Newspaper Page Text
No Remedy
“By George, i! I were in your place,”
said the officious friend, “I would ap
ply for a divorce.”
“I’d like to,” admitted Mr. N. Peck,
“but Bhe won’t let me.”
Gbokts are Pale and Shadowy,
them. Say those who profess to have interviewed
Whether spooks or tallow-faced or
not, mortals are whose Mood is thin and
watery in consequence of imperfect as-imi
kition. When invalids resort to Hostetler's
Stomach Bitters, and use that unequalled
tonic p-rs steutly, they soon "pick up” in
strea-th. flesh and color. It should be used
also to prevent ma'arial. rheumat c and kid
neycomp sick headache aints, and to remedy constipation,
and nervousness.
If character on one h >nd. nr wealth on the
other, are at stake, choose the former.
Dr. Ki in r s s w a vi p - ii oot cure*
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation S'. free. V.
Laboratory Binghamton.
We awnme a great re ponsibility in the
s ght of God when we iud -esomeone else.
and Throat Troubles. They afford instant relief
jm&vxss ? 1 * u,e
Sii .re iic < ourt Decisions.
s-nceChas. O. Tyner beg n the manufacture
Of Tyner - Dyspeps-i Keme iy, many people
have inquir d as to its efficacy. Chief Just
B eek . v. of Ge .rr a. has-m-dit, for indiges
lion and dystiepsia, and gives this as his de
^“Atlanta, Ga.. March have 14, 1894—Clias. 4 O. Ty
nor, A anra, ( rn.: I nst* . and am now
using. Ty.u-r’s IJ spepsla Remedy. With It is its a
men aid al as well of as a ph\»ica le* I e lvir. frequently
a he ul a pair spec’a of table ran too much
sre 1 ,aw in spite un u or
3b t. L"Gix E. Bleckley.”
Thi* is a splendid decision and people are
profiting by it.
State of Ohio, City of Toi.edo,
Lucas County. the
Frank J. Cheney manes oath that he is
senior partner of the firm o. F. J. Cheney &
Co., iloina bu-iness in the City *>f Toledo,
County and State aforesai 1, an I that,said firm
will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL¬
LARS for each and every ca~e or Cbt rrh that
ca not be cure l by the use of Hall’s Catarrh
' Frank ,T. Cheney.
Cure. crihed in
Sworn to before nv and sub my
pre>ence, this 6 th (lav of Decemb T. A. D. 1SS6.
j A. V. Gleason,
l SEAL Notary Public,
, internally and
■ Hal's Catarrh Cure is taken
acts directly on tno lilorel and mucous sur¬
faces of the sy-t -rn. Send for t stimonials.
free. F. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
{STT-old by Druggists, 75c.
Three hundred different foreign good, collection, root¬
age stamps, 25c. Sell n: out Julius mv Loeb, 10
Send money with order to
Spruce street. New York City.
It is So Easy to Remove t orus With
Hinder orns.we wonder so many endure them.
Get it and see 1 ow n cely it take- them off.
ves
The nerves upon pure blood, and they will
be your aithful servants and not tyrannical
masters: you will not be nervous,but strong, blood,
cheerful and happy. To have pure
and to keep it pure, take
9
'Mr
Sarsaparilla
Hood’s Pills cure all Liver I Bs. 3 5 cents.
Q J A
I lesson
(ill S3 in
i/I (I
Cooking
Two Cupfuls of
Hecker’s Self-Raising
Buckwheat,
Two Cupfuls of
Cold Water,
Stir a few times,
Bake on a hot griddle.
Takes about a Minute.
»
BUCKWHEAT.
Si
P oor soil
and exhausted fields which
were _______* once pr J 1 „
C>
be made profitably fertile
by a proper rotation of crops
and by the intelligent use of
fertilizers containing high per=
centages of
Potash.
Strikingly profitable results
have been obtained by follow¬
ing this plan.
Our pamphlets are not advertising circulars boom¬
ing special fertilizers, but are practical works, contain
ing latest researches on the subject of fertilization, and
are really helpful to farmers. They are sent free for
the asking. GERMAN KALI WORKS,
03 Nassau St.. Nev- Vn-V
D TO AVOID THIS XTs357
0 N TETTERINE
C S • The U only painter and harmie^i
C _ T s ;;E for the w >rst. type of Eczema,
QC tier. Ringworm, ugiy crusted rough patch¬
es on the face, eealo.
