ixttdy Render*.
Nine-tenths of the women of the world are
afflicted with some of the com plaints famil
iarly known as “Female Due ases. • 11 or “Womb
Trouble*.” There Is scarcely a lam ly hut has
ao idoliz' d daughter, a cheri-hed sister, or a
«rly lovi^l mother who suffer' agon es that
ere endured in silence to protect, her nrio«b-Btv.
Proper treatment Is postponed from month to
month by dread of a physicians hum! iatiny
examination, or surgeon’* knife. BUcocHHfuJJy Most of
these dangerous dine • es can he
treated at home, but there ' 1,:
norance among even the most their intem-'cni
classes of women regarding generation, owing na«urai to
functions and o pan- of
so little information hairing been published that in
regard to this subject and a modesty
WA‘i » *a« of of
f( . ma ,. diseas-s cures thousands of 1( cases J'*'
thD kind o troubles every year. ' R .“ liome
ti-ed successfully in tim pr vacy of the
| S cheap and eff. ctir-. Ask your drugget
for McElrce’s Wine of Cardui.
lt ;y*v.r Full*,
Tyner’s Dy pepsia Remedy lias been on the
market for -eyerai yean, end the universal
verdict in that it never fails to aocomp I*h it*
WO rk. ft is a mil i and effich nt. ren.euy u»edV»e« for ail
ytomach and bowel di»ea-eg. pleasure, Its but adds not
Interlere with bus ne.-s or
t( , both. Nearly all dise.-es are hea caused th will by in he
digestion. Stop it and of your Tyner'* Dyspepsia
per'ect. A few doses
Remedy .ale will all do druggists. lt. Pries 50 cent* per bottle.
For by
Mr?. Win? ow s .-not ning Syrup ; 'ir children
teething, softens the gums, redm-.-" infiarnma
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. Am. a bottl
FITS "topped free hy I)n. Kline’s Great
M^ew'^ures!*' Treatise and $2?Mtria* bVu'
tie free. Dr. Kline, 93V Arch St., Rhila.. I’a.
Walking Would Often be rt IMeawttre
were It not for corn?. The-e pest? ar? removed
wit:, Hindi rooms. 15c. at dru(fi?ists.
I cannot Bpeak too highly of Pii-o'- ij for
Consumption.--Mr*. Frank Mobjis. 215 \V. ‘sz 1
St., New York, Got. 20 , 1W4.
S4 PARKER’S 1
B HAIR BALSAM
H is Cle*r*te§ and beaut!fief the hair, j
Promote* a luxuriant frrowth.
Never Fail* to Restore Gray
Kt Hair to Its Youthful Color.
B Cure* »e*ip d;*w**»e*Jf ha it fa. ■■■t
SOc,and*!.'*>at LRugjriiiU
—
1 H 40 PISO’S CURE FOR ■ to
CUKto WHtKfc AU. tlht tAILb. Lsc
Best f -ouKb riyrup. Tauten Good. O
in time. bv drofftriat*
. L 7 CJ ON SUMPTION (*:; ■
Bobby’s Disappointment.
Mrs. Yabsley was entertaining somo
ladies at a select littio 5 o’clock tea,
and Bobby, who had been exception¬
ally well-behavod, was in high feather.
“Ma,” he said, as cake was being
handed round, “may I have somo
tongue, please?” Bobby.”
“There isn’t any tongue,
“That’s funny,” commented Bobby.
“I heard pa say there would be lots of
it.”—Tit-Bits.
An Kye to Business.
He—What did the doctor sav was
the matter with you?
She—Said I was run down.
“What did ho recommend?”
“Bicycle riding.”
“I see; that will make business for
him, because you’ll run other people
down. ”—Yonkers Statesman.
*£
f/
*v
It
. : m lV.
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is and pleasant
and refreshing promptly to the taste, the Kidneys, acts
gently Liver and yet Bowels, cleanses on tho
head¬ sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds,
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro¬
ducer, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the 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¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
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 FIIANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KV. NEW VORK. H *.
GOOD POSITIONS
SECURED BY STUDENTS
Business Finns Supplied with Help
Richmond’s Commercial College,
I'.mubliiilied 1884.
Bend for Catalogue. SAVANNAH,GA.
e» «fl f ejfiind Q A DAY rS
'k«T» W« win *bow you how to
iii d«T; »bM>iuU»ly twb «'ir«o tr*r w« tur
Utah the work mid you you
v— A. work in tho locality where you 1it«j
i if lw ,-Vi Bend buafiM’M iia your udiireiw end we will explain
iOMM the fully: remember w»- guar- «/’■
r.t-.Kr profit of ft forwewy writ, at »n«e.
work; absolutely Box Hur»*i LB, Detroit, Ml«h.
KOVAL It AM YAP TI KINU COMPANY*
OSBORNE’S
Soudtnedd
Sofiool of SliortlinJid
AIJGIJNTA. buninas* 4JA. from day of
Ho text hooka uaod. Actual
entormff. Bu inc.d . collHgH ourr*noy aa 1
pood* n-«d. Solid for h*ndnomwiy illustratwd crifci
ioriid. Hoard ciiwap. R. It. faro unui to A uguutA,
Water
•*ys —nothing with but Pearline. water. Don’t That claim s use all is you any need soap that
\ with it. If what we true,
Pearline is better than soap, the
soap doesn’t have a chance to do
\ any work. IFs only in the way.
n / I Besides, some soaps might cause it
{ trouble—and you’d lay Pearl¬ to
1?— / ' Pearline. You’ll never get
ine’s very best work till you use it just
as directed on the package. Then
7 ' you'll have the easiest, quickest, most
economical way of washing and cleaning. 477
I IEATIN Itiie G SJOVES ™.
■ largest line south, the lowest prices.
r#"Wrlte Tot- Pricoe. Ml
HOIICDTT k BHLLINGRATH GO., Attt,
The One Crop System
of farming gradually exhausts the land, unless a Fertilizer containing a
high percentage of Potash is used. Better crops, a better soil, and a
larger bank account can only then be expected.
Write for our ‘‘Farmers’ Guide,” a 142-page illustrated book. It
is brim fuil of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and
will make and save you money. Address,
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York.
r AcwTA^posiTroy 7 ?iRE^TORJ'
e' 6 >
A List of Reliable Business Houses
where visitors to th (treat Show
will be properl;/ treated and can
purchase goods at lowest prices.
STILSON & COLLINS
JEWELRY CO •V
55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Everything in the Jewelry anil Silver
Line at Factory Prices.
u C □ PAYS I (lit A I'l LI, I OJIRSL tfOC Jou
SI IIOI.AH-- III IN
SULLIVAN & CRICHTON’S
r/Jr/frfM'
And School of Shorthand.
Student* from 20 Suite*. 4 Penmen in
Faculty It] I1T Catalogue fr«»e> SfJI.I.IVAM «&
^ Pi**or street* Atlanta* tie.
fjflk 2 .
C/f m
FINE MHUNEJRY
78 Whitehall St.
Atlanta. Ga.
D TO AVOID THIS XTJSTEI
0 " TETTERINE
h f The only painless and harmless
C ▼ I OUur for the worst, type of Kcietna,
B Tetter, Ringworm, ugly crusted rough patch
- «* on the face, noalp.
N A _ Ground itch, chafes, chap*, pun
| Dies. Poison from ivy or Send poi onoatc. in
e-5 II Savannah. In -tniiip.H short or ALL cash Ga,, ITCHES. to for J. T. box, Stiuptrine, 60o. it your
II one
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A Valuable FAMILY DOCTOR Book
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A. N. 0...... ....... Forty-five, '93.