Newspaper Page Text
,—
SodoL
How could I txp«* to be hippy and gmj,
Sacha dayf
When thins* are as dull and as still as a
la the boost.
Oh, dear, If I knew
Of something to do!
Tba world looks as if it wen haring a cry.
It only tbs sunshine would Kails out again;
Aad tba rain,
- And the dark, gloomy clouds, and tba mist,
aad tba gray
Go away—
Why, than yon would sea
How marry I’d bo! "
If only tba aon and tba wadtber would a;
Bo would L
—Sydney Day re, in St. Nicholas-
THE SQUIRE'S WIFE.
Squire Clover listened in silence, but
with a ouict smile upon his lips, to his
old cronies’ yarns of their vanou
“We young.
will, an’ afore sunset the corn-was all
husked and piled away, ami the bam
floor swept dean for the dance an’ sup
per we was to bare in the ereniu*.
“Pretty soon the women folks began
to flock in, all drained in their best, an*
lookin’ as fresh an* bloomin' as a flower
garden after a shower.
“But Sae was the prettiest of the hull
lot, dressed in her whits frock, with the
pink ribbon tied around her waist.
“Silas Peterkin, he was thereof course,
an* as won a* I see him I went to the
OP SONGSTERS SAC-"
R1FICED TO FASHION.
Cirds in Mnsenme and on Indies'
Hats—Birds Moat Sought, and
Where Collected-The Meth
ods of the Dealers.
“As I was standin* on the back steps,
out of sorts with myself an* everybody
else, I heard a voice say:
‘•‘David!’
“An* turning round, I saw Sue, lookin'
as smilin* as a basket of chips.
“ ‘Ain’t you cornin’ down to the bam?
says she.
“‘I rather guess I ain't wanted,* says
Th? destruction of brids in the United
States is awakening new and Serious in
terest among ornithologists. A commit
tee has been appointed hy the American
Ornithologists* Union to gather informa
tion bearing on the destruction and pro
tection of North American birds.
A Herald reporter called on Mr. J. A.
Allen, one of the active member* of the
committee, in relation to the matter. The
Of all our infirmities,
dearest to us; a man will
vices to keep that alive.
One of the saddest things about human
nature is, that a man may guide others in
the path of lifp without walking in it
himself; that he may be a pilot and yet
a castaway. *
Whenever you commend,add your rea
sons for doing so; it is th« which dis
tinguishes the approbation of a man of
sense from the flattery of sycophants,and
ldmiratinn nf
Natural History, in Central Park.
“We. hare protective laws,” said Mr.
Mien, “and if they were - properly
fied and enforced our birds would
be fairly protected. As it is, their slaugh
ter continues to increase from year to
“Oh, yes, you are,’ says site: *1 want
you.*
“She looked and spoke so sweet, that
I was e'enamost a mind to go. But
jest then I heard Silas callin’ her; an’
mutterin’ somethin* about havin’ some
tools to grind, I walked off.
“I was most sorry for’t, though, when
I caught* sight of her face as she walked
away with Suaa, an* saw how sober it
liable injury to the country will
follow and many of the species become
extinct. There are thosewho would make
bird collectors for museums in a measure
responsible for the rapid decrease of bifds
in this country. The charge < is un
founded. I have taken pains to galher
data, and after carefully examining the'
records of the museums of the United
and mishaps in their younger days
trying to get pose-sion of the girl of
their choice.
Bat after they had all spoken he
knocked the ashes out of his pipe, and,
proceeding to refill if, said:
“Ay, neighbors, ye've told some pretty
queer stories, but I’ll warrant I can tell
one that’ll match ’em. I rather guts*
’twould astonish th.se acquainted with
my quiet, mode it-loo king wife yonder
to know how it was that I thought of
taking her for better or worse.” ,
“Now, David,” expostulated Mrs.
Clover, both reddening nnd smiling os
she met her husband's quizzical look.
“Why will you tell tl at silly story? If
you hadn’t cared to tike me, you could
have let me alone.”