A T Ground pies. Pcanon itch, from chafes, ivy or chap*, Send pot -on w.) p:m- o&<
In short ALL ITCHKS. c. m
-tanipi or cash to J. T. Snopt riae,
Savann ah, Ga.. for one oox, if yoar
drjggist don’t keep it- Atlanta
You will find it at Chas. O. Tyner’s,
PARKER’S BALSAM
HAIR tjcftotifle* the
Cleanses tnd growtn.
! Promotes a luxuriant
*££ t?SS & hair U*ung.
Cure* scaip d.weates
m O Si : >3Drugg:«M
00 e piso’s^cy Ti E FOR ■ 25CTS. I
»
Best br cru^trists.
W5 in r imp. m
CM c ON S UMRIiON i
« % A a \ \ grot
Wk ! * ;CS V
m % tbSk vr S' C.TAi’T A 1
A BELT Of JEWELS.
The newest thing in Paris is a belt
made of jewels. Sometimes right
around the waist is a metal band stud¬
ded with diamonds, or a long jeweled
clasp extending almost from one arm
to the other forms the finish to a band
of ribbon. The newest long chains
are made entirely of diamonds, with a
long pendant tassel of diamonds hang
SS‘T “'° d * °° •“*- B **
o.a -uveru t er.
At .. Richmond, »f<*«„ Ky., Miss Mary B.
£ ay, daughter of General Cassius M.
Clay, and sister of Miss Laura day,
of oi Lexington ijexington, President rresiuent of or the tne Ken- tv in
tucky Equal Rights Association, paid
her State and county taxes but wrote
on the margin ot the duplicate: I
protest 1 against taxation without repre
Bentation. . m lhe association decided ,
to meet and make arrangements .? to
support , Miss Clay in the protest , ,
against paying taxes without the right
to vote.—Chicago Times-Herald.
HOW TO MAKE THE HAIR WAVS.
Soft, natural looking waves of hair
are made by rolling the hair over
large, soft papers or kid curlers, roll¬
ing from the top of the curl toward
the end. The hair should be wet and
left on the rolls over night. If that is
not done, pinch the eurls with a hot
iron. If you wish to have the hair set
out around the face, turn the teeth of
your side combs toward the face, not
away from it. Catch them through
the end of your waves and you can
“fluff” the hair ns little or as much as
you choose.—New York Telegram.
WOMEN IN AUSTRIAN TRISONS.
In Austria, a woman, no matter what
she may do, is never regarded or
treated quite as a criminal. She may
rob, burn, kill—set every law at de
fiance, in fact, and break all the com
mandments in turn—without a fear of
ever being called upon to face the gal¬
lows. She is not even sent to an ordi¬
nary prison to do penance for her
sins; the hardest fate that can befall
her, indeed, is to be compelled to take
up her abode for a time in a convent.
There the treatment meted out to her
is not so much .... justice seasoned , with
mercy as mercy seasoned, amt none
too well, with justice. Even m oft ;
cial reports she is an “erring sister
—one who has, it is true, strayed from
the narrow path, but quite involun¬
tarily.—Cornhill Magazine.
PRINCESS MAUD.
Marlborough House officials, who has
been a member of the Prince of
Wales’s household for many years, and
who gave me some not uninteresting
information in regard to the Princess
Maud of Wales, the news of whose be
trothal to one of the Danish Princes
was recently announced. Both she
and her sister, Victoria, are gentle,
cultured, unassuming girls, as unlike
the traditional idea of royal Prin
cesses in their manners as may well bo
conceived. Both of them shrink from
the formal etiquette which at times
they are compelled to follow, and they
are never so kappy as when on rare oc¬
casions they are enabled to pass a few
days, or even a few hours, incognito.
It is only a week or two ago tnat I
noticed them myself trotting about
the Westminster Aquarium and gaz¬
ing at all the sights therein to be seen,
in company with their royal mother
and a few members of the household,
like any ordinary family of country
cousins. Princess Maud has a weak
ness for collecting curios, carved ivor
ies in particular being her especial
hobby. Of these she has already gath.
ered quite a large collection. Like
her sister, she is thoroughly aomesti
cated, and the active interest she has
taken in the model dairy at handring
buRe^mak^f 6 ^ qmt6 ““
TWO BRIDES.
