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CARTERS
CURE
Slok Headache an,l relieve all the troubles Inci
dent to a bilious state of the tvsfern. such rj>
Dizziness. Na lsea. Drowsiness. Distress after
eating. Pain ti the Side, <£c While their most
remarkable s>i teeas has been shown in curing
4eanacbe, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills
are equally valuable in Constipation, curie?
t nd preventing this annoying complaint, while
Vtey also correct all disorders of the stomach.
sthn late the liver and regulate the bowels
Kven if they only cured
Acne they would lie almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing complaint;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once tvy them will finu
those little pill* valuable in so nativ wavs that
they will not be willing to do without’ them.
But after all sick head
ACHE
b the bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small
and very easy to take One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictlv vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them.' In vials at 25 cents;
five for sl . Sold everywhere, or sint by naf.
cashes lismcat* or-.. Z'*t
Small Pill Small Sosi. ktilS&fc
<yVVc^'
piif? quickly.
11 PPM AN BROS., Savannah. Ga~-
*— Sole /T3ENTS IN THg U. 5. ;*s
Morphine and fnmd
Opium Habit vUItJU
Yon do not nave to stop ■work. You
experience no pain. A cure is certain
.For particulars and ter msaddress
HIE MACON RELIEF CO.,
p] O, Box 466. MacouJG?.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE N o w t'VVp.
Do you wear them? When next In need try a pk.|
Best In the world.
MOOJE %*2.58
#2*25% S HL7S
If you want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest
styles, don’t pay $6 to SB, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or
$5 Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and
wear as well. If you wish to economize In your footwear,
do so by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. Name and
price stamped on the bottom, look for It when you buy.
TV. I DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Sold by.
For Sale BY J. SV. Stafford & Sons.
LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors,
Druggists, Uppman's Block, SAVANNAH, GIL
np A pss
KetSKUsas^^Nswg
itooUtni. Adores. t. U^ri- 883 Ur****. •* *•
K Wra . COMPOUND.
■3 Vfv y A recent discovery by an old
and V •? physician, Succeatfiuly *“
KA W monthly by thousands of u>
l / Is the only perfectly safe
and reliable medicine dtscov
ered. Beware of unprincipled
*2ruggl*ta who offer inferior
medicines In place Ask for Cook s Cotto
KootCokpoukd, rokeio evbititvte,
6 cents In postage In Wtter, and we will send, seaieo,
by returnmait Full sealed particulars In plain
env 'lope, to ladles only, 2 stamp*.
.. At (tom Pond Lily Company,
. ' No. 3 Fisher Slock, Detroit, Mich.
. tw—*• e-
thicks that tailed.
ACCIDENT AND LIFE INSURANCE COM
PANIES EVER WATCHFUL.
How a llrooklyn Man Drew Damages
Through an Injured Double—Value of
the Time Dater—lt Took Three Years to
Catch the Slick Stockman.
A Brooklyn man who was hard up ran
up against his double, whose finan
cial situation was equally depressing.
Each was astounded at the resem
blance he bore to the other, and by
common consent they joined fortunes
' and rooms together. A day or two aft
er one of the two Dromios was knocked
down by a wagon and sustained a frac
ture of tho leg. He was carried home,
and the brilliant idea at once occurred
to his roommate to take advantage of
the resemblance between the two and
draw $25 from an insurance company
for as long a period as possible. Bor
rowing the injured man’s clothes, he
paid a visit to an avuncular relative,
from whom he borrowed a few dollars.
He went next to an insurance company
and took out a policy. Two weeks later
a claim came for total disablement,and
the injured man was easily identified
as the holder of tho policy, liis room
mate being careful to keep out of the
way. There could be no doubt as to
the man’s leg being broken, and as the
officers of tho company recollected that
the man who took out the policy was
sound in wind and limb there seemed
little reason to doubt that the accident
had occurred since the premium was
paid. No question was raised, and for
three or four weeks the $25 was paid
with a regularity highly satisfactory to
the well member of the firm.
