Newspaper Page Text
Water Test for Kggs,
A way to tell bad eggs is to put them
in a pail of water, and if good, they lie
on their side; if bad, they will stand
on their small euds, the large ends al¬
ways uppermost, unless they have b-en
shaken considerably, when they will
stand either end up. Therefore a bad
egg can be told by the way it rests in
the water, always end up, never on its
side.
Saved from Destruction.
This is what happens when the kidneys are
rsscued from inactivity by Hostetter’s Stom¬
ach Bitters. If they continue inactive they
are threatened with Bright's disease, diabetes
or some other malady wh ch works their
destruction. Malarial, bilious and rheumatic
ailment and dyspepsia are also conquered by
the Bitters, which is thorough and effective.
Nainsook*, with goUl effects in stripes and
squares, will be u-ed to trim basques, shirt
waists, blouses, etc. ,
Mothers
Anxiously watch declining health of
their daughters. So many are cut off
by consumption in early years that
there ia real cause for anxiety. In
the early stages, when not beyond
the reach of medicine, Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla will restore the quality and
quantity of the blood and thus give
good health. Read the followingletter:
"It is but just to write about my
daughter Cora, aged 10. She' was com¬
pletely run down, declining, had that tired
feeling, and friends said she would not
live over three months. She had a bad
Cough
and nothing seemed to do her any good.
I happened to read about Hood’s Sarsapa¬
rilla and had her give it a trial. From the
very first dose she began to get better.
After taking a few bottles she was com¬
pletely cured and her health has been the
best ever since.” Mas. Addie Peck.
15 Railroad Place, Amsterdam, N. Y.
"I will say that my mother has not
stated my case in as strong words as I
would have done. Hood’s Sarsaparilla
has truly cured me and I am now well.”
Cora Peck, Amsterdam, N. Y.
Be sure to get Hood’s, because
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
la the OneTrue Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1
Prepared only by C. I. Hood Sc Co., Lowell, Mass,
I Crt ItlS JJI- are purely vegetable, 25c. re
liable anil beneficial.
vv.
krl i
1 TARKIIF^I
Mr. Herbert Miles, special repro
sentalive of’the Interstate Savings
Loan and Trust Corporation, having
main offices 901 and 902 NoaveBldg.,
\ Cincinnati, O., sends, under date of
September 3d, 1895, a testimonial
from his barber, Harry Scheid, of
211 West 6th St.: "I want to say,"
writes Harry, "that lor eight
months I have taken three Itipans
Tabules a day, and bavo not been to
see a doctor once since I com¬
menced to take them. Before I
would have to have a big tube put
down my throat und hnvo my
stomach flushed (I believe that is
What they call it) three times every
week by a doctor that charged mo
60 cents for every time. Of course
that always gave me relief, but it
always came back again, and I can
tell you it was no fun to be pumped
out about every two Hays. The
doctor said I had catarrh of tho
stomach; but whatever it was it
don’t bother mo now, but I still take
ono of Bipans after each meal, as I
am afraid to quit. I am a barber,
and for four yean I was troubled,
so that I used to lose about three
days out of every month. I wish
you would have your Tabules kept
In more 6tores in Cincinnati, as
there are only two places where I
can get them. My attention was
first called to your remedy by asking
what the street car sign meant.
(Signed), HAniiY Scheid."
Ripans Tabules are sold by druggists, or bv
mail if the price (50 cents a box) i- -ent t o The
Bipans Chemical Companv, No. 10 Spruce St.,
New York. Sample vial. 10 cent-.
_______
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR
*3^ SHOE^UV®
If you pay ’ !JI " shoes, ex¬ ® 3
amine the VV. L. Douglas Shoe, and
see what a good shoe you can buy for .
OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS,
jf ^—- CONGRESS, BUTTON,
Wv and FACE, made in all
fi \ kinds of the best selected
Shf 5pr <te \ T leather We by skilled work
men.
make and
sell more
*»- - -b 53 Shoes
than any
other
manufacturer in the world.