New York in a day offers some in¬
teresting contrasts. The day that the
Vanderbilt wedding party rolled up to
St. Thomas’s with rustle of satins and i
flash of diamonds and permme of
flowers, and the bride with her Duke,
with the pretty bridesmaids scatter
iDg blossoms in their path, came down
the church aisle, and ail of them rolled
away in their coaches to the wedding
breakfast with pomp and pageantry—
that same day another procession was
watched by a World reporter.
It was also a bridal procession. The
bride was dressed in white robes *nd
, her brow there ., the , band , of „
upon was
a holy order. Shejro Je with the bride
groom Death in a plain, cheap coffin
m a sable hearse. There were no
flowers, no emblems. The single car¬
riage that followed the hearse cou
rained four placid-faced nuns. A few
passers stopped to watch tne little
cortege as it crossed Broadway; a
cable car waited for the hearse to pass
and dashed on in front of the car
riage, and then the cortege had passed
out of sight, the peaceful bride to¬
wards the far country.—New York
W’ or l(j.
GOSSIP.
The Prince of Wales has 8250,000
worth of lace.
Mary Anderson advises all stage
struck girls to “don’t.”
A woofkn insurance agent has built
np a profitable business in Gardiner,
Me.
And so, after all the reports to tiVe
contrary, the Queen of Madagascar
does not chew tobacco.
Queen Victoria never removes from
her hand the three rings connected
with her courtship and marriage.
In London tho bicycling women <i>f
the UDper ten thousand have their
wheels painted to match their oat
r j ao -es
-it. »i «.
Princess of Wales’s youngest brother,
s.*°rul” ii c .“faS,“:«5
clirab ed a ladder and helped put oult
the lire _
T Lady J Lva u QBin On in is is tho tno most most noted not t
Bmo ng modern ladies; her ti get
destroying / exploits f are renowned in
India Thil) ady has jdlied six full
o. rnwn titrera from the frail nrotectio” protectio.
of the howdah.
For several years a woman has
driven the stage between Manceiom.;
and Bellaire, Mich. She handles the;
reins as well as any man in that
region, and has never had trouble
with stage robbers.
The Princess of Wales is making a'
fight for demi-toilet at the theatre. 1
For the last two years she has worn a
smart high bodice with sleeves almost
to the wrist whenever she has ap¬
peared in the royal box,
A new avenue open to women is tho
“ivorizing” of plaster casts. The
recipe is a plaster cast, a cake of
white soap, powdered raw sienna and
tmpentine, with a large supply of
patience, care and painstaking.
For five years Eev. Mr, Hicks was
pastor of Methodist Episcopal charges
iu Corunna, Mich. During that time
his wife paid $600 on their home out
of marriage fees, which were always
turned over to her by her husband.
Mrs. Mackay has sent $2000 to the
Mayor of the Seventeenth Arrondisse
ment of Paris, in which is situated the
Church of St. lerdinand, whore the
funeral service of her son was per¬
formed, to be divided among the poor
of the district and its schools.
Island Falls, Me., is making ^big ef¬
forts after prime distinction in tho
New Woman movement. Tho women
of that place have just formed a sew
- * circle and j3llV0 adopted as one of
th ^ b laW8 . "There shall be no gos
gi 1 at our meetings.”
One of the maids of honor to tho
young Empress of Russia was married
a few months ago. On bidding her
good-by iier the Empress congratulated
wvrmly, adding: “I shall indeed
bo sorry to lose you, but I am so happy
married, r too. i e '“ yo ” to be
Two women rode in tho first line of
a party of cattle owners out hunting
wolves near Chamberlain, South
Dakota, the other day. and they are
credited with killing several of the
. hunted animals. Gray woives have
become very numerous in that region
lately, and are causing much havoc on
: the cattle ranges^
' Miss May Palliser, who is shortly to
marry Lord Wallscourt, a British peer
of between fifty and sixty, won a
j>rize in a beauty show when she was
in her teens. She and her sister, Miss
Grace, were the successful competi¬
tors in a contest among a large number
of ladies who sent in their photo¬
graphs to the promoters of the enter
prise.
FASHION NOTES.
Sable, mink, marlin, astrakhan and
lamb are used to accentuate clotii.
The latest velvet cape is made with
^ ur gores, and the effect is novel but
exceedingly stylish,
Muffs are in vogue this winter, and
they are made of various materials.
and in many shapes and sizes,
White gloves and those of pearl
co ] ore j hid are worn almost as much
m the daytime as in the evemn8 '
Lyons tulle of diaphanous meshes is
chosen for party gowns, aud this sea¬
son is most often of snowy whiteness.