But the sick man came to the conclu
sion that he was not getting a square
deal. Unable to leave his bed, he could
not take part iu the jollifications in
which his comrade delighted, and it ap
peared to him that he was not getting
more than about 20 cents on the dollar
of the weekly allowance. H 3 demanded
an equal division on the ground that,
although his friend had done all the
thinking, he had really played the lead
ing role by getting himself knocked
down and run over. It was tho usual
case of rogues falling out and honest
men deriving tho benefit. The disputes
were overheard by an adjoining room
er, who promptly gave away the story,
with the result that the weekly payments
came to a sudden and distressing end.
A case demonstrating the value of a
time dater occurred in Ohio. A man
carrying a large amount of accident in
surance had fallen a few days behind
in his premium, but one afternoon a
relative brought in the small amount
and obtained a receipt for it. That day
the insured was crippled in a street car
accident in Columbus, and it was of
course claimed that the premium was
paid before the accident took place.
The facts were distinctly favorable to
the injured man, for investigation
proved that there were two street car
accidents at about tho same place the
same day, two or three people being in
jured in each accident. The police
records threw no light on the subject,
and the man appeared to Lave been
taken away by his friends. There was
little doubt that the premium was paid
between the two accidents, though there
was much difficulty in fixing the exact
time.
It was finally ascertained that a tele
gram had been sent from Columbus an
hour after the first accident asking to
have the premium paid, and this cir
cumstance was in itself so suspicious
that payment of the benefit was refused.
A compromise was finally agreed to,
but considerably later two witnesses
were found to provo that tho man was
hurt in the first accident, so that if the
premium was paid in consequence of
the telegram fraud was evidently con
templated. But for the difficulty in
proving the exact hour of payment the
claim would not have been seriously
considered. As it was, however, tho
applicant’s case was on the face of it
quite a strong one.
Every one has heard of the man who
had been reported as dead, and whose
friends had collected the insurance, in
dulging too freely in whisky and mak
ing a complaint to the insurance com
pany that tho money had not been fair
ly divided. Instances in which money
has been claimed on account of the
death of people still living are much
more numerous than is generally be
lieved. In one case an Ohio stockman
carrying an accident policy for SIO,OOO
took some stock to New York. On the
return trip he disappeared from the
train while it was crossing a bridge,
and his hat being subsequently recov
ered it was contended that he had fallen
off and had been drowned in tho river.
The company took advantage of the 90
day rule and then offered to pay the
money if a bond were put up to cover
tho amount. The neighbors of the wid
ow fixed up an irreproachable bond, and
the money was paid.
The company was by no means con
vinced that the man was dead, and ar
rangements were made to have the
widow watched. Three years elapsed,
and the instance was well nigh forgot
ten, when a dispatch was received to
the effect that the lady was disposing
of her furniture and evidently about to
move. A detective was employed to
keep track. The family went to Chi
cago. and the detective followed. Aft
er a day’s delay they took a train for
the northwest, the detective also on the
train. Away cut in the wilds of Mon
tana the family alighted at a small sta
tion, where it was warmly welcomed
by the long lost stockman, who was
promptly put under arrest. The bonds
men were good for the money, and on
this occasion the company sustained no
loss beyond the expense incurred in the
watching.—New Orleans Times-Demo
crat. _____
American pumps are known in China
and Japan, os well as in all parts of
Europe.
SCHOOLBOY FIREWORKS.
1
Somehow Thfiy Wouldn’t Work Properly
and tho Connequencon Were Unpleasant.
I I have mmy mind a display of fire
! works given by myself when 12 years of
! ago or less. Dr. Adam Norris, my
1 schoolmaster in those days, knowing
that I was a past master in chemistry
i and an adept at tho manufacture of col
ored fire, directed mo to organize an
entertainment. The old gentleman is
gone now where there may or may not
bo fireworks, but to his dying day he
never appreciated my efforts on bis be
half. It was proposed to illuminate tho
playgrounds with colored fires and lan
terns, to invito the parents of tho 30
scholars and to regale them after the
display with cake and wine—l mean,
of course, the parents.
I was let off my evening lessons for
a week and allowed the run of the
school laboratory. There I reveled in
preparations. Not content with mere
red, blue and yellow fires, I arranged
Catherine wheels and Roman candles
and rockets. I felt the instinct of a
Brock and a Pain rising in me. I even
asked Dr. Norris for additional money,
j telling him that I had an idea for a
splendid novelty. He trusted me, tak
ing the word of our chemistry master
that I knew what I was doing. My
novelty, which 1 kept as a grand sur
prise, consisted of a “set piece,” with
the words: “God bless Dr. Adam Nor- j
ris. ”
This benign wish would como out in
red fire and subsequently change to
green, if all went well. The night ar
rived and tho company. The prelimi
nary illumination was not entirely suc
cessful, as my assistants did not under
stand their business, but tho first Cath
erine wheel went around several times
and appeared to be well liked. Owing
to some unfortunate miscalculation with
the materials, my rockets would not
soar. The spirit was willing; tho
chemical compound was weak. So they
tore about the ground, like snakes, and
hissed in among the company, and one
let off purple stars under the petticoat
of a lady. A solitary rocket really went
up a considerable distance, and the
stick fell through the hothouse of a
man next door, who had always been
unfriendly toward tho school. I pass by
the hot air balloon. It soared all
right, but I forgot to tie on the mag
nesium light, so nobody realized what
a fine thing was being done. The Ro
man candles passed off without adverse
comment, and then I lighted tho * * set
piece.”
You will not believe what happened.
Nobody has ever credited the story,
though I have told it to thousands. The
facts, however, are these: Owing to
unforeseen circumstances, the first two
words of the display—those asking God
to bless our good master —did not light
at all; the next word, ”Doctor,” fell off
altogether; the “A” in Adam also fail
ed, and tho whole of our preceptor’s
surname, excepting the initial letter,
blew up. What was the result? Why,
against tho black night, raised on sup
ports some 20 feet above tho heads of
the bewildered assembly, there blazed
forth a solitary colossal “Dam N.”
It burned red, and then in a silence
that could be felt turned green. The
“Damn” and I turned green together.
That ended tho entertainment. People
never believe this story. Indeed at so
great a distance of time I should be in
clined to doubt it myself, but I cannot
forget the subsequent interview with my
dear old master in his study. We had a
little private display of fireworks all to
ourselves. Thus do most improbable
effects result from remote causes. The
Chinese by inventing fireworks were do
ing a thing which, after long genera
tions of time, rendered it impossible for
mo to sit down with any comfort for a
week.—ldler.
Poisonous and Harmless Snakes.
There is a certain physiological dif
erence between the poisonous and harm
less snakes, which exists very plainly in
their manner of dentition. All snakes
are objects of aversion and dread to
mankind, so much so that to be bitten
by a snake has at times been so fearful
to tho victim as to have produced death,
although tho snake was harmless. Such
is the instinctive dread with which these
reptiles are thought of that it may be
desirable to have some easy modo of
distinguishing tho one kind from the
other. This distinguishing characteris
tic is afforded by the teeth. In all pois
onous snakes there are only two rows of
l teeth, the fang or fangs being ar
ranged either within the two rows or
outside of them. Tho harmless snakes
have four distinct rows of teeth, and
when the bite shows this kind of wound
and not any single deeper or larger
puncture there need bo no apprehen
sion.—New York Times.
The “Second Samson."
Richard Joy, who died May 18,1742,
at the age of 07 and is buried in the St.
Peter’s churchyard, islo of Thanet,
Kent, England, was known throughout
Europe as tho “Kentish Hercules,” or
the “Second Samson.” When but a
youth of 17 years, he was invited to
London by the king to give an exhibi
tion in remarkable feats of strength.
Among the feats of his more mature
years was that of breaking, with his
hands and feet, a rope with a tensile
strength of 85 hundredweight and the
lifting of 2,200 pounds. The following
is a copy of his epitaph:
Herculean hero! famed for strength.
At last lies here—his breadth and length.
See how the mighty man is fallen!
To death the strong and weak are all one;
The same judgment doth befall
Goliath rr-at und David smalL
—St. Louis Republic.
Stagnation Is Death.
The sun would be consumed by its
own ardor if it did not shine. Nature
knows nothing of hoarding. The sun
gives away its gold without ostenta
tion. The ocean gives its vapors to the
clouds, the clouds return them to the
earth, the rivers to the sea. There is a
constant exchange between lungs and
leaves. Stagnation is death. Give to
I get; get to give.— Ram’s Horn.
r Ull I SO I REMEMBER ".SftKSJ-M SSSSI 1
I B B I careful Investigation as to our responsibU- I S
9 B B iBM MWMN I lty and the merits of our Tablets. 1 yT a V
Gils®] Double Chloride of Gold Tablets x^^
Will completely destroy the desire forTOBACCO In from 3t05 days. Perfectly harm - S V' & S
less; ejinse no eirkneßH, and may be given In a cup of tea o-r coffee without the know! S a
edge of the patient, who wUI voluntarily stop smoking; or chewing In a few days. /
DRUNKENNESS and MORPHINE HABIT X XX *
the patient, by the uso of our SPECIAL FORMULA GOLD CURB TABLETS. J v X
During treatment patients are allowed tho free use of Liquor or Mor- A PPW
phine until such time as they shall voluntarily give them up. ■ w lull
Wo send particulars and pamphlet of testimonials free, and shall S lFsftiTrirvniP
bo glad to place sufferers from any of these habits in oommunics- lGuUiUUUiulu
tiou with persons who have been cured by the use of our Tablets. ff
MILL’S TABLETS are for sale by all vibst-cum X from persons
enclsse ns ~ .OO Z Wh ° haVQ bGBn
Tablets. Wil * ** retUr " “ P ‘ okaK ° °* ou * / curod by tno USO Of
Write your name and address plainly, and stats . . #
whether Tablets aro for Tobacco, Morphine or S SB / Mall TtHI/vrei
v 11111 S I HDICIS.
DO NOT BE DECEIVED into purchasing X mm mmT/
any of the various nostrums that are being X TH* Ohio CHtsiOiL Oo.:
offered for sale. Ask for TTTT.x.t Dus Sib:—l have been using your
TABLETS and taka no etheff. S cure for tobacco habit, nud found it would
a*.Manufactured only by what you claim for it. I used ten cents
worth of tne strongest chewing tobacco a day,
* Tint S and from one to Are cigars; or I would smoke
“ S from ton to torty pipes of tobacco. Hate chewed
nirm mrmrTn i T nr S and smoked for twdnty flvs years, and two packages
UHIu liuiiM'LAL Lit S mm of your Tablets curod me solha ve no desire for It.
umu UIUIUUUiUJ UU,, yX T B.M.JArLOKD, Leslie, Mlcb
SI, 63 A BftOpen Block, / Bt Dobbs Febrt, N. T.
■■ m Th*OHloOhbmicalCo.:—G*ktlimp,k:—Sometime ago I sent
LIMA, OHIO. X Bt m / . for 01.0 Q worth of your Tablets for Tobacco Habit. I received
them all right and, although lwus both n heavy smoker and chewer,
PARTTPTTT.ARS S lMk ABw/ they did the work In less than three days. Intncured.
riiuiLiLAJO) x mm/ J Truly yours, MATHEW JOHNaOU, P.0.80x.
Cprr thWK, rffl Pittsburgh, Pa.
rnt.La XABPSaSk
jT wife. ww. my word of praise for your Tablets. My son was strongly addicted to the useof
l wSsk Hn. / liquor, and through a friend, 1 was led to try your Tablets. Ho was n heavy and
/Bhm. Wtw/ constant drinker, but after using your Tablets but three days he quit drinking,
/ ■ sn. and will not touch liquor of any kind. I have waited four month before writing
you, in order to know the cure was permanent. Youra KJ MORK , OfT
yV’ Tu* Onio Chemical Cos : —Grhtlrmbn: —Your Tablets have performed u miracle In my casa.
V| 1 have used morphine, hypodermically, for seven years, ana have been cured by the use of
mB two packages of your Tablets, and without auy effort on my part. tv. L. T OTKGAT.
WV Address all Orders to 1
j A WAKTED THE OHIO CHEMICAL CO., .
L X 1 51,03 and OO Opora Block, LIMA, OHIO. ■ji
S (In writing please mention this papea)
LAUNCHING A STKANDED
UTEAMER.
A large force has been engaged in
preparing the way for the removal
lof the steamer Crescent City from
her position on the Bay Shell, where
she was driven by the recent storm.
The plan adopted to remove the \
boat is a novel one here, and the pro
gress of the work is the subject of
much cousideiatiou from slupmeu
and others. A basin 6 feet in depth
has been cut beneath and around
the boat sufficiency large to permit
her to bo turned faud poiuted out to
wurd the deep water. Connecting
will this basin is a canal made iu
three divisions and live feet deep.
It is proposed to pump the first
basin full of water with a steam fire
•ngine, and when this is douetbe
boat will bo floated, and turning it
half way rou-d will be uu easy task.
When iUe bout has '.een turned in
the direction of the deep water, the
dam leading into the first section of
the canal will be opened and by the
uaturu! gi a vital ion the boat will be
fioaied imo the first section of the
canal, and after this the second and
the third dams will be cut away, ana
thus the boat will be caniedout to
where the water ot the bay will be
deep enough to float her.
The situation ot tho Crescent City
10 feet or more übovo the water,
will allow a good fall of tho water.
Mobile Register.
According to the American Agri
culturist, which buses its statement
on the mortgage figures of tho cen
i sub for thirty three states, “three
fourths ot the fatms of the country
are owned free of all incumbrance,”
and “the average mortgage on the
rest represents only one third of the
farm incumbered.” If this statement
is true, and there is reason for the
belief that it is, the chief argument
of the populist calamity howlers is
exploded. They have labored faith
fully to create the impression that
eveiy farm in the west is plastered
all over with mortgages.
TWO LIVES SAVED.
Mrs. Phoebe Thoti as, of Juction
City, 111., was told by her doctors
she hud consumption and that there
was no hope for her, but two bottles
of Dr. King’s New Discovery com
plete'y cured her and she says it
saved her life. Mr. Thos. Eggers,
139 Florida St, San Francisco, suf
fered from a drsadful cold, approach
ing consumpt-GD, tried without re
j suit everylb’ng else then bougbtoue
bott'.e of Dr. King’s New Discovery
and in two weeks was cured. He is
naturally thankful. It is such re
sults, of which these are samples,
that prove the wonderful efficacy of
this medicine in cougbs and colds.
F/ee trial bottles at S. B. Burr’s
drug store, Regular size 50c. and
*I.OO.
STICKS CLOSEII THAN A
BBOTHER.
Bob Clamwhooper—About a week
ago you sold me a porous plaster to
get rid of a pain in my chest.
Druggist—Yes, I remember it
very well. What can Ido for you
c w?
Clamwhooper—Now I want some
thing to get rid of the porous plas
ter. —Texas Siftings.
t ~—- i.
PRESSURE SUSTAINED BY DI
VERS.
George W. Fuller, tho veteran
submarine diver, n relating some
anecdotes concerning tbsbottou of
tbe sea and its itiaabitauLs, gives
some interesting figures as to tbe
( am dint of pressure ibe body of a di
i ver is subject to. At a depth of only
100 feet the pressure of It pounds
to each square iuen of tne divers
body surface. The ordinary human
frame has about 12 square feet of
surface, which would make tba pres
| sure ut the depth uientioued above
not less than 28 tons! This enor
mous weigtt is not all pressing
downward, but inwards from all di
, rections.
EMERALDS ARE SCARCE,
It is reported that emeralds are
steadily disappearing. In the ’sos
aud ’Ofls emerul Is were the favorite
jewels, and were worn strung on a
thread like pearls. Now emeralds
are no longer polished into a round
form, but are polished like diamonds.
Faultless stones of a deep c lor
have always beeu a9 valuable as dia
monds. Tbe reason of the scarcity
of emeralds is tbe decreuse is pro
duction in the Ural mountains.
Emeralds were first discovered on
the rieht bank of tbe Tokowoier,
near Kalherineburg, in 1830, and iu
the first years the harvest was a
rich one.
STORING MILK.
The keeping of milk in a way that,
it will not be effected by outside in
fluences and remain sweet for a rea
sonable length of time is one that
should interest many are not inter
ested directly in dairy matters. Tbe
writer now has in mind such persons
as are interested in hotels, boarding
schools, soldier’s homes, and many
county and state institutions where
large quantities of milk aro consum
ed each day.
In the first place, cotracts for
milk should be made with pro iucers
of known cleanliness aryl integrity,
and it should bo insisted on as one
of the conditions that tho milk shoul
be cooled as soon as drawn to n tem
peratture not higher than 50 degree
tne cooling to be done in
pure air and the milk stirred at least
a portion of the time while being
cooled-
Having received the milk it is im
portant to have the proper facilities
for storing it and at the same time
conveniences for drawing it wen re
quired for use, such conveniences as
will admit ot the milk being drawn
without disturbing tbe cream.
In connection with some institu
tions referred to above there are
farms. This is usually the case with
most of the county and some of the
state institutions. At such places the
provisions for storing milk can be
made to answer an additional pur
pose, that of creamiDg it.
We have in mind one set of county
insti tutions, the managers of which
fully realize the importance of the
subject of this article. We refer 10
those of Milwaukee ( Win ) county, lo
cated at Wauwatosa, that coun'y.
The alms bouse, hospital and asy
lum for chronic insane are all fur
nished with portable creameries, and
it is tbe testimony of the superin
tendent in charge aud the physicians
connected with those institutions
that they were valuable adjuncts.
LARGEST DRAWBRIDGE IN
THE WORLD.
Now London, in the little State
of Connecticut, has the largest
swinging span drawbridge in the
world. It is on theSbore Lme Rail
ways and wus built during tbs sum
mer of 1889. This titanic span, which
is of siet tftiid weigus 2,5000,000
pounds is tie center one iu the
great Pequot River Bridge, the to
til length of which is 1,422 feet.
The pier upon which this “triumph
of mechamoM c instruction” swiugs
was sunk iu 57 feet of w iter aud 80
feet of saud and mud.
Can you think of anything more
convincing th in the promise that is
made by the proprietors of Dr. Sage’*
Catarrh Remedy? It is this: If we
can’t cure your Catarrh, we’ll pay
you $509 iu cash.”
POND’S
EXTRACT
WILL OU7IB
PILB9
“ I ntv. It na known it, voluo in b A
It i, it.# prir,# o( romtdin,
i- ,11 form, ol hemorrhoid,."—Or A.
M. COLLINS, C,moron, Mt.
CATARRH
•• Htv bn a constant 9 M
years from sever* colds in hd f -fN*
tfwoit. Tried most every s noiMA
remedy. Pond's Ixtrect reWeved m*
wondorfully, end hes effected elmoe*
s radict! euro PREO ER \ C A
FINCK, New York City.
SORE EYES
"ltct, lik* m,gro in opbtf •
lik, it ,o much tor Mr, ay**.”—K**,
M. JAMESON.
bAMENESS
" I strongly recommend Pond**
for ltmen-f*c, and uss it constantly.
MICHAEL DONOVAN, N. Y. AthleN*
Cluo-
BOR EM ESS
*' Had a 'ergo eating so • c n my en’tl*
which Had eaten to the b oo'i. Foe
r.ine months I doctored to no purpose.
Tried a bottle of Pond's Extraot, *nJ
wii cured immediately."—MlNNlfe
>ANATTA, Lock.oose, r %.
TRUSSES
"Pond's Extract has been used v*lt
marked benefit by ou* inmotes in m*ey
of bruises, ano na. el wav* prs .•♦4
yen* beneficial * —L’TTLE
f /’ THE POOR. New York City,
QPRAbNS
"I have been prescribing Pend s Ex*
tract, and find it a valuable remedy it
strain end a ,# est'ons of like on**
acter/'—W P. BURDICK, M.D.
STURMS
"Hd my >f* hend •f.r.ly brn.
jnd lost tho uss of it sompl.t.l?;
scurod toli.f by us, of Pond’, Exro
in twolv, hour,.Mr,. A SffEPMAH
Nw York City.
HEMORRHAGES
“Am . roubl.d with h,morrh. fr*
lungs, und find Pond’, cstr.ct th.onty
r,md, th.t will ,ntrol thm."-
GEORGE W. WAKNER, Scranton,
INFLAMMATIONS
i have used Pond’s Extract if. i ctei
of long sta *ding internal inflanimetlo*
and obtained reGe* within e few hour*."
--JAMES E. READE, Philadelphia.
and should be always
kept on hand for em
ergencies.
" Leng experinoe ha* taught my hm
by t* regard Pond’* Extract as one A
the absolute necessities of fcousekeeot
ing."—AN DREW D. WHITE. Prtefa
dent Cernell University.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
See Landscape Trade-mark l*
Buff Wrapper.
MADE ONLY ST
BOND’S EXTRACT CO,
Yort end London.