“Ah, sure it is easy talkin’,” said the
squire, shaking his head with demure
gravity. “But when a girl—an’ cipeci-
ally aich a pretty one—flies directly into
a fellow’s arms, what else can he do!
That’s what I’d like to know!”
Laughingly declaring that “she’d stay
to listen to no such nonsense,”\Mrs.
Clover gathered up her work and
Sittin’ down on the back steps, I
went to work; the raspin’ of my file
soundin’ a deal pleasanter to my cars
Tin’ that floated up from the
than the fiddlin'
bam down in tin medder.
“It had been uncommonly hot for a
number of days past, but tlus had bccu
the hottest one of all. Not a leaf moved,
an’ there was somethin’ unnat’ral' in the
stillness of everythin’ around. There was
a strange look to the sky, too; it was
streaked overhead with purple an’ ri’let.
with a sort of yellow glare ia the west.
of less than two hundred thousand birds.
This number is not a twentieth of the
birds killed in a single season and sold
to the hat trade. These 200,000 birds
belonging to American science represent
the collections of many years, while the
vast numbers destroyed and sold to the
milliners are the result of a single sea
son’s slaughter. This wholesale destruc-
the present fashion of wearing
wanderin’ restlessly
hour, now set up a mournful howl.
“When I went to fodder the cattle I
found the poor critters huddled together
in one corner of the yard,utterin’ low bel
lows of terror and dismay, their instincts
warning them, as all these signs did me,
his
ly; and her husband, after shaking
jot* ”
_ illy sides with silent laughter,
til some of tho^e present were fearful
that apoplexy would be the result, grad
ually recovered himself and proceeded to
satisfy tho curiosity he had aroused
thus:
“I was a poor bov, as perhaps you
know, with nothin’ but a pair of stout
arms and broad shoulders to push my
way in the world with: b it I had a brave
heart, an’ wasn’t afraid of work, an’ on
the whole, ain’t no ways dissatisfied with
what my hands have brought me.
“The summer I was twenty-one I went
to work for Sue’s father.
“Mr. Bean was a well-to-do farmer,
and Sue his only child. He wasn’t any
ways stuck up about his property, but
he set a great store by Sue; an’, as he
knew that some day she’d liavo as good
a farm as there was in the county, nat’r-
5 -r«—b to fifivq as much as he took,
’ v “So I had no more idea of ever bein’
Sue’s husband than I had of Ilyin’, and
E t the very first time I set eyes on her I
iew, as well as I know now, that
other woman would ever be to me what
ladies* hats and raiment. It Is true that
many of the birds sold in the trade
imported, but they are fully balanced by
those we send abroad. The number of
birds annually slaughtered in this coun
try for the sake of fashion amounts to
many millions, as. we have found by
making careful estimates based on manu
facturers’ figures of birds bought and
she i
“I remember the dav just as well as if
’twss yesterday. I had seeu Mr. Bean
down to the village the night afore, an’
’twas agreed that I come the next after
noon.
“When I come to thchiusc
looking house it was, wiiha broad piazza
each sido on’t—I was dubious as to
of thetornaJo that was approach! a’.
“Goin’ back to the house I shut every
door and winder.
Then thlnkin’ of the folks in the barn
—that was the most in danger of any
thin’—I ran down through the garden to
ward the medder where it stood.
“But I had hardly gone two rods be
fore it came—liftin’ me off my feet an’
hurlin’ me against an opposite fence 1
“I picked myself up an’ hurried on. As
I come in sight of the barn—or, ruther,
where it once stood—the air was filled
with dust an’ fly in* shingles an* timber!
“As soon as it clcired away a bit, I saw
Sac standin’ in a most perilous position
right in the midst of it!
“I shouted to her to come away; and
jest then the wind took her upas if she
was but a feather, bearin’ her directly to
ward me. ’ I opened my arms, an’ she
came right into them.
“As she did so, one of the flyin’ sticks
hit one of my arms, makin’ it useless;
but boldin’ her tight with the other, I
took her to soma low bushes in* a little
hollow* between two hills.
‘•The tornado was as short as it was
violent, and though a good deal of dam
age was done, luckily, no one was hurt
much.
“Sue escaped without a scratch. My
arm was broken; but considerin’ who
nursed me, you needn’t waste any pity
on me for that!
“I hea:d arterward,
alarm was given, Silas Peterkin took to
his heels, an’ never stopped until he
reached his father’s door.
“Whether he heard that the old man
vowed that he’d set Bose on him if he
ever came nigh Sue ng’n, I can’t say, but
his visits ceased from that day. -
“I sent him an invite to my weddin’,
sold. The more beautiful the bird, the
eagerly it is sought, and the more
money it will bring.”
“What birds are most used by thc’Now
York bird dealers?”
“Our sweetest singers and most in
dustrious worm catchers! Among them
are tho orioles, redbirds, cedar birds,
goldfinches, bluebirds, redstarts, vireos,
cherry bird", blue-jay, red winged black
birds, meadow larks, swallows, bobo
links, sand pipers, golden winged wood
peckers. robins, shore lark3, thrushes,
insect killing nighthawks, whip-poor
wills, wh'te herons, egrets, much sought
account of tneir long, graceful
plumes, and terns, or sea swallows.
“Tho destruction of these birds has
become a regular and systematic busi
ness. An experienced man, with two or
three taxidermists, will go along the
coast in the season and employ the natives
to kill birds. It is surprising how many
birds one of these New York agents,
with a few good taxidermists, can get in
few months. The islands along the
Atlantic coast are favorite breeding
grounds for birds. This the natives well
know. An inducement of ten cents
apiece for all birds delivered roon de
populates the islands of their feathered
dubious
whether I had better go In the side __
back door. I finally «oacluded to take
tho latter.
“As 1 passed tin k'tchcn window I
heard a vole.* tingin', as sweet and clear
as a robin’s, an’ on lookin’ in I saw Sue
standin’ by a table, kneadin’ bread, an’ I
never see a prettier picter afore or sencc.
“Ah, lads, ye it ay talk about girls at
the pianny, but they a n’t half so much
come I'm sort of mis
trustful that he was afraid of another
tornado.”—New York News.
I saw at tho
in’-bcard; the flour tiio was siftin’
not any whiter than h r round, uncov
ered arms, aad with as bright a bloom on
cheek an* lip as the roses that were clam-
, arter starin’ at her pretty face
as long as I dared to—quite unbeknown
to her—I knocked at the door.
“ *Come in!* sang out a voice that set
my heait to bestin’ like a sledge ham
The Shah’s Hurem.
A lrttcr from Teheran, Persia, to the
London Globe says: Most of the ladies
of tho harem have small separate estab
lishments but all live in the palace, the
doors and windows of th sir rooms look
ing out into a large quadrangular court.
Some wives occupy suites of apartments,
others have only one or two rooms. The
shah’s harem, like other well-conducted
establishments of the kind, is shrouded
in mystery, and the European ladies who
N “Liftin’ the latch I walked in.
“ *Is Mr. Bean to home!’ I stammered,
colorin’ as red as abret, as Sue tamed her
black eyes on me.
“ ‘Yea; father’s somewhere about.
He’ll be in in a minute. Won’t yon take
a aestl* ;
“In goin’ across the room, I stumbled
over a pail, which to flustered me that I
sat down in a chair where a large gray
cat lay curled up asleep, and who, spit-
tin’ an* clawin’ at me, sprang out of the
window
“I could see by the dimples that came
round Sue’s pretty mouth that she had
hard work to do to keep from laughing
outright. But she didn’t ’pear to take any
notice on it, aad ^
Bead came in, as
more comfortable.
“They were real nice sort of folks,
who treated their help like their
own family, an* I soon began to feel at
home.
“All but with Sue;IcoO’*dn’t seem to say
two or three words to her without blun
derin’, an* was always doin’ some awk
ward thing or other, whenever I went
have occasionally visited it cannot tell us
much. These ladies visit the harem on
certain holiday*, when every inmate is
gay and happy, and they therefore see
only the bright side of harem life. There
is, of couise, a dark ride; but of this
nothing certain is known to the outer
world, and the members of the harem are
discreet, and do not blab. The shah ia
said to be a kind master, and his wives
Unary precautions are always
taken to prevent males from getting in
side, and the European ladies who visit
the harem are, on entering, examined
bj eunuchs, who also inscribe the names
t the visitors and those of their attend
ants. ' a In spite of the great precautions
taken, it baa once or twice happened that
a man has been smuggled into the harem,
and I lately heard a story of a laborer
having been found on the roof of the
women’s apartments. He was advised
to affect madness—which was hardly nec
essary, as fear had already made him
idiotic—and it was explained that he had
got into the harem through an under-
td water canal, in which he had
working. It speaks well for the
shah that the man was let off scot-free;
informer times ha and several women
would have been executed there and
It occasionally happens t^mt 1
shah ccmes into the women's apartments
when European ladies are there' on a
visit He then asks who the visitors arc,
' nigh
“I don’t think I'd have felt quite so
ahy if I had known her opinion ‘of me;
for I wasn't a bad lookin’ chap in my
days—broad shouldered
it as an arrer—\ -
•wn hair,
vations on their looks. He is not very
complimentary; and some time ago a lady
u told by his majesty
lean. The
admiration of fools.*
One breach of faith will always b2 re
membered, no matter how loyal your sub
sequent life may be. People may imagine
pet all the time they
that they trust you, yet
have on eye on the former break.
An old man who has lived in the exer
cise of virtue, looking bock without a
blush on his past days and pointing to
that better state where alone he can be
perfectly rewarded, is a figure the most
venerable that can well bo imagined.
Don’t think that one part of your life
is important'and another unimportant;
Long Lire the Grand Bake.
done,
another part is slighted.
Every moment, at work, at play, demands
the best there is in you. lave full,
true,
honest live*. ,
How little is known of what is in the
bosom of thoso around us! .Wo might
explain many a coldness coaid we look
into the heart concealed from us; we
should often pity where we curl the lip
with ecorn and indignation. .- To judge
without reserve of afiy hmban action is a
culpable temerity—of all our ' tins the
most unfeeing and frequent.
Few people know how \p look or how
to list eg. The eye and ear need Irainf
A German school teacher wag instruct
ing his pupils how to act when the Grand
Duke should pan through on the rail
road, an event which win to occur next
day.
“Remember, children,” said the peda
gogue, “that as soon as the train arrives
you are to yell as loud as you'can:
‘Long live the Grand Duke!* until he
leaves.”
Next day when the Grand Duke ar-
bowed trom theplatform
car, the school children made the welkin
weary by yelling:
“LoDg live the Grand Duke until ho
leaves!”—Siftings.
to distinguish what may be seen
to appreciate what may be j
heard. The
attention needs to be aroused and fixed,
the power of concentration needs to be
exercised, the flagging interest needs to
be Stimulated, in order that even tolera
bly correct impressions should bi made
upon the brain.
How Rachel came to Harry Jacob.
This true story comes from an old sea
board town in Maine:
Jacob loved Rachel, but Rachel
wouldn’t have him. Jacob labored oo,
; his suit at intervals, and after
tuff telling, her he was bonnd to
win her yet, and convince every one she
cared for him as much os he b.licvcd in
his heart she did.
“Very well,” cried the indignant. Ra-
vilh a tnu of lipr lmul *•!
inhabitants. The bird which costs ten
cents in tho country tells for fifty cents
to a dollar in the city. The cost is trifling
compared with the large profits and vast
extent of the business. Herons and
egrets, which were so plentiful in Florida
few years ago, have almost disappeared.
“Aii ordinary dealer in the country
will sell 10,000 birds to his city custom
ers in a' single season. Many of the
larger jobbers handle from 30,000 to
40,000 birds a year each. On Long Is
land and in N*w Jersey an immense
number of birds are killed every season.
A single neighborhood on Long Island
will send from 300 to 500 birds to
market a week. A single village in the
back country ships from 50.000 to 80,000
birds during a summer. When the sea
son is at its height-from 5,000 to 10,000
birds are daily received by the New
York taxidermists. A woman agent
down in the quiet State of Maryland has
been known to collect 50,000 birds (many
of them the sweet singing Baltimore
orioles) and ship them to Paris in a sea
son. The islands along the scncoast
between Philadelphia and Fortress Mon-
chel,' with a toss of her head,
on till you make folks believe that, and
when you do I’ll marry you!”
Jacob did persevere, but with small
success and at last began to lose cour
age. About this time another suitor of
Rachel’s arrived home from sea, bringing
with him, among other exotics, a parrot
of gorgeous hue which he presented to
Rachel, who forthwith hid the bird sus
pended from the sitting room window,
whence she lo:-kod out afternoons when
her work was done. For a day or two
after his elevation to this dignity the
parrot remained, marvelously quiet, only
casting an eye about os if taking in his
new situation. On the third morning,
however, no sooner did the neighbors
begin to stir than he electrified each
passer-by with the announcement:
“Rachel's gone on Jacob; no chance
for John!”
Of course, the ihore laughter this
raised the more vociferously the bird
proclaimed the news. It spread like
wildfire, and the parrot’s audience stead
ily increased. Rachel, meanwhile, went
into hysteric*, but kowev^y riiuch tlu»
incommoded thq family it made‘no im
pression on the parrot, who, although
threatened and beaten and relegated to
darkness, waxed more and more furious
with desire to^ spread his knowledj
systematically robbed of their
birds for the benefit of thoughtless, fash
ionable women. Wings of handsome
re qu<
at from thirty cents-to one dollar apiece,
and birds’ eggs at from five to eight
cents each. In Washington the daily
papers contain half column advertise-
mrats giving particulars of beautifully
colored birds’ wings and breasts, which
are offered for sale by the dozen or gross.
“We are going through the same ex
periences that liavc long been complained
of in England, where active measures
are' now taken -o save birds. Over there
an auction room advertises for sale 0,228
birds of paradise, 4,974 pheasants, 40,-
ii< n OKtt non
Jacob kept out of the way for a wl
but there was no lack pf couriers
bring him information of the other fel
low's discomfiture and the parrot’s he
roic defence of his cause. At last Rach
el’s father appeared, wearing
weather-beaten face an odd mixture of
frown and grin;
“Look a-here.” ho said, “between
that bird’s screechin’ an* folks a cacklin’
that gal’s a’most out o’ her head. Tbere'i
nothin’ for you to do but go over there
and try to fix up things as well’s ye can.
I guess most likely she ll see ye—I do’
>, folks can’t always tell.”
The upshot was Rachel married Jacob,
who sticks to it that it was the pqnetre-
trative wisdom of his rival's palTOt that
did the business, and denies to this day
came by his speech. —Boston liecon
Interesting Autographs.
“Carp” makes up a reliable letter from
Washington to the Cleveland header by
devoting it largely to extracts- from the
autograph album of Mrs. Ogle Tayloe,
for years one of the mo3t n >ted society
ladies at the capital and the confidant
and friend of more than one generation
of great men. Here are the productions
of some famous people:
A distinguished fair, with prudential care,
440 Brazil birds and 356,389 birds from
the East Indies. It is a noticeable fact
that the greater the slaughter and sale of
song birds the less is the demand for
ostrich feathers.
‘All birds are beneficial!” continued
. • Allen. “They destroy insects,
worms and noxious larvfe. To the far
mers and gardeners their services are in
valuable. The country would be over
run and the crops destroyed bat for the
birds of America! In considering the
causes of their destruction legitimate
sportsmen and bird collectors for muse-
To wrest a friend from ruthless Time,
Has assigned a place his poor hand to 1
In heavy prose or trifling rhyme.
Thus, tbo*the record of his sheathed ywi
Boon should perish or be forgot,'
This protective pft^e shall outlive the age.
Ami save the name of Winfield Scott.
January. 1829.
BY FITZ-OREKN HALX.KCK, THE POET.
Let names of warriors and of sage3
On histoiV* leaf eternal be;
l few brief years on beauty’s pages.
Are worth thsir immortality. ,,
This volume of the lieart permit* me
To brave oblivion's Withering dowi
Till she, whose name it bears; f
[vRKKXK HALUCX.
with the demands of the fashiona
ble milliner and dressmaker, which are a
hundred fold greater than all others. It
is true that State laws are supposed to
prohibit this shameful and indiscrimi
nate slaughter of birds, but their pro
visions are violated with impunity by
mm who, under the cloak of a taxider
mist’s permit, become legalized agents
for citv millinery establishments, and do
not hesitate to shoot birds in all places
and seasons. Of course this wanton
abuse of a lawful privilege is not prac
ticed by all alleged scientific: collectors,
but enough of them are violating their
permits to work great destruction among
New York, Nov. 24,1828.
BY PRESIDENT JACKSON.
Let wisdom all ray actions guide,
And let my God with me reside.
No wicked thing s': all dwell with i
Which may provoke thy jealousy,
June, 1830. Andrew Jackson.
BY CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL.
Dear JIadau—I am too much flattered by
■r other complaints—Dr. Kilmer's
CHAIPIOK SPARK ARRESTER
m tree? It is full of leaves.
•ok like*. _
Huckleberry. Cordial leaves the
bowels in their natural condition, and does
not after checking them, constipate, as
**- J
and to stimulate the
love so near the genuine quill
receipt is simple. You have only to take
entcold.and neglect it. Abernethy, the
great English surgeon, asked a lady who told
him she only had a cough: “What would
mu have? The plague?" Beware of "only
coughs.” The worst cases can, however, be
cured hy D*. Wm. Hall's Balsam vorthe
Lungs. In Whooping Cough and Croup It
immediately allays Irritation, and is .sure '
prevent a fatal termination of the '
8old by druggists.
DYSPEPSIA
Ah Infallible Remedy.
Tom—“How’s that cold of yours?”
Bert—“Oh! I got rid of it.”
Tom—“What did you take?”
Bert—“A fresh one.”—Ljfe.
A Knight of Labor.
JU. W. tTwtatt, ft well-known bnUdar. >•«.
die* without much relief. Brown’s Iron Bitten has
entirely cured as I cheorfull yrrconmi rod it."
, Mb. J. M. Kixismsb. cor. Philip and Majndm
St*., New Orleans. La, Mja: “Forrom* tbnol was
ft nuurtyr to Bypopoi* aad triad nriou rotnedlM
without relief. I urod Brown's Iron Bitten, aadl.nt
aowNjo7ia« oxcoUmt bMlth and do iwonmtod It."
OwroliwIiM tbomTVadoMmrk nnd crowod rod Una
onwisppor. Tnkcnootbrr. Madamlrbr
BROWS CUFMICAL CO~ BALTIMORE. MR.
ms
It is THE GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY for the
bowels. It is one of the most pleasant and effl-
esc loos remedies for all rammer complaints. At
a season when violent attacks of the bowels
so frequent, some speedy relief sh<
The wearied
so frequent, some speedy relief should be at hand.
The wearied mother, losing sleep in nursing the
little om teething, should use this medicine.
CO ets.-a bottle. Send Sc. stomp to Walter A.
Taylor, Atlanta, Qa., for Riddle Book.
'nylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet u—
1 Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup and Cou-
"■ id |1 a bottle.
sumption. Price. 15c. and \
—Judge.
I have faith in intelligent, modest
religion, but nbt mu :b in the ostenta
tious »treet-corner religion with brass-
baud accompaniment. If a person can
not be redeemed by rational means he
She is hardiy woit’i redeeming
lUmrJdutAO
only about ninety cants a room. Aik dealer* for 1 t or
vrito CHARLES H. CONNER. Masntsetam,
LOP18V1I.LE, KT,
, Opera Houso Block. Doavsr.Col. 1
iroaihou e to house; affords steady
cjrai'ssit »s
teed, no risk, psr-
AHD
ticulsrs free, c
lime to Make Photograph*," ra t Sami
by Empire A mateurCamem ~—*
aiouist..N.Y.
Salvo
BINGHAMTON. N.V. ,
THE INlOtUffS BENEFACTOR.
dot* for tho Alewkol llablt and tho
only remedy that darss to send trial <
boulos. Richly endorsed by the mod-
tool profession sad prepared by well-
Discoverer of Dr. KUmer'
Iomplete Female Remedy
Ladlea* Home Treatmen t
iclal and Specific treatment for
jrapiaints nnu Diseases peculiar to
Daughters, Wives and Mothers.
Female He
U ftO Anolnlmi
tfOr tho throe in ono Package$2.0a
Recovers the "run-down;” bed-ridden’’
or "abandoned.” It Eliminates Humors
and Blood Impurities that cause Scrofula,
of eighteen experienced and skillful Physi
cians ai.d Surgeons, constituting the most
complete organization of medical and surgical
cal means for their cure.**Marvelous success has
been achieved in the cure of all nasal, throat
skin diseases, rheumat!
i V -—. aatism, neuralgia, 1
vous debility, paralytis, epilepsy (fits), sper
matorrhea. impotency and kindred affec
tions. Thousands are cured at their homes
through correspondence. The core of the
worst raptures, pile tumors, varicocele,
hydroCtle and strictures is guaranteed, with
ation, Buffalo, N. Y.
Beauty
‘ • stamps for the Invalids* Guido
ea) which gives all particulars.
Medina! Associ-
lality t
i Cotton (lin i* "A No. 1.”
. — is simply perfect.’ __ .... „„„ —
improvements and Is delivered free of all
charges at any accessible point. Head to Com
pany at New London, Ct., for catalogue or ask
your merchant to order one for yon.
In some of our restaurants the customer h
s who does the most waiting.
Offensive>breath vanishes with the \
o be jnst,,but most any-one
can pi«!u-h justice with tirnf'-claws
One word: one step may make or mar one’s
Dr. Jones'Red Clover Tonic is
whole future.
If you have a tumor, (or tumor symptoms)
Cancer, (or cancer symptom). Scrofula. Ery-
Yew can’t afford to neglect early ■
Letters of inquiry prompt!,
Dr.KUnier'a Female IH*peamry, fr
“JnwiMds* flntde to HeawC*
SOLD BY ALL DBUGGISTS.
OPIUM “A
UllMIH In all part. Um.MAasa.Q1
CONTAGIOUS!
two years waa under treatment
t lent at Nottl nsbam Hospital. E
try. and u . — „
Roosevelt In this etar,**
prominent physician In New Fork hk<w* •*»
determined to give It a trial. I took sU botUes and
I con say with great Joy that they have cured ms
entirely. 1 am as sound aad w « u
my life. L nus. Haltosd.
New York City, Jane ttth, HRS.
Mwirr Specific Ox, Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga
s^JL^HAY-FEVER
ELY BROTHERS, Drwrgista. Owsgo. If. T.
rnniml
WIL80N’S
our^own I
Tfegpisiss
Dr. WARD A co.. locisuxa; mo./
I LL DeLOttk k BR.,lflfflL OLY
Wce» wredwftdft lewrij3
a
Muicajy and FalslMW
OPIUM
E VAF0RATIN6 FRUIT
m
ivuitr
PEARL
Keeping Teeth .Perfect and Gi
I WELL BORING «<io m
*1 If FIN. OHIO,
i-
Pensions fclr "•yfwa>hlmcio.^L*^-
$m. SSBSSiBBBggg