The brocaded waist is most often
round ... the . with long , slender . .
in bacx, a
point in front fastened by only two
durts and a middle seam,
The Louis Treize, Louis Quatorze
and Seize jackets still hold their own,
and will probably remain popular and
in good style through the winter,
Turquoise blue is even more popular
than it was last season, and, indeed,
a n shades of light blue are much worn
ftS the navy blue so common now for
street costumes,
Turned-over collars of white linen,
tWQ lnches wid€t mouated on Htra ^ ht
bands, are again worn with morning
toilets by those whose complexion will
permit the use of this very thick
white.
A , for . whlte , 8een “ ma Y
, hin 2« this season. Thus a stocK-col- ,
a ^ of ^ite satin ribbon drawn m
fold8 *nd tied in a bow at the back is
wora a « OWQ 0£ alm03t an ^ wlor
ana any fabric.
Velvet hat and bonnet crowns are in
chameleon colors wrought with silk
stitche3 and beeds, or they may be in
a rich and glowing monochrome or in
mingled tones to please the most re
fined taste,
The new evening cloaks are most
picturesque wraps. Their specially
uovel feature is a hood of great size,
as large as a cape, giving breadth on
the shoulders aud amwn up with a
rubber band beneath.
I^ATEST TRIUMPH OF SCIENCE.
Light. Discovered by Which Bones Can
Re Photographed Through Flesh.
A dispatch from London says: The
noise of war’s alarms should not dis¬
tract attention from the marvelous
triumph of science which is reported
from Vienna. It is announced that
Prof, llontgcn of the Wurzburg Uni¬
versity has discovered a light, which,
for purposes of photography, will
penetrate wood, flesh and moBfc other
organic substances. The professor
has succeeded in photographing metal
weights which were in a closed wooden
case, also a mau’s hand which
shows the bones, the flesh being in¬
visible.
The Chronicle correspondent says
that the discovery is simple. The pro
fvssor takes a so-called crook and pipe,
viz: A vacuum glass pipe with an in¬
duction current going through it, and
by means of rays which the pipe emits,
photographs on ordinary photographic
plates.
In contrast with the ordinary rays
of light theso rays penetrate organic
matter and other opaque substances
just'^"’ordinary rays penetrate glass.
He «iiu succeeded in photographing
hidden metals with a cloth thrown
over the camera. Tho rays penetrated
not only the wooduu case containing
the metals, but the fabrio in front of
the negative.
Tho professor is already using his
discovery to photograph broken limbs
and bullets in human bodies.
A Test of Education.
It is quite probable that this man is
a baohelor. Only an unmarried gen¬
tleman would have time to ponder on
things of this sort. He says:
Don’t be satisfied with your boy’s
education or allow him to handle a
Latin or Greek book until you ure
sure that he can —
Write a good legible hand.
Spell all the words he knows how to
use.
Speak and write good English.
Write a good soeial letter.
Add a column of figures rapidly.
Make out an ordinary acoouut.
Deduct 16J per cent from the .face
of it.
Keeeipt :fc when paid.
Write an ordinary receipt.
Write an advertisement for a local
paper.
Write an ordinary promissory noto.
Reckon tho interest or discount on
if for days, months or years.
Draw an ordinary chock.
Take it to tho proper place in a bank
to got the cash.
Make neat and correct entries in day¬
book and ledger.
Tell tho number of yards of carpet
required for your parlor.
Measure a pile of lumbor in your
ihed.
‘Tell the number of bushels of wheat
it your largest bin and the value at
current rates.
Tell something about the great au¬
thors and statesmen of the present
day. it is
If lie can do all this and more
likely he has sufficient education to
make his own way in the world.
Facts About Last Year.
Last year in this country various
persons gave $12,879,820 to colleges;
$5,745,670 to charities; $2,089,150 to
churches; to museums and art galleries
$1,724,500; to libraries $530,439, aud
to other institutions $6,471,976; a to
fyil of $28,943,549, which is nearly
$10,000,000 more than was given the
year before.
Against this bright record wo must
contrast a very different chapter of
statistics. Last year this country lost
4,250 lives by shipwreck, about 2,000
feyver than were lost in 1894. Our
railways killed 3,600 persons, about
550 more than were killed in 1894.
We lost by fire last year $131,578,206,
about $15,000,000 moro than the pre¬
vious year.
In the world at large 79,461 persons
lost their lives in epidemics, a fal ! ing
off of 50 per ceut from tho year before.
In war 157,986 lives were lost
Iu 1895 we had 10,500 murders, an in¬
crease of 700.
Lynckings show a decrease. In 1895
there were 171 persons lynched as com¬
pared with 194 the year previous.
Embezzlements are also on the de
e vsase, the defalcations for last year
ai ounting to less than half of tho to
for 1894.
Upon the whole, it is a record of
light and shade. Some of it is very
black, but the bright spots will en¬
courage those who maintain that the
world is growing better.
Ah! What Dell cion a Co free.
Thus a Texas lady writes, and I grew it
1 j,r fees than %e. a pound lrom Bator’s
Great German Coffee Berry, coffee better
tfcan Bio! That’* a genera! venlict! A 15-.
paoktaje gives 33 lbs. Largely used in Ger¬
many, France, Holland and England. Ripens
Jn September!
Ix ion WILL COT THIS OOT AND SEND it With
1 he. stamps to the John A. Halzer Seed Co.,
L t Crosse, Wis., you will get a package of
above great coffee seed and our 14b page
seed catalogue! Catalogue alone 5a. lor
n dling. • (A C.)
ITS -topned fret* bv Da. Kline’s Great
i rve Restorer. Treatise Vo tit*after and fir-t $2.OOtrial day’s bot- a-.e.
ik cure s. Arch St.. Phi Pa.
tie free. Dr. Kiine. 'Ml la..
Vo have not been without Piso’e f.’ure for
f sumption fork') yyi h.—Lizzie Ferbel,
( St.. Harrisburg, Pa.. May 4. ”34.
Tltere 1m fleakuri: u»d Profit
a I ratiafaction in ahaiinK troublesome and
pi* - nt L by using Parker’s Ginger Tonic.
nt. V;r,«,iow’i Soothing .Syrup for children
tf... * bins, softens toe gum*, r ■ices lnftamrna
. 4 /- a!, ays pain.care* wind n . I’tc. a bottle.
r* SyRhp®0s Jfc, y
&
A*
rrfb
ONI5 ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; tho it is and pleasant
to tafte, acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬
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 iu its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy excellent and agreeable substances, commeiid its it
many all and have qualities made tho
to it most
popular remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50
Syrup by all leading drug¬
cent bottles who
gists. Any have reliable hand druggist will
may not it on pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. I)o not accept any
iubstitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NSW YORK. M V.
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR
W. L. Douglas
$3. SHOE BES vUV HE
If you pay &4 to W* for shoes, ex¬ »3.
amine the W. L. Douglas Shoe, and
see what a goad shoe you can buy for
OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS,
CONGRESS, HUTTON,
anil RACE, nindii in all
k i ml m of the lawt tndected
leather by gkillcd work¬
men. Wo
make and
i; sell moro
$3 Siloes li TM
v t Iiiiii any
o t h « r
manufacturer None genuine unless In tlic name world. and 3) Fj J I
price is stamped on the bottom. * *
Ask vour dealer for our t*r>, h /aCI 2#;!
»4, M 3 .no, nui.no, »3.35 Shoes- Azfcf
#3.50, #3 and #1.75 for hoys.
TAKE NO supply SUBSTITUTE. Ifyourdealer send fac¬
cannot you, to
tory, enclosing carriage. price and kind, 36 cents style
to pay State
of too (cap or plain), size and
width. Our Custom Dept, will till
your order. Send for new illus¬
trated Catalogue to Box It,
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
THE AKRMOTOK CO. 0oe» lour tli« worlfl'»
windmill IiiibUmwi, became It has reduced the cost ul
Wind power to 1wlmt It was. It lms man, blanch
w m liour.es, and supplies Its needs and repairs
aTBM aASSwa, /W#. at jour door. article It c:m fur and Imhh dues money furnish than a
ffolliors. better pumping snA
PgL &fTgWWaB It makes
nuHi ed. Steel. Galvanised Tlltlnic al l er*
Completion Windmills,
CTP and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Buzz Saw
^ Frames, Stool Food (hitters and Feed
w Grinder:). On application It will name one
of these articles that it will furnish uritu
January 1st at l/:t tho usual price. It also makes
Tanks and Pumpn'of all kinds Send for catalogue.
Factory 12th. Rockwell ami Fillmore Streets. ChlcAf<s
■
OPIUM and WHISKY babit»cored. Book sent
ntKK. Or. H. 31. WOOMJtY, ATLANTA, UA.
It’s a slow process,
C ^ usually—education, development, and
growth. But it hasn’t been so with
Pearline. Pearline’s success has
y been a wonder, from the start. All the
more so when you consider the
many poor imitations of it, which
claim to make washing easy.
\v These things tend to confuse
I people, forced of on course. the public They’re by
peddlers, prizes, substi
rC \ tution, etc. No doubt
they’re often thought to
be the same as Pearline.
We protest. Don’t judge
p ear li n e by the company it has to keep, «1
fflol'Mil IFfelfflfa©
41 is L
As the i superior
\> to the
So is BROWN’S IRON BITTERS to other medicines.
GTJAW AMTEtt
Neu’ralifia. n.-yt Female fnlirmlll-x Impure Bloou, Weaknem, and only Nervous $2.00 asked Troubles, for and Chronic refunded. Headache or
More than *,090,000 bottles sold
brown CHEMICAL CO.. Baltimore, Md
[fine/ ! m . Cardin *
•'X
(Pure Vegetable extract.-not Intoxioating.)
Cures Female Diseases!
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT..
0 SKN LX
A gentleman of ametliodioai hahit,
wlio had adopted the practice of re¬
taining a oopy of every prescription
Issued by his family physician,
became interested as time went on t»
note that the same Ingredients were
pretty certain to be prescribed at
some point of the treatment of every
ease. For a poor appetite, or a sob*
throat, for restlessness which dis¬
turbed the baby's sleep, and for
troubles which beset the aged grand
parents, tb« favorite remedy was
always turning np, although slightly
modified from time to time and o**d
often In conjunction with others.
One clay our friend happoned to ob
serve that tho formula of a certain
advertise! remedy was tdontioai
wtth the latest prescription ho had
reoeived from his own physician,
and in Romo surprise he stated the
ease to him. The family doctor,
aTter listening to what he had to say,
replied: “The case is about this
way: Whenever there is a disturb
unee ot the functions of the body,
no mattor ot what nature, it Is pret¬
ty certain to be accompanied by a
derangement of the digestive organ*.
When they are all right the patient
gets well. That particular formula
that you have observed me to writ*
moro and more frequently is the
result of an age of oarerul experi¬
ment, and is pretty generally agreed
upon now by all educated physician*
who keep up with the times. Th*
disoovery of the past few years of
the means reduolng every drug to a
powder and compressing the pow
•ders into little iosenges or tablet*,
or tabula. If you prefer, which wltl
not break or spoil, or lose their good
qualities from age, If protected fro*
air and light, is the explanation of
how it lias como about that this pro¬
scription is now for sale as an ad¬
vertised remedy. It is the medlctn*
that nine people out of ten need
every time they need any, and I
have no doubt that making It so eiuqr
to obtain, so carefully wllrtend prepared, and
Withal so cheap, to
actually prolong the average of
human lifo during the present geor
ernllon.”
Rlpium Ta'mlns nrn sold by Irn rsdxtr or by ma*
If ih* prico (BO oonU »t box) lx **nt u> The Kjxtai
Ohttinioal Company, l(fcents. No. 10 dyruod M*ir xoafc.
Sample vial,
25 POULTRY YARD
“ ION VP. atm Kd. lVrltl«*«i »*»«1 m»I«I|
by 1 1 fnrmei* and l’oultry
man of 50 yearn «x perlenc*
A plain, learned. practical DmrlbMl
rawlly tliflnllMNUiftii liowtom*hf
w .. r lirns lay. C’lmlcra, tiape*
TSP^tL. rr-.—T . nerd not l»avr.
A Prtcc,*ic.(»tun»p*). Itou p you A. Fr«c'
1,'arl. A. M. I.AWI, Box 331
•» ? 3 flLml A DAYSMENS how
e vs*# VMii fhu# ,TwB to
nfsh unit* tho worlk nod alMoluiel/ teach •tiroi fr— wo fur
in ha loeallby you jom fluuf
work I whar* wawill you
aand usyonraildrw fully; and axplaiu
t* u,, tn*-KM 4 lammnoar wo (uaj%
” * ante* work; a auxoliitnly el**ar profit 01 9.1 for writ# ovary ai ay's
' Hire; •**«.
n. T« BlORUiV, Banasar, Won LF, USTKOIT, IllCItKUJk
AmiBftM OPIUMS Morr»liln« SfI‘*H?WKJ2RSS5SS: Habit Cured in 1#
\. N. IJ.... Three, ’9$.