None genuine unless name and
price is stamped on the bottom.
Ask vour dealer for our S3.
84 , 83 : 50 , * 3 . 50 , 83.85 for boys. Shoes;
83 . 50 , 83 and 81.75
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. Ifyourdeater send fac¬
cannot supply you, to
tory, enclosing price and 36 cents
to pay carriage. State kind, style and
of toe (cap or plain), Dept size will fill XT
width. Our Custom lUus- ^
your order. Send for new
-trated Catalogue to Box K.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
rj-., OPIUM 5g . Morphine BSSBMatt :r»hit in io
I e iso’s '-5" S3 ■
a
l~ cunts wtitat i Use
t-> Best O-’Ujrb svrup. Tastes Good. n
Iri t irnP. Nrtld by druggists. , -i .
CM. CONSUMPTION ■ LT, ■
%
• V L’U, i?s
'
v
fx: i».\ -A v*« £> m 1 ?
Ife js e- '' ~mf ,W&\
m&- >!
■m as W \
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WILD SUNFLOWER BELLE.
An Atchison girl started out the
first of the year with a resolve to say
nothing, but always look interested
and sympathetic. The other girls are
still wondering what makes her so
suddenly popular with everyone.—At¬
chison Globe.
THE SMOOTH BROW’.
The photographs of a decade ago,
or even half that period back, look
crudely old fashioned now. It is the
heavy bang which then prevailed, and
which has now almost disappeared,
that gives them their air of antiquity.
The straight bang departed long since.
The heavy curled bang belongs to past
history. And even the light fringe, to
which the possessors of high foreheads
haVe clung, is retreating. It is being
thinned, trained back, pinned off the
forehead with sidecombs and all that
will remain on most brows before long
is a light curl or two to break its se¬
verity.—New York Advertiser.
AVOIDS THE PUBLIC GAZE.
Mrs. Cleveland dreads publicity for
her children. She says her little
girls are private persons and that the
public has nothing to do with them.
To her they are too sacred to be gazed
upon by the vulgar public. This is
to be regretted, as persons who know
the little tots declare them to be most
charming children. So bent is she on
preserving their privacy that she has
never had their photographs taken by
any professional photographer. Only
one amateur is said to have been al¬
lowed to make sun pictures of them.
She is a young lady, an intimate per¬
sonal friend. Evidently Mrs. Cleve¬
land’s trust in her discretion was well
founded. Mrs. Cleveland has no such
feeling about her own photographs,
which maybe bought in a great variety
of graceful poses at any shop where
pictures are sold.—New York Journal.
AN INEXPENSIVE BEAUTIFIER.
If you want to soften your face, try,
instead of rubbers and unguents and
balms, a little spiritual gymnastics.
Look at yourself in the glass. If the
corners of your mouth are down, and
you are an unhappy looking object,
elevate your expression, Think of
the pleasantest thing that ever hap¬
pened to you; the kindest thing that
was ever done for you; the merriest
time you ever had in your life; send
out the most generous, the sweetsst,
the most helpful thought you can
think to your friends, and if your face
is not softened more ’charmingly than
ever a wrinkle rubber could make it,
then you have not thought strongly,
buoyantly) or generously enough,
There is so much that could be written
on this that thoughts play leapfrog
over my pen, and there is not time to
adjust them properly or to utter them.
It is clear, However, that she remains
youngest who has the widest possible
range of sympathies and vivid ap¬
preciation. Not knowest thou, not
believest thou, but—lovest thou? is
the password through the gates of
everlasting youth, as well as to “the
new church.”—Boston Transcript.
SPIDEK WEB VEILS.
The very latest is a large, delicate
mesh somewhat resembling a spider’s
web. A curious little white speck
like a fly near the left eye and on the
right close by the mouth is an ar¬
rangement of spots which might easily
be mistaken for a spider. This veil is
bordered with a little narrow edge of
Honiton lace and two loveknots with¬
in a reasonable distance of a pretty
mouth. If the veil is white the spider
and the fly are black, and vice versa.
This might truly be called the allegor¬
ical veil, assuming the face to be
young and innocent, looking at the
world beyond with wondering eyes.
The old-time useful fashion of gather¬
ing the ends aod front, making the
veil fit comfortably around the face,
has been quite done away with. In¬
stead, it is allowed to hang loose and
fall in funny little frills, resembling,
on a smaller scale, the godets of our
gowns. A few years ago this fashion
was the special prerogative of old la¬
dies. Some women have a born talent
for buying veils, and it is generally the
woman who is not over young to
whose toilet a becoming veil is more
inportant than all the rest. The most
popular these cold days is a heavy
chenille dot and very close together;
in this the white-haired woman with a
youthful face i3 seen at her best.—
New York Journal.
GOSSIP.
Mrs. Mary E. Lease, the famous
Populist politician, has left the lecture
platform for the pulpit.
Two women servants in Paris are the
sole legatees of their mistress, who
lately died possessed of 8120,000.
Miss Martha Carev Thomas, Presi¬
dent of Byiu Mawr College, has been
elected a Trustee of Cornell Univer
Bity.
Mrs. Toulman Smith is tb9 first
woman to receive the appointment
of Librarian of Manchester College,
Oxford.
Miss Helen Gould has founded two
$%5Sft£ s z
nually.
In England there is a woman auc
tioneer who is successful in her chosen
business, which she adopted when she
was only tixteen years of age.
There are'now in America 2338 wo¬
men practicing medicine in ono or the
other of its forms, and inclusive of
130 homeopathists.
After an existence of fifteen years
the Woman’s Exchange, of Albany, N.
17, has been obliged to suspend busi¬
ness on account of laok of patronage.
Mme. Hatoyania, a Japauese lady,
is up to date m politics. When her
husband was a candidate for Parlia¬
ment she made public sxieeches in his
interest.
Miss Ella Knowles, of Montana, set¬
tled a lawsuit between two mining
companies by submitting an agree¬
ment so obviously just that both par¬
ties accepted it and paid her $10,000.
Kitty Reed, the Speaker’s nineteen
year-old daughter, is becoming a great
favorite in Washington society. She
is said to be a clever, sincere and
unaffected young woman. She has the
Reed drawl.
Miss Alice C. Fletcher was elected
oneof the sectional Vice-Presidents of
the American Association for the Ad¬
vancement of Science, the first honor
of the sort extended to a woman by
the association.
Mrs. Elkins, wife of the Senator
from West Virginia, is a brunette of
remarkable beauty. She is very l'ond
of society and has wealth to assist her,
and her home will probably be ono of
the gayest in Washington.
Mrs. J. Stanley Brown (Mollie Gar¬
field) is one of tho most popular young
matrons in Washington. She is a
brunette, with warm golden brown
hair, large dark eyes and an exquisite
complexion. She has three children.
Mrs. Gear, wife of the Iowa Senator,
has been an invalid for almost eight
years, but takes a deep interest in her
husband’s career. She enjoys reading,
but her specialty is embroidery, and
some exquisite work comes from her
deft fingers.
Mrs. Hernando De Soto Money, wife
of tho new Mississippi Senator-elect,
is a brunette of small, slight, willowy
figure, jot black hair and eyes of
almost a purple tint. She is a woman
of considerable literary talent and a
clever talker.
It is said that tho Empress of Austria
is a very different woman from the
dashing sportswoman who used to
hunt like a man. She is now fifty
eight, and spends tho most of her
time in the search of health, She- is
slowly falling a victim to consumption.
Mary E. Wilkins is one of the most
unpretentious of literary womon, and
when she read in a recent issue of an
English magazine a description of her¬
self that made her out both youthful
and pretty, she wrote and begged to
have it corrected, as she was not young,
she said, and had no pretension to
beauty. She is supposed to be about
thirty-seven years old.
The Countess of Warwick, who is a
philanthropist of the visionary and
sentimental sort, in addressing a meet
ing of London workingwomen not
long ago assured them that they need
ed more recreations and more pleas
urea. Then she described the benefits
to be derived from two or three hours
vigorous horseback riding, a morning
at tennis or a day in yachting.
FASHION NOTES.
Slight paniers are shown on some
of the models of spring gowns.
The plain gored skirt of serge, well
lined, flares to six 'yards in width at
the foot.
Trained skirts of demi-length are
gradually winning their way back to
favor for ceremonious occasions.
Light, dressy cloth wraps for out
of-door summer wear are to be fash¬
ioned in the graceful Marie Antoinette
shape.
Bishop sleeves are to be very popu¬
lar in thin wash gowns. They are
worn with French waists and wide,
turn-over collars edged with embroid¬
ery.
Crisp taffeta ribbon is tho note of
tho moment for millinery use. It is
to be employed on spring and summer
bonnets in great profusion. It comes
iu all effects, Persian, clouded, chintz
and in checks and plaids.
French skirts, those now arriving
from tho other side, measure from
four and a half to five and a half yards
around. They are no longer lined
throughout, but are faced to the depth
of about fourteen inches.
Round waists are by no means ban¬
ished. They are still used on very
youthful, dressy gowns, A pretty
finish for these waists on slender fig
ures is a flounce of gathered lace held
in place by one of the narrow belts
now so popular.
Among the long cloaks is one style
which is considered sufficiently youth
fu for very young matrons. This is
G> of black
lined with some gay colored silk,
,; ithtr light rose p j n k or bright green.
j t is made very effective by several
short but full capes of velvet, trimmed
with black ostrich feathere.
The most favored materials for tea
gowns are those which are soft and
like nun’s veiling, cashmere,
1
are very desirable this season; and in
addition to these there is a new k.nd
of tapestry cloth which is mucu used
j for Louis XVI. t«* jacket* With W©*
' toire fronts of r.l&iu velvet or sun.
;
HIS BACK ALMOST BROKEN.
A Gtfoitor* I'ARMEU'S SEUIOUS AC
CIDESI.
Whileriowinc In the Field He Attempts
to Urtiso a Pine Stump and In¬
jures His 'pine.
From the Ishmaelite, Sparta , Ga.
‘‘Did you notice the man who just passed
us r asked a gentleman of a reporter.
♦'Yes, what about him?” asked the re
porter.
"How old would you take him to be?"
"Oh, about thirty-five, I guess."
"Well, vou have made the same mistake
that mauy others have made. That is Mr.
(Do. Bradley, and he is fifty yeats of age."
A few days later tho reporter was intro¬
duced to Mr. Bradley and commented on his
youthful appearanee. He seotned pleased,
aii'l in explaining the reason for it, iuci
ddntly told of a once serious accident to him¬
self. spring,”
"It will bo Bradley’, twenty years next con¬
tinued Mr. "that I was breaking up
Und for cotton in the northern part of the
State, and my plow stuck under a large pino
root. I loosed my plow and told my three
boys to have the root pulled up by the time I
exine around again. When 1 returned I
found the root still there, and thinking the
boys were not trying to get it up, 1 told thorn
to get out of tho way and I would pull it up
myself. hands and
"I grabbed it with both gave a
jerk which broke it and almost did tho same
with my back. I had to quit work for some
time, in fact. I was never able to do any
more very laborious work. I suffered ail the
time; I tried several doctors and many
methods of treatment, but nothing would
tase the terrible pain 1 suffered. Night und
day it was the same. stayed
"I moved to Massachusetts and
fbere several years, during which time 1
tried several more doctors, but with the same
disappointing results. I came to this place
fifteen years ago, and had become almost a
physical wreck. 1 suffered most excruciat¬
ing pains und had given up all hope of ever
being well again. One day last year I saw
an account of a similar case which had been
cured by Hr. Williams’ Fink Pills, and I do
cided to try them. I purchased them, six 1 boxes,
and by the time I had taken was en¬
tirely free from pain and had gained twenty
pounds, and I have never been troubled since
with my back."
Hr. Williams' Fink rills for Palo Peoplo
''arc considered an unfailing specific for such
diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paraly¬
sis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
rheumatism, nervous headache, the utter ef¬
fects of la grippe, palpitation that of the tired heart, feel¬
pale and sallow complexions, prostration, all
ing resulting from nervous
• diseases resulting from vitiated humors in
the blood, such ns scrofula, chronic troubles erysipe¬
las, etc. They are also a specific for
peculiar irregularities, to females, and all such forms as of suppressions, weakness.
In men they effect a radical cure in all cases
arising from mental worry, overwork or ex¬
cesses of whatever nature. Hr. Williams’
Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be
sent postpaid on receipt of price, 60 cents a
box or six boxes by for $2.50 by (they addressing are never Hr.
sold ia bulk or the 100),
Williams’ Medicine Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
Absurdly Similar.
Yabsley—I saw another ono of thoso
stories about a man losing bis watch
and not finding it for two years, nud
when ho did find it it was still running.
Mudge—Well, I know I found a
tailor’s bill I had mislaid seven years
ago, and it was still running.—India¬
napolis Journal.
A remarkable record has been made
by Mrs. Luke Fish, of Anderson,
Micb. Last week she gave birth to
twins, making her fourth pair of twins
in five years. She is only 28 years old,
and all the members of her large fam¬
ily of eight small children are alive
and in excellent health.
When ail article has boon Hold for .’ll years,
in spite of competition and cheap imitations, it
muttt have superior' quality. Dobbins’ Electric
Soap bus been constantly made and sold sine©
A sk your ffrocer/or it. best of all.
The value of the manufactured products of
New York exceed $750,000,000.
fir. Kdliner s S vv amp- Hoot cure*
R.ii Kidney and Bladder troubles.
fVwipblefc And Bln«rharnt.on. Consult/it.ion N. free. Y.
Laboratory
The ricrlit kind of fait h to have in God is just
to take Him at HU word and no away satisfied.
Sufferers from Couons, Sore Throat,
etc., should ho constantly supplied with
niw..v»L Brown' x Bronchial Hr.,»/>lii/i/ Trocher." 'fWichi’.' ” A A unid void irnitutiniiH. imitations.
One-quarter of all the people tinrn <lie before
0 years, ami one-half before they are 10.
Now Is the Time In Cure Vonr Corns
with Hindereorii". It takes I hem out l erfeel
ly ami v1 ves comfort. Ask your driiKL'ist. 15c.
MOTHERS MUST GUIDE.
Should Watch the Physical De¬
velopment of Their Daughters.
| Information They Should Furnish at tho
Proper Time—Knowledge by Which
Suffering May lie Avoided.
Every mother possesses information
(of j vital value to her young daughter,
When the girl’s thoughts become
sluggish, with
headache, di/.zi- ji
ness, and a dis
position to “
JlVs
w
-A*
deep, /
pains in
back and
lower air’
limbs, ! !
J 7 ¥ 111
eyec
im, O'*
c <:sire w
for solitude, '
and a dislike to
the society of
children: when she is
a mystery to herself and friends, then,
her mother should come to her aid.
Lydia E. Pipkham's Vegetable Com¬
pound will, at this time, prepare the
rjrstem for the coming change. See
tTat she has it, and Mrs. Pifikham, at
Lynn, Mass., will cheerfully answer
any letters where information is de
- red. Thousands of women owe their
h alth to her and the Vegetable Com
p ,-und, and mothers are constantly
applying to her for advice regarding
tueir daughters.
Filling the Bill.
A dealer in Htuffod animals, who al¬
so kept a few live creatures for sale,
gave his shop boy, who was permitted
to sell the stuffed specimens, orders to
call him when any ono asked for any
of the living animals. One day a gen¬
tleman called and demanded amonkey.
“Any one of these?’’ asked the boy
who was in charge. He pointed to the
stuffed specimens.
“No; I want a live monkey,” an¬
swered the customer.
The boy stepped to the door of the
back shop and called to his master :
“You’re wanted, sir.”—Youth’s Corn
pan ion.
A Man of Ills Word.
Mrs. Farmer—You said that if I
gave you a breakfast you’d put in an
hour’s work on that wood-pile, and
you’ve done nothing.
Hungry Hoke (deeply injured)—Noth¬
in’, Mum? I’ve bin a-calkerlatin how
many horse-power it ’ud require ter
saw dat hull pile, countin’ two
hundred feet’ ter de saw an’ each
foot’ wid a muscular resistance of ono
ohawergramme. Mebbe you don’t
kuow it, but brain work’s tho hardes’
kind uv work, lady.—Judge.
How Merit Counts.
"My father sot a box of Txttertne from a
friend who had obtained it somewhere in the
West, fie has had eczema very’ bad a long
time, and Tettkiiink is the only thing that
has ever benefited him.
“Please send by Express C. O. H. half-dozen
boxes. I’ve no doubt but it will lie the means
of selling a great deal of it here.” Very
truly, Mrs. L. O. Malcolm. I.
591 Cranston St., Providence, It.
1 box by mail for 60c. in stamps.
J. T. Snui’THiNB, Savannah, Oa.
Statu or Ohio, City or Toledo, I
Lucas County. i ' the
Frank .T. Chunky makes oath Hint lie is
senior pari MCI- of tho firm of F. .1. Ciieney <y
Co., doing business in file City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL-
1, A HS for each and every case of Catarrh that
cannot lie cured by the use of II all’s ( 'atarrii
Cure. Frank .1. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this Otli day of December, A. D. 1806.
. A. W. Gleason,
■j SEA I. J Notary' Public.
Hall’* Catarrh Cure is tnken internally anil
acts directly on tho blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
free. F’. J. Ciienkv Ac Co., Toledo, O.
1^‘ Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Mrs. Winslow’s .Soothing Syrup for children
teething,softens the muus, reduces inflamma¬
tion* allays pain,cures wind colic. 25o. a bott le.
FiTS stopped free by Du. Kmnk’h (Ducat
Nerve Marvelous Restorer. Treatise No tits after ami first $ 2.00 day's trial 11S0. bot¬
cures. Pa.
tle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St... J’iilla.,
Pipe’s Cure cured me of a Throat ami Bung
trouble of three years’ standing. K. Cm>y,
Huntington, I ml., Nov. 12, IBM.
Kvery Mother should Always Have
a bottie of 1 ’arker’s Ginger 'I onic. Nothing so
good for pain, weak ness,colds and sleeplessness
511 m ALABASTINE.
IT WON’T RUB OFF.
a m ALABASTINE i
J For Wale by Paint Itenlcm Everywhere.
The Doctor —"On, layor of -n.. A Card allowing 12 desirable tlnlH, also Alalinstino Y
H i What’s your
/j. husband’s work?
\ Does he have to do anything as hard as your
\ washing and scrubbing? It can’t be.
\ What can a man do that’s as hard, for most
7 - men, as this constant house
[fjr * drudgery is, for most women?
\ If he has any sympathy for
I - 5 you, Pearline. tell him to Sympathy get you some is all
very well, but it’s Pearline,
not sympathy, that you want for washing and cleaning.
Nothing else that’s safe to use will save you so much down¬
right hard work at the washtub or about the house. It saves
money, too—saves the ruinous wear on clothes and paint
from MfcK^iRgiiiiiD© needless rubbing.
c orn
is a vigorous feeder anti re¬
sponds well to liberal fertiliza
tion. On corn lands the yield
increases and the soil improves
if properly treated with fer¬
tilizers containing not under
7% actual
Potash.
A trial of this plan costs but
little and is sure to lead to
profitable culture.
Our pamphlets are not advertising’ circulars boom¬
ing special fertilizers, but are practical works, contain¬
ing latest researches on the subject of fertilization, und
are really helpful to farmers. They are sent Irut fur
the asking.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
03 Nassau St., New Ynrie
OPIUM and WHISKY habit i cored. Book oent
FKEK. Dr. ». K. WOOULBT. ATLiATJ. «»•
Strengthens 3
Brown’s muscles, tones
the nerves, aids
Iron digestion, puri¬
fies the blood,
: Bitters improves the
complexion.
-hr-::
Brown Chemical Co. Baltimore, Md.
o
WWm 14m kv
■
Wmm
7'.
m
L
tgv
Gladness Comes
XX/ith n' netter understanding of the
VV transient nature of the many phys¬
ical ills which vanish before proper ef¬
forts—gentle offorts—pleasant efforts—
rightly directed. There is comfort in
the knowledge that so many forms of
sickness arc not due to any actual dis¬
ease, but simply to a constipatedcondi- pleasant
tion of the system, which the
family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt¬
ly removes. That is why it is the only is
remedy with millions of families, and
everywhere esteemed so highly by all
who value good health. Its beneficial
effects are. duo to the fact, that it is tho
one remedy which promotes internal
cleanliness, without debilitating the
organs on which it acts. Itis therefore
all important, in order to get its bene¬
ficial effects, to note when you pur¬
chase,ihatyon have the, genuine article,
which is manufactured by the California
Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep¬
utable druggists. tli© enjoyment of good health,
If in
and the system is regular, then laxa¬
tives or other remedies are not needed.
If afflicted with any actual disease, ono
may bo commended to tho most skillful
physicians, but if in need of a laxative,
then one should have the best, and with
the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of
Figs stands highest and is most, largely
used and gives most general satisfaction.
PLANTER’S
For Yourself ami your Stock.
It is Rood for man and beast. Tho
Finest Nerve and Bone Liniment Made,
(hires fresh outs, wound-, bruises, pores,
rheumatism and pains of all kinds. Take no
sub-t it ut«*, as it has noequal. For pale by all
medicine dealers.
PRICE, 23 and 50 Cents.
Manufactured only by the
NEW SPENCER MEDICINE CO.,
CHATTANOOGA* TICNN.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
a? Clcantiff iiixl bcauilfle* tho hair.
Promotes % luxuriant growth.
JtflH ‘-J f! v ’ >r Fails to Restore Or ay
Uni r to it a Youthful Color.
Cures M itlp nn<l ilispftscs IM0 & Druggists hair lulling.
60 c, g at
WE H A V EJKSJtSSHIJL
^fir ut. wUolwittlo yricftH. Shift
Hi anywhere for examination
X. xVd . before Hale. Kverythirv^ of Car* w»r
run ted. ioo styles
riaffes, 90 stylus of Mar*
ness,41 styles Hiding 5 od*
o * - dies. Write for catalogue.
ELKHART
> Carriage A Harneu MCg C*.
W. B. tUATT, Hncr Elkhart, lnd.
HADJI lilllil WOOD MANTLES I
TILES AHD GRATES.
OIL STOVES.
SbikI for Prices.
HlliCltl k BilM CO
ATLANTA, GA.
& DM SURE.w{four
viii thomr yaa how to
make tv work day; absolutely touch sure: fr©« w* fur¬
nish the and you you
work u»jrour*«1dfos«!aml in tb* locality whero you live;
s©n<i explain
tho buaintiM fully. w* cu&i* t-«y’«
*nt«* a a,prod; or $3 tor «r«T
work; ftbAOlUtclr mirv, writ* ftt one*.
D. T. ■ORBAt. Ilanneer, Box I F. DETROIT. ■ICMltAJL
A. N. U .Fifteen. ’